Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n word_n world_n wrong_v 53 3 8.5880 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

There are 30 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

subject to CHRIST Ergo he is God The proposition is laid downe Verse 5. Where the negative part alone is expressed but the affirmative is to be supplyed Not to the Angels but to CHRIST which is the heire of all things the Lord of the whole world The assumption is layd downe Verse 6. Which is confirmed by a testimony out of the Psalmes Where 1. The allegation 2. The application of it In the allegation an admiration of the goodnesse of GOD. 1. The dejection of man 2. His exaltation by his neerenesse to the Angels by his dominion over all creatures In the Application 1. An exposition 2. An anticipation VERSE 5. NOw hee comes to the confutation of them that opposed themselves to the Deity of CHRIST wherein we have two things 1. A constant holding of the conclusion that CHRIST is GOD. 2. An overthrow of the argument against the Deitie The conclusion soundly and largely ratified before is confirmed by a new argument if the world be subject to CHRIST not to the Angels then he is God superiour to the Angels but the world is subject to him not to the Angels ergo Here the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to be supplyed The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signifie to subject in a military ranke or order when as the whole armie is subjected to one captaine leader or governour as the Church is to CHRIST Whether hath this coherence with that which went before or with that which followeth after Some thinke it is a proofe of that Verse 3. That CHRIST was called Lord. The world is subject to him therefore hee is Lord of all Others that it is a confirmation of that in the former Cha. concerning Christs superiority over the Angels It may have dependance on the words going before for he doth all things according to his owne will in regard whereof he hath subjected the whole world to his Sonne not to the Angels It is rather a patheticall introduction of the maine conclusion which still he keepeth in mind and prefixeth as a firme foundation the adversaries with all their cunning are not able to shake say what they will yet Christ is God for he hath subjected the world to him As for the Lord they deliver that first as the ground of all What is meant by the world to come Some expound it of that time and part of the world that is to come since the publike preaching of the Gospell till Christs second comming In the former time of the world while the Law was in force Moses and the Angels seemed to beare sway by whom the law was delivered but the world to come in the time of the Gospell God hath subjected to Christ not to the Angels Others interpret it of the world to come after the day of judgement In this world the Angels seeme to have rule they be the governours of the world Satan is the Prince of the world but in the world to come the Angels shall have nothing to do that shall be wholly subject to Christ alone Yet the Apostles meaning seemes to be more generall the whole world both present and to come is subject to CHRIST he hath all power in heaven and earth and Eph. 1.20.21 Phil. 2.9 and the Apostle alleadgeth out of the Psalme Verse 8. that all things are put in subjection under him The world in generall is said to come in respect of CHRIST which was from all eternity CHRIST was alwayes the everlasting Iehovah Before Abraham was I Am but the world in time was to come Now this world to come with all things with all creatures contained in it above and beneath hath the LORD subjected to CHRIST not to the Angels ergo he is God above the Angels and all other creatures Thus our Saviour Christ the second Adam is said to come in regard of the first Adam that went before him Rom. 5.14 So the world is said to come in respect of CHRIST that went before the world By the world to come is meant the whole company of Gods elect that shall be gathered together in the life to come the which is termed the world to come because both the number and perfection of them is to come the whole number not yet being accomplished in this world nor having aspired to perfection This agreeth with that which went before if we neglect so great salvation which is reposed for us in the world to come the which world God hath subdued to Christ that he may be the King of the Church and reigne for ever Whereof we speake in this our treatise shewing that all things are subject to Christ who is not only superiour to the Angels as he is God alone but even as he is God and man the mediatour of the Church VERSE 6. THen he comes to the Argument which the adversaries used for the overthrow of CHRISTS Deity Man is inferiour to the Angels CHRIST was a man therefore inferiour to the Angels The proposition they proved out of the Psalme What is man thou hast made him a little lower than the Angels To this hee answereth .i. confessing Christ to bee a man and in regard of humane infirmities his death passion c. inferiour to the Angels yet the same man Iesus Christ being God too is advanced above the Angels The proofe of the proposition One sayth in a certaine place c. Why doth he shoote at rovers not at pricks Hee speakes not this in contempt but. 1. Because the Psalmes were well knowne to the Iewes above other portions of Scripture being sung continually at home in their houses and publikely in their Synagogues therefore Saint Paul thinkes it needlesse to name the place which was common and triviall among them all One sayes you know whom I meane I need not to name any 2 Peradventure it was doubtfull who was the Penman of the Psalme whether David Asaph or one of the Sons of Chore therefore S. Paul sayes generally one saith it makes no matter who he was the Holy Ghost being the author of the Psalme 3 Hee did not well remember at the present what Psalme in order it was therefore hee contents himselfe with a generall allegation Many now a dayes take a pride in quoting the very Chapter and Verse S. Paul was not so scrupulous no more were the ancient Fathers they thought it sufficient to cite Scripture oftentimes not naming the Book out of the which the testimony was desumed And indeed it was a long time before the Scripture was sorted into Chapters of late yeeres was it divided into verses Let us be sure to 〈◊〉 the Scripture aptly and fitly and let us not be curious about chapter and verse which were but of late invention Here you have an admiration of Gods goodnesse towards man What is man Aenosh of Anash indoluit aegrotavit a receptacle of all miseries or of Nashash oblivisci he hath forgotten thee yet thou hast not forgotten him or the son of Adam the progeny and
and not in his heart It hath beene an ancient custome in the Church of Rome to sweare by Saints and by their relikes But consuetudo sine veritate erroris est vetustas Cypr. l. 2. ep 3. The laying on of the hand on a Bible or a testament when we sweare This may bee excused for properly to speake wee doe not sweare by the Bible it is only an obtestation as the words of this bible are most true so is that which I sweare and it is an outward token whereby wee declare to the world that wee sweare by him which is the authour of the Bible or because in this booke are contained the promises and threatnings of the LORD to them that sweare truly and against them that sweare falsely so among the heathen they touched the altar when they swore yet they swore by him whom they worshipped on that altar for they would lift up their hands to heaven when they swore denoting by that bodily gesture of theirs that they did sweare by God alone who made the heavens We may sweare by God primariò principaliter but we may sweare by the creatures Secundariò This is but a meere shift and fond evasion Zephan 1.5 for they sware by the Lord primarily by malchum secondarily yet God was offended with them Besides there is none greater than man but God The Angels are creatures as well as we they are our fellow-servants and one fellow-servant must not sweare by another therefore we that be creatures must sweare only by the Creatour 3. Here wee see what a reverent estimation wee are to have of an oath it must be the end of contradiction after men have sworne wee should be as mute as fishes not have a word to say An oath was sacred among the heathen 1 Sam. 30.15 Abimelech and Phicol his Captaine were satisfied when they had Isacks oath Gen. 21.22 but with us small credit is to be given to oathes the oath of a Christian is no sure foundation to build upon Iesabel had false witnesses at her elbow to condemne Naboth withall the Pharisees had two false witnesses in a readinesse to sweare against our SAVIOUR CHRIST And now a dayes such is the corruption among Christians that small credit is to be given to many mens oathes for they say it is an easie matter in London and I would to God it were not in the country to procure men to sweare to what they will So that now a dayes an oath is rather the beginning then the end of controversies whereupon so many perjuries are found in the land a manifest argument that Atheisme growes among us The foole that is the wicked man sayes in his heart there is no God and I thinke many sweare by God if there be a God but all false swearers shall one day know to the terrour of their conscience that there is a God who will be avenged on them for abusing his name Let an oath be such an holy thing with us that there may be no more controversie after we have sworne Then why should we doubt of our salvation God hath bound himselfe by oath and promise to bring us to his kingdome and shal wee bee as reeds wavering with the winde I for our salvation dependeth in some sort on our workes pendet ex certitudine operum quae conjectu ralis atque imperfecta certitudo est It dependeth on works not as causes but as inseparable effects of faith not upon their dignity or perfection but upon their being with faith Be faithfull to the end and I will give thee the crowne of life I but who can tell whether he shall persevere to the end or not We may be good to day and bad to morrow Noah David Peter fell Yes we may be comfortably sure of our perseverance for hee that hath begun a worke in us will finish it to the day of Christ and though we fall yet we shall rise againe for the Lord putteth to his hand whom he once loveth hee loveth to the end and never forsakes them till hee have brought them to his kingdome Onely let us not bee rocked a sleepe in the cradle of security but work out our salvation with feare and trembling VERSE 17. Ἐφ ' ῷ̔ wherein in the which thing or in the which oath or for the which cause God did it willingly not by constraint none could enforce him to it More abundantly then was necessary for his bare word had beene enough save that the weakenesse of man required it See here GODS dealing with us after the manner of men To shew that is to make a lively and evident demonstration Vnto the heyres of promise not to Abraham alone but to all the faithfull The immutability which cannot be transposed or altered Not of his promise but counsell arguing that it was no sudden or fickle promise but such as proceeded from wise and deliberate counsell and the counsell or decree of God standeth for ever That of Hezekiahs and the Ninevites had a secret condition unlesse he had prayed earnestly for life and the others repented Ier. 18.7 8. or it was rather a commination then the pronuntiation of a decree or counsell Interposuit se as if CHRIST the Mediatour had made this oath and interposed himselfe in it betweene the father and us for the greater ratifying of it Oecumen Annexed to his promise Here we have the dignity of the godly they are heyres not of a Knight of a Lord a Duke c. but of God and the promises that is of the joyes of heaven which GOD hath promised to them in his word The kingdome of heaven belongs to Children not to servants the faithfull are the Children of God and joynt heires with Christ so that the inheritance of the celestiall Canaan pertaines to them how then dare you despise the lest of the heyres of promise 2. This may comfort us against the crosses of this life Art thou a poore man hast no money in thy purse to relieve thy selfe and thy family withall as Peter and Iohn had not hast thou not a bed to rest thy weary body on nor an house to hide thine head in as Christ had not the foxes have holes and the birds of the ayre have nests but the Sonne of man hath not whereon to lay his head yet faint not neither be discouraged for thou art an heyre of promise and shalt one day have a full fruition of the heavenly inheritance prepared from before the foundations of the world were laid The heyre of a Gentleman is kept under Tutors and Governours in the time of his nonage but as soone as that is expired he is at liberty and free from all so though we be the heyres of God yet in the time of our minority and nonage in this world we are kept under many austere masters yet the day of our redemption drawes nigh when as all teares shall be wiped from our eyes and we shall have full
