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

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being but the herbinger and the person of Christ whose comming he proclaimed yea so great as he was not worthy to do him the basest seruice so much as to pull off his shooes this being a prouer be taken from those countries where trauelle●s going in the heat all day did accustome at their iourneies end to haue a seruant attendant to plucke off their shooes and to wash their feete In the speech there are two parts to be obserued first the abasing of himselfe and his office secondly the magnifying of the ministery of the Messias Here first note that Iohn doth not compare the baptisme hee administred with that the Apostles should afterward minister nor his outward signe of water with theirs as being any difference betweene them but he compareth his owne person with the person of Christ and that which he worketh visibly with water with that which Christ worketh supernaturally cleansing the conscience They therefore are deceiued that thinke 〈◊〉 baptisme lesse effectuall then this of ours drawne from the 〈◊〉 postles for in the substance there is no difference but onely● the manifestation and perspicuity of it that as Iohn was pla●● then the Prophets so were the Apostles and after Minister more plaine then hee which was signified by that speech a Christ Mat. 11.11 Hee that is least in the kingdome of God is greater then Iohn Baptist this being meant of their ministeries for the Sunne is the same both in the morning in his weaknesse and at noo●● daie in his strength and there is the same humane nature is a child as in a man and no other baptisme in substance now then this of Iohns being both instituted by the same Lord. But the Iesuites challenge the Caluinists for making Iohns baptisme comparable with the Apostles for Iohns say they did not remit sinnes but he onely baptized them vnto amendment of life Wee answer first in neither of their baptismes there is any remission of sins this onely being in the power of Christ the institutor as in circumcision the cutting of the flesh in it selfe a●●led nothing but the effieacy was in sealing to the conscience the beliefe in the Messias to come for many had outwardly that signe whom the Lord abhorred and if that did but secure the soule vpon an inward beleefe much more is baptisme now but a seale of righteousnesse vnto vs. Againe if their baptisme vnder the cloud was the same with Iohns so was that of the Apostles and could any of them giue any more then the external ministerie But Iohn say they baptized onely to amendment of life We answer as it is Marke 4. Iohn baptized to repentance and remission of sinnes and can there be any repentance without remission No for being promised both together they are receiued of the person both together Againe if this baptisme of ours and that of Iohns be not the same in substance then did not Christ sanctifie our baptisme in his flesh which is false for man can giue but the outward element and Christ alone doth purge the soule Secondly learne what power there is in the outward ministerie of men and in the outward seales for howsoeuer the Scripture doth magnifie outward means and the men as instruments as that Paul is said to saue soules and to haue begot Onesimus in the faith Philemon 2. Cor. 3.6 chap. 1. and our ministerie is called the ministerie of the spirit yet when the scripture will shew what either the men or the meanes separately and apart can do in their owne nature and that all is the worke of God onely then either the meanes are not at all mentioned or else they are woonderfully debased as Paul can but plant Apollo can but water but it is God that giueth the increase Heere Paul is nothing 1. Cor. 3.6 for the blessing is onely from the Lord the internall being opposed to the external for whensoeuer these be either opposed by comparing or compared by opposing then all is in God for God dealeth otherwise in disposing of things that nourish to eternall life then of those that helpe to the conseruation of this present life As there is some power and as it were an inherent vertue in bread to nourish in it owne nature and there is power of generation in man to beget but to awake the conscience and to clense the heart there is no power that remaines in the Ministers person or in the seales of Baptisme and the Lords Supper the Minister separately hee speakes and it is but a perishable breath as the voice of another man though they be the words of God Act. 16.14 for otherwise why should Lydiaes heart bee opened more then any of the rest of the hearers there was the same voice of man sounding into the same eares of men by nature And in Baptisme for himselfe the Minister can doe nothing but powreon water and the water is but naturall which can but wet the body and there is no power appropriate to it that of it selfe it is able to conuey any security to the conscience But doe not the words of institution worke something and bee they not operatorious to worke some change As the words bee pronounced with the organ and instrument of the mouth it cannot make the bread to alter the substance but the words haue this power to declare what the Lord will worke first for our selues that we must breake bread for the people that they must eate it This is my body shewing what the Lord will doe that wee must not be amazed in beholding the signes but lift vp our eyes vnto the Lord that giueth Christs bloud to the heart of euery beleeuer for there is no flesh in the bread nor vnder the bread nor with the bread These therefore haue no power to conney any grace to the soule for if they had then were all regenerate that receiue them and sometime regeneration preceeds and goeth before baptisme as in Cornelius Acts 10. sometime it followeth baptisme as in children And againe if there were any power in water of it selfe or by the words of institution then after the sacrament the water should euer remaine sanctified which we see contrary for it doth putrifie like common water And no more doeth the Sacrament depend vpon the intention of the giuer and consecratour then it doth vpon the intention of the receiuer for it was as true a sacrament and as effectually offered to Simon Magus and to Iudas as to the other of the Disciples for the same Sunne shneth to all though some doe shut their eies Further obserue and beware that we doe not make duos totos baptismos two whole baptismes one of Iohns another of Christs but onely of one whole baptisme two parts as of one whole man we make two parts body and soule one is as in the law a circumcision with the hand cutting the flesh the other cleansing the conscience by faith in Christ Neither do we make them two th● God
to couer our nakednes with the robes of our elder brother Christ Iesus and to remedie and cure our vnrighteousnesse in the righteousnesse of the blood of Christ So as with the hearers of Peter Act. 2.37 the law ●●ging and pricking our consciences wee shall crie out in a holy distrust of our selues What shall we do And this kind of despaire pr●pareth vs to saluation for the spirit sheweth vs our pouerty and where to buy gold that shall cost vs nothing it sheweth vs our wretchednesse that haue nothing but rags to put on and withall the wardrobe of Christs righteousnesse where wee shall haue garments fit for the Saints of God it sheweth our Apostasie how we haue fallen and by our fall haue euen broken and cut as it were our owne throats and sendeth vs to the Physitian Christ who is onely good at such a desperate disease it sheweth our blindnesse and withall the eie-salue of the holy Ghost to cleare vs 1. Ioh. 2.20 it sheweth vs our debt and the sergeant the diuell ready to arrest vs and then sends vs to the God of heauen in whose hands is all treasure to discharge what we owe it sheweth vs how we stand vpon the scaffold ready for the hatchet and then out of this astonishment sendeth vs an absolute pardon from heauen sealed with the blood of Christ and subscribed with Gods owne hand So as it teacheth vs onely to mistrust and despaire in our selues and to seeke to be releeued and refreshed with that water of life whereof hauing once drunke wee shall neuer thirst againe Iohn 4.34 Howbeit on the contrary this same spirit bringeth the wicked into a sense and feeling of this same horror and leaueth them in the astonishment of their conscience so as Sathan continually hath their sinnes to scourge them with and their corruptions wherewithall to vpbraide them And the cause why they bee left in this hellish plight and suffered to be thus perplexed and tormented of themselues is their owne infidelity that they haue stopped their eares against that comfortable sound of the Lords mercy and so poisoned their hearts with sinne that the power of the word could not worke vpon them and so the Lord most iustly hath hardened them in their irkesome and tedious hypocrisie that the sinnes they commit should be the punishments of sinnes past and the deserts of punishments that are to come And as to that that the holy Ghost working this same feare and terror in the hearts and consciences both of the elect and of the wicked and should leaue the reprobate euen when they are brought to the depth of despaire it were blasphemy to say or thinke that he doth it for and to the same end tha●●● than doth for Sathan doth it to prooue God a liar as that being in that case it were not possible for God to saue them whereas the mercy of the Lord is aboue all his workes But the spirit of God doth this that God may be iustified in the iust hardening of that mans heart whom hee found sinfull and whom hee was not bound to saue and so his end is to take vengeance of his hypocrisie for the Lord is as iealous of his iustice as he is of his mercie Sathan promiseth saluation to whom God pronounceth damnation and lulleth them in security whom he findeth carelesse to watch ouer their steps neuer greatly troubling or mouing any of his owne till they come to such a deepe exigent and to such a narrow pinch euen to hels mouth that they cannot goe from him then they taste euen of hell fire in this life and feele a fearefull beginning of that shall neuer haue end Now God threatneth damnation to all to his elect that they may seeke and hasten to be shrouded vnder the shadow of Christs wings and to feele the vertue of the hemme of his garment to the reprobate that they may bee the more hardened Mat. 14.36 because it is in the corruption of their owne hearts that they heaue refused the acceptable time of grace and reiected the pearle which they might haue bought It will be said But why should the holy Ghost leaue them in this despaire He is not properly the author of despaire but if the reprobate being brought to this be not recouered it cometh of his owne wickednesse As for example a man sheweth vnto a triator his indignity and hauing done this with great and vehement passions hee sheweth him the detestation and vglinesse of his offence and leaueth him with some doubt and scruple of conscience as amazed at his owne wickednesse if the traitor vpon this make himselfe away by violence as Iudas did hee that thus laid the quality and nature of his offence open before him Mat. 27.5 is not the cause of this his desperate end hee was the cause and meanes of making him to bee affraid and angry with himselfe onely and that was lawfull so the holy Ghost by laying open the riches of Gods mercy at the first thine owne wilfull rebellion to forsake him Rom. 7.12.23 his giuing of thee a law to bridle thee and the h●● and feruencie of thy corruption to breake through all lawes worketh this terror in thy heart that art a reprobate and sheweth as it were before thee the smart and execution of thy sinne If now thou despairest and restest there the cause is in thy selfe for thou sawest light and louedst it not and heardest the sound of retrait and yet weatest on to thine owne destruction Further this spirit of God is not the author of despaire as it is despaire for a man should neuer despaire of Gods mercy as God was not the cause of the lie in the false Prophets as it was a lie 1. Kin. 22.7 but he shewed his iudgement on them by giuing them thus ouer to this sinne So despaire in the reprobate wrought by the wickednesse of their hearts is after this sort reuenged by the spirit in giuing them ouer to the extremity of this sin so as it commeth from the spirit not as an euil author but as a iust reuenger of their former sinnes Now the instruments the spirit of God vseth to bring and perswade the conscience to feare damnation are two first the law naturall for in the nature of euery man something is ingrafted and written of euery sinne that howsoeuer it bee acted and performed with pleasure yet euen in nature it endeth and is left with remorse which doeth shew that there is a God to punish it This was that which made the heathen to haue an apprehension and vnderstanding of infernall furies as that for some sinnes they should bee so exagitated and tormented with them as they could haue no rest For this cause they tearmed them by speciall names as the fury of Nemesis that should plague the proud man Eumenides because shee was implacable and would not bee intreated Alecto because it was a torment that neuer ceased Alasto that should pursue
and prostrateth it selfe before God in Christ vpon confession that the soule is Satans due and deserueth to bee bound hand and foote and to bee cast into prison as vnable to pay the debt it intreateth that this obligation may bee taken from Satan it wrastleth with death and damnation and terror of conscience Coloss 2.14 and craueth a pardon bringing nothing but the very heart blood of Christ And euen as the very looking vpon the Serpent healed them in the wildernesse Num. 21.9 and nothing else could appease the tempest Ion●h 1.15 but the very casting of Ionah into the sea and the sinnes of the people Leuit. 16.22 were laid onely vpon the Goate so faith in this petition of forgiuenesse brings nothing but commeth emptie and laieth all vpon the shoulders of Christ But now betweene men and men on earth faith worketh by loue so as if we bring nothing to men but faith it is certaine wee neuer brought faith from God for since thy heart is not discernable and the spirit and piety of the heart is vnsearchable in respect of men and good to God wee cannot doe our faith vpon earth must be as busie before men in workes as it is before God in the blood of Christ And as Martha and Mary Luk. 10.39 dwelled in one house one onely to heare Christ the other working and labouring to entertaine Christ euen so our faith with Mary must onely kneele at Gods feet to heare that comfortable voice of the pardon and absolution of our sinnes in the blood of Christ but our faith on earth must labour with Martha by loue and good works to entertaine and helpe our brethren Besides wee must consider that things may worke together but not together in the same worke Euen as Christ in the worke of mediation must haue two natures a diuine humanity and an humane diuinity and we say not that Christ as God onely nor as man onely is Mediator but by these two concurring together and as wee saie that Christ is not Mediator without flesh and as truely we saie that hee raised not vp his flesh by his humanitie but suffered in the flesh and was raised vp by the power of his diuinitie onely and that his diuinitie died not but his flesh onely and in this they worked seuerally in the flesh to be ouercome of death and in the spirit onely to ouercome death yet these two in the worke of our saluation doe worke together Euen so faith worketh with loue in bringing foorth sanctification and a holy life but in the verie apprehending of Christ his bloud this power to iustifie is of faith onely Like as the roote of it selfe giues life but the roote with the branches bring foorth fruite And as the fire maketh warme by heate and light and yet the heate of the fire warmeth alone but light is inseparable from it so no faith can worke well without workes but yet there are none iustified by the power of workes but by faith onely Now where it it said Faith wrought with his workes and through the workes the faith made perfect obserue that this is meant onely of a declaration to men for we are perfectly iustified in the sight of God by the bloud of Christ And though the hand be leprous yet it can receiue sound meate so though our faith be imperfect yet our iustification is perfect For there is but one pardon in heauen through that one death and passion of Christ and before a man be perfectly iustified he cannot do a good worke for we must first be in Christ before wee haue faith and must haue faith before wee can worke for these are fruits of faith And as a Toade is not therefore a Toade because it poisons but therefore poisons because it is a Toade nor a Serpent is not therefore a Serpent because it stings but stings because it is a Serpent so we are not ingrafted into Christ because we are good but being ingrafted into Christ wee are made good Lastly obserue in the wordes that wee are not iustified because wee worke but because wee shall be saued therefore wee worke Zaccheus Luke 19.8 had not saluation because hee restored foure-fold and gaue halfe his goods to the poore but because the Lord was come into his house and had taken possession of his heart therefore hee wrought these works of faith Neither was the poore man in the Gospell healed because he should sinne no more Iohn 5.14 but Christ faith Thou art healed therefore in signe of thankfulnesse for thy health looke to thy life that thou sinne no more for heauen shall not be giuen to workes but to workers and promise of eternall life is made to the workes of the iust as they are iustified Gal. 3.11.12 and they are iustified onely in Christ for in euery worke there is imperfection not but that the spirit could worke perfectly but that euery thing is receiued according to the measure of that that doth receiue it and wee in this life are able onely to receiue the first fruites and not the fulnesse of the spirit for the spirit is like the Sea that is able to fill any vessell but no vessell is able to containe it Now in the 23. verse two parts are to be considered first the purpose of the Apostle in alledging this Scripture secondly the sense of the matter deliuered For the first if Saint Iames cited this place to proue that Abraham was imputed righteous in the sight of God by this work of sacrificing his sonne hee must needes haue wrested this Scripture which were blasphemy to say being written by the singer of God for Abraham had this imputation of righteousnesse through his beleefe giuen him and pronounced by God himselfe Genes 15.6 before either Ismael or Isaak were borne so as then the meaning of the Apostle in alledging this scripture is onely to shew that that testimony which God gaue Abraham of the excellency of his faith was declared and approued to bee true by the performance and execution of this speciall worke Now for the second point concerning the sense of the place cited namely that Abraham beleeued God and it was imputed to him for righteousnesse here we see that it is agreeable to the scripture that the obedience of the sonne which stood in two parts first in fulfilling the law secondly in satisfying for our sins is onely inherent in the sonne and was in him euen from the moment of his conception to the moment of his ascension and that wee haue onely his obedience allowed vnto vs and through the imputation thereof we are made iust not that it abideth in our selues for we are no better then Abraham but we haue it by imputation as Abraham had And this is a doctrine of great comfort and necessitie to be beleeued that wee haue it by imputation and not of our selues for now wee are sure it shall neuer faile vs nor wee shall neuer lose it as Adam at first lost
religion For if God be not with thee to direct thee that thou stray not to correct thee that thou swell not to preserue thee that thou famish not to pardon thee that thou despaire not to curb thee that thou stumble not to strengthen thee that thou fall not to sanctifie thee that thou sinne not and to glorifie thee that thou perish not Psal 145.14 Psal 19.12 so many be the errors of thy life as thou canst not heale them and so safe is thine iniquitie sealed vp as thou canst not chuse but haue change of sorrowes I haue therefore presumed in a Christian loue of thy soule if not to cure thy iealosie of the world yet to prescribe thee Physicke to crucifie thy selfe It is a field sowne by the hand of another though some fell not vnfruitfully I hope into my ground and albeit many yeeres haue now ouergrowne my papers since I first plowed it and that the seeds-man himselfe sleepeth in the earth yet somewhat to awake the memory of the righteous and to quicken and giue heart to the desires of the religious I haue shot some few arrowes that I had of his which if thou peruse with diligence and lay vp with conscience thou shalt find of greater force then the shafts of Ionathan since these forewarne thee of the fury not of Saul 1. Sam. 20.21 but of Satan who reioyceth more in thy damnation then he sorroweth for his owne So hoping thou wilt either looke vpon me in loue or lay me aside without shame I commit thee to God who giue thee and forgiue thee much Grayes Inne Decemb. 24. 1604. Thy friend H. Yeluerton To the Christian Reader CHRISTIAN Reader when thou takest a view of the bookes already abroad and daily increasing as also according to thy measure of grace receiued doest discerne of and censure the weaknesse and insufficiency of too many I speake not now of those idle and vaine oh that I might not say tending to Atheisme and prophanenes which are rather to be bewailed in a Christian common-weale than censured but of those whose subiect is profitable and workmen desirous to profit Euen in too many of these thou hast cause iustly to complaine there is no end of making many books the reading of such being but wearisomnes to the flesh and so breedeth a distast of the necessary vse of reading But when thou shalt lift vp thine eies and spie out as in a foggie mist Eccle. 12.10 diuers also wherein is an vpright writing the words of truth able to teach and to conuince thou art now to be encouraged and not to be wearie to exercise thy selfe as thy calling and meanes will affoord in bookes that are necessary pretious and godly Among these if thou wilt take the pains to read thou wilt easily condescend that these Sermons deserue both for their matter and penning to be preserued for the vse of Gods Saints Which will appeare if with mee thou wilt a little neerer obserue the frame and comelinesse of this work namely the doctrines naturally raised the reproofe of the aduersary soundly concluded and that in such a pithie phrase and words sauouring of grace that thou canst not but with me acknowledge diuers excellent graces of God shining clearely in the Author in the Penman By the Authour the word is truly interpreted and in a most excellent maner brought home to thy conscience both for mortification of life and quickening in heauenly duties as also for setling thee against that accursed heresie of Popery which is too much neglected of too many able teachers In the Pen-man obserue diligence wisedome godlinesse he tooke this pains only for his owne priuate vse for very hardly could hee bee drawen to communicate this to the common good yet so carefully is it performed that vndoubtedly not a sentence yea hardly will it appeare that a word of moment escaped him as those who were diligent hearers with him may remember and can witnesse His godly wisdome appeareth not only in attending on the Lords own ordinance the publike ministery of the word on the Lords day and other set times but also in treasuring the same vp by writing knowing well that the voice working inwardly for a time through mans weaknesse and infirmity doth quickly perish to this end that with his ordinary sanctifying of the Sabbath he might and that liuely set before his owne eies this powerfull meanes also of saluation therby nourishing the same faith and godlinesse in himselfe which he saw from his infancy and daily doth see to dwell in that reuerend and truely religious Iudge his father and in that vertuous Lady alwaies ready to refresh the bowels of the Saints his mother to whom I also owe my selfe both for encouragement in my entrance to the worke of the ministery first begun in that their well ordered family as also for many fauours since principally for that charge where I now dwell bestowed on me by that worthy most religious carefull disposer of the Church-liuings the right honourable Sir Thomas Egerton Knight Baron of Elsemeere Lord Chancelor of England Lastly Christian Reader with me consider of the blessing of God vpon the labours of this godly and learned Gentleman in his owne profession who hath taken these paines now for thy good euident to all those that know him which doth clearely conuince that the keeping of the sabbath is not the losse of one yeere in seauen as too many of his rank I would they only by their practise do discouer they think Indeed if the fourth commandement were ceremoniall and consequently abrogated if there were no heauen no hell and that man were only for this life they might haue some colour But that the care of thy calling and of holy religion may go together yea hand in hand heere thou hast a paterne and example benefite thy selfe by this his paines and tread in the same steps of godly wisedome Thine in the Lord George Bard Minister of the word of God at Stanes in Middlesex GEntle Reader whereas by some ouersight the 19.20.21 and 22. verses of the eight chapter to the Romans follow not in their due place thou art to be aduertised that they are handled in the end of the chapter after the 38. and 39. verses where thou art to looke for them MATH chap. 1. vers 1. verse 1 The Booke of the Generation of Iesus Christ the sonne of Dauid the sonne of Abraham c. to the 18. verse THE foure Euangelists haue beene resembled by some writers to the foure beasts spoken of Ezec. 1.10 and Reu. 4.7 This Euangelist Mathew being compared to a man because he begins with the pedegree of our Sauiour Christ S. Marke to a lion because hee begins with the preaching of Iohn Baptist who roared like a lion in the wildernesse the doctrine of Repentance S. Luke to an Oxe or Bullock because he begins with the story of Zachary the Priest whose office was vnder the Law to offer sacrifice and
was a type of the Messias 1. Sam. 15.28 it was begun in Dauid onely for Saul though he was king before yet was he no type of the Messias And for this second order which is all of Kings we shall see if we peruse the booke of God that Christ came of some as wicked kings as euer were for where from Salomon to the captiuitie there were 19. kings 13. of them were most wicked and some of them had such speciall blemishes spots vpon them as it is doubted whether they be saued or no Salomon had great enormities but there is no doubt of his repentance witnessed by his booke of retractions called Ecclesiastes Asa began well but in his old age he imprisoned the Prophet that told him of his sinne and in his sicknesse trusted more to the Physitian then to God 2. Chr. 16.10.12 Iehosaphat did the woorst act that could be 2. King 8.18 to marrie his sonne Iehoram to Athaliah the daughter of Iezabel whereby manie prouocations were committed and yet these were the best Iehoram he caused all Iuda to commit idolatry so as the Lord forsooke him and 2. Chro. 21.15 he died a miserable death his guts falling out of his belly not all at once but day by day which was more grieuous Ahazia his sonne was slaine 2. Chro. 22.9 by Iehu in the field and neuer any reuenged his blood Ioash his sonne 2. Chron. 23.3 was mightily preserued by Iehoiada the Priest from the hands of Athaliah Yet when the Priest was dead 2. Chron. 24.78 when the Prophets came to tell him he was a bused and misled by his Princes to idolatry he caused them to be slaine in the temple and himselfe Vers 25. was afterward killed by his owne seruants Amaziah his sonne fell to Idolatrie after a victory obtained of the Edomites and 2. Chro. 25.27 was traiterously slaine by his owne subiects Azariah his sonne 2. Chro. 26.21 because he vsurped vpon the Priests office was immediatly smitten with the hand of God that he came to be a Leper but some of those last Kings are not heere named by S. Matthew because hee meant to make a proportionable and euen number that should consist on foureteenes For Ahaz hee made all the altars like the altars of Damascus and 2. King 16.3 made his owne sonne passe through the fire according to the sacrifice and abhomination of the Heathen Iehoiakim hee contemned the threatnings of the Lord and caused the roule to be burnt Ier. 36.23 which Baruch had writ from the mouth of Ieremie he was therefore buried like an Asse as was prophecied by Ieremie 22.19 euen drawne and cast foorth without the gates of Ierusalem And for Zedechiah hee imprisoned the Prophet Ieremie and contemned the Lord therefore were his eies put out by the king of Babel Iere. 39.7.8 and he bound in chaines and led like a slaue into captiuity Out of which obserue that there is no priuiledge in the Princes chaire to keepe them from sinning neither yet that the maiestie of their places can protect them from the Lords vengance Vnderstand these words touching Christs descent legally as Deu. 25.5.6 and pag. 8. line 29. but that if their hearts bee lifted vp against God his hand shall fall vpon them to their distruction for the grace of the Lord must season their palaces else doe they stand but in slippery places And though our Sauiour Christ vouchsafed to come out of the loines of such wicked Kings it was not at all to giue an●e countenance to their offences or to embolden them in their sinnes but onely to open the fountaine of mercy to vs that wee may know he is able to sanctifie the vilest sinner Now for the third order which is of them who were caried away into captiuity note first the cause of the captiuity secondly the cruelty of it thirdly the mercy of the Lord in their deliuerance For the first which is the cause that Gods owne children and them of the blood royall should be caried into slauery it is set downe 2. Chro. 36.12 to be first for that the king rebelled against God and humbled not himselfe before Ieremy the Lords Prophet Secondly for that both Priest and people trespassed wonderfully set downe in two things principally First they polluted the house of the Lord with the abhominations of the heathen Secondly they mocked and misused the messengers of the Lord and despised his words vntill the wrath of the Lord rose vp against them and that there was no remedie but he was enforced to giue them to the bloud-thirsty Babylonians Wherein obserue what a fearefull thing it is to fall into idolatrie after our eies haue once beene opened and how nothing prouokes the Lord so much as the contempt of his embassage For if hauing once seene the goodnesse and power of God we decline from him and lay holde on other helpes and contemne the face and speech of his Ministers whom he hath made acquainted with his secrets and that wee waxe strong in our selues we doe but as Vzziah did 2. Chron. 26.16 lift vp our hearts to destruction and force the Lord to take his cuppe of indignation in his hand and to holde it as well to the mouth of the king as to the people for where all conspire to worke mischiefe all shall be ouerwhelmed with the same madnesse as Ieremy speaketh chap. 25.18 For the second which is the miserie they sustained being captiues it is to be seene first in their vsage before they came to Babylon set downe 2. Chr. 36.17 they tooke both young and old men and women and though they fled to the Sanctuarie for succour yet were they there stabbed with daggers they burnt the house of God and tooke the precious vessels of it to abuse in their superstition when they come to Babel Now to see the temple on fire and yong and old slaine without mercy had beene enough to haue rent their hearts in peeces to see the worship of God thus defaced and themselues reserued but as an after pray to the enemy But now secondly comming thither namely to Babel to behold such grosie idolatry and to heare such high reproches as no doubt were giuen against the God of Israel as Psal 137.3 Come sing a song to the God of Iuda that hath forsaken you and Beholde heere be the people whom the Lord hath spued out besides the bondage wherein themselues were kept how could they but straine foorth teares of bloud and send foorth deepe sighes from a mournfull spirit Yea their case was so desperate and miserable as Ezech. 37.11 their raising vp againe and restitution was made of the Lord as great a matter and as hard as to put life into a company of dead bones for their the Lord saith These drie bones are the house of Israel neither yet did this their captiuity last but a while but they were wintred and sommered there full 70. yeeres as was foretold by the Prophet Ieremy chap. 25.11 that
