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A76798 Expositions and sermons upon the ten first chapters of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to Matthew. Written by Christopher Blackwood, preacher to a Church of Christ in the city of Dublin in Ireland. Blackwood, Christopher. 1659 (1659) Wing B3098; ESTC R207680 612,607 923

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Christ ver 16. 2 That no man should dare to think as if there were any contradiction in these and such like Scriptures as Faustus the Manichee did who did deny this Gospel to be penned by Matthew and denied this Sentence to be any of Christ's words because it is false that Christ did not destroy the Ceremonies seeing Christians do not observe them Consider the Law having no place in justification and nothing contrary to the Law of the New Testament in point of meats days or ceremonies we ought with Paul to think it holy just and good Ob. But if the law be thus fulfilled what shall we think of the ten Commandements Answ The Decalogue or ten Commandements is part of the Law of nature Rom. 2.15 Which shew the works of the Law written in their hearts Yea every command of them was observed before the giving of the Law upon Mount Sinai even the command of the Sabbath Exod. 16.29 now they being the Law of nature are to be observed for example it s writ in every mans heart that there is a God and that this God is one and that he is the immediate object of worship and that his name is to be sanctified c. All the question is about the Sabbath or seventh day from the creation which is put to an end Col. 2.16 yet is it written in every mans heart that if God be to be worshipped there must be a time for his worship and if it be left to the scantling of every carnal mans heart it will be little enough yea in time it will come to nothing among such it remains then that godly men as they have it writ in their hearts to give God a time so that they give him that time which the Churches at Corinth and Galatia and Troas gave unto him and as they so doubtless all the Apostolical Churches This was the day which the Spirit calls the Lords day as like phrases call the Lords table the Lords body the Lords supper whereto that speech of Psal 118.24 hath respect This is the day which the Lord hath made we will rejoyce and be glad herein For all the rest of the Commands as the obedience of inferiours to superiours and that every man shall enjoy his own wife life state and good name c. is writ in every mans heart Moreover for that of the Sabbath the distinction of divers of the Rabbins is to be observed viz. one thing is commanded in these words Remember thou keep holy the Sabbath the cause of which holy worship is a thankful remembrance of the creation of the world another thing is commanded in these words The seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God in it thou shalt do not manner of work this rest respecting their servitude in Aegypt belongs to the Hebrews onely Exod. 31.13 remembring their own servitude in Aegypt they should handle their own servants gently which also was the opinion of Irenaeus l. 4. c. 30. and Eusebius l. 1. c 4. so that to distinguish rightly we must distinguish the commands of worship and the commands of rest as by their causes so by their times The Christians observed the Sabbath and had their assemblies thereon in which assemblies the Law was read Acts 15.21 which continued to the Council of Laodicea to whom it seemed better that that day the Gospels should be read and therefore from the ancient fathers Balsamon observs that almost in all things the Sabbaths were equal'd to the Lords days which two days Nyssen calls brethren Also Justin Martyr against Tripho before Abraham there was no need of circumcision nor before Moses of the celebration of the Sabbath feasts and offerings p. 186. Asterius cals them a beautiful couple also Clement Const l. 7. c. 24. saith Keep holy the Sabbath day and the Lords day because this is dedicated to the memory of the creation the other to the memory of the resurrection also cap. 8. he saith let servants labour five days but on the Sabbath day and Lords day let them wait on the doctrine that makes to Godliness in the Church In the ancient Church they had a custome not to fast on the Sabbath because it was a day of gladness except on the Sabbath that was before the burial of Christ Ignat ad Philip Tertul. de jejun and therefore Eusebius mentions that Constantine forbade Christians to be summoned to law on the Sabbath no less then on the Lords day because those days were dedicated to holy assemblies and therefore whereas some think from that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one of the Sabbaths the Lords day is placed into the room of the Sabbath they are deceived seeing there is no mention hereof by Christ or the Apostles Now when the Christians observed these two days viz. the Sabbath and Lords day they did not do it of any command of God or of the Apostles but by voluntary consent by the power of liberty given to them unless I should add by divine example which is not of little force see Jer. 26.18 Unless we add that the spirit calls the day of worship the Lords day Rev. 1.10 on this day there was a meeting of all that dwelt in the City and Country though he call it Sunday Justin Apol. 2. Q. Whether to these ten commandements as the law of nature may not other commands of the Gospel be refer'd A. Yes to the first we may refer all those commands which forbid the least shew of worship to be given to false Gods 1 John 5.21 and that the true God alone be worshipped John 17.3 1 Cor. 8.6 To the second command we may refer all commands forbidding resemblances of God and the worshipping of God through any mean which himself hath not instituted Matth. 6.24 Ephes 5.5 Phil. 3.19 To the third command we may refer the due sanctification of the name of God Matth. 6.9 and to keep our words in the bounds of yea and nay Matth. 5. ●4 Jam. 5.12 To that of the Sabbath we may refer that certain hope concerning the rest in heaven the taste whereof we have in peace of conscience Heb. 4.9 10 11. To the fifth we may refer all honour due to Princes Rom. 13.1 2 3 6 7. to Masters Col. 3.22 to Husbands Eph. 5.22 to Pastors 1 Tim. 5.17 Heb. 13.17 To the sixth command all wrath and hatred which are the seeds of murthers Matth. 5.22 1 Joh. 3.15 To the seventh command are reckoned all impurities and all divorces without the cause of adultery Matth. 19.9 To the command against theft are refer'd not only those commands which forbid us to hurt the goods of others but that we should profit them Col. 3.25 1 Cor. 12.7 To the ninth is refer'd those commands which caution us against lying and enjoyn us a continual care of truth Eph. 4.24 25. To the tenth are refer'd the commands of quenching inordinate motions Gal. 5.24 Eph. 5.22 23. the baits of which concupiscence are wealth honour
water its full when it s out of the water nothing remains in it 5 Meditate of what thou reads or hears so do godly men Psal 1.1 So did Joshua cap. 1.8 and David Psal 119.15.148 Those that read and hear much and meditate little are like those that have a sharp appetite after food but by reason of a cold stomack they cannot digest it Meditation is to the soul as digestion to the stomach for want of which the word heard is as a writing writ in the sand which the first blast of wind doth utterly deface 6 As the light of the sun or some other light must meet with the light of the eye before sight can follow so in order to spiritual light God must shine in our hearts 2 Cor. 4.6 Besides the light of wisdom in the soul there must be the light of divine revelation The inspiration of the Almighty gives understanding Job 32.8 I will make known my words unto you Prov. 1.23 Matth. 16.17 Flesh and blood hath not revealed this unto thee but my Father which is in Heaven V. 24. No man can serve two Masters for either he will hate the one and love the other or else he will hold to the one and despise the other yee cannot serve God and Mammon Christ to the end of the chapter sets down 2 things 1 a dehortation from worldliness and carking cares from ver 24. to ver 33. 2 an exhortation to true carefulness ver 33. For the dehortation it is confirmed by divers reasons the first is from the impossibility of serving God and the world or loving God soveraignly and the world soveraignly No man can serve two masters Mammon as Aretius and many others observe is a Syriack word and signifies wealth or as Hesichius interprets 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a treasure This Mammon or wealth is said to be a Lord or Master not as if it were so by nature or in deed but onely in the estimation of men and because it possesses the chief seat in the hearts of earthly minded men Not as if it were unlawful to have Mammon or wealth for Christ bids us make to our selves friends of the Mammon of unrighteousness Luk. 16.9 But he bids we should not make an Idol of it to serve it as covetous men do who set their hearts upon their wealth and make a God of it Abram Isaac David Solomon had wealth but set not their hearts on it We may see what it is to serve Mammon by considering what it is to serve God To serve God is to acknowledg him to reverence him as our Lord and Saviour to obey him to trust in him alone to lift him up in our hearts above all creatures and enjoyments when he and they shall come in competition to seek and promote his glory onely all or most of this covetous and earthly men ascribe to wealth now God will be worshipped alone or not at all Now whereas covetous men object we can serve God and the World together we can have leasure for Gods worship and our own gain I confess I am eager to get wealth but I will not omit the worship of God To this Christ answers No man can serve two Masters for either he will love the one and hate the other This Proverb means it of Masters in the whole as the Lawyers say there cannot be two Lords or Masters of one and the same thing 2 No man can serve two Masters that is commanding contrary things at one and the same time for else we may serve divers Masters subordinate one to another as the Council here and those that derive power from them and those who derive power to them 1 Peter 2.12 13. and two Masters that are in equal power Besides immoderate love of the World will alienate the heart from God yea getting a reign in our heart it will throw God out of government there Ye cannot serve God and Mammon Irenaeus derives Mammon of Mum that is a spot and Hon that is Riches so that Mammon is the spot of Riches such is covetousness which hides Riches up that they are eaten up of Rust and Moth. From the words I le gather one Observation Obs The love of God and the love of the World cannot in any sovereign and eminent degree be in one and the same soul at one and the same time James 4.4 O ye adulterers and adulteresses know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God 1 John 2.16 If any man love the world the love of the Father cannot abide in him Reas 1 From the contrariety of one to the other 2 Because God among all the affections of the soul challenges our love Matth. 22.38 yea and that in a sovereign degree Matth. 10.37 therefore the World cannot have it When we give up our sovereign love to him then he gives us back some of it that we may bestow it upon Wives Children Estate with this intention that we love them subordinately to himself 3 From the absurdity of placing God and the World in one and the same Throne It 's all one as to joyn light and darkness together which cannot have communion 2 Cor. 4.14 To be translated out of the World and to love the World cannot be together in one and the same subject it 's an argument à repugnantibus Use 1 For information See how far they are from Christianity whose hearts are knit to any earthly thing more than God 1 These earthly things thou so affects are not able to fill thy soul God onely fills the soul Eccles 5.10 He that loveth Silver shall not be satisfied with Silver He spake like a Fool that said Soul take thine ease eat drink and be merry You may as soon fill a Chest with Grace as a Soul with Gold 2 Consider for whom God placed the affection of love in thee was it not for himself As the eye was made for colour so was our love for God To fall in love with the World and not with God is as if a man having a beautifull virtuous noble and rich virgin offered him he should slight her and fall in love with some base and beggerly strumpet 3 The love of the World will eat out the love of God 2 Tim. 3.4 Lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God The more love to God the more remiss about earthly things and the more love to earthly things the more remiss to God and his service 4 All earthly things thou so affects are not the true good Matth. 19.17 Why callest thou me good there is none good save one that is God Christ himself though nearer to good than any creature yet if men had set their affections on him as a creature they had done amiss When worldly men say who will shew us any good meaning from Corn and Wine the Prophet judging these not to be the true good saith Lord lift up the light of thy countenance upon me Psalm 4.6 7. as if he should
love of sinfull correspondency make unhappy discoveries this way Mic. 7.5 Trust not in a friend put not confidence in a brother 4 Beware of purposing to turn back into the waies of errour because of the opposition we finde in Gods wayes If once we put our hand to Gods plow we are not to look back Luke 9.62 5 Beware of a cowardly giving way to the opposers of the truth Jeremy complained there were some were not valiant for the truth Jer. 9.3 Contrary Paul would not give place by subjection to the false Teachers no not for an hour Gal. 2.5 that the truth of the Gospel might continue If any man should intrench upon your names estates relations you would contend against them and not spare your purses in this case let us be like minded in matters of Religion so Nehemiah c. 6.9 11 15. To this the Apostles exhort Phil. 1.27 28. Jude 3. It was well said by Luther I will not fly God assisting nor leave the word of God in the front of the battel I had rather burn among the living coals then stink halfe alive if not altogether dead Reason thus either the cause is Gods or not if not why stir we a foot in it if it be why go we not thorow with it 6 Let all that are godly be united among themselves if not in a same opinion yet in a charitable affection and united conjunction to oppose wickedness and to stand for holiness Divide and overcome was the old maxime There 's a story of a Father that gave a quiver of arrows to his sons and bad them break them being united in the quiver but they could not he bad each of them after to take out a single arrow and then any one of them could break them he made the application that so long as his sons were united none could hurt them but when disjoyned and severed one from another they became a prey to all I may apply this fitly to all Saints who are the subjects of the worlds rage Psalm 133.1 3 Use Consolation to saints under much opposition They in this world have little peace but in heaven there remains a rest for them Heb. 4.10 11. Rev. 14.13 Yet as the weather-beaten mariner in sight of his Haven is comforted in the hopes of his arrival therein where he shall have an end of all storms so we being tossed under a continual storm should comfort our selves by faith and hope in the haven of our rest To these contentious persons that obey not the truth but oppose the professors of it there will be tribulation Rom. 2.7 8. but to thee who by a patient continuance in well-doing goes on there will be peace Christians are apt sometimes to grow passionate under the oppositions of the world Jer. 15.10 Woe is me saith Jeremy that thou hast born me a man of contention and strife to the whole earth but this is our comfort 2 Thes 1.6 7. It is a righteous thing with God to recompense tribulation to them that trouble you and to you who are troubled rest with us when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty Angels V. 35. For I am come to set a man at variance against his father and the daughter against her mother and the daughter in law against her mother in law Obj. But what seems more monstrous then this Text Christ seems to overturn all Laws which ordain honour and love of children to their parents Christ contrary comes to set them at variance Answ The nearest end of Christ his coming was by his doctrine to unite hearts but the separation mentioned here was an accidental end The world cannot indure the Gospel but hate all that receive it so that the argument is he that stirs up strife and variance is guilty of sin but Christ doth so therefore he is guilty of sin Answ The proposition is true by it self the assumtion is true onely by accident else it s false for what a blessed peace should we have would every man receive the Gospel Obj. It s said of John Baptist He shall turn the hearts of the fathers to the children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the just Answ This is the proper end of the Gospel if wicked men hindred it not but the contrary through wicked mens malice oft falls out Gods children may retort those words which Eliah did to Ahab to the wicked of the world 1 Kings 18.17 18. Art not thou he that troubles Israel Eliah answered I have not troubled Israel but thou and thy fathers house in that ye have forsaken the commandment of the Lord as Joshua said to Achan Jos 7.25 Why hast thou troubled us the Lord shall trouble thee this day The cause why the world troubles the Saints is because they witness against their evil John 7.7 The world cannot hate you but me it hateth because I testifie of it that the works thereof are evil There 's no bond so strait which the Gospel will not break in sunder through the corruption of wicked mens hearts See it Jer 12.6 For even thy brethren and the house of thy father even they have dealt treacherously with thee they have called a multitude after thee believe them not though they speak fair words unto thee One part of the trial of Christians is to be exercised with contentions when the Lord calls his people from the wicked of the world 2 Cor. 6.15 16 17. Come out from among them and touch not the unclean thing and I will be your God and ye shall be my sons The world thinks this an intolerable wrong to make a departure the mother is angry with her daughter for it and the daughter with the mother yea sometimes a Church with a member and casts him out for this because he will preserve his conscience pure Church-communion is an high priviledge but to sin against conscience is too high a price for it V. 36. And a mans foes shall be they of his own houshold Christ had in part set forth the variance the Gospel brings not of it self for Christ is the Prince of peace Esa 9.6 The Gospel of it self is the word of reconciliation 2 Cor. 5.19 Believers are the children of peace and follow after it 1 Pet. 3.11 but by accident in that wicked men will not suffer their superstitions and wickedness to be reproved he comes to close up all that a mans enemies shall be they of his own houshould The unconverted wife or servant will oppose the converted husband and master as Christ had prepared his Disciples in the former verse against the enmity of kindred and neighbours which words were in part taken out of Jer. 9.4 Take ye heed every one of his neighbour and trust ye not in any brother for every brother will utterly supplant and every neighbour will walk with slanders So now Christ prepares his Disciples against all enmity which shall be in their own houses Some times the childe is angry with
grace 2. From the punishment of sin 1 Thess 1.10 Jesus who delivered us from the wrath to come 3. From the guilt of sin Rom. 8.1 There 's no condemnation to them that are in Jesus 4. From the weariness and burden of sin Matth. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden I will give you rest 5. From the remainders of sin this will be in another World Rom. 7.24 25. Who shall deliver me from this body of death I thank God through Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 15.57 3. The means whereby Christ sayes viz. his Death and Intercession If when we were Enemies we were reconciled by the Death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his Life Rom. 5.10 1. By his living to make Intercession for us as it is expounded Heb. 7.25 wherefore he is able to save to the utmost them that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make Intercession for them This is one Argument of Christ his Godhead to save his People from sin for it 's applied to Jehova Psalm 130.8 He shall redeem his People from all their iniquities If there were a Physician in the World that could save a man from all Diseases multitudes of Patients would come to him how should Believers then come to Christ who saves his People from all their sins Psalm 103.1 2. As the Woman that had the Bloudy Issue touching Christ was healed so we touching Christ by the hand of faith the bleeding wounds of our sins are stanched This is true tidings of joy to all believing souls that such a Saviour is born Luke 2.10 11. V. 22. Now all this was done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying The Evangelist sets down a third ground to stablish Joseph's heart and together with him the hearts of all other Believers viz. that this Prediction of a Virgins bringing forth was foretold seven or eight hundred years ago in the Reign of King Ahaz Isai 7.14 Joseph at first was ready to be startled at these strange News the Angel told him but when he heard that all that the Angel told him was confirmed by the Scriptures this brought full satisfaction The sum of the Promise was that not onely that God would save the House of David Isai 7.13 from the Syrians and Men of Israel their Enemies v. 8 9. but that also he would save the believers among them from their spiritual Enemies and because the matter seems hard to believe the Lord gives them a sign to confirm it viz. Behold a Virgin remaining a Virgin still shall be with childe● so that as in Painting or Building there are first rude Lines or Draughts made by the Painters who after by degrees perfect that which they had conceived in their mindes according to the Idaea therein so as the Lord had prophesied of a Virgins conceiving so now he perfects and fulfils it so that as the calling of the Israelites out of Egypt Hosea 11.1 was a Shadow of the Deliverance of the Sons of God out of the spiritual Egypt of Hell so these things told then by Isai did shadow out what was now fulfilled V. 23. Bernard thinks the Devil fell out of envy envying men that Dignity that God should become Man Behold a Virgin shall be with childe and shall bring forth a Son and they shall call his Name Emmanuel which being interpreted is God with us The Evangelist sets forth not onely the sum of the Prophesie but the wonderfulness of it Behold this Adverb still points out attention and admiration Behold as if he should say Men and Angels wonder at this strange unheard of thing that a Virgin should conceive and bring forth Emmanuel that is God-Man Jer. 31.22 The Lord hath created a new thing upon earth A Womam shall compass a man Some men will not wonder at any thing to conceal their own ignorance but here is a providence to admire all And they shall call his Name Emmanuel that is being interpreted God with us that is not onely spiritually that is reconciled to us 2 Cor. 5.19 but because the Word was made Flesh and dwelt among us John 1.14 They shall call all the saithfull and many others shall so call him God with us for this Pronoun Relative they hath respect unto a plurality See Luke 12.20 Luke 16.9 Quest How can Jesus be called Emmanuel Resp Not in sound but in sense Christ was called Emmanuel from the Dignity of his Person and he was called Jesus from his Office and effects of it and in all this it sell out that the Prophesie of Esaias was fulfilled Shut your eys without Christ and say that you know no other God but he that was in the bosom of Mary and suckt her Breasts Where that God Christ Jesus is there is whole God or the whole Divinity found the Father and the Spirit Luth. in Ps 130. I shall also add what a late Writer adds to interpret this Prophesie viz. that within a space of time wherein a Virgin might marry and conceive and bring forth and the Childe come to the distinguishing of good and evil Isai 7.14 15. Rezin and Pekah Ahaz his two Enemies should be brought low and from this he calls an high improved sense over and above the vulgar sense which belonged to the words that from this place the Spirit should gather that a Virgin should bring forth a Son V. 24. Then Joseph being raised from sleep did as the Angel of the Lord had bidden him and took unto him his Wife Here we have Joseph's obedience to the Angel seen first in taking unto him his Wife as the Angel bad him When we are convinced of Gods Commands we must neither dispute them nor delay them Psalm 119.60 now Joseph takes both Mother and Childe into his tuition V. 25. And knew her not untill she brought forth her first-born Son and called his Name Jesus Here is the second thing wherein Joseph's obedience to the Angel was seen viz. in not knowing his Wife he means in a matrimonial way as it is taken Gen. 4.1 to make it appear that Christ was not conceived of Joseph but of the Holy Ghost So the phrase is taken Num. 31.35 1 Sam. 1.19 No doubt the Angel had given Joseph command herein not to know her because he did as the Angel commanded this was done as for the stablishing of our Faith on Jesus Christ as being conceived in such a wonderfull manner so for to verifie the Promise that the Seed of the Woman should break the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 Untill she brought forth her first-born Son It is not for us to contend to finde whether the Virgin Mary were a Virgin ever after she brought forth her first-begotten Son it is curious to seek and more curious directly to define that son is said to be the first-born before whom there was none though he were the onely begotten This word untill oft signifies an
Egypt Because it was a Country near at hand whereunto the journey would be less And be thou there until I bring thee word Gods command should be the rule of our motion As the souldier is not to leave his station without the command of his Officer no more are we without Gods command For Herod will seek the young childe to destroy him The Angel knew this by divine revelation For God knowes the thoughts of mens hearts a far off Psal 139.2 And the motions of our wills Though the Angel might suspect it from the cruel and proud disposition of Herod yet onely he knew it from revelation There is no wisedome nor counsel can stand against God Prov. 21.30 The Angel saith not Herod will destroy but onely seek to destroy Psal 37.32 V. 14. When he arose he took the young childe and his mother by night and departed into Egypt Here is the obedience of Joseph We must go from Country friends and kindred when God calls so Abraham Gen. 12.1 2 though we know not whither Here was a long and dangerous journey for Joseph an old man to carry a woman that had lately lain in and an infant of about forty days old above two hundred miles through a vast Wilderness into Egypt to sojourn among persons utterly unknown whose language probably he knew not and that in the depth of Winter but faith overcomes all difficulties he believes the Angel that he would bring him word when it was fit to remove as he said v. 13. Faith in Joseph swallows up carnal fears 15. And was there till the death of Herod that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying Out of Egypt have I called my son And was there till the death of Herod Here 's the second branch of Josephs obedience We must not onely go whither God will have us but tarry there as long as he will have have us How long Christ was in Egypt and in what place and what miracles he did the Scripture is silent herein That it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying Out of Egypt have I called my son The Scripture is fulfilled four ways 1 When that which is plainly fore-told is fulfilled as that a Virgin shall conceive a childe Esa 7.14 compar'd with Matth. 1.23 2 When the Scripture prophesies in general of such and such persons it may be applied to every particular as when wicked men contemned Isaiahs Ministry the Lord sends the Prophet Isaiah cap. 6.9 to preach That they should hear but not understand see but not perceive To such contemners Christ at several times applies it as Matth. 13.13 14 15. Joh. 12.39 40. and the Apostle applies it to such Jews Act. 28.26 27. so Rom. 11.8 as it is written God hath given them the spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and ears that they should not hear to this day which though spoken by Esaias and aiming at the wicked that then lived under his ministry yet being spoken in general falls upon all that have a spirit of slumber 3 Analogically or by way of proportion So this Scripture Out of Egypt have I called my Son which is taken out of Hosea 11.1 That place cannot literally be meant of Christ because that Israel there meant the Prophet upbraids with unthankfulness therefore it 's meant by way of similitude As Israel the adopted Children of God were called out of Egypt by the Ministry of Moses so was Christ the natural Son of God called out of Egypt by the Ministry of the Angel the Members were called out in Hosea The Head here 4 Prophesies are fulfilled by way of Type when the thing typified answers to the Type So the Prophets phrase of calling my Son out of Egypt being spoken singularly was a Type of the Son of God who was to be called out of Egypt by the Angel neither needs this seem strange for Sinah and Sion Hagar and Sarah which signifie the two Testaments are more unusual Types and further fetcht The third part of the Chapter V. 16. Then Herod when he saw that he was mocked of the Wise-men was exceeding wrath and sent forth and slew all the Children that were in Bethlem and in all the Coasts thereof from two years old and under according to the time that he had diligently inquired of the Wise-men We have here the History of Herod's Cruelty from v. 16. to v. 19. set down 1 From the outward cause of it viz. his being mocked of the Wise-men 2 From the inward cause viz. an exceeding Wrath he conceived in his heart partly for the Indignity he conceived the Wise-men had done him and partly to hear that there was one born that should be Heir of his Kingdom and he not know who he was 3 From the cruel Edict or Command he sent forth to slay all the Infants of Bethlem two years old and under 4 From the prophetical Prediction thereof Jeremy prophesied In Rama was there a voice heard Lamentation Weeping and Mourning Rachel weeping for her Children Then Herod when he saw that he was mocked of the Wisemen We have the outward cause of Herod's cruelty viz. his being mocked of the Wise-men for they promised they would return unto him but God having admonished them of his Treachery returned not to him neither did Herod presently go to murder the Infants for about thirty days after Christ was presented in the Temple Luke 2.22 which was about eighteen days after the Wise-men came and a little while after dwelt at Nazareth in Galilee Luke 2.39 And likewise it is probable the Tyrant Herod had endeavoured to finde Christ that he might kill him alone before he would kill so many Infants which thing he knew would render him odious to all Moreover there was a common Report that when Joseph and Mary came to present Christ to the Lord at the time when Mary was purified that the Childe Jesus was openly declared by Simeon and Anna to be the Messias and from thence Herod supposed the Wise-men had deceived him Was exceeding wroth and sent forth and slew all the Infants in Bethlem and in all the Coasts thereof from two years old and under Because the Report of the Wise-men and the Witness of Simoon and Hanna in the Temple stuck much in the mindes of men so that Herod could not without fear of a Tumult vent his Malice against Christ he deferr'd his Malice to a fitter time and hearing of his being presented in the Temple began to inquire where his abode was but when he could not finde him in all Judea he thought he was hid for fear he dissembled the matter a while thinking hereby that his Parents fearing nothing would bring him out of the place where he was hid but when after his long dissembling the Childe was no where to be found in Judea the second year when he saw his opportunity he endeavours to take away the Life of the Childe but