the sences They say that the body and bloud of Christ are there invisible under the shape of bread and wine therefore by their owne position it is no sacrifice 2. They confesse it to bee an unbloudy sacrifice and then not propitiatory for the quicke and the dead as they will have it for Hebr. 9.22 Without shedding of bloud there is no remission of sinnes There is no bloud shed therefore no remission of sins and then a masse not worth a figge thou canst not have the remission of sins by it but it is a phantasticall dreame of their owne Let us magnifie the Lord Iesus for his owne sacrifice which he offered for us and lay hold on it by a true and a lively faith What did Christ offer for us not silver and gold not a Bull a Sheepe or a Goate not the haire of his head the paring of his nailes or his little toe not one of his Disciples but himselfe Oh blessed SAVIOUR that spared not himselfe for our sakes So let us give our selves to him he that will be my Disciple let him deny himselfe and follow mee We must not only sacrifice our sins for Christ his sake which wee will hardly doe but if occasion require offer up our selves for him we must say with Paul my life is not deere to me c. I am ready not only to be bound but to dye at Hierusalem for the name of the Lord Iesus But alas wee are wanting in love and thankefulnesse to Christ hee offered himselfe for us We will not offer up our pleasures for him Hee laid downe his owne life for us we will not lay downe our sinnes for him Wee will not forgoe our lusts our covetousnesse pride drunkennesse for Christs sake how then shall we offer up our selves for him as he did for us VERSE 28. THe reason is taken from the excellencie of this our high-Priest he that is the Sonne of God voyd of all infirmity sanctified for ever is able by one sacrifice to satisfie for the sins of the Church but Christ is the Sonne of God voyd of all infirmity sanctified for ever ergo This is illustrated by a famous antithesis betweene the Priests of the Law and him whereof there be foure branches 1. The ceremoniall Law made men Priests the Gospell made God a Priest For this our High-Priest as hee was the Sonne of man so the Sonne of God too and therefore God 2. The Law made servants Priests as Heb. 3.5 The Gospell the Sonne which is more honourable than any servant 3. The Law made them that had infirmities namely of sinne and corruption otherwise CHRIST tooke on him all our naturall infirmities 4. The Law made those that were mortall and endured not long by reason of death the Gospell hath made him that is consecrated for evermore By the word of the oath may be meant the Gospell as Luk. 1.73 because it was ratified by Gods oath But rather by it is meant the promise made to Christ which God confirmed in the Psalme with an oath If we respect the substance of the oath it was from all eternity CHRIST was ordained an everlasting Priest in the eternall decree of his Father 1 Pet. 1.20 but it is said to be after the Law because it was written published and exhibited after the giving of the Law The word of this oath comming after the Law did put the Law out of place though Gal. 3.17 because the promise was of greater force and efficacy then the Law but as the last Will disannulls all the former wills so the word of the oath comming after the Law did abrogate the Law Which is sanctified for evermore or perfected and therefore is able perfectly to fulfill the office of an High-Priest There was no Priest no Prophet in the time of the Law there is no Minister no Preacher no Christian whatsoever but hath some infirmity or other Noah a Preacher of righteousnesse was overtaken with wine and lay uncovered in his Tent. Abraham a Prophet so the Lord himselfe termeth him to Abimelech had his infirmities when hee dissembled for the saving of his life David a man after Gods owne heart had his grosse faults when hee was carryed into Adultery and murder using one as a Cloake to cover the other withall Saint Peter had his infirmity when he did Iudaizare cum Iudaeis applyed himselfe to all companies Saint Paul and St. Barnabas had their infirmities when they were at an open jarre and publike defiance one with another about St. Mark and departed in a chafe one from another Shew mee the garden that hath not one weede in it and shew mee the man either Preacher or other that hath not some infirmitie Let not us cast off men because of infirmities much lesse let us be ready as some are to hurle away the word because of the infirmities that be in the Preachers of the word If we will have a man without infirmities we must goe to heaven for one for there be the Spirits of just and perfect men There is none perfect in this world we are all full of infirmities the Lord be mercifull to us only Christ Iesus our High-Priest is voyd of infirmities hee is consecrated for evermore and holds to consecrate all that belong to him Let us serve this our High-Priest in holinesse and righteousnesse in this life that wee may triumph with him and offer the sacrifice of praise to God with him his Saints and Angels in the life to come CHAP. 8. IN the Priest-hood of Christ there bee two things 1. His calling to that office cap. 7. and 8. 2. The exequution of it cap. 9. and 10. In his calling 1. The Party called which is set forth at large in the former Chapter 2. The thing whereunto he is called in this Chapter which is to Minister for the good and salvation of his Church This Ministration of his is advanced above the Leviticall ministration by foure arguments 1. From his empyre rule and authority by reason whereof hee Ministreth after a more magnificent manner then the Levites did Verse 1. 2. From the place where he Ministers 3. From the Sacrifice wherewith he Ministers ver 3.4 5. 4. From the subject whereabout he is occupied In the first argument 1. An entrance into it 2. A description of his power and authoritie Having cast up the account this is the summe that ariseth of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or upon the things spoken this is the chiefe of all it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This is to stirre us up to attention The summes of things are welcome to us Who is not desirous to have the summe of the Bible The summe of the Law contained in so many volumes a summe of Physicke c. The Oratours in the end of their Orations deliver the summe of that which they have spoken so doth St. Paul here hee delivers to us the totall summe of the things which he had spoken before
1. A relation of them 2. A communication of them 4. Quare Why he gives thankes because he hath a joyfull experience of them in himselfe He doth not say I commend thee I extoll thee to the skies for this great love thou shewest to the Saints and for the faith thou hast in the LORD IESUS but I thanke GOD for them He is to be praised for all The Oratour would thanke God for honour but himselfe for vertue It was the Donatists song Scientia ex Deo charitas ex nobis knowledge is of GOD love is of our selves Whereas God is to bee blessed for them all for what have wee poore beggars but that which wee have received Eo quisque pessimus quo optimus fi adscribat sibi quòd optimus He that is best is worst if he ascribe his excellencie to himselfe Ioseph indeed saies Augustine found silver in Benjamins sacke but it was of his owne putting in So God findes silver and golden graces in us but he put them in before therefore he is to be thanked for all Homo est exceptorium bonitatis Dei Man is an emptie vessell that receives all which it pleaseth God to powre into it Whose God is he whom he thankes My God What is he Saint Pauls God and not Saint Peters God Yes verily It is not his meaning to monopolize God to himselfe as it is the manner of some to doe God is their God alone they are the Sole children of God all others are reprobates St. Paul was not of such a proud spirit he speakes this Non Deum restringendo sed Deum applicando not restraining God to himselfe but applying God to himselfe Aug. makes a sweete commentary upon it Dicis Deus meus thou sayest my God Securus dicis verum dicis thou speakest it securely thou speakest it truly at non fecisti ut non sit alterius yet thou hast not hereby brought it to passe that he should not be other mens God as well as thine Non enim sic dicis Deus meus quomodo equus meus for thou doest not so say my God as thou doest my horse equus tuus est non alterius he is thy horse and not anothers Deus tuus est alterius he is thy God and anothers too not of the Iewes only but of the Gentiles too yea the God of the whole world The Sunne is ALEXANDERS and Diogenes too But this is the propertie of faith to applie God particularly to our selves My Redeemer liveth sayes Iob there is no peace saith my God to the wicked my spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour sayes the Virgin Mary My God and my Lord sayes Saint Thomas I thanke my God sayes Saint Paul which hath loved me and given himselfe for me Meus Iesus sayes Origen my Iesus frequent in his bookes Erasmus reports of Dr. Colet Deane of Saint Pauls that he was often heard to speake these words O Vtinam essem cum meo Christo. The Devill can say God and he trembles at it but he cannot say my God this is proper to the faithfull The Lord is my strength and my salvation whom shall I feare the Lord is the strength of my life of whom shall I bee afraid though I walke through the valley of the shadow of death I will feare no evill he will be my God in life and in death too he will never forsake me till he hath brought me to his everlasting kingdome But where or when did he give thankes for him in his prayers making mention of thee He was not unmindfull of him he did not forget him as Pharaohs butler did Ioseph he remembred him he made mention of him Not now and then but alwayes Where Not in his cups but in prayers There were some in Saint Ambrose time that would make mention of the Emperour in their cups but St. Paul made mention of Philemon in his prayers as he praised God for him so he prayed to God likewise for him The best men cumulated with the greatest graces of the Spirit had need to be prayed for St. Paul was rapt up into the third heavens where he saw secrets not to be uttered yet he desires the Ephesians prayers Saint Peter was a stout champion yet CHRIST prayes that his faith should not faile Philemon abounded in all good gifts of knowledge faith and love yet St. Paul ceased not to pray for him 1. The best of all know but in part believe in part love in part therefore wee had need to pray for them that their defects may be supplied that they may encrease daily more and more 2. Here we are viatores non apprehensores wayfaring men we are not come to our journeyes end therefore wee had need to be prayed for that wee may persevere to the end and have the crowne of life Paul had his prayers So we must all Isaack went into the field to pray and hee prayed oft in his tent too David prayed at all seiles of the day morning evening noone and he prayed in the night too David was encumbred with the weighty affaires of the kingdome yet he prayed thrise a day Cornelius prayers went up into remembrance before God Our Saviour in the dayes of his flesh was full of prayers there was one that payd three hundred prayers to God every day as a daily tribute Constantine was stamped in his coine praying he would especially be marked for that 1. Our necessities are many for soule and body therefore let our prayers bee many We are as houses that stand in continuall need of reparations therefore let us pray to him that made us to repaire us that we may be fit buildings for his Majestie 2. Our enemies are many within and without too Now there is no strength in us against this great multitude let us pray to God to stand by us and for us But let us pray first in faith else we are like the Waves of the Sea and shall obtaine nothing 2. In fervencie remembring the Apostles If dignior sequeture effectus quem ferventior praecedit affectus that prayer shall have the greatest efficacie which hath the greatest fervencie 3. In humility omnis rogatio humilitate eget all requests must be preferred in humility This poore man cryed and the Lord heard him thou prayest and art not heard quia diveses because thou art rich in thy own conceit he sent the rich empty away 4. Pray with importunitie a kinde of godly impudency sayes Nazianzen is to be used in prayer 5. Perseveringly Speciall mention is to be made of some in our prayers 1. Of Kings which are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the pillars of the people they are worth tenne thousand of us therefore let us pray for them nominatim by name Sacrificamus pro salute Imperatoris Deo nostri ipsius sed quomodo pura prece we sacrifice for the safety of the