they should be an astonishment and serue the king of Babel so many yeeres For the third which is the Lords mercy in their deliuerance they be the words of his owne mouth For thy sake O Israel I will not doe it for thou art filthy Ezec. 36.22 but for my owne sake I will that they may know I am able to doe it and for Dauid my seruants sake I will not vtterly put out the light of Israel Hence learne generally that there is no nation so free but the Lord may captiuate and if they decline and leaue their first loue the Lord may and will abandon them For if any people might haue presumed it was this who had the promises and a more peculiar presence of God then any nation vnder heauen yet were they vile and did stincke in his sight for abusing his kindenesse and setting at nought his Ministers Howbeit neuer were they more scorned then in these daies wherein either men make themselues deafe that they will not heare or heare but there is a noise of vanity higher and louder in their eares Heere then is the same cause of captiuity why should wee not feare the same iudgement We see it is our selues can doe vs the greatest hurt for when wee once giue our selues ouer to loosenesse of life and to distaste the word the Lord then disarmes vs both of policie and strength that euen a weake enemy may soone surprize vs. Let therefore euery man amend one albeit these times bee so mischieuous as it is to be feared lest many of vs be as willing to returne to Babylon for religion as euer were the Israelites to come foorth Secondly obserue the cursed and hard-harted disposition of the enemies of God that they thinke no torment nor cruelty too exquisite nor too sharpe for his people for Zedechia and Ahab did the King of Babel burne in the fire Ier. 29.22 and the rest were slaues to him and his sonnes 2. Chro. 36.20 With which malice the diuell hath poisoned and filled their hearts because they cannot be auenged of the Lord himselfe for euen at him doe the proud Nimrods of the world point their fingers Gen. 11.4 and against him doe they lay their siege to plucke him out of his seate for the Babylonians were more fierce to the Israelites then to any other whom they subdued onely because they were the chosen and beloued of the Lord. Lastly obserue in their deliuery the compassion of the Almighty that he will not be angry for euer and the truth of his promise that he will at the length visite his people in mercy when they thinke the clouds so thicke as they cannot be ouerblowne for now when Israel was euen rent to ragges he harboured Ier. 29.11 the thoughts of peace and not of trouble and gaue them an end of their fainting hope euen a mighty deliuerance by the hand of Cyrus king of Persia 2. Chro. 36.22 Where it is said Iechonias begat Salathiel obserue that Salathiel was not his naturall sonne but ouely succeeded him in the kingdome by legall succession as next heire for Iechonias had no sonnes but the house of Salomon ended with him as appeareth Ier. 22.30 Write this man that is Iechomas destitute of children So also Ezec. 21.26.27 the Lord speaking of Salomon I will ouerturne saith he repeating it thrice the diademe of this king and neuer shall any out of his loines weare it vntill he come whose right it is that is the Messias and I will giue it him To prooue also that Salomons line must cease and that Christ must not come of him lineally appeareth by the prophesie of Isaiah 2. King 20.18 that there should not one bee left of the house of Iehoiakim which could not be so vnlesse the line of Salomon were vtterly extinguished and for Salathiel he came of Nathan the second brother as Saint Luke setteth it downe chap. 3.31 which nothing disagreeth from this of Saint Matthew for he was but to shew the line of the Kings and not naturally of whom Christ came but whom hee should succeed in the kingdome Where note the wonderfull prouidence of God that Salomon who had so many wiues and children hath not now any left to sit vpon the throne to teach vs that Salomon was to bee punished for his many wiues so as the Lord would not haue Christ to come of him naturally but of his yonger brother Whereby all nobility may bee swallowed vp in the glory of the Lords progeny and generation that drowneth all nobility that since Salomon in all his glory wanteth naturall heires that they stand not vpon these outward shewes and dignities but seeke to continue their posterity by liuing in a cleane and holy course of life for the Lord will wash away the vnholy seede and serape out their names from vnder heauen that seeke to establish their house in filthinesse and to pollute the mariage bed Further in that Christ is said to come of Ioseph the poore Carpenter heerein are the ancient Prophecies fulfilled Esay 53.2 that Christ should come and no man regard him and that he should grow vp as a roote out of the drie ground without forme or beauty and as Esay 11.1 that the should come as a rod out of the stocke of Ishai the Yeoman 1. Sam. 16.3 whereby we obserue that when things are most desperate then the Lord recouereth them and now when the kingdome was come to a poore Carpenter then Christ was borne to teach vs that in the greatest exigents and extremities we must neuer distrust nor seeke to extricate our selues out of any sorrow the Lord hath brought vs to but still to waite vpon him for as Dauid saith Psalm 32.7 The Lord is our secret place that is he hath many priuie deliuerances wee know not of and as Psalm 4.3 will strengthen vs vpon the bed of sorrow as he did Dauid who when Saul with his armie was euen at his heeles and hee no doubt much anguished yet the Lord had his secret deliuerance for him and turned Saul on the sudden another way 1. Sam. 23.27 Euen so heere when it had beene night with the Israelites a long time and that their enimies thought they should neuer recouer their sight againe then ariseth Christ like they day-starre and restoreth the beauty of their kingdome to greater glory then before let vs therefore waite with Simeon for the saluation that shall come Now remaineth to shew the difference in the recital of Christs pedegree by Saint Matthew and that of Saint Luke chap. 3.23 and it standeth in three points first Mathew doeth descend from the first to the last from Abraham to Ioseph Luke ascendeth from the last to the first from Ioseph to Abraham Secondly Mathew was to fetch his pedegree so as he might proue him to be the Messias of the Iewes and to come directly from the feed of Abraham Luke deriueth him not onely from Abraham but from Adam that he might shew him to be
would not mary her as by the law he might haue done and after haue put her to death Deu. 22.21 if she could not haue shewed the tokens of her virginity but he would haue put her away priuily and resigned his interest to him who as he suspected had abused her Wherein we learne that iust men are to take all things at the best and not to seeke occasions of others hurt or meanes to wreake their malice on them that haue in sort abused them for loue must couer and religion must passe by offences If Nabal be so churlish as to deny refreshing to our seruants 1. Sam. 25.10 we may not be so impatient as Dauid to vow their destruction but with the mildenesse of Abigael we must leaue them to the Lord. A patterne of this also we haue in Ioseph of Egypt who though he was sold by his brethren in the depth of their malice yet neuer vpbraided them with their fault but gently passed by it freely forgaue it accounting it as the hand of God that had sent him thither Gen. 45.8 And this indeed ought to be the affectiō of all Gods children Gal. 6.1 not to blaze but as as S. Paul speaketh to support one another in their infirmities and not to shame them when the actiō committed may in some sort be wel construed Further obserue that this example of Iosephs in making the best of his wiues honesty is no warrant for husbands to keepe their wiues that may publikely be conuinced of adultery but they may safely releeue themselues by the law of the Magistrate so as their end in prosecuting the matter be not to defame them but to reforme them for the sword is a notable meanes to bring vs to repentance And though Ioseph complaineth not it doeth not prooue that others should be silent for the cause is diuers First Ioseph seeing her defloured did abhor to accompany with her Secondly knowing her great piety and singular modesty he wondred how it came he could not accuse her for an adulteresse for it might be the act was done before they were betrothed Now in this perplexity he staieth his thoughts and recommendeth it to God and so this was of a matter altogether doubtfull therefore not like to that where she is publikely conuinced of such shameles filthines Againe in this of Iosephs the whole case was extraordinary and the Lord had the full stroke in it for he suffered Ioseph to be abused by the errour of his iudgment and restrained Mary from speaking one word to her husband how all this matter was wroght whereas he louing her to entirely and being fully perswaded of her piety and thereby halfe induced not to make suspition of her chastity he would haue rested contented with her relation but the Lord stopped her mouth that as this action proceeded immediatly from God so Ioseph should be satisfied only by the oracle of God and therefore this is not to be matched resembled to that where women shamelesly breake then vow which they made to God and man as we may see 1. Cor. 6.15 Mal. 2.14 where the Prophet bringeth in the Lord as a witnesse betweene man and wife and vrgeth this as a reason why the one should not trespasse against the other because out of the abundance of his spirit he hath made them one Now for the second part which is the satisfaction Ioseph receiued and the meanes whereby his thoughts were appeased while hee was musing of this euent we must consider three points first what messenger God dispatcheth namely an Angell secondly at what time when he was euen vpon the resolutiō to haue put her away thirdly what message was brought while he was thus reasoning with himselfe and was anguished with blinde discourses which containeth seuerall parts first that which is set downe in the very first words as much as to say as Thou hast not done amisseto take such a moderate course in this matter but feare not she is a virgin Secondly a confirmation of this That which is in her is of the holy Ghost Thirdly he declareth the blessed condition of the child fore-prophesying of this name Fourthly a reason of his name He shall saue his people Fiftly because the Angel know Ioseph prepossessed with preindice and therefore yet there might rest some scruple in his mind he allegeth an ancient record of the Prophet Esay 6.7.14 written 800. yeres before which expressed as much as the Angel now told him by this testimonie concurring with his speech he doth absolutely resolue him for an angel speaking according to scripture is not to be doubted For the first the messenger that is dispatched from the heauenly palace being so excellent as an Angel let vs learne to be caried into an admiration of the Lords loue that the Angels elect shal be messengers ministers for his chosen Hereupon Dauid Psa 8.4 being confounded with the Lords goodnes breaketh forth saying O Lord what is man that thou shouldest be so mindfull of him and shouldest thus exalt him for thou hast made him little lower then God not that the Angels in themselues are baser in nature condition then we for as it is Esa 6 2. as they haue two wings to hide their face from the glorie of God so haue they two wings to hide their feet because we cannot behold them in their excellencie for the seruice they do is not to vs for our owne sakes but they do it as to Christ their head as is prefigured by Iacobs ladder Gen. 28.13 wheron the Angels ascended and descended Ioh. 1.51 this ladder being Christ and Christ vouchsaffing vs this honour to sit with him at his table the Angels minister to vs as owing all dutie to him Now this ministerie of Angels is so deputed as euery particular member elect hath not one but many continually attendant on him as Psal 91.11 Hee hath giuen his Angels charge to beare vs in their armes lest we should dash our feet to hurt them not that the Lord is vnable to rescue vs or insufficient to support vs from any danger but he doth it onely to prouide a remedie for our infidelitie who must euer bee held as it were by the hand Mat. 14.20 or else we crie with Peter in the least temptation Lord helpe vs we perish Euen as a man desiring safe conduct out of the realme should receiue of the Prince not onely his letters but his royall guard to wait vpon him which were a matter ex abundanti that by this meanes he could no way doubt of quiet passage so lest we should distrust the Lord or bee too much confounded with his maiestie hee hasteneth to helpe vs by more familiar meanes and hath giuen vs as it were his royall name to guard vs that we may be sure as Sathan hath manie waies and laieth many snares to entrap and to hurt vs so hath the Lord pitched his tents about vs and compassed vs with fenced souldiers to preserue
name as a thing that Ioseph could not be vnmindefull of And this indeed is the duty and ought not to be the labour of euery trembling Christian to lodge as it were with the booke of God in their bosome and with the Noble-men of Beraea Act. 17.11 to receiue the word with readinesse and to search the Scriptures daily which is the garden of the Lord where runneth the riuer of wisedome to resolue all doubts and where is to be had the oile that softeneth all our afflictions Now in the testimony it selfe heere alleaged consider two things first the person that should beare a virgine secondly the person that should be brought foorth Emmanuell consubstantiall with vs in nature for both these the Prophet beginneth with a word of wonder Behold as of a miracle neuer performed but once If it be asked how it was possible a virgine should conceiue we must beleeue it was so and rest in this nothing to bee impossible with God Mat. 19.26 For as it was possible at the first to make a woman out of a man without the helpe of a woman as wee may see in the first creation Gen. 2.22 so was it possible for him in this new creation to make a man out of a woman without the helpe of a man Which was done to this end because if there should haue beene any corruption of the seed of man in Christ he could not haue sanctified others Concerning the person that should be brought forth it is Emmanuel the same that Iesus and they both imply one thing for he that is Emmanuel is God with vs as Iesus is God sauing vs. Now he is God with vs many waies and albeit in the Arke vnder the law the Lord was alway speaking through the Cherubins insomuch as the very enemies of God the Philistims 1. Sam. 4.7 could say when the Arke came that the God of Israel came and therefore cried woe vnto vs yet is he farre neerer with vs namely in such a spirituall manner as the Prophet speakes heere a God not onely present and fauourable to vs but connaturall to vs and vpon which did depend all the graces of God formerly giuen to his Church Therefore if Moses did say in admiration of the Lords goodnesse Deuter. 4.7 Looke if euer the like came to passe that God from heauen should speake vnto his people and shew his glory so to appeare on earth much more may we breake foorth into the like astonishment to whom God is come so neere as to be of the same nature with vs and to speake vnto vs not in the publication of the killing law but in the manifestation of the quickening Gospell whereby we may receiue comfort in the deepest dangers that gathering our selues vnder his wings and seeking rest and refreshing at his hands he will first giue vs a generall charter of grace for the pardon of out sins And because pardon of our sinne will not saue vs from hell but our iudgement shall be iust vnlesse we yeeld full obedience to the law hee will secondly impute and lay all his obedience and righteousnesse vpon vs so as in him we shall fulfill it And yet because we are still sinners as carying about vs the orignall vncleanenesse we brought with vs Ephes 5.30 the third rest he will giue vs is so to sanctifie vs as we shall be bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh not that we are absolutely sanctified in this life but that that which this our Christ brings vs is al-sufficient to saluation And being sure of this we need not to be dismaide for the waters of trouble are but a bath to cleanse and purge vs from those corruptions we gather by walking in this dirty world Further let vs consider heere why it was necessary that he that should be Iesus should also be Emmanuel first it was necessary he should be the Emmanuel that is the strong God for when wee were all enwrapped in sinne and shut vp vnder death then was there neede of remedy And what shall that be Mercy No God is iust and we hauing smitten his Maiesty by our sinne must bee smitten againe by his punishment Shall it then be iustice No for we haue need of mercy Heere so to be mercifull as not to disanull his iustice and so to be iust as not to forget his mercy and to make a way both to appease his wrath that his iustice might be satisfied and yet so to appease it as his mercie might be magnified in forgiuing there must needes come a mediation and if all the world should be offered to God for satisfaction it is nothing for it is his owne the worke of his owne hands If Angels should step in before the Lord it were nothing for they are engaged to him for their creation and being but temporally good they cannot satisfie for an infinite sinne howbeit he that must satisfie must bee infinit to suffer infinite punishment for an infinite sinne committed against an infinite Maiesty therefore he must be God he must be also Emmanuel with vs for how can there bee satisfaction for our apostasie but by humility nor procurement of life but by death Now when God comes to obey hee must needes bee humbled and when he comes to deserue hee must needes serue which God alone cannot doe and when he comes to die he must needes be mortall which God cannot be Therefore hee was man to be himselfe bond God to free others man to become weake and God to vanquish man to become mortall and God to triumph ouer death The situation also of the Ladder spoken of Gen. 28.12 is an euident demonstration of the two natures of this Emmanuel for the word must bee vnderstood of the second person in the Trinity By the foot to satisfie his Fathers wrath as being of our nature that he might stand close to Iacobs loines and to his Church militant and by the top to expresse his diuinity which toucheth the seate and reacheth to the bosome of God that he might in time bring thither his Church triumphant Now euery ladder is a Medium or meane whereby weascend to some place that otherwise we could not reach vnto which this Emmanuel is to vs for wee being euill debters and God a seuere creditor Colos 2.14 Christ is the meane to cancell this debt and to set it on his owne score and we being ignoant clyents and God a skilfull Iudge not able to vnderstand our tale Christ must be our aduocate 1. Ioh. 2.1 to pleade our cause for vs. And as betweene God and vs so betweene the diuell and vs he is a mediator for he casteth fierie darts against vs which we onely driue backe by the shield of faith in Christ Ephes 6.11 Further in the word Emmanuel obserue three things first the truth and verity of the subsistance of both these natures in Christ secondly the reall distinction of them thirdly the personall vnion of them And these three points wisely and
soberly weighed doe confute those foure maine heresies risen heeretofore in the Church concerning this great mystery For the first that there be two natures in Christ is plainely expressed by Saint Paul Rom. 9.5 First he was according to the flesh of the seed of the Iewes secondly he is God ouer all blessed for euer And Esa 9.6 A child is borne and his name shall be the mighty God Heere then first is confuted the heresie of Martian who said Christ was God but not man but had onely an heauenly body of an imaginary substance and alleageth Phil. 2.7 for his ground where it is said he was made like vnto men and was found in shape as a man therefore no man indeed By the same reason he might haue concluded aswell hee had not beene God for in the same place vers 16. it is said he was in forma Dei in the forme of God But the Apostle there fully proueth his humanity vers 8. by his obedience to the death of the Crosse for if he had not taken true flesh he could not haue died nor yet haue satisfied for our sinnes And Gal. 3.16 it is said the promises were made to Abraham and to his seed which seed is Christ and Gal. 4.4 When the fulnesse of time was come God sent his Sonne made of a woman which proueth that he was truely man Secondly heere is confuted the heresie of Arius who denieth the diuinity of Christ and saith that onely in his humaine nature hee had participated vnto him some diuine thing and some heauenly vertue For as wee see heere he must be Iehouah not an inferiour God or a God by participation of some diuine excellency but he must be Deus ex seipso filius à Patre a God of himselfe a Sonne by reference to his Father And so much is expressed by S. Paul Rom. 9.5 for when he saith hee was borne of the Iewes according to his flesh he implieth he had somewhat else he had not of them set downe in the words following Who is God blessed for euer which word God howsoeuer in the Scripture it be taken essentially and personally essentially when it signifieth the whole Trinity absolutely as Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God onely and Act. 4.19 It is better to obey God then man yet in this place it is spoken personally of the Sonne as it is also 1. Tim. 3.16 God is manifested in the flesh Now there be foure arguments to proue Christ God equall to the Father and to be Iehouah coeternall in the Godhead as the Father first by the property of of his person secondly by the property of his essence thirdly by the power of his diuine workes and fourthly by the diuine worship that is due vnto him For the first hee is proued to be God by his generation for he was begotten of God whereby is vnderstood that he was of the same substance with God euen as hee that is begotten of a man is a man and therefore hee is called the proper Sonne of God which he is not as he was conceiued of the holy Ghost for then Mary hath a part as he was borne of her And this is proued by the Scripture that when we call him the Sonne of God wee vnderstand that he is God as his Father is Iohn 10.20 I and my Father are all one and Ioh. 5.17 I worke the same works and after the same manner that my Father doeth meaning that he was God as well as he And so the Iewes vnderstood him speaking in their language which made them goe about to kil him For the second it is proued he is God by the property of his essence which standeth in these foure things first eternity secondly infinity to be in all places thirdly by his knowledge of all things fourthly by his omnipotency For the first that he is from all times is proued Reu. 1.17 I am that first and that last spoken by Christ himselfe and lest this should haue beene vnderstood of the futher he saith ver 18. and am aliue but I was dead For the second which is his infinity it is said in Ieremy that God filleth all places and Psalm 139.7 Whither shall I flie from thy presence If I goe into heauen thou art there if into the deepe thou art there also And Christ saith of himselfe Iohn 3.13 hee being on the earth No man ascendeth vp to heauen but he that came downe from heauen that sonne of man which is in heauen and in an other place he saith Where two or three be gathered together in my name I will be in the midst of them Math. 18.20 For the third which is his knowledge of all things Reu. 2.18 it is said that the Sonne of God hath eies like a flame of fire Ioh. 2.24.25 Math. 9.4 and verse 23. All Churches shall know that I am the searcher of the reines and hearts and in another place it is said hee durst not trust the Iewes because hee knew their hearts For the fourth which is his omnipotency it is proued by sundry examples in the Scripture that hee was able to raise vp the dead by his owne vertue and Iohn 5.17 he doeth the same works which his Father doeth and Phil. 3.21 Christ shall raise vp our bodies by the same power whereby he subdueth all things For the third which is the power of his diuine workes as himselfe saith Iohn 5.17 I doe the same workes my Father doth all which are of three sorts the first concerning the creation the second of miracles extraordinary the third that tend to the saluation of his church For the first of these it is said Iohn 1.3 by him all things were made and nothing was made without him and Col. 1.15.16.17 he is the inuisible forme of the father for whom and by whom all things were created and in him all things doe consist And likewise for sustaining them being made we haue Heb. 1.3 He beareth vp all things by his mighty word For the second that is for miracles he raised vp dead men euen as his Father did without any inuocation to any other which the Apostles did not but by calling on his name whether it were for raising the dead or dispossessing the diuell as I command thee in the name of Iesus to come forth Act. 16.18 but Christ saith of himselfe Iohn 11.25 I am the resurrection and the life and Iohn 10.37 I doe the workes of my father Now for the third which are the works he did for the saluation of his church they are principally siue first election Eph. 1.4 God hath elected vs in Christ and 1. Cor. 1.5 In all things we are made rich in Christ and Ioh. 3.17 through him we are saued and in another place he saith Iohn 13.18 I know whom I haue elected The second is vocation now to enlighten the heart of man must needs bee the worke of God Math. 16.17 as it is said in Saint Mat. flesh and
shall want the Rauens shall feed him yea hee will make the wicked an instrument to prouide for his chosen as Zedekiah to command that Ieremy be fed in the prison as long as there is any bread in the City Ier. 37.21 which ought to teach vs not to compasse any thing vnlawfully or to dig vs cisternes out of the policy of the flesh but to relie vpon the Lord who can and will send vs reliefe from the vttermost parts of the earth and when we least looke for it and when it shall be most welcome as he did heere to the mother of Iesus For the sixt generall circumstance namely for the oracle giuen these Wise-men to goe home another way learne first how the Lord disappoints the purposes of tyrants and wicked men which bend their bowes whet their swords and make their arrowes keene to pierce the sides of the godly Psal 7.14 that it fals out they are but concerued with vanity and trauell of iniquity and bring foorth a lie For when Herod meant to haue glutted his bloudy minde vpon the report of these Wise-men then are they of the Lord sent another way And when Act. 23.12 the Iewes had bound themselues with a curse that they would neither eate nor drinke till they had killed Paul then the Lord sent into the heart of the chiefe Captaine so to intrench him about with souldiers as he was kept safe from their fury So when Senaherib the King of Ashur had thought to haue swallowed vp Ierusalem Esay 36.33 then the Lord said and performed it that he should not so much as shoot an arrow nor cast a mount against it Thus doeth the Lord alwaies preuent the dangers intended against his children Psal 91.5.6 that neither the plague that flies by day nor the pestilence that walkes by night nor the snare of the hunter can once intrap them but his eares are open euen to the praiers of Ionas c. 2.2 to deliuer him out of the Whales belly and his eies are so bent vpon Daniel c. 6.22 as the Lions haue no power to hurt him but he is as a shadow against the parching heat and as a shield against the blustering cold which may inco●●age vs still to lay hands vpon him as our succour to behold him as our deliuerer to flie to him as our comforter to waite vpon him as our guide and to commit our soules vnto him as vnto the best keeper Secondly heere learne by the not returning of these Wisemen to Herod according as they were commanded that an oath or a vow taken and made against the bond of charity and tending to the hurt of our brother is not to be performed but being vndertaken vpon weakenesse is to be discharged vpon conscience and therefore rash was the vow of Iphtah Iudg. 11.31 to promise to the Lord without limitation a sacrifice of that he should first meet when he came home For though the Apostle Heb. 11.32 commendeth him for his worthy enterprise in deliuering the people yet by this rash vow and wicked performance of the same his victory was much defaced For we must make no haste with our mouthes to pronounce any thing but set a watch before our lippes that they may hedge in our tongues from speaking euill of our brethren and yet if we hap to slip in this wee must keepe in our hands from executing what vnaduisedly we vttered For first we are so farre from being bound to derect them when their liues or bodies are sought for as wee are to counsell them to hide them as Eliah 1. Kings 17.3 was counselled of the Lord to hide himselfe So did Ionathan 1. Sam. 20.42 make his fathers fury knowen to Dauid that hee might hide himselfe and therfore cursed be the Ziphims 1. Sam. 23.20 that promised Saul to deliuer Dauid into his hands and cursed be Irrijah Ier. 37.13 that staid Ieremy and brought him to the Princes as a fugitiue when hee was going to the land of Beniamin Secondly if they cannot hide themselues wee must doe it for them So did Obadiah 1. Kin. 18.13 in the court of Ahab hide a hundred Prophets from the cruelty of Iesabel So did Rahab Iosh 2.1 in great zeale to God and loue to his seruants hide the spies with the danger of her owne life So did the Disciples Act. 9.21 let downe Paul in a basket when his life was sought for by the Inquisition Thirdly if they be apprehended we must be so farre from accusing them as we must countenance and defend them to our powers So did Ebedmelech Ier. 38.9 when he came to the King in the gate and told him Ieremy had wrong to be imprisoned and so did Ionathan 1. Sam 20.32 defend Dauid against his owne father for it is not the commandement of a King that ought to make vs giue vp the sonnes of God into their hands nay the Lord himselfe in this place teacheth vs otherwise that would not suffer these Wise-men to obey Herod wherby the babe might haue beene exposed to his butchery Lastly in the departure of these Wise-men obserue that God both in the beginning and in the end will blesse all courses and actions enterprised and done in his feare and in a holy obedience as he did blesse and prosper the iourney of these Wise-men giuing them both a direction which way to come to Ierusalem and which way to goe from Bethlem which must make vs if we expect any blessed successe of that we vndertake not to begin but with the warrant of a good conscience nor to proceed but with a reuerent and resolute obedience as to the commandement of God and as aiming at the aduancement and promotion of his glory and the furtherance of his seruice MATH chap. 2. vers 13 14 15. verse 13 After their departure behold the Angell of the Lord appeareth to Ioseph in a dreame saying Arise and take the babe and his mother and flie into Aegypt and be there till I bring thee word for Herod will seeke the babe to kill him verse 14 So he arose and tooke the babe and his mother by night and departed into Aegypt verse 15 And was there vnto the death of Herod that the might bee fulfilled which is spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying Out of Aegypt haue I called my Sonne THE Euangelist as before hee shewed the glorious and blessed beginnings of our Sauiours birth who though borne in basenesse had testimony giuen him of his maiesty by the starre in heauen and in earth by the Wise-men of Persia so now he setteth downe a matter of great discomfort that this same babe euen from his cradle should begin to bee crucified in himselfe and his members Wherein generally there be three points set downe first the commandement of the Angell secondly the obedience of Ioseph thirdly the fulfilling of a prophesie In the commandement consider first the circumstance of the time that it was after the departure of the Wise-men how long after is not