by Stones is meant either the Rocks that lay upon the Banks or shore of Jordan Luke 19.40 If these should hold their peace the stones would immediately cry out Neither was this other then when God made man of the dust of the earth and breathed into him a living soul Some by Stones understand the Gentiles from whom the Jews did expect Faith and Godliness as from the Stones neither is it incredible for God to make Children of Stones seeing Isaac was begotten from Abraham when his body was dead to her being an old woman though afterwards he had Children by Keturah a young woman and Sarahs body also Rom. 4.19 For Abrahams dead body is resembled to a Stone Isa 51.1 Look unto the Rock whence ye are hewen q. d. You Pharisees Sadduces and Jews think if you should perish what would God do for an off-spring I tell you he is able to raise them from the Gentiles nay if need were from the dead or liveless Rocks whence your self at first had your beginning and wherewith at present your hearts have some resemblance and similitude as God turned Lots Wife into a Pillar which was standing many hundred years yea even in Josephus his time so can the same God turn a Stone into a Man doing that bodily which he doth spiritually taking away an heart of Stone and giving an heart of flesh Ezek. 36.26 Obs There is an Omnipotence in God to do whatsoever can be done even what he wills Psal 115.3 Matthew 26.53 2 The spiritual promises of God are not tied to fleshly issue Rom 9.6 7 8 9. Gal. 3.7 29. but to the Children of promise to raise up children to Abraham setting forth the manner how Abraham should have Children not by begetting onely but by raising up As in the Law they that were born of the brother remaining alive were sons to the deceased brother not by nature but by Law so all believers are planted into Abraham and become not Children of the flesh but Children of the promise Rom. 4.12 13. The Baptist Christ and the Apostles endeavour to take away the pride and Carnal confidence conceived from the Holiness of their ancestors Abraham as a common father or trustee received the promises from God which belong to all believers Hence Abraham is called a father like unto God Rom. 4.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both in spirituality as God is to his Children for the believing Gentiles are not descended from his Loyns 2 In universality so that as God is an universal Father not onely of the believing Jews but also of the Gentiles Rom. 4.17 so was Abraham V. 10. And now also the Ax is laid to the Root of the Trees therefore every Tree which bringeth not forth good Fruit is hewen down and cast into the Fire The Ax is laid to the Root of the Trees Here is a Motive to stir up the Pharisees and Sadduces to Repentance because laid his Ax to the Root of the Trees By Trees he means Men or Jews Matth. 12.33 Make the Tree good and his Fruit good By Ax he means 1 the Threatnings of the Word which were now laid to the Roots of mens hearts Every Tree that bringeth not forth good Fruit is hewen down as Husbandmen do with Trees that cease bearing Fruit they cut them down to make fire-wood of them so will the Lord do with you Jews Luke 13.7 Cut it down why cumbreth it the Ground John 15.6 Withered Branches are by the Husbandman cast into the Fire and burned Every Tree which bringeth not forth good Fruit Every Man Woman City among you is hewen down and cast into the Fire Whereas you think you being once the People of God shall still so continue to be know ye that at present ye have the Ax laid to you you shall be cut off from your Root Abraham Rom. 11.22 And first ye shall be destroyed by the Romans 2 Ye shall be cast into the Fire of Hell for your unfruitfulness 3 Your posterity shall be given up to a spirit of slumber They shall have Eys but not see Ears but not hear Hearts but not understand Rom. 11.8 For though Deut. 20.20 Fruit-trees were not by the Law to be cut down no not in time of a Siege yet Fruit-trees that either never bore or had done bearing might be used either in the Siege or for fire-wood Obs A present or speedy Judgment of God may be expected of those that under means of grace remain unfruitfull Trees Luke 13.6 7. John 15.6 7. Luke 20.16 Isai 5.4 5 6. V. 11. I indeed baptize you with Water unto Repentance but he that cometh after me is mightier than I whose Shoes I am not worthy to bear he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with Fire John's Ministry is set down from the difference betwixt him and Christ 1 Whereas the People might be apt to think him to be the promised Messias he tells them he was not he declares himself to be onely the Minister of outward Baptism but Christ who was shortly to be shewn to them was the Authour of inward Baptism The occasion of John's speech here is set down Luke 3.15 All men mused in their hearts whether John were the Christ John answers I indeed baptize you with Water c. I indeed baptize you with Water unto Repentance That is you Jews and repenting Publicans and Souldiers as appears Luke 3 10 11 12 13. I baptize you with Water unto Repentance already wrought which I judg by the confession of your sins v. 6. and by the profession of your Faith Acts 19.4 Not you Pharisees unto a future Repentance For John turns his speech from the Pharisees to the People doubting whether he were the Messias Luke 3.14 15 16. And therefore John's Baptism as also the Baptism of every Dispenser is not the Baptism of future Repentance but of present Repentance Acts 2.39 40. Repent and be baptized every one of you in the Name of Christ for the Remission of sins Hence Infants for want of present Repentance are excluded from Baptism what change of heart shame sorrow or hatred of sin can there be in them By baptizing persons to Repentance for time to come you make two Baptisms whereas the Scripture makes but one Baptism Ephes 4 5. But he that cometh after me is mightier than I Or more excellent 1 Both in Gifts and Grace 2 He it is that makes my Ministry effectual 3 He is the Bridegroom I am onely his Friend to sue for a Mariage betwixt you and him John 3.29 4 He must daily increase in his praise and esteem I must daily decrease in mine John 3.30 as the light of the Sun swallows up the light of a Star 5 I have the spirit in such a measure he hath the spirit out of measure John 3.34 6 Whereas I never did any Miracle among you John 10.41 he shall do Miracles raise up the Dead cast out Devils c. Whose Shoes I am not worthy to bear This is a
therefore Matthew Mark and Luke say As a Dove and like a Dove It 's like it was of a fiery matter as the fiery Tongues were The Spirit appears in the likeness of a Dove to shew that that Spirit that was in Christ was full of meekness Isai 42.1 2 3. I have put my Spirit upon him the bruised Reed shall he not break nor smoaking Flax shall he not quench See Matth. 11.29 Again a Dove represents the Graces of the Spirit Isai 11.2 The Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him to shew the innocency purity and charity in Christ A Dove was the sign of the Reparation of the World after the Floud and here it is a sign of Reconciliation by Christ This Dove was a fit Resemblance to this Lamb of God for as the Lamb is most harmless among Beasts so is the Dove among Birds The Flight of this Dove denotes the divine Influence of the Spirit coming from Heaven into the Members of Christ as well as into the Head Mahomet by putting Corn into his Ear accustomed a Dove to fly to his Ear which eat what was there put by this way he perswaded the People the Spirit of God was familiar with him and suggested to him his Alcoran Yet must we not think this substance or body resembled by a Dove to be hypostatically united to the Spirit of God as the humane nature of Christ was to Christ but as Angels oftentimes took humane bodies and appeared to men with them and laid aside those bodies afterwards so did the Spirit of God As the Heavens were opened unto Christ to shew his Doctrine was not earthly but heavenly so did the Spirit come upon him to shew his Doctrine was the Ministry of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.8 called The glorious Ministration of the Spirit this visible Appearance of the Spirit could not but send divers of the Spectators to the perusals of those places of the Prophets forementioned Isai 11.2.42.1 2 3.61.1 especially Christ so interpreting the visible descent of the Spirit upon him Luke 4 18. To conclude by this visible sign of a Dove is shewn that Christ is that harmless one in whom the Spirit hath his constant residence in and through whom alone we are to receive of the gifts of his Spirit for whose sake rather than for his own in whom the fulness of the Godhead dwelt bodily this Spirit descended upon him and especially for John's sake to whom this sign was promised whereby he should be certified in a most absolute clearness of the person of the Messiah John 1.32 On whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending like a Dove that same is he This Spirit John is said to see not essentially but believingly for by a Metonymie the name of the spiritual thing is given to the visible sign V. 17. And lo a Voice from Heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased We have here the third sign confirming the Call of Christ and his Instalment into his Office viz. a voice from Heaven when the Heavens clove that voice sounded It was the voice of the Father doubtless in that he saith This is my beloved Son here was the first clear Revelation of the Trinity under the New Testament the Father shews himself in a voice the Son in the flesh or humane nature the Spirit in the likeness of a Dove This is my beloved Son Not an adoptive but onely begotten my onely everlasting and coequal Son These words are partly taken out of the second Psalm v. 7. I will declare the Decree the Lord said unto me Thou art my Son By this forementioned voice he made his Son King upon Sion That Psalm is to be referred to this Of this beloved Son Isaak was a Type Gen. 22.2 Take thy son thy onely son thy son whom thou lovest And so was Solomon called Jedidiah or the beloved of the Lord. Oft was Christ called Beloved in the Book of Canticles the Fathers voice might have respect to these Figures Of this Christ speaks John 17.26 I pray that the love wherewith thou lovest me may be in them Ephes 1.6 We are said to be accepted in this Beloved In whom I am well pleased The same with that In whom my soul is well pleased Matth. 12.18 As if he should say Thou my Son onely and chiefly beloved pleasest me in all things and that infinitely and no man pleases me but by thee yea by thee am I appeased with all them I have given thee at whom I was offended by the sin of Adam and there is nothing in thee that displeases me Enoch pleased me Heb. 11.5 but not so as thou dost for in thee I am appeased and reconciled to the World of Believers The shew of a Dove was a dumb thing therefore here 's a voice to make all things concerning the Messiah out of question and also opening the whole Mystery of our Redemption for what is our Redemption but this whereas formerly we were at enmity with God now God is well pleased with us in Christ 2 Cor. 5.19 God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself These words are taken out of Isai 42.1 and in that Chapter is the calling and sending of Christ to his Ministry described and indeed the whole Scripture whence some words are taken should be lookt into To this in the Transfiguration was added Hear him not Plato Socrates Moses further than he Witnesses of Christ but hear him who being in my bosom John 1.18 shall reveal my Mysteries which have been hid from the foundation of the world He shall open the way to Heaven to you CHAP. IV. IN this Chapter there are four parts 1 Christ his Tentation from v. 1. to v. 12. 2 Christ's Preaching in Galilee from v. 12. to v. 18. 3 Christ's calling of four Disciples Peter Andrew James John 4 The Confirmation of his Doctrine by Miracles v. 23 24 25. In the Temptation observe 1 The Time v. 1. immediately after Baptism 2 The Place in the Wilderness v. 1. 3 The efficient Cause viz. the Spirit of God 4 The End to be tempted of the Devil v. 1. 5 The kindes of the Temptations which are three 1 To Unbelief v. 2 3. 2 To Presumption v. 5 6. Cast thy self down for he shall give his Angels charge of thee 3 To the vain glory of the glory of the World v. 7 8 9. 6 The Victory Christ got over these Temptations so that the Devil was forced to give ground v 11. amplified from the Weapon wherewith Christ overcame him which was the Word of God 7 The comfort Christ had after the Temptation was over The Angels came and ministred to him V. 1. Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into the Wilderness to be tempted of the Devil This Temptation of Christ is set down 1 From the Time Then When Even presently after his Baptism Mark 1.12 Immediately the Spirit driveth him into the Wilderness and being full of the Holy Ghost he was led by
contemplation of 40 days For though Christs natural heat might be suspended by his deep contemplation so that he might slowly digest for the powers of the soul when they go into contemplation they have little left for digestion and nourishment as we see generally in great students and so might keep him alive without meat the longer yet not forty days He was afterwards an hungred When Christ began to be hungry the tempter came to him hitherto he stood doubtful and durst not come partly because of the voice he had heard out of heaven and partly because his forty dayes fast did portend some great thing but now seeing Christ to be hungry he comes the more impudently as he came to the head so to the members when the feeling of affliction begins to touch them He was not hungry all the forty days but after he was hungry to show he was man Some think Christ by his hunger did objectively allure Satan to tempt him that so he might overcome him as a party of souldiers sometimes feign a running away that they may allure the enemies to follow them and so cut them off either by an ambush or by an orderly facing about so the devil tempted Christ as man not knowing him to be God or if he did know him to be God Christ doth as it were encourage his cowardly enemy that durst not set upon him as God shewing himself to be man V. 3. And when the tempter came to him he said If thou be the Son of God command that these stones be made bread We have here the first of the three temptations wherewith the devil assaults Christ And when the tempter So he is called 1 Thes 3.5 from the first temptation wherewith he supplanted Eve he is called the Tempter not because he is the alone tempter but because he is the chiefest for sometimes our flesh and sometimes the world tempts This tempting of Satan was nor barely by way of suggestion for that would easily have been repelled from the holy heart of Christ but in some outward and bodily form perhaps of a man To tempt is to try but Satan is an ensnaring trier He said unto him If thou be the Son of God Meaning as that voice at thy baptism declared and as John Baptist hath preached thee to be do not thou suffer hunger having whereby thou mayest asswage thy hunger Satan thought either by the miracle or by Christs inability to do the miracle he might know whether he were the Son of God or no that so he might vent his old wrath and envy against him It 's like the devil did not come abruptly upon him but first saluted him courteously as what Sir art thou meditating of I saw thee to be baptized of John in Jordan I heard a voice from heaven saying This is my beloved Son I would fain know whether the voice meant that thou art truly the Son of God by nature or an adopted Son by grace I see also by thy long fast of forty days that thou art hungry if therefore thou art the Son of God succour thy hunger and turn these stones into bread for thou canst easily do it The scope of Satans temptation was to tempt Christ 1 To unbelief as if he should say Thy father hath hitherto forg●●ten thee and sent thee no meat now thou seest thy God fails thee therefore necessity puts thee upon to provide for thy self The scope of Satan was to draw Christ from resting on Gods word and to follow what unbelief should suggest and this appears by Christ his answer Man doth not live by bread alone So that though I will not deny but Satan might tempt Christ to a vain boasting of his own power yet specially he tempts Christ to unbelief either that he should not believe that testimony that was given at his baptism or to doubt that God would fail him of necessary livelihood As he overcame the first Adam with unbelief of the threatning Gen. 3.3 so doth he endeavour to overcome the second Adam with unbelief of the promise And seeing Satan dare call in question the Son-ship of Christ no wonder if he tempt Saints to call in question their son-ship Where we may see Satans craft Christ being hungry is tempted to provide bread in such a way as Satan prescribes He usually fits his temptations according to mens present conditions marking in his temptation whereunto persons are inclining or wherein they are wanting so that as Fowlers lay several baits for the birds and Hunters for the wilde beasts and Fishers for the fish and lays for every one their proper bait for to catch them so to the hungry or poor Satan sets before them bread and livelihood to the full idleness and sloth to the proud honours to the covetous gain to the revengefull wrongs and discontents to the curious Magick and inch●ntments to the adulterer beauty to the drunkard wine c. as he tempted the head so doth he the members to the afflicted despair to the idle wantonness to the busie trouble to the severe cruelty to the mercifull flattery V. 4. But be answered and said Man shall not live by bread alone but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God But he answered and said We may see the defence Christ had against Satans temptation it was the Scripture for that is our sword we are to fight with Ephes 6.17 which the Papists taking from the people expose them to Satans open violence A man that is to go where thievs way-lay him will be sure to have his sword yet is not the bare repeating the word in an heartless manner a defence against Satan but to repeat it believingly after which the temptation uses presently to vanish But herein we must joyn precept promise and threat precept forbidding such a sin and commanding such a duty the promise in case we consent not nor obey Satans temptations this we must set against all Satans proffers the threatning in case we yield to the temptation because Eve set not the threatning against the devils temptation and minc'd off the temptation which was In the day thou eats thereof thou shalt die which she minc'd into this Lest ye die Gen. 3.3 she was overcome of the tempter Man shall not live by bread alone but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God As if he should say Man shall live of every thing which the Lord hath commanded or appointed to the sustenance of mans life and not onely of bread as the Jews lived of Manna 40 years So that if the Lord should command us to eat grass and snakes c. we should live by them as by the most delicate meat yea if he should command it we should live without any meat as Moses and Elias did Therefore by word here is not onely meant the promises but the decree for the word that goes out of a man is his will pleasure or decree So that by word is meant the
thou serve We have here a twofold Answer of Christ to Satan's Argument First he answers to the person of the Tempter and then to the Temptation 1 To the person of the Tempter Get thee behinde me Satan 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hupage Get thee gone depart appear no more before me but get thee behinde me for I will neither hear thee nor look upon thee thou dost not onely promise false things but also thou requirest wicked and blasphemous things of me to wit that I who am thy Creatour should worship thee who art my Creature This word behinde me is not in some Copies This word begone is used when we reject those whom we have a while endured with some trouble and tediousness Blasphemous words should not be patiently heard of Christians no more than they were of Christ but to be rejected with great indignation Also we may learn when the Devil grows troublesom with blasphemous Temptations not to dispute with him but to drive him away with anger saying with one of the Ancients Thy uncleanness be upon thee O Satan because thou art an unclean Spirit uncleanness is thy work Let not Satans blasphemous thoughts which he casts into thee fill thee with doubting whether such Injections can befall Gods children and so put thee into an habit of heavy walking but drive him back as Christ doth by the Word Satan being he cannot torment Saints in Hell will labour to torment them here on Earth It 's a point of wisdom to draw some spiritual good out of Satans blasphemous Tentations When he suggests there is no God say Nay Satan the Word to which I am confined says there is besides in the Lights of Heaven I see a shadow of his divine countenance in the Creation of the World I see his infinite greatness in his universal provision I see his goodness let these motions make us see Satans malice that he hath against the Majesty of God let us also with more dearness adore and love the Majesty of God Be also humbled that thou canst not with greater abhorrency abominate such hellish Blasphemies also strive to be more strongly settled that there is a God that there is a Heaven and Hell because Satan endeavours to instill the contrary Let it also be a strong Argument that thou in more likelihood than formerly belongs unto God for so long as thou liest dead in thy sins the Devil never affrighted thee with blasphemous thoughts but now since thou camest home to God and begannest to imbrace his ways Besides gather experience by these blasphemous thoughts to comfort others in the same kinde For it is written Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God The meaning of Christ's words are those things which properly belong to the Worship of God are not to be given to any Creature neither ought a Dispute concerning any such thing to be received but angerly to be rejected as Christ here doth Yea those things which belong to Worship they are to be given to no Creature nor to be divided betwixt God and Creatures This place is taken out of Deut. 6.13 in stead of Worship there it is Fear Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God for the Hebrews put Fear for all the Worship of God hence Rabbi Juda in libro Chasidim saith If any man see the Devil and be afrid of him he falls down before him And him onely shalt thou serve 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Latreuseis this word render'd serve neither in the rise or use of it is proper onely to God See Acts 7.42.10.25 And therefore their distinction of Latreia that it is onely due to God and Doulia to Saints and Hyperdoulia to the Virgin Mary This word onely excludes all others save the Lord from divine Worship And therefore the popish distinction of Adoration which they acknowledg onely to be given to God and that of Invocation wherein they acknowledg Saints may give good things and drive away evil is vain All Invocation presupposes three things 1 Omniscience that he that is called on may hear our Groans 2 Omnipresence that he every where hears our Prayers 3 Omnipotence that he can succour us in our miseries now can Saints departed do any of these and therefore why should they be invoked and therefore that it 's not lawful to give divine Service or Worship to any save God onely I le give these Reasons 1 We have a Command onely to call upon God in the Name of Christ John 16.23 24. Ephes 2.18 Heb. 7.25 Now we have no Command to call upon any Saint departed 2 We have no Promise of being heard if we so call 3 We have no Example of one godly man that did so 4 The Saints departed know not our Wants Isai 63.16 Abraham is ignorant of us and Israel knows us not 5 It darkens and derogates from Christ's Mediatorship to whom it belongs to intercede for his People which they blasphemously ascribe to Saints especially to the Virgin Mary Now Christ alone conveys the things that are Gods to us and ministers the things that are ours to God Now we are commanded to come in our Wants not to Saint departed or Angel but to this Mediator Heb. 4.14 15 16. 6 By calling thus upon Saints we put them into the Throne of Christ and invest them with Gods properties as to hear Prayers and to know our Wants Rom. 10.14 We are onely to call upon him on whom we believe Yea hereby we invest them with Gods properties for we acknowledg the person we pray to the searcher of our heart and the authour of our good And therefore Chemnicius writes The Papists in their Temples paint Christ threatening and casting Darts against sinners the affrighted sinners they fly to Mary who puts her self betwixt as a Mediatress and drives back the Darts this honour Christ gets hereby that he is less loved less sought and counted less mercifull 7 He that we call upon must know the states of all that call upon him every where that he may judg what is expedient or not expedient for them but this is proper to God alone Psalm 65.2 neither doth it help them to say that Saints departed know the states of all by the revelation of the Angels or in the glass of the Trinity or from those that dy for our Prayers ought not to be founded on such Dreams but on plain Scriptures and so much more in that the Saints the Papists call upon are scarcely any where to be found save in the Popes Kalender Yet do we not think slightly or speak reproachfully of the Saints departed whose Memories are celebrated in Scripture Psalm 106.16 for there 's Memory of Saint Moses and Saint Aaron as well as of Saint Matthew Saint Mark c. In the New Testament there 's a Catalogue of many Saints Heb. 11.32 Yet doth it not follow that Saints are to be called upon we are to praise God in his Saints and to acknowledge the grace of God in them and to imitate them
in some supposititious writings falsely ascribed unto him V. 11. Then the devil leaveth him and behold Angels came and ministred unto him We have here the victory over the tempter The devil brought the worst of his fiery darts but Christ overcomes him We may see the temptations of Satan are limited that God will not still suffer Satan to tempt 1 Cor. 10.13 nor us to be tempted above strength Luke adds when the devil had ended all the temptation ●e departed from him for a season Satan left not Christ altogether but onely for a season to let us know that the rest of his life was not free from temptations and to teach us that sometimes Satan politickly gives way to try afterwards whether he can finde us secure Satan will try whether we have not lost our former strength care or vigilance or whether God that now doth not will not at another time for some causes suffer us to be led into temptation Satan would come oftner but that God who knoweth our strength or rather our weakness will not suffer him Satan is apt to come again with the same temptation to see if he cannot tyre and weary us out with the anguish and vexation of it 2 Cor. 12.8 Satan thrice tempted Paul with pride and sometimes he changes his weapon Let us do as the Pilot doth have our compass ready and stand ready to turn your needle to any point knowing that your lust within is for any sin and Satan can as easily tempt us to prodigality as to covetousness Onely when Satan comes with some other weapon God doth it for our good as change of Physick is good for the body for the same Potion always used will not work so well so the longer we are used to the same temptation the less it worketh God will have Satan turn some other way to purge some other stream of lust Besides God will have us learn skill by experience at all sorts of weapons by the falls of Hezekiah and Jehosaphat and David learn we that when one temptation is over another will come which will be a mean to prevent spiritual pride and security As we must not be secure when the temptation comes but set against it before Satans suggestion joyn with our corruption set against it while it is young so let us not be secure when the storm of the temptation is blown over let us do as Mariners that mend their tacklings against another storm come We are apt to think we shall have no more such temptations and then comes the tempter Satan was never so beaten by any as by Christ yet he came again and again A man that is once well beaten in the Field will hardly be brought to fight with the same man again but it is not so with Satan We must have some good days to breath in else we should not be willing to live and more fits of Temptations we must have or else we should not be willing to dy And behold the Angels came and ministred to him Here 's the comfort Christ had after the Temptation was over Angels come to minister to him Consolations are wont to follow after Temptations Hereby Christ saw the Father had a care of him and whereas solitariness in a Wilderness was one Trial here 's the company of good Angels nor had he onely their company but also he had them ministring to him Meat and other necessaries till he came out of the Wilderness The word Behold le ts us see that this was no little wonder that the Son of God who was even now exposed to Satans scorns should have not onely one but divers Angels ministring to him The like was in his passion Luke 22. As in Battel when the Enemies are dispoiled and driven away Friends come to congratulate with us so the Devil being overcome the Angels come to rejoyce with Christ As the Angels ministred to Christ after his Combate so do they serve Believers they are all ministring spirits Heb. 1.14 but it 's not to Run-aways but to then who have valiantly stood it out Thus we see Satan's great Temptations 1 Distrust in Adversity 2 Presumptuous undertakings without a Call 3 To seek success in our Calling as Riches Honour c. without and against a Command of God The second part of the Chapter containing Christ's Preaching in Galilee in which observe 1 The time when which was when John was cast into Prison 2 The place where viz. in Galilee 3 The end wherefore Christ preached which was 1 For the fulfilling the Prophesie v. 14. 2 For the enlightening of those in darkness v. 15 16. 4 The subject matter of his Preaching which was the Doctrine of Repentance v. 17. V. 12. Now when Jesus had heard that John was cast into Prison he departed into Galilee We have Christ's Preaching set forth 1 By the time when which was when Jesus heard that John was cast into Prison from that time Christ began to preach v. 17. which was as soon as John Baptist his fore-runner was cast into Prison of this mention is made Acts 10.36 37. The Word which God sent unto the Children of Israel preaching peace by Jesus Christ that Word you know that was published throughout all Judea and began from Galilee after the Baptism which John preached This circumstance of time notes to us that this Jesus was the Lord whom they looked for who sent John as a Messenger to prepare the way of his Gospel which was prophesied by Isai cap. 40.6 and Malachy cap. 4 5 6. Hence the Disciples when they saw Elias come after Christ in the Transfiguration they scrupled saying Why do the Scribes say that Elias must first come Christ tells them that John Baptist was that Elias the fore-runner of Messiah according to those words of his father Zachary Thou Childe shalt be called the Prophet of the Highest for thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his way namely as the Angel told him in the power and spirit of Elias Luk● 1.17 This John was Christ's fore-runner both in his Birth being born six Moneths before him and in his Preaching and also in his Passion and Suffering Matth. 17.12 Elias is come and they knew him not but have done to him whatsoever they listed even so also shall the Son of man suffer of them Now seeing the coming of Christ is twofold the first in the flesh the second to judg the World whether do not the Prophesies imply that there must be an Harbinger of his second coming as well as of his first for though the Prophesie of Isai 40.6 seems applicable onely to his first coming yet that Mal. 4 5. seems to be applicable to both his commings I will send you Eliah the Prophet before the coming of that great and terrible Day of the Lord and he shall turn or restore the hearts of the fathers to the children that is he shall bring the unbelieving Jews to have the same heart then holy fathers and