St. Augustine for calling them brethren That learned father deplores their case before the people doleamus illos fratres tanquam fratres let us lament them brethren as brethren Velint nolint fratres nostri sunt whether they will or no they are our brethren tunc esse desinent fratres nostri quando desierint dicere pater noster then they shall cease to be our brethren when they cease to say Our Father Stand apart sayes the Hypocrite come not neere me I am holyer than you So say some holy ones among us namely the brethren of the separation So they style themselves an unbrotherly title disdaining us for their brethren they are not so good brethren as we wish they were like ungracious children having forsaken their mother neither indeed will they say Pater noster with us for it is piaculum with them to say the LORDS Prayer yet for all that they shall be our brethren professing the same GOD the father of us all and the same CHRIST the SAVIOUR of us all Wee will not utterly discard them though they discard us VERSE 8. THat for the gratulation Now to the supplication Where 1. The manner of it Then the matter of it 10. For the manner it is not by the way of command 8. But of entreatie 9. Why doth he not command Because he wanted authoritie No he had sufficient power to doe it not fearefully but boldly he had not a little but much boldnesse not usurped but committed to him from CHRIST he had boldnesse not to request but to enjoyne Not that which was inconvenient but that which was convenient Ministers may be bold in the execution of their office 1. Quia Deus imperat because GOD commandeth it Ierem. 1.17 be not afraid of their faces he addes a forcible reason least I destroy thee before them And thou Sonne of man feare them not neither bee afraid of their words though thornes be with thee and thou remainest among Scorpions feare not their words nor be afraid of their lookes 2. Quia ipsi ministri pro hoc or ant because it is that which the Ministers themselves begge by earnest prayers at the hands of GOD. Now O Lord behold their threatnings and grant unto thy servants with all boldnesse to speake thy word Pray with all manner of prayer and supplication in the spirit watch thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all Saints and for me that utterance may be given unto me that I may open my mouth with all boldnesse to publish the secret of the Gospell Shall they pray for it and not practise it 3. Officii dignitas id postulat the dignity of their office doth require it an Embassadour may speake boldly We are the Embassadours of God the King of Kings we are in CHRISTS stead Therefore let us be bold 4. Protectio Dei ad hoc animat Gods protection may encourage us unto it Behold I have made thee a defenced citty an yron pillar and walls of brasse against the whole land against the kings of Iudah and the Princes thereof against the Priests thereof against the people of the land CHRIST holdeth the seven starres in his right hand and none shall dash us out of his hand 5. Admirationem apud ipsos inimicos procurat it procures admiration even with the very enemies When they saw the boldnesse of Peter and Iohn they mervailed the high Priest and the whole counsell This made Luther so famous among all The Pope himselfe and the Emperour could not but admire him This made Elias bold with Achab Iohn Baptist with Herod Liberius with Constantius Chrysostome with Arcadius and Eudoxia Ambrose with Theodosius which moved him to give him this commendation Solus Ambrosius dignus episcopi nomine only Ambrose that hath dealt so roundly with me is worthie the name of a Bishop Let us all be bold and couragious in our places with wisedome and discretion but not saucie and impudent as some are 2. Ministers have authority not only to entreat but to enjoyne The King hath his Injunctions and wee under God and the King have ours We may enjoyne you to leave your rash needlesse and unadvised swearing your prophanations we may enjoyne you to honour your Fathers in Church and common-wealth to live in peace and love and unitie one with another and he that despiseth these things despiseth not men but God But what to enjoyne Quod ad rem pertinet sayes the vulgar interpreter that which concernes the matter Sed hoc nihil ad rem nothing to the purpose Cajetan finds fault with that circumlocution affirming as the truth is that in the Greek there is but one word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod decens est conveniens which is decent and convenient we have no authority to enjoyne you any unlawfull and inconvenient thing to goe to Masse where CHRIST is offered up daily by a Priest because by one sacrifice once offered and that by himselfe alone hee hath perfected for ever them that are to be sanctified to conspire against Princes to kill kings if in our opinions they be Heretikes heresie makes no divorce betweene Man and Wife much lesse betweene the King and his Subjects so farre as God enjoynes you we enjoyne but no further VERSE 9. HEe hath produced his authority and shewne his commission yet hee layes it aside and falls to entreatie Where 1. The motive of it 2. A description of the party entreating The motive is love Yet for loves sake I rather beseech thee for the love of God towards us all in CHRIST for the love I beare to thee for the love thou bearest to me for the love I beare to Onesimus thy servant and my Sonne let the cords of all those loves draw thy affection to him Love hath a greater attractive force then feare the love of CHRIST constraineth us sayes the Apostle Lydia being but a woman by her loving eloquence constrained Paul and Silas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shee used a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is the most forcible argument with the Logitians if the people bee perswaded of the Preachers love his preaching shall be more availeable he may wind himselfe into their affections Studeto magis amari quàm metui strive rather to be loved then feared Pontifices Christi non dominorum metu sed patrum honore veneramur the Bishops of CHRIST we doe not feare as stately Lords but honour as loving Fathers the love of a father will make a good natured child doe any thing What doth he for loves sake he rather beseeches then commands suspendite verbera producite ubera suspend your blowes produce your dugges pectora lacte pinguescant non typho turgeant let your breasts swell with milke not your hearts with pride Christus non fulminans tonans sed in praesepi vagiens tacens in cruce salvavit humanum genus CHRIST not thundring and lightning but weeping and holding his
of greater holinesse than men in place because they be with him in the Court of heaven Our kindnesse si caeteris paribus if other things be correspondent should extend it selfe more to them that be neerest to us in the flesh Hee that hath this worlds wealth and sees his brother want So he that hath this worlds wealth and sees them that be neere to him in the flesh especially if there be neerenesse in the spirit too how dwelleth the love of God in him Neverthelesse the spirituall affinitie is in some regards to bee preferred before all Who is my Father my Mother sayes Christ hee that doth the will of my Father in heaven hee is my Mother brother and Sisters VERSE 17. THen he concludes the receiving of him with a kinde of adjuration If thou hast me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in thy opinion and judgement it is well translated if thou count mee What a partner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one of the same countie together with thy selfe of the same communion of Saints of the same house-hold of faith he doth not say if thou count me a Prelate a ruler of the Church but a partner he is content to be unus ex illis non supra illos to bee one of them part and part like not one above them The Angels count us partners I am thy fellow servant and one of thy brethren CHRIST counts us partners Heb. 2.14 and shall we disdaine to call one another partners There bee partners in nature so are we all partakers of the same ayre of the same water of the fruits of the same earth partakers of miserie and of death there bee partners in office as Church-wardens and Constables they that answer for a child at the font are called partners There be partners in grace partakers of the divine nature not of the substance but of the qualities of it partakers of one Christ of one heaven Such a partner did St. Paul desire to be accounted and happy are they that be in this partnership He is very earnest with Philemon as Lydia was with Paul and Silas If yee haue judged me to be faithfull to the Lord come to my house they durst not but count her faithfull to the Lord and Philemon durst not but count Saint Paul a partner Now receive Onesimus or exclude me out of thy partnership he pressed sore upon him But how should hee receive him As my selfe as my owne bowels Thou wouldest receive me affectuosè reverenter with a loving affection and with reverence so receive him Papè quanta verbi dignitas Good Lord how doth he dignifie Philemon by it O admirable love especially to a fugitive and a servant VERSE 18. THe last argument to perswade the receiving of him is ex parte debiti concerning the debt which he oweth and wrong that he hath done to him which he would have to be no hinderance to the businesse Where 1. There is a concession of the wrong and debt 2. St. Pauls undertaking for the satisfaction of it Verse 18. 3. A confirmation or strengthning of the satisfaction 4. An amplification of the satisfaction Verse 19. Injured thee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in any thing or owes thee namely ought Wherein wee have confitentem reum hee himselfe with teares hath acknowledged it to me So that the particle If here is not nota dubitantis but concedentis At his departure as fugitive servants are wont to doe he carryed away with him a piece of Plate or some other thing if he have so done as I know he hath impute it to mee set it on my account I will be countable for it and discharge all Here first we see that restitution must be made of wrong Restituere as Aquinas doth well define it est aliquem iteratò in possessionem dominium rei substituere Restitution is a constitution of a man in the right possession of the thing againe The wrongs whereof restitution is to be made are bona animi corporis famae fortunae the goods of the mind if we have heene the meanes of the distraction of any the goods of the body if we have wounded any the goods of fame if we have defamed any the goods of fortune as wee call them but indeed the blessings of God this text leadeth us only to the latter If we have wronged any this way let us be carefull to make restitution non remittitur peccatum nisi restituatur ablatum sinne is not remitted unlesse the thing taken away be restored 1 It is Gods precept if the wicked have restored the pledge and given againe that which he hath robbed till restitution be made he remaines as a thiefe and robber 2 Iudas made restitution he brought againe the thirty peeces of silver they are worse than Iudas that make no restitution 3 The thing remaining unlesse it be restored will ruinate thee and thy house too The taking away of Naboths Vineyard was the overthrow of Ahab and his house If we have so lived that we may make Samuels chalenge at our dying-day whose Asse or Oxe have I taken to whom have I done wrong It is a sweet thing yet a rare thing if our conscience tels us we have wronged any let us make satisfaction for the wrong De quanto how much is to be restored we will not curiously dispute at the least simplum the same thing if it be possible if not yet something equivalent thereunto and according to the quantity of the wrong if the party have susteined much wrong by a long detention of it then duplum or triplum as the Schoolemen speake Zacheus offers a fourefold restitution the which he doth not by the way of supererogation as Aquinas will have it but in an extraordinary fervent zeale for the demonstration of the efficacy of his conversion The person to whom restitution is to be made is the party himselfe if he be alive or else his heires Et ubi non est haeres ecclesia haeres sayes Eusebius where there is no heire the Church is heire But in any case let restitution be made and that with as great expedition as may be for nec per modicum tempus in peccato morandum for there is no dwelling in sinne no not a small time Lactantius affirmes of the Romanes si restitutionem facerent ad casas egestatem reverterentur if they should make restitution they must come to poore Cottages instead of their magnificent Palaces So would many it is to be feared if they made restitution of all wrongs especially to the poore Church which hath beene wronged in all Ages 2 Here it is apparant that debts are to be paid Rather than Philemon should bee unpaid Saint Paul will pay him a matter of greater moment than we are aware of 1. It must be preferred before our living and maintenance When the Prophet had made a bountifull provision of Oile for the poore