commanding that which flesh and bloud most abhorreth and giueth no reason of it namely to bee the butcher to his owne sonne But heerein shall our condemnation be the more iust because the Lord hath giuen so many calles and yeelded so many reasons why we should flie from sinne and why we should turne to him not for feare of any bodily destruction by the hand of Herod but for feare of that spirituall thraldome wherein Satan laboureth to keepe our soules the Lord hauing discouered vnto vs early and late that hee is an old and a subtill enemie armed not onely with darts but euen with fiery darts to sting vs vnto damnation Let vs therefore with Ioseph embrace the sweet kindnesse of the Lord who mildly exhorteth vs to haste as it were out of Sodome and let vs with him resolue without any fleshly discourse with our selues to bee gone at the first call for his word is truth and the danger he foretelleth will follow Secondly heerein obserue that the Lord knoweth the secrets of mens hearts for Herod pretended adoring but intended the murthering of the Lord Iesus And his crafty and concealed purpose is heere named by the Angell that we may feare to deale doubly with our owne soules and may abhorre all hypocrisie because the Lord casteth his eie not only vpon our actions but watcheth euen ouer our very thoughts and will in time discouer them to our great shame This is it Dauid praieth against Psalm 32.3 that the Lord would free him from guile of spirit not to deceiue himselfe nor to dissemble his sinne for his dealing doubly with God and his soule in that his sinne with Barsheba had so distempered his conscience that vntill he had fully mastered his hypocrisie he could finde no rest in his bones Yet such is the simplicity or rather the frowardnesse of our harts that though wee know all things to bee naked and open before God we still runne on in hiding and cloaking of our sinnes which is as auncient as our first fathers fall who after the eating of the fruite forbidden had his eies opened indeed that is he then by experience perceiued and by checke of conscience saw what euill he came into and what good he had lost being conuinced of his owne misery he takes fig-leaues to couer his shame a small couer to hide it from the eies of God Beside marke his sottishnesse he couereth but his shame whereas the principall instruments of his wickednesse were his eies his eares and his taste and these were more filthy for the other part actuall had not sinned Now when he heard the voice of God the winde carying to his eare such a voice as he had not heard before then hee flieth among the trees thinking if fig-leaues would not serue yet the shadow of trees would sufficiently hide him alwaies when the Lord summons vs seeking shelter that wee may not come to reprehension And when this voice of the Lord could not bring him to a confession of his sinne nor pierce his heart enough the Lord calles him with his owne mouth Why does● thou hide thy selfe Marke now his wonderfull hypocrisie crept in so soone after his fall Adam assigneth two causes of the hiding of himselfe both false and omitteth the true cause that is his sinne the one because he heard God speake which is most false for he had heard him speake often before and that most comfortably The second cause because he was naked and yet this was no cause for it is said in the text they were both naked and were not ashamed And by the malignity of his nature in this hee secretly chargeth God to be the cause of his sinne who in his originall creation had made him naked whereas hee himselfe was the cause of the shame of his nakednesse God goeth further with him Hast thou not eaten of the fruit which I forb●● thee Now the Lord names the sinne and in his answer marke his hypocrisie and guile of spirit worse then before The woma● saith he which thou gauest●●e gaue me of the tree and I did eate As if he should say it was thine owne ordinance so as he impudently faceth out the matter and la●es it vpon his wife whereas it was his owne ambition and not her suggestion only that prouoked him to the sinne and in the whole story yee shall not finde one word of confession So the woman shee transfers from her selfe to the diuell the cause of her fall the Serpent indeed blew the coles but the fire was in her owne heart and she would not confesse that shee abused her selfe to bee seduced by the Serpent so as both of them felt the punishment of their sinne but would not iudge of the cause of it in eating the forbidden fruit By which examples as by the naming of Herods sinne conceiued but in heart and by the traducing forth of Adam for his sinne that brake foorth into his hands we must learne to hedge in our thoughts that they harbour not so much as an euill inclination for sinne is of a forward brood and will soone bee hatcht and though as it is Psalm 50.21 the Lord hold his peace that is forbeare with patience for a time whereby wee thinke him like our selues that is as in the Hebrew a good fellow like our selues yet saith the Lord I will lay thy sinne before thee that is as it signifieth in the Hebrew either set them in order before thee like dishes on the table or write them in a role and make thee reade them in despight Thirdly in that it is saied Herod will seeke to destroy him it sheweth what hearts the wicked beare toward the godly and what purpose they haue but that it shall bee frustrate for it is said Herod would kill him not he shall kill him Thus though we be all sheepe appointed to the slaughter in the malice of the enemy yet we are not so in the purpose of God For the Dragon Reu. 12 4. like a bloudy mid-wife standeth ready to deuoure the child whereof the Church should bee deliuered but the Lord prospereth her in her trauell and assumeth the child into heauen that he may be free from the cruelty of the beast Whereby we are taught euery day to take vp our crosse for if wee will liue godly in Christ there is a necessity of persecution and we must all suffer either the sword of Esau or the frumping of Ismael Gen 27.1 Gen. 2● 9 Act. 23.31 And this may be our comfort Herod may trauell with mischiefe but he shall neuer bring it foorth the Iewes may vow and sweare the death of Paul 1. King 17.5 but they shall be preuented Iesabel may make hue and crie after Eliah but the Lord himselfe shall hide him What did Herod thinke God to be an idoll or to haue cast off all care of his Sonne he knew by the Prophets that God had set him vp to raigne ouer his people and yet he vainly thinkes
the babes life verse 21 Then he rose vp and tooke the babe and his mother and came into the land of Israel verse 22 But when he heard that Archilaus did raigne in Iuda in stand of his father Herod he was afraid to goe thither yet after he was warned of God in a dreame he turned aside into the parts of Galiley verse 23 And went and dwelt in a citie called Nazareth that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the Prophets which was that he should be called a Nazarite NOW followeth the returne of Iesus out of Egypt after the cruelty executed by Herod vpon the children and the iudgement of God manifested on Herod striking him with death 〈◊〉 which words there bee foure generall points to be considered first the commandement of the Lord by the message of an Angell vnto Ioseph as the foster-fathe● of this babe whereby he is aduertised to returne hauing securitie giuen him that he need not doubt namely that Herod and the rest were dead which sought the life of Christ Secondly the obedience of Ioseph turning neither to the right hand nor to the left but as he staid till hee was called so he staied not when he was called Thirdly in what feare Ioseph stood finding suc● troubles in Iudaea and into what perturbation of minde he●● cast when he heard that Archilaus raigned knowing him to be Cockatrice hatched out of a Serpents egge and how the L●sent an Angell to releeue him in this perplexity Fourthly 〈◊〉 Ioseph minding no such matter by his turning into Galile th●● is an ancient Oracle fulfilled that this babe should bee call●● Nazarit Out of the first learne the faithfulnesse of Gods pro●●● that he is a God of his word for in this is his first prom●●● complished as appeareth now by the effect that he wou●● his sonne out of Egypt and that the same Angell that br●●● the heauy tidings vnto Ioseph of his flight from Bethle●● Egypt the same Angell brings him this glad tidings of 〈◊〉 turne from thence into the land of Israel And thus m●●● consider of all the promises of God as of his couenan● Noah Genes 9.11 that the world shall no more bee dro●● his promise to Israel that they shall be his chosen for ho● euer the Lord withdrawes his fauour from his saints for a●● yet at the last he will release them and in compassion will 〈◊〉 vpon their afflictions And well may the mountaines fall the course of nature change but Gods promise shall 〈◊〉 faile 1. Thes 5.24 for as Dauid saieth Psalme 32. though their ●●lations bee many yet the Lord will deliuer them out of And though this pregnant security of returning be not expresly giuen to euery prisoner as it was heere to Ioseph yet all that feare God haue this to comfort them that hee hath giuen his word hee will make them blessed Mat. 5.4 and that as hee hath drawne them to the profession of his name so hee will neuer leaue them till hee haue brought them to the possession of his glory and that whether they die in Egypt vnder the fornace of affliction or come forth of Egypt all shall worke for their saluation And this his wisedome hath not onely disposed of the generall end which is his glory but of the meanes also how hee will bring euery one of vs to his kingdome And though it bee thorow the riuers of waters what skilleth it if wee haue the crowne at last Iob. 5.18 The same hand that woundeth shall bind vp the wound againe and the same hand that smiteth shall heale and the same God that layed vs before in the ashes shall giue vs oile to make our faces cheerfull Psal 104.15 Act. 12.8 by a warrant from heauen discharge Peter of his chains when in the eie of his enemies he stands condemned and make Ioseph returne out of that barbarous nation Egypt wherein God was so much dishonored to exercise himselfe in the seruice of God in Galile And though wee haue no certaine promise of this yet let vs be affected like Dauid who wandring 2. Sam. 15.25 through the mountaines in great di●●●esse his griefe being increased because hee was banished by his owne sonne and supplanted by the subtilty of Achitophel his ●hiefe counsellor when he saw he could not haue the Arke with ●im bids it should be caried againe into Ierusalem saying If I ●aue found fauour in Gods sight he will bring me thither againe but if hee haue no delight in me let him doe as seemeth best to ●im for either in the time of our trouble we shall be gathered to God in peace Psal 56.13 or else he will let vs see his goodnesse in the light of the liuing Now the cause why it is safe for Ioseph to returne is because Herod is dead where we learne to our comfort that tyrants shal ●ot liue euer and when they perish and fall away then is the Church deliuered and comforted for this death of his was no doubt as cheerefull to Anna and Simeon at Ierusalem as to Ioseph and Mary in Egypt and Rachel that before was brought in weeping ouer the innocent bloud of the poore children as if the graue had felt such barbarous and beastly cruelty may now be thought to breake forth into exceeding ioy that such a rakehell was taken away as Herod was that sought the life of Christ How we ought to bee affected at the fall of the wicked appeareth Psalm 52. where although Doeg had got great authority with Saul so as he boasted in his power trusted in the strength of his malice his tongue being as the sharpe razor alwaies cutting or as the coales of iuniper alwaies raising contention against the Saints yet the Lord shall destroy him and though hee thought to haue built his neast in the heauens yet shall the Lord cast him downe and the righteous saith he shall see it and reioyce the wicked being blind neuer beholding the iudgement of God and they shall laugh not in reuenge but to see God mercy in taking part with the godly And not onely the righteous shall ioy at this but as Iob. 20 26. saith The tongue of the ●●per shall slay them that is the very wicked shall curse them 〈◊〉 Princes that want religion soone slip into tyranny and want●●● conscience to moderate their desires and affection to looke vpon their subiects they will soone resemble Rehoboam 1. King● 12.10 in making the yoake heauy and correcting them 〈◊〉 Scorpions Further from hence learne that God doth often so disappoint the plots and purposes of cruell tyrants that when they intend to execute others they die first themselues and sometime Haman Ester 7.10 is hanged on his owne gallowes th●● he prepared for Mordecai Herod had thought to haue kill●● Christ but he is faine to take the paines to die himselfe If M●ses come any more into Pharaohs sight he shall surely die Ex●● 10.28 Well Moses will see his face no more but
be satisfied and rest in so much as is reuealed so as wee are not curiously to enquire what Christ did while he liued a priuate man in Nazareth for since the holy Ghost hath not disclosed it we must be wise according to sobriety Rom. 11.3 as Saint Paul speaketh and not seeke to learne where the Lord hath not taught or to open where he hath shut Onely Saint Luke chap. 2.46 reports that about twelue yeeres of age he disputed with the Doctors in the temple and confounded them and astonied such as heard him And this is enough to comfort vs that so much is recorded of him as hath ransomed vs from the indignation of his Father Secondly in that it is said Iohn came and preached note that the first ministery of the new Testament was a preaching ministery so as whether we speake of men sent mediatly or immediatly from God alone or from God by men we shall neuer finde any ministery commanded or practised nor any messenger sent that was not qualified with gifts and graces from aboue to diuide the word and this is impregnable not to be resisted that no man ordinarily can hope or looke for the power of saluation without preaching which is euident Rom. 10.17 Faith commeth by hearing and hearing by the word preached and this preaching cannot be as some would haue it bare reading as appeareth 2. Tim. 4.2 Preach the word be instant improue rebuke exhort which importeth some further matter then literall reading Besides if reading should be preaching and sufficient to beget faith then hath not the Lord forsaken the Iewes nor the Turkes but they remaine still the Church of God for they haue the Bible and doe reade it howbeit none will say but these are out of the Church Againe when Esay and the rest of the Prophets cried out against blinde guides did they meane they could not reade And Paul when he saith Wo t● me if I preach not the Gospell 1. Cor. 9.16 doth he meane that this wo shall light vpon him if he reade not No for there be many weake Christians that must be fed with milke others with strong meat but the word read is of the same sound to all and as bread set before the hungry but they want strength in their teeth to breake it for it is fruitlesse to reade if wee vnderstand not and the Eunuch Act. 8.31 could liberally and religiously confesse hee could not doe it without a guide whereupon as the text saith vers 35. Philip preached vnto him Iesus So as it is a most determinate truth that there is no man lawfully and rightly called to the ministery that is not enabled with the grace of preaching and expounding the Scripture and euery place must labour to recouer if they haue lost or to obtaine if they want such a man as may goe before them in this wildernesse both in life and doctrine and diuide the word aright vnto them that they may be able to spie out the armour of their aduersary Heb. 4.12 and to preuent his assaults not but that the Lord extraordinarily may saue by bare reading yea and without reading for hee can knocke when he list and open when he list he can make corne to grow without sowing as he did in Hezechtahs time 2. King 19.29 For the second circumstance which is the place where hee preached namely in the wildernesse we learne that where the holy Ghost placeth a man there hee is to abide and to content himselfe not excepting against the rudenesse of the people as to be too grosse and base for their excellencies to instruct or against the place as to be too priuate or too vnwholesome and that their Pulpit must onely stand at Hierusalem and their anditorie must be great men Iohn Baptist we see how hee was content to exercise his message in a most solitary place the Wildernesse for this was by the assignation and appointment of the Lord. True it is Hierusalem had been more fit for state and celebritie and this might haue seemed more plausible to Iohn as a meanes whereby hee might sooner haue beene more famous but because the Lord had tied him to this place hee obediently keepeth it Much more are they then to bee reprehended that purchase liuings like farmes one for Summer another for Winter and not content with this put ouer their people to milchlesse nurses which as the Pope saith is like a harlot that puts forth her childe that she may the sooner returne to her lust Howbeit by the wildernesse he must not vnderstand a place not to be inhabited but onely a place not so well frequented as the fruitfull valleis of Iudaea Heere the Iesuites because wildernesse in the Greeke is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 note Iohn Baptist to be the father of the Hermites men whom they faine to bee deuoted to religion to bee familiar with the Gods and to haue the contemplation of heauenly things hauing their soules freed from passions and their bodies humbled in diuine seruice To which wee answer First if Iohn preached in a wildernesse and in a bare solitarie place as they imagine how is it that their hermitages are built neere great cities Secondly the calling of Iohn was extraordinarie being immediate from God and his office extraordinarie being to denounce the comming of Christ Admit he were an Hermite yet when he had run his race his office did cease Thirdly of all liues there is none so contrarie to the societie of man and to the communion of Saints as this of Hermites for first God in Adams integritie saw Gen. 2.22 he could not bee without a companion much lesse can we now And to this is answerable that of the Preacher Wo to him that is alone Eccles 4.10 and amongst the Philosophers he that abandoned company was esteemed either a god or a beast Secondly if any be qualified and beautified with any speciall good grace and vertue then ought hee to supply the wants of others and being such a candle as they would haue him he ought not to be hid vnder a bushell and if there be defect in him then ought his want to be supplied by the fulnesse of others Thirdly if neither he need others nor others want him which cannot be in this life yet if there were nothing else then the beholding of the beautie of the house of God and the comfort of the participation of the Sacraments Psal 84.3 as Dauid saith and wished rather to bee a sparrow that built her nest in the temple then to be banished from the congregation of the Saints saying Psal 42.1 That as the Hart braied for water so did he for the contemplation of the Arke wherein the Lord did sit This were sufficiently forcible to disswade from this vnsociable life besides that Iohn liued not alwaies heere but staied till he was called to the Court of Herod where he lost his head for his boldnesse Mat. 14.10 For the third point namely the summe of
were the nailes that fastned Christ to the Crosse wee must weepe and cry as one mourneth for his onely sonne and first borne and there must be such a compunction of the spirit as to crie with the hearers of Peter Act. 2.37 What shall we doe and with Dauid Psal 6.6 to wash our bed with teares and so to mourne as if we heard the Lord summoning vs to iudgement for our sinnes are not lighter then Dauids that our sorrow should be lesse then his And when we haue attained to this to be pierced to the soule with sorrow not for any discomforts in this life but for that we haue offended God and haue exercised our selues in this not as in a pang that shall perplex vs for the time but that wee haue daily ripped and laied our hearts naked before the Lord then from hence springeth forth the third fruit amendment of our sinnes and repentance for them which standeth in two parts first in the forsaking of the old sinne secondly in inclining to the contrary vertue for the repentance of an vlurer is not restitution only but with Zaccheus Luke 19.8 to restore and to be mercifull to the poore as before he was vnmercifull for drunkards not onely to leaue the combat of their cups but to forsake that company and to obserue all kind of abstinence whereby he may be more fit for his calling and in iudgement to condemne it and in affection to abhor it both in himselfe and others so as briefly to repent is not to be as thou hast bene but to be in Christian duties that thou hast not beene For the second point which is the reason of the exhortation by the word Kingdome of heauen vnderstand the manifestation of the Messias which as a ●●ately monarch shall rule in the hearts of men such as shall bee gathered by the Gospell with a wonderfull spirituall maiesty by his word and graces first leading them by the Gospell to haue their conuersation in heauen while they liue heere whereupon gather there is a double kingdome first of administratory prouidence which is that wherby the Lord ruleth ouer all euen the diuels secondly of royall preheminence in his church which is threefold first in their beginning by imperfect sanctification when men translated drawen from the power of sin are brought to the obedience of the Lord Iesus the second confirmed by perfect sanctification in the soules of the saints already departed the third fully to be accomplished when wee shall bee crowned of the Lord both in soule and body with perfect and perpetuall glory when God shall raigne in his Sonne his Sonne in his Church and his Church triumph in them both for euer Now this spirituall maiesty of Christ setling and inthronizing himselfe in the hearts of men is far more magnificent then any earthly throne prescribing vs lawes within which we are to bound our selues for in a kingdome there are foure things requisite first a King to gouerne secondly subiects to obey thirdly lawes to keepe in awe fourthly authority to execute them Now in this kingdome of light Christ is the King the faithfull be the subiects the word of God the lawes the power of the spirit the authority to execute them so that if by our subiection to the word the little flocke of Christ be increased the workes of the diuell bee destroied the enemies of God be subuerted and sinne bee subdued in the strength thereof then 〈◊〉 being gathered into this first kingdome which consisteth in the regeneration of the spirit may assuredly waite for the expectation of the other kingdome which standeth in the perfection 〈◊〉 all glory And we may the better vnderstand this by weighing the diuersity of Kingdomes which the diuell hath these being double first on earth secondly in hell On earth the reprobate being his subiects their corrupt affections their lawes 〈◊〉 their being giuen ouer of God to follow those wicked waies being the power to execute them So as in all those places b●● they neuer so well polished to the eye which haue not suffici●●● power of the Gospell to saue them ●or which haue it notat●●● or which haue it in a counterfet manner and measure or wh●●● hauing it sincerely Mat. 7.6 doe flie like dogs to rend them in peeces th●● bring it in these is the kingdome of darknesse set vp and sauing for the elects sake which shall bee taken out of them by the manifestation of Gods grace it were but a cage of filthy birds and the Synagogue of Satan For the second which is in hell it is that wherein vnmercifull Diues now lieth Luk. 16.24 and cannot haue so much refreshing as to coole his tongue and wherein after this life the wicked and impenitent shall bee tormented with endlesse paine The consideration whereof may driue vs to the meditation of the Lords bounty that hath prepared another place for vs if we follow the counsell of Iohn Baptist to amend our liues and to reforme our waies euen such a place wherein we shall behold and enioy the beauty of his glorie for euer Further obserue though Iohn Baptist willeth them to repent and amend yet it proueth no ability or naturall inclination in a man to doe this no more then when Christ saith Mat. 11.28.29 Come vnto me and take vp my yoake it argueth no power of our selues to come for so much himselfe setteth downe in another place where hee saith No man can come vnlesse my Father drawe him But the end of this is Iohn 6.44 not that the commandement is giuen to meet with our power to performe it but as Rom. 3.20 that thereby might come the knowledge of sinne for when wee see our weakenesse that we cannot doe it and our wretchednesse that we haue done the contrary as that where we should haue repented of our sins we haue rather increased them it leads vs to seeke grace in Christ pardon for the sinne and power of his spirit to forsake it So as in the commandement know thou oughtest to doe it in the correction of the Lord know thou hast not done it in not doing it know thy condemnation in praier and faith thou knowest where to haue it in thy conuersion thou knowest where thou hast receiued it and in thy perseuerance know by whom thou doest retaine it And albeit all commandements are of three sorts first such as command our first conuersion secondly that command our obedience to the Lord after our conuersion thirdly that command our perseuerance after wee haue begun obedience yet we shall see the strength of all these commeth from the Lord. For the first Zach. 1.3 there is a commandement giuen to turne to the Lord and Ioel 2.12 this is more particularly set downe that it must be a turning with all the heart But how shall this be wrought Obserue Ephraims speech to the Lord Ier. 31.18 Conuert thou me and I shall be conuerted So Deut. 10.16 Moses commandeth that the people should circumcise the
for the officers of the Church and the ministerie it is not onely ordained of God in generall but euery particular place and euery kind of office is set downe the Church being his owne house which he meant to beautifie with all necessarie furniture and none of this can be put downe neither may others be added 1. Cor. 12.28 and Ephes 4.11 For the Pastor may bee put downe by the Prince but not the Pastorship without maiming the bodie of Christ for then were it an humane constitution as is the other of Magistrates And therefore most grosse is it that women should be licenced to baptize which pertaineth onely to the office of a Minister and it is an idle answer to saie Quod fieri non debet factum valet that which should not be done is yet effectuall when it is done for this is a seale put into a wrong hand And if Vzziah 2. Sam. 6.7 being no Leuite was striken with sudden death for but touching the Arke of God which was readie to fall though his intent was good and if Vzziah 2. Chro. 26.20 was smitten with leprosie which he could neuer claw off to his death for burning incense to the Lord which onely pertained to the Priests to doe then may these intruders vpon the Lords possessions feare some plague to light on them for intermedling with these holy things and as well may they administer the Supper as Baptisme for they be seales of equall dignitie Howbeit if thou wilt be Iohn Baptist shew me these two things first a commission of thy calling secondly besides that thou must proue thy calling warranted shew me that thou commest rightly by it and that thou canst lawfully conuey it vnto thy selfe as Luk. 3.1 the spirit of the Lord came vpon Iohn For to haue this securitie is good in two respects first for the sasety of thine owne conscience in the day of affliction for thou knowest the iudgement of Christ concerning such as creepe in at the window they haue neither loue nor care of the flocke Ioh. 10.1 Therefore Ieremie chap. 1.6 cried O Lord I neuer thrust my selfe into this vnthankefull office but thou sentest me and thy wordwas as afire shut vp in my bones Secondly it is good to retaine the people in obedience when they shall see the Patent of thy calling whereas otherwise they will esteeme thee but as offering thy selfe vncalled and then thou maiest labour among them vnthanked For that Esay spake saying The voice of a crier in these words is set downe the execution of his office Where we learne that there are no names giuen to Ministers but they are words of emploiment and of labour For Preaching comes of Praeco to be a proclaimer in the market place so are they called trumpeters for that they must blow the siluer Trumpet of the Lords word that it may sound and ring in the eares of the people Criers Esa 4.11 Ezec. 34.10 1. Pet. 5.4 so as they must be no toong-tied fellowes for they are no fitter for this office then is a blinde man to be a Pilot. They must be shepheards which in Iuda were faine to watch all night to preserue their flockes from Wolues Watchmen who must take heed lest through their sloth the fort be surprized Embassadors hauing a great message to deliuer from the king of heauen Angels as Christ is called the Angell of the great couenant and Reuel 3. Write vnto the Augell that is 2. Tim. 2 1● 1. Cor. 3 1● the Minister of such a Church Workmen because they be builders of mens consciences Stewards to prouide meat for the Lords inheritance And as Iohn was to crie in his time so is there as great necessitie laid vpon vs to crie in this time according to the proportion of that grace we haue receiued In Pauls time 1. Cor. 9.16 it was a curse of damnation not to preach which cannot be appropriated to Paul himselfe it being a dutie specially required of all that labour in this vineyard And 2. Tim. 4.2 he adinreth Timothie to preach instantly so that as Iohn as the fore-runner and Timothie as an Euangelist were to preach with vehemencie so are wee as Pastors to crie the same crie for it neuer yet pierced deepe enough nor entred far enough to make men watchfull ouer their liues Now some are vnwoorthie the name of celers being scarce able to speake others are able but not willing to be criers bringing others a sleepe with their sloth vpon whom without repentance resteth a woe into lerable to beare and impossible to auoid Secondly obserue heere the agreement betweene the Prophet Esay and Iohn Baptist Iohn making that plaine was spoken obscurely by the Prophet Prepare yee the waies What is that Repent Let the high mountaines be brought low that is let pride of life be abated Let the low velleis be filled that is let despaire be reiected Let crocked things be made straight that is let the iudgement be rectified Let the rough waies be made smooth that is let thy swelling affections be changed Now this Allegorie vsed by the Prophet is borrowed from entertaining of Princes at their first coronation at which time all ordures bee clensed bridges repaired the streets pau●●l herbingers goe before to take vp lodging the trumpets sound the volley of shot goeth off and euery man is arraied in his best robes not that the Lord of glorie expecteth such a transitorie triumph for hee requireth but this amend thy life and a cleane heart is his best harbour a spirituall entertainment being fittest for a spirituall king Lastly in this crie of Iohns obserue his faithfulnesse he prepareth a way for the Lord not for himselfe he might haue liued farre better in respect of the world then in this base office and in this base place for his priestly birth being the sonne of Zachary Luk. 1.13 would haue affoorded him a richer portion yea he was offered to be Christ Ioh. 3.28 but he would none of it contenting himselfe with that share the Lord had allotted him and attending on that dutie the Lord had enioined him And thus ought all the Ministers of the word to doe not to preach for reward nor to crie for ambition though the herbinger must not lie without doores but they must looke for a recompence from the highest for the world is vnthankfull And it is not enough to preach but they must preach to the consciences of men that the Lord Iesus may enter in and not to gratifie the affections of men with the eloquence of the flesh and in swelling words that themselues may enter in For if they crie to get a name or renowne or preach in contention they may crie long enough they haue all they shall haue hauing that they sought for to bee caried in the mouthes and to bee had in admitation of the people For the fift circumstance which is his extraordinarie austeritie his attire and girdle was such as Eliah did weare 2. King