progenitor● had that is he should convert them to the faith of Christ their fathers hoped in and looked for lest continuing obstinate to the great and terrible Day of the Lords Judgment they should perish among the rest of his Enemies to understand which the old Prophets Daniel excepted for the most part spake of the coming of Christ without distinguishing his first and second coming and applying those things which respectively concerne the state of either of them Again it appears from Matth. 17.10 the Disciples upon the Transfiguration asked Christ Why say the Scribes that Elias must first come Christ answers Elias truly shall first come and shall restore all things These words being spoken of Christ after John Baptist was beheaded imply plainly that he is to come again besides how can this restoring of all things be verified of the Ministry of John Baptist which continued but a short time and did no such thing as these words seem to imply for the restoring of all things belongs not to the first but to the second coming of Christ Acts 3 19. Repent and be converted for the blotting out of your sins that the times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord and that he may send Jesus Christ which before was preached unto you whom the Heavens must receive untill the times of the restitution of all things If the M ster come not to restore all things till then surely his Harbinger who is to prepare his way for restoring all things is not to be looked for till then Whereas Malachy saith Behold I will send you Eliah the Prophet it proves no more that it should be Eliah the This bite in person than when it is said David shall rule over you proves Christ should be David in person It 's like if it be one that comes again it should be John Baptist himself who was the Harbinger of the first coming so that as Christ had two comings so his Harbinger should have 2 We have Christ his Preaching set forth by the place which was Galilee The Word begun from Galilee Acts 10.37 Galilee was part of the Land of Canaan it was divided into two parts the higher and lower the higher was for the most part the Land of Nephtali wherein stood Capernaum the chiefest City of Galilee situate upon the bank of Jordan over against which on the other side stood Chorazin the lower Galilee contained the Tribes of Zebulon and Issachar wherein were the Cities Nazareth and Bethsaida near the Lake or Sea of Galilee and Cana. Also Mount Iabor where he was transfigured In Galilee was Christ's conversation principally when he was upon earth there it was Christ healed the Nobleman's son John 4.46 In Nazareth a City of Galilee he was conceived Luke 1.26 and brought up Matth. 2.23 there he began his Preaching in Capernaum thence it was that his Disciples were Acts 1.11 Ye men of Galilee why stand ye gazing up into Heaven Acts 2.7 When the Holy Ghost was given it 's said Are not all these that speak Galileans Jesus went about all Galilee teaching in their Synagogues and healing all manner of sickness Matth. 4.23 at Cana in Gatilee he turned Water into Wine his Transfiguration was upon Tabor a Mount of Galilee his ordinary residence was in Galilee he came into Judea as it 's thought onely at the Feast times when the whole Nation assembled at Hierusalem during which times partly during his stay there partly in his going and returning he did all in a manner that he did out of Galilee and the last Feast he came thither offered himself a Sacrifice upon the Cross And when he was risen from the Dead he appoints his Disciples to go see him in Galilee Matth. 28.10 Onely his Nativity was at Bethlem upon the occasion of the Taxing his Passion at Hierusalem and his Ascension upon Mount Olivet near to Hierusalem V. 13. And leaving Nazareth he came and dwelt in Capernaum which is upon the Sea coast in the Borders of Zebulon and Nephtali V. 14. That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Esaias the Prophet saying V. 15. The People which sate in Darkness saw great Light and to them that sate in the Region of the Shadow of Death Light is sprung up We have in this History the beginning of Christ's Ministry set down 1 From the occasion of it which was Christ's hearing that John was cast into Prison 2 From the place of it which was Capernaum a City in the Coasts of Zebulon and Nephtali lying near the Sea 3 The end of his Ministry there which was twofold 1 For the fulfilling of the Prophesie of Esaias mentioned cap. 9.1 2. v. 14 15. 2 For the enlightening of People that sate in darkness v. 16. 4 The sum of his Doctrine which was Repentance v. 17. Repent for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand Leaving Nazareth John gives the Reason hereof Because a Prophet hath no honour in his own Countrey John 4.44 This was the Town where his Parents dwelt Luke 2.39 wherein he had lived thirty years Luke 4.16 Matth. 2.23 hence called Jesus the Prophet of Nazareth of Galilee Mat. 21 11. the Reason why he could have no honour there was because it was his own Countrey Many Prophets that have their gifts and graces admired in strange places are partly from meanness of Parentage and partly from childish weakness in their childhood acted partly from observation of some Infirmities in them partly from Passions to which the holiest are liable Christ onely excepted and partly from curiosity men being apt to loath Manna because of the commonness of it and partly from wantonness men having itching ears and desiring change apt to be contemned by their own People As it should be the care of a faithfull Teacher to keep up the authority of his Ministry Titus 2.15 so should it be the care of Gods People to honour the Prophets of God and to esteem them that are over them in the Lord 1 Thess 5.12 lest their Ministry become ineffectual for the Message will never be esteemed where the person is vilified Christ was exceeding contemptuous of the glory and praise of men as appears John 7.3 4. but he knew none could receive good by his Ministry that did not esteem reverently of his person which reverence and honour because he could not have it at Nazareth he goes to Capernaum Teachers should have such sanctity of life powerfulness and impartiality in Doctrine sufficiency of maintenance as may keep their persons from contempt and the People of God should count it their happiness to have such as they can reverence for the obtaining such let them spare no pains nor cost He came and dwelt in Capernaum upon the Sea-coast Capernaum did adjoyn to Jerdan where Jordan flowed into the Sea of Tiberias it was by reason of its lying on the Sea the Metropolis of Galilee and the chief Mart town here Christ and his Disciples lived the best part of three years
than he that is in the World Isai 43.1 2 When thou goes through fire and water the Lord will be with thee Rom 8.37 We are more than Conquerours How We are sure of Victory before we fight 1 Cor 10.13 5 There 's a day coming when God will reckon with all Persecutours Psalm 9.12 When he maketh inquisition for Bloud he remembereth them God will inquire who slew Hooper Bradford c. who articled against such and such who brought them before Ecclesiastical Courts High-Commissions Committees Assizes Sessions Psalm 12.5 For the sighing of the Prisoner will I arise 2 Thess 1.6 6 A great deal of good comes to Christians by suffering Persecution 1 Hereby affections come to be loosened from the World and to be fastened upon God Psalm 142.4 5 2 Christians formerly loosened one from another come now to be fastened The Children of one Father that fall out among themselves are soon united against a common Enemy 3 Persecutions tend to the furtherance of the Gospel Phil 1.12 1 By propagation or spreading of the truth Upon Stephen his Persecution many of the Brethren preached the Word of God far and near Acts 11.19 and the hand of the Lord was with them v. 21 to convert many 2 By confirmation of those who are weak in faith Phil 1.12 Many of the Brethren in the Lord waxing confident by my bonds are much more bold to speak the Word without fear 3 Hereby the World sees that God hath Worshippers who do not cleave unto him for worldly advantage Whiles for the hope of Israel they are bound with Chains Acts 28.20 and will not accept of Deliverance out of most painfull sufferings in hope of a better Resurrection Heb 11.35 7 Consider the cause for which thou sufferest set down 1 By the goodness of it Acts 5.41 Rejoycing they were counted worthy to suffer shame for his Name Rom 8.36 For thy sake we are killed all the day long Revel 1.9 John was in the Isle of Patmos for the Word of God and for the testimony of Jesus Christ This cause is more worth than thousands of my Life 2 By the clearness It is not wrapt up in consequences and must have Sophisters to fetch it out but it 's clear Dan 3.16 the three Children said O Nebuchadnezzar we are not carefull to answer thee in this O King as if he should say We desire no clearer cause to lose our Bloud in It 's a comfort in suffering clearly to see our way 3 By the fewness of Witnesses and multitudes of Adversaries 2 Tim 1.15 4.16 when Paul came to witness before Nero all those of Asia forsook him at his first Answer 8 Consider the wofull condition that will befall Persecutours 1 Their strokes and malice falls on Christ Zach 2.8 He that toucheth you toucheth the Apple of mine Eye Acts 9.6 Saul Saul why persecutest thou me 2 They have extreme horrour of conscience Jer 20.2 3 Pashur was a Persecutour he smote Jeremiah and put him in the Stocks and God threatens to make him a terrour to himself and to all his friends Zedekiah who smote Micaiah 2 Kings 22.24 in a day of trouble goes from chamber to chamber to hide himself Herod was tormented with John's death 3 Such persons as persecute have upon them at present an evident token of perdition as you that suffer persecution have of salvation Phil 1.28 4 The people of God every where are imploring God against Persecutors Luke 18.7 Shall not God avenge his own clect that cry unto him daily I tell you he will avenge them and that right speedily Herod might have lived long had it not been that the Church was imploring God against him Acts 12.5 Lam 5.59 60 61 c. 5 Persecutors come to fearfull ends Acts 12.23 Herod was eaten up of worms Jezabel thrown out of a window and eaten up of dogs why She slew the Prophets of God Revel 6.9 10 11. 6 They are branded with infamy to posterity 2 Ti. 4.14 Alexander the Coppersmith did me much evil and greatly withstood my words Elimas Acts 13.10 there 's present information given among the godly who persecute 7 All godly men rejoice at the downfall of persecutors the Jews teasted when Haman was hanged When the wicked perish there is shouting Prov. 11.10 Let not this joy be out of personal hatred but because justice is glorified the Church delivered and Satans kingdome weakned 9 Submit to the providence of God in all persecutions and look to it for 1 If the hairs of our heads are noted by God much more our lives Matth. 10.29 30. 2 Persecutours cannot touch the soul Matth. 10.28 3 Our times Eberties estates are not in the hands of persecutors but in Gods hand Psal 31.13 14 15.83.4.5 Revel 2.10 for it is God gives us our cup to drink John 18.11 as mastiff dogs fall upon men when their chain is unloosed so do wicked men upon Saints when God unlooses his cham of providence 4 As in active obedience we labour that what we do may please God so in passive obedience endeavour that what God doth may please us 2 Sam. 15.25 26. Behold here I am let him do to me as seemeth him good Mark 14.36 Take away this cup from me nevertheless not my will but thine be done 1 Sam. 3.17 It is the Lord let him do what seems him good 5 In all persecutions and sufferings commit thy soul to God desire him to take care of that so Christ Luke 23.46 Father into thy hands I commit my spirit so Stephen Acts 7.59 As in times of extremity we commit our jewels into the hands of trusty friends when houses are on fire and there are combustions men have principal respects to their jewels and gold oh that I could save that The worst persecutors can do is to take away life when the body dies it 's like the setting of the Sun which in short time rises again Therefore in all persecutions commit your soul to God in well-doing 1 Pet. 4.19 as into the hands of a father We reade of many deceits in Scripture but we never reade of a father that beguiled his childe We must also commit our bodies and goods to God but we must be at a point with these if God will have them but we must not be so with our souls 6 Beware of indirect means of escaping that persecution which providence casts thee into In particular beware of cowardliness compliancy to great friends and kindred base shisting tricks and distinctions gluedness of heart to earthly things 2 Tim. 4.16 Imitate Antipas who held the faith though sure to die for it Revel 2.13 7 Consider that all second causes are onely instruments in the hand of God The wicked are called Gods sword Psalm 17.13 the staff in their hand is Gods indignation Esai 10.5 6. Who gave Jacob to the spoil and Israel to the robbers did not the Lord Esai 42.24 25. 2 Samuel 16.12 2 Use Consolation In sufferings and persecutions you have a kingdome
dangerously deep where they run smoothest retaining that principle to be abhorred that profest hatreds lose their place of revenge If this inward anger be not suppressed in the heart we know not to what excess it may break out as in Cain and Haman Obj. But I am naturally angry and cholerick Answ By this reason might the adulterer murtherer thief excuse their letchery theft and murther V. 23. Therefore if thou bringest thy gift to the Altar and there remembrest thy brother hath ought against thee V. 24. Leave there thy gift before the altar and go thy way first go and be reconciled to thy brother and then come and offer thy gift Q What is meant by offering Answ A free will offering mentioned Levit. 1.2 Christ herein showes that this Commandment against murder is not fulfilled if there be any grudge betwixt us and our neighbour and we do not return into good will with him and herein Christ showes two things 1 That unless we be reconciled to our brother all duties of godliness as prayers hearing receiving are nothing worth therefore as oft as we come to the worship of God we must cleanse our hearts from these So the Apostle commands 1 Tim. 2.8 1 Pet. 2.1 2. Malice and wrath and calling a person Racha doth no less disable from prayer then from the supper This should be a ground of humiliation for all such carriages when we come before the Lord. No voluntary offerings whether costly or of free-will that are offered with an angry heart do please God And therefore foolishly did the Pharisees suppose that gifts offered in the Temple did expiate sins which the Judges did not punish though there were no amendment of heart 2 That in vain persons profess themselves to be worshippers of God who offend their brethren and after proudly contemn them for under one kinde Christ points out all outward exercises of worship wherein men counterfeit godliness rather then truly witness it If we give all our goods to the poor and have not charity it profits not If thou bringest thy gift to the Altar Christ speaks of the worship of the Christians in words applied to the worship of the Jews when they offered sacrifices and gifts on the Altar of the Temple though I grant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was the name often given to the Lords Table so called in reference to the sacrifice there signified which was Christ Heb. 13.10 We have an Altar whereof they have no right to eat that serve the Tabernacle yet was it not called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which was proper onely to heathen Altars besides it appears by the Apostles Canons that Christians brought gifts and laid them upon the Altar or Communion-Table for the use of the Ministers and poor and for the use of the Ordinances Canon 3. and Canon 5. And there rememberest thy Brother hath ought against thee That is any just complaint concerning wrong done to him though thou hast nothing against him yet if he have any thing justly against thee yet oughtest thou to consider hereof This is needfull 1 In respect of God who looks not so much upon the Gift as upon the Heart clean from Hatred and Malice Isai 1.15 When you make many Pra●ers I will not hear your hands are full of Bloud 2 In respect of our selves because unless we be reconciled to our Brother we pray against our selves when we desire forgiveness of God as we forgive others Col. 3.13 Forgiving one another if any man have a quarrel against any one Quest But what if the person will not be reconciled Answ This may comfort thee thou hast done thy duty Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after Righteousness Christ absolves thee if thou seek Reconciliation and canst not obtain it Moreover if the Supper of the Lord be here meant and I know no absurdity in including of it how necessary is it for Brethren to be united hence it 's called a Communion that is a common union betwixt Christ and Believers and indeed this Unity and Love is the Badg of Christ's Disciples we tell an apparant Ly when we come to this Communion and have not an Union with our Brethren 1 Cor. 10.16 We being many are one Bread and one Body in token of vvhich Union Christians before the Supper gave an holy kiss one to another as Lapide observes This must be limited to respect time and place for if the person offended be far from thee then let thy affection go to him and give satisfaction as soon as thou canst onely we may see how unholy a thing Discord and Strife is that it unhallovvs every service Also Christ condemns selfishness whereby too oft we stand too much upon our own right even to loss of Charity contrary to Phil. 4.4 Let your moderation in remitting of your right 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be known unto all men V. 24. Agree with thine Adversary quickly whilest thou art in the way with him lest at any time the Judg deliver thee to the Officer and the Officer cast thee in Prison V. 25. Verily thou shalt not come out thence till thou hast paid the uttermost Farthing Christ goes on further to commend unto us Reconciliation and the scope of these words is 1 that we should endeavour to be reconciled with that person whom we have offended this is done 1 By confessing our evil Luke 17.3 4. 2 By professing our sorrow for it Luke 17.4 3 By declaring that we would willingly that the thing we have done were undone and if it were to do again we would not in any vvise do it this is satisfaction 2 Cor. 2.7 8. 4 By making a just apology to our Adversary Josh 22.26 The two Tribes and an half made an Altar beyond Jordan but not for burnt-offering nor for sacrifice with which apology that the Altar was made onely for civil use the rest of the Tribes were satisfied for want of which apology the Benjamites were destroyed Judges 20.43 2 That the person offended should accept satisfaction and not shew himself irreconcilable or hard to forgive a Wrong Mark 11.25 Forgive if ye have ought against any that your heavenly Father may forgive you your trespasses Col. 3.13 Much more bear offences in Wives and Freinds and Servants which are made up with so many benefits Now this Forgiveness contains 1 A removal of inward grudg and displeasure Levit. 19.18 2 Forbearance of all manner of Revenge Rom. 12 19. 3 To be lovingly affected and ready to do good as if we had not been offended at this person so Joseph towards his Brethren Quest But must we forgive all offences Answ In offences done against us are two things 1 The Injury 2. The Damage For example A man strikes a Tradesman or a labouring man so that he keeps his bed and is at expences for the cure of the Wound besides he hath lost what he might have earned and spent that he might have saved Exod. 21.18 19. The Injury must be forgiven
Husband for Idolatry Infidelity 1 Cor. 7.12 13. onely if the Idolater will depart and put the Believer away the Believer is free Nor for Errour in person as if a man think he mary a Virgin and doth not because she hath done nothing since his Wife nor for Errour of Estate as supposing to mary one rich but she is poor nor for Idolatry Ezra 10.2 3. Compare Rom. 7.1 2 3 4. nor Heresie 1 Cor. 7.12 no nor yet for poverty is a person to put away his Wife no nor for frigidity or coldness because not able to perform the duty of Mariage nor for some incurable Disease these may hinder a Mariage from being but not break it after it is solemnized 1 Cor. 7.10 11. Let not the Wife depart from her Husband and let not the Husband put away his Wife Quest But what if the Wife be of contrary Religion as a Papist and will not live with her Husband in such Countreys where the Husband may safely profess the Faith Answ It was the judgment of Calvin and the other Helvetian Preachers that there might be a Divorce whereof there were two Examples one of Pizarro who maried a Wife who would not live with him save in the Roman Territories where he must either deny the Faith or lose his life After Divorce he was maried as I remember for I have not the Book by me to one Magdalen Moor. The other is of Galeazeus Caracciolus whose Wife refusing to live with him save in Italy where he was either in danger of denial of Christ or loss of life he was divorced from her and maried to a Gentlewoman of Roan who fled for the Gospel sake 1 Cor. 7.15 But if the unbelieving depart let him depart a Brother or Sister is not in bondage in such a case but God hath called us to peace that is to peace of conscience herein as Martyr expounds it Now the reason is because such a person totally puts away such a yoke-fellow for doing his duty or if retained it is with an intention to murder him 4 Exhort To be wary in choice of yoke-fellows seeing the Bond of Mariage is an indissoluble Bond it cannot be broken save for Adultery beware how you chuse let Women beware how they consent if it were as common Bargains that a man might be rid of them losing his Earnest or if they were taken as some take Apprentices upon liking or as some buy Horses to lose so much if they dislike and return them but this is an eternal Bond therefore ought to be done with much deliberation as being onely once to be done Beware then how you chuse for Beauty Portion Many Women are soon won for person kindred riches because he that hath her is able to deck her in fine Apparel and Jewels never looking what ability such a man hath to instruct her and to bring up the Children they shall have in Gods fear And so much more ought we to be advised because Mariage is that point upon which depends in a great measure our eternal Estate for the Estate it self it is but for a few years but eternal things both of our selves and posterity much depend upon it How angry was God for his peoples matching themselves with Idolaters Nehem. 13.23 24 25 26 27. Ezra 9.2 3. such kinde of mariages are in danger of turning us from God Deut 7.3 4. 5 To stablish the consciences of competent Judges in granting divorces when one of the persons is a fornicator it is of the light of nature that he that keeps not the conditions of a contract or bargain should lose the benefit of it and the contract be made void that whoredome was a just cause of divorce in Moses time was in respect of gentle husbands who would not have their wives put to death such an husband was Joseph to Mary or in respect of such husbands who though they believed their wives were strumpets and perhaps found them so yet they were not able to prove it in judgement the proper punishment thereof was death either burning Gen. 38.24 or stoning Levit. 20.10 Joh. 8.5 but now Christ warrants any Judge to proceed to divorce in this case of adultery But for other cases as for a woman against her husbands will to go to the banquers of strangers or without just cause to lye out all night or to go into the Baths with men these are no sufficient grounds of divorce though they may be grounds of suspicion 6 To rest contented in the state of marriage wherein God hath placed us and hate putting away Mal. 2.16 as God hates it so should we And so much more because God joyns persons in mariage Matth. 19.6 What God hath joyned together let no man put asunder Besides they are one flesh V. 33. Again ye have heard that it hath been said by them of old time Thou shalt not forswear thy self but shalt perform unto the Lord thine oaths V. 34. But I say unto you Swear not at all neither by heaven for it is Gods throne nor by the earth for it is his footstool c. In the words are two propositions 1 Thou shalt not forswear thy self Levit. 19.12 Ye shall not swear by my name falsely 2 Thou shalt perform to the Lord thine oaths Numb 30.2 If a man swear an oath to binde his soul with a bond he shall not break his word he shall do according to all that proceedeth out of his mouth Out of these two places are the words of this text taken in the bare words there appears no corruption but in Christs answer the depravement appears in three particulars 1 Thou shalt not forswear thy self that is swearing by the name of God but if thou forswears by creatures thou mayest 2 For the latter but shalt keep or perform thy oaths that is oaths made by the name of God but to break oaths made by the creatures is no perjury 3 They taught that rash and needless swearing was no prophanation of the name of God so that they swore truly In opposition to these corruptions Christ saith Thou shalt not forswear thy self that is thou shalt perform that thou hast sworn to the Lord or by the Lord that thou wilt do Thou shalt perform thy oaths as all other oaths so in particular vows confirmed by an oath Besides to perform to the Lord thine oaths signifies that if we will swear we must swear by the true God not by idols From this thus explained observe Obs Perjury is an heynous sin before God There 's a flying rowl of curses that goes out against false swearers Zach. 5.2 3. It 's called a rowl because the Jews books were not distinct by leaves as we have but one piece of parchment wrapt upon a stick like a map which was called a rowl because rowled together In this was writ their perjuries and the punishments of them it 's said to be flying to signifie the swift vengeance that hangs over impenitent persons it hangs as
37. But let your communication be yea yea nay nay for whatsoever is more then these cometh of evil The meaning of Christ here is not to forbid swearing in just cases but prophane and rash swearing whether by God or creatures This is mentioned Jam. 5.12 as if he should say Let your speech usually be a bare affirmation or denial For that which is added to these by calling God or creatures to witness cometh of evil Yea yea nay nay Christ notes to us the constancy that should be also in our speeches without faltringor deceitfull equivocating 2 Cor. 1.19 20. Our word among you was not yea and nay Besides Christ teaches that in promises not sworn our faith ought to be kept in like manner as if they had been sworn Psal 15.4 He that sweareth to his own hurt and changeth not So much appears Jam. 5.12 Let your yea be yea and your nay nay lest you fall into condemnation In stead of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sub judicio Grotius reads out of some Copies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lest you fall into hypocrisie that is lest ye be found deceitfull which becomes not Christians Joseph speaks of the Essens Every thing that was spoken of them was stronger then an oath Some there are that think promises have not a binding power but a simple affirmation of a thing that in future we would do ought to proceed from that minde that at that time would do that thing which we say we would do in future Yet he is not bound thereby nor we are bound thereby because the will of man hath a power to change his decrees neither can he take away that right from himself by the alone respect of himself So that we must distinguish 1 Betwixt the declaration of our minde wherein we show our present intentions but yet with the reservation of our future liberty of changing our present determination upon new reasons we yet see not 2 And betwixt a promise For in a promise there is the translation of a mans right to another as a man that owes an horse may pass him over to another by some signe of his will now because by such a signe some right passes over to another therefore the will cannot honestly change it self Now that a promise may be of force there are four requisites 1 That the promiser be capable of promising and therefore those that want reason as children and mad men their promises are of none effect there can be no willing without understanding 2 That the things promised be just herein Herods promise was of no force when Herodias desired John's head 3 That we promise what is in our own power If a servant promise his service to him that is not his master this promise is nothing because it is beyond the power of the promiser so if a man should promise to reach heaven it is out of his power 4 After our promise is made to any person upon consideration that we look upon it as an absolute debt which we cannot in conscience nullifie unless the person to whom we promise do acquit us Whatsoever is more then these cometh of evil Evil in the masculine Gender signifies the evil spirit the devil who tempts to swearing as well as to other sins without any necessity of an oath If we take these words of evil in the Neuter Gender then we must understand that this sin of vain swearing comes of the evils that are in the hearts of men As from 1 Irreverence of the name of God 2 Distrust when men will not believe without an oath 3 From a custome of swearing wherein persons have been bred 4 From the custome of men in not standing to their promises and not using faithfulness in their speeches so that it is as if Christ had said think not you will be excluded from the society of men if you refrain from swearing for the manner of swearing springing up from mens unfaithfulness if you shall honestly perform your words and promises you will sooner be believed without an oath then others with an oath Yet know that Christ doth not count oaths evil or unlawfull in the whole but things that are not to be used save in matters of very great moment as bring called before a Magistrate or when something is committed to the trust of another or for purging our own innocency when suspected Num. 5.19 or when persons are slow to believe that which is profitable for them to believe or for Gods glory Ro. 9.1 Oaths are not to be used but in these and such like cases as have been named For Application learn to keep vvithin the bounds of yea and nay avoiding all prophane swearing If the Princes of the world will not suffer their names to be abused vvill God suffer it Will Christ suffer his vvounds his heart his bloud his foot to be sworn by Also all prophane cursing to vvish they might sink be hang'd be damn'd be burnt never to come in the Kingdome of heaven never see vvife or children or the face of God that this bread may be their last if it be not so Moreover beware of swearing by creatures as by the cross by light by heaven by faith troth by Jerusalem by thy head remember vvhatsoever is above yea and nay is sin Avoid the calling of God to witness in trivial things as even many professors do using such vvords as the Lord knowes God can vvitness vvith me Moreover learn to be constant in your vvords and promises that your faithfulness may perswade men to believe you vvithout oaths V. 38. Ye have heard that it hath been said An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth Here 's another Commandement depraved by the Pharisees vvhich vvas the law of like for like or retaliation Exod. 21.23 24 25. This law of giving eye for eye tooth for tooth vvhich vvas appropriated to the Judge they applied it to private persons that every man might avenge himself That it belonged to the Judges onely see Deut. 19.21 the scope of which law vvas to keep men from avenging themselves seeing they had the Magistrate an avenger of their vvrongs Onely vvhere Magistracy cannot be had there may be an unblameable defence The law of the 12 Tables vvas if he hath broken a member let there be like for like Now the Pharisees expounded the law of God to serve the corrupt humours of the Jews vvho vvere much given to private revenge yea it is natural to every man to think revenge sweeter then milk then life Corrupt teachers are ready to expound the law of God according to the manners of men as Princes frame their governments according to the manners of their people V. 39. But I say unto you Resist not evil but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek turn to him the other also Resist not evil Christ in answer forbids all private revenge We should onely desire to defend our selves and ours not thirst to hurt our Enemy For that
revenge that Sampson had against the Philistines for his eyes Judg. 16.28 29. It vvas not the revenge as of a private man but of a Magistrate as appears by the assistance God gave him at that time neither vvould Sampson have prayed to God for assistance in any sin Certainly were it not lawfull to drive back force with force the Apostles following Christ would not have carried swords Luke 22.38 It is of the law of nature to defend our lives and to turn away those things that hurt which if it vvere not thievs and robbers vvould spoil honest men this may be where vve cannot have defence from Magistrates But to push like rams as those Kings Dan. 11.40 is forbid Whereas Christ blamed Peter Mat. 26.52 Put up thy sword into his place for all they that take the sword shall perish with the sword It vvas not for driving avvay force by force but for his desire of revenge vvhich revenge appears in that it vvas not probable that such a multitude as came to take Christ should be driven back by two or three armed men Also Christ blames him for going on so rashly vvithout his command or the Magistrates command He that takes away thus any mans life vvith the sword shall perish either by mans sword or by the sword of Gods vengeance Moreover this command of not resisting evil seems to be a supplement to Moses Tertul. cont Marcion l. 4. Christ taught us a new pattern forbidding the course of wrong permitted by the creatour requiring eye for eye and tooth for tooth When he teaches vengeance is mine I will repay it he teaches that patience expects revenge yea the Lord doth not onely forbid revenge but the remembrance and calling to minde of the wrong Beware then how you use private revenge vvhether it be that vvhich is inward as the bearing of a grudge condemn'd Levit. 19.18 Jam. 5.9 Grudge not one against another or that vvhich is outvvard vvhen a man shall vent revengful vvords or actions Prov. 20.22 Say not thou I will recompense evil but wait on the Lord and he shall save thee Prov. 24 29. Say not thou I will do to him as he hath done to me I will render to the man according to his work Christ gave not reviling for reviling 1 Pet. 2.23 he was led as a sheep to the slaughter Esai 53.7 as a sheep before the shearers is dumb so opened he not his mouth But whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek turn to him the other also This is a proverb taken from Lam. 3.30 he giveth his cheek to him that smiteth him it signifies to suffer wrongs patiently rather then revenge our selves This was exemplified by Christ Esa 50.6 I gave my back to the smiters and my cheeks to them that pluckt off the hair I hid not my face from shame and spitting Christ meets with an objection if I may not revenge my self by bearing one wrong I invite my enemy to do me another Christ therefore saith its better to take the second wrong then to revenge our selves can preserve us from further injuries or else repair us for what we suffer Now because this general rule of not revenging our selves might seem hard Christ instances in 3 particulars 1 In assaults against our body ver 39. 2 Against our property ver 40. 3 Against our liberty ver 41. As 1 In assaults don to our bodyes as when a man shall strike us on the cheek which is not to be taken literally for Christ Joh. 18.23 saith when they struck him If I have done evil bear witness of the evil but if well why smitest thou me Paul when Ananias commanded him to be smitten on the mouth said God shall smite thee thou whited wall but Christ hereby would teach christian patience in bearing wrongs offered to their body here and to their goods after and to perform the precept of non revenge Yet doth not Christ intend patience in all sorts of wrongs but in light wrongs as a box or a blow but if it prejudice our life we may fight with him and rather kill then be kil'd Exod. 22 2. a man might lawfully kill a thief in the night without the guilt of blood so we may bear the loss of a garment but if it prejudice our estate we may go to law with him so to go two miles with a man if he compell thee but not to go an hundred By this first instance Christ reprehends the usual practise of fighting and quarrelling as being the acts of evil men and not of Christians who are to suffer Ver. 40. And if any man will sue thee at the Law and take away thy coat let him have thy cloak also Christ gives a second instance wherein Christian patience is to show it self viz. in bearing smaller wrongs done to our estate and property as if a person by oppression in law take away one garment and then another The meaning is when Christians are spoyled of one part of their goods they ought by patience to prepare themselves for the spoil of the rest Christ means not as if we might not come to sue at law for the just defence of our estates few indeed sue in courts of justice with a patient spirit yet because some do so we must not condemn going to law till impatience do appear and seeing the cloak is more worth then the coat Christ signifies that when we receive a less loss we should prepare for a greater in summe Christ forbids scandalous and impatient going to law 1 Cor. 6.1 2. ad 8. Paul appealed to Caesar Zenas a lawyer is reckoned among believers We should also learn to preferre our peace before our goods and to be slow in going to law in that its apt to disquiet the mind An ounce of peace is worth a pound of victory Law should be used as desperate Physick onely in case of extremity Ver. 41. And whosoever shall compell thee to go with him a mile go with him twain Here 's a third case wherein Christian patience is to appear viz. in loss of liberty which is when a man shall compell thee to go with him a mile as in these dayes they will press post-horses for the service of the state so were they wont to press persons for the service of the Emperor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to lead to a ready way or to be a guide to carry burthens it s a Persian word as Aretius observes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are the messengers of the King who forced persons to bear burthens and necessitated persons to needful service its like from the Persians this custome came among the Jews Christ means that we should show our patience by going with him two miles rather then contend with him so you shall overcome him that compells you and so shall make him friendly to you but if thou resist him thou wilt stir up contention with him and lose thy own peace and stir up hatred to thy self and by impatience