Iudaei so of Abram Hebraei for Aleph is a gutturall Thus yee see of whom they had the name of Hebrewes To them was this Epistle written and in them to us that bee English men and to all Christian people in the world that which I say to you sayes CHRIST I say to all watch So that which Saint Paul writeth to the Hebrews he writeth to us all therefore let us all with reverence attend to it So much of the inscription Now let us come to the substance of the Epistle It is divided as all others into two parts 1. The doctrine of Christianity which wee are to learne 2. The life of Christians which we are to live The Doctrine hath two branches 1. A large and ample description of our Saviour CHRIST the author and finisher of our salvation 2. A pointing out of the hand whereby we apprehend Christ and that is faith Chap. 11. The doctrine concerning CHRIST may be reduced to his person and offices his kingdome cap. 1.2 His prophesie cap. 3.4 His priesthood cap. 5. c. His person consisteth of two natures The 1. Is his deity The. 2. Is his humanity His deity is first taught in this Chapter then applyed in the next CHAPTER 1. 1. AN introduction is made into the deity of CHRIST 2. A confirmation of it 1. Simply then comparatively 1. For his person 2. For his offices An introduction is made by a comparison betweene them in the time of the law and of the Gospell A comparison is made betweene them in foure respects wherein we excell them 1. In regard of the matter of the Doctrine delivered to them 2. Of the manner how it was delivered 3. Of the time when 4. Of the persons by whom it was delivered For the matter of the doctrine it was dispensed to them at sundry times divided into many parts that is the nature of the Greek word It was given them by piece meale now a part then a part They had one part of it in Adams time another in Noahs one in Abrahams an other in Moses time one in Davids time another in Isaiah's and the rest of the Prophets It was parcelled out to them as the capacity of the people in sundry times did require but we have the doctrine of salvation at one lump propounded to us in one whole and entyre Summe Thus God hath dealt more graciously and bountifully with us They had one flower now and another anon we have all the flowers in Gods garden sweetly smelling all at once in our nostrills They had now a loafe and then a loafe now a draught and then a draught of the Lords Wine the whole Magazen of God Almighty is opened to us Then how thankfull ought we to be to God above them And how carefull should we be to enrich our selves with these heavenly wares that may freely enter the whole store-house of the Lord of hoasts 2. For the manner God delivered his will to them after diverse manners to Abraham by Angels in the shape of men to Moses in a bush and a cloud to Samuel in a dreame to Ezekiel in visions by the oracles and answers of the Priests in a soft winde as to Elias by thunder c. To us he hath delivered his will in one manner by the sweet and comfortable voice by the powerfull and majesticall voice of his owne Sonne never man spake as he which taught in the streets of Ierusalem and of Iudea in his owne person and after his resurrection and ascension he sent his Apostles abroad as his Legats and Deputies into all the world This one manner farre surpassed all the manners whereby God spake to them Those were darke and obscure this plaine many of those were terrible to the hearers insomuch as they ranne to Moses and desired that he might speake to them not God lest they died this was a most milde and amiable manner Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavie laden c. He stood with unfolded armes ready to imbrace them he spread forth his wings as a loving Hen to gather all as chickens under them We are to magnifie God for this one manner whereby he now speaketh to us Variety doth delight yet it is not alwayes the best The World was in best case when they had but one Tongue Speech and Language Variety of tongues in respect of the Originall was but a curse on mankinde and it is far better now with the Church since Almighty God began to speake to us after one manner by his Sonne than when he spake after so diverse manners under the Law Therefore let us be thankfull for it and reverence the voice of his Sonne 3 For the time he spake to them in old time in the first and eldest age of the world he speakes to us in a new time when all are made new by our Saviour CHRIST It was said by them of old times sayes CHRIST Mat. 5.21.27 But I say to you this new time wherin all things are made greene fresh and flourishing by our SAVIOUR CHRIST is far more excellent than that old time of the world 4 For the persons by whom or in whom it was delivered Hos. 1.7 Psal. 63.11 Sweare in him 1. By him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yet there is a great emphasis in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 GOD spake in them moving their hearts and tongues 2 Pet 1.21 The Prophesie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of GOD spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost Mat. 10.20 It is not you that speake but the spirit of your Father which speaketh in you not in those alone that wrote but in all from Adam Ier. 7.25 whereof some were of the bloud-royall as Isaiah Some of the Priests as Ieremie Some of the common people as Amos. GOD spake in them to the Fathers not in the Patriarchs alone but in all But our estate is farre more excellent he spake to them by the Prophets which indeed were rare and singular men worthy to be had in high price and estimation yet not worthy to be named with CHRIST by whom he speaketh to us They were men Christ by whom God speaks to us is GOD and Man they were wise could foretell things to come aptly and pithily interpret the Word of GOD yet all their wisdome and knowledge was borrowed Christ was wise of himselfe clad with his owne feathers they mortall and corruptible dust and ashes CHRIST never saw corruption but abideth for ever and ever they were servants in the House of God Christ is the Sonne yea the Lord and owner of the house Therefore wonderfully hath God honoured us in the time of the Gospell above them in the time of the Law If a King should speake to us by one of his Privie Councell it is much but if he speak to us by his sonne and heire apparant to the Crowne it is a greater dignity The Prophets were of
Gods Councell as the Preachers be at this day the Iewes were honoured that God would speake to them by them but to us hee hath spoken by his onely Sonne therefore our honour is the greater we are set in an high chaire of dignity above them happy are the eyes that see that which we see Many Prophets and Kings have desired to see these things which we see and have not seene them God give us grace to use our happinesse to his glory and the salvation of us all In this the Old and New Testament are equall God is the Author of them both God spake by the Prophets then and he speaketh now by his Ministers The word of the Lord the burthen of the Lord thus saith the Lord. These were the preambles of all the Prophets God spake by the mouth of David as he spake by the mouth of all his Prophets So God speaketh by the mouth of the Preachers at this present day It is not you that speak but the spirit of your Father which speaketh in you Wee are the Ambassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us When we teach God teacheth when we exhort God exhorteth when we reprove sinne God reproveth sin It makes no matter what the man be that speaketh so as he be the lawfull Minister of Christ God speaketh by the man when the man speaketh Gods word When the Ambassadour of the King of Denmark of France or any other Countrey speaketh in the Court the King speaketh whose person he doth represent when my Lord Chiefe Iustice gives the charge at the Assizes the King gives the charge for he sustaines the Kings Person and is a Commissioner for the King so when the Preacher speakes in the Pulpit when he in Gods name gives a charge against pride malice c. God himselfe speakes and gives the charge Oh that this were imprinted in the hearts of all that come to Church the Preacher is a man as thou art but God speakes by him and if thou despise him thou despisest God that speakes in him VERSE 2. WE have seene the estate of them in the time of the Law Now let us take a view of our condition under the Gospell Theirs were the first dayes ours be the last In those that were the first dayes some new Doctrine was daily to be expected but in these last dayes GOD hath opened to us his whole counsell there is no mint of any new Doctrine to be looked for now nothing but the second comming of our SAVIOUR CHRIST is to be expected which hath revealed the whole will of his Father to us If an Angel from Heaven preach any other Doctrine than that which wee have received in these last dayes let him bee accursed 2 In the last dayes there is greatest aboundance of knowledge In the last dayes I will powre out my Spirit on all flesh GOD then was sparing of his Spirit he sent it downe by drops but now he powres it out upon the Church they had the Moone-light we have the Sun-light Therefore if we be ignorant our condemnation shall be the greater as GOD knowes a number of ignorant persons are in this glorious light of the Gospell yea in those Towns where the Candle of Gods Word hath shined brightly these many yeares together The preaching of the Word is a well of water but we will not come with our buckets to fetch water at this Well or if we doe we come with riven buckets the water runs out by and by 3 These last dayes wherein we live are the most dangerous sinne overfloweth with a full streame In the last dayes perillous times shall come Never did sin shew her selfe with such a brazen face as it doth now Men now stick not to set themselves against the Word of GOD it selfe to call the authority of the Scripture in question whether all things be true in it or not To band themselves against the Preachers if not openly yet secretly and to pull downe if possible the Church it selfe these be the last times wherein we live GOD keepe us in them by his holy Spirit 4 Seeing they be the last dayes let us not be so much in love with them Will any be bestowing great cost on his house the last day when he is to goe out of it These are the last dayes of the world wherein we are ready to be turned out of the house of this world therefore let us not be inflamed too much with the love of it In the first dayes when they entred first into the farme of the world they might be merry and jocund we live in the last dayes when we cannot have long to tarry in it therefore let us not be glewed and wedded to it let us use this world as if we used it not for the fashion of this world fadeth away in these last dayes let us so live that whensoever Christ comes to judgement we may meet him joyfully in the Ayre and be translated with him into his kingdome of glory Spoken unto us 1. To the Apostles first that saw and heard him then to all Christians His must be understood Mat. 21.37 But last of all he sent unto them his Son in his Sonne Col. 2.9 For in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily The which Sonne speaketh to us by his Ministers to the worlds end they had servants to speake to them but God hath spoken to us by his Son yet even his Son is little regarded Many of the Pharisies knew him to be the Son of God this is the Heire yet they said come let us kill him I am perswaded if CHRIST were now alive and preached many yeeres together in this Towne yet there be some so maliciously set against the Word and the preachers of it that they could finde in their hearts to kill him Hee that heareth you heareth me and he that goeth about to kill them goes about to kill CHRIST too What a vile age doe we live in What manner of Son not adopted but naturall 1 Heire The Son is the Fathers Heire he hath a right and interest to all his Fathers goods and lands when his Father is dead he hath the same power lordship and authority over all that his Father had So Christ Psa. 2.8 Iohn 16.15 Ioh. 17.10 Yet God his Father never dieth He is Heire as God and Man the King and Mediator of the Church All power is given unto mee in Heaven and Earth God appointed Him He did not intrude Himselfe He was not appointed Heire because being in time made He deserved it by His holy life as Photinus said not only Heire in time but with the Father before all times Of all Of all persons as well as of all things CHRIST hath a right to all he that taketh away any thing bequeathed to the Heire by the Will and Testament of his Father robs the Heire and is guilty of theft if we goe about to take
we are not the Angels Ministers This is thy gracious goodnesse towards us thy name be blessed for it for ever and ever Whether he have appointed to every one of us a particular Angell or not let us not be too curious in the discussing of it this is comfortable for us that wee have many Angels to Minister to us Their Angels saies CHRIST of those that believe in him not their Angell not one Angell but many carryed Lazarus his soule into Abrahams bosome 3. What an unspeakable comfort is this for us What a Tower of defence against Satan and his Angels The Devill compasseth the earth to and fro hee walkes up and downe like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devoure and there be many 1000s of devils there were a legion in one man These by Gods permission raise up tempests stirre up extraordinary windes blow downe houses Nay if God did not bridle them they would quickly teare us all in pieces but let this be our castle to flye unto as there be bad Angels to hurt us so there be good Angels to defend us There were Charrets and horse-men of fire round about Elisha and the Angels of God though we cannot see them with our eyes pitch their Tents round about us these be stronger than the Devill and his angels because they never sinned and have God on their side In the time of Popery the people were much deluded with the walking of spirits they durst not go through a Church-yard in the night for feare of them Sundry are afraid of Fairies and of ill spirits that haunt their houses no doubt but the evill angels are busie in all places yet let us feare none of them all we are guarded with the celestiall guard of holy Angels that are able to protect us from them all especially Christ Iesus is on our side which is above all Angels he sits at Gods right-hand hath all power in heaven and earth he will preserve us from all dangers in this life and bring us to his everlasting Kingdome in the life to come 4 Seeing that God hath ordained the Angels to be ministring-spirits for our sakes which undoubtedly looke carefully to their charge seldome or never are they absent from us some or other are present with us continually Let us do nothing that may grieve these Heavenly Spirits let the Women be covered because of the Angels So let not us sweare and blaspheme the Name of God c. because of the Angels Men would blush to commit filthinesse in the presence of an honourable Personage the Angels are alwayes present with us therefore even in respect of them let us absteine from sin CHAP. 2. IN the former Chapter the Author as in a Glasse shewed the Deity of CHRIST and both simply and absolutely ratified it Now he applies it to them to whom he writeth Where 1. An application 2. A transition to his