when there lurketh so much poison in your breasts when all your deuotion standeth in open ostentation Euen as Peter challenged Simon Magus Acts 8.23.24 saying Thou art in the gall of bitternesse repent if it be possible and pray that the thought of thine heart may be forgiuen thee Iohn denouncing also their fearefull estate as that the axe was now laied to the roote of the tree that faith in Christ and not the glory of comming of Abrahams race should saue them from hell fire In the words obserue two parts first how great the auditory was Secondly how he applied himselfe diuersly according to the diuers sorts of hearers which he had baptizing some confessing their sinnes and for the other first he sets downe a bitter reprehension calling them a brood of Serpents full of poison against the truth and frameth his speech as wondring how they durst come the Sadduces beleeuing no wrath to come the Pharises thinking by their merits to auoide it Secondly followeth a graue exhortation remouing away many blockes and hindrances wherwith they were blinded that they could not see the truth in Christ Thirdly he concludeth with a commination and threatning that they were to bee cut downe first because they were wicked in themselues secondly that there should double damnation fall vpon them if they refused Christ as the Prophet Malachy had foretold For the first obserue three causes of their concourse and frequent comming to Iohns ministery first because there had been a long surceasing of Prophesie Malachy being the last that spake by that extraordinary spirit and hearing this great newes and fame of Iohn they thought some great Prophet had beene raised vp and so were desirous to heare him Secondly they were moued to frequent him by the strangenesse of his teaching not teaching coldely and without power as the Pharises did but in vehemency of spirit and great feruency and earnestnesse to perswade to amendment of life Thirdly they resorted the rather vnto him as pricked forward by the extraordinary austerity of his life and diet Where learne that when God furnisheth a man with a commission and sealeth him a warrant of his calling and giueth him a booke as hee did to Ezechiel Ezech. 3.2.3 which hee must eate when the word of the Lord is as fire in the heart of Ieremy and when the purpose of the Lord is that it shall preuaile it cannot bee crossed by any wit or policy of man For great exceptions might haue beene taken against Iohn first preaching there was a Kingdome at hand it might haue come neere to treason sounding in the eares of Herod to the dispossessing of him and Princes are easily iealous of their greatnesse and will not haue any of their priuiledges called into question Secondly the Pharises knew they should be controuled and called into question for misleading and abusing the people so as no doubt they suggested to the King that it was dangerous for the State and touched the Crowne that he should whisper into the peoples eares of the comming of a new King labouring heereby to haue their flocking staied by Proclamation or other sharpe commandement as that also if this man were tolerated and winked at the great Fathers of the Church might bee exposed to great shame and obloquy Math. 23.13 as keeping the keyes of heauen and neither entering themselues nor suffering others to enter And againe it might be thought fantasticall that the people would leaue their trades to goe so farre to heare Iohn And for the Pharises themselues they as Luke 7.30 despised the counsell of God and were not baptized of him and Mat. 21.27 Christ telleth them they would neuer beleeue that Iohn came from heauen but laboured by all meanes to supplant him yet obserue that before he had executed and finished his message neither the power of Herod nor the craft of the Pharises could suppresse him Howbeit as we heare in this place of great flocking so Ioh. 5.35 it is said that he was at first as a burning lamp ●nd the people for a season reioyced in this light but after they grew secure and carelesse Where further note that in deposing ●dolatry and in the restitution of the Gospell how earnest men ●aue beene and the kingdome of God hath euen suffered violence for a time the people running in great multitudes to welcome it but after it is once established they grow to a Laodicean luke-warmth Reuel 3. neither hote nor cold as if it were hony that could cloy the stomacke therfore we must suspect the pregnancy and eager fits of them that runne so speedily at first to the Gospell for Iohn soone loseth many of his hearers some comming onely to behold him some to intrap him some to see what was in him that was so much renowmed and some to shake off the yoake of the law thinking to get greater liberty by the Gospell and few as Christ saith came of a good purpose and with honest hearts Further learne that this baptizing heere spoken of was of such as were of age for they were not receiued before they confessed their sinnes For this Sacrament being a seale of sinnes pardoned there must first be a confession of sinnes commited heere being a double couenant first God sealing vs a Charter of forgiuenesse in the bloud of Christ through the sanctification of his spirit secondly God requiring of vs first a confession for who hath hope to haue his debt released before it bee acknowledged or to be infranchised before hee thinkes himselfe bond or to bee washed before hee seeth himselfe vncleane secondly a belee●● that the bloud of Christ is of force and able to purge vs of all 〈◊〉 sinnes and thirdly a dedication of our selues to serue the Lor● in newnesse of life as testifying our thankefulnesse for so g●●ous a pardon Heere the Iesuits like Spiders that sucke vp poison gather vpon this confession of the people a confession of shrift that euery one should whisper his sinnes into the eares of the Priest before he can be pardoned which is most absurd for first the wo●● heere vsed beares not any secret confession being answerable 〈◊〉 that Leu. 16.21 where the Priest was to confesse all the people sins and to put them vpon the scape Goate which praefigu●● Christ secondly this of Iohns was a publike action and so 〈◊〉 place for priuate whispering thirdly the sacrament of Bap●●●● which he ministred required this confession for the profess●●● of faith is requisite in them that are of yeares and baptized 〈◊〉 we are not then first ingrafted into Christ when we are bapti●●●● but being already ingrafted we are then confirmed and therefore Act. 8.37 the Eunuch first confessed is faith and then was baptized by Philip. And Mar. 16.16 He that shall beleeue and be baptized shall be saued So as it was Iohns dutie as the minister of God that such as receiued this seale should giue testimony of their faith Fourthly Iohns giuing of generall plaisters argueth that
Psal 58.6 and Psal 59.6 So Paul calleth false teachers dogges snarling against the preaching of the truth sometime they are called swine to disgrace the filthinesse of mans nature sometime for their cruelty to Beares robbed of their whelpes sometimes for their boldnesse to Wolues as Mat. 10. Christ saith I send you as sheepe among Wolues which vers 16. he expounds to be among men sometime to Buls Psalm 22. The fat Buls of Basan seeke to deuoure me sometime to wild Boares as Dauid praieth O Lord set a hedge before thy vineyard for feare of wild Boares Psal 80.13 they are so full of rage sometime for the subtilty they are tearmed Foxes as Christ saith Gord that Fox speaking of Herod that I will preach to day and to morrow Luk. 13.32 sometime to horse-leaches Prou. 30.15 which haue two daughters that crie bring bring they are so full of cruelty so Psal 22. those that persecute and afflict the Church are called Vnicornes and heere the Pharisees are named Vipers that would eate and deuoure the Church and yet they would come to heare which made their sinne so much the heauier that they would come to so holy a place with so vnholy harts Thus do●● sinne strangely change vs and thus are men when the Lord h●●● giuen them ouer that they haue not the property of one beak but of all beasts for they are as malicious as Apes as enuious as Serpents and as venimous as Adders and yet they dare come and state the Lord in the face in his congregation hauing neuer communed with their hearts before This is that the Lord complaineth of Ier. 7.9 Will you steale and commit adultery auburne incense vnto Baal and come and stand before me in this house where my name is called vpon Nay the Lord abhorreth all such manner of worship and sacrifice as himselfe protesteth Esa 66. The sacrifice of a sheepe in this sort I esteeme as the bloud of a m●● For though the meanes to auoid the wrath to come be by conming to Gods ordinance of preaching yet to come with a pharisaicall heart doth but increase the vengeance and hasten thy destruction Now for the instruction Bring foorth therefore fruits c. Marke how plainly and precisely Iohn doth stand vpon an open declaration of repentance by amendement of life for euery one may say he meaneth well which if he doe he will not be ashamed to bring it foorth So as if we will be trees of righteousnesse engrafted into Christ we must shew foorth the fruits and not the leaues of righteousnesse by the operation of his spirit for thou canst not be one flesh with a harlot and one spirit with the Lord Iesus 1. Cor. 6. and charitie ought not to make mee beleeue him to be Christs sheepe that heareth not his voice So as marke that the Lord measureth the flowre of our hearts by the fruit of our lips for Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh and men may see our hearts through our hands Since then the Lord requireth that wee should approoue our faith to men and manifest our reconciliation with God in heauen by the works of loue shewed to men on earth let vs weigh our steppes that they may be straight watch ouer our words that they may be gracious passe nothing through our fingers that shall be entangled with the hurt of our neighbour but measure out our actions by the rule and square of religious loue And say not with your selues c. This is the second point before deliuered namely the godlie and graue exhortation Iohn made vnto these false hearted Pharisees and Sadduces containing two parts first what they should do Amend their liues Secondly what they should not doe that they should not presume vpon the externall priuiledge they had of being circumcised as the children of Abraham For this was the error of their iudgement that the whole seed of Abraham by generation of the flesh were within the couenant of grace to be saued And this is the obiection implied and answered by S. Paul Rom. 9.6.7 namely that if the Iewes were cast away then the word of the Lord was fallen away because it is said I will be thy God and the God of thy seed for euer which is confuted there by the Apostle by a distinction of a double seed There is an Israel in the couenant and an Israel out of the couenant So as there is a double election in the house of Israel first generall that all that came of the loines of Abraham should haue this dignity to be accounted within the couenant to partake of the word and seale of circumcision The second is a speciall election out of the former that out of the seed of Abraham one seed onely should be saued as it is Malach. 1.2 Is not Esau Iacobs brother yet haue I hated Esau and loued Iacob Whereby appeareth there is a speciall election out of the generall so as the grace of the couenant was offered to all Israel and all Israel differed from the vncircumcised nations yet the promise was effectuall onely in the elect Whereupon gather that if these Pharisees had not beene blinded and bereaued of the spirit of truth they would neuer haue stood vpon any externall priuiledge for the promise being made indefinitely had beene fulfilled if ten onely had beene saued for the Scripture goeth onely thus farre I will be the God of thy seed not of all thy seed And this the Apostle proueth in the place before thus If all the Iewes were within the compasse of the promise and the couenant of grace by vertue of the outward seale of cutting the foreskin of the flesh then it was necessary the first borne should bee and that he might challenge this assoone as any to be saued But this was not so for in Ismael the eldest was not the promise but in Isaac shall thy seed be called so as God declared his purpose by distinguishing them at first when the couenant was but new made while Abraham himselfe liued and when he had but two sonnes And lest this particular example might bee excepted against by reason of the disparagement in their birth Israel being borne of the bond-woman Take saith the Apostle Esau borne of the same wombe begot of the same father yea borne at the same time almost and if there were any prerogatiue it was Esaus for he was eldest both of them circumcised yet did not the promise pertaine to Esau as is proued by two testimonies of Scripture Gen. 25 23. The elder shall serue the yonger and Mal. 1.2 I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau his seruitude in the flesh being ioyned with the hatred of God vpon his soule So as the difference betweene the children of Abraham according to the flesh onely and according to the flesh and spirit also standeth in these two things first in Gods secret purpose whom to glorifie and whom to reiect secondly in the effects of faith and
yeeld to Eliah and not Eliah to Ahab There is execrable cruelty committed on the infants of Bethlem who is the cause of it not Christ but Herod and Christ may not giue place to Herod though it cost neuer so much bloud Secondly obserue where it is said hee will make his floore cleane that all that refuse the Gospell whatsoeuer they pretend they are but chaffe For the Pharisees heere which had the chiefest places in the Church they pretend to haue the Oracles and the temple to bee descended from the Patriarks and to liue after the law of Moses yet they are but chaffe which fill the floore being onely puffed vp with pride and hauing no sound graine in them for when Christ is offered they persecute him and crie Hang him as an enemy to the law of Moses Mat. 27.22 so as their intention was good yet was that no excuse for then they that persecuted the Prophets and crucified the Lord of glory should be blamelesse for they had a zeale but not according to knowledge Now if they that stand onely in defence of that God himselfe ordained and like not that any of that should be abrogated by the Gospell are but chaffe what shall they be that seeke to maintain their owne traditions against both law and Gospell and stand in defence of many corruptions in the Church of God and yet perswade the Prince that all is well what can they bee but chaffe of the worst sort And will purge his floore c. Here may be demanded what the cause is why there is so much chaffe in our Church and so little good graine for it is strange to see with what belli-gods it is stuffed how disguised men be in pride and how excessiue in vsury which bee not as S. Peter calleth them spots 2. Pet. 2.13 but as the biles and vlcers of Egypt yea so much biting gaine raigneth among vs as hath made no more friendship betweene man and man then betweene Cain and Abel such whoredome as the Sunne cannot hide it nor the earth beare it but doth crie for vengeance and their children baptized that are woorse then Sodomites which as Saint Iude saith be now in hell To this we answer that the cause is first the want of fanning in many places of the land the people hauing onely a man set ouer them that can giue no one word to separate but onely reade bare Seruice and stinted praier which can make no manifest separation but of open recusants so as the people may well be quiet because the word neuer blowes among them and till the winde come the chaffe and the wheat are mixt together for can the wild asse bray if he hath grasse or the oxe low if he hath fodder or an hypocrite shew himselfe till his heart be discouered Iob 6.5 and his vizard taken off All the plagues of Egypt which made Pharaohs heart to relent somewhat and yet in the end so hardened it as he vtterly contemned the Lords hand are not like to this fanne of the word which searcheth euery part of a man and bloweth him away vnlesse he be substantially rooted in religion A second cause of this is that where there is fanning yet it hath no power they huckstering and tempering of it for their owne fame and for Balac●s offer of preferment and not preaching to the conscience the crucified word of the Lord they preach of contention to adde affliction to others and not in sinceritie and meeknesse to bring consolation to others and also when they speake it is but verball for their liues doe really confute the words of their mouth A third cause why there is such a mixture in this floore is because although it be truely preached yet men may do what they list and the maiestie of the word is not hedged in with discipline for if men liue wickedly vnlesse the law of man take them by the heele and restraine them the word of God cannot determine so as except there be some speciall good inclination in some few for the multitude preaching doth no good For he must be a good scholler that will learne without discipling he a sound christian that will refraine from sinne by bare preaching The Word indeed is the speciall farme for this floore but then is it most powerfull if it haue discipline to strengthen it and authority to countenance it What doe you meane the floore must be purged in this life and that there must be nothing but wheat in the Church of God Why this cannot bee till that great day of separation when euery thing shall be put in his peculiar place To this wee answer that there is a double purging the one in this life the other after this life the one particular the other vniuersall That purging that may and ought to be is first the separating of all such as doe not offer themselues Secondly of them that offer themselues but are vnworthy as if a man can make no conscience to profit by the word or can render no found account of his faith when he hath beene long taught but like an idle and slothfull professor is still to be trained vp in the rudiments of religion it is no reason to let him be in this floore without feeling some smart for his negligence neither is it fit to giue the holy things of the Lords Supper vnto him for hee deserues not the crummes that fall from his table If a man be obstinate and will not promise reformation his child ought not to be receiued to Baptisme vnlesse hee confesse his sinne or giue witnesse to the Church by others which must doe it and then they ought to take the child from his father and not to returne him to his parents againe where his education shall bee corrupt For others that doe professe if after they breake out into any enormous sinne such chaffe must bee separate for no vncleane liuer must be in the Church but either hee must submit himselfe and then he is none such or hee must be cut off if he continue senslesse in his sinne for it is the house of God which harboureth none but such as heare his voice And such as these ought not to be admitted to the Sacrament though they present and offer themselues neuer so much for hee that permits them sinneth three waies first in respect of Gods giuing the bread of children vnto dogges and making the house of God as a common Inne where he may buy any thing for mony but he must doe as Iehoiada the Priest did 2. Chron. 23.19 not suffer any vncleane man to enter or to set his foot within the Temple Secondly as hee must not doe it in respect of God and his owne conscience so neither in respect of the party himselfe for seeing himselfe debarred and disfranchised from the citie of God he would bee ashamed and this his abdication would bring him to humility 1. Cor. 5.2 2. Thess 3.14 whereby his soule
might be saued and he would stand abashed that hee that should bee a Christian should bee separate from Christians and thrust out of the Church out of which there is no saluation whereas now seeing that his sinne doth not separate him from the communion of the Saints it brings him a sleepe in it and hardly he comes to repentance Thirdly he sinneth against the Church in admitting such a one for who would suffer a leprous man to lie with a child and this animateth and emboldeneth others to sinne by the sight of his impunity and many are infected by the scab of such a one Did God in the law abhorre lepers and must no man that touched a dead carkase partake of the Passeouer a moneth after and shall not whoredome and such like vncleannesse bee a cause to barre men from the Supper of the Lord Paul said plainely 1. Cor. 5.7 Purge out the old leauen speaking of him that had committed incest comparing the Paschall lambe to the Gospell the seauen daies wherein it was eaten to the whole course of our liues the house where it was eaten to the Church the lumpe to the multitude the leauen to maliciousnesse and filthinesse the vnleauened to the children of God so as they must separate all that are leauened in malice or wickednesse that not onely euery peculiar man may be blamelesse but all the Church may be cleane comming to so holy a place For since we are all partakers of that immaculate Lambe that is slaine Christ Iesus we must cast both out of our selues and out of our houses and congregations all impurity Wherefore let not thy hand bee in sacriledge to permit such a one it is in thy power to giue and answer the church at thy perill thou must whatsoeuer the law of the Magistrate is for no man may command thee to sinne but according to the rule giuen to Timothy speaking of vnable men to goe before the people in life and doctrine 1. Tim. 5.22 Lay not thou saith Paul thy hands on him It will be said this was an easie matter in the Apostles time when they had the keyes of the Church and the power in their hands to cut off the incestuous person and when the Gospell was but newly entred and but stept as it were within the threshould but now men are not so easily corrigible as they were then being now more growen and sturdy in sinne then before We answer that if the censures of the church were so duly executed when there was no Christian magistrate to countenance and protect them much more might they bee so now when they might haue the sword also to assist them And if they had fewer offences when they had lesse meanes to purge them for they could but separate from the congregation only and then if they would they might haue returned againe to the infidels far greater beuty might be looked for now if the gouernors of the church had not some great mist before them And if the churches of Iudaea and Galile as we may see Acts 2. 3. did multiply exceedingly hauing the magistrate not against them though not with them much more might they flourish now hauing the Christian law of the Magistrate binding their bodies whose consciences should be bound by the censures of the Church But is it no true Church where this exact cleansing is not And is it not the table of the Lord because some strangers besides children are receiued and is the whole lumpe infected by a little leauen God forbid onely we say the leauen ought to be separate and the incestuous man ought to be cast out for they tha● eate the Passeouer must haue none come to it that hath eaten leauen and if wee ought not to eate with him that is haue no familiatity with him much lesse ought he to bee admitted by the Minister but if he be yet to thy conscience that art a worthy receiuer it is a sacrament If Saul be in the Tabernacle I little doubt but Dauid will with all his heart wish to pray with him And was Zacharie any whit polluted by praying and scrificing with the filthy Pharises or Annaes praiers lesse auailable because many swine entred into the Temple The church saith Paul hath no such custome to be contentious 1. Cor. 11.16 but if it be yet it remains a Church stil And to resolue this point to whom spake Iohn in this place but to the Church of God for as yet there was no separation of the wheate from the chaffe but afterward they prooued sworne enemies to Christ and it was Moses chaire though they sate in it and the people were commanded to heare them Was not the church of Iuda the floore of the Lord though the Pharises taught false and corrupt doctrine that Gods name was not taken in vaine vnlesse men were openly forsworne Mat. 5.33 and though the high Priests were aduanced by simony Christ himselfe saith it was and laboreth onely to remoue these errors and to reduce euery thing to the purity of his Fathers institution But now with vs since this long venting of the word of God hath beene with so litle profit and that the Pharises stand so close about the Princes mouth as that she can hardly breath in the wholsome aire of the truth what hope is there of a better separation but the fanne of fiery triall that if wind will not doe it persecution may doe it for the drosse that cannot be scattered by blasts must be consumed with burning Now when the floore is cleane and swept within the Church then is there another cleansing out of the Church which is either particular or vniuersall particular when good or bad men die and such as they die such they shall continue for the tree that is fallen there it lieth Vniuersall at the last day when all things shall be complete and perfect when not onely the chaffe shall bee blowne away but euen the tares that is secret hypocrites shal be cut vp by the Angels for open offenders should be cut off heere by the word and discipline Further in that it is said Some shall be gathered into the Lords garner obserue that it is a most detestable opinion to thinke that all shall be saued and that damnation is preached but for fashion to containe men in some obedience For let the scripture be burnt if this be true and let Belzebub bee saued if all shall bee saued and let Iudas come foorth of hell if none shall goe thither Nay our owne consciences doe adiorne and summon vs to thinke of a generall iudgement and Iudas owne heart condemning him caused him to hang himselfe Mat. 27.5 The Lords house must be fully furnished and in all such houses as S. Paul speaketh there must be vessels of honour and dishonor 2. Tim. 2.20 some prepared to glory some to destruction for in that hee is willing to shew his wrath Rom. 9.23 appeareth that it is his will some should bee damned
Neither is this contrary to that God willeth not the death of a sinner for the difference is this God willeth not the confusion simply of any man as a thing wherein he delighteth but he willeth it as it is his iustice and what greater or better iustice can there be then to bee glorified in the condemnation of some that haue deserued it and he must be no more vnwillingly iust then vnwillingly mercifull Further learne that euen in this life the godly are gathered to heauen and so of the wicked that though they liue yet they are in hell So S. Iohn saith he that beleeueth is already passed to life Iohn 5.24 and Heb. 12.22 we are gathered already to the Patriarks and to the soules of iust and perfect men through hope and wee are as sure to haue that we hope for as we are of this we haue already namely the pledge of Gods spirit and Ephes 2. vs he hath gathered to the celesticall places vnder hope speaking as if it were already done though the reall gathering shal be at the latter day On the other side of the wicked it is said by the same spirit He that beleueth not is already damned the words are fearefull but it is so set downe to expresse the certainty of it not but that hee that is not beloued Ose 2.23 may be beloued and he that is not vnder mercy 1. Pet. 2.10 may obtaine mercy But looke in what state a man is in the Church in the same shall hee be after this life for whatsoeuer is bound on earth is bound in heauen and they that bee not bound heere being priuy hypocrites are notwithstanding bound in heauen and shall be so in hell also For the last which is vnquenchable fire thereby is meant the condemnation prepared for the reprobate not that wee must imagine there is any naturall fire there for first this fire can not pierce the soules of men nor the spirits of diuels and the paine must extend both to soule and body Secondly it is no more naturall fire then it is a bodily worme spoken of in the Gospell which shall gnaw the hearts and consciences of the damned Mark 9.44 Thirdly in Esay 30.33 it is said there was a great lake prepared for Kings with fire of much wood and it is absurd to thinke there is any wood there and a riuer of brimstone burning by the breath of the Lord which is not to bee intended of materiall brimstone but it is set out by such termes to expresse the vnspeakable torment of it not to be comprehended much lesse to be endured for the torment of fire and brimstone euen to flesh and bloud are strange and terrible therefore these speeches are vsed to conuey to our vnderstanding what we could not before conceiue So it is said in the Gospell that they shall bee bound hand and foot not that there be any bonds or chaines there Mat. 22.13 but the meaning only is that they are the prisoners of the Lord for euer neuer to be released but to be restrained from all libertie wherby they might in any sort be eased Againe hell fire is called Gehenna or Topheth which was a litle place where the Israelites did sacrifice their children in fire to the Diuels this being taken for the torment of the reprobate Now this torment is expressed two waies first in the extremitie of it secondly in the permanencie of it The first two waies First by that they shall feele both in soule and body secondly by that they shall lose both of them expressed 2. Thess 1.9 they shall be separated from the power of his presence and bound in chaines in euerlasting darknesse The greatnesse of this torment is expressed two waies first it shall be vniuersall in all parts and it is most fearfull in this life to be pained in euery part of the body at one time Secondly the particular torment th● euery one in hell shall feele as that Princes shall be tormented like Princes euery one according to the sinnes that he wrought in his body Mat. 10.15 as it is said in the Gospell It shall bee easier for Sodome then for them and yet they be in hell already for the damnation of Belzebub shall be the greatest and then of them that sinned against the holy Ghost and none of these shall haue so much as a drop of water to coole their toongues but they shall continually bee blaspheming of God for the which they shall continually be tormented And though this shall be great and grieuous such as they cannot yet they must abide yet shall it be a farre greater hell vnto them to thinke they haue lost heauen seeing Gods children to reioice that their persecutors be now plagued and that God is so auenged of them for their sakes For the second which is the endlesnesse of this torment it is a fire that shall neuer go out nor the flames wherof can neuer be●bated If there were but as many yeeres to endure it as there be grasse piles on earth or starres in heauen the conscience might somewhat through hope bee eased because at length it should cease but the end thereof cannot be imagined and this word neuer is fearefull Let this therefore teach vs rightly to embrace the Gospell that we may be wheate in this earthly floore of the Lord to the end we may be gathered into his heauenly garner MATH Chap. 3. vers 13 14 15 16 17. verse 13 Then cam Iesus from Galile to Iordan vnto Iohn to he baptized of him verse 14 But Iohn earnestly put him backe saying I haue neede to be baptized of thee and comest thou to me verse 15 Then Iesus answering said to him Let be now for thus it becommeth vs to fulfill all righteousnesse so hee suffered him verse 16 And Iesus when he was baptized came straite out of the water and lo the heauens were opened vnto him and Iohn saw the Spirit of God descending like a Diue and lighting on him verse 17 And lo a voice came from heauen saying This is my beloloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased NOW the Euangelist proceedeth to shew now Iohn exercised part of his Ministery euen toward the Messias himselfe and setteth downe how after Christ had liued long in Nazareth containing himselfe in Iosephs house till his heauenly father should consecrate him and call him forth to the great worke of the Ministery and of maiestie hee being now of thirty yeeres of age commeth to Iohn and requireth to be baptized in as much as he appearing in the flesh of man was to ioyne himselfe to them that confessed their sinnes Iohn by reuelation perceiuing that he was the Lord for they neuer met before this being in wise dome prouided of the Lord lest it might haue seemed a compact betweene them two to cosen the world refuseth to do it and put him backe earnestly acknowledging Christs excellency and his owne vnworthinesse In this bewraying the error of his