him that prayes is enlarged the rest are like to hold out the better yet we must have respect unto them and consider whether their hearts be like to hold out so long as thy heart who hast the enlargements of God upon thee As in preaching we must have respect to the hearers ability in bearing of it John 16.12 so must we in prayer Christ spent a whole night in prayer but it was not his usual wont 6 As there may be occasion of long prayer so may there be occasion for short prayer as in ejaculatory prayer also when we have but little time also when some prevailing business falls in which cannot be dispensed with onely herein pay the Lord another time for the time thou hast taken from him Sometimes a marvellous indisposition comes upon the soul occasioned by weariness in our callings sleepiness journeying Sometimes we want vital spirits in these cases we may be short And it 's wisedome usually so to pray with sick persons that they may not lay aside attention nor be weary of the duty Also in the closing of Church exercises when much time hath been before spent in prayer Onely let this shortness of prayer be upon due occasion and not usual 1 Because in these short prayers the soul can be but little drawn up to God 2 The soul in them gets little answer for assoon as the heart begins to be up the prayer is done 3 Short prayers argue either strangeness from God persons not using to hold long discourse with strangers or irreverence towards him in that being a God of such greatness we can so slightly take our leaves of him V. 8. Be ye not therefore like unto them for your Father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask him Be ye not therefore like unto them Two Reasons first from unprofitableness of such Prayers neither in unprofitable babbling and speaking superfluous things as in the Papacy who mumble over a great many prayers without any devotion thinking they are heard ex opere operato meerly for saying words so many Lords Prayers and Ave Maries This they do often with such volubleness of tongue that they cannot understand themselves and with such distraction of minde and irreverence of body that the Heathens dare not so call upon their gods nor mortals pray unto their Prince 2 Neither be ye like them in much speaking as if your God did not know your wants unless you told him of them and made long stories unto him For your Father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask him A second Argument why we should neither use Battology or vain speaking nor much speaking in prayer is from the all-knowledg and goodness of God he knows what we have need of therefore we need not tell him of them in many words Yea sometimes he prevents our prayers Yet this doth not hinder that we should not be sensible of our wants and from the sensibleness of our misery call on God The Heathens thought God did not understand their miseries unless they told him of them but your God knows your wants and knows how to help you and is ready so to do 1 Peter 5.7 casting all your care on him for he cares for you Deut. 4.7 What nation is there that hath God so near unto them as the Lord is unto you when you call upon him Isai 65.24 Before they call I will answer and whiles they are yet speaking I will hear Object But if God know our wants before we ask what need is there to tell our wants to him that knows them already Answ We do not call upon God as if he 〈◊〉 us or as if we would put him in minde of any 〈…〉 us for our prayers or as if we would move him of hard to become gentle but we come to him in the duty of prayer as an ordinance wherein he will be found and 〈◊〉 promised to convey good to us 2 Though he know our wants before ye● be will 〈◊〉 us sensible of them as in the case of the blinde man Mark 10.51 who Matth. 20.33 begged mercy of Christ but got none till he was sensible what mercy he lacked even the recovery of his sight which no sooner was he sensible of but Christ granted his Request 3 God will be called upon because he will have this glory given to him that he is the authour and giver of every good thing James 1.17 Every good gift comes from the Father of Lights 4 That we may unburden our cares into the bosom of 〈…〉 37 5.55.16 17. compared with v. 22. 5 That1 we may come into familiarity and acquaintance with God Job 22.21 Acquaint thy self with God and be at peace Psalm 73.28 It 's good for me to draw near to God 6 That we may better prize blessings when we have got them by prayer Psalm 116.1 2. I will love the Lord because he hath heard the voice of my supplication 7 For the venting of their holy affections they have to the Lord as faith in his faithfulness James 1.6 7. love to him for his goodness Song 4.16 desires and breathings after God Psalm 42.1 Joy in their interest and property in God Psalm 116.7 8 From the prevalence that praying Saints have with God as Moses Hezekiah Jehosaphat Object God hath in his eternal counsel determined what he will do for us which all our prayers cannot alter Ephes 1.11 Answ It 's a sign God hath determined to do us some good when he stirs up our hearts to be earnest for it Jer. 29.12 13. When the Lord was about to bring his people out of captivity he stirr'd up Daniel to be earnest to seek him Dan. 9.4 as God hath determined what to do for us so hath he determined to do it in the use of prayer Ezek. 36.37 We are not commanded to inquire into Gods secret counsels which cannot be found out but to his revealed will which requires us to seek him for every good thing and reproves the neglect hereof V. 9. After this manner therefore pray ye Our Father which art in Heaven After this manner pray ye Where we see 1 Prayer is a duty we ow to God 2 We must pray in a right manner 1 Prayer is a duty Call upon me in time of trouble Psalm 50.15 Ask and ye shall have 2 We must pray in a right manner Now that we may so pray 1 Pray in Christ's Name Whatsoever ye shall ask the Father in my Name he will give it you John 16.23 Our prayers are not heard for any excellency in them but for Christ's sake When a Servant comes for Wares in his own name the Merchant will not deliver them but if he bring a Ticket from his Master the Merchant will deliver what Wares the Servant asks for so when the soul comes in its own name it speeds not but if it come in the name of Christ it speeds It 's an Argument we come in Christ's Name when we come with a
last the prayer reaches unto heaven 2 Chron. 30.27 the prayer of the godly Priests came up to his holy habitation even unto heaven We should do with our hearts in prayer as in the winding up of a bucket if two or three windings will not fetch it up we will winde it higher and higher till it do come up so our hearts should not be at the same pin but we should winde them up higher and higher so though we get not the thing wholly that we desire yet we should get our hearts nearer God Contrarily hypocritical men will not cannot pray perseverantly Will he always call upon God Job 27.9 q. d. he will not Hence their prayers are 1 Endless That for which a thing is that is the end of a thing now the end of prayer is to speed with God therefore he whose prayers speed not with God his prayers are endless Thou prayest against Covetousnes Pride and Passion and yet remains so still to what end are all thy prayers when thou enjoys not the end of thy prayers to what end is thy servants work if thy business be not dispatched 2 Fruitless To what purpose is a Beggars begging if he be gone before the alms be bestowed so if thou go away from the throne of grace before the grace be given thee thy begging is fruitless The blinde man said Joh. 9.31 We know God hears not sinners How do you know that may some say Why by experience and example A drunkard prays against drunkenness that God would heal it in him all the world may see that God doth not hear his prayer because he doth not cure him but lets him go on in his sin Seest thou a man go on in his sin thou mayest see God hears not his prayers If a man lye upon his death-bed and send for all the Physicians in a country to come to him yet we know he is not cured so long as his deadly disease remains upon him so when I see a mans malice pride c. lye upon him ordinarily and usually notwithstanding all his prayers I know God hears not his prayers For application see then that you pray perseverantly Imitate the woman of Cana who would take no manner of denial or repulse from Christ sometimes he was silent sometimes he did as it were deny her I am not sent save to the lost sheep of the house of Israel imitate that man Lu. 11.5 6. Properties of perseverant prayer 1 It wrastles with God by arguments Job 23.4 I will fill my mouth with arguments Men when they are perseverantly earnest for a thing will bring all arguments to effect their end so will a believer to obtain his end Lord it 's a grace of the covenant thou art my father whom should I go to but thee this is for thy honour and what wilt thou do to thy great name Esa 63.16 I am a poor creature consider my frame remember I am dust Psal 103.14 15. Our near approach to death when we can no more call upon God Job 7.21 Why dost thou not pardon my sins for now shall I sleep in the dust Psal 115.17 So from our own extremities Be not silent to me lest if thou be silent to me I become like one that goes down to the pit Psal 28.1 Save me for the waters are come into my soul Psal 69.1 from our own helplesness otherwise Ps 22.11 Be not far from me trouble is near and there is none to help Jer. 3.23 Esa 63.5 from the greatness of scruples and tentations that lie upon our souls from the overwhelmings of spirit by sins and sorrows from the necessity of such a blessing for the discharge of our callings from the command of God that bids us ask Jer. 33. ● from the promise of God who hath ingaged his faithfulness Gen. 32.9 10 11. from our confidence in him Psal 143.8 from former experiences Psal 44.1 O God we have heard with our ears the great works thou diddest from the low condition of Gods people Psal 44.9 10 11 12. from their constant adherence to his truth ver 17.18 19 20. All this is come upon us yet have we not forgot thee from our own not living in sin Psal 86.2 hear my prayer for I am holy from our perseverance in prayer Psal 86.3 be merciful unto me for I cry unto the daily From the plentiful mercy and goodness in God Ps 86.5 2 Property perseverant Prayer is striving Rom. 15.3 I beseech you for the Lord Jesus sake that ye strive together in your Prayers to God for me So did Jacob wrastle with God Gen. 32.24 Especially for those to whom we are related a pastour for the flock a father for his children a master for his servants an husband for his wife c. as if we were to wrastle-with a strong man we put to all our strength As a father that hath an apple in his hand the childe first opens one finger and then another till the apple drop out so let us open one finger and then another to get sincerity till we get all the graces of Christ upon us 3 It 's a proceeding Prayer though a godly man do not get the thing totally that he desired yet he is nearer God than he was at the first beginning he grows better every day by his Prayers Job 18.9 The upright shall hold on his way and he that hath clean hands shall grow stronger and stronger 4 It 's a prevailing Prayer I will not let thee go except thou bless me Gen. 32.26 Shall not God avenge his own elect that cry unto him day and night I tell you he will avenge them and that right speedily Luke 18.7 That very Parable of the unjust Judg and poor Widow was spoken that men should pray always and not faint Luke 18.1 c. Motives to pray perseverantly 1 The continual intercession of Christ in Heaven in our behalf there to present our Requests Heb. 4.14.7.25.9.24 So that sooner or later they will speed or else it 's more expedient for us that the thing be not granted 2 The greatness of those things we pray for which concern our everlasting estate hence we had need put forth all our strength to beg them Col. 4.2 Continue in Prayer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strength by the transposition of a Letter so that the word signifies to ply some laborious thing with all our might till we have brought it to an end Object But I have prayed long and finde no benefit by my praying Job 30.20 I cry unto thee and thou dost not hear me I stand up and thou regardest me not Answ 1 God sometimes answers the Prayers of his Servants before they perceive it Dan. 9.23 At the beginning of thy supplications the commandment came forth yet for three Weeks he chastened himself by Prayer and Fasting cap. 10.2 3. v. 12. From the first day thou didst set thy heart to chasten thy self before thy God
thy words were heard yet Daniel knew not of it else would he not have further supplicated but have given thanks for it Sometimes through heedlesness and negligence persons look not after their Prayers Sometimes anguish of heart makes persons not perceive it Job 9.16 If I had called and he had answered me yet would I not believe that he had hearkened to my voice 2 Look upon it as a great affliction to cry and not be heard Lam. 3.44 3 God takes notice of the Prayers of his people Acts 9.11 Behold he prayeth yea delights in them as men do in the smell of sweet Odours and Incense Psalm 141.2 Revel 5.8 and if not yet answered wait for sooner or later they shall be answered They shall not be ashamed who wait for God Isai 49.23 9 Pray with watchfulness Col. 4.2 Continue in Prayer and watch Watch and pray Matth. 26.41 Take heed watch and pray Mark 13.33 Be sober and watch unto Prayer 1 Peter 4.7 Watch therefore and pray always that ye may be counted worthy to escape all these things Luke 21.36 There are two sorts of Watchings 1 Proper 2 Metaphorical 1 Proper this was practised 1 Under the Old Testament when holy men being compassed about with many cares distractions and business could not sometimes finde fit access to God on the day time hence were forced to take part of the night caeteris paribus the thing is lawfull now if a Christian unavoidably hindered on the day time do take part of the night for Prayer thus David Psalm 22.2 I cry unto thee in the night season and am not silent Psalm 6.6 All the night make I my bed to swim Psalm 119. At midnight I will rise to give thanks unto thee Or if a soul not content with Prayer in the day time shall have an impulse to pray in the night thus Christ Matth. 26.38 Tarry ye here and watch with me saith Christ So the godly Levites Psalm 134.1 2 Under the New Testament there were night-watchings the Christians in the Apostles times were compelled when they would either hear the Word publickly or pray to meet in the night Acts 12.12 Peter in the night came to the house of Mary where many were gathered together praying Acts 20 7. John 20.19 Now they met in the night because of the Pagans among whom they lived to avoid their fury Afterwards when Emperours became Christians whether for solemnity custome or devotion sake I know not Christians still retained the custome of wakings and these Wakes they kept when a solemn Feast or Holy-day came on which Wake they spent in Prayer and in the Word that so they might be more fitted to partake of the Supper of the Lord hence Tertullian lib. 2. to his Wife brings a Reason why Christian women should not mary heathen Husbands even from these Wakes for saith he Quis Ethnicus nocturnis convocationibus c. What Heathen would willingly endure his Wife to be from his side at these night assemblies What man would endure without trouble that his Wife should go abroad in the night at the Solemnities of Easter wherein it 's like they had divers Wakes From this custome have the popish Wakes continued in the Nations to this day but quite altered from their primitive institution being now onely kept as Festivals for the most horrid drunkenness dancings and licentiousness 2 There is a metaphorical watchfulness This is 1 Against drowsiness that we do not come before the Lord with sleepy Prayers Thus Peter James and John fell asleep even as Christ was at Prayer Matth. 26.40 They had a willingness to have watched with Christ but drowsisiness seized on them through fleshly weakness v. 41. See also v. 43. A sleepy spirit scarce speaks sense to God in Prayer How do you think that God should hear drowsie Prayers which your selves do not hear Will Gods ears be delighted with non-sense Shouldest thou offer such blinde halt services to the Prince would he accept them Mal. 1.13 It 's a shame to speak what many men do in secret which they have confessed after conversion yea and it were well if Christians were not guilty herein If it so fall out with thee that thou goest late to Prayer and thine eys and spirit prove drowsie be humbled and be short lest thy whole Prayer be a taking of Gods Name in vain Make the Lord amends some other time when thy heart is in a better temper Let us be like Musicians that first tune their Instruments and then play Or like Mariners who having a good Gale of Winde set up all Sails Psalm 57.7 2 Watchfulness against distractions I have before showen the causes of them under another Head onely I le add that a worldly frame of spirit is a great cause of them for when the heart comes immediately out of the World from pleasures and worldly business no wonder if the soul be full of wandering thoughts in duty Also disorderly affections of fear joy desire grief anger vain hopes will be ready to interpose in Prayer Besides a spirit of slothfulness when we do not press our hearts to the Prayer in hand will open a door for distractions besides abundance of vain impressions upon the imagination with the absence of holy impressions there help forward distraction Besides many remaining lusts draw away and entice the soul Remedies against these Distractions 1 Be humbled for them and desire God to cleanse thee Psalm 19.12 2 Keep thy heart with diligence Prov. 4.23 3 Practise preparation of heart that thou mayst not come rushing into the presence of God Job 11.13 4 Remember the greatness of that majesty before whom thou presents thy self The Angels cover their faces before him Psalm 6.2 The Mountains quake at him and the Earth is burnt at his presence Nah. 1.5 5 Keep thine eye from gazing How many distractions come through the eye That the Prophet might keep his heart close in the duty he desires the Lord to turn away his eys from beholding vanity Psalm 119. ●7 The eys and ears are as the gates of the City keep them well that the Enemy enter not 6 Trim thy soul There 's a twofold preparation 1 Habitual thus the wise Virgins had Oyl in their Lamps hence get a Principle of Grace in thine heart from this holy motions arise in thy soul 2 Actual as the wise Virgins had not onely Oyl in their Lamps but also trimm'd them so must thou do act every grace faith love joy fear grief upon a right object 7 Get an heavenly frame of heart Psalm 45.1 My heart boileth up good matter Eructat Hence the tongue is as the Pen of a ready Writer which scantly makes a dash Where the heart is heavenly the heart will be heaving uptowards Heaven such hearts converse in Heaven and dwell there Phil. ● 20 Revel 13.6 8 Bring a feeling of thy wants the more thou feel'st them the more fixedly thou wilt look unto God for supply God will not have the Prayer
of a sinner that feels not his sins because he doth not understand nor will the thing that he prays for Luth. Tom. 4.380 9 Fear repulse for thy careless cold and slothfull calling upon God and this will quicken up thy attention in the duty Fear is a very wakefull affection as being conversant about danger hence in our service we are bid to bring fear Psalm 2.11 Psalm 5.7 10 Get love to God this makes the soul follow hard after God Psalm 63.8 Quest Whether do distractions in Prayer nullifie the acceptation of it Answ There are two sorts of distracted Petitioners 1 Unregenerate men who voluntarily usually and contentedly admit roving thoughts in duty Prov 5.14 I was almost in all evil in the midst of the congregation and assembly Ezek. 33.31 These despise their ways and shall die Prov. 19.16 2 Regenerate men who groan under these distractions Rom. 7.15 16. these do not nullifie the fruit of Prayer to them regenerate men herein make usually resistance it matters not whence they come whether from Satan or corruption as it is a thing very difficult if possible to distinguish them provided we resist them and mourn under them they are not imputed to us Yet may even Saints sometimes pray so carelesly drowsily and distractedly that they may lose the comfort of this or that particular Prayer as when the distraction arises from sloth and carelesness But if the distraction arise from Satan bodily distemper or pain God is very pitifull in this case as a father to his childe Psalm 103.14 Quest Whether may not the Devil and corruption distract the soul in Prayer sometimes with unseasonable good motions I mean such motions as are for the matter good but not good at that time Answ Yes we see it in that Pithonesse Act. 16.16 17 when Paul and his company were going to prayer she cries out these men are the servants of the most high God which shew unto us the way of salvation this was a good motion but injected by Satan that his lyes might be believed and the Saints disturbed in prayer Zach. 3.1 Satan by these motions intends diversion or turning away the soul from what the soul is upon but motions that tend to further intention in the duty attentness and further inlargement are of God The spirit moves not to draw us out of the way but to put us into it and being in it to move us to keep on Rom. 8.14 15. Esa 30.21 These motions of Satan are like misplaced words and letters in a Printers press which spoil the sence 10 Let thy prayer be full prayer is a powring forth of the heart before God Psal 62.8 1 Sam. 1.15 yea we are to powr them out as water before the face of the Lord Lam. 2.19 It may be thou powrest out thy prayer like tarre out of a tarre box half sticking by the sides but when thou prayes thou must powr out all before God provided there be time and no hindrance powr out all thy wants be humbled for all thy evils when thou givest thanks remember all Gods benefits Psal 10● 2 Many men make quick dispatch because they are eager to be about their business hence they gallop over their prayers but thy prayer must have its full growth that is when convenient time affords we must powr out supplications confessing our sins petitions desiring pardon healing and new dispositions of heart intercessions to turn away judgements from others and thanksgiving for benefits on our selves and others 1 Tim. 2.1 11 Pray with frequency It s bad when the soul contents it self with seldome approaches to God If David Psal 55.17 and Daniel cap 6.10 could finde time to pray three times a day what shame for us who come so seldom before the Lord sometimes David praised God seven times a day Psal 119.164 Anna continued in prayer night and day Luk. 2.37 12 With assurance of obtaining whatsoever things ye desire when you pray believe that you receive them and ye shall have them Mark 11.24 Matth. 7.7 ask and ye shall have Matth. 21.22 Doubt not of your prayer but know when the word is gone out of your mouth your prayer is writ in the eyes of God so that that shall be done which is desired or its expedient not to be done The Lord is like a most bountiful king that signes all petitions with a fiat quod petitur Oratio sinelaude dei est thuribulum sine prunis Luth. Tom. 4.124 let that be done which is desired 13 Joyn praise with prayer Phil. 4.6 In every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your request be made known unto God Prayers are the seeds of prayses when we have sown we may look to reap what we receive as a a fruit of our prayer is more sweet then what we receive of common providence Praise is that imployment we shall have in heaven when prayer shall be no more mean time joyn we them together whiles we are here on earth and so much more in that we have but a drop of affliction and a sea of benefits 14 Break through all hindrances and use all furtherances as 1 hindrance is multitudes of business what business so great almost but should give way to this 2 Brokenness in expressions why God hears sighs 3 Dumbness and barrenness if this come from unacquaintance with God be humbled for thy coldness and by stirring thou mayest get warmth if dumbness come from overwhelming temptations it 's no otherwise with thee then it was with Asaph Psal 77.3 4. Green wood with long blowing will be made dry and take fire so motion in prayer fits for the duty 4 Our own unworthiness Who acknowledged his own unworthiness more then Daniel Dan. 9.7 8. However thou art unworthy yet must thou pray for God hears thee not for thy own worth but of his meer mercy 5 Prayer will take up much of our time to this I say remember the comfort that will redound to the conscience in time so spent We think not long of the time spent in the refreshment of our bodies why should we think long in the time spent in refreshing of our souls of four and twenty hours can we not afford God one or two who took more time in prayer then David and Daniel and who did prosper better Time spent in this brings a blessing on our affairs 6 That many do well enough that never pray as those do that use to pray to this know they onely receive temporal things as the shining of the sun and the falling of rain Matth. 5.44 45. But the Saints receive the Spirit in prayer Luk. 11.13 Neither can prayerless men be sure to have earthly things when they want them nor to hold them when they have them Job 21.15 16. What profit is there that we should pray unto him seeing we have earthly things ver 16. Lo their good is not in their hand 7 Because the soul hath lately been in passion of anger
1 Peter 2.5 And Angels are called holy Mark 8.38 but there is none holy as the Lord 1 Sam. 2.2 Saints and Angels are holy with a derivative holiness but in God it is essential Holiness in the creature is a quality in God it is his being and nature in the creature it 's finite and in such a measure in God it 's infinite and without measure Being then so infinitely and essentially holy let us sanctifie his Name by 1 Acknowledging him to be the true God Psal 103.1 The gods of the Heathen were impure Lechers 2 By being abased when thou comest into his presence after Jobs eye had seen God he abhorred himself in dust and ashes Job 42.5.6 Peter out of the apprehension of that great vileness in himself and holiness in Christ saith Depart from me for I am a sinfull man O Lord Luke 5.8 3 By extolling and praising this holiness in God Glorious in holiness and fearfull in praises are joyned together Exod. 15.11 Psalm 30.4 Give thanks at the remembrance of his holiness Without Gods holiness what were his wisdom but subtilty his will but wilfulness his power but oppression his love but dotage his justice but terrour but his Holiness declares the perfection of all his Attributes 4 By removing all causality of sin from God he can no more be a cause of sin than the Sun of darkness Shall not the Judg of all the World do right Gen. 18.25 God may will the being of sin but man the nature of it as in a Chain that breaks none is in fault but that which breaks so in the concurrent causes of sio none is to be faulted but the immediate cause the will of man God withdrawing his restraint which he is not bound to give corruption boils out and the creature sins necessarily but voluntarily He that drives a lame Horse is the cause of his going not of his halting God is the cause of the actions of the sinner for in him we live and move Acts 17.28 but not of the corrupt turning of the will 5 By avoiding all prophanation of his holy name When a man and his father went in to the same maid they prophaned Gods holy name among the heathen Amos 2.7 so the Babylonians seeing the unholy lives of the Jews cryed These are the people of the Lord and so Gods holy name was prophaned Ezek. 36.20 A small impeachment to the name of a Prince stirrs him up to arms and will not the Prince of Princes be jealous for his holy name See Ezek. 36 2● Ezek. 39.25 Give unto the Lord the glory due unto his name Psal 96.8 6 By imitating God in holiness be ye holy for I am holy 1 Pet. 1.16 as a little white is like a great white differing onely in degrees so let our holiness be like Gods Are we not Gods temples wherein his spirit dwells and were not temples severed from common uses Was Belshazzar so punished for abusing a material temple and shalt thou escape if thou prophanes a spiritual temple The lives and families of too many proves that they live the lives of heathens under the name of Christians some cry out as Corah Are not all the Lords people holy Numb 16.3 others think there 's none holy but glorified Saints but there is a people who are called to holiness and who so walk making holiness their Element wherein they live as the birds in the aire and fishes in the water Hereunto were we elected that we should be holy 2 Thess 2.13 we cannot climbe up into heaven to behold our election yet may we read it in our sanctification Without holiness we cannot prove our justification seeing the water and spirit witness with us as well as the blood 1 Joh. 5.8 Ere long heaven and earth will be on fire holiness at that time will be like pure gold which will not be consumed by the fire 2 Pet. 3.11 3 Gods Name is his Attributes which name God proclaimed Exod. 33.19 compared with cap. 34 6. I will proclaim my name before thee and the Lord passed by and proclaimed the Lord merciful gracious c. the name of God is every thing which is truly affirmed of him Thou shalt fear this glorious and fearful name the Lord thy God Deut. 28.58 to derogate from any attribute of God as to tax his justice to limit his power to question his faithfulness to ascribe that to fortune which is due to providence is a prophaning of the name of God 4 Gods Name is his ordinances Mal. 10.14 as the word Psal 138.4 Prayer Act. 9.14 The supper 1 Cor. 11.29 There ought to be a discerning of the Lords body so baptisme Matth. 28.19 Baptizing them into the name of Father Son and Spirit onely God magnifies his word above all his name Psal 138.4 5 Gods Name is taken for the honour of God and credit of Religion Rom. 2. ●4 My Name is blasphemed every day through you that is you Jews who profess my name and live loosly Ezek. 36. ●0 the loose Jews in Babylon prophaned Gods name when the heathens reported These are the people of the Lord Esa 52.5 Hallowed be thy name To hallow is taken 1 for the making of a person or thing that was unholy to become holy 1 Cor. 6.10 thus we cannnot hallow Gods name 2 For the declaration or for an appearing to be holy so God will have his name appear to the whole world that he is an holy God not onely by a reverend speaking of his essence and Attributes avoiding all swearing cursing c. but also by a holy conversation Thus we are to sanctifie God in our hearts 1 Pet. 3.15 and in our lives 1 Pet. 1.16 Be ye holy for I am holy We by our holiness should show forth the glory of Gods holiness that if there be so much holiness in poor Saints how much is there in God 3 For the publishing of a thing to be holy so we are to publish the name of God to be holy Ps 105.3.111 9. Holy and reverend is his name Psal 30.4 4 For the manifestation of Gods holiness in a way of judgement when sinners will not show forth his holiness in a way of practice so when God destroyed Nadab and Abihu he saith I will be sanctified in them that come nigh unto me Levit. 10.3 so God was sanctified in the destruction of Zidon Ezek. 28.22 so God will be sanctified of God in the eyes of the heathen Ezek. 38.16 23. Thy kingdome come There 's a twofold kingdome 1 of grace 2 of glory 1 Of grace this kingdom we desire may come 1 By casting down the kingdome of Satan in us 2 Cor. 10.4 2 By setting up Christ to raign in every one of our hearts thus the kingdom of God is said to be within us Luk. 17.21 governing us by his Word and Spirit 3 By stablishing all means towards the building up of this Kingdom as the preaching of the Word which is called the Gospel of the Kingdome 4