humanity In the Application 1. the Vse 2. the Reasons whereby it is pressed 1. From the incommodity 2. From the punishment set forth by a comparison 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 forsomuch as CHRIST the Author of the Gospell is not onely above the Angels but is the high and eternall God being the naturall Son of the everlasting Father and engraven forme of his Person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we ought So then it is not left to our discretion we are tied with the bond of necessity to it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intend our mindes that the things may be imprinted in our hearts and practised in our lives 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more aboundantly We should abound more in hearing attention and practice than they did in the time of the Law we should excell them by a more rare and singular attention for though the things are the same yet the party is not the same by whom they are delivered It is not enough to heare Sermons every weeke which is good and commendable but we must yeeld a diligent attention to the things that we heare we especially now in the time of the Gospell when God speaketh to us by his owne Son The people were bound to heare attentively in the time of the Law when the Prophets of God spake to them but much more are we when the Son of God the Prince of Prophets the Prophet of the Prophets speakes to us All Samaria gave heed to Simon Magus that bewitched them and lead them to the Divell and shall not we give heed to Iesus Christ that labours to carry us to Heaven Doe not onely heare but attend to that which ye heare Take heed how ye heare whether loosely or carefully profitably or unprofitably Lydia attended to the things that Paul spake Acts 16.14 We must not only heare the Preacher but attend to the things which he uttereth An Infant doth not only take the dug into his mouth but he sucketh at it and that with greedinesse So we must not onely lye at the big of the Word but we must suck sweet doctrines and heavenly instructions from it The ground that receives not the seed into it will never be fruitfull if it lye aloft and be not hidden in the bowels of the earth it can never yeeld fruit so when the seed of the Word is sowne if we doe not marke it and lay it up in our hearts hide it within us as David did the birds of the Ayre that is the divels that flie up and downe in the Church will pick it up and run away with it Therefore let us diligently give heed to the things which we heare hearing is good and they be commended that heare yet that is not sufficient a diligent attendance must be given to that which we heare When Christ reades a Divinity Lecture to us we that be his Schollers must attend to it It is said of the people that they hung on Christ watching the words that came from his mouth ready to receive them before they came so with all care and diligence we must hang on the Preacher marke his words and be ready to receive them into our eares and hearts even before they are delivered so eager should we be of the Word Especially now in the time of the Gospell what attention is there in the Starre-Chamber when the Lords of the Privie Counsell speake But if either the Prince or the King himselfe make an Oration then there is wonderfull attention In the time of the Law the Prophets spake which indeed were of Gods counsell by whom God revealed his will to the people but now the Prince of peace the everlasting Counsellor the Kings owne Sonne that lay in his owne bosome in whom all the treasures of wisdome are hid speaketh to us Therefore let us listen with all diligence to the things which he speaketh And how doth Christ now speak Not daily from Heaven as he did to Saul but by the mouth of his Ambassadours He that heareth you heareth me will ye have an experience of Christ that
speaketh in me Christ spake in Paul when he preached and hee speakes in us when we preach The Pearle is precious though it be in an earthen vessell that brings it to you therefore receive it with all reverence We ought more diligently to give heed to the things which we heare and yet we are more negligent in hearing than they were in time past an egregious fault Let it be amended by us all The reason is taken 1. From the danger lest we be as wet paper which blotteth out the words and letters that are written in it so as they cannot be read or lest we perish as water that runneth over and is spilt on the ground as wax that melteth away before the fire The words following seeme to ratifie this interpretation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysostome Ne praeterfluamus lest we run by or run over lest we be like to Sieves and Vessels full of holes out of which the water runneth out immediately so soone as it is powred in as he said in Terence Plenus sum rimarum huc et illuc diffluo lest we runne by as water doth by a way and stayeth not So lest we passe by the celestiall doctrine propounded to us and regard it not we must dwell upon the things which we heare by a serious meditation and not flow like water from one thing to another We must let the Word slip at no time though we have never such weighty businesse One thing is necessary This one thing necessary is to be preferred before all others never let a Sermon slip from you without some profit I but how shall we keep them from slipping away There be foure things to hold the Word from slipping from us 1 A meditation in that which wee have heard blessed is the man that meditateth in the Law of God When thou hast heard a Sermon take some time to meditate in it that thou mayest imprint it on thy memory This is a common fault among us The word of God preached to us passeth away as water on a stony Rock When we are once out of the Church we never thinke on it againe therefore no marvell though it slip away from us The 2d. thing to hold it is conference with others The Disciples that travelled to Emaus conferred together the Bereans that came from S. Paul his Sermon tooke their Bibles and conferred together of the Sermon many eyes see more than one that which one hath forgotten another may remember Therefore let Christians recount the things they have heard and that repetition will be as a naile to fasten the things they heard The 3d. is prayer Our corporall meat will not thrive except GOD blesse it therefore they that have any feare of GOD have grace before and after meales no more can the food of our soules doe us good without the blessing of God upon it therefore it behoveth us to pray both when we come to Church and goe from Church that he would send us good speed blesse his word to us The 4th is a care to practise that which we have heard This is the digesting of our spirituall meat and the converting of it into our substance Many heare but few care to practise that which they heare it is never our owne truly and indeed till it be practised that will make us grow up as perfect men in CHRIST IESUS We heare swearing reproved yet we sweare still drunkennesse inveighed against yet we are drunke still envie and malice controlled yet malicious still yea against the Preachers that are as Gods arme to pull us out of our sins a manifest argument that we hold not that which wee heare but suffer it without fruit to slip from us Shall a Childe be put to a Nurse that hath aboundance of milke and bee never a whit the fatter for it Has God sent you many spirituall Nurses that in great plenty have delivered the sincere milke of the Word to you and are you never a whit the better for it Surely GOD will require it at your hands Doth a man sit at a table well furnished every day and yet is he leane and in no good plight There is some internall lett in himselfe as there was in Amnon Hath God spread before you a rich Table of his word where you had dish upon dish meat upon meat and yet are you leane and ill favoured doe you not grow up by the Word truly your meat is ill-bestowed on you and GOD shall deale justly with you if he take it quite away from you therefore let us attend diligently to the things that we heare that they slip not from us but may remaine and continue with us to the salvation of us all VERSE 2. THE second reason to inforce the use is drawne from the punishment which is set forth comparatively The greatest part of Interpreters by the word spoken by Angels understand the Law which they say was given by the Ministery of Angels grounding on those places Acts 7.53 Gal. 3.19 Whereas if the words be examined in the Originall they imply no such matter Stephen sayes not that they received the Law by the Ministery of Angels but among the Orders or Rankes of Angels that is the Angels by whom the fearefull Trumpet was sounded as a celestiall Guard and Armie attending upon God at the present time which gave the Law to the people and in the Galatians it is among the Angels by the hand of a Mediator therefore by the word spoken by Angels is not meant the Law but any doctrine or admonition whatsoever which God sent to man by Angels in the Old Testament The Lord then used much the Ministry of Angels and by them hee revealed his will to them the which if they despised and regarded not they were surely punished for it as Lots sons in law that would not beleeve the destruction of Sodom and Zacharie that would not give credite to the Angels speech was made dumbe yea even the word spoken by the Prophets though but men was severely punished much more shall that which is spoken by CHRIST Was stedfast that is remained firme and unmoveable against the contumacie and stubbornnesse of them that resisted it It tooke effect in despite of all the adversaries though they strove with might and maine against it Not some but every one GOD suffered none to goe unpunished some copies have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 responsation Transgression hath reference to those things that are forbidden 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to those that bee commanded every swarving or declining from the right way every stubborne contempt when men will scant vouchsafe to give it the hearing or reject that which they heare Received a just recompence a lawfull recompence which cannot be gaine-sayed pronounced by the Law it selfe Deut. 28. from Verse 15. ad finem They were diversly punished Of reward both good workes and evill are rewarded 2 Tim. 4.14 VERSE 3. WEE would seeke wayes of escaping any hole or
crany to escape by but we shall find none he makes them Iudges I appeale to your owne selves Iudge you He doth not say if we contemne secretly or openly but if we neglect The carelesse neglect of the Gospell shall pull damnation on us He doth not say so great a word as before but so great salvation A glorious and comfortable title which cannot be ascribed to the law that killeth it doth not save Saint Paul calls the law a killing letter the ministration of death and of condemnation but the Gospell sayes It is the word of salvation Act. 13.26 The power of GOD to salvation Rom. 1.16 So that they which contemne it contemne their owne salvation So great as can not be expressed by the tongue of men and Angels wrought by so great a Saviour Tit. 2.13 So great as eye hath not seene eare heard neither entred into the heart of man to conceive not a saving of us from our enemies in this world but of soule and body from the Devill death and damnation in the world to come Great also in eternitie and durance for it shall never have end The greatnes of this salvation is amplified three kind of wayes 1. By the first Preacher and divulger of it 2. By those worthy instruments that succeeded him 3. By the miracles wherewith it was graced That which wee heare is salvation a matter of great weight and singular importance therefore let us not neglect it If a man lye in a deepe pit ready to be drowned and one come to him offering him his hand to pull him out will he not listen to him The preaching of the word is Gods hand to pull us out of the pit of hell and shall wee neglect it If a man tell thee of a Lord-ship which thou mayest have for a little money wilt thou not give him the hearing We bring you tidings not of an earthly Lordship but of an everlasting kingdome which you may have without Gold and without Silver only reaching out the hand of faith to apprehend it and shall we turne away our eares and not regard it How shall wee escape if wee neglect so great salvation When men are at a play they will be attentive and the preaching of the word whereby we may be saved in the life to come is had in small estimation What a lamentable thing is this This must needs pull the wrath of GOD on us Wee count it a small matter to neglect the Word of GOD yet they that doe it shall hardly escape the vengeance of GOD how shall they escape sayes the Apostle Certainly with great difficultie therefore let us be diligent hearers of it The threatnings of Angels if despised were severely punished and shall not the threatnings of the Sonne of GOD in the ministrie of the Word The Preachers in the name of CHRIST thunder out GODS judgements against swearing profanations c. A number heare them and are no more moved than the stones in the wall but GOD will meet with such they shall hardly escape GOD will one way or other make them feele the smart of his heavy hand there is no way of escaping for them Therefore let us with reverence tremble at the word Which at the first began Having taken a beginning to be preached by the LORD which brought it first out of the bosome of his Father he did not introduce it into this world by stealth secretly as heresies