all graces and so truely is it sealed vnto our soules that wee eate Christ though not corporally By the word we eate the flesh of Christ continually by faith and in the Sacrament it is only more plaine that we eate it because two senses are satisfied by it the eare hearing the word and the eie seeing the bread For the third testimony There comes a voice from heau●● by the former miracles the Lord onely prouided for the witnesse of the eye but now hee prouides for the eare also Where wee learne the wonderfull wisedome and loue of God to exercise all our senses that thereby we might be brought to a certaine perswasion of these mysteries Among the Philosophers is a great question whether the sense of sight or of hearing bee better in it selfe True it is that sight in nature is more excellent as for celerity and quickenesse so for perspicuity and sharpnesse but if the doubt bee made of the profit of these two then hearing excelleth for we can see nothing but that is visible but many more things are to be heard of which thereby may be conueied to the heart to iudge of so the largenesse of hearing is greater in the profit Besides no man profiteth by sight vnlesse he vnderstand it by hearing for which cause it pleased God to apply both in the mystery of saluation that thereby we might be sure of it we neuer doubting of that we both see and heare Faith commeth by hearing Rom. 10.17 and the holy Ghost bores the care Psal 40. and leades the eye to satisfie it setting before it in Baptisme water and in the Supper bread and wine so as it is prouided that the hearing might haue the word and the eye the sacraments Now in the voice consider what it doth expresse namely th● that flesh which stood there before them was the naturall sonne of God and this he is two waies first as he is the sonne of God by nature of the eternall substance of his Father howbeit let no man thinke fleshly of the matter for hee departed with no substance nor had any manner of change secondly as he was the sonne of Mary not by nature or adoption for then there had beene a time when he was not the Sonne of God but by personall vnion the man Christ being neuer a person by it selfe vntill it was personally vnited to the Godhead so as he was borne the sonne of God not by nature for he was of the nature of his mother so Mary is said to bee the mother of God not that she brought forth God but brought foorth that man that was God and this in respect onely of the personall vnion In that it is said my welbeloued Sonne vnderstand that all lo●● comes from him that comes to vs and wee are beloued only for Christs sake as Ch●●● 〈…〉 praieth Iohn 17. I beseech thee good Father that as 〈…〉 ●●●d me so thou wilt loue them and giue them the same glory thou guest me This is God required to doe by his owne Sonne who can a●ke nothing shall be denied him With the same loue loue thou them as I am in them so are they in me And this ministreth singular consolation that when we consider Christ to be beloued we may withall remember that with the same loue the Lord loueth his natural son with the same doth he loue vs that are adopted so as when he beholds the beauty of his sonne in whose fore-head as in a golden plate are written all our names hee turneth from our filthinesse and embraceth vs as his owne sonne and the Father and sonne are all one in desire The Lord grant we may be able to comprehend it and be willing to entertaine it that this loue may constraine vs to loue him againe otherwise it brings foorth no effectuall fruit in vs. Againe since the Father tooke all delight in this Sonne Christ Iesus and that the whole Trinity was heere at his baptizing and that the father saith in another place Sonne I will glorifie thee still Iohn 12.28 let vs learne to magnifie the Lord Iesus let him bee our ioy for who is there in heauen or earth in whom wee can set our delight better then on him which thus pleaseth the father Let vs loue him that God loueth he is the only Priest to sacrifice for vs the only Aduocate to plead for vs the onely Prophet to instruct vs the only King to gouerne vs the onely shield to defend vs we shall be made rich through his grace only righteous through his obedience onely safe through his protection onely and saued through his mediation only He that glorifies the Sonne glorifies God and he that resteth vnder the wings of the Sonne shroudeth himselfe vnder the shadow of the most high then accursed be that man or that religion that holds Christ but as the chiefe Sauior and would haue other helpes ioyned to him for we must only haue Christ and wholly Christ and assure ourselues to bee ●aued onely in him our praiers to bee heard onely through him and our wounds to be healed onely by the sight of him and to what end should we ioyne others with him since all are beloued onely for him That there is a Trinity appe●● 〈…〉 ●●er in this place a● namely the fathers voice 〈…〉 ●esence in the Done and Christ manifested and 〈…〉 flesh and these bee seuerall yet but on●●e ho●●● and all and euery of them is le●●●uah It is a mystery only to be adored yet in some measure i● to be kno●en that they should be three persons yet but one God as for example take three men Paul Iames and Iohn heere be three persons and three men but it is not so in God for in things that bee created wee must consider they are onely limited therefore the same nature in Iohn is not the same natu●●● singular and in specie that is in Paul because they bee not onely two persons but diuided in quantity and that particular nature in particular that is in Iohn cannot be in Paul So for Angels take Raphael Gabriel and Michael supposing him to bee a created Angell the same particular angelicall nature that is 〈◊〉 one is not in another for they be not onely two persons of Angels but two natures not distinct but separate Now in God 〈◊〉 make a common essence which is Iehouah wherein doth cons●●● three Elohims yet are they not three Iehouahs because his nature is simple and the selfe same is in them all and the same being is in God the Father that is in the Sonne and is tota to 〈◊〉 in euery one and the same in Vnity And if wee will haue th●● Gods then must we make a substance diuided which cannot be but there is onely a distinction Angels are separate one from another and are one without another but in the Trinity it is otherwise The Sonne is in the Father the holy Ghost in the●● both and they are all one The Sunne
Christ taketh nothing but they pamper themselues with wines and iunkets which be as irritable to lust as flesh therefore theirs is but a mock-fast for Christ fasted not sparingly only but abstained altogether Againe if they will imitate Christ they must doe it in the wildernes and if it be a commandement because Christ did it why did they it not in Eliah and Moses time If neuer any Iew proposed to himselfe this imitation of him that fasted not but by the power of God much lesse should we in this follow Christ that fasted by his owne power Againe Christ fasted that Satan might take him in his infirmity but must we doe so to expose our selues the more to the opportunity of his temptation God forbid Yet if we will know what fasting is we say it is a necessary exercise which our owne calamities doe require and the desolations of other churches doe exact and hee that taketh in more then will well fit him to the duties of his calling hath surfeited Now in the fasting of the Papists we note foure faults first they destroy the worke of fasting in the bodily exercise which they doe two waies first by fulnesse secondly by delicacy Secondly there is a meere deceit and cosinge in their fasting for with fasting should bee ioyned praier extraordinary both for feruency and continuance which by humbling our selues in this sort doth set an edge vpon them which otherwise would crawle vpon the ground and were not able to pierce the heauens for if fasting had not this vse but that the action would be complete by outward abstinenc onely then were it a brutish fast for the beasts of Niniueh Ionah 2. fasted in this son But they doe notioyne praier extraordinary that the body may be crucified and the minde humbled that thus it might bee as grindstone to set an edge on their supplications therefore theirs is no fast Thirdly all fasting is for the obtaining of some grace or preuenting of some danger but they haue inioyned and appointed set daies to fast on as if the Physition should say such a day he would let bloud not regarding the present state of the patient wherein hee should rather shew himselfe a Prophet the●● a Physition euen so doe the Papists deale in their fasts either verie ignorantly or prophetically Fourthly where fasting is appointed to humble vs and to confesse our vilenesse by feeling our wants and to powre foorth our soules vnto God they thinke that hauing pleased him by the bare action of abstinence they may doe what they list or else puffed vp with a Pharisaicall pride of merit thinking they haue deserued at Gods hand they will match their almes with the very bloud of Christ which is most sacrilegious Of these the Apostle speaketh 1. Tim. 4.3 that In the latter times there shall come men which shall forbid marriage and meates speaking in hypocrisie c. Yea say they this is meant of grosse heretikes which should condemne mariage and meates altogether as the Marcionists that said men and women were coupled for generation of the diuell This is absurd for these men speake it not in hypocrisie but in open blasphemy Yea say they but we doe not hold that meates are vncleane in themselues And yet they forbid it to all men at some times and to some men at all times Againe a Doctor of theirs in approbation of their Lent saith that flesh was accursed in the floud of Noah but so was not fish Yea but God forbad the tree in Paradise and certaine meates vnder the Law yet were they not vnlceane We answer that which God hath made lawfull what man can interdict And as it is Antichristian to command what God forbids so is it to forbid what God commands The meates in the Law were forbidden for significations and they cease so for meates offered to Idols for they are abolished and a man may now eate meate offered to the diuell for hee cannot pollute it for euery creature of God is good and nothing ought to be refused if it be receiued with thanksgiuing 1. Tim. 44. Againe if they speake of the quantitie and qualitie it were somewhat but they doe not so but all fish and no flesh is lawfull Then came to him the tempter c. This is the first speciall temptation wherewith Christ was assaulted as if Satan should haue said there hath been a voice heard from the aire that thou art the son of God and there hath beene a visible cutting asunder of the heauens by a miracle and by this thou perswadest thy selfe that thou art so and thou hast fasted heere forty daies which makes thee highly conceited of thy self yet is it not possible thou shouldst be Gods Sonne for thou wantest not onely the hoast of heauen to wait vpon thee which were worthy the glory of the Sonne of God but thou art so distressed as thou wantest a peece of bread for the strength of thy body therefore it is vnlike thou shouldest be Gods child for then hee would more respect thee then now he doth to leaue thee thus destitute of comfort Well I know thine infirmity to bee such as bread thou must haue and being heere where is none but wild beasts and where no present supply can be made bestirre thy selfe and be thine owne puruetor and because without bread thou canst not liue bee thou Gods Sonne or no looke how thou canst furnish thy selfe whether by miracle or without miracle Now heere in this desert there is nothing but stones which if thou beest such a one as thou woldest be thought to be thou canst change their naturall hardnesse and make them fit for nourishment Therefore to satisfie me and for thine owne good let me see at thy commandement their nature to bee altered and transubstantiate Our Sauiour Christ being well furnished and appointed not onely with the graces of the spirit but with the word of God doth not answer whether he be Gods Sonne or no or whether he can turne those stones into bread or no but hee ouerthroweth the ground of his reason that it is not impossible man should liue without bread as if he should say Thou giuest the power of sustenance to a peece of bread but my Father is able by his power and prouidence to fustaine me though I haue no bread and not onely my selfe an thus perswaded being Gods sonne but euen flesh and bloud may be able to liue without food if so be it be Gods pleasure therefore there is no cause why I should worke a miracle since not only I but many other may bee relieued without these ordinary meanes And that thou maiest know I haue truth on my side I speake nothing but scripture for Deut. 8.3 it is said Therefore hee humbled thee and made thee hungry that hee might teach th●● that man liueth not by bread onely but by euery word that proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord doeth a man liue And as for thee thou goest about to tempt
a miracle it shall more conueniently be spoken of in Christs reply Now for the second generall point which is the beating ●●ke of the temptation we must consider two parts first that ●●●ulseth him by alleaging Scripture secondly the place alle●●● what sense it is to be applied For the first vnderstand that out Sauiour Christ might many waies haue ouercome him yea by the power of his God●ead he could haue confounded him without an answer but it leased him to fight with the weapons of flesh and bloud that we by his exampl might learn out of the word as our of a school of defence to beate backe Sathan Where obserue that Christ alleaging Scripture as an instrument to repulse the diuell that there is no sword of the spirit to driue away temptations so sure as the Word of God being most necessary for this purpose Where two sorts of men are iustly reproued first they that wring this weapon out of the peoples hands secondly they that cast it from them that are content themselues to abide the blowes but another must weare the sword For the first they are the prelates of Rome who in the time that heauen was made a haire-cloth and Antichrist set foot on the Lords throne shut vp the booke of God into the rusty scabberd of Bishops houses where it was kept vnder the bondage of the Clergy vpon paine of excommunication charging the lay people not to meddle with it as if it had beene the readiest weapon to haue cut their throats But since the Sonne of righteousnesse appeared the Gospell shining in mens hearts they being ashamed of this and being perswaded in common equitie that men were not to bee kept from it they haue published one part of the word the new Testament not say they vpon any absolute necessitie but to auoid corruptions that may g●●● by reading other translations they knowing the people 〈◊〉 would not bee made such fooles and babes as they were 〈◊〉 there was a generall mistouer the whole world But wee doe stand vpon the absolute necessity of hauing the word common because the danger is common that thereby is to bee auoided and this for two causes first it is necessary that euery one should trie the spirits so as he must vnderstand more then hee is taught by the mouth of that spirit which should bee tried therefore they must haue the booke of God according as the men of Beroea had Act. 17.11 giuing no further credite to Pauls Sermons then they were consonant to the written word Secondly euery Christian is a souldier and in his baptisme hath taken presse money of Christ to serue him in this field of the world against the Diuell our sworne enemy who worketh outwardly by the glittering shewes of the earth inwardly by the desires of flesh and bloud adding his owne suggestions to both these Now the weapons to encounter him are the word as the sword and faith as the shield And euery one being tempted in his owne person the more to offend the enemy and the better to defend himselfe and since our owne sinnes shall be required at our owne hands we must euery one take his sword out of the Lords armory that we may resist in person as we are striken in person And it was a fearefull thing for them to put out the kandle while the people were smitten and a shamefull thing to put out their right eye that they might not discerne their euill wares they vttered them for their good money Oh say they it is good they should haue them to keepe them from the infection of other impressions as if the reading of the Scriptures by the people were Physicke when men are sicke and not meate when they bee whole Treacle to driue out poison and not preseruatiues to keepe from it as if it had strength to put the enemy to flight and none to hinder his approach the contrarie whereof is rather true For if it bee meete to giue light to the simple when the heauens are ouercast with the mist and cloudes of heresie it is much more forcible to shew the way when they are not so clouded Oh but there be many hard matters in the Scripture past the common reach So there bee many easie within their reach for the Lord hath so tempered them as some be easie to prouide against penurious stomackes and some difficult to preuent fastidious lothsomnesse Yea as in the most champion and plaine ground of the booke of the Scripture there be some mysteries as hillockes higher then the rest so in the greatest and steepest hill thereof there is footing whereby with labour and trauell we may come to that height of it where wee may see and discouer so much of the land of Canaan and the kingdome of heauen as our places doe require Therefore it is well said that the Scriptures are like a floud wherein the lambe may wade and the Elephant swim for the plainer places are to be digested with comfort and the hidden treasure to be digged out by praier Therefore saith Christ Mat. 23.14 Let him that readeth consider c. Oh but this taketh away the glorie of the Church when euery one may controule his master and breedeth heresies when euery one may maintaine by this his owne opinion Yea but it is good that euery one shold know the truth that they may follow the steppes of their teachers but in the way of truth and if because some haue beene seduced all should be depriued of this blessing then away with preaching for it is the sauour of death to many 2. Cor. 2.16 and with the Sacraments for many feede of Christs flesh but to choke them to damnation and then away also with Christ himselfe for to many Luk. 2.34 he is a rocke of offence to rush their bones to perdition And if Heretikes haue abused the Scripture this is a reason to restore it that they may be againe conuinced by Scripture And if it be sufficient to say the diuell alleaged Scripture therefore hide it from the people we say to this Christ vsed nothing but Scripture therefore let them haue it for it is no reason to take away the thing for the abuse of the thing no more then that a lambe should cast off his fleece because the Lion sometime weareth it or that because one abuseth is sword therefore none should weare any weapon For howsoeuer some mad-men-or quarrellers in the campemay abuse them to their owne and others destruction yet the Law of not bearing sword in the field will neuer bee iust And to meet with such an euill by taking away the good is ●●e vnto those vnskilfull Physitians that rid their Patients of no disease vnlesse they take their liues from them Yea but it is dangerous medling Why then put out the candle lest it burne the house Oh but put not kniues into childrens hands But there is no such comparison in the Scripture it is indeed compared with a sword in the
Whereas wee so looke to the meanes on earth as if there came no blessing from heauen when as wee should in duty first lift vp our eies to the Highest that hee would adde his fauour to our labour for hee can make vs aswell want in abundance as abound in scarcity the dearest things a man can haue either for possession as lands or for affection as wife in the middest of persecution if the crosse be sanctified vnto vs by the hand of God in the want of both these we shall haue an hundred fold more that is more peace of conscienc more contentation of minde and more sweet tast of the Lords loue then wee should haue had auoiding this persecution in an hundred wiues or an hundred times more liuing We being now assured of Gods fauour and being but pilgrims on earth wee shall see Christ in the heauens with his armes displaied to imbrace vs a ioy surpassing all that worldly men can conceiue in all their superstuities this but tickling the sense and nothing contenting the mind the other wrapping vp the soule in assurance of full and perfect blessednesse For the second point which is the affirmatiue that is for the blessing of God and the way he hath deemed to bee most fit to maintaine our selues that is his word we are to learne a double vse the first speciall the second generall Speciall in the matter heere expressed for sustenance that it is the Lord who doth maintaine vs so as his blessing must be vpon the bread else it can affoord no nourishment Whereby are to be reproued those inordinate men that go vnto their meates like horses to prouinder and like hogges gathering the mast and neuer looking vp to the tree whence it falleth They should consider first that the bread vnlesse it be sanctified 1. Tim. 4.4.5 by God is none of theirs for we lost all the benefite of Gods creatures in the fall of Adam and can no way challenge them but by restitution in Christ and this must be by praier Secondly if wee would thinke that God could take away the strength from bread wee would feed more religiously let vs know that he may rot the graine in the clods or blast it in the eare he may restraine the latter raine that it may not yeeld in the barne vermine may consume it if it passe the flaile the mill the ouen yet in thy mouth it may be rats-bane and turne to poison or in thy stomacke it may become the gall of Aspes for why shouldest thou feede on Gods creatures not acknowledging them whence they come Set before thee the example registred in the Scripture Numb 11.33 qua●les came loth somely out of their nostrels and they died with meate in their mouthes hauing fat bodies and leane soules Therefore let vs pray that the food wee take may doe vs good otherwise wee haue no more right to vse them then the Israelites had to the quailes And as God can turne stones into bread so can hee also turne bread into stones for it is not the nature of the thing it selfe simply to nourish without a blessing but wine which doth comfort the weake the Lord can make it to the wicked a cup onely to infatuate them that their account may be the greater for vsurping the Lords creatures And this is the reason why wee are taught in the Lords praier to pray that our daily bread may be giuen vs thereby acknowledging first God to bee the giuer secondly that we haue trust that through our praiers onely it shall bee giuen vs thirdly that not onely the creatures themselues but the blessing vpon them comes from God for though our garments were as costly as the Ephod of Aron yet without his blessing they were nothing For so miserable is our condition that we are not able to li●● one moment without the speciall prouidence of God For the second vse which is generall as it is true in bread so is it in all other things that without the blessing of God they can auaile vs nothing when wee are sicke wee seeke like Asa 2. Chron. 16.12 to the Physitian fixing our eies and fastening our hope only vpon this outward meanes whereas if the Lord hath called for a plague vpon vs what man can cure it vnlesse the Lord doe reuoke it So is it for warres men may prouide money munition and horses for the day of battell but victory commeth of the Lord for it is he that amazeth the rider Prou. 2● 31 and asswageth the fury of the enemy and blindeth the wisedome of the Princes of the world that they shall faile in policy And how commeth it to passe saith the Prophet Hagge 1.6 that ye sow much and reape little weare much apparell and it doth not warme you drinke and your thirst is not quenched but onely that the Lord hath blowne vpon it hath blassed and not blessed it Therefore let vs learne to remooue this fault that by the secret infidelity of our hearts wee doe not attribute too much to the meanes for the Lord can feed without bread but bread cannot nourish without his blessing The vse then of this doctrine is double first for our indgements secondly for our affections For the first first we are heereby warranted to pray for things necessary for this life as Math. 7. it is said Aske and it shall be giuen you secondly that the expectation of these things from God and not to haue them without him is an outward profession that he is onely the distributer of them and therefore will giue to euery one his appointed portion Wee may not therefore simply pray for these outward and earthly things but with limitation first that they be subiect to the pleasure of God secondly that they be desired not for themselues but to glorifie God and to profit our neighbour Thirdly heere is confuted the error of the heathen that worshipped Ceres as the God of corn and Bacchus as the God of wine which howsoeuer they were the first inuenters of grinding the one and pressing the other yet both the Corne and the Grape come from God For the second which concerneth our affections heere is first reproued couetousnesse in getting the venome of all vertue and is contrary to the keeping of a good conscience before God and desiring of a good name before men making vs deafe to the noise of infamy For if the hand of God containeth all and the blessing of God continueth all to what end shall we tempt him or bury our selues as it were in the graues of lust Secondly is reprehended our vnthankefulnesse in vsing Gods blessings pasting by them with our eies shut and glorifying the meanes aboue the matter Thirdly our diffidence lest we should lose or want them for the fountaine of all riches streaming from the Lord hee can conuey vnto vs whole riuers of them and measure them vnto vs without stint if we depend vpon his prouidence Then the Diuell tooke him vp into the holy
the Tower of Babell should haue beene erected to them and as easie it is to pull God out of his throne as to disgrace vs further then he permits for our saluation is as sure as his owne seate and as stedfast as if our selues had beene in heauen and seene it written with Gods owne singer Yea we shall stand like mount Sion Psal 125.1 and not a feather of a bird much more not the haire of our head nor the hem of our garment shall bee touched or fall without his appointment Wherefore Sathan sinneth against the holy Ghost in labouring to seduce the faithfull whom he knoweth he cannot stirre and when he knoweth wee cannot fall finally since the Angels haue charge ouer vs and cannot but be faithful keepers of that is committed to them And heerein may we embrace the riches of the Lords mercy who when his owne prouidence might be sufficient to secure vs of our safety yet to releeue our infirmity and to support our weaknesse hath giuen vs the gard of heauen to wait vpon vs as if one that were to passe the seas should not onely haue the letters of the Prince for his safe conduct but should be guarded with his royall Nany to assure vs that doing that we doe by the warrant of his word we shall neither be persecuted nor molested but so far as he may haue glory by it and we reape comfort For the third wherein he doth falsifie the text alleaged and this he doth two waies first by wronging the words secondly by wresting the sense for the Psalm 91.11 is He hath giuen his Angels charge to keepe thee in thy waies so as the promise is made with a limitation that hee keepe him in his waies Now from the pinnacle of the temple to fall downe is not the way but hee leaueth out the demonstration of the truth thy waies that is those waies that bee prescribed as from the Temple to come downe by the staires by this meanes dealing fraudulently leauing out the principall Secondly consider the wresting of the sense for where this was spoken that Christ should depend vpon his Fathers prouidence walking in his waies hee laboureth to secure him generally of the same prouidence though he were out of the way heereby to ouerthrow him Now as hee dealt with the head so hee doth with the members for pretending Gods protection hee laboureth to bring men to destruction For predestination hee will tell a man Esau was hated and Iacob beloued before they had done either good or euill Mal. 1.3 that it is not in the willer nor in the runner neither in the affection Phil. 2.13 nor in the action which hee doth onely to make vs rest in the prouidence of Gods predestination without hauing regard to our conuersation whereas heereby we ought the more to bee induced to get as many testimonies as wee can to prooue that this election pertaineth to vs and not to waite till grace should distill by diuine influence or to make the decree of God a meanes of our security to liue as we list as that being elected we cannot perish and being appointed to be damned we cannot auoid it So for Iustification hee will suggest Wee are saued by the bloud of Christ onely and when wee haue done all we are vnprofitable seruants the more we sinne the more grace aboundeth Rom. 6.1 and God hath most glory in pardoning most offences Whereas being elected we worke well not to recompence the goodnesse of God but to shew our thankfulnesse And there is no promise where the commandement is not kept for this is to be performed on our part else God is discharged on his part for being out of our waies the diuell may take vs as vagabonds the protection of the Lord not extending to vs in this course And thus doth Sathan almost labour to peruert all the Scripture that he may finde vs straying out of our Fathers house as to suggest that the Sabbath is made for man therefore hee will labour to make vs worke on this day Mark 2.27 But let vs not giue eare to him for this leadeth out of the way So when it is said He that laboureth not for his house 2. Tim. 5.8 is worse then an infidell if hee abuse any of vs by this to couet after riches away with it for it is said in another place Couetousnesse is the root of all euill and the desire of riches is simply vnlawfull 1. Tim. 6.9 for by this he falleth into many snares It is written againe Thou shalt not tempt c. This is the second generall part namely the repulse of the temptation wherein consider two parts first that Christ answereth againe by Scripture secondly in what sense the place is alleaged For the first we may obserue and see it is no disgrace nor disparagement to the Scripture to proceed from Sathan nor any occasion to make vs leaue our hold for Christ answereth againe and striketh with the same weapon wherewith he was stricken shewing vs that it is lawfull to vse a text well against them that doe abuse a text and if Christs example be our president then wee may alleage Scripture against depraued Scripture For the Bee may gather hony on the same stalke that the spider doth poison And though a swashbuckler kill a man with his weapon yet a souldier may lawfully knit a sword to his side and though there be many piracies committed on the sea yet may the merchants trafficke or though some surfet by gluttony yet may others vse their temperate diet And if the diuell change himselfe into an Angell of light shall therefore the Angels lose their light Or shall Paul therfore deny himselfe to be a preacher of saluation because the Pythonite Act. 16.17 spake it Or because Caiphas by the spirit of the diuell Ioh. 11.50 said one should die for the sinnes of the people must we not therfore beleeue it And though Numb 22. an inchanter wished that his soule might die the death of the righteous yet is it a praier fit to be vsed of all Christians though hee sold his soule for gold For saith hee Numb 24.17 a starre shall come out of Iuda a true speech of a false spirit And heere the diuels owne mouth protesteth that Gods prouidence reacheth ouer his children which we may beleeue with comfort though it proceed from his lying lippes For the second which is the sense of the words heerein Christ doth plainely shew that hee abused the place before alleaged because he inforced the promise contrary to the commandement mandement making it absolute where it was but conditionall that the Lord would protect him if he kept him in his waies and for him to expect the promise if he went astray were meerely to tempt God so as the diuell by concealing that part did poison and adulterate the Scripture Now wee must obserue that God is tempted by man two waies first when we doubt of his power vsing
Act. 22.13 was suddenly called to preach and Amos from his sheephooke Amos 7.15 to prophesie let vs know that the Lord that called them had power to giue them gifts in a moment for he hath the fulnesse of the holy Ghost to dispose at his pleasure but men that want this power must trie the gifts first and the Church must allow of none vnlesse they be perswaded he be such a one that if Christ were on the earth he would giue his consent Thirdly learne by the word Fishermen that the ministery is no easie nor idle but a laborious office wherein they must alwaies be either casting their nets or mending their nets or sorting the fish trauelling sore both night and day As Peter could answer Christ Luk. 5.5 We haue trauelled sore all night and caught nothing so as they that thinke much to take this paines are not fit for this calling For the fourth which is their obedience it sheweth that it was more than the voice of a man that thus wrought vpon their conscience for he secretly and inuisibly spake vnto their hearts by his spirit and he might as easily haue drawen Caiaphas as Cephas if it had beene his pleasure for he mollifieth the soule on the sudden and can open the doores of death with the least breath of his mouth Secondly learne that no affection or delight ought to make vs to forsake or driue vs from following Christ in our calling These men we see left their father whom they loued and their nets by which they liued and 1. King 19.19 Elizeus left his oxen and made haste after Eliah had cast his mantle on him And Mat. 8.21 one whom Christ called would but haue done his duty to haue buried his father and was not permitted Howbeit heere men must beware of two extremities first that they frame not excuses but willingly leaue their nets when they are called Secondly that they leaue them not till they be called and leaue into the Ministery of themselues being as fit for it as a blind man to be a painter For the last point which is the effect that came of Christs teaching it is said The multitude followed him where learne that when the Gospell is fresh and greene and first flourisheth men are very greedy to taste of it but if it continue long among them euen Manna proueth horsebread and men are soone weary of it For so it fell out with this people against whom Mat. 11.23 Christ denounceth a fearefull iudgement for their vnbeliefe making them worse than Tyrus and Sydon which were before condemned Whereby we may see how dangerous it is to grow cold in our first loue of the truth and to suspect them that in a preposterous zeale will seeme to run after Christ bragging with the yoong man in the Gospell that they haue kept the commandements and yet know not the least point of charity how to distribute to the poore LVKE 11. vers 24 25 26. verse 24 When the vncleane spirit is gone out of a man hee walketh through dry places seeking rest and when he findeth none he saith I will returne to my house whence I came out verse 25 And when he commeth he s●●deth it swept and garnished verse 26 Then goeth he and taketh seuen other spirits worse than himselfe and they enter in and dwell there so the last state of that man is worse than the first IN this text there bee fiue points to bee obserued first what is meant by the going out of the spirit secondly his behauiour after his departure namely that there is a restlesse desire in Sathan to reenter into his former habitation thirdly the fit opportunities hee obserueth for the regaining of his possession there be two set downe in this place hee staieth till he finds it swept and garnished and a third is expressed Mat. 12.44 he findeth it empty that is deuoid of all cares quiet and swept of the grace of God and yet notably garnished with hypocrisie fourthly the vehement inuasion he maketh at his re-entry that hee will so garrison and lay such munition about the house as he will neuer be dispossessed againe for he bringeth seuen spirits worse than himselfe the Lord doth so darken the hart of that man that was for a while enlightned fiftly the lamentable and damnable estate of such a man his end is worse than his beginning For the first how Sathan is said to be cast out wee must vnderstand so cast out as he still continueth in for if he were once vtterly dispossessed then could he neuer returne againe And this kind of casting out heere meant is matched with diuers other places of the Scripture as Heb. 6.5 It is impossible that they which haue tasted of the good word of God if they fall away should be renued againe And Heb. 10.25 If wee sinne willingly after we haue receiued the knowledge of truth there remaines no more satisfaction or sacrifice for sinne and 2. Pet. 2.21 It had beene better neuer to haue knowen the way of truth than after they haue knowen it to turne from it If a man then may know the truth and yet forsake it bee enlightned and yet fall away be sanctified and yet crucifie Christ againe by the same reason may Sathan be cast out of a man and yet continue in that man For when these tearmes be thus vsed either of casting out Sathan or of letting in the truth and yet by the sequel of the words vsed by the spirit we see the ruine of such men set downe wee must neuer take it for any effectuall working of the spirit of God but onely of the greatnesse of the Lords mercy offered them in the outward meanes of their saluation namely in the word and Sacraments to cast out Sathan according as it is said Luk. 10.11 The kingdome of God was come neere them but not at them or as Luk. 17.21 Christ speaking to the Pharisies saith The kingdome of God is within you as if he should haue said Ye looke about for a Messias as if hee were absent but he is euen among you and in the middest of you though not by spirituall operation So that obserue hence that as often as we partake of any of the Lords graces it is to cast out Sathan and to root out his kingdome in vs though we receiue it not with that effect it should haue and therfore though that for a time Sathan seemeth to haue lost his dominion in vs yet by the vnright receiuing of Gods blessings and the vnreuerent vsing of them he doth still continue in vs. Againe so far Sathan may be said to be cast out of a man and yet he a reprobate as the spirit may be said to bee quenched in a man and yet he a Christian and that the comfort of a Christian may be much abated and sore eclipsed if we will not beleeue it Dauid may wel perswade vs Psal 32.4 who found such leannesse and emptinesse of grace in him as if