our pains and care is nothing unless God give a blessing Psal 127.1 2. 6 To bridle our immoderate covetousness 7 That we should not take that which is anothers but that which is our own either left us or got with honest labour Psal 128.2 8 To acknowledge our own beggery and want Psal 104.27 28. Acts 14.17 and that what we have becomes ours by Gods gift Jam. 1.17 9 To put us in minde of our frailty in that every day we are a new to beg for bread Obj. But I am rich what need I ask daily bread A. The greatest heaps you have without Gods blessing will not profit Deut. 8.3 Man doth not live by bread onely but by Gods word In vain put we meat into our stomacks unless God give meat power to nourish and the stomack ability to digest 10 In that we are onely to pray for bread we are to learn contentment in any little that the Lord shall send Phil. 4.12.13 and not greedily to pray for wanton abundance Onely know that this bread is to be measured according to mens several callings and charges as if a man be a publike person a Magistrate or Preacher a beggerly maintenance makes their callings contemptible so where there is great charge of children there is need of more and the reason why abundance is not to be prayed for is because in abundance we are apt to forget God Deut. 8.12 13 14. See it in Hezekiah 2 Chron. 32.26 David 2 Sam. 24.1 1 Tim. 6.17 In respect of our proneness to abuse plenty a competency is the safest estate to pass through this world 11 It denoteth to us that we must pray every day for the good things we want if God give us good things this day for to morrow let us to morrow pray for supplies for the 3d. day Give us He saith not me but us 1 To show that we must not onely regard our selves in our estates but be also mindful of others many covetous persons instead of praying for a supply of their brethrens wants cry give me all give them none 2 We are hereby taught so to use our portion that others may have part with us God makes rich men Stewards for the poor Eat the fat and drink the sweet and send portions for them for whom nothing is prepared Neh. 8.10 Stewards receive sometimes the wages of the whole family not to keep them but to distribute them Job 31.17 Job did not eat his morsels himself alone but the fatherless did eat with him also v. 19. And forgive us our trespasses By trespasses Christ means sins Luk. 11.4 Because sin is the greatest debt Hence no man is without sin contrary to the Pelagians who said righteous men pray for pardon of sin for others not for themselves or if they said so for themselves it was not in truth but out of humility and modesty but to say that which is false is not humility but Hypocrisie Now we see there 's none so holy but needs pardon and pardon of sins from Christs advocation and intercession is a continued act in God This word Forgive is a metaphor taken from creditours who upon occasion forgive debts And though God in the new covenant forgive our sins Heb. 8.12 and hath promised so to do yet would he not deliver us from eternal death but upon these terms that whiles we are in this life we should humbly acknowledge before God our sins past and persevere in asking pardon for them The Lords prayer teaches us that we are daily sinners and alwayes sin and that our whole life is a repentance Luth. Tom. 1.301 Under sins Christ means original and actual sins Obj. But these are all forgiven to Gods children Rom. 8.1 There 's no condemnation to them that are in Christ Why then should they ask pardon Answ Because there is not a justified person that sins not Psal 130.3.143.2 Enter not into judgement with thy servant David committed Adultery and Murther after justification and Peter denyed Christ This petition is put next to the former of begging daily bread that after we have got a natural life we should seek for a life of justification when God pardons our sins we are thus alive as malefactors that have obtained pardon from the Prince are then said to be alive Besides we could not begg pardon of sin if God should not continue our natural life and this petition is joyned to the former to show that all the bread or outward things in the world are no comfort to us if together with them we obtain not pardon of sin In desiring forgivenness we see 1 There must be an acknowledgement of our sins Psal 32.5 I said I will confess my transgressions and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin David first confessed saying I have sinned and then Nathan saith the Lord hath put away thy sin 2 Sam. 12 13. He that confesses and forsakes shall find mercy Prov. 28.13 1 Joh. 1.8 If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us them The sick sinner Job 33 26. confesses I have sinned and perverted that which was right and it profited me not then follows ver 58. he will deliver his soul from going into the pit And this according to Christs preaching Mar. 1.15 Repent ye and believe the Gospel To preach remission of sins to faith without repentance is a dangerous doctrine seeing both of them are together in the soul Zach. 12.10 They shall look on the Lord as crucified and mourn and in that day when there is such mourning which alwayes includes confession of sins in it there is a Fountain set open for sin and for uncleanness 1 As to obtain pardon there must be the blood of Christ Heb. 9.22 without shedding of blood there 's no remission and with the blood of Christ the whole Church is purchased Act. 20.28 Rev. 1.5 Rev. 7.14 so must this blood be applyed to every individual soul that hath the power of believing this blood washes white yet must there be washing before whiteness Pardon must be had not onely from bloodshed but from blood sprinkled See Esa 52.15 Ezek. 36.25 Heb. 9.13 14.10.22.12.24 1 Pet. 1.2 Yet as the Spirit must besprinkle thee and apply this blood to thee so must thou by faith wash and besprinkle thy self Rev. 7.14 They have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. God hath fore-appointed Christ to be the propitiation for our sins yet is it not before believing but through faith in his blood Rom. 3.25 Faith is the hand of the soul and the soul by faith puts her hand into Christs blood and so washes off its guilt Zach. 13.1 Christs blood is resembled to a Fountain opened for sin and uncleanness but it s not standing by the Fountain but the washing with the water thereof that will cleanse hence Luk. 7.49 50. Thy faith hath saved thee go in peace 2 To obtain pardon there must be repentance As there is a faith unto
life Joh. 6.47 A justification to life Rom. 5.18 So is there repentance unto life Act. 11.18 Ezek. 36.25 26. With Gods sprinkling clean water there 's a taking away the stony heart where God gives repentance he also gives forgiveness and appoints his Appostles to preach repentance and remission of sins together Luk. 24.47 Some doctrines of these latter times suppose a forgiveness not onely before repentance but also before the sinner was born nay some go as high as to say from eternity if it was so to what purpose was it then for Christ to preach repentance and remission together Reasons why pardon follows upon repentance 1 Faith that looks on Christs blood shed for us looks at the same time on its own sin as the cause of its shedding and every believing sinner is at the same time a repenting sinner Zach. 12.10 Thou sayest thou hast faith that apprehends pardon and applyes Christ if thou doest this rightly thy faith is a repenting and a mourning faith Zach. 13.1 There 's a Fountain set open in that day in what day not simply in that day when they see him but when they see him and mourn for him 2 God walks by his own rule now Christ bids that upon a brothers repentance we should forgive him Luke 17.3 4. So upon our repentance God will forgive 2 Sam. 12.12 13. 3 From the rule of justice it stands not with justice for God to forgive sin to a man that goes on in a purpose of sin therefore at the time God gives pardon he gives repentance 4 The want of assurance of pardon doth greatly disquiet as well as the want of pardon Suppose a person upon believing have his pardon yet is it but dim he cannot lightly be assured of it until he do repent upon repentance God gives the assurance and seals it to the conscience Zach. 2.3 4. As the Lord takes away the filthy garments from Joshua so to Joshua's conscience hespeaks I have caused thine iniquity to pass from thee Preachers must take heed they do not preach remission to faith without repentance The summe of the Gospel is that whereas we are all dead men in Adam remission of sins is tendered to all that do believe and repent this is signified in baptisme and the supper which are signes on Gods part to confirme unto us his faithfulness in remission and signes on our parts to binde us to believe and repent We see in this petition 1 who forgives even God He to whom a debt is own can onely forgive it Esa 43.25 I even I am he that blotteth out thy sins for my own Name sake Others may remit the wrongs that concern themselves or they may remit declaratively they are to preach deliverance to captives Esa 61.1 Luk. 4.18 The state of a man unpardoned is like the state of a man imprisoned as the words shutting and opening and keyes Matth. 16.19 import now when persons repent preachers say to souls as Nathan to David 2 Sam. 12.7 The Lord hath put away thy sin The Lord hath done it I onely declare it Christ spake to his Apostles whose sins ye remit they are remitted but first he said receive ye the Holy Ghost for it is the Holy Ghost puts away sin and not you God onely forgives authoritatively Christ gave the power of teaching to his Disciples but kept the power of forgiveness to himself Now for the ground upon which pardon of sin is founded it is the meer mercy of God it s for his own Name sake the graces that are in us are not causes that God forgives fin to us but evidences thereof for the onely groundis mercy which is seen 1 In that he hath found out and appointed a way to satisfie his justice even Christs satisfaction Rom. 3.25 Esa 53.6 2 In his acceptation of that satisfaction and not requiring the debt of us Esa 53.11 3 In giving us to Christ Joh. 6.37 4 In giving us grace to receive Christ so tendered in the Gospel Joh. 1.12 5 In that there was nothing in us to move him thereto but our misery so that as tender hearts show mercy to persons in misery so did God What was there in Paul when he was going to Damascus to persecute For Application 1 begg forgiveness of sins of God Reprobate men may have other mercies this onely belongs to the elect Esa 33.24 The people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity Though Saints have prayed for removing judgements yet have they specially prayed for pardon of sin 2 Sam. 24.10 Grounds of begging pardon 1 From the painfulness and anguish that is in unpardoned sin lying on the conscience compared to a thorne in the flesh Ps 38.3 There 's no rest in my bones because of my sin to a heavy burthen Psa 38.4 To the breaking of the bones Psal 51.12 To a Serpents sting 1 Cor. 15.56 Yea to the stinging of an adder Prov. 23.32 To a scorching heat Psal 32.4.5 Freedom from wrath law sin death are easily spoken but to feel the fruit of it in agony of conscience and to apply it to a mans self is very hard Luth. Tom. 4. Fol. 149. 2 The comfort and content that is in the soul when sin is pardoned it is as if you should take off a talent of lead or a heavy weight from the soul Matth. 9.2 Be of good cheer thy sins are forgiven thee Look upon a poor debtor that ought a thousand pound and was ready to be cast in prison for it the creditor shall not onely forgive the debt but cancell the bond how doth this cheer the debtor so did Christ for us Col. 2.14 Blotting out the hand writing of ordinances that was against us he took it out of of the way and nayled it to his Cross so that it can never be pleaded against us Hence when God would comfort Mary Magdalen weeping he doth it from this ground because her sins were forgiven Luk. 7.38 9 49 50. Matth. 9.2 To the Palsey man Christ saith Be of good cheer thy sins are forgiven thee Esa 40. Comfort ye my people but how tell them their iniquity is pardoned Object But drooping souls cry out Hence I doubt my sins are not pardoned because I have so little peace in my soul Answ 1 Though comfort arise from pardon yet must God make us to hear the voice of it Psalm 51.8 Make me to hear the voice of joy and gladness God makes the voice to speak higher or lower as he thinks good 2 The more even the soul walks without back sliding the more doth the Lord speak peace to the soul Psalm 85.8 The Lord will speak peace unto his Saints but let them not turn again to folly as if he should say If they relapse or turn to folly their peace will be interrupted 3 Observe whether thy conscience speak truly or scrupulously If thy trouble come from thy conscience witnessing that thou livest in sin as Cain's conscience did Gen. 4.13 this must needs destroy
assurance of thy pardon get more and more earnest of the Spirit Men that deal in great matters love to get as good earnest as they can the fuller earnest the more security Again people keep and esteem an earnest more then other mony because it hath reference to further matters which other mony hath not So should we esteem the Spirits testimony as sealing us up unto the future inheritance in heaven at which day it shall cease to be any further an earnest as earnest mony ceases to be earnest when the whole sum is paid Mean time till we come into that glory the Spirit though it do not always confirm us to present sence yet doth it confirm us to present experience from the former workings thereof which we have felt as the former movings of the infant in the mothers womb confirm the mother that she is with childe though at the present she feel no moving at all thereof Obj. But the heart is deceitful Ans The Spirit in us is too holy to deceive and too wise to be deceived When there is an object to be seen and an eye to see and light to discover the object to the eye sight must needs follow so in a believer there is grace to be seen and an eye of faith to see it so is there a light of the Spirit discovering that grace to the soul Obj. But some as Papists and others think there can be no assurance of remission of sins and of salvation A. That we may be assured herein appears 1 The Word bids us make our pardon and salvation sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Heb. 6.11.10.22 which were in vain if such a thing could not be 2 The Saints have been assured hereof Job saith c. 19.25 I know that my Redeemer liveth and that I shall stand up with him on the earth at the last day and I shall see him not with other but with the same eys 2 Cor. 5.1 Paul saith We know if our earthly tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God Abraham Rom. 4.21 22. 1 John 3.14 1 John 5.14 15. We know we are translated from death to life we know we have the petitions desired 1 Pet. 5.1 I am also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed Peter speaks of himself in this life Obj. But what these Saints had they had by special revelation Answ No. For the Saints Peter writes to had obtained like precious faith with himself 2 Pet. 1.1 And Paul saith I am perswaded that neither life nor death shall be able to separate us from the love of God See he names other believers as well as himself Rom. 8.38 39. 2 All the Saints have the same Spirit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 though not in the same degree Timothy saith I know whom I have trusted 2 Tim. 1.12 See there is a certainty in knowledge The Hebrews knew in themselves they had a better and enduring substance which was the ground they not only patiently suffered but also joyfully endured the spoyling of their temporal substance Heb. 10.34 They did not onely conjecture it but knew it in themselves Peter when Christ asked him whether or no he loved him he did not answer Lord thou knowest we cannot tell truly whether or no we love thee but appeals unto Christ saying Thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee John 21.15 16 17. Peter mentions it three times shewing the undoubted assurance he had thereof 3 The Scripture bids us prove our selves as concerning our estate to God ward Gal. 6.4 Let a man prove himself that he may have rejoycing in himself alone 1 Cor. 11.28 Let a man examine himself and so let him eat 2 Cor. 13.5 Examine your selves whether you be in the faith This bidding us search our conscience according to the rule and the declaring that rejoycing followes thereon doth denote unto us that assurance of remission of sins may be had It is ridiculous to think that the Spirit should bid us search for that which cannot be found 4 That certainty and assurance of salvation may be had appears from the many signes and evidences the word of God sets down of our being in Christ of our having the Spirit of our regeneration uprightness confidence to say that he that hath these graces is not sure whether he have them or no is a great mistake for do not I know that I love the Lord better then any thing that I love my brother yea mine enemies that I combate against all sin hunger after righteousnesse that my heart closeth with every command of God that I hate all sin do not I know that I have comfottable answers from God in prayer when I have them Comfortlesse is the assurance of hope arising from humane conjecture allowed by Papists and differs from Theological or divine hope arising from faith 5 The doctrine of doubting of remission of sins or conjectural hoping for salvation is a comfortlesse doctrine for 1 It kills our joy and thankfulness for how can I joy in or be thankfull to him who for ought I know may damn me another day and how can I joy in a thing which I know not whether I shall have or no 2 This doctrine of doubting stuns and hinders our proceeding in a godly course How can a man have a heart to go on when he cannot tell whether all he doth will come to any thing yea or no The Scripture ordinarily exhorts to duty from the knowledge we have that our labour will not be in vain Gal. 6.9 Be not weary in well doing knowing in due season you shall reap if ye faint not 1 Cor. 15.28 Be ye alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know your labour will not be in vain 3 The doctrine of doubting must needs fill the conscience with much anguish and anxiety A man that is condemned and hath no way to escape but by a pardon must needs be in perplexity of mind till he know of his pardon so must the soul needs be that sees its own lost estate and knows nothing of the pardon of his sins 6 From experimental feeling when I trust to a person promising to give or lend me any thing I know I trust to him and rest on him for what he hath promised and shal I by faith rest on Christ and know no such thing 7 From the testimony of the renewed conscience for our spirits regenerate witness our good estate Rom. 8.16 Yea even this is witnessed even in weak Christians though with some fear of the contrary the poor man cryed out Mark 9 2● Lord I believe help my unbelief How could we say we believe if we could not know it we cannot speak that truly whereof we can have no certainty 8 From the seal of the Spirit witnessing with our spirits Take heed of expecting such inward witness of the spirit as some expect viz. a discovering of your adoption without first discovering the signes of it as if by an
secret fasting so he will reward thee openly not by way of desert which is onely proper to Christs obedience but he by his Spirit will in the sincere performance of this duty stirre up in thee mortification of the flesh and affliction of the Spirit together with a devout intention in the exercise of repentance and we shall understand this not onely at present but specially at the day of judgement Mean time know God is not a debtor to thee for thou canst deserve nothing at his hand Luk. 17.10 Rom. 11.35 The same way that a reward is given to him that prayes it is given to him that fasts but the reward is promised to him that prayes of grace not of desert Therefore so it is given to him that fasts and that not simply to him that fasts but to him that joyns prayer with his fasting Thus we see how Christ reprehends the Pharises Hypocritical fasting who did institute their fasts as to the outward part of it in imitation of the Fathers and holy people who were wont to sit on the ground and to be covered with sackcloth and ashes which were signes of their true sorrow but to the inward part which was hearty grief for sin and an earnest breathing after reconciliation this the Pharisees altogether omitted From the words thus expounded Observe that Gods people ought as in other duties so in fasting to avoid corruptions and to perform it in a right manner I will open 1 The kindes 2 The manner There 's a twofold fast 1 publick which is when Gods people meet together either to desire pardon for some great sin committed or to turn away judgement as in Jezabels time they met together in respect of a supposed blasphemy so when the men of Ai had smit thirty six men Joshua and the elders of Israel fasted Josh 7.6 7. So the men of Israel having lost two set battles against the men of Benjamin Judg. 20.26 fasted untill the even so when there was a famine coming the Lord calls to the Priests to gather all the people of the land to fasting and prayer Joel 1.14 so when Moab Ammon and Mount Seir came against Jehoshaphat he seeks to God by prayer and fasting 2 Chr. 20.3 2 Private when we humble our selves for some evils lying upon our persons or family So David humbled himself for the child 2 Sam. 12.16 Of this Christ speaks when the bridegroom shall be taken away from them then shall they fast Matth. 9.15 So when in private we humble our selves for some evil lying upon the Church so did Nehemiah cap. 1.4 for the affliction of the Jews And Daniel sought the Lord for the Jews that God would bring them out of their seventy years captivity Dan. 9.3 Sometimes one friend fasts for another so Jobs friends Job 2.12 sometimes for enemies Psal 35.13 And so David fasted for the recovery of the health of his enemies 2 The manner of fasting 1 it must be with preparation to get off the hardness of the heart as in all prayer preparation is to be used before it so much more in this solemn duty Levit. 23.29 32. 2 It must be with humiliation and affliction of Spirit Psal 35.15 Levit. 23.29 Ezra 8.21 3 Removed from hypocrisie Anoint thy head and wash thy face As in the text Thou art not to be proud because thou hast been humbled but to be humbled because thou hast been proud 4 Free from censoriousness of others that fast not when thou fastest Johns Disciples when they fasted censured the Disciples of Christ for their not fasting Mat. 9.14 In the same family one may have cause of fasting when another hath cause of rejoycing 1 Cor. 7.5 5 In performance of reading and expounding the Word Nehem. 9.3 one fourth part of the day was spent in reading the word and opening the same Baruch on the fasting day read the Word of the Lord by Jeremiah Jer. 36.6 Another fourth part of the day they spent in prayer wherein confession of sins was most insisted upon Neh. 9.3 6 In separation of the soul and body from sundry comforts wherewith at other times we do refresh our selves as from stately apparrel the King of Niniveh laid aside his princely robes Jon. 3.6 Such apparrel is fittest at a fast as most shows the abasement of our Spirits onely let it not be affected also then refrain from pleasures which are then both unlawful Esa 58.3 Joel 2.16 The bridegroom then must go forth of his chamber and the bride out of her closet also they are unsutable God complains that when he called to weeping mourning and girding with sackcloth then behold joy and gladness Esa 22.12 13. Yea on a fasting day we are to refrain from the ordinary works of our calling Esa 58.3 Behold in the day of your fast ye exact all your labours Also abstinence from Meat and Drink 2 Sam. 3.35 David did not taste Bread or ought else till the going down of the Sun Onely note this abstinence is so far forth requisite as it helps forward our inward humiliation If the forbearance of food prove an hinderance to humiliation it is not to be used and such as cannot abstain though through weakness they cannot keep a fast yet may they keep a day of humiliation and prayer Onely 1 Beware of a pretended necessity instead of a true for if it be pretended God findes out pretences Prov. 24.12 Doth not he that pondereth the heart consider If it be a real necessity then God will have mercy rather than sacrifice 2 Though thou canst not abstain wholly yet abstain from so much as usual or from food of such a kinde Daniel ate no pleasant bread for three weeks Dan. 10.3 A tanto à toto or à tali in such bodily abstinence we judg our selves unworthy of the creatures 7 Consider the petitions you would commend to God in prayer and the sins you desire to acknowledg and the judgments you desire to have removed and the mercies you desire to obtain and insist especially upon them when the Church would have a blessing upon Paul's Ministry they used fasting Acts 13.2 so for a blessing upon stated Elders prayer and fasting was used Ezra to have a right direction for the people in their coming from Babylon sought God by fasting and prayer Ang. ad Casul Ezra 8.21 in all these fasts they insisted upon the matter in hand When Peter was to encounter at Rome with Simon Magus the Roman Church on the Sabbath-day fasted Augustine when he saw his City besieged by the Vandals gave himself to prayer and fasting and died in that Siege as Possidonius mentions 8 Beware that thou turn not thy fast into a matter of penance Persons when they do penance in formal and idolatrous Churches are glad when it is over though they never shew any true repentance so persons are glad when the fasting is over though their hearts have never melted throughout the duty The end of a thing is that for which
fine houses pleasant gardens and costly apparrel hath the late cloud of war overshadowed Esa 23.9 The Lord hath stained the pride of all glory and brought into contempt all the honourable of the earth But could Satan give the glory he pretends yet should you have it upon exceeding hard terms He said to Christ Fall down and worship me and all shall be thine 4 As the Lines meet in the centre and the beams of the Sun in a burning-glass so let your scattered affections meet in God Solomon having let his affections go out to pleasures mirth wine buildings vineyards gardens pools of water possessions of cattel treasures of gold and silver musick c. Eccles 2.1 2 3 4 5 6 7. came to see the vanity and to centre himself in the fear of God and keeping his commandments Eccles 12.1 5 Consider the things of the world which are sutable to others God can make them disproportionable to thee Ahab had a Kingdom but could take no comfort in it but was sick for one poor Vineyard Haman had wealth honour and the favour of the Prince in abundance yet the want of a cringe from Mordecai a small matter one would think made all bitter If inferiour causes can bring forth contrary effects as the Sun can soften Wax and harden Clay cannot the highest cause much more produce it Many have vast Estates but an unequal yoke-fellow or the reproach of some sin they have committed or a guilty conscience takes away the comforts of them 6 Consider it 's a Christians duty always to have a disposition to leave all for Christ Luke 14.26 Now how can we perform this duty if our hearts be set upon the World Thou sayest thou canst not leave thy stately dwelling and accommodations thou dost in effect say I cannot be a Christian Paul saith Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should rejoyce save in the Cross of Christ 7 Be convinced of the vanity in all earthly things Practise often follows conviction there 's a mask upon riches pleasures honours which is false opinion which must be pulled off How was Achan cozened with a Wedg of Gold and Gehezi with two Talents of Silver The Labours of worldly men are not unfitly by some resembled to the sports of children their buildings to the houses children make of cards and trenchers their gathering wealth to the others gathering sticks their immoderate sorrow in the loss of them to the cry of children when their houses are cast down Whether it be a thing more to be laughed at or pitied I shall not determine to see man that hath an eternal soul and eternal objects to look at upon the terms of highest necessity his eternal weal or wo to spend the strength of his spirit upon earthly vanities We count them mad men who leaving serious things are disposed to play with pins and straws such are worldly men The Prophet said He saw an end of all perfections Psalm 119.96 May we not say the same we have seen an end of all perfection of beauty save of Gods image Holiness of all perfection of pedegree save spiritual adoption of all perfection of wealth save of riches laid up in Heaven of all perfection of buildings save of that City whose Builder and Maker is God of all perfections of joy save the joy of a good conscience which is a continual feast 8 Beware of being deluded by worldly pretences as 1 the hardness of the times in hard times let us be less worldly then should we open our hands freely 2 The greatness of their charge true we are to provide for our charge else we are worse then Infidels but thou provides for thy self being loath to part with any thing till death put thy children in possession whether thou wilt or not nay if God take half their charge away they are not more lib eral 3 The great necessities of the Church a faire pretence if true but consider what hast thou done for the Church do not thy proportions come short not onely of others but also of thy own ability we read of some who parted with all for the Church but they were not men of this temper Acts 4.34 35. 9 Be much in prayer that God would cure thy worldly frame of heart say Lord I can savour nothing but oxen and farms If any man speak a word of any heavenly discourse it 's unsavory I have a heart just like the Inn at Bethlehem room enough for others none for thee Be large in thy confessions say Lord this is a sin that makes me sometimes neglect duties of religion and commonly chop them off that makes me so many times in a week go to bed prayerless and abroad in the morning prayerless This sin hath oft exposed me to lying over-reaching for which I doubt I have not made full restitution my own interest hath made me seek the ruine of the whole this hath made me take a bribe in my office to sell justice in my magistracy cheat in my weights and measures flatter in my ministry sell things unlawful to be sold as the Christians in Tertulian's time sold images to the heathens As a Land-lord I have rackt my Tenants grinding their faces because I knew they must have my farms as a labourer I have extorted because I knew they could not get another As a servant I have cozened my Master now and then of a penny as a Master I have griped my Workmen making them take so much in commodity at a racking price because I knew thy were tied to my Work these confessions when they are feeling and not historical will much take off the heart from the World 10 Set your affections in Heaven when a man is upon an high Pinacle things below seem very small so get your spirits up on high and the things below will seem small The Christians in Justin Martyr's time in his Epistle to Diognetus inhabited their own countreys as strangers they had all things common with others as Citizens but suffered all things as strangers every strange countrey is their countrey and every countrey is strange to them they live in the earth but have their conversation in heaven That which is the soul in the body that are Christians in the World the soul is dispersed through all the members of the body and Christians are dispersed through the Cities of the World the soul dwells in the body but is not of the body so Christians dwell in the World but are not of the World Then are our affections in Heaven when the soul is longing after the presence of God the soul is not so much there where it lives as where it loves The soul looking upon better things than the World can easily bid adieu unto the World It was a Christian speech of a certain Bishop mentioned by Augustine that when the Gothes had taken the City and spoil he said I am not sorry for my Gold and Silver thou knowest where my treasure is 11 Believe the