and phantasies are wont to be but openly Christ alwayes taught in the Synagogues and in the Temple The Lord. That is the LORD IESUS the LORD of heaven and earth The LORD often so called not by Angels as the Law but by the LORD the naturall SON of GOD not by mortall men as Plato Aristotle c. In this respect the Gospell should be most welcome to us The LORD IESUS Himselfe was the Preacher of the Gospell he went up and downe through Citties and Townes preaching the Gospell The first Sermon hee made was in Nazareth where hee was brought up from thence he went up to Ierusalem c. CHRIST was a Preacher and shall we thinke basely of Preachers Was it not an high office which the Sonne of GOD will take on him CHRIST would not be a King be refused that then what wretches are they that will rayle on Preachers gibe and jest at them make songs of them Reverence the Preachers seeing CHRIST Himselfe was a Preacher And was confirmed unto us c. Some expound it thus and after them that heard it of Christ it was confirmed to me that is after it was preached by CHRIST and the first Apostles that heard him on the earth it was confirmed to me also as a later Apostle yet one that heard and saw CHRIST from heaven rather Paul in modesty and humilitie puts himselfe in the number of the common Saints and Christians to whom the Gospell was confirmed by the miracles of the Apostles or by the Apostles that heard Christ. Or he doth not speake here of his doctrine as if he received that from the Apostles but that hee was confirmed in the truth of the Gospell by the miracles of the Apostles which was no disparagement to him This is the strongest argument to perswade some that this is none of Pauls Epistle Saint Paul is wont to stand stiffely on the reputation of his Apostle-ship hee had his doctrine not from men but God he was not inferiour to the chiefest Apostles whereas the Author of this Epistle was one of the Apostles Schollers he had the doctrine of the Gospell not at the first hand but at the second This may be answered diverse kinde of wayes 1. Both these may well bee applyed to Saint Paul the LORD IESUS first preached the Gospell to him from heaven when he called him and he was confirmed in it by Ananias 2 It may be a rhetoricall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 frequent in divine and prophane writings when as the speaker assumes that to himselfe which is proper to the hearers and by a Synecdoche includes himselfe in their number as the Penman of this Epistle sayes how shall wee escape if we neglect so great salvation yet he was none of them that neglected this salvation Heb. 10.26 Yet he did not commit that wilfull and horrible sin against the Holy Ghost Paul 1 Thes. 4.17 sayes We that are alive yet he was not alive at Christ's second comming so though he say which was confirmed to us yet he speakes in the name of the Hebrews not of his owne as 1 Pet. 1.12 where S. Peter seemes to exempt himselfe out of the number of the Apostles yet he was one 3 S. Paul by conference with the Apostles that heard Christ preach when he was on the earth might without any disparagement to him be the more confirmed in the truth of the Gospell 4 He doth not say he was confirmed but the Doctrine was and that clause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports not the persons but the
and Spirit in this life that wee may have entrance into the holy Hierusalem in the life to come If CHRIST and we are all of one much more are we among our selves A King and a beggar are of one a rich man and a poore man are of one a faire and beautifull man or woman and they that want beauty are of one we descended all of Adam and were taken out of the dust of the ground therefore let us not insult one over another GOD for a season hath advanced one above another the Magistrate above the Subject the Father above the Son the Rich man above the poore man and every one is to be honoured according to that place whereunto God hath exalted him yet if we look back to our originall to the stocke from whence we are taken we are all of one The Wax that hath the print of the Kings seale on it is the same in substance with the waxe that hath the print of the seale of a meane man yet it is honoured in that the Kings seale is set on it So we are all of one weake and waxie nature save that it pleaseth God to set a more honourable print upon one then on another Therefore let us not thinke highly of ourselves and contemne our brethren but submitte to them of low degree using the greatnesse that GOD hath given us to the glory of the Giver Seest thou a poore Lazarus full of sores desirous to bee refreshed with the crumbes that fall from rich mens bordes Contemne him not in thy heart he and thou though thou farest deliciously every day and rufflest out in silkes and velvet are both of one This he proveth by the relatives They that be brethren come of one Father and Mother CHRIST and wee are brethren therefore we are of one of one Adam which is our Father and of one Mother which is Eve Whereas some interpret it of one God of one heavenly Father it is impertinent to the Text. He doth not simply say they are his brethren but hee is not ashamed to call them brethren Prov. 19.7 All the brethren of the poore doe hate him how much more doe his friends goe far from him He pursueth them with words but they are wanting to him But Christ thought it no disparagement to his glorious Deity to call men his brethren Though there be wonderfull ods betweene Christ and us hee the Creator we the creatures hee the LORD and Master we his servants he without sinne we defiled with sinne in Soule and body he mervailous rich heaven and earth being his we poore men of our selves not worth a groat yet Christ is not ashamed to call us brethren If a man come once to be Lord Major of London hee will scant acknowledge his poore brethren and Sisters when they come to him Christ is not a Lord for a yeere and a day but an everlasting King yea the King of Kings yet he vouchsafes to call us brethren One Iudge will call another brother and if he be a Sergeant he shall have that name but every pettifogger and paltrie Lawyer shall not be the Iudges brother yet Christ the Iudge of the whole world calls us all brethren O the humility of Christ and the dignity whereunto he hath advanced us VERSE 12. THis he proved out of the Psalme 22.22 Many things in that Psalme are in the New Testament applyed to CHRIST as Verse 1. Verse 16. Verse 18. The Prophet speaketh this of himselfe that when GOD had delivered him from his enemies he would declare his name to the people which were his brethren though GOD had exalted him above them But prophetically also he speaketh of the Messiah after that CHRIST was delivered from Satans fury and the rage of his instruments from the power of death and of the grave hee would declare the name of GOD to his brethren This he did while he was alive Ioh. 17.6 but especially after his resurrection when hee sent his Apostles to preach the Gospell to all nations CHRIST was not only the Author and matter of the Gospell but he was also the proclaimer and Preacher of it he declared it in his owne life time by himselfe after his Ascension by his Apostles The name that is the power mercie and goodnesse of God By brethren here are understood not the Apostles or faithfull onely though they in more speciall manner bee the brethren of CHRIST Matth. 12.49 Ioh. 20.17 but all men generally for CHRIST and all men came of one which is Adam and were made by one God Mal. 2.10 CHRIST will not declare his name in a corner but in the middest of the Church In the middest of the Church among the rest of my brethren as fellow singers Christ did sing with his Disciples after the supper he prayed worshipped and sung as we doe CHRIST hath many Brethren 1. All men in respect of our humane nature which Christ assumed to himselfe are his brethren hee a man as all are 2. In regard of Country and lineall descent the Iewes are his brethren of whom Christ came according to the flesh Rom. 9.5 Deut. 18.18 3. In respect of consanguinity the kinsfolke of CHRIST in the Scripture are called his brethren Iames the brother of the Lord that is the kinsman of the Lord. 4. In respect of the Ministery the Preachers of the Word are CHRIST his brethren for hee was a Minister and Preacher of the Gospell as we are although in gifts and graces he excelled us all as the Sunne doth the Starres But more neerely and properly the faithfull are his brethren being made the Sonnes of GOD by faith in CHRIST IESUS I goe to my God and your God to my Father and your Father Ioh. 20.17 1. As CHRIST is not ashamed to call us brethren so let us doe nothing so neere as wee can that may shame this our Brother Is it not a shame that the Kings brother should bee a common drunkard whoremaster or such like Doth not the King take himselfe disgraced by it And shall wee that are Brethren to the King of Kings take such courses as that great ignominie should redound to CHRIST by it As hee is not ashamed to call us brethren so let us doe nothing that may pull a shame on him and his Gospell 2. Can a brother that is a wealthie man of faire revenewes and ample possessions see any of his brethren goe a begging will hee not rather receive him to his owne house and set him at his table CHRIST which is the Lord of heaven and earth is our brother therefore let us feare no want so long as wee feare him This may be a comfort to us in all our calamities that CHRIST and we are brethren VERSE 13. AN other argument to prove the humanity of Christ it is drawne from the effects Christ putteth his trust in God therefore he is man Hee that trusteth to another is inferiour to him to whom hee trusts the party whom he makes his pillar
to leane upon is superiour to him greater than he CHRIST trusted in GOD the Father therefore in respect of his humanity he is inferiour to the Father These words whether deduced out of Isai. 12.2 or out of Psalme 18.2 are fitly applyed to CHRIST Chasah I will flye to him as to a strong tower and Castle That song in Isaiah is sung by the whole Church and so consequently by CHRIST the head of the Church The 70. have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the Psalme though David speakes it of himselfe that for all the fury of his adversaries hee would trust in God of whose goodnesse hee had comfortable experience by his deliverance from the house of Saul as in the title yet being a type of Christ figuratively hee speaketh also of him Sundry things in that Psalme cannot be applyed to David as Verse 43. and that Verse 7. Whereas at the passion of Christ the earth quaked Our Saviour Christ in his bitter agony in the garden trusted in God and when he hung on the crosse he knew that though God seemed to forsake him for a time yet hee would deliver him out of all and assume him into his kingdome thus he still put his trust in GOD. If he did trust in God in all calamities from whom the Deitie was never separated much more ought we miserable men in all adversities trust in God Some trust in Charets and some in Horses but let us remember the name of the Lord our God and trust in him Cursed be he that maketh flesh his arme Let us not put our trust in riches though our barnes be never so full of corne our coffers of gold and silver Let us not trust in our strength in the multitude of our men in our walled townes and defenced castles Let us not put our trust in the fortitude of this good yland that is compassed about with the Seas Let us not put our trust in our friends When we be sicke let us not put our trust in the Physitions as Asa did not trust in our pollicie as Achitophel but let us alwayes in all difficulties put our trust in GOD hee is able and willing to plucke us out of all dangers Hee delivered the Israelites from the red Sea Daniel from the the Lions Peter from the fury of Herod Hee can and will preserve us from all the devils of hell the gates of hell shall never prevaile against us Happy are they that put their trust in him he is a sure friend that will never faile them The fourth argument to prove the humanity of Christ is taken from the relatives The Father and the children are of one nature Christ is the Father we his children ergo This is at large amplified by the Apostle 1. He that makes himselfe equall with the rest of the faithfull and of the servants and children of God is a man as they be but Christ makes himselfe equall with the rest of the faithfull of the servants and children of God Ergo. 2. Hee that receiveth children as a gift from God is inferiour to GOD that gave him these children but CHRIST receiveth children as a gift from GOD ergo he is inferiour to GOD which cannot be but in respect of his humanity Ergo he is man as well as GOD. He produces an other testimony Isa. 8.18 That this testimony is to be applyed to the Messiah is evident by many places in that chapter where he is called Immanuel 2. That v. 14. is expounded of Christ in sundry places of the New Testament as Luk. 2. Rom. 9. 1 Pet. 2. 