for Sathan But we must loath and detest all manner of sinne with an absolute and perfect hatred or else his weapon is not taken away for what praise is it for a rich man not to fall to theft a sin whereto he is not tempted or for a begger not to slip into briberie a sinne that is kept farre from him or what is it to keepe thy body cleane from filthinesse if thou defile thy tongue with euill speeches It was nothing for Herod to heare Iohn Baptist gladly Mar. 6.20 since he kept his bed polluted with incest for the sweetnesse of this sinne did so possesse him Matth. 14.3 that for Herodias the strumpets sake Iohn was bound and beheaded A liuely example wee haue of this 2. King 5.18 in Naamun the Syrian who vowed vnto the Prophet to worship none but the Lord heere was Sathan cast out of him in good measure Yet when I go saith he with my master into the house of Rimmon and hee leaneth on my hand and I likewise bow there the Lord bee mercifull vnto mee in this point So he will continue still an example of idolatry in the seruice of a superstitious master which is a sufficient hold for Sathan to get into his soule againe and euen in this did hee carry a weapon to kill himselfe for Christ died not that wee should die to some sinnes but to all sinnes and if wee make exception of any one we are guilty of all as S. Iames saith chap. 2.10 if we faile in any one point we are guilty of all and therefore Ezech. 18.21 the wicked are admonished to returne from all their sinnes and to walke in all the waies of the Lord In omnibus sine exceptions quamuis non in omnibus cum impletione in all without exception though in all we cannot with perfection for repentance must not be to some dead workes but to all with a full purpose of our heart to renounce all sinnes I speake not of infirmities but of presumptuous and crying sinnes that we do not blesse our soules in any such sinne for if we doe it is Sathans ladder to clime vp againe though for a time he be cast downe that is neither so forcibly felt nor so visibly seene in thee Fourthly obserue that Sathan in policy will bee content not to shew himselfe alwaies in thee as he is but sometime euen to transforme himselfe into an Angell of light and hee will not grudge at thee though thou remit somewhat of thine enormities and grosse sinnes so he may retaine somewhat to himselfe hee cares not to be cast out of thee in idolatry as that thou shalt not bow thy knee to Baal so hee may bee kept in thee by Atheisme to say with the wicked in thy heart There is no God He was well pleased that Iudas should become a Disciple of Christ learne of Christ follow Christ so couetousnesse might so possesse him as to sell his master for money Mat. 26.15 Hee cared not though Abimelech entertained Abraham the seruant of God Gen. 20.14 with the best of his land when he had once drawne him to consent to adultery with Sara his wife A most liuely example of this we haue in the bodily Pharaoh of Egypt Exo. 8. Moses had a commission from God that hee should goe three daies iourney with the children of Israel to celebrate a feast vnto the Lord. Go saith Pharaoh vers 25. but first doe sacrifice vnto the Lord in this land vers 26. No faith Moses that were abhomination to sacrifice beasts to them that worship beasts vers 28. Go saith Pharaoh but not farre vers 27. No saith Moses I must goe three daies iourney Chap. 10.11 Go saith Pharaoh ye and the men but leaue the children No saith Moses vers 8. yong and old must goe vers 24. Goe all but leaue your cattell and your sheepe behind you somewhat 〈◊〉 will crosse the commandement of the Lord vers 25. No we must haue all for we know not what neede we shall haue of sacrifice Thus we see how Sathan deales in sinne by conditions and limitations for hee will suffer himselfe to be dislodged of ignorance by a generall knowledge of the truth and if hee cannot send forth error to corrupt our knowledge if he can but worke by worldlinesse to prophaine it he will not greatly care for this shall bee as a cable rope to pull him in againe We must therefore learne to incounter this spirituall Pharaoh if wee haue a desire to goe out of Egypt that is to be deliuered from eternall darknesse with Moses his courage● and if we gaine by our courage as Moses did let vs follow on stoutly to keepe the ground and commandement which is set before vs. Sathan will if hee can retaine some sinne and make thee relish some iniquitie but if thou preserue any works of the flesh for him thou cariest a most fearefull weapon to destroy thy selfe Againe since so much of the vncleane spirit may be said to be gone out of a man as admitteth any participation of the spirit of God and since euen the reprobate may partake of all the graces of God Heb. 6.5 sauing one grace to bee made new creatures lest this doctrine not rightly vnderstood might shake the foundation of some weake Christians wee will set downe certaine markes to distinguish betweene Sathans going out of Christians and out of the reprobate since the holy Ghost may bee and is communicated euen to them The difference then standeth in two points for the graces of God in these be different first in the measure of grace being greater in the elect than in the reprobate secondly in the obedience and working whereby the elect shew themselues conformable to the grace and so doe not the reprobate Now there be two kind of graces wherein the measure is greater in the children of God than in the reprobate and yet the first of these is really communicated to the wicked that is the enlightning of the minde for the reprobate are indeed enlightned in the knowledge of God as Heb. 6.5 do taste of the good word of God but not effectually as the elect do And though the Lord doth not regard the quantity but the substance of this enlightning so as sometimes there may be more light in a reprobate than in the childe of God yet for the most part the elect haue receiued a greater measure of this grace For the reprobate as Mark. 8.24 be like the blinde man who at the first putting on of Christ his hands saw men like trees that is a shape aduanced vpright but the elect as vers 25. are like vnto him when the Lord had laid his hands the second time vpon him for then he saw cleerely a farre off So as the hypocrite may goe thus farre hauing not a vaine but a vanishing light No● enim gratia vana est sed euanescem to walke for a time in the light as Iohn 12.35 Yet a little while the light
felt most suggestions and yet hath resisted them may assure himselfe that Sathan is cast out for flesh and bloud cannot bee cured but by temptations as Paul witnesseth of the Churches of Macedon 2. Corinthians 8.2 whose ioy abounded in their great triall of affliction And as the same Apostle testifieth of himselfe 2. Corinthians 12.7 lest he should be exalted aboue measure the messenger of Satan was sent to buffet him which though Satan doth it of malice yet the Lord doth it to humble vs for if he should at once cast Satan out of vs then the wild beasts of pride and of not feeling the infirmities of our brethren would deuoure vs euen as Deut. 7.22 the Canaanites were rooted out but by little and little from among the Israelites lest the beasts of the field should haue increased vpon them I will returne c. and when he commeth he findeth c. This is the third point set downe in this parable that setteth foorth the enlightning of hypocrites to their most iust condemnation namely the meanes and the fit occasion Sathan espieth to surprise againe that man out of whom he was cast There be two set down here the first swept the second garnished and the third is supplied Mat. 12.44 He findeth him empty that is void of the graces of God and fitter to receiue Sathan after his enlightning then he was before It is a metaphor or translated speech taken from trauellers or guests that desire to be entertained with clenlinesse For so it is with Satan that when thou art filled with all bitternesse gall of heart and hypocrisie then art thou a clean habitation for him and the fuller of sinnes the fairer and fitter not that Sathan doth delight in cleanlinesse but that thou art to him most neate and handsome when there is in thee the superfluitie of all wickednesse and when thou art become a most excellent and perfect hypocrite as th●● thou canst pray at Church cousin at home pretend kindnesse to thy brother and yet eat him thorow with vsury the sweeter dwelling is there for Sathan in thee Hence let vs obserue for our comfort that this cannot bee meant of the true children of God for it is impossible that Sathan can find the soule of a Christian empty that is depriued and void of the whole grace of God For an abatement of the spirit of God must not be taken for an emptinesse as Ephes 4.30 it is said the spirit may be grieued and 1. Thess 5.19 it is said it may be quenched and many of the graces of God in his children may be empty that is there may bee no feeling of them for a time but the chosen of God cannot cleane fall away not the image of God be cleane defaced in them for then could they not be brought home againe vnlesse Christ should suffer againe which cannot be Heb. 10.10 Againe in the greatest sins when men haue deserued the greatest punishments yet we presume they haue some of the good spirit in them as Paul did of the incestuous person 1. Cor. 5.5 whom he willed to be separated for a time that his flesh might be tamed which sheweth the Apostle had some hope he had the spirit for if all in him had beene flesh then should he not haue beene excommunicate by the censures of the Church but wholly cut off from the Church and accursed Dauid Psal 51. praieth to haue a cleane heart created in him vers 10.11 not to haue it taken away which shewes he felt it therefore hee praieth not there for the holy Ghost simply but for some graces of the holy Ghost as for a stable spirit that he fall not againe for that grace he had not before and after he praieth Lord giue me peace so as hee had not the peace of conscience before and when he saith Take not thy spirit from me that is though his sinne had deserued it euen as wee praie Lord be not farre from vs not that the Lord is at any time absent from his Saints but that wee feele it not at that time so comfortablie as wee desire so Dauid praieth Lord giue me a free spirit that is that hee might praie more seruently then he did before for except he had had indeed the heat of the spirit it is impossible hee should haue yeelded obedience to the chasti●●ment of God or for Peter to haue wept in his heart at the rebuke of Christ except hee had some seedes of the spirit of God in him Mat. 26.75 Howbeit we may not be drawne by this to presumption to thinke it maketh no matter how wee liue for as the children of God haue the inuisible marke of the earnest of the spirit so must they also beare the visible marke of zealous profession and honest conuersation For if wee doe not cherish the spirit of God by good emploiment and spirituall gaine that wee grow from faith to faith it is a signe that the spirit of trueth is not in vs so that we must not flatter our selues because there cannot bee indeed an emptinesse but with Saint Peter 2. Peter 1.5 we must ioine vertue with faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance c. For if we stay at the first staire we shall neuer be able to ascend to the Saints of God and if growth and increase be not in vs we are but idle and vnfruitfull in the acknowledging of Christ The reason is because being elect when wee receiue grace of God wee receiue withall grace to employ and vse it that it may abound alwaies excepted the storme and tempest of an afflicted conscience for that time for the Lord if he see vs prosper with one grace hee will giue vs more and if we thriue not with a graine of faith Mat. 25 16. he will take all from vs so as though thou canst praie yet vnlesse thou canst praie better with more feruent zeale and powre out thy soule more fully before the Lord than before it is nothing for the first grace to pray onely was but giuen thee as an hypocrite to make thee vnexcusable Further obserue hence that Sathans fittest garniture and best entertainment is hypocrisie to make thee pretend holinesse when thou intendest nothing but wickednesse and this hypocrisie standeth in two things first in not doing that which God hath commanded secondly in doing it otherwise than God hath commanded If thou fallest into the first thou shewest thy selfe rebellious if thou slip into the second thou discouerest thy thy selfe against the law of the Eternall If he tell thee thou shalt not eate of the forbidden tree thou oughtest not so much as to looke on it lest the lust of thine eie betray thy heart and the desire of thy heart doe beguile thy taste If he prescribe thee a rule and a course wherein thou shalt walke thou must not as Numb 22.18 for a house full of gold go beyond the word of the Lord to do more or lesse And therefore
purchasing and possessions if couetousnesse did not delight thee nor profanenesse and cursed speaking so please thine eares if ignorance and contempt of God did not so seale vp thy conscience as thou canst not see thine owne deformity Hobeit in this thy iudgement of others obserue 3. rules First iudge thy self first lest while thou reprouest others thy self may be cōdemned Secondly giue thou no final iudgement for that pertains to God alone before whose eies all things are open Thirdly iudge not according to the inner man but by the outward that euery man may see as much as thy selfe though they want that heauenly wisedome to mislike for what sow did euer finde fault with other for wallowing in the mire secondly consider the phrase or metaphor vsed by the Apostle borrowed from trauellers or those that vndertake dangerous iournies for as one is subiect to fall if he walke in slippery places or to be hindred in his walke if blocks doe lie in his way so fareth it with the child of God he walketh through slippery places and gets many fals but riseth immediately because he meets with Christ in the way he trauaileth ouer mountains as it were in the wildernesse and is much wearied but refreshed by Christ who is vnto him the water of life yea he hath many stones laid on purpose to stumble at but through the strength of Christ he creepes ouer them and comes at length to his iournies end which is his rest in heauen Thirdly marke the difference betweene the way of the elect and of the reprobate the first as Mat. 7.14 is strait and narrow the other broad and wide now though the labour be greater to croud into the narrow way yet heerein is the benefit greater also that being narrow when thou art once in thou canst not lose it and being strait thou maiest goe on as by a line and cannot misse it yea if thou fall as needes thou must through frailety being in the way that God prescribes thee thou hast Psal 91.11 the Angels to protect thee so farre as thy fall shall not hurt thee whereas now the wicked that take such elbow roome in their walkes they may and do easily wander and being once out of the way the further they goe the further they are off the end they desire nay they haue such windings and turnings in the lusts of the flesh wherein they liue as it carieth them at length among the wolues of their soules that will deuour them and though as Iob speaketh cap. 15.20 The wicked man is continually as one that trauelleth of childe being euer conceaued with some mischiefe as Esa 59.4 yet God so disappointeth them as it were of their midwiues as they bring forth but a lie as Dauid saith Psal 7.14 And therfore it fareth with the children of God and the wicked as with two setting forth together the one going strait toward the place appointed the other turning backeward from it the first will come to his iournies end at the time appointed the other neuer euen so will God in his due time bring vs whom hee findeth watchfull and vigilant to that place that Christ hath prepared for vs in his house and shut the dores vpon them that wandred all their life as in the darke that since with darkenesse they were delighted in darkenesse they shall be tormented Fourthly obserue the maner of the hypocrites walke For as the Hare when she is started by the hounds by reason of that naturall instinct sagacity God hath giuen her runneth toward the market way not for any desire she hath to the way it selfe but that the hounds might lose her tract by the continuall passage of the people euen so doe the hypocrites walke in the tract of Gods children as come to sermons ioyne in praier reproue swearing lispe out somthing for reformation and such like but why do they this onely because wee should not trace them like foxes into their form whither their carriage for the flesh is gone before so as they are but clokes to couer their filth withall that looking into their profession they will deceiue vs but if wee cast our eie but vpon their feete we shall finde their steps tend to death And whereas policy hath diuided the state into three branches the King the Clergy and the Laiety the scripture affordeth vs examples of hypocrisie in euery one of these Herod for a King Mark 6.20 will grace the doctrine of Iohn Baptist so farre as he will heare him gladly and fauour his person so much as he will yeeld to many things at his request but yet he had a swing in the flesh he could not bee turned from for you might haue traced him home to his brother Philips house and haue sene a most filthy nest he had there made for his walk in the flesh Looke vpon Iudas a Disciple a follower and preacher of Christ he pretends a worke of mercy and a religious care of the poore Ioh. 12.5 there is too much ointment wasted on Christ that might better haue beene spent and bestowed in mony vpon the poore heere are good words and faire shewes but the Lord vneaseth his hypocrisie and discouereth his priuy way to be but for the filling of the purse which he c●●ied that he might spend it on his lusts for faith the text vers 6. He was a theefe Lastly steps in Ananias and Sapphira the foundation of a family being man and wife they Act. 5.1.2 will be such hot followers of the Apostles as none shall goe beyond them for the reliefe of persecuted Christians they will sel a possession pretend to bring the whole price of it and lay it at the Apostles feete but marke they haue a secret chest they thought no man should see one corner of couetousnesse in their heart must be filled by keeping part of the mony to themselues which dissembling of theirs was suddenly and seuerely auenged that we may beware by their destruction After this sort doth the Lord in all ages discouer the skirts of hypocrites that if they be but watcht ouer in a holy wisdom they haue euer some backedore which we shall at length espie whereat the lusts of the flesh doe enter which heapeth but heauier desolation at the last because they thought to haue mocked God who in truth will not be mocked Now some will say if they walke in the right way at any time it sufficeth alledging for their example the thiefe vpon the Crosse Luk. 23.40.41 who made but a short confession for that long happinesse he hath in heauen and therfore thinke thy need not take so long a iourney as Abraham and the rest of the saints of God haue done But how can he that setteth foorth in the euening finish the same iourney he doth that went out in the morning It is true God calleth at all houres yet must we not looke for such miracles at the moment of death as the conuersion of the thiefe was for if we deferre
the vengeance as neuer to be forgotten Tosiphone that tooke vengance vpon murtherers yea almost for euery sinne committed they had a seuerall fury which was thought to punish it Yea by this very light of nature they likewise imagined some of these furies to burne the of fendours with torches some to sting with Adders And what bee these furies saith the Philosopher Nothing else but Suae quemque exagitant furiae that is Euery man is tormented with his owne furie which is his conscience the property whereof is to present thy sinne before thy f●ce that out of thine owne mouth thou maiest ●ee iudged yea the heathen had such a deepe impression of these tortures as committing some foule and hainous fact without some expiation or sacrifice they thought they should neuer bee in quiet But the greatest instrument which is the second that the spirit vseth to strike feare into the soule and conscience is the law written which is a dead letter and such a sentence that for desert pronounceth damnation as oft as we read it which we must needs conceiue to bee so if wee consider that the least bad thought is damnation though it bee not coupled with consent to bring forth an actuall fruit of sinne What then Is the preaching of the law the worker of this terror And are some by the booke of nature so exagitate and troubled with furies as they cannot rest when they haue slipt into some sinne and yet shall there be some in these daies that are so frozen in Atheisme and so ouergrowne in the weeds of Popery and so possest with the power of the diuell that they are not once touched or pricked in their hearts for their horrible sins but that liuing as diuels they hope to be saued as Saints Indeed it is not be doubted but that now there is greater Atheisme in some and lesse sorrow and remorse for sinne in others then was in the heathen and yet it was the iust iudgement of God then as Paul saith to giue vp the heathen into a reprobate sense Rom. 1.28 that they might receiue in themselues such recompence of their error as was meete and therefore much more in vengeance doth the Lord deliuer vp these men to be beguiled of their owne fancies and to become senssesse in their owne sins since they profit not by this booke of the written law pronounced by the Lords owne mouth and deliuered by the Lords owne hand the truth whereof ought not to be called in question though these men really confute it by their liues thinking there is no Christ to saue nor God to punish nor conscience to accuse nor diuell to torment but with scurrility do scorne at the wholsome disease of tendernesse and terror of conscience which they themselues at their separation shall finde so great as neither themselues can still neither in truth can it be stilled And howsoeuer many peraduenture haue commanded their conscience to be silent and put away the euill day far from them and think themselues safe inough if they may be let alone till the last day yet we haue seene some of the eldest sons of Sathan after a long and redious hypocrisie wherein they were fallen asleepe to haue beene so fearefully astonished in the end and plunged and cast down into so deepe despaire as they euen seemed to heare the very echo of the damned spirits which is a most hideous and terrible sound in the eares of the most carnall man that is and could by no meanes bee comforted or any whit eased but haue either hanged themselues as Iudas did or otherwise died in a sense of hellish torment in this life For as in a seared peece of flesh there is alwaies left in the toppe some crust but vnder that there is euer some pregnant sense so if the Lord once pare away from the soule that is cauterized and crusted then is the feare and terror of those men greater for they feele the flame of the Lords indignation which the elect neuer doe hauing by a sanctified wisedome preuented this extremity by seeking remedy in Christ who giueth and neuer vpbraideth Now to prooue that the Law is such a dead letter as being rightly vnderstood it is impossible to keepe thy selfe from despaire in respect of any thing which in thine owne person thou canst deserue obserue that this law of God teacheth that lust in thy heart is absolute adulterie Mat. 5.22.28 and that anger in heart is flat murder wherein it goeth beyond and surpasseth all the laws of any earthly Prince which free the heart and extend onely to the act whereas this law bindeth both the outward man from working and the inward man from compassing mischiefe Now if thou come to weigh and examine thy selfe in this ballance and take this law for a touchstone to trie whether thou beest gold or drosse thou shalt find thy selfe too light but refuse for who can say I haue not offended who can say I am not crazed nay whateuer thou art thou canst not clear thy heart of these such like passions of heat betokening wrath and of corrupt thoughts bewraying thy vncleane heart But if thou enter into this consideration that though thou thinke of such things and thy heart reprooues thee yet that in the strict construction of this law if thou hast but a wandring or wanton thought in the precisenesse thereof thou shalt be damned for all and euery particular power both of body and soule ought to bee taken vp for Christ and wholly vsed to his glory so as if thou callest in doubt the truth of the Scripture though thy heart abhorreth it it is damnation If thou examine thy selfe according to this rule and yet escapest from the sight of despaire it is hard nay it is impossible for this is the sharpest edge of the law and the most fretting corasiue that eates out the dead flesh of our sinful hearts that sounds the bottome of mans vast soule and toucheth the sinnes that lie betweene the skinne and the bones Since for our very thoughts alone by the tenth commandement without consent we are culpable of iudgement which S. Paul Rom. 7.7 expresseth by speaking in his own person I had not known lust that is the fountaine and seate whence lust doth spring except the Law had said Thou shalt not lust Heere then we must needs confesse since this ought to bee euery mans examination that if we doe not examine ourselues after this sort formerly set downe it is a signe we haue not this spirit of adoption because we haue not had the spirit of bondage Now this is no examination of our selues to liue morally as to receiue the testimony of men that we are honest in giuing perhaps a groate to the poore and pardoning the forfeiture of an obligation and such like and yet not sticke to prophane Gods sabbath to contemne his messengers to poure out othes by Faith which includeth the whole blessed Trinity and say it is nothing
by the Masse that most execrable idoll and say it is sworne out of the country Can a man thinke himselfe rich that is indebted to all the world and hath nothing wherewithall to pay them And can such men that bee very beasts and without sense before God esteeme themselues vertuous and religious because they are onely highly praised of men They see not their owne estate because they haue not examined themselues according to the former rule When a man hath swept his chamber he thinkes all is cleane but when the Sunne commeth it sheweth many a mote hee could not before spie out so if the spirit would once shine into these mens consciences they should see not onely motes but most deformed and enormous sinnes in their hearts And how friuolous is it to stand vpon mans witnesse without religion which pierceth and looketh into the soule For otherwise he that thinketh himselfe in best health carieth his deaths wound in his bosome The basest gold is better then the purest led and the greatest imperfections of Gods children better then the highest vertues of the wicked and neuer shall they bee exalted that haue not before beene humbled The law is a hammer not onely to bruise the conscience but to breake it into powder which if it be not done wee shall neuer haue the spirit of adoption to seize vpon vs. The law commands but giueth no power to obey and is as if we should say to a beggar Buy such a mannor when he hath neuer a penny to helpe himselfe nor yet we giue him any money to do it euen so purchase heauen with thy works saith the law and yet knowes we are spoiled of all abilitie and doth not enable vs to doe such workes all one as if we should say to one hold vp the heauens with thy finger and yet giue him no strength to do it or as if we should say to the blind see it is comfortable and to the deafe heare it is profitable and yet giue them no meanes whereby they should doe these So the law is but a dead letter and hath but a dolefull and dreadfull sound vntill the spirit come and arme vs with power and abilitie to performe what the law requireth Lastly where it is said Luk. 15.21 Ye haue not receiued the spirit of bondage againe obserue that all that are conuerted and with the lost sonne are come home againe haue beene once brought to a terrour and fright of conscience which hath beene after a diuers measure for the Lord keepes some longer in the schoole of the law then he doth others according as hee findeth their hearts and dispositions inclinable to stoope and to be humbled or else for example sake as seemeth best to the Lord. But yet euery one of Gods chidren must come to this that is Act. 2.37 being moued and pricked in conscience to say and crie out What shal I doe to be saued I see my debt where shall I get surety I perceiue my nakednesse where shall I be couered I am fallen how shall I be recouered And being touched in their hearts if they fall not into that exclamation then as it is said of Ely his sonnes 1. Sam. 2.25 they obeyed not because the Lord would slay them so for these men to be baked in their sinnes and to see their destruction and not to shunne it and by this meanes to despaire finally is the iust iudgement of God that he may be auenged of their great hypocrisie for mercy offered and refused or set light by doubleth the punishment Euen as in this nation by the blessed preaching of the Gospell Sathan is cast out in the generall profession of the Land if now he labour to creepe in againe by hypocrisie and make vs thinke religion to rest in shewes and consist in ceremonies growing more leane and ilfauoured after we haue deuoured so many yeeres of store and plentie in preaching the word we doe erre in our hearts and do arme our enemie against vs who at his reentrance will bring seuen spirits worse then he did before Luk. 11.25 and will so fortifie his habitation with hypocrisie and other great and monstrous sinnes as there shall be more profannesse in this nation then euer there was before But ye haue receiued the spirit of adoption In this the Apostle proueth that we are the Sonnes of God because we are so adopted in the euerlasting grace of his blessed Sonne And to proue we haue this spirit he doth it by the contrary thus we are deliuered from the spirit of feare and redeemed into such a Christian liberty as we now loue God not for feare but feare him for his loue In this there are two parts to be considered first what this spirit of adoption is secondly the inseparable effect that followeth it namely an assured confidence to come boldly before the Lord euen as children before their parents to craue pardon for our sinnes For the first this spirit is the holy Ghost assuring vs by the word of grace that is the Gospell that the Lord hath auowed vs for his children in that one and best beloued Sonne of his Christ Iesus so that no extremities of this life nor sorrowes of death nor sinne it selfe shall be able to ouer whelme vs. Therefore it is said in the Scriptures that the holy Ghost setteth a seale vpon the heart of his elect Ephes 1.13 and writeth a deed in their consciences which is but a draught of that originall deed which is in heauen in the booke of the Lords gouernment And this is sealed vnto vs by the finger of the spirit to free it from the forgery of Sathan and by this euidence we make our title to the kingdome of heauen ● Cor. 5.5 Also it is called an earnest penie because as in contracts by giuing a penie in earnest the partie is obliged and bound to pay the rest so this being as it were the first fruites of the spirit the Lord doth assure vs that as verily as we haue receiued thus much in hand in this vale of misery so this shall bee a pawne and pledge vnto vs that he will giue vs the rest in the fu●●e●●● 〈◊〉 is glory vnder which assurance we rest and lie down in hope with ioy vnspeakeable And as the first fruits in the law made the whole crop holy so this sparke of the Lords grace being kindled and set on fire in vs doth embolden vs to an expectation of the full enioying of our whole Lord Christ Iesus This testimony oft times is very weake especially when Sathan doth sift and winnow vs as he did Peter Luk. 17.5 so as we had need to pray with the disciples Lord encrease our faith Yet as a prisoner in a darke dungeon seeing but the Sunne at a little grate doth know and beleeue that the Sunne shineth vpon the whole earth so though we be shackled and imprisoned in this flesh as in a dungeon that we are not able to