seducement by a false Prophet may prove as dangerous as a scandalous practice hence false Prophets are said to bring in damnable Heresies 2 Pet. 2.2 Use 1 Try the Spirits that is the doctrines because many false Prophets are gone out 1 Joh. 4.1 False Prophets take advantage of seducing by the lightness of mens mindes As all should try them so especially governours Princes and great persons for whom such lye in wait Act. 13.6 2 Take heed of such deluders for this purpose 1 Get a love to truth for want whereof many are given up to delusions to believe lyes 2 Thess 2.10 11. 2 Take heed of lightness of mind many are taken with every new fangled whimsie as the Galatians were soon removed so are they Gal. 1.6 3 Take heed of their fair tongues Rom. 16.18 With good words and fair speeches they deceive the hearts of the simple they promise liberty but allure to wantonness 2 Pet. 2.18 19. 4 Converse not with such false Prophets 2 Epistle of John ver 10. 5 Consider the danger of their doctrines They come in sheeps cloathing Here 's the danger of them they come in sheeps cloathing but inwardly are wolves Lether or sheep-skins was the habit of true Prophets Heb. 11.37 Under this kind of habit we are to understand all outward show of innocency testified by countenance words or Apparel The Prophets wore sometimes hairy garments as the Baptist Matth. 3.4 And the false Prophets wore these to deceive Zach. 13.4 As a flock of sheep is in danger when there is among them a Wolf covered with a sheep-skin so is Gods flock in danger by these false Prophets Quest But what is this sheeps clothing Answ Extraordinary appearance of Zeal Pretended inspirations of the spirit seeming sanctity without the power of godliness plainness of Apparel pretended self-denial mortification and humility even to the neglecting of the body and sometimes even of relations pretended harmlesness Allegations of Scripture in a flourishing way but not in truth pretence of being called by men so did the Scribes and Pharisees of their being called A readiness to endure prisons banishment c. for the tenents they hold Laborious painfulness in going from one Land to another to gain Proselytes Matth. 23.15 Denunciatory damnations against those who will not believe their dreams Inwardly they are ravening Wolfes They are like Wolfes 1 For greediness Esa 56.11 they are strong of appetite as the word is varied in the Margin they can never have enough they look all to their own way every one to his gain 2 For subtilty The Wolf is very subtile the Evening Wolf though it eat some of the flesh when it takes the prey yet hides the rest he gnawes not the bones till the morrow see Zeph. 3.3 so false Prophets are very subtile deceitfull workers transforming themselves into the Apostles of Christ Eph. 4.14 3 For mischief One Wolf will mischieve a great many Sheep so these 4 For watchfulness The Wolf watcheth if the Shepherd be gone to catch the Sheep Joh. 10.12 so do false Prophets they watch to catch the Sheep and Lambs of Christ in the absence of the Shepherd 5 Wolves do not enter in by the door but climb over some other way getting over pales or hedges So do false Prophets they do not come in at Christs door which is the lawfull call of a Church but some other way as pretence of presentation institution induction commendums dispensations c. John 10.1 6 For fierceness and cruelty they presently tear out the very entrails of a creature Hab. 1.8 The Chaldeans are said to be more fierce then the Evening Wolves so these Acts 20.29 Grievous Wolves shall enter in among you not sparing the flock False Prophets are cruel to the souls of men yea and to their bodies too Zedekiah the false Prophet struck Michaiah 〈◊〉 Kings 22.24 25 26. Pashur put Jeremy in the stocks and smote him Jer. 20.2 3. Ananias commanded Paul to be stricken Acts 23.2 Use 1 Caution against the feigned pretences of false Prophets Learn to be wise as Serpents against them Matth. 10.16 If they be Wolves and Serpents to circumvent you be ye Serpents to prevent them 2 Learn to hear and obey the Lords faithfull Prophets Joh. 10.4 5. Heb. 13.7 17. V. 16. By their fruits you shall know them Christ gives a note whereby to try false Prophets viz. By their fruits that is by their fruits of iniquity Obj. But you said before they had a seeming sanctity Answ True but feigned things soon return to their nature no man can long carry a counterfeit person Q. But what are their fruits Answ They are many 1 Usually they flye sufferings especially where praise doth not accompany it 2 They allure unto themselves men that live in sin especially the richer sort and promise them peace how bad soever Even such as have been cast out of Churches without requiring any thing of their repentance 3 They move questions not any way tending to godliness but either curious or captious questions they dote about questions and strife of words being full of perverse disputings 1 Tim 6 4 5. full of revilings against the faithfull servants of Christ and those which are the most eminent instruments of his Church 4 Also they go to preach without any call either of a true gift or of a true Church or Pastour Acts 13.2 3 4. Also Acts 14.23 True Prophets have usually had a call by those who have had a greater measure of the spirit to judge then the person called Onely men that are likely to be usefull this way may be tried The Lord complains that the Prophets prophesied without his sending Jer. 14.14 15. Jer. 23.21 22. I have not sent these Prophets yet they ran I have not spoken to them yet they prophesied 5 Also they think to make people forget the name of God by their pretended inspirations Jer. 23.27 They think to cause my people to forget my name by their dreams which they tell every man to his neighbour as their fathers have forgotten my name for Baal 6 Also they are full of confident blasphemous boldness to say God saith when God saith not Jer. 23.31 I am against the Prophets that smooth their tongues and say he saith The word of the Lord to this Judge this Teacher See Ezek 13.6 7 Also a bold pretending to know and search hearts which is onely proper to God 1 Kings 8.39 Thou even thou onely knowest the hearts of the children of men they will tell a man they never saw before that he is an hypocrite and wicked 8 Also sadding the hearts of the righteous and gladding the hearts of the wicked Ezek. 13.22 23. 9 Also to build up and comfort souls with a false peace Ezek. 13 10 11. one cried peace when there was no peace One false Prophet by his flattery built a wall of carnall confidence and another daub'd it with untempered morter This is called a sowing of Pillows v. 18. telling persons on
not that therefore the Apostle excludes the teaching of man for then why would Christ send out his Apostles and the seventy Disciples and why doth he establish a Ministry in his Church one essential property whereof is that he must be apt to teach yea doth not Christ bid us pray to the Lord of the Harvest for such Labourers Christ also shews us that from the Lords teaching as a principal cause the Ministry of man becomes effectual 1 Cor. 3.7 There are many other fruits of false Prophets as the soothing and flattering of Princes 1 Kings 18.6 compared with v. 1● The mingling of Truth and Errour together or at least truth and corrupt affections from which the Apostle clears himself 2 Cor. 2.17 There are many other notes of false Prophets which by a frequent reading of the Scriptures and begging of the Spirit we may attain to know V. 16. Ye shall know them by their Fruits Do men gather Grapes of Thorns or Figs of Thistles Look as of Thorn-trees men do not gather Grapes nor of Thistles men do not gather Figgs so from false Prophets there is no good and sweet fruit gathered but the harsh and corrupt fruit of Errour and Heresie V. 17. Even so every good Tree bringeth forth good Fruit but a corrupt Tree bringeth forth corrupt Fruit. Christ here comes to confirm unto us further that men do not gather good fruits from bad trees and makes a reddition to the former Proposition laid down interrogatively By good and bad Trees in general the state of the regenerate and unregenerate man may be understood Matth. 12.33 Carnal men cannot please God Rom. 8.8 Abel's person was first respected then his offering Gen. 4.4 In particular Christ means the Prophets when good they bring forth good fruit when corrupt they bring forth corrupt fruit when good they handle the Word of God uprightly 2 Cor. 2.17.4.2 when corrupt they handle Gods Word deceitfully Ephes 4.14 Such false Prophets are not known by the leaves or flowers of an outward profession but by their fruits V. 18. A good Tree cannot bring forth evil Fruit neither can a corrupt Tree bring forth good Fruit. Christ amplifies what he had delivered shewing that a good will from the habit of grace in the soul brings forth good things ordinarily and usually and an evil will from the habit of sin in the soul brings evil things But Christ means first the man must be changed that his works may be changed But who is found good of the Lord seeing Christ died for sinners therefore he found us all bad Trees but gave us power to believe on his Name Aug. de Verb. Domini Serm. 12. But if we carry it to Teachers we must understand it so far as he is a good Teacher for even good Teachers have been mistaken in some things they cannot bring forth corrupt Doctrine nor can a corrupt Teacher so far as he is corrupt bring forth good Doctrine It 's usual that the actions of the body are sutable to the qualities of the minde Matth. 12.34 35. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is good an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart brings forth that which is evil If we understand it of men we must understand it of men as in their natural estate But as a Tree when it is transplanted brings forth good fruit though naturally without transplantation it could not so when persons are transplanted out of their natural estate into Christ they bring forth good fruits John 15.4 5. though in their natural state they could not If we carry it to Teachers as Christ means both then the meaning is if these Prophets were true lovers of godliness as they would seem to be they would not usually commit such things as are directly contrary to godliness as they do V. 19. Every Tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewen down and cast into the fire V. 20. Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them Here 's the punishment of false Prophets The words are a similitude taken from an Husbandman and are denounced against all Hypocrites in general who have the leaves of profession but want the power of godliness and in particular against hypocritical false Prophets John 15.6 If a man abide not in me he is cast forth as a Branch that is withered and men gather them and cast them into the fire and they are burned as the Husbandman casts fruitless Branches into the fire so will Christ cast such as bring not forth good fruit into the fire of Hell See Matth. 3.10 In particular false Prophets bring upon themselves swift destruction Their judgment lingers not and their damnation slumbers not 2 Peter 2 1 3. Is hewen down and cast into the fire They are now at present hewen dow by the threatnings of God and shall hereafter be thrown into Hell Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them Christ here concludes thus q. d. seeing men usually teach things suitable to their manners and practises by such kinde of corrupt Teachings you may suspect these Prophets before they instill or drop in their opinions into you for such as the Masters are such will they make the Scholars such as the Tree is such will the Fruits be V. 21. Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven but he that doth the will of my Father which is in Heaven Christ from reprehending false Prophets comes to reprehend all hypocritical Formalists whether teachers or hearers who pretend the faith and doctrine of Christ in a great shew of holiness but deny it in their works They prophesied in the Name of Christ and wrought miracles but did not do Christ his will In the words two things 1 An exclusion of hypocritical Formalists or formal Hypocrites out of Gods Kingdom Not every one that saith Lord Lord c. A name without a thing is nothing It 's as an ornament in the clay or a jewel in the mire 2 A reception of those who have a sincere purpose to obey God But he that doth the will of my Father To do the will of God is 1 To believe on Christ John 6.40 This is the will of the Father that every one that sees the Son and believes on him should have everlasting life 2 To declare our faith by a sanctified course of obedience 1 Thess 4.4 This is the will of God even our sanctification 3 To have a purpose for all Gods commands without excepting of any Psal 119.6 106. Col. 1.10.4.12 Heb. 13.20 21. But he that doth the will of my Father which is in heaven and consequently my will for I and my Father are one Joh. 14.7 and the Father is in the Son and the Son in the Father but Christ as he is man for modesty sake names the will of the Father and not his own From the words thus opened observe Obs 1 That in the visible Church there
shall onely shew his opinion 3 Let it be with modesty and humility not in a proud magisterial way that it may appear the desired satisfaction arises meerly from conscience and not from humour 4 With a care to preserve the authority and reputation of the Teacher Titus 2.15 5 Upon due satisfaction given to sit down and hold your peace and not for the defence of your own opinion and credit to violate peace and holiness See Acts 11.18 6 To avoid all words that may force strife that the hearer may go away and report that God is among this people whiles they can peaceably debate of the things of God 1 Cor. 14.25 See 2 Tim. 2.23 7 Be sure that what you have to reply against any thing delivered be of moment and strength else your selves who shall reply will suffer reproach and scorn herein and come under the name of a gain-sayer Titus 1.9 8 In case words tending to no profit but to the subverting of hearers shall be brought the Preacher is to charge them before the Lord That they strive not about words to no profit 2 Tim. 2.16 Also v. 14. Shun profane and vain bablings for they will increase unto more ungodliness and their word will cat as a Canker as Hymenaeus and Philetus who denied the Resurrection so Quakers Antiscripturists are thus to be charged For the time will come when men will not endure sound doctrine but will turn away their ears from the truth and shall be turned into fables 9 Sometimes apostate Professours stirred up by the Devil this way as well as others may make great resistance against the words of a faithfull Preacher 2 Tim. 2.14 Alexander the Copper-smith greatly withstood the Apostles preaching and it may be suspected that some will be apt to abuse this Liberty proudly opposing sound Doctrine for meer trifles 10 Herewith rejoycing Jer. 15.16 Thy words were found and I did eat them and thy word was unto me the joy and rejoycing of my heart Psalm 119.162 David rejoyced in the Word as one that findeth great spoil Acts 2.41 Object But the stony ground received the Word with joy Matth. 13.20 Answ So they did and it was well that they did but 1 Hypocrites joy in some part onely but right hearers joy in every part hypocrites joy in the promises not in the precepts 2 Hypocrites joy in the notion onely but the right hearer joys in those truths as having an interest in them We rejoyce in the sight of a Diamond but joy more in the property The joy of one is like the joy of a man that is glad to see a fine field of Corn the joy of the other is like the joy of him that is the owner of this field of Corn. 3 Hypocrites joy in the Word after the outward man as apprehending most of the duties equitable and reasonable and many of them advantageous to a mans Estate credit and relations but a right hearer delights in the Law of God after the inner man Rom. 7.22 4 True joy is accompanied with fear Psalm 2.11 Rejoyce in him with trembling and also righteousness Rom. 14.17 The Kingdom of God consisteth in righteousness peace and joy of the Holy Ghost It 's otherwise in hypocrites their joy is accompanied with love of some Lust 11 Practise Christian conference Mal. 3.16 The godly when they met together spake often one to another of the providence of God The two Disciples going to Emaus communed together and reasoned of what they heard from Christ Luk. 24.15 Exhort one another daily while it is called to day Heb. 3.13 In speaking of the good things we have heard we do not onely warm others but our own hearts also 12 Retain and hold fast the Word 1 John 3 9. The seed of God abideth in him Cares pleasures will be apt to steal away the Word Else the fowls of the air will devour it Luke 8.5 For as many fowls follow the Seeds-man to pick up what is sown so do many Devils follow Sermons to pick up the seed Devils are called Fowls of the Air both for the nimbleness of their motion in a little time they will compass the whole earth Job 1.7 and from the place of their habitation which is the Air Ephes 2.2 13 Avoid all cavilling objections against the Word 1 Tim. 6.3 4. we ought to consent to the Doctrine according to godliness without any cavilling It 's one thing to make an objection in order to Christian satisfaction and another thing to cavil from pride and conceitedness Cavillers in Pauls time were out of Churches 1 Cor. 1.23 Where is the disputer of this world Take we heed they be not now in the Church It was the wickedness of the Jews that they were gain-sayers not onely their ears but their hearts Rom. 10.21 against Gods truth I have stretched out my hand to a gain-saying people 14 Practice meditation Deut. 32.46 set your hearts to all the words I testifie among you this day As a plaister works not unless it be bound on to the sore no more doth the Word unless meditation bind it on the affections Unclean beasts contrarily chew not the cud As the ground cannot be quickned with fruit unless it receive the seed no more can our hearts be quickned with the Spirit and fruits of it till by the use of hearing and meditation we have taken in this seed Many are so far from meditating that they are like children when schooling time is ended glad who can first get out and think not of what they have learned 15 Consider the benefits you shall have in the preaching of the Gospel when rightly received As 1 The graces and comforts of the Spirit conveyed in the beginnings and increases thereof even as Conduit-pipes carry water hither and thither Luke 24.32 Did not our hearts burn within us whiles he talked with us by the way Gal. 3.2 5. 2 Therein glad tydings are conveyed Rom. 10.15 How beautifull are the feet of them that bring good news Upon the hearing of it we feel as it were new spirits to return to us how much more when we hear tydings of reconciliation from God how should our hearts abound in comfort shall other news revive us not this 3 The excellency of the ministry we are under it is the ministry of the Gospel far more excellent then that of the Law 1 In the Law they saw darkly we with open face 2 Cor. 3.18 2 The one is the ministration of death but the Gospel is the ministration of righteousness and life v. 7 8 9. Obj. But may not the Gospel also be called a ministration of death Answ Yes by accident not directly when souls will not obey the Gospel it turns to their condemnation As a Princes pardon cannot kill any one of it self but being despised it doubles the guilt and brings to a more hasty destruction so the pardon of God in the Gospel killeth not any but being despised causeth more heavy destruction But the Law
him sins not that is lives not in a purpose of sin Prov. 19.16 He that despises his way shall dye 1 Tim. 5.6 Shee that lives in pleasure is dead Luk. 15. ult 2 Want of feeling A man may be alive and want all other sences as seeing hearing smelling tasting but if once he loose his feeling he is dead so when a man shall be past feeling of sin Eph. 4.19 or past feeling of the miseries of a Christian he is a dead man 1 Cor. 12.26 3 Separation from the living As when persons shall voluntarily separate themselves from Churches Jude 19. These be they who separate themselves sensual having not the spirit or when Churches shall separate men whom they judge to live in sin from their Communion 4 Stiffness and wilfulness in sin Jer. 44.16 The Word which thou hast commanded in the name of the Lord we will not do Joh. 8.44 The works of your father the devil ye will do as dead bodies are unbendable so are dead hearts Luk. 19.27 We will not have this man reign over us 5 Dead men move not so when thou hast not spiritual motion towards spiritual duties in the compass of thy calling as to prayer to do good to poor Saints to promoting the glory of God to gain others to the faith by thy holy example art not thou dead They which live live not unto themselves Rom. 14.7 8. 6 When men are loathsome A dead body how adorned soever is loathsome yea though our nearest friend Abraham when Sarah was dead said Bury her out of my sight Gen. 23.4 so are all dead men to God Prov. 13.5 so are they to Gods people so far as they are renewed 7 When a soul is pluckt up by the roots Jude 12. Twice dead pluckt up by the roots not onely dead in the state of Gentilisme but of Christianity so that he is severed from the root Christ Joh. 15.5 and so can do nothing no more then a tree pluckt up by the roots nor can bring forth any fruit Many men are not onely pluckt up from the power of religion but also from the very profession 2 Tryal whether thou hast spiritual life in thee 1 Love to the means which maintain it 1 Pet. 2.2 As new borne babes desire the milk of the word As young ones by natural instinct run to the teats of their dams every life loves that which maintains it the natural life loves meat and drink and Apparel the sinful life loves that which maintains it so doth the spiritual life 2 Life is seen by breathing so if thou be spiritually alive thou wilt breathe after God Psal 42.1 2.28.1.63.1.143.7 3 By contending as we contend to the utmost for saving temporal life so for preservation of spiritual life the soul will contend to the utmost It will let lusts go friends go enjoyments and country go As the body endeavours to expel poyson or hurtful things by vomit so Saints sometimes shame themselves even by confessing not onely to God but to men some lust that holds in combat 4 Groaning under deadness and complaining against it Psal 119.25 37 50 93. This very sensibleness of deadness helps to prove life 5 Where life is there will be a conveyance of a life of sanctification whereby the soul will be quickned up to all the wayes of God Rom. 6.13 together with the life of justification which is nothing else but the obtaining of a pardon Rom. 5.18 a Prince may pardon a malefactor but he cannot put a principle of love and fidelity in him but Christ conveyes a principle of love Luk. 7.47 and holiness 6 It stayes upon a promise Psal 119.49 50. Joh. 6.37 Heb. 7.25 Yet grace growing sometimes unperceivably as in young converts who have been bred religiously See Mark 4.26 27. We must not be too strict to limit young converts in their professions to a right judging of the work of grace either to the time of their conversion to declare that or to the promise that sustained them in the hour of conversion Promises in the hour of conversion made over to the solu are rather supports against temptation then absolute sole measures to judge of spiritual life as the trials sine qua non as if the soul not remembring the promise that first staid him were to be put by as an unconverted person what if from preaching in general promises the soul came to see the worth of Christ and to close with him with a disposition to part with all for him whether lust or enjoyment is not this enough Yet where there are promises made over to the soul in the hour of conversion which the soul well remembers and wherein it found the sense of Gods love in pardon it tends so much the more to manifest spiritual life which if they were truly so made over and were not delusions they were accompanied with the forenamed disposition of parting with all lusts and enjoyments for Christ 7 Condescention in indifferent things with an unmovable resolution in the things of God you will not bate any thing of the peace of your consciences for any mans pleasure If they take away goods liberty let it go but if they go about to take away our faith here we are to give way to none Means to spiritual life 1 Get union with Christ the members must needs be alive being united to a living head 1 Joh. 5.12 Christ is a head over his Church by way of provision and dominion but this is most comfortable that he is a head by way of union He that will work well let him begin not from working but from beliving What makes a person g●ood but faith or evil but unbelief Luth. Tom. 1. Fol. 469. The Angels are united to Christ by knowledge and love but we by faith and the Spirit that member is a dead member that draws not quickning from the head As the sea fills all vessels yet is not emptied thereby so doth Christ fill all in all Eph. 1.22 Yet hath not he less 2 Set faith on work to draw life from Christ Christ is compared to a garment but to have benefit by him we must ut him on by believing Rom. 13.14 to bread but to have nourishment by him we must feed on him by faith John 6.50 51 53 54. As we cannot have the strength of Bread unless we eat the substance of it so in this case And as the soul by virtue of sight doth joyn it self with the body of the Sun though the Sun be in Heaven and we be on Earth so the eye of faith enlightened by the Spirit doth joyn it self with Christ though he be in Heaven and the believer on earth and from him draws influence John 1.17.4.10.7.38 39. And as there are degrees of light from the Sun according to the clearness or dimness of the eye that beholds it so there are degrees of union with Christ and inhabitation according to the clearness or dimness of the eye of faith 3 Hear the
2 Cor. 4.8 because God comes for our rescue persecuted of men but not forsaken of God Suppose the evil be imprisonment how comfortable was Paul and Silas in it If burning and martyrdome God will either abate the fire or give thee strength to bear it as a Martyr once comforted himself and others 2 Be exhorted that you be not swallowed up of fears This hath been the portion of the ungodly Jer. 46.5 Pashur had fear round about Jer. 20.4 Zedekiah in his fears goes from chamber to chamber to hide himself 1 Kings 22.24 The hearts of the men of Jericho melted for fear when the men of Israel came against them Jos 2.9 10 11. so that there remained no more courage in any man The men of Benjamin when they saw the City on fire on one side that they could not retreat thereto and the men of Israel turning upon them were amazed Judg. 20.40 41. We live in a time of fears and dangers Sometimes mens hearts failing them for fear looking on those things that are coming on the earth Luk. 21.26 Sometimes our hearts trembling because of the Ark of God 1 Sam. 4.13 as Eli his heart did Sometimes fearing under the sense of our unworthiness Now to quiet our hearts under all fears consider 1 That all the evils men or devils can cast upon us cannot reach the soul Matth. 10.28 2 Get out the sting of sin by obtaining pardon When this sting is taken away the soul will be couragious 1 Cor. 15.57 O death where is thy sting then death will be like a serpent without a sting Without this the heart cannot be free from terror 3 Look on grounds of encouragement as thus I have Christs righteousness for mine I have a disposition to part with all for the Lord I have comfortable answers in prayer I have a good conscience in all things I finde in my self a thorow change I endeavour in all things to eye God Discouraging fears will not be cast out without supporting reasons The soul being reasonable must needs close with reasons 4 Fore-think of evils before they come and set Christ against all So Moses Heb. 11.26 In the worst of times no enemy can take away Christ from me 5 Get Gods fear This will much eat out false fears Matth. 10.28 as the true Serpent ate up the false See Esai 8.12 13 14. 6 Exercise confidence in the promises of God Psal 56.3 4. In God will I put my trust I will not fear what flesh can do unto me What time I am afraid I will put my trust in thee when thou goest through the fire and through the water I will be with thee Esai 43.1 2. 7 Get God on your sides Psal 118.4 The Lord is on my side I will not fear what man can do unto me A Christian should be like a rock in the Sea which though the waves break themselves against it yet it remaineth firm Rom. 8.31 If God be for us who can be against us viz. to hurt us for else no man hath more enemies then a Christian This made Paul so couragious at Corinth Acts 18.9 10. Be not afraid but speak for I am with thee and no man shall set on thee to hurt thee Yea this made Paul not to fear when the Ship was every moment ready to be cast away Acts 27.23 24. The Angel of God stood by me whose I am and whom I serve saying Fear not Paul This made David not to fear though an Army of men were coming against him Psal 27.1 2 3. See Psal 46.1 2 3 c. Motives to rid the heart of these fears 1 They procure great torment to the soul 1 Joh. 4.18 Hence Ezekiel setting forth the misery of the people saith They shall eat their bread with quaking and drink their water with carefulness trembling and astonishment Ezek. 12.18 2 It 's the end of our deliverance to serve God without these slavish fears Luke 1.75 That we being delivered out of the hands of all our enemies might serve him without fear 3 These fears are sometimes worse then the evils themselves feared 2 Kings 7.5 6 7. The Syrians in a vain fear ran away from the Camp and left it to the plunder of Israel Psal 53.5 There were they in great fear where no fear was 4 Many persons have their slavish fears come upon them Saul feared David would get the Kingdome and he sought all means basely to prevent it but could not the Jews feared the Romans would come and take away their place and Nation if they let Christ alone yet when they had slain him the Romans came and took all from them 5 These carnal fears are full of mischief as 1 To exalt creatures in the place of God 2 They expose us to a snare Prov. 29.25 The fear of man brings a snare so doth the fear of hell many dare not do duty for fear they should lose their lives and go to hell 3 These fears bereave us of the comfortable enjoyment of good things we have fear of loss of estate liberty life takes away the comfort of it That good hath the truest content therewith for the loss whereof we are habitually prepared rather then lose Christ and a good conscience 4 Though these fears may sometimes put a man upon self-reformation yet usually this reformation that arises from these fears lasts no longer then the fear remains Psal 107.26 as we see in Mariners in a storm Job 41.25 When he raiseth up himself the mighty are afraid and by reason of breakings they purifie themselves We see how in time of fears men reform but see how unsound it is lasting no longer then the danger lasts Psal 78.34 35 36. When he slew them then they sought him nevertheless they did but flatter him with their mouth Then he arose and rebuked the Winde and the Sea and there was a great calm Not in a feigned way as the Heathen Aeolus rebuked the windes but in a real way as the Lord of windes and sea Hence Mark hath it Peace and be still Mar. 4.39 He reproves the wind and sea as if a Master should reprove a servant here is a plain argument of Christs Godhead Who can command winde and sea save God alone As his power was seen in quieting the storms of the sea 〈◊〉 the same power can quiet the storms in the Churches and among good men and the storms that Satans temptations shall stir up in the hearts of Saints So when there are passionate storms in our hearts the command of Christ should make a calm It 's a comfortable thing in a storm to be in covenant with him whom windes and seas obey Christ speaks alike to windes and storms diseases and devils he quiets them with the word of his mouth and so can he quiet storms in the Commonwealth Psal 65.7 Which stilleth the noise of the seas the noise of their waves and the tumult of the people Onely in these times of confusions let us awake the Lord
countrey he was willing to go with Christ Luke 8.38 3 His obedience when Christ sent him back again to his own countrey and kindred he was willing to go trying whether that effect of Doctrine which could not be by Christ might by him being one of their own countrey become effectual withall in sending him thus Christ shews that an active life is to be preferred before a contemplative first the body must be exercised in labour and then be refreshed by contemplation CHAP. IX V. 1. And he entred into a Ship and passed over and came into his own City V. 2. And behold they brought unto him a man sick of the Palsey lying on a Bed Jesus seeing their faith saith to the sick of the Palsey Son be of good chear thy sins be forgiven thee WE have in this story 1 The return of Christ from the countrey of the Gergesenes into his own City Capernaum whence lately he came v. 1. 2 His miraculous power in not onely healing a man sick of the Palsey but also forgiving his sins v. 2. 3 The cavil of the Scribes against him charging him with blasphemy for his forgiving the Palsey-man v. 3. 4 Christ his vindication of himself together with his asserting his power to forgive sins 1 By his knowing their thoughts Why think ye evil in your hearts v. 4. 2 Because he was able to do the thing which was more hard therefore he was able to do that which was more easie v. 5 6. Whether is it easier to say Thy sins be forgiven thee or to say Arise and walk q. d. You think it harder to heal a Palsey man than to forgive sins now you have seen me do that which you think harder therefore can I without blasphemy do that which is easier 5 The effect this Miracle had among the Multitude they 1 Marvelled 2 Glorified God who had given such power to men v. 8. He came into his own City That is of Capernaum called his own because usually he dwelt there and preached more Sermons and did more Miracles there than elsewhere That Capernaum is meant here appears Mark 2.1 Matthew saith cap. 4.13 Leaving Nazareth he came and dwelt in Capernaum They brought him a man sick of the Palsey lying on a bed A palsey is the dissolution of the sinews of the body which are the instruments of motion without which a man cannot move or walk Hence this Palsey man was born of four Mar. 2.3 For charity requires that the well and healthy succour the sick Luke sets down there was so great a multitude came to the house where Christ was that no man could come in Hence those that bore the Palsey-man uncovered the roof and let down the Palsey-man to Christ though doubtless the rubbish did fall down yet was not Christ offended Herewith learn we to take all opportunities to come to Christ and to bring others to him Jesus seeing their faith saith to the sick of the Palsey Son be of good cheer thy sins be forgiven thee Christ seeing both the faith of the Palsey-man and of those that brought him speaks thus not as if another mans faith can profit to the forgiveness of our sins but hereby Christ applies pardon to the Palsey-man and to so many as believed who helped to bring him to Christ Thy sins be forgiven thee Nothing will cheer the soul unless forgiveness of sins go along with it not to have a disease removed Christ is not onely the Physician of diseases but of sins first he forgives the sins and then heals the Palsey to show that sin is the root and fountain of diseases Whereas the conscience of former evils might perplex the Palsey-man that he should not obtain healing Christ tells him that sin the cause of sickness was pardoned and therefore he might comfortably expect healing This was not faith of miracles which is a confidence of a future miracle but faith of justification which if the Palsey-man had not before by Christ his speaking it was wrought in him but it seems he had it before in that Christ calls him Son Quest Why did Christ first forgive his sins before healing of him Answ 1 Because sin was the cause of sickness and to remove the effect there must be first a removing of the cause Palsey and other diseases arise rather from sin then from natural causes 2 That forseeing the calumny of the Pharisees against Christ his miracle Christ might prove his Godhead first by this that he knew the thoughts secondly by this that he had power on earth to forgive sins We may see Christs bounty that he heals the whole man Joh. 7.23 Learn we from our afflictions to reflect upon our sins as the cause of them V. 3. And behold certain of the Scribes said within themselves This man blasphemeth Here 's the calumny of the Scribes and Pharisees against Christ which was this he that is not God but takes upon him power to forgive sins he blasphemes but Jesus the Son of man is not God and yet takes upon him power to forgive sins therefore he blasphemes The proposition was most true 1 Because none can forgive offences against God but against whom they are committed 2 Because to forgive sins in God is not onely to forgive the guilt but the punishment and curse but the Pharisees err'd in the assumption Hence Christproved himself by two reasons that he was God Within themselves Not among themselves as if they had been murmuring one among another of Christs doings hence Matthew saith not v. 4. Jesus knowing their words but saith Jesus knowing their thoughts Now that they said within themselves was as Mark tells us cap. 2.7 Who can forgive sins but God alone Isa 43.25 I am he that blot out thine iniquities Mic. 6.18 Who is a God like unto thee forgiving iniquity transgression and sin Jer. 31.34 I will forgive their iniquity and remember their sins no more It s like the Scribes remembring these and such like places and not considering what was spoken out of the Old Testament concerning the Messiah conceived these murmurings in their hearts This man blasphemeth Omitting the acceptions of this word as else where it is taken here it signifies to arrogate that which belongs unto God unto a mans self The Lawyers or Scribes thought this power mentioned 2 Sam. 12.7 Nathan to David saith The Lord hath put away thine iniquity was incommunicable now Christ in token that he had this power 1 Works a miracle 2 Searches their hearts which is onely peculiar to God 1 King 8.39 Thou onely knows the hearts of the children of men Jer. 17.10 11. I the Lord search the heart 1 Sam. 16.7 The Lord looks upon the heart Rom. 8.27 Yet was the arguing of these Scribes of no weight to reason thus God never gave the power of forgiveness of sins to any man hitherto therefore he cannot grant it none of the Prophets could do it therefore the Messias shall not be able to do it V. 4. And