3. Though this was true in the Prophet himselfe and in his Disciples yet it is verified likewise of Christ of whom the Prophet was a Type Behold this argues his prompt and ready obedience presenting himselfe to the Lord so Christ was obedient to God the Father even to the death yea of the Crosse. By children are meant servants followers attendants upon any 1 Sam. 21.4 Acts 4.25 Ioh. 21.5 by them are signified the faithfull which as children and servants waited on Christ and attended to his voice as children doe to the voice of their Father All the faithfull in the world by whose ministery soever turned are Christs children he the chiefe Father we secondarily they are his children principally ours instrumentally It is CHRIST that begets us though not now in his owne person yet by the Ministers and Preachers who are our Fathers under Christ and we their Children GOD the Father gave him those children 1. By the administration of baptisme 2. Then by the working of his Spirit and the powerfull preaching of his word Ioh. 17.9.6 Ioh. 6.37 Iohn 10.29 Properly to speake they are given to no Prophet nor Minister but to Christ alone That they be as signes and wonders agreeth well to Christ and all the faithfull Christ was despised so are we Ioh. 15.18 1 Cor. 4.9 to 14. S. Paul might have had more pregnant testimonies for the confirmation of Christs humanity than these be yet he made choice of these partly because peradventure they were applied by the Rabbins and the Iewes themselves to the Messiah partly because these set forth to us the mercy of God towards us and our honour and dignity that we should be Christ's brethren that he and we should be in a manner equall coupled together in one yoke This is true in the Prophets and in CHRIST too the preachers of the Word have children given them of the Lord. The Prophets in their time had their children the Apostles theirs and we ours Saint Paul begat Onesimus in his bonds GOD gave Lydia as a child to Saint Paul in opening her heart and causing her to beleeve Yea many Nations were given to S. Paul GOD gave those three thousand soules as a great company of children to St. Peter And the Lord by the ministry of the Word gives us children at this present day You are our children and therefore you ought to love and honour us What childe will raile on his Father they be Bastards that endeavour to pluck out their Parents eyes yet some doe on the Ministers their spirituall fathers This also may be affirmed of Christ he is our brother and our father too he is the right and proper father of the faithfull whom he begetteth by the word of truth and they that are truly begotten by the word are Christs children whom the Father gave to him from all eternity before all times and whom in time he giveth to him daily by the preaching of the Gospell to the worlds end 1 We have not these children of our selves simply by our preaching be it never so powerfull It is GOD that gives them to us Children are the inheritance of the Lord so these spirituall children Let us praise God for them A Father rejoyces in his children so may and doe Preachers in their Children 2 There is no Father but will protect his Children as much as lieth in him hee will bee content to
with all reverence Secondly a strengthning of the charge by an argument which he disputeth by the example of their fathers Where first the sinne of their fathers then the punishment of the sinne Their sin is set downe first generally then particularly with the circumstances belonging to it of the place where it was committed the persons by whom the nature and quality of the sin amplified by the meanes they had to call from it the time how long they continued in this sinne The punishment is double 1. GODS wrath and displeasure 2. A definitive sentence proceeding from it an exclusion of them out of his rest VERSE 7. SEeing we have such a rare and excellent Prophet as is not as a servant but as the Sonne in the house of GOD let us attend to him and for so much as faith makes us to be of this house and hope is as a pillar for the susteining of us in it let us beware of infidelity that pulls downe the house and shuts up the doore against this Prophet that he cannot enter in into us Now because hee was to make a commemoration of the stubbornnesse and contumacie of the ancient Israelites which in time rejected this Prophet and would not heare him very wisely for offending of the Hebrews he delivers it in the words of the Holy Ghost rather then of his owne They would peradventure have kicked against his reproofe but they durst not spurne at the reprehension of the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost long agoe by the mouth of David provoked the people to lysten to CHRIST the true Prophet of the Church therefore let us all attend to him The Author of this Epistle was not ignorant that David was the penman or Authour of this Psalme for he himselfe affirmeth Hebr. 4.7 yet he doth not say as David speaketh but as the Holy Ghost saith whereby he gives us to understand that the Holy Ghost the third person in the glorious Trinity speaketh in the Scriptures the whole Scripture is given by inspiration of God 2 Tim. 3.16 this heavenly spirit did breath them into those worthy instruments which he used Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost The Manichees sayd that the evill GOD was the Author of the Old Testament and the good GOD of the new yet the Holy Ghost spake in the Old Testament This then is the prerogative of the sacred Scripture above other wrytings In other books men speake but in this God speaketh In other writings Tullie Seneca Plato Aristotle Plutarch speaketh who indeed were wise and learned men but in the bookes of holy Scripture the Holy Ghost speaketh which is the fountaine of all wisdome In them the servants speake in this the LORD speaketh In them the subjects in this the Prince The Holy Ghost speaketh in the bookes of Moses of the Psalmes of the Prophets in the bookes of the New Testament yet such is the blindnesse of our understanding and the corruption of our nature that we preferre humanity before Divinity the writing of men before the writings of God the Moone before the Sunne wee had rather be reading of humane Authors then of these heavenly books wherein the HOLY GHOST speaketh to us Now if yee will heare his voice as God hath commanded you to doe Deut. 18.18 Then harden not your hearts Thus it is as cleere as the noone day that the Spirit of God gives an evident testimony of our Saviour CHRIST To day In the time of the Gospell The law was as the night this as the day While he speaketh to us 2 Cor. 6.2 CHRIST spake in Moses time in Davids time he spake in his owne person on the earth and he speakes in the Ministerie of the Gospell to the worlds end The Gentiles that were not as yet of CHRISTS fold heare the voyce of CHRIST Ioh. 10. but CHRIST is now in heaven therefore the voyce of the Preachers is the voyce of CHRIST He doth not say to morrow post it not off till to morrow but heare it To day while it may be heard VERSE 8. WHat then He doth not say stop not up your yeares we must not doe that neither but it is in vaine for the eare to heare if the heart bee hardned therefore first he beginneth with the heart God opened the heart of Lydia The heart is the principall thing which GOD requireth in the hearing of the Word In vaine doe wee heare with our eares if our hearts bee not opened therefore sayes the Holy Ghost harden not your hearts GOD hardeneth the hearts of men and men harden their owne hearts He hardned the heart of Pharaoh and Deut. 2.30 GOD hardneth not only permissivè but also activè the LORD hath a kinde of act in it his providence is in it He gave up the Gentiles unto their owne lusts Rom. 1.24 Hee sendeth the wicked strong delusions to believe lies He did not only suffer Pharaohs heart to be hardned but he hardned it indeed How Not infundendo malitiam by infusing evill into our hearts for they be as pots full of all impiety already GOD needs not nay GOD cannot it is repugnant to his nature to put any evill into us yet hee doth not harden onely subtrahendo gratiam though that bee one meanes but by having an operation in the action yet so as he is free from the least imputation of sinne As hardnesse of heart comes from GOD it is a punishment of sin of our former contempt of his grace and mercie offered to us as it proceedeth from our selves it is a sinne yea an horrible sinne To conclude we first contemne that grace which should soften our hearts and then God hardens them We our selves properly to speake are the hardners of our own hearts GOD gives us his sacred word as a trumpet to waken us out of sinne he sends us his Ministers and Preachers as bells to toll us to the kingdome of heaven they will us in GODS name to believe in CHRIST to forsake our sinnes be they never so neere or deere unto us we for all that harden our hearts that those heavenly admonitions cannot enter into them Let God say what hee will let him preach by his Embassadours we will still continue in unbeliefe and dwell in our sinnes we say with them in the Gospell we will not have this man to reigne over us Sinne shall be our King Lord and Master CHRIST IESUS shall not rule us by his word and Spirit This is the hardnesse of heart that is in us by nature Oh Hierusalem how often would I have gathered thy children together and yee would not Matth. 23.37 The LORD sent his Prophets early and late 2 Chron. 36.16 and in Zach. 7.12 there is a wonderfull example to this purpose This hardnes of heart reigneth exceedingly at this present day yea even in those townes where there is most plentifull preaching Therefore let us intreat the LORD to give us a new heart to take from us
this heart of stone and give us an heart of flesh let us desire him by the dew of his spirit to mollifie our hearts that the heavenly doctrines exhortations and admonitions delivered to us may sinke deepely into our hearts and make a conversion of us that our hearts may melt as Iosiah's did at the hearing of the law Nothing can enter into that which is hard if the ground be hard it cannot receive the seede if the Waxe be hard it cannot take the impression of any seale and so long as our hearts remaine hard they cannot receive the immortall seed of the word nor the print of the Spirit which is GODS seale Wherefore let us be suiters to God to soften our hearts daily more and more Above all evills the Lord deliver us from hardnesse of heart for that is the ready way to hell When yee be at Sermons harden not your hearts against the vices that are reproved but tremble at the word of GOD bee grieved for your sins open the doores of your hearts to the Lord Iesus which standeth knocking at them with the hammer of his word that he may come and suppe with you in this life and you dine and suppe with him in the life to come From this hardnesse of heart he disswadeth them by the fearefull judgement of God that fell upon their fathers for it which he propounds first generally In the provocation Hebr. Meribah in the chiding and contending when the fathers chode and contended with Moses which Saint Paul calls an exacerbation or provocation because God by that was provoked to anger in so much as he became very bitter in words and deeds towards the Israelites Doe not you dance after that Pipe and walke according as they did Temptation Hebr. Massah which is expounded afterwards It is a question among interpreters to what place of the Old Testament Saint Paul heere alludeth Some referre it to that Numb 14. Where after the returne of the Spies they despaired of entring into the Land of Canaan and murmured against GOD and Moses Others to that Exod. 17. where water came out of the rock whereas before they murmured for want of water There may be some allusion to both places for the one place hath her name of the contending and tempting and is called Massah and Meribah and in the other place is contained the forme of the oath that God used Neverthelesse it were fittest to expound it generally of the stubborne and contumelious behaviour of the Israelites in the wildernesse then of any one particular temptation 1. Because he names no particular place but the wildernesse in generall 2. Because the tempting he speaketh of here lasted the whole forty yeeres 3. The word day is often taken in Scripture not for any set and prescript time but for an indefinite time a continuance of time Ioh. 8.56 Psalm 25.5 all the time that the temptation lasteth Psalm 50.15 As to day in the former verse was largely taken So here 4. Num. 14.22 It is apparant that they tempted him many times Then he describeth it by all particular circumstances belonging to it 1. By the place where this sinne was committed in the wildernesse where they were subject to innumerable dangers scarsitie of meat and drinke to the invasion of wild beasts compassed with enemies on every side yet the LORD was as a wall of fire round about them hee carryed them on Eagles wings he suffered none to doe them any wrong but reproved Kings for their sakes Notwithstanding in this place where they were continually under the wings of GODS protection they tempted him and provoked him to wrath as if the Child should scratch the nurses face when hee is in her armes VERSE 9. 