forth our cold petitions and that which was generally beleeued by faith before is now particularly chalenged of God by praier that wee may finde and ●●ele the former promise to be true by this particular instance of reaching foorth our requests to God by praier And the more to hearten and encourage vs in this exercise and Christian taske God giueth and graunteth our requests differing in three respects from the gifts and benefits of worldly men For first he can giue all things in his power secondly in his wisedome he giueth and neuer repenteth thirdly in his goodnes he giueth and neuer vpbraideth This is the perswasion of faith and therefore now if wee spare to speake wee may well spare to speed whereupon the Prophet Dauid saith I beleeued therefore I spake hauing his faith for most to prepare his lips to praier And surely the cause why wee call not vpon God so often or so boldly as we ought is either because our faith fail●s vs that wee thinke not to speede or else because wee haue but weake and faint hope to speede For as the Philosopher saith Qui timide rogat docet negare He that craueth fearfully draweth on a deniall for that faith that openeth the eies to see such treasures openeth the mouth to supplicate and to pray for them so as by this learne in one word that the Apostle will measure thy faith by thy praiers Whereby we crie In this word crie is implied three things first a confident boldnesse secondly a great earnestnesse thirdly an importunacy with perseuerance Boldnesse in that wee speake not softly as in feare but loud as in assurance euen as a fauorite of an earthly Prince that hath a promise to haue and obtaine what he can spie out hauing speciall security to speed commeth boldly to his Prince and craueth the performance of that was pledged vnto him by promise before Earnestnesse not to take a nay or deniall at the first at our fathers hands but to goe on with I pray you Father Good Father I beseech you Father and such like speeches of vehemency and feruency which is heere expressed by the geminating and doubling of the word Father Father Then with these must there be an import●nacy in praier which Paul expresseth Rom. 15.30 by stri●ing or wrestling in praier shewing thereby the feruency of the minde and of the voice euen as Iacob did Gen. 32.26 that would not let the Angell goe before hee had blessed him and according to the example set downe Luk. 18. ● of the widow who by her importunity which in the Greeke word signifieth impudency so troubled and wearied with her cries as it were with blowes the vnrighteous Iudge as she wrested her sute from him Christ in that parable teaching vs that wee ought to vse a holy kind of impudency in our petitions vnto God and neuer to giue him rest till hee hath yeelded to our requests which wee make in faith and present in hope Heereupon it is that the soule is very earnest with God as either being laden with some sinne which it desireth to be eased of or priuy to some wants which it faine would haue supplied or in some apprehension of Gods iudgement for sinne which it seeketh to escape or the loue of God constraining it to be thankfull for the rich mercies formerly receiued or else being assaulted with some danger and temptation craueth to bee ●●liuered so as alwaies the soule hath occasion to bee quicke and earnest in praier for causes to moue vs euen in our owne particular persons vnto this duty besides the generall cause of the Church doe daily occurre and fall out In that it is said We crie Father heere is questionable whether onely God the first person in the Trinity be to be praied vnto and not the Sonne nor the holy Ghost To this we answer that the word Father and God is taken essentially for the whole essence of the God-head which includeth them all as it is in the Lords praier or else it is taken personally for that the Sonne must be praied vnto the place is plaine Act. 7.59 And they stoned Stephen who called on God and said Lord Iesus receiue my spirit And that the holy Ghost must be praied vnto appeareth by Saint Paul who endeth his Epistle 2. Corinthians 13.13 with this praier The communion of the holie Ghost be with you So as the word Father in this place is not meant of any one distinct person subsisting in the name of Father but it is to bee vnderstood of them all the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost for as they be all offended with vs for our sinnes so must they all bee reconciled to vs by our praiers And heereupon is it that Saint Augustine saith that the whole Trinity is Father in respect of the creature and hee is onely named heere because the Father is the fountaine of the God-head and the first in order but not in time howbeit being vnderstood in respect of their diuers subsistences they are seuerall Whereupon it is true that the word Father or God is sometime taken personally as Iohn 3.16 where it is said God so loued the world that hee gaue his onely begotten Sonne that w●●●euer beleeueth in him should not perish And 1. Corinthians 8.6 Vnto vs there is but one God which is the Father of whom are all things in which places the word God is taken personally as it is also in the Greede when wee say I beleeue in God the Father But the whole Trinitie is called Father in two respects first because hee is the fountaine of the God-head and the fountaine of all loue election and saluation the will of the Father going before the will of the Sonne in order not in time Secondly because howe●●● wee pray to Christ and to the holy Ghost as we doe to God and howeuer all the workes of the Trinity be vndiuided that they doe all saue and not the Father only yet they doe it by degrees Christ saueth vs insubmitting his will to his Fathers will the holy Ghost saueth vs in perswading and leading vs to goe to Christ and fro● Christ to the Father so as our praiers are made vnto God in the name of Christ his Sonne by the direction of the holie Ghost Againe in that we name him Father learne that all our security and assurance that our praiers shall be effectuall and that we shall speede in our sutes and requests lieth in this that we are his children and so all that wee doe and performe pleaseth him no further then the person pleaseth him And therefore Dauid Psal 7. 17. 26. making a commemoration of his vertues as that there was no wickednesse in his hands that he had purposed his mouth should not offend that he had not hanted nor sorted himselfe with dissemblers doth it not the rather to moue God to heare him and to incline his eare to his petition but by these testimonies of a good conuersation
them and prompt him with excellent and effectuall words of prayer Yea this must be the comfort of vs all that though wee fight to the bloud for the Lords cause not one droppe of it shall perish but as the Lord doeth keepe our teares so much more will hee keepe our bloud in a bottell Psal 116. ● that wee may bee made precious white in the bloud of the Lambe Now for the second point which is the meanes how the spirit helpeth our infirmities that is by stirring vp prayers and grones Obserue first that no man can pray of himselfe vnlesse he be taught of God secondly that the holy Ghost doth minister vnto vs that power in prayer which no man is able to bring and performe of himselfe howbeit we may not construe the words as if the holy Ghost himselfe did pray but onely that he suggesteth vnto vs fit words and matter and prompteth vs to pray For the first vnderstand that it is not postible for any man of himselfe to pray vnlesse he be helped and renewed in his spirit for prayer must be made in the mediation of Christ which flesh and bloud neuer thinketh of nay which flesh and bloud doeth but mocke at And this disabilitie in prayer and vnaptnesse to performe it is euen true of them that be enlightned and called to the faith vnlesse also they be impulsed and driuen on by the spirit Howbeit by this so excellent an instrument as the spirit the Lord doth poure into our hearts such a constant and stedfast assurance of his loue as we come and humble our selues before him boldly and beate our breast and pray from the booke of our conscience confidentlie vnfolding the whole heapes of our miscries before the Lord yea we come vnto him hauing euen a sight and contemplation of his maiestie and we stand not vpon words but a broken and contrite spirit maketh vs speake plainely the interpreter of our meaning being the holy Ghost so as wee in this exercise conferre with God and speake as it were with the mouth of Christ who maketh our supplications as sweet as incense in our and his Fathers nostrels So as it is no such slight matter nor so easie a worke to pray aright for of thy selfe thou art speechlesse and canst not vtter one word vnlesse the spirit vntie the strings of thy tongue and though happely thou speake yet is thy vnderstanding senslesse that thou knowest not what to aske vnlesse the spirit teach thee nay were thou neuer so well taught if the spirit make thee not acquainted with Christ Reuel 8.3 that he may present thy praiers to God all else is in vaine and fruitlesse Further in that the holy Ghost is said to make request for vs wee are admonished vnlesse it bee for weake Christians and babes in Christ that are not growne in the word of grace vnto whom a booke of prayer is allowed as a Catechisme that they that bee old schollers in the schoole of Christ ought to striue and indeuor to grow from praier to praier aswell as from faith to faith that as their iudgements are increased in knowledge so their hearts may increase in feruencie and affection toward God and that they may bring foorth their hidden treasure of the Lords spirit in enabling them to conceaue a praier and to pray as their present necessities shall require For this is that the Lord looketh for that as he said by the Prophet Zacharie 12.10 that he would in the last times powre out the spirit of deprecation and of prayer vpon the sons of men so men should endeuour to bee familiar in this dutie without booke and not content themselues to praie either a stinted prayer or a stinted time but as it is said Hebr. 6.1 wee must leaue the beginnings and be led forward and striue to perfection For if notwithstanding such plentie of foode these many yeeres there be still such leannesse in thy soule that thou art not able to feed thy selfe nor to expresse and vtter thy necessities in a corner before the Lord how canst thou looke for any blessing that hast beene so sluggish and hast so carelesly entertained the spirit of God in this acceptable time If any sudden calamitie hang ouer thy head or any secret sinne presse thy conscience how canst thou thinke to be releeued nay thou canst not but iudge thy selfe vnworthie to be helped if thou art vnable without a booke before thee to vtter thy griefe and to pray for helpe Thou must know thy temptations are particular and thy sinnes are particular and a generall confession is not a proper salue for any particular sore but as in this and this sinne thou hast offended God so particularly for this this sin thou must call for mercy And what if that speciall grace thou prayest for be not in thy booke then thou goest away emptie for thou art not likely to obtaine that thou dost not aske for For howsoeuer the Lord doth ofttimes preuent vs with his mercies and giueth before wee aske yet when he shall perceiue such negligence in vs that we desire but as it were a common and generall head-peece to shield vs from all assaults and doe not arme our selues in euery part especially knowing our old enemie the diuell lieth at all aduantage this maketh the Lord weary and vnwilling to helpe vs who otherwise easily inclineth his eare to the praiers of the faithfull When it is said With gronings that are vnspeakeable we are by this to comfort a distressed conscience that if afflictions doe come so fast vpon vs as the waues one in the necke of another and our spirits be so ouer whelmed and cast downe that we are not able to conceiue a praier for the anguish of our soules in this case if our hearts doe but bleed and grone though no word be vttered yet is it a praier precious and acceptable in the Lords sight We read of Ezechiah Esa 38.14 that he was not able to speake one word but did chatter like a Crane and mourne like a Doue in his sicknesse hee was so opprest with sorrow in the bitternesse of his soule yet was this a praier and a praier heard of God and himselfe deliuered and fifteene yeeres added to his life So oftentimes our praiers are so peppered with salt and fire that is our soule is so anguished and our spirits so appalled that either we speake abruptly or only knocke our selues on the breast Luk. 18.13 as did the Publican yet this soundeth in the Lords eares and commeth pleasantly before him for words in praier are but to make vs vnderstand what we aske the Lord vnderstandeth our meaning without words yea knoweth our wants better then our selues And as the mother pitieth her child when it is fallen sicke and is able to tell where the paine lieth and to aske such things as it wanteth but when the disease is growne so fore that for extremitie it cannot vtter the paine by speech but lieth
complaining by grones and cries with the eies fixed vpon the mother this doubleth the compassion maketh her verie bowels to yearne with pitie Euen so the Lord more kind then a mother lendeth his louing and tender eare to our bitter complaints but being astonished with griefe that we cannot but onely crie out in hope and expectation of some help and we lie pained not able to expresse it this doth more enlarge the bowels of his compassion and then he gathereth our reares into a bottle and wipeth our eies and putteth his hand into our side to heale vs and regardeth as preciously such maner of speechlesse vtterance as any praier vttered in feruencie and vehemencie of words Which is a most singular comfort for Gods chosen that the clouds of affliction can neuer be so thick but a heartie sigh will scatter them yea come what will no time can be so euill nor tyrant so bitter or cruell that can stay vs from groning though through weight of torment they may stop vs from speaking as Dauid saith Psal 38.9 I powre O Lord my whole desire before thee and my sighing is not hidden from thee for none can refraine the heart from sobbing Yet must wee not abuse this comfortable doctrine to our fleshlie libertie to make vs sluggish in praying to the Lord and thinke onely a mentall prayer or a desire conceiued though not vttered to be enough for this speechlesse prayer is onely permitted in the bitternes of the heart and when the venime of affliction hath seized vpon the outward man in such a case and in such a time if we cannot speake with Anna 1. Sam. 1.13 we may with her wag our lips bee wee neuer so old Otherwise wee must say with Dauid Psal 57.8 Arise my tong and then arise vp my glorie for there is no instrument so fit to set foorth our wants and it is no excuse for thee to say the Lord knowes thy heart for so doth he know thy wants also before thou aske and by that reason neither the panting of the heart nor the paines of the lips should be requisit For the third point that is for the effect and efficacie of our prayers that they comming from the spirit must needs speed haue good successe obserue when it is said The Lord knowes the meaning that there is a speciall propertie of this word to be vnderstood for knowing is taken here for approuing as Rom. 7.15 What I do I know not that is allow not nor approue that Ido so Mat. 7.23 Depart from me I know you not that is approue you not for he knew them well inough So Psal 1.6 The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous that is approueth it and in the same sense is it taken in the Prouerb 12.10 The righteous man knoweth the soule of his beast that is approueth it Why then this is the lesson that if our prayers haue an allowance and approbation with God we may be sure we shall reape the fruit of our lips and that our requests shall not returne emptie vnto vs but shall be as the doue that brought an Oliue in her mouth signifying that the flouds are ceased and that we may walke on the drie land The reason why our prayers must needs speed is because the same spirit that maketh vs pray doth make vs onely to pray for those things that stand with the Lords glorie therfore must of necessitie be granted for God cannot denie himselfe he and his glorie are inseparable 1. Ioh. 5.14 And this is witnessed by S. Iohn This is our assurance that if wee aske any thing according to his will hee heareth vs and we know that we haue the petitions we desired of him So that it is not the worthinesse of our prayers that draweth Gods bountie to vs but the bounds and compasse wherein our prayers are limited and circumscribed that is ayming at nothing else and referring all to the will and pleasure of God which wee may be sure shall come to passe Euen as Iacob said Gen. 32.11.12 Thou wilt deliuer me O Lord from my brother Esau for thou hast said thou wilt do me good and 2. Sam. 7.21 Dauid saith O Lord I know thou wilt blesse my house because of thy word for thou hast spoken it Many there bee will say I haue prayed often and cried incessantlie for the increase of faith and yet I finde it as weake and my flesh as sinfull as it was before And thus Sathan perswadeth thee thou prayest not according to Gods will for if thou hadst bene his and hadst belonged to him he would haue giuen thee faith at thy first request But thou must beate backe this temptation which is but to lull thee in securitie by this answer that thou must thinke thy lot and thy portion to be no better then Dauids who Psal 69.3.4 brake forth saying O Lord I am wearie with crying and mine eyes faile while I haue waited for my God for the Lord will haue thee to continue in prayer not to wearie thee but to trie thy patience how long thou canst wait so as if thou speakest and the Lord seemeth not to heare thee double thy prayers vpon him for he maketh himselfe deafe to make thee more quicke and feruent If he listen to thee and yet thou obtainest not perseuere and continue for at last the Lord will incline to thy petition and from his throne will he send thee a chearefull message In Saint Luke we haue an example of one that asked but three loaues Luk. 11.8 and by his importunitie got as many as he would So may the p●●ore widow bee our paterne Luk. 18.5 who by her multiplying of her sure wit● many words obtained right of the vniust Iudge and therefore much more shall we by our instancie with the Lord obtaine what in faith we shal desire for out of the very words of the Apostle here we may learne first that it is certaine we shall haue it though it be vncertaine when it shall be cast vpon vs for Christians must endeuour to striue to this to haue Iacobs spirit and resolution that though the Lord fight with vs and would faine shake vs off yet not to let him goe till we haue forced a blessing from him and haue our petitions granted And we must haue the strength of the womans faith in the Gospell Mat. 15.22 as not to feare three denials of Christ hand to hand for her constancie and perseuerance were rewarded double first with the commendation of her faith secondly with the health of her daughter which was the thing she craued And euen so at length shall our prayers bee requited with the perfect cure of all our infirmities Secondly marke and assure thy selfe that if thy prayers made now be not presently heard thou shalt be rewarded in a time thou least lookest for and when thou art vtterly out of hope of that thou didst craue as we may see Luk. 1.13 Zachary and
that he hath a name at which all knees shall bow and this name is giuen him so as he hath it not as God for being God nothing could be giuen him Phil. 2.13 so as he hath it not as God for being God nothing could be giuen him but hee hath it as man and God for his bare humanity could not deserue this neither yet to be gouernour of all the world Now for the third which is the priuiledge we haue by being his brethren they are chieflie three First we are by this heires and fellow heires with him of all things in this life and in the life to come as appeareth vers 16.17 of this chapter Secondlie by this followeth and from this commeth the soueraigntie we haue ouerall creatures as 1. Cor. 3.22 Whether it be the world or life or death all things are ours for we are Christs and Christ is Gods and being vnder Gods wings no man neither dareth and though his stomacke bee neuer so good yet hee hath not the strength to hurt vs for the Lord will keepe vs as the apple of his cie Thirdlie by this though the Angels be farre aboue vs in nature yet we haue one of our nature better then they that is Christ and through him they doe all become our ministers Heb. 1.4.7 Christ is made more excellent then the Angels and he maketh them but his messengers Now for the degrees wherby the Lord doth execute this his eternal purpose for the first of them which is calling it is wrought by the holie Ghost as the principall cause and by a double instrument the holy Ghost vseth first the preaching of the law whereby we are brought to a holie despaire of our selues by the sight of our owne corruption that we may seeke for remedie in the profound sea of the Lords vnsearchable mercie The second the preaching of the Gospell whereby hee anointeth our eyes with the eye salue of the holie Ghost Col. 2.13 that being dead in sinne and not so much as dreaming of saluation the sound of the Gospel doth awake vs that we may heare that hearing we may liue Hereupon it is said that the Lord doth draw men and pull them vnto him as Christ saith Iohn 6.44 No man can come vnto me vnlesse the father draw him that is doth separate them from the cursed generation of the world and sets his inward seale vpon them that is his spirit and brandeth them in the forehead with a visible marke of holinesse of life that euery man may know them to be the Lords Hereupon also it is said that the Lord doth open the hart with the key of the Gospel as Act. 16.14 he is said to open the heart of Lydia and as Psal 40.6 he boareth the eare and softeneth the heart and moisteneth it with his grace that aboue all things a man shall esteeme of the pearle of the Gospell and be brought chearefully to sell all he hath to buy such a iewell as shall bring him righteousnesse to saue his soule so as this calling of the Lord is to this end to manifest and to secure a man in his soule that the Lord hath giuē him to Christ out of all the world Here may be obiected are not all vniuersally called by grace We answer No for first all men are not called effectuallie secondly some are not called at all Some are called externallie by the Preachers mouth and saluation is offered them by the ministerie of the word and sacraments and the kingdom of God is come to their dores and peace is shewed them and the glory of Ierusalem is set before them Math. 22.3 but yet we see of them that were bidden to the mariage there were three sorts not effectually called first they that being called carelesly refused to come being possessed with the cares of this world and with voluptuous liuing secondly they that cruelly persecured the inuiters messengers of the Bridegroome not onely refusing to come being called but disdaining to come as scorning such cheare and faring euery day better themselues at home thirdly they that came hand ouer head neuer looking to their feet before they entred into the Lords house nor neuer changed their attire but came without the wedding garment of a holy life So wee reade that of the foure sorts of ground that receiue the word and the seed thereof Mark 4.4 one sort onely shall be saued not that we must vnderstand it as if of foure hearers there should be but one saued for the Lord may haue mercy vpon a whole congregation to saue them but three sorts of them filled with seuerall affections that vouchsafed to come and to stand before the Lord as hearers were reprobate that is such as did not beautifie the profession of the Gospell with a holy life And truly of them that come and feed vpon the word and yet be reprobates it is wonderfull to see how farre they goe euen in the right course for first they may be enlightned generally in the knowledge of the truth and may taste of the heauenly gift yea and be partakers of the holy Ghost Heb. 6.4.6 and yet may fall away neuer to be renewe● by repentance Secondly they may haue faith Luk. 8.13 for a time not counterfeit yet not truly sincere for in the daie of trial they fall away like fruit from the tree with a blast of wind yea they may take ioy in the word as Herod did Mark 6.20 who was glad to heare Iohn Baptist and with Herod they may for a time do many things at the request of Gods Ministers Mark 16.20 And for outward reformation swine we know may be washed so may they leaue off and discontinue some grosse sins for a time when Sathan being for a season cast out of them doth not worke so forciblie in them as Math. 12.34 the Pharises and Sadduces may for nouelties sake come to Iohns baptisme and for a time speake good things when they are euill and yet be but a generation of vipers yea they may wish with Balaam to die the death of the righteous Num. 23.10 iustifying in their owne conscience the course of holinesse and which is more they may partake of all the graces of God sauing that one grace of sanctification and yet they may seeme to bee sanctified as Hebrews 10.29 they tread vnder foot the Sonne of God and count the bloud of the new Testament an vnholy thing were with they were so sanctified Now others there be that are not called at all and these be of two sorts either those to whom the Lord hath denied the verie contemplation of the booke of nature as children that die as soone as they be borne who if they be elect it is by a supernaturall power of the holy Ghost if they be reprobate it is iust in respect of their naturall filth and corruption that did cleaue so fast vnto their bones for in that they die it proues they had finned and
sinne proues there is a law which law being broken bringeth death for the wages of sinne is death Rom. 6.23 The second sort is of them who though they be called by the booke of heauen and earth as the Gentiles were Rom. 1.20 who do see the eternall power of God in the creation of the world and other his works and liuing to a more vnderstanding age are euen by the light of nature without all excuse yet are they not inuited by the voice of the Gospell to rise from the dead but die in their sinnes as the Canibales Barbarians and the Iewes since their Apostasie to whom there pertaineth nothing but a fearefull expectation of iudgement Heereof followeth and is to be obserued that it is contrary to the scripture to thinke that it was the will of God from eternity that all should be saued for then it was his will likewise that all should come to the knowledge of their saluation for whom he hath ordained to the end them hath hee also ordained to the meanes whereas to the reprobate the sound of the word if they doe heare it is but as the noise of bels confusedly iarring in their eares and yet many there be that neuer heard it Why but it is said 1. Tim. 2.4 that it is the will of God all should be saued True all men not euery singular particular man but of euery singular condition of men some not all of all kinds but of all kinds some according to that speech of the Euangelist Mat. 4.23 Christ healed euery disease in Iury that is euery kind of disease not euerie particular disease Now if all men come not to the knowledge of the truth of God either it is done by the wil of God or against his will to say that it is against his will were impious and blasphemous for this were to hold that something could offer violence to the will of God and as if he might not otherwise haue purposed which must be far from a Christian heart to imagine If then this be done with his will then it followeth that his will is changeable if hee once meant to saue them for wee see some euen like dogges readie to rend them in peeces that offer them the pearle of the word whom if the Lord had purposed to saue Mat. 7.6 they should not continue persecutors of the truth as Paul saith of himselfe 1. Timoth. 1.12.13 It pleased Christ Iesus to put me in his seruice being before a blasphemer a persecuter an oppressor and I was receiued to mercy And where it is said 1. Iohn 2.2 that Christ is the reconciliation for the sinnes of the whole world it is to be vnderstood for the sinnes of all sorts and degrees of men gathered out of all the parts of the world and this Christ himselfe interpreteth Ioh. 17.9 when he said Father I pray not for the world and vndoubtedly he will neuer saue them he neuer praied for for whom he excluded from his praier them he neuer meant should haue benefit by his death nay hee had beene bound in duty to haue praied for all if all had been elected to saluation Now if it be asked why men are damned the answer is easie It is for their sinne howbeit it was purposed in the Lords vncontrolable decree that they should be damned before they euer sinned and being corrupt in themselues the Lord hardneth them either by withdrawing the meanes or the power of the meanes the first by ignorance the second by denying them vnderstanding hearts So as if it be demanded why the Lord hardned any it is because he found him corrupt in Adam if why hee damneth any it is because he found him a sinner in himselfe Whom he calleth he iustifieth that is doth absolutely pardon him all his sinne and absolutely impute vnto him all his Sonnes righteousnesse that as Christ for vs was made sinne so wee in Christ might bee made righteous so as iustification is the translation and remouing of our sinne to Christ and the translation and remouing of his righteousnesse to vs. To our sinne hee opposeth his obedience to the punishment of our sinne hee opposeth his satisfaction otherwise he had not fully acquitted vs by fulfilling the law vnlesse he had satisfied his Fathers wrath for our breach of the law in our corrupt birth For if a man could now fulfill all the law of God yet should hee not bee saued because he was borne corrupt and could not possibly satisfie for that was past and in performing the law afterward he should doe nothing but his duty But this is our comfort that the Lord seeing our weaknesse hath in his loue passed by it and seeing our thoughts to bee alwaies euill taketh no account nor reckoning of vs but were sembling the image of his Sonne the Lord reckoneth with him and striketh off our debts in setting them on his score who hath paid the Lord his full due euen to the vtmost farthing being in his birth cleane in his life holy and in his death obedient Whom he iustifieth he glorifieth In this life the Lord doth onely call vs and iustifie vs so as no man need say as Rom. 10.7 Who shall ascend into heauen for that were to bring Christ from aboue or Who shall descend into the deepe for that were to raise Christ from the dead for so much vertue and power of Christ as is needfull for vs wee taste of heere but our glorifying is reserued and followeth in the life to come hauing it heere only in spe and not in re in hope but not in hand This glorifying heere spoken of is meant not that wee shall haue at the last day of our separation when the world shutteth her doores vpon vs but of that glory wee shall receiue at the day of iudgement which is plaine and euident by that went before vers 21. namely that wee waite for the restoring of the liberty of the sonnes of God and for the freedome from the bondage of corruption Howbeit in the glorie of our separation two things are to be obserued first Reu. 2● 4● that we shall be freed from all feares and teares and shall haue sinne abolished secondly we shall enter into our Lords rest but the glory of the last day is farre greater and resteth in three things first in the resurrection and a waking of the body when it shall be made conformable to the body of Christ when it shall not liue by the soule only nor be maintained by outward and externall instruments of bread such like but it shall liue as the body of Christ liueth and be glorious like the Sunne which shall then exceed it selfe in glory Isay 65.17 2. Pet. 3.13 Secondly there shall be a new heauen and a new earth and in this new heauen shall dwell the soules of the Saints of God and all things else shall bee restored to their first maiesty Thirdly which is the greatest of all we shall then haue