which are to us ward they cannot be reckoned up they are more than can be numbered Psalm 139.17 How precious are thy thoughts O God unto me How great is the sum of them Every hour yea every minute God think of us let us then be often thinking of him saying with David Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none on Earth I desire in comparison of thee Psalm 73.25 saying as a certain holy man who when he was bid to have his thoughts in Heaven answered I am there already 8 If thou forgets to think on God thy soul will be in a withering condition Job 8.11 12 13 14. 3 Use Consolation to Saints 1 When condemned by men Job 16 19. My Witness is in Heaven and my Record on high 2 When we have upright intentions to bring about things for God but cannot at present effect them If there be a willing minde it is accepted 2 Cor. 8.12 3 In all acts of uprightness 1 Chron. 29.17 Thou triest the heart and hast pleasure in uprightness that is in upright intentions when we sigh to him he knows our sighs and groans Psalm 12.5 Rom. 8.26 this comforted Peter John 21.17 that the Lord knew his thoughts were affectionately set for Christ Thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee 4 Terrour to all wicked men who allow wicked thoughts in them God knows how thou smothers thine own conscience and goest against it what thoughts of denying Christ and temporizing are in thee what tricks thou hast to keep off conviction what heartlesness in duty what rovings in prayer Thou wouldst be ashamed if a man saw the wickedness of thy thoughts how much more when God beholds them Nay the Lord sees thy thoughts afar off even before thou thinkest them Exod. 3.19 He knew Pharaohs thoughts that he would not let the people go he sees thou hast an intention to deny him if a temptation come Mark 14.30 This night before the Cock crow twice thou shalt deny me thrice So the Lord knew Hazaels thoughts 2 Kings 8.12 which was to rip up women with childe He knew Israel would go a whoring from God when Moses and Joshua were dead And doth he not then know thy present wicked thoughts Psalm 50.21 Thou thoughtest that I was such an one as thy self but I will reprove thee and set them in order before thee or catalogize them as I take it some renders the word He sees God is not in all thy thoughts Psal 10.4 Yea he knows thy unclean and revengefull thoughts which are abomination to him Prov. 15 26. And though thou diggest deep to hide thy counsell from the Lord yet shalt not thou be able Isai 29.15 V. 5. And whether is easier to say Thy sins be forgiven thee or to say Arise and walk Christ brings a second argument to prove he had power to forgive sins viz. Because he was able to do that which in the opinion of the Pharisees was more hard therefore he had power to do that which was more easie It was more to forgive sin then to heal a disease but because the healing of a disease was visible and the forgiveness of sins was invisible therefore healing the Palsey-man seemed to the Pharisees to be the more difficult work yet is forgiveness of sin the harder work 1 Because no disease is contrary to the nature of God but sin is 2 Healing a Palsey is a natural work but forgiveness of sins is a supernatural work Christ applies his speech to their capacity who being meer natural men were moved with outward signes more then with the spiritual power of Christ So Christ reasons John 5.28 Christ proves the effectual power of his voice to quicken dead souls because the same voice of Christ shall at the day of resurrection be able to quicken dead bodies Besides this miraculous healing was a signe to confirm the other that he had power to forgive sins V. 6. But that yee may know the son of man hath power on earth to forgive sins then saith he to the sick of the Palsey Arise take up thy Bed and walk V. 7. And he arose and departed to his house Christ here positively proves that he had power on earth to forgive sins because miraculously by a word of his mouth he causes the Palsey man to walk so that he arose and departed to his house immediately Power on earth to forgive sins That is authoritatively Preachers forgive onely declaratively as Nathan to David 2 Sam. 12.7 The Lord hath put away thy iniquity John 20.23 Then saith he to the sick of the Palsey Arise take up thy Bed and walk That so this cure Christ wrought might appear to be a perfect cure Christ bids the Palsey man 1 Arise 2 Take up his Bed and carry it on his shoulders 3 Walk V. 8. But when the multitude saw it they marvelled and glorified God which had given such power unto men Multitude saw it they marvelled Here 's the effect of this miracle all saving the Pharisees who had accused Christ of blasphemy wondered at the miracle and so broke forth in praising God They wondered at it having never seen any such example of such a thing in former times The tendency of their wonder and praises was that persons with more confidence should submit themselves to the doctrine of Christ whiles they believed he was able to pardon their sins V. 9. As Jesus passed from thence he saw a man named Matthew sitting at the receipt of custome and he said unto him Follow me And he arose and followed him We have in this story 1 Christ calling Matthew v. 9. 2 Matthew his yielding obedience to the call of Christ v. 9. 3 We have Matthews thankfulness in making Christ a Feast v. 10. Amplified from the Guests that were there with Christ they were Publicans and sinners v. 10. 4 Here 's a question moved by the Pharisees hereupon which was why Christ would eat with Publicans and sinners v. 11. 5 Here 's Christ his answer to this charge 1 Apologetical that he conversed with them as a Physician to heal them not as one that practised like wickedness with them 2 Reprehensory taxing the proud conceitedness of the Pharisees who thought themselves whole and that they had no need of the Physician 3 Defensory v. 13. Go and learn what that meaneth I will have mercy and not sacrifice as if he should say That ye see me do is a work of mercy and charity in calling sinners from their sins to repentance that they may be saved therefore I doing what God commands your calumnies are not to be regarded Saw a man named Matthew sitting at the receipt of custom Christ passing from thence towards the Sea Mar. 2.13 saw a man This was that Matthew who penn'd this Book in the Hebrew tongue supposed to be him whom Mark and Luke call Levi and the circumstances of the History tend much thereto yet doth not Matthew at any time call himself Levi nor
Father being sick Paul prayed and laid his hands on him and healed him It may be supposed the Apostle speaks of this Jam. 5.14 Is any among you sick let him send for the Elders of the Church and let them pray over him anointing him with Oyl So Christ Mark 6.5 Mark 16.18 2 Ordinatory there is a laying on of hands in ordination of Elders this is acknowledged by all the reformed Churches of what judgement soever Though Papists acknowledge this to be an unblottable character which who so hath can never blot it out again yet the Protestants acknowledge it onely a signe pointing out the person ordained who is commended to the prayers of the Church Hence that saying of Augustine is ordinarily produced Quid aliud est impositio manuum quam oratio super hominem what other thing is laying on of hands then prayer upon the man ordained Besides these two there is a third way which I suppose comes nearer to truth which is that by laying on of hands in ordination there is a further measure of the Spirit infused into and poured upon the person ordained Concerning laying on of hands in ordination the Scripture speaks 1 Of those who are sent into the world Act. 13. When they had fasted and prayed and laid their hands on them they sent them away v. 5. 2 On those who are officers in Churches as deacons Act. 6.6 The Apostles first prayed then laid their hands on them So Elders Acts 14.23 And when they had ordained them Elders in every Church by laying on of hands the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and had prayed with fasting they commended them to the Lord 1 Tim. 5.22 Lay hands suddainly on no man neither be partaker of other mens sins That is by consenting to ordain such 3 There is a laying on of hands on baptized persons after Baptisme this hath been depraved 1 By those who have endeavoured to make working of miracles a concomitant thereof because some persons in the Apostles times after hands laid on them did speak with tongues Act. 19.6.7 and prophesied 2 This laying on of hands hath been depraved by the Romanists 1 By changing the name from laying on of hands to confirmation 2 By assigning it an outward matter viz. Oyl and Balsome and the form of it to be I signe thee with the signe of the Cross and confirme thee with the anointing of salvation in the name of the Father Son and Spirit Chem. exam cont Trid. part 2. p. 95. 3 That those things they attribute to confirmation they deny to be given and received in Baptisme 4 That they ascribe an indelible character unto it as to Baptisme and order Chem. p ar 2. cap. de charactere p. 45. 5 By affixing it on a Bishop Gratian distinct 68. Fol. 99. propounds this question Wherein Chorepiscopi by which I suppose he means either rural Deans or Suffragans differ from Bishops answers and gives this as one difference that it s not lawful for them to give the comforter the holy Spirit by laying on of hands to Baptized believers or converted Hereticks 3 Laying on of hands hath been depraved by the Episcopal party who retaining the popish name of confirmation and affixing it to a Diocesan Bishop instead of prayer for strengthning of believers 1 Lay hands upon infants or young children 2 Supposing them all to be regenerate after Baptisme pray for an increase of grace on them 3 Have added hereto God-Fathers as they call it Now to prove laying on of hands on Baptized persons is an apostolical institution I prove it 1 Because the Apostle makes it one of the six principles or the word of the beginning of Christ Heb. 6.1 Or the first rudiments or elements of the beginning of the oracles of God Heb. 5.12 The words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is onely explanatory for the principles of all arts are called elements nay which is more the Apostle calls it a foundation as well as repentance faith and Baptisme now the five others being fundamentals wherein all converted persons are to be practical in the belief how can laying on of hands be excluded from being so received 2 If laying on of hands on Baptized persons after Baptisme be rejected then instead of six principles laid down by the Apostle we shall receive onely five but this is absurd Obj. but we acknowledge a laying on of hands in the call of ministry therefore we acknowledge six Answ And why not as well after Baptisme what reason can be brought that ministerial imposition should be here acknowledged and the imposition after Baptisme excluded nay it seemeth imposition after Baptisme is rather meant 1 Because as faith and repentance go together resurrection and the last judgement so Baptisme and laying on of hands go together in the Apostles joyning of them 2 Laying on of hands upon officers is not herein meant because this was an administration the whole Church had received Act. 8.16 Heb. 6.1 but officers are not the whole Church 3 Because this laying on of hands is called milk for babes Heb. 5.12 13. but officers are not babes 3 Because there is a command for it 1 It 's called the rudiments of the beginning or elements of the beginning he means not elements of the world of which Gal. 4.3 8. Col. 2.8 20. that is elements wherein persons were initiated or begun in Christianity Heb. 5.12 As the elements of the Latin tongue is the learning of Accidence or Grammer so this doctrine of laying on of hands was first to be taught and practised 2 It s called an oracle Heb. 5.12 Now what are oracles in Scripture language but commands Act. 7.38 Moses received the lively oracles to give unto us This is called the Law ver 53. Who have received the Law by the disposition of Angels and have not kept it Rom. 3.2 What advantage hath the Jew Much every way chiefly that unto them were committed the oracles of God See Psal 147.19 20. 1 Pet. 4.11 If any man speak let him speak as the Oracles of God that is as the commands of God 3 The Apostle calls it a foundation Heb. 6.1 so that there is not onely a virtual command but an actual command from these three words of rudiments or elements oracles and foundation I gather a plain command 3 It appears from absurdity Is it not absurd to think that one of the six foundation principles commended to us by the Apostle should cease and all others of them to remain to the end of the world Nay is not imposition after Baptisme placed in the midst betwixt faith and repentance the resurrection and last judgement so that there is no coming to slight it being fenced on every side but we must renounce faith and repentance on the one side or the resurrection and last judgement on the other Is it not absurd to think the Apostle would place one temporary principle which was to last but for a small time
true Baptism Learn this observation descends from that Authority that after the Lords Ascension the holy Spirit came down upon the Apostles Eusebius in his History lib. 6. cap. 35. relates that Novatus though he were baptized yet because he was not confirmed or had hands laid on him after Baptism he never obtained the Holy Ghost His words are Neither did he get other things wherewith he ought to have been endued after Baptism according to the Rule of the Church nor was he sealed of the Bishop with the Lords seal meaning Imposition after Baptism which he having not obtained how could he I pray you obtain the Spirit For modern learned men take Gerson out of Hugo What profits it that thou art lifted up from thy fall by Baptism unless thou also beest strengthened by Confirmation Estius in Heb. 6.1 saith The Apostle undoubtedly understands that Laying on of Hands which is wont to be administred to the faithfull presently after Baptism of which Saint Luke Acts 8. Acts 19. That is to say the Sacrament of Confirmation whereby the Spirit of God is given to persons baptized wherewith they being strengthened confess the Name of Christ undauntedly among the Enemies of the Faith and then he concludes For that Hands were wont to be laid upon baptized persons after the Example of the Apostles Universa docet antiquitas All antiquity teacheth Grotius in Heb. 6.1 Hands were laid upon baptized persons to obtain the strengthening power of the holy Spirit and on persons ordained to the Eldership and on them that were reconciled after sins and those who were weak in body and on new maried people desiring a blessing from the Church Erasmus in Heb. 6.1 The first step to Christianity is to repent of our former life next that salvation is to be hoped from God next that we be purged in Baptism from our filth next that by laying on of hands we receive the holy Spirit Heming in Heb. 6.2 Imposition of hands was done by the Bishops and Elders on persons examined he should have said Baptized prayer and blessing being added thereto at this laying on of hands the holy Spirit was often visibly given Obj. But seeing Baptism and laying on of hands are conjoyned how came they to be severed Answ When persons with a right Baptism came back from Hereticks or Schismaticks to the Church they were not rebaptized but received onely by imposition of hands so the counsel of Arles can 8. If any one come to the Church from the Arrian Heresie let the preachers of our faith ask them their Creed and if they see they were Baptized into the Father Son and Spirit let them onely lay hands on them that they may receive the holy Ghost Leo. Epist 77. He that is Baptized among Hereticks let him not be rebaptized but let him be confirmed by laying on of hands with calling upon the holy Spirit Yet was not this rite used every where for Gregory de consecrat cap. 4. saith The west was wont to receive such as returned to the Church from Hereticks by imposition of hands but the eastern parts were wont to receive them by the anointing of Oyl Aug. against the Donatists lib. 5. c. 23. Gives a reason hereof and saith If laying on of hands should not be used to one coming from Heresie he would be judged to be without all fault but for the coupling of love hands are laid on Hereticks amended 2 When upon necessity any man was Baptized of an ordinary man that the Baptism might be approved and confirmed the person Baptized was brought to the Bishop that he might be confirmed Concil Eliberitanum Can. 18. A believer and in case of necessity one instructed in the Faith may Baptize so that if he that shall be so Baptized shall live he bring him to the Bishop that by imposition of hands he may be perfected 3 A third reason is mentioned by Hierom in his Dialogue against the Luciferians He saith The custom of the Churches was that the Bishop being about to lay hands to the calling on the Spirit of God he made haste to those that were Baptized in lesser cities by Elders and Deacons the meaning is as is after exprest when the Bishop knew they believed rightly and were lawfully Baptized he made haste to lay hands on them and to call upon the Spirit that they might persevere in that faith From all these customes not onely the common people but also sundry Bishops long before Hieroms time came to this opinion as if Baptism were without the Spirit and that the Spirit was first given and received when the Bishop to the calling on the Spirit of God laid hands on the person Baptized which Hierom confutes and proves that Baptism is not without the holy Spirit Answer to objections Obj. 1 In the laying hands on the Samaritans there were visible gifts conveyed Act. 8.18 Simon saw that through laying on of hands the Holy Ghost was given Act. 19.6 When Paul had laid his hands on the twelve they spake with tongues and prophesied but in imposition that is or shall be by the Apostles of the Churches there are no visible gifts given therefore that imposition in Scripture and yours is not the same Answ 1 That God did sometimes convey visible gifts after imposition of hands to honour it is true yet were these visible gifts no more parts of the ordinance much less essentialities thereof then Philips suddain surreption or catching away by the Spirit from the Eunuch were any part of the Eunuchs Baptisme Act. 8.39 40. this miraculous surreption was a confirmation to the Eunuch So when the twelve spake with tongues after Baptisme and laying on of Hands it was onely a confirmation to them of the truth of that Doctrine and powerfulness of that person into whose name they were baptized 2 The Apostles Peter and John Acts 8.16 17. would never have come down to Samaria for to do Miracles for Philip had there wrought Miracles abundantly Acts 8.7 in casting out Devils healing Palseys lameness c. therefore they came for some other end which was that the Samaritans might receive the Spirit Object But here were visible gifts given Simon saw that through laying on of the Apostles hands the Holy Ghost was given Answ There 's a sight of the understanding as well as of the eye Simon might see the Holy Ghost given whiles he beheld the operations of the Spirit in Prayer self-denial mortification yet not one gift given visible to the bodily eye But if visible gifts conspicuous to the bodily eye were given they were no parts of the Ordinance but Crowns and Ornaments thereof The Holy Ghost may be said to be given not onely in gifts of Tongues and Healings but also in meltings of heart Prophesie c. 2 It 's a mistake to say that in the Apostolical Imposition always visible gifts were conveyed such as the natural eye could behold for Paul laid his hands on Timothy and had nothing conveyed save inward gifts
and grace 2 Tim. 1.6 Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift of God which is in thee by the putting on of the Hands of me Paul speaks of such gifts and graces as were raked up in ashes as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies which the Apostle bids him rake out of the ashes or make alive as you do fire almost dead by blowing of it Object But this gift and grace given to Timothy was given by the Presbyters when he was ordained an Evangelist and not by Pauls laying on of hands after Baptism Answ Paul speaks of such a gift as was given by the laying on of his own hands 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the Imposition in Ordination to Preaching was by the Hands of all the Eldership 1 Tim. 4.14 where the Greek words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying a conjunction of persons but 2 Tim. 1.6 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to denote the act of one man Object But the Apostles who laid on Hands after Baptism were such Apostles as were immediately called of Christ as Peter John and Paul how will the Consequence hold from them to the Apostles of the Churches Answ There 's a twofold Call 1 Immediate or personal 2 Mediate or virtual the Apostles of the Churches though they act not by an immediate and personal call yet they act by a mediate or virtual call of Christ 2 Matthias though chosen mediately of the Church had the same power the eleven had who were immediately called of Christ why may not then Apostles chosen of the Churches have the same power For what difference betwixt the eleven called immediately and Matthias called mediately or any others of like kindes when they can make their power appear and so much the more when persons whether immediately or mediately called can make one and the same end appear in their Office viz. the work of the Ministry the perfecting the Saints the edifying the Body of Christ Quaere Whether there be any essential difference betwixt the twelve Apostles and the Apostles of the Churches 3 If Imposition after Baptism belong onely to Apostles called immediately it had been in vain to have called it a Foundation to have conjoyned it with Faith and the Resurrection sith the persons that had the administring of it were most of them dead and the rest in a short time would be dead Ergo I conclude that Apostles whether called immediately or mediately may lay on Hands on baptized persons Object But if laying on of hands be an ordinance of Christ what is conveyed in it Answ An increase of the Spirit 2 Tim. 1.6 Stir up the gift of God which is in thee by the putting on of the hands of me So that as the Spirit is conveyed in the use of prayer Luk. 11.13 and preaching Act. 10.44 Gal. 3.3 5. and Baptisme Gal. 3.28 and supper 1 Cor. 10.16 so also is it conveyed in the laying on of hands Quest But what are those gifts of the Spirit which are or may be conveyed in laying on of hands Answ 1 An increase of all habits of grace as 1 Boldness to confess Christ When Paul bids Timothy stir up the gift of God which was in him ver 7. he shows what gift he means even boldness for God ver 7. God hath not given us a spirit of fear but of power of love and of a sound mind ver 8. Be not thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of the Lord. q.d. he that hath received the Spirit aright in laying on of hands hath an habitual intention to confess without blushing against all oppositions whatsoever or at least it is his duty so to have 2 The Spirit is a free agent dividing to every one severally as he pleaseth 1 Cor. 12.11 to one is given a word of wisdom and knowledge to another strengthning grace to another comfort to another power to resist temptations to another constancy the Spirit knowing what grace is most wanting to his people in a right receiving of an ordinance is wont to help herein Yet know that laying on of hands is not all this ordinance or the principal part thereof but prayer is the principal So much Melchiades de consecra dist 5. The holy Spirit gives beauty in Baptisme to innocency in confirmation he performes an increase to grace Chemnitius cites some sentences out of the ancients as out of Urban All believers by the laying on of the hands of the Bishops ought to receive the Spirit after Baptisme that they may be found full Christians and he the same person gives to confirmation these prayers that we may become spiritual that the heart may be enlarged to wisdom and constancy that we may be wise to discerne good and evil to resist malice to resist wicked desires that we being kindled with the love of eternal life may be able to lift up our mindes from earthly to heavenly things Clemens saith a person Baptized receives the seven forme grace of the Spirit else in no wise can he be a perfect Christian nor have a place among the perfect Although he have been Baptized after he shows what he means hereby viz. a spirit of wisdom and understanding a spirit of counsel and strength a Spirit of knowledge-and godliness and fill him with the fear of God So much the compilers of the Common Prayer-book thought who after they had acknowledged laying on of hands ought to be retained saying we make supplication unto thee for these children upon whom after the example of thy holy Apostles we have laid our hands to certifie them by this signe of thy favour and goodness towards them come to adde that they apprehended an increase of grace to be conveyed therein as in the first prayer of confirmation appeareth in these words Almighty God who hast vouchsafed to regenerate these thy servants by water and the holy Ghost and hast given unto them forgiveness of all their sins strengthen them O Lord with the holy Ghost the Comforter and daily increase in them the manifold gifts of grace the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and Ghostly strength the Spirit of knowledge and true Godliness and fulfill them O Lord with the Spirit of thy holy fear Amen And then the Bishop laying on his hands said these words Defend O Lord this child with thy heavenly grace that he may continue thine for ever and daily increase in thy holy Spirit more and more untill he come to thy everlasting Kingdom And in the rubrick after confirmation none were to be admitted to the Lords Supper till such times as they were confirmed Object But if the Spirit be conveyed in Laying on of Hands let us see a Promise of God for it that an increase of the gifts and graces of the Spirit shall be given therein Answ A command of God is enough to receive an Ordinance though there were no Promise annexed concerning benefits herein Now I have before proved a command 2 Some
resurrection after we have slept the sleep of death 2 In sleep there is such a binding of the sences that the body seems to be liveless so that it neither moves nor regards any object that is before it nor any relation that is next unto it Quest But seeing Christ saith that the maid slept whether do the souls sleep in the bodies till the resurrection or are they annihilated till that time Answ They are not annihilated being they act intellectually and the souls being absent from the body are present with the Lord 2 Cor 5.1 2. They that dye in the Lord are pronounced blessed from henceforth the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the moment of their departure Rev. 14.13 Now all blessedness consists in action which is contrary to annihilation 2 They do not sleep if so why would Paul have desired to be dissolved and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 why doth Paul say we would not be unclothed but clothed upon that mortality might be swallowed up of life 2 Cor. 5.4 As the souls of the wicked are at present tormented so the souls of the godly are at present in bliss Jude 7. The souls of the Sodomites in Judes time were suffering the vengeance of eternal fire So the rich man Luke 16.24 saith I am tormented in this flame Not I may be or shall be but am at present Besides the souls under the Altar cry How long Lord Rev. 6.9 Therefore though Saints have not a personal blessedness before the day of judgement yet have they a blessedness of soul the receiving whereof doth not exclude ful personal blessedness at the coming of Christ but is an earnest peny thereof as we see in the thief who was admitted the same day he suffered not into an earthly paradise which by the flood was dissolved but into a Paradise of glory whereinto Paul was taken up 2 Cor. 12.2 compared with v. 4. That which ver 2. he calls the third heaven ver 4. he calls Paradise And they laughed him to scorn Being carnal and not considering the power of Christ they laughed him to scorne as thinking it absurd and impossible that Christ should restore her to life Christ rejecting them takes three Disciples to witness this miracle Luk. 8.51 for they were not worthy to see that they did not believe V. 25. But when the people were put forth he went in and took her by the hand and the maid arose Mark hath it Talitha cumi Damosel I say to thee Arise Talitha cumi Christ did not use these Syriack words to be used by way of inchantment as some have done supposing by the repetition of these and such like they could do wonders but that the power of Christs words in raising up the dead might be made manifest In that he uses the words I say to thee Mark 5.41 He puts a difference bewixt those who raised up others to life by his power as Peter did Dorcas and himself who raised this Damosel up by his own word and power q.d. I the Lord of life and death command thee who though thou art dead as to nature yet thou sleeps as to me I command thee that thou arise and stand up The learned say Cumi is a Syriack word which signifies to stand which is the posture of men in health in opposition to lying which is the posture of sick men Took her by the hand Luke adds he said Maid arise such a voice after to Lazarus Lazarus come forth The voyce was from his humane nature the power from his divinity It was the omnipotent Word of God and of the man Christ Luke adds that her Spirit came again and she arose cap. 8.55 straightway the immortal soul of man is separable from the body so Eliah stretched himself upon the child and said I pray thee O Lord let this childs soul come into him again 1 King 17.21 in death the body returns to dust and the Spirit to God who gave it Eccles 12.7 now when God permits a soul to return to its body it 's quickned and rises again as we see in Ezekiels dry bones cap. 37.7 Mark cap. 5.42 adds that her Parents were astonished with a great astonishment as such suddain sights are wont to do Luke cap. 8.56 adds He charged them that they should tell no man what was done not that he would hinder persons from believing on him through the fame thereof but to stop the rage of the Pharisees against him who were sorely provoked by his miracles 2 To teach us from his example to shun all desire of vain glory seeing he would have so great a work concealed 3 That the ruler and his wife might not be proud of this priviledge And the maid arose Mark adds Christ commanded to set meat before her cap. 5.53 to shew not onely that she was alive but also was well and in health V. 26. And the fame hereof went abroad into all that Land Lest any man should think the Miracle was feigned Christ adds The fame hereof went abroad into all that Land The whole Countrey were witnesses and doubtless praised the work as a new unheard of thing and consequently acknowledged Christ as the Messias There were three Christ raised from death this Maid the Widows so n of Naim and Lazarus V. 27. And when Jesus departed thence two blinde men followed him crying and saying Thou Son of David have mercy on us In this History three-things 1 The Petition of two blinde men set down 1 From their following Christ and crying unto him in the way v. 27. 2 From their following him to the house v. 28. 2 We have Christ his grant amplified 1 From the antecedent Question Believe ye that I am able to do this together with the blinde mens Answer They said unto him Yea Lord. 2 From the present cure v. 29. Then touched he their eys saying According to your faith be it unto you 3 From the following effect v. 30. Their eys were opened 4 From the Injunction Christ lays on them v. 30. Jesus straitly charged them saying See that no man know it 3 The unthankfulness and disobedience of the blinde men They when they were departed spread abroad his fame in all that Countrey Two blinde men These whether from the reports of his Miracles or whether from the Prophesie of the Messiah Isai 35.5 The eys of the blinde shall be opened desire Christ to restore their sight The loss of sight is a great loss 1 Sight is the largest of senses whereas the ear onely takes in sounds the smelling takes in odours but the eye takes in not onely quantities and motions but colour and figure The eye is not satisfied with seeing Eccles 1.8 2 Sight is the most comfortable sense There are many glorious objects in Heaven and Earth but little content should we have had we not sight to behold them Hence to behold the glorious objects of Heaven the eys shall be raised up so that we shall see our Redeemer
〈◊〉 a rower because under Christ the chief Pilot they row the ship of the Church towards heaven Now rowing is a very painful work Vide Beza They do not onely labour in the word but in prayer also Col. 4.12 Hence have they a due right to their maintenance Pharaoh reserved the Priests living Jezebel maintained four hundred false Prophets Micha maintained a Levite the Levites had not near the service we have yet was his maintenance greater then any of the Tribes They are Souldiers therefore to be maintained of them for whom they fight 1 Cor. 9.7 To say preachers must have but for bare necessity is to no purpose for how can they then be hospitable Are few Here 's the cause of the sending out the Apostles of which cap. 10.1 for onely John the Baptist and Christ laboured the Scribes and Pharisees being given to their pleasures and profits Causes why so few labourers 1 Love of ease whereas much study is a weariness to the flesh Eccles 12.12 Offer not that to God which costs thee nothing 2 Inability of hearers to difference betwixt doctrine and doctrine hence superficial raw indigested notions are as well or better liked then solid and substantial truths 3 The discouragement that Preachers in many places finde every man else is incouraged but they discouraged partly from the censures that pass upon their doctrine and partly from strait-handedness Every calling as Physician Lawyer is rewarded onely what preachers have in many places is counted as alms hence there are but few labourers and were it not for conscience towards God there would be much fewer 4 The strictness of the account that they must answer for the souls committed to them Ezek. 5.17 Heb. 13.17 Act. 20.26 27. 5 The multitude of business that lyes upon a faithful labourer What a business is it to make one soul lye level upon Christ sometimes full of fears and doubts for want of comfort sometimes falling into spiritual pride in the enjoyment of it sometimes wrastling with an angry God sometimes conflicting with a scrupulous conscience sometimes a soul thinks all he hath done is in vain and that he is cast out of Gods sight Psal 31.22 One wants knowledge another comfort another reproof one is a babe another a grown man Now the work being so weighty few that know the weight of it are forward to venture on it it being a burden too heavy for the shoulders of Angels Cyprian complained in his time that persons would not take the over sight of flocks but persons betook themselves to be Merchants History of Trent c. rather then to be thus employed After his time the ministers by reason of persecution were so few that necessity compel'd to commend two or three congregations to one pastor whence came the corrupt custome of Commendums Preaching is counted the easiest business and as many use it so it is but to preach that our words may be as goads to the dull Ox and as nails to the fastening of instructions Eccl. 12.11 to be like a good housholder that brings forth new and old Matth. 13.52 to search into the deep things of God and to follow a mans work there where he left it till a spiritual building be erected who is sufficient for these things V. 38. Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest that he would send forth or in the Greek cast forth labourers into his harvest Christ here propounds a remedy for the want above mentioned viz. to pray to the Lord of the harvest c. Christ hereby not onely informes us of the backwardness of men herein but also pricks on the Apostles and others to accept of such a call Moreover here is signified not onely a disposing providence to send teachers to this or that place but also a bestowing of special power with peculiar commands and gifts which well agrees with the call of the Apostles in the next chapter As the Embassadors of Princes are directed to their residence and their continuance determined by the Prince how long they shall remain so are teachers disposed of God in like manner He carries them from one place to another Jonah from Israel to Nineveh Pray ye the Lord of the harvest It 's the Lords work to send forth labourers Act. 1.24 Shew whether of these two thou hast taken The holy Ghost bad separate Paul and Barnabas to the work Act. 13.2 Yet prayer hath been a means to obtain such teachers to get them out of prison Act. 12.12 13. to get them from one place to another Philem. 22. I trust that through your prayers I shall be given to you Strive we then to be fervent with God in prayer herein as a faithful teacher is one of the greatest blessings so the contrary is a great curse We are earnest with God for many other things O strive to be earnest for this But because wants set an edge upon prayer lay open before the Lord thy six or seven children and three or four servants who are yet in the state of nature nay there are thousands in their conditions and therefore for their sakes come and help Grounds of thus praying 1 Gods command every command of God is to be obeyed therefore pray God commanding persons thus to pray doth not mean to send them away empty handed when they do pray 2 The mischief that comes where such planters and waterers are absent all runs to ruine mostly in the want of such Some places famous for religion when such lights have been removed what darkness hath been 3 The multitudes of business that God hath for labourers to do Paul would have gone to the lesser Asia and Bythinia but the spirit suffered him not but when a man of Macedonia prayed Come over and help us they obtained Paul Act. 16.6 7 9. When there is plenty of work and scarcity of labourers you must besides paying be fain to pray so it is in this case 4 Prayer is a mean to get such teachers it s a mean to obtain every blessing from God Matth. 7.7 therefore this blessing also 5 It 's a singular blessing unto a people to have their eyes behold their teachers and not to have them removed into a corner Esa 30.19 20. The contrary is a curse Amos 8.11 12. To go from sea to sea to seek the word of the Lord because of the famine of the word God onely gives such teachers Jer. 3.15 I will give you pastors after my own heart which shall feed you with knowledge and understanding For this end Christ ascended into heaven Eph. 4.10 11 12 13. In the 68 Psalm 18. It s said Christ received gifts in this place its said he gave gifts the meaning is Christ hath received gifts from his Father and given them to men The benefits of faithfull Teachers as 1 Conversion How shall they believe without a Preacher Rom. 10.14 Acts 2.37 38. Acts 26.18 2 Edification to wit building up souls converted Paul perfected what was lacking in
the Thessalonians faith 1 Thess 3.10 3 Direction in difficult Cases together with satisfaction in scruples so that the souls of persons are kept in peace John 9.3 4 To kindle affections when souls are dead how were the affections of the Brethren at Ephesus Acts 20.36 and Tyre Acts 21.5 kindled and the three thousand pricked Acts 2.37 The hearts of the Disciples going to Emmaus were on fire whiles Christ spoke to them Luke 24.32 5 Relations kept in the way of duty fathers children husbands wives princes subjects masters servants 6 Soul watchfulness Heb. 13.17 They watch for your souls Isai 62.6 7. 7 They wrastle with the Lord in prayer and give him no rest till they obtain mercy for a people Isai 62.6 7. 8 They gather Gods harvest into barns that is souls into Churches here and into glory hereafter That he would send forth Labourers into his Harvest Seven grounds hereof 1 The need there is of such Labourers as a Field will be overgrown with Weeds if the Husbandman send not Labourers into it so will the hearts of men where there are not such Labourers to weed And as when Corn is ripe it will be apt to shatter if there be not Labourers to inn it so people of good affections are apt to decline where there are not Labourers to perfect young comers on The need of such is seen in that yearly there are so many thousands born Children of Wrath. And in that the hearts of good men are liable to so many decays and coolings 2 The great blessing there is by such Ministry and labour and needs must it bring a blessing because it roots out that which will be the ruine of any place I mean sin Prov. 28.2 Yea nothing doth more bless a place than such Labourers 2 Chron. 11.17 The godly Priests and Levites that came to Rehoboam strengthened the Kingdom of Judah 3 Because the Harvest is Gods it 's called his Harvest therefore it belongs to him to send forth Labourers into it Now they that are of Gods sending are endued with gifts and grace 4 Because they cannot preach unless he send them Rom. 10.14 How shall they preach except they be sent The least degree of sending is to have ability to divide the word This sending is 1 Inward when a man having the love of souls stamped upon his heart is made willing to offer up himself to this work Isai 6.6 7 8. 2 Outward because too many out of pride and self-conceitedness are ready to put themselves forward this way hence God hath appointed that persons that are to go out be first approved by men thereunto appointed Else Jer. 23.21 I have not sent these Prophets yet they ran 5 As the primitive work of sending is Gods so there is something in sending which is ours to wit that we shew our selves willing to be sent When God had sent one of the Seraphims to Isaiah with a coal in his hand to touch his mouth meaning a burning zeal to Gods glory and when the Lord asks the question whom shall I send and who shall go for us the Prophet then answers v. 8. Here I am send me Isai 6.6 7. Men to whom God hath given Abilities should be forward to put forth themselves Out of love to souls they may desire the Office of a Bishop 1 Tim. 3.1 yea they must out of a ready minde take the oversight of the flock of God 1 Peter 5.2 Not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready minde 6 All the success that is in any mans Ministry how fully soever sent or how willing of himself for to go is from God So that the force of the Reason is he hath the power of succeeding and making Ministry effectual therefore he hath the power of sending We preach to persons to turn from darkness Acts 26.18 but God turns them Isaiah preached a long time Isai 53.1 yet because the arm of the Lord or the power of the Lord was not revealed to souls there were so few converted that he cries out Who hath believed our reports yea he and the children God had given him were as signs and wonders If God go along Peter shall at one Sermon convert three thousand All our Preaching is but as the rigging of the Sails which avails not unless the Winde blow When he opens none can shut when he shuts none can open Rev. 3.7 8. yet must we in a patient manner make trial what success God will give us in our Ministry imitating Peter Luke 5.5 who had toiled all night and taken nothing yet would at Christs word further let down the net And truly persons sent by God usually have their labours blessed to the converting and building up of some souls Jer. 23.21 22. 7 It is the Lord that maintains them in their work Acts 18.9 10. Be not affraid but speak and hold not thy peace for I am with thee He holds the seven stars in his right hand Revel 1.16 20. now the right hand is the hand of strength and power Jer. 1.18 19. saith God to Jeremy I have made thee an Iron Pillar and a Brazen Wall they shall fight against thee but not prevail Seeing God maintains persons herein it 's fit he have the sending of them CHAP. X. WE have in this Chapter three things to be premised 1 The occasion and coherence which was multitudes coming to Christ with desire to hear the Gospel he was moved with compassion towards them cap. 9.7 Seeing them as Sheep without a Shepherd he consults to send out his Disciples and therefore before he sends them forth he bids them pray to the Lord of the Harvest to send forth Labourers which the Disciples doubtless did hence as an answer of their prayers Christ as the Lord of the Harvest sends forth Labourers even his twelve Apostles 2 That there is difference betwixt this sending and the election of the twelve mentioned Luke 6. when Christ chose them that he might instruct them that in time to come they might be sent out Christ will have those whom he sends out first to be Disciples before he will send them out he mentions not here their chusing but onely their sending because he had chosen them before 3 That this sending forth of the twelve Disciples or Apostles differs from that sending forth of the twelve mentioned Matth. 28.19 this being onely particular that they should go into the Land of Judea that being for them to go into all the World and was to continue till the end of the World Matth. 28.20 Contrarily this sending may seem to be onely temporary and that the Commissions here and there do tota specie in the whole kinde differ and that that is not an enlargement of this commission but another 1 Because at this sending Christ impowers them to preach and do Miracles but there he impowers them to make Disciples and baptize them 2 Because these are forbidden not to go into the way of the Gentiles nor
at present believe and it seems to be covered yet shall it be known to the World in a little time But I see no absurdity why both these may not be meant so that the words are a consolation to them both under their reproaches and revilings of Beelzebub c. and under the small beginnings of the Gospel that what was now hid should be revealed and though their Doctrine were at present reproached yet time should discover it to be Gods truth V. 27. What I tell you in darkness that speak ye in light and what ye hear in the ear that preach ye upon the house tops The meaning is whatsoever Doctrine ye have heard of me either in this Sermon preached unto you or whatsoever Doctrine at any other time I have or shall declare unto you in secret do you publish the same openly for that Christ means by house tops having respect to the Jewish buildings which were flat upon the house tops with battlements Deut. 22.8 Gods truth is not to ly smothering in our own breasts but we are to declare it to others Rom. 10.10 Psal 40.9 10. With the heart man believes unto righteousness and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation The World will not endure to have their deeds reproved hence they come not to the light Joh. 3.21 They say to the Seers See not and to the Prophets Prophesie not prophesie unto us smooth things Isai 30.10 Get ye out of the way turn aside out of the path v. 11. yet must the Preachers and Disciples of Christ speak and not hold their peace Isai 58.1 Hosea 4.1 Hosea 8.1 yea the whole counsel of God which is plain unto Teachers they are bound upon pain of avoiding guilt of soul bloud to declare unto the people Acts 20.26 27. so far as it shall be absolutely needfull to their salvation We may also see the excellency of the Gospel that when preached it will abide the Light which no other Doctrine is able to do As these Disciples were commanded to publish the Mysteries Christ declared to them viz. the calling of the Gentiles the end of the Jewish Ceremonies the fulness of Redemption in Christ the new Covenant c. so are other Preachers bound in like manner to publish what the Lord shall reveal to them out of his Word as to take up Christs Cross daily to repent of their sins V. 28. And fear not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soul but rather fear him which is able to destroy both soul and body in Hell Here is the fifth danger whereto they should be exposed if they preached what he bad them to wit that they would be in danger to be put to death To this Christ answers Fear not them which kill the body In the words two parts 1 A forbidding of false fear Fear not them which kill the body backt with a Reason because they are not able to kill the soul 2 An Exhortation to true fear of God but rather fear him which is backt with a Motive because he is able to destroy soul and body in Hell Fear not them which kill the body The sum of Christs speech is that we should not fear the loss of this perishing Life in respect of an everlasting Life and that they have no true fear of God in them who for fear of Tyrants do suffer themselves to be brought from the Confession of the Faith As if that Christ should say You have immortal souls which are not at the will of Tyrants but of God 1 Sam. 2.6 The Lord killeth and the Lord healeth he woundeth and maketh alive Whence is it that we are affrighted with terrours of men and deny the Faith or blushingly confess it or dissemble it but because our bodies are preferred before our eternal souls and whereas we think to escape death hereby shall we not incur a sorer death hereby even an everlasting death Is 66.24 Christ herein speaks to Christians that they should not thus fear Lu. 12.4 5. I say unto you my friends be not affraid of them which kill the body and though men may think this is no point of Friendship to let Christians suffer yet is it an high privilege to be called to suffer Phil. 1.29 To you it is given not onely to believe but to suffer So that experienced Christians have rejoyced herein Acts 5.41.16.25 Learn we to contemn our Lives in the cause of God so did Queen Hester cap. 4.16 If I perish I perish The three children Dan. 3.28 yielded their bodies that they might not worship nor serve any other God except their own God so Paul in sundry places Acts 20.24.21.13 2 Cor. 4.10 11. Phil. 1.20 2 Tim. 4.6 Rev. 12.11 17. It must needs be grievous for two such dear friends as soul and body to part but when we consider it is for the Lord why do we fear when for fear of being killed we shall not preach and witness Christ his truth we may look for every such denial to be cast into hell We may observe 1 That after this perishing life is past there remains another 2 The truth of God cannot be fully witnessed without peril of life 3 The disposing of that life to come is onely in the power of God not in the power of Pope Obj. But must we not fear Magistrates parents c Answ Yes but not when God and they come in competition Acts 5.29 The cruelty of Magistrates and parents can onely extend unto the body But are not able to kill the soul Whence see 1 That the soul and body are separable one from another 2 That the soul dies not with the body But rather fear him which is able to destroy soul and body in hell Here is a remedy against slavish fear even to have Gods fear in us We more feared the Pope with his Purgatory then God with his hell and we more trusted in the absolution of the Pope from Purgatory then in the true absolution of God from hell Luth. Tom. 4.334 This word rather is not a comparative but an adversative we should not fear man at all when he comes in competition with God So Victorian the Pro-Consul of Carthage being sollicited to Arrianism by the Embassadors of King Hunnerick answered thus Being assured of God and my Lord Christ I tell you what you may tell the King let him burn me let him drive me to the beasts let him torment me with all kinde of torments If I consent in vain am I baptized in the Catholick Church whom the tyrant afterward tortured with exceeding great tortures Victor Uticens l. 3. Wandal Persecut So the Prophet Isai 51.12 Who art thou that thou shouldest be afraid of a man that shall dye and the son of man which shall be made as grass and forgettest the Lord thy maker Moreover you know how afraid you are to offend a man which can hang you so that you fear the wrath of a King as you do the roaring of
sacrifice and service of the faith of the Philippians Phil. 2.17 I say when the flesh shall ask this question let thy conscience be able to answer Whatsoever trouble falls upon me in the strength of God I will do duty So contrary when the flesh shall ask will you not commit any known sin though you gain never so much by it though by a Ly or by dissembling you might gain the favour of such a great man by denying or dissembling the truth you may gain or keep such a preferment which else you cannot by such an equivocation you may save your life by marying a carnal person you may gain a great estate when at present you are in a poor condition by taking such an Oath or subscribing to such a Subscription which is against your consciences you may keep off banishment and sequestration of your estates now when to these and such like questions the conscience shall declare not a conditional resolution but an absolute that come what come will or can in the strength of God you will not you cannot sin here you are fitted to take up the cross So Joseph Gen. 39.10 How can I do this and sin against God That is I cannot 2 Cor. 13.8 We can do nothing against the truth Obj. But did not Balaam say Numb 22.18 If Balak would give me a house full of silver and gold I cannot go beyond the word of the Lord my God to do less or more also when Balaam was come to Balak v. 38. he saith Lo I am come unto thee have I now any power at all to say any thing the word that God putteth in my mouth that shall I speak Also c. 23. Balaam saith How shall I curse whom God hath not cursed or how shall I defie whom the Lord hath not defied v. 8. Also cap. 23.12 Balaam tells Balak Must I not take heed to speak that which the Lord hath put in my mouth and all these resolutions were when King Balaks gold came in competition with the doing of a duty Answ 1 Balaam did not say he would not curse Gods people but onely he could not for his will was to commit the sin of cursing Gods people This could not appears cap. 23.20 I have received a commandement to bless and I cannot reverse it As if he should say I would reverse it if I could to obtain thy rewards of divination but I cannot Also cap. 23.26 Balaam answered Balak Told I thee not saying All that the Lord speaketh I must do Also cap. 24.11 12. Balak said to Balaam I thought to promote thee to honour but God hath kept thee back from honour and Balaam spake to Balak Said I not to thy Messengers If Balak would give me his house full of silver and gold I cannot go beyond the commandement of the Lord to do either good or bad of my own minde but what the Lord saith that will I speak Now that Balaams will was to curse Gods people appears 1 Because he would enquire of God whether he might curse his people cap. 22.8 2 Because when God gave him his flat denial neither to go with the Messengers of Balaak nor to curse Israel v. 12. though he withstood it at present v. 13. yet upon the coming of new Messengers he yielded to make a new enquiry of God whether he might go or no v. 20 21. when he had his flat denial of permission to go v. 12. 3 Because Gods anger was kindled against him for his going v. 22. so that he was near slaying by the Angel v. 22 23. 4 Because Balaam confesses his sin v. 34. I have sinned that is in having a hankering desire to Balaks gold 5 In that Balaam goes with Balak from place to place and from altar to altar and that Balaam did not curse Gods people was merely for fear of the Angel of God But contrarily the resolutions of Saints that take up the cross are not because they cannot though they cannot but because they will not God having so wrought upon their wills that they will not part with the Lord. 17 That we may take up the cross let us deny our selvs Luke 9.23 Matth. 16.24 If any man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his cross See denial of our selves goes before the taking up of the cross We must deny our selves in our ease profit pleasure credit house lands relations yea deny our selves in our lusts of pride c. And followeth after me is not worthy of me Christ thinks no man worthy of himself who followeth him not To the taking up the cross we must add this to follow Christ Now to follow Christ is to do whatsoever he commands without exception whether it be to do or suffer at all times rather then to leave the Lord. When the conscience hints to us to do such a duty to witness such a truth to forbear such a gain to restore for such a wrong to perform such a duty Obj. But the law of Christ is the rule of our life how then are we to follow Christ Answ Christ is the example of the rule as in Grammar there is a rule and then there is an example of the rule so the law of Christ is our rule but Christ is the example of the rule Quest Wherein must we follow Christ Answ In humility Matth. 11.29 When the multitude would have made Christ a King he refused it He washt his Disciples feet Joh. 13.14 he took on him the form of a servant Phil. 2.6 7. 2 In patience He was led as a sheep to the slaughter Isai 53.7 1 Pet. 2.22 23. Heb. 12.2 3. 3 In taking opportunities of doing good Acts 10.38 Christ went about doing good Joh. 4.15 16. 4 In compassion Matth. 9.37 Heb. 7.25 5 In tenderness Matth. 12.20 Not to break a bruised reed 6 In heavenly mindedness who took occasion from all visible objects to draw holy meditations as from bread door light vine and branches 7 In publike spiritedness 1 Pet. 2.24 8 In praying for enemies Luke 23.34 Grounds of following Christ 1 From Gods predestination Rom. 8.29 Whom God predestinated to glory he predestinated to be conformable to the image of his son As Christ was holy by nature so must we be holy by grace 2 From the name of Christian which we bear Acts 11.26 as the first Adam begat a son in his own likeness so doth the second Adam 3 From the bond of union 1 Cor. 12.27 Ye are the body of Christ and members in particular Now the head and members live one and the same life 4 From the command of Christ who commands us to follow him Joh. 13.14 yea and gave us an example that we should follow him v. 15. I have given you an example that you should do as I have done unto you 1 Pet. 2.21 leaving us an example that we should follow his steps 5 If we follow not Christ we follow the devil and our lusts or else we follow the
sundry doubts of other mens actings and yet these not hinder our own acting nor do they come under Paul's kinde of doubting who speaks onely of a mans own actings our conscience or perswasion hath nothing to do to judge an other mans liberty 1 Cor. 10.29 For example Augustus laid a tax upon all the world some Christians doubted that part of this tax would be bestowed on Idols and their Priests and therefore doubted whether they might pay Augustus tribute their doubts were not to be regarded they might pay tribute notwithstanding these doubts for they had nothing to do to doubt or judge what Augustus would do with it being secret in his own breast An Officer doubts the Magistrate hath given an unjust sentence yet may he execute it because his own duty is clear to him but the Magistrates injustice is not I am a Church member I doubt my fellow member is an hypocrite yet may I communicate with him because his hypocrisie doth not appear and the manifestation of his evil and the censure of the Church thereupon is the ground for my not communicating not my doubting of his unsoundness A souldier doubts his Captain sends him upon an unjust service this souldier if he know not the injustice may not refrain 5 In your own proper actings do not that you doubt of Rom. 14.5 23. As it 's against the Law of friendship willingly to do that which we doubt whether it will be acceptable to our friend so is it against the Law of the love of God to do such things as we doubt whether or no do please him Reas 1 Because satisfaction in scruples tends much to the quieting of the soul The Jews doubted whether any of their members might eat with the Gentiles Acts 11.2 and some of them dealt with Peter herein When Peter gave them satisfaction concerning the lawfulness thereof They were glad and glorified God v. 18. Then is it that a man can act comfortably and chearfully 2 Clearing up of scruples tends to make Church-communion comfortable The Jews did earnestly endeavour to keep the ceremonial commands of the Law and to impose them upon others and would not have communion with the Gentile brethren that would not keep them Acts 15.1 On the other side the Gentile believers knowing their liberty by Christ would exclude the Jews living Jewishly from their communion whereupon a Schism was like to arise therefore Paul to heal the scruples on all sides warns the Jewish believers so to follow their opinion that they did not condemn the Gentile believers of wickedness and warns the Gentile believers that they should not refrain the Communion of the Jewish believers because they lived Jewishly nor despise them for it but that they should receive one another to Church-fellowship Rom. 14.1 Him that is weak in the faith receive you but not to doubtfull disputations The words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifie the judging of thoughts q.d. Do not you Gentile believers judge whether they use these ceremonial commands as necessary or as profitable or how they hold them in their conscience what have you to do to rifle there what have you to do to judge their thoughts 3 The great anguish that is in the soul for want of satisfaction herein Many have scruples as to vows oaths restitution assurance obedience to mens commands c. and go on in a pining condition for many years together when one word of a faithfull Teacher or Brother would quiet all How much better did those poor Jews who were pricked in their hearts for guilt Who in their anguish of conscience asked of Peter and the Apostles Men and brethren what shall we do Peter with a few words speaking heals all the scruple Acts 2.37 38 39. saying Repent and be baptized but they had another scruple that in their violence against Christ they had wished his blood be on their children this scruple Peter answers The promise is to you and to your children when the Lord shall call them For to satisfie afflicted souls the Lord hath given the tongue of the learned to speak a word in season to him that is weary Isai 50.4 How painfull have the doubts and scruples about assurance been to sundry of Gods children Psal 77.7 8 9. Isai 49.14 15. Especially when an evil day comes as sickness death c. How will these scruples afflict you how will they make you unwilling to dye It 's like David had a scruple on his death bed for not putting Joab to death who had kild two innocent men hence he gives Solomon order to put him to death for we cannot think that now when he expected mercy from God he did it out of revenge 1 Kings 2.5 6. Use Exhort to clear up all thy scruples Now scruples are of two sorts 1 Rational and material so the woman of Samaria having a scruple where the place of worship and where the true Church was whether in Mount Gerizim where was a Temple built by Manasses the High Priests son as Josephus mentions or whether at Jerusalem was the place of worship Christ answers her scruple 1 Condemns her worship and the worship of the Samaritans because not grounded upon knowledge saying Ye worship ye know not what Joh. 4.22 2 Commends the worship at Jerusalem by two reasons v. 22. 1 Because grounded upon knowledge We know what we worship 2 Because the Jews had the means of salvation there which the Samaritans had not saying Salvation is of the Jews Such was that of Joseph Matth. 1.19 20. who was perplexed about the putting away of Mary 2 Irrational and circumstantial Satan pussles many with these as some persons when they have paid money because they could not remember the time or place have scrupled whether they have paid it though their hearts tell them they pay every man presently after it is due Sometimes when a soul hath cleared up a scruple to full satisfaction the devil comes a year or more after and endeavours to trouble him again to re-act a discussion of the same question in both which cases Satan endeavours to rob us of our time carrying us to impertinencies and if possible to make us walk heavily I much question whether it were not a needless scruple in David when his heart smote him for cutting off the lap of Sauls garment 2 Sam. 24.4 5. seeing he did it not for to affright him nor to impoverish him but to make his own innocency appear that he was not an enemy to him Others scruple whether it be lawfull to eat flesh upon a Friday whether they may teach their children a Catechism or patern of sound words the slighting of these and such like is not a way to weaken but to strengthen the conscience All scruples that bring not a word are frivolous and vain and not to be discussed Means to be used in case of scruples 1 Suffer not men to impose upon us and subject us to their ordinances beyond the bounds of the word Col.