the beholding of the very face of God and there shall bee no markes set to keepe vs from the mount where the Lord dweleth Reu. 21.12 as there was Exod. 19.12 but as Paul speaketh 1. Corinth ●3 12 we shall then see him face to face and know him as wee ●re knowen of him and see him as God all in all that is ●ee shall behold the glory of God not standing vpon the veile of the flesh of Christ for then all mediation and intercession shall cease and this is part of that Christ praied for a litle before his death Iohn 17.24 that we might see that glory he had before the world was made for then we shall see Christ-God and the whole Godhead immediately raigning yet in Christ the Sonne of man and in vs but so as we shall no more leane and relie vpon the praiers of Christ for then he shall raigne no more as the Sonne of man in the midst of his enemies for this gouernement shall cease death which is the last enemy being then abolished and he then shall raigne ouer them vanquished as God Howbeit the fruit and benefit of this his mediation shall indure for euer and the subiection of his humane nature shall then more appeare because of the glory of his Godhead which shall then be seene fully euen such and the same as he had before eternitie yet shall this saluation more increase the glory of his humanity when we shall vnderstand and see it to bee personally vnited to the sonne of God who with God the Father and the holy Ghost shall be all in all Now the fruition and possession of this glory shal worke three effects in vs first it shall breed in vs an infinite loue toward God secondly an infinite ioy in God thirdly an infinite praise to God Infinitely shall we loue him that hath aduanced as to such honour as is endles and to such fellowship as is matchlesse our hearts shall be filled with ioy yet not able to comprehend or expresse it Mat. 25.23 therefore it is said Enter thou into thy masters ioy for this ioy is too great to enter into thee and besides the ioy we shall haue in our owne saluation we shall conceiue as great ioie for the saluation of others which is called ioy celestiall and we shall haue yet more ioy then before to see the Godhead so glorious the Lambe aduanced in our flesh and to be one person with God And this is aboue all ioies because we shal loue Christ far aboue our selues for the zeale of Gods glory shall euen eat vs vp and it shall be so great in vs as it cannot be so great for our owne saluation and then out of this loue and ioy as out of two fountaines ioyned in one shall spring and arise such continuall praise to God for this glory that we shal vncessantly sing to God in the Temple which is God himselfe so as we shall praise God in God and this shall be as the Prophet Esay saith from new Moone to new Moone and from Sabbath to Sabbath that is for euer for this loue of God is from eternitie in respect of our predestination and to eternitie in respect of our glorification and this is that we sigh and grone for and for which while wee are in the flesh absent from God wee continually pray for ROM chap. 8. vers 31.32 verse 31 What shall we say then to these things If God be on our side who can be against vs verse 32 Who spared not his owne sonne but gaue him for vs all to death how shall he not with him giue vs all things also THe Apostle before set downe that God the Father by his eternall purpose hath foreacknowledged vs and foreloued vs with an euerlasting loue in his Sonne and not vs onely but all those that to the end of the world shall loue him and manifest and shew foorth this their loue by a sincere worship and religious care to keepe his commandements and how that the Lord as he hath ordained vs and them to the same glory so at the fulnesse of time by the dispensation of his wisdome by his spirit he doth call them by the instrument of his word by the same loue doth iustifie vs in his Sonne and will glorisie vs with himselfe Now he being ouercome with the thought and meditation of these things breaketh foorth into a woonder and admiration that seeing it is thus that the Lord hath taken it vpon him neuer to leaue vs till he hath aduanced vs to heauenly places euen the seat of the Lord Iesus what shall we say The answer is giuen with the question this we must say that since he is our God as appeareth by that which went before then is it impossible wee being thus backed and hauing the Lord our bulwarke that any creature can bee of that force or be so against vs no not the diuell in hell with all his power can hinder vs from the fruition of this glorie In the other words who spared not his Sonne c. there is a further consolation set downe vnto vs to make the heape of comfort greater that since the Lord gaue as it were iudgement against his owne Son and set him foorth to a shamefull death for vs and this when we were his enemies and strangers from the life of God how can it bee he should now denie vs any thing to further our saluation being made friends with him and reconciled to him thorow his Sonne This doctrine needeth rather deepe meditation then large explication for who doth not assume to himselfe sufficiently to vnderstand it being but thus much in effect that since God in his euerlasting purpose hath thus manifested his glorie and mercie and hath ordained the end which is his glorie in our saluation and to bring it that it may come to this end hath subordinated and set downe certaine causes as calling and iustifying it is impossible any thing should hinder our saluation If God he on our side Heereupon wee must not thinke that if God be on our side we shall haue no enemies for because God loueth vs therefore we haue the more enemies and therefore wee are persecuted and subiect to the hatred of the world as Christ himselfe expresseth Ioh. 17.14 The world hateth them because saith he they are like me So as in this place the Apostle doth not meane that we should expect any immunitie and exemption on from the e●mitie and malice of men but that wee hauing this heauenly securitie and assured certaintie of the Lords protection neither Angell nor man nor diuell nor torment shall be able to ouer come vs. For this is that Paul speaketh of All things are by Christ Col. 1.16 through Christ and for Christ that is all things are created by him all things are preserued through 〈◊〉 maintained for his glorie so that our saluation being alwaies ioyned with his glorie neither shall men breath nor the diuell
nature but this is onely spoken in way of comparison by a figuratiue or borrowed speech speaking that of the dumbe creature which is onely to be applied to vs of vnderstanding for if there be such a feruent desire a longing a sighing and a mourning in these senselesse creatures for our deliuerance from this bondage of corruption vnder which wee are now held how much greater then should our desires willes and affections our sighings and mournings be who are sensibly and feelingly to be made partakers of this heauenly glorie and to this end is their feruencie brought in to stirre vs vp to the like or greater as a thing more neerely concerning vs. The like phrase of Scripture attributing life sense desire and affections to dumbe creatures is vsed in many places as Psal 114.3.4 When Israel went out of Egypt the sea saw it and fled Iordan was driuen backe the mountains leaped like rams and the hilles like lambes and vers 7. The earth trembled at the presence of the Lord the Prophet bringing in the creatures magnifying and reioicing at the maiestie of God in the destruction of his enemies and at his mercy in the deliuerie of his Saints that since these sensilesse creatures in their obedience in their kinde seemed to see this glorie and triumph at it much more should the people themselues that visibly saw it and sensibly felt it be rauished as it were with ioy at the so powerful presence of the Lord in making the sea as the drie land for their escape and rescue from the sword of their enemies After the like maner doth Dauid Psa 148.2.5 bring in the creatures in course as they were created praising the Lord in their kinde not in any forme or phrase of speech but the beautie of the Lord appearing in them by their obedience in obseruing that course wherein they are set heereby inuiting and stirring vs vp that haue sense feeling reason and vnderstanding to be more mindfull in our praise and thankesgiuing to God who are filled with greater plenty and haue a more spirituall and diuine beautie shining in vs than they haue So Esay the Prophet chap. 14.7.8.9 in derision of the tyrannie of the king of Babel bringeth in the whole world singing for ioy the firre trees and the Cedars of Lebanon reioicing and hell it selfe mooued at the death of so gold-thirsty an oppressor as he was as if it feared lest hee would trouble the dead as he did the liuing teaching vs by this that if the insensible creatures doe seeme to spread their boughes and bud foorth their flower at the destruction of tyrants as bringing rest and quiet to them how much more should we be affected at it that taste the smart of their crueltie and are kept but as a spoile and pray to saciate their bloudie and butcherly desires So Ionah 3.7 sackcloth must be put vpon the beasts and they must be kept from feeding as if they sorrowed for the affliction hung ouer their land not that they had sinned or could haue any affection of griefe in them but by this that the people might the more acknowledge their vnwoorthinesse as deseruing iustly not onely to be plagued of God in their persons but euen to be depriued of the vse and beenfit of the creatures whereby their present life was maintained And thus are the creatures brought in heere by the Apostle as inwardly smitten with sorrow for the sin of man and for his pollutions on the earth and longing after the aduancement of the sonnes of God to glory to set the sharper edge on vs who are to taste as it were the full cup of the Lords bountie and glorie in the highest heauens who will thus exalt the horne of his Saints Further vnderstand that by Creature in this place is meant all the creatures in the world as appeareth vers 22. where it is said that euery creature comprehending all doth grone with vs howbeit there are two sorts of creatures heere exempted namely Angels and men both elect and reprobate for the Angels elect they wait not as groning vnder vanity otherwise they desire it for the reuelation or triumph of Gods Saints in heauen because they alwaies stand before the Lord behold his glory Mat. 18.10 It is true indeed as Lu. 15.10 That the Angels of God reioice at the conuersion of a sinner because more glory is brought to God by his saluation but they need not this affection of groning or sighing heere spoken of because they are in paradise before the throne of God already Neither can it be meant of the reprobate Angels the brood of the diuell for first they wait not for vs vnlesse it be as Ren. 12.4 the dragon waited for the deliuerie of the woman to destroy vs neither doe they waite vpon vs vnlesse it be as Matth. 4.1 the tempter waited vpon Christ in the wildernesse Secondly they waite not for themselues for they feare nothing so much as the perfecting of Gods elect in number because that is the time of the perfefection of then torment at which they tremble Lames 2.19 the diuell euer thinking that Christ hasteneth too fast and commeth before his time to torture him Now for men it is not ment in this verse of the elect as appeareth by the words themselues for the waiting is not by them but by the creatures for them till they shall be restored to their libertie in glorie and so much is plainly set foorth vers 23. And not onely the creature but wee also that haue the first fruits of the spirit do sigh c. bringing the elect their waiting in by themselues not folding them vp in the general word creature Concerning the reprobate it is not meant of them for they are but of two sorts the one such as Peter speaketh of 2. Pet. 3.3.4 There shall come mockers which shall walke after their lusts and say where is the promise of his comming thinking because the Lord hath beene patient so long therefore the day of iudgement is but a tale to keepe men in awe So as these men cannot waite for Christs comming since they denie it and deride it the other are such as know there shall be a day of reckoning but feare it and put it farre off as loth to see it as their father the diuell because then they shall receaue according to that they haue wrough●● the flesh which at that time shall turne to their sighing and groaning because they denied to themselues sorrow and griefe in the flesh So as all creatures but men and Angels are meant heere where we see the concordance and agreement as it were of the whole frame of heauen and earth not ●arring but ioining in one that they might be at the end of their labour and vanitie by their dissolution and change of their subiection into immortalitie Where it is said When the sonnes of God shall be reuealed we may vnderstand it fiue waies First that it is spoken in this
it were not possible but they should be rauished with expectation after it there being at euery gate an Angell standing to let in Gods children and to keepe out the fearefull and vnbeleeuers adulterers and vngodly persons Againe heere learne that the creatures waiting with vs and hauing as it were the same affection we haue to be vnchained of corruption and at the libertie of the sonnes of God they belong only to vs that are his children and are sanctified for our vse through prayer and thanksgiuing for as through vs they fell so through vs they shall be restored and therefore wait both with vs and on vs in the meane time and the wicked are but vsurpers ouer them snatching them against their willes and abusing of them to their lusts as the voluptuous Iewes did who feeding vpon that was none of theirs while the meate Psal 78.31 was yet in their mouths the wrath of the Lord Numb 11.33 was kindled and consumed them and euen so at length shall the wicked be chased out of the world Iob. 18.18 and for his theft in rauening vpon that is none of his as God himselfe saith Iob 39.13 he shall be shaken out of the corners of the earth for that they enioy is none of theirs but belongeth as truly to vs as a man accounteth that his owne which he getteth by his honest labour and in that they abound more with them heere then Gods children to whom of right they appertaine it is certaine the glory of Gods elect shall be the greater in heauen for the want of the creatures heere on earth and the more the wicked enioy heere the greater shall their torments be in hell for that is Luk. 16.25 the obiection of Abraham to stop the course of Diues his petition who was in torment Remember saith he thou hadst thy pleasure in thy life and therefore for thy pleasure thou art tormented in thy death for God sendeth not all his plagues at once vpon the wicked but suffereth him to haue his seeking that he may be satiate with his owne way and that desiring Prouerb 12 12. the net of euils he may be heereafter tied and ensnared with the cords of his owne sinne Againe obserue hence for the conclusion of this point that all the creatures in heauen and earth do serue for the furthering of our saluation and are readie and willing to do vs good except the diuell and those that shall be damned for we know the red sea ranne backe and became dry land for the passage of the Israelites Exod. 14.21 The bitter waters Exod. 15.25 were made sweet by the casting in of a tree to stanch their thirst The riuer Iordan returned backward Psal 114.3 till the people of God were passed ouer Water came foorth of the stonie rocke Exod. 17.6 that the Israelites might drinke according as they desired The Sunne stood still in the middest of heauen and hasted not to goe downe for a whole day Iosh 10.13 at the prayer of Ioshua At the prayer of Hezekiah Esay 38.8 the Sunne went 10. degrees backward contrary to the course of nature The small quātitie of meale oyle which the widow of Zareptah had through the word spoken by Eliah 1. Kings 17.16 wasted not till the Lord sent raine vpon the earth The waters being twice smitten with the cloke of Eliah 2. Kings 2.8.14 diuided themselues twice this way and that way for the passage ouer both of Eliah and Elisha The waters of Iericho 2. Kings 2.21 by the sprinckling of a little salt at the spring head were healed of the Lord for the good of his seruants that death come no more thereof The furnace Dan. 3.23 though it was heat seuen times more then it was wont to be had no power so much as to scortch the garments of the three children that would not obey the kings commaundement in a matter of Idolatry neither had the Lions Dan. 6.12 though rauenous in themselues any mouthes to open against Daniel that made his prayers to God notwithstanding it was against the decree of Darius the king and so much sollicited by his malitious and idolatrous nobles Since then the creatures of God are thus readie to hide and smother their strength where they may hurt vs to open and enlarge their power when they may defend vs and since the Angels of God Psal 91.11 watch ouer vs in our wayes let nothing make vs so foolish since we runne well but to hold on for the tyrants rage can not last but the wrath of God is a soft consuming fire and let vs venter our bodies which are but dust for the saluation of our soules which are the Lords 1. THESS chap. 5. vers 19.20 verse 19 Quench not the spirit verse 20 Despise not prophesying THe words themselues yeeld two points to be considered first a commandement or an exhortation equall to a commaundement secondly the meanes how this commandement may be best obeyed and the exhortation most fruitfully receiued The commaundement is Quench not the spirit the meanes to performe this is Despise not prophesying that is the wise and found interpretation of the Scriptures by them whose lippes preserue knowledge and whose feet are shod with the Gospell of peace for so prophesying is to be taken for an application of the word and a teaching to edification In the first obserue forasmuch as nothing can be quenched but fire why this Metaphor or borrowed speech is vsed of the Apostle to expresse the Spirit by fire The like phrase and speech is vsed Mat. 3.11 when the seruant baptizing his master lest it should seeme a disparagement and debasing of him doth protest in great humilitie that he did it but with water but there came one after him that should baptize them with the holy Ghost and with fire that is with the supernaturall power of the holy Ghost as it were fire And in Iohn 7.38 the spirit is resembled to water meaning thereby that who so is not cleansed of the holy Ghost as with water cannot be saued Now the spirit is compared to fire in respect of the foure properties that bee in fire first the nature of ●●re is to consume any matter that is combustible or may be burned euen so the holy Ghost is sent into vs to wast and consume all the lusts of our flesh as selfe-loue pride of life and whatsoeuer else exalteth it selfe aboue the purity and simplicity of the Gospell Secondly fire doth refine euery thing that can be purified euen so the holy Ghost doth change and refine our affections and purgeth vs from that drosse and filth of the earth that cleaueth so neare to vs and hangeth so fast vpon vs and keepeth vs still in the fornace of affliction till we come to that perfection of eternall blessednesse that the flesh dying the spirit may liue in the day of the Lord. Thirdly fire doth relieue by warmth all those subiects that be capable of life and those that be benummed it comforteth and reuiueth
mire by this token that the Gospell hath saued thee from hell For the second benefit it was singular fauour to be freed from the former misery but the Lord together with that hath aduanced and raised vs to speciall dignity that of the bond-slaues of the diuell we are made heires not of this world onely but of the world to come fellow heires with the Lord Iesus to be beloued with the same loue and to tast of the same glorie Iohn 17.22 so as wee may say with Ioseph Thus and thus bountifull hath the Lord beene vnto mee how can I then commit such wickednesse against the maiesty and in the presence of so good a God Hence learne since the Gospell exhorteth vs by this sauing argument to reformation of life whensoeuer we are assaulted inwardly by our owne lusts by the instrument which is the diuels to vse the benefit of this saluation to stay vs from that sinne we are tempted to let it be it were to wantonnesse then let euery of vs argue thus with himselfe And what shall I vse the members of Christ bought with such a price as the blood of the Sonne of God and shall I make them the members of an harlot 1. Cor. 6.15 shall I thus requit the Lords kindnesse and so lightly esteeme the riches of his mercy Why now hee doth not command to performe the law and so be saued but because I am already saued he doth beseech me to amend my life and shall I set no more by all his benefites bestowed both vpon my soule for instruction and vpon my body for health and comelinesse shall I not remember the manifold temptations he hath freed me from and the multitude of his compassions extended towards me shall I make no more reckning of his fauour that hath bestowed on me so many graces and pardoned so many sinnes Far bee it from me that aduisedly and deliberatly I should so despite the Lord as to grieue his spirit and dishonor that God that hath giuen me Christ out of his owne bosome and with Christ all things else and through him saluation Now for the instruction and first for the things we are to forbeare the first is vngodlinesse that is not onely the superstition of the heathen and palpable Atheisme but all carelesse seruing of God when men regard nothing lesse then the purity of a good conscience in the seruice of God and when they little respect the true worship of God but onely make a shew and a semblance to serue him so as the word vngodlinesse doth signisie all dispising of him openly or seruing of him negligently Now all vngodlinesse prophannesse and urreligiousnesse doth touch first the exercises God hath appointed to testifie our sincerity secondly it toucheth God himselfe For the first when wee come to heare the word or to pray if we doe not perswade our selues that hee that despiseth the teacher despiseth God as wee may see Luk. 16.29 by the answer of Abraham to the rich man They haue Moses and the Prophets let them heare them And further if we doe not beleeue that what so is preached out of the Bible shall as fully be executed as if it were now performed as we may see Reuel 22.19 this is open vngodlinesse and for this diminution of the truth of Gods word his part shall be taken out of the booke of life for a man must iudge of vngodlinesse by the effects of vngodliness as to say a mans good meaning is good beleefe for then was Vzziah vniustly punished and smitten with the Leprosie for burning incense vnto the Lord 2. Chron. 26.19 for his intention was good but his action was accursed because it was not for the King to deale in the Priests office So when we heare men say It were no matter if there were no more going to Sermons since there is no more following of them these and the like are speeches of open vngodlinesse for did euer any man grow colder for sitting by the fire or leaner for eating of bread The second thing to be eschued is worldly lusts which be two fold first to lust after vnlawfull things which be either the fleshly desires of a carnall man in himselfe or which may hurt our neighbour either in name goods or body Secondly when we lust after worldly lawfull things vnlawfully and immoderatly both which are set downe in three generall points by Saint Iohn 1. Ioh. 2.16 first the lust of the flesh that is that the flesh would liue at ease as we may see by she reasoning of the rich man with himselfe Luk. 12.19 after great store gotten Now soule saith he liue at ease eate drinke and take thy pastime Secondly the lust of the eye to liue wantonly and to haue an adulterous eye as Euah had that could not see the fruit but shee must eate it Genes 3.6 and as Achan had Ioshua 7.21 that could not see the Babylonish garment but hee must haue it and as Shechem had that could not see Dinah but hee must rauish her Thirdly the pride of life that is the desire of honour and thirsting for preferments in this life for it is impossible for that soule that is surfeited with these things to carrie any true loue toward God or any burning zeale toward his truth And these bee they that wrought so forcibly with our first mother in yeelding to the first temptation that euer was in our flesh for first the apple seemed faire to the eye Gen. 3.6 secondlie it was good for meate thirdlie it was good for knowledge which implied pride of life shee thinking thereby to bee as wise as God These three the Gospell denieth vs of when we sauour so of them as our greatest care is to enioy them and wee affect them more then the righteousnesse of Gods kingdome And as the Gospell teacheth vs to forbeare these things so also doth our Baptisme for who so is dipped in the water which representeth the blood of Christ hee is thereby instructed to denie himselfe and to hate the workes of the diuell this being a Sacrament which not onely sealeth to vs remission of sinnes in the blood of Christ but also sanctification by the spirit of Christ which consisteth in mortifying the old man and quickening the new The first standing on these two first death secondly buriall that as wee beleeue Christ to bee dead to obtaine pardon for all our sinnes so we beleeue that hee by his obedience obtained the spirit of God to mortifie all our corruptions and when hee went into the graue our old man was buried with him that we might bee raised vp with him to newnesse of life and this is set downe 1. Peter 1.2 where he saith We must suffer in the flesh that is die in corruption and in sinne daily euen as Christ did in his bodie And he that doth not crucifie his affections performeth not his vow in Baptisme nor cannot chalenge any part in Christ his death for he is said to
words Rom. 4.2 Abraham was not iustified by workes and therefore they must be so reconciled as both places may bee true lest contrariety and variance appeare in the spirit of God which cannot be This is like those speeches vttered by Christ My Father is greater then I Ioh. 5.17 19. Iohn 10.30 and in another place I and my Father are all one and I count it no robbery to be equall with my Father which is spoken in a different respect the first in the person of a mediator the second in the person of the Godhead So Saint Paul taking the word iustifying for iustification before God said true and Saint Iames taking the word iustifying for iustification or approuing of his faith before men saieth true also but the word being taken in one and the same sense it were impossible for an Angell from heauen or for Christ himself to reconcile them And the reconciliation which the Papists make of these two places fighteth directly with Paul for they say faith and workes doe iustifie Paul saith faith onely iustifieth So as when Paul speaketh of iustifying by faith hee meaneth that whereby wee are acquitted by Christ and doe appeare perfect before God in him and Saint Iames taketh it for being iustified in the sight of men that is declared and approued to bee iustified when our holy life answereth to our holy profession And that the word Iustified is thus vsed and taken in this sense as Saint Iames doth appeareth Psalme 51.4 That thou maiest be iustified when thou art iudged that is declared to bee iust So Luke 7.29 the Publicans iustified God that is declared him to bee iust and in the same place it is said Wisedome is iustified of her children And Luk. 10.29 it is said the Lawyer was willing to iustifie himselfe that is to shew that hee was iust and it is likewise prooued out of the text it selfe Shew mee saith Saint Iames thy faith shew it to mee not to God Againe Saint Iames had falsified and abused the Scripture if he had taken the word iustifying in the sense to be made iust for the sentence that Abraham was iustified had passed the Lords mouth many yeeres before the sacrificing of his sonne for this that hee was iust was pronounced long before Ismael was conceiued as appeareth Genes 15.6 and therefore taking the word iustified to bee made iust hee could in no sort bee iustified by offering vp his sonne because he was iustified before but the meaning of Saint Iames is that it was approoued by this act and worke of Abraham that God had not saied before in vaine that hee was iustified and Rom. 4.10 it appeareth Abraham was iustified in his vncircumcision and this worke Iames speaketh of was done long after his circumcision To this the Papists reply thus Though Abraham was iustified before hee did this worke before God yet there is a degree to bee more iustified and so this place of Saint Iames may bee taken to bee a further iustification and an increase of faith before God as well as not To this wee answer that one pardon from God sufficeth for all sinnes and one droppe of blood serueth for all offences but because our faith is weake that we are not able to apply this bloud all at once therefore it is said that we must grow from faith to faith and he that is washed in the bloud of Christ is all cleane but our sanctification in this life leaueth some grudge and tang of corruption and maketh our feete impure as Christ speaketh Iohn 13.10 so as with God wee are iustified all at once and there is no proceeding by degrees in respect of him for blood pardons all but water that is our renewing groweth by degrees Now for the speeches of Saint Paul Rom. 4.4.5 and Rom. 8.30 that none are iustified by workes the Papists say It is to be taken of the workes of the law ceremoniall but not of the law m●●ll But we must note that Paul speaketh there of the law written in the tables of stone of that law that manifesteth sinne to bee sinne Thou shalt not lust c. which is the law morall and so their distinction false and friuolous Besides they were both the lawes of God and therefore a man may bee iustified as soone by the one as by the other for as Paul saith 2. Corinth 3.5 All our sufficiency is of God and of our selues we can doe nothing and but that the vaile is taken away in Christ the same couering remaineth which was in the old Testament vnder Moses And where Saint Paul saith Abraham was iustified without workes and no man shall bee iustified by the workes of the law True say the Papists by none of the workes of the law that he doth in the time of his infidelity but by them that hee doth after his conuersion he may be iustified And they say that forasmuch as the Apostle saith The workes of Abraham were done in beliefe therefore by this hee excludeth onely those workes done before faith to helpe his iustification So as by this wee see the aduersaries make two iustifications the first when of an infidell a man is made a professor which they say is by congruity when there is a certaine inclination in the heart of man to performe some good workes and yet for want of grace cannot the Lord seeing his heart thus prepared to be iustified doth call him and meerely of his grace doth iustifie him The second when a man is freely iustified by the grace of God then by this grace of God and his owne free-will say they hee may increase his iustification before God For the first we answer that none can be iustified by workes before faith for this is as if a tree should bring foorth fruite without a roote or a body should liue without a soule so in vaine is it to make a question of that cannot be for before wee haue faith it is impossible to worke or to thinke of a good work Secondly where they say that speech concerning Abraham is taken and to be vnderstood of his workes done before faith and that he was iustified by his good workes in faith this doth wholly eneruate and take away the strength of the Apostle his reason for Paul saith If hee were iustified by workes then had he whereof to glory with God Rom. 4.6 which speech extendeth as well to workes after faith as before faith for hee that deserueth any way may glory Secondly the Apostle saith Not to him that worketh but to him that beleeueth is righteousnesse due for if hee worketh hee hath his wages by desert that is say they he that standeth vpon his owne workes before faith without the assistance of Gods grace this man challengeth it by desert because hee did them without faith and grace which euasion and shift is most vaine for a man is not therefore made euill because he doth euill but he doth euill because he is borne euill so a man is