2. THe parties that committed this offence were their Fathers of whom they much gloried and boasted Our fathers eat Manna in the wildernesse God made a covenant with our fathers that he would bee their God and they should bee his people The oracles of God were committed to our fathers God talked familiarly with our fathers our fathers were deepe in Gods bookes If we doe as our fathers did we cannot doe amisse I but our fathers must not alwayes bee a rule for us to follow your father 's tempted CHRIST in the wildernesse so must not you doe your father 's resisted the HOLY GHOST so must not you your father 's killed the Prophets your fathers were often ready to stone Moses so must not you The Papists at this day are the Iewes Apes they are likewise wedded to their fathers Our fathers were of this Religion therefore we will be of it our father 's kissed the Popes feete ergo Our Fathers cast off the yoke of CHRIST therefore wee will doe the same our fathers would be joynt Saviours with Christ they would merit heaven therefore we will doe the like our father 's worshipped they knew not what so we will doe But Saint Paul gives us a better rule be yee followers of me as I am of Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 If our fathers followed CHRIST let us follow them otherwise let them goe alone thy father drowned himselfe and wilt thou drowne thy selfe too The Father of lights must bee preferred before the fathers of darknesse the Father of heaven before the fathers on earth If we delight in antiquity let us do as the ancient of dayes prescribeth us let us not dote with our fathers and goe to hell with our fathers Children must bee content to heare of their fathers sinnes for the better avoyding of them If any raile of our fathers that bee dead spew out their poyson against them disgrace our fathers where there is no cause or rake up the infirmities of our fathers a● out of graves we have just cause to be moved at it but if any in the feare and zeale of GOD admonish us of our fathers grosse and notorious offences that we stumble not at the same stones and breake our neckes as they did wee are to take it in good part and profit by it to that end doth the Apostle here make a commemoration of their fathers sinnes but doe not you tempt me as they did The quality of their sinne was a tempting and proving of him probaverunt that is causâ curiositatis exquisiverunt an possem facere Num. 11.18 God is tempted diverse wayes 1. If having meanes we neglect them fondly flying to the supposed providence of GOD if CHRIST having a paire of staires to come downe by should have cast himselfe downe from the pinnacle of the Temple he had tempted GOD. Many that be sicke would faine be well but they are resolute to use no physicke many would gladly fare well have sufficient for themselves their Wives and Children but they will not labour nor take paines that is a tempting of God 2. Men tempt God when having had evident proofe and manifest experience of his wisedome power mercy and goodnesse yet if they be driven into any streights and see no present meanes to
good thing but to obey that which we heare is better Not every one that saith Lord Lord but he that doth the will of my Father shall enter into the Kingdome of Heaven Mat. 7.21 Christ shall come from heaven to render vengeance to them that obeyed not the Gospell 2 Thes. 1.8 The ancient Israelites were banished out of Gods rest because they obeyed not His voyce I was not disobedient sayes Paul to the heavenly vision Let us by their example learne to obey God that we be not excluded out of His everlasting rest VERSE 19. IN the last place he poynteth out that maine and capitall sin for the which they were debarred this rest and he introduceth it in Emphaticall termes In the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a conjunction copulative but often it hath the force of an illative as 1 Cor. 15.21 It is as cleere as the noone day we may behold it with our eyes Not that they would not it may be they had a minde to enter into that rest but could not why what barred them out unbeliefe Infidelity is a grievous sin The Noble man on whose hand the King leaned was troden under foote in the gate because he believed not the Word of the Lord. If the Lord would make windowes in heaven might this thing be it cost him his life for it The ancient Israelites were heere excluded out of the Land of Canaan and many of them out of the Kingdom of heaven too because of their unbeliefe Can God give us flesh to eate can he prepare a table for us in the wildernesse thus they mooted on Gods power and called it into question ô the townes of the Land of Canaan are walled up to heaven the inhabitants are Gyants we as Grashoppers in comparison of them Can God bring us into this land for that cause they entred not into it therefore let us labour to pluck up this bitter roote of infidelity out of the hearts of us all Neverthelesse it is the proper vice of this age it reigneth exceedingly among the professors of the Gospell we believe neither Gods threatnings nor His promises God saies whoremongers I will Iudge a poynt for his judging we will be whoremasters still God resisteth the proud yet we will be proud men still Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruite c. We reade of no hurt that Dives did to Lazarus hee did not set his dogges on him nor cudgel him from his gate yet because hee did no good hee fryed in Hell wee will not believe this for all that wee will keepe that wee have to our selves and doe no good with it The curse shall not depart from the house of the swearer yet we sweare still we laugh in our sleeves at the threatnings of God And as for his promises we believe them not God hath promised us a Kingdome where though we be consumed to dust and ashes yet we shall rest with Christ for ever yet we believe not this A Bird in the hand is better then two in the bush We will not leave our earthly pleasures in hope of this Kingdome Our unbeliefe is in a manner as great as theirs therefore God may worthily shut us out of his rest But let us remove this infidelity out of our hearts This is the time of the yeare that we remoove tenants out of houses unbeliefe is a bad tenant that will not onely pay us no rent but will also rend Gods Kingdome from us hath dwelt in the houses of our hearts many yeares together let us now at length give him a remoove thrust him out of doores let us beleive God in all his sayings in this life that we may rest with him in his eternall Kingdome in the life to come CHAP. 4. IN the former Chapter he excited us to a reverend attention to Christ the Doctor and Prophet of the Church by a fearefull example of the wrath of God that fell upon the ancient Israelites for hardning their hearts against his voice and contemning him for this cause they were excluded Gods rest Now in the beginning of this Chapter he makes a more large and evident application of that example to us in the time of the Gospell wishing us not to tread in the steps of the rebellious Iewes least we drinke of the cup of Gods wrath as they did This Chapter divides it selfe into two branches 1. The remainder of Christ his prophesie to Verse 14. 2. A transition to his priesthood In the remainder the former example is applied to us In the which application wee have first a dehortation from incredulitie which was the barre that kept them out of God's rest to Verse 11. 2. An exhortation to a diligent studie to enter into that rest Touching the former 1. A propounding of the dehortation 2. A preventing of an objection that might bee made against it In the propounding of it 1. The substance of it 2. A reason whereby it is strengthened The substance of it is comprehended Ver. 1. VERSE 1. SEeing we have such a terrible example of Gods wrath in the ancient Israelites which for their unbeliefe and contumacie were shut out of Gods rest let us being subject to the like frailety and as little able of our selves to stand as they let us feare that we fall not as they did What is it that we must feare Least any of us should seeme to come short of his rest for there is no time to sin and goe to hell in our youth or elder age How lest the promise being left cast behinde our backe and not regarded the cause of infidelity is a carelesse neglect of God his promise Where read we of any promise made of entring into his rest we read of a commination or threatning that some should not enter into it but in the former testimony there was contained no promise True not directly yet indirectly and by necessary consequent for if God sware that they should not enter which disobeyed him then a secret promise was included that the faithfull and obedient should enter in therefore let us feare least forsaking this promise of entring into his rest c. Any of you For I love you all and would be loath that one of you should perish Seeme not simply say be deprived Some thinke the Apostle so speaketh that he might not exasperate the Iewes which would have taken it in great snuffe Therefore he sayes if any seeme but that word may have his force Seeme and that worthily even in the judgement of all the world by neglecting so great salvation to be deprived To come short The word is very significant To be left behind If among them that travell by the way some being weary of the length and tediousnesse of the journey slacke their pace sit downe and will make no hast the rest enter into the towne or City to the which they travell but they are left behind So if we goe not on cheerefully in the way following God calling us that leadeth
us to the celestiall Canaan we shall be left behind and not enter in we shall come tardie as the five foolish Virgins did as fainting and loitering travellers are wont to doe and so never come to the journeys end therefore let us look to it the danger is great In the substance of the dehortation is commended to us an holy and religious feare which we must carry in our hands for feare of falling This feare is amplified by the object whereabout it must bee occupied and the danger that will ensue if wee let goe that feare Must we that be Christians feare It may seeme not Luk. 1.74 Rom. 8.15 For the determination of this yee must know that there is a foure fold feare mundanus servilis initialis filialis This filiall feare is not a boysterous winde to shake the pillar of the certeinty of the Salvation of Gods Children which in respect of God our Salvation is sure our life is hid with God in CHRIST Col. 3.3 yet in regard of our owne weakenesse and frailety we must feare all the dayes of our life Though a Souldier make sure of the victory yet he must not rush into the battell unarmed nor be carelesse of himselfe he must feare the Pikes Swords and Pellets of the enemy and be carefull to avoyde them Though a wayfaring man make sure to come home safe to his house yet he must not be reachlesse but feare in some sort the thieves that be in the way They that be on the Sea though they make no question of their safe arrival yet they must not give themselves to sleeping and playing let the ship drive whither it will they must feare the waves windes and tempests A kinde and loving Wife doubts not of the good affection of her husband yet she will feare him So we neede not doubt of Gods love he will doe his part for whom He once loveth he loveth to the end yet we must feare him There bee two dangerous rockes the one of doubt and despaire the other of security and presumption Though there is no reason to despaire Rom. 11.29 Iohn 10.28 Heb. 6. yet we must beware that we be not drowned in security not give our selves to eating and drinking I am sure I shall be saved therefore I care not how I live Christians must feare in regard of our owne weakenesse we must distrust our owne wit policy strength and depend upon God alone we may stand a great while and yet fall in the end as Adam Noah David Salomon Peter In our selves we are as weake as water therefore let us distrust our selves and put all our trust in the living God Againe wee must feare in respect of the strength and policy of our enemies We have many enemies to encounter withall and those not weake but potent We wrastle not with flesh and bloud but against principalities and powers against the rulers of the darkenesse of this world The Divell like a roaring Lion walkes up and downe seeking whom he may devoure 1 Pet. 5.8 therefore we must feare VERSE 2. THE reason is deduced from a gracious benefit bestowed on us as well as on them which if it be rejected by us as it was by them will shut us out of heaven It hath two parts a par and an impar If they for not believing the Gospell were banished out of his rest then the like may happen to us for we are partakers of the Gospell as well as they and for that cause let us feare 1 That is to be unfolded wherein they and we are alike We are Gospelled as well as they nay in that wee are advanced above them Adam Abraham Iacob had the Gospell velatum to us it is revelatum To them CHRIST was preached afarre off to come to us already come a Virgin hath conceived They had the Gospell by a servant which was Moses we have it by the Sonne of God they had it darkely and obscurely we have it cleerely and plainely They had the Moone light and we the Sun light Blessed are the eyes that see that which we see It was one and the same Gospell in the Old and New Testament Iohn 5.46 and 39. here is the imparity the Word preached did not profite them as it did us that believe The word of hearing That word which indeede above all other words is to be heard by the which faith commeth Rom. 10.17 Plato Aristot. Seneca Tullie Augustine Hieron Irenaeus Tertul. c. in time and place are to bee heard but this word above all This is a word meet to sound in our eares continually He doth not say which came not unto them for it was preached to them as we heard before Profited them not did them no good The Gospell is a precious pearle an unspeakeable blessing of God yet all that are partakers of it are not saved Iudas had the Gospell yet it profited him not Simon Magus Hierusalem c. The Sun is not comfortable to all The most delicate fare doth not make all bodies fat The raine doth not make all grounds fruitfull neither doth the Word of God though it be mighty in operation profite all that partake of it Luke 13.26 Mat. 8.12 nay it is the heaping up of a greater measure of condemnation to some through their own default Ioh. 15.22 Ioh. 9. ult Therefore let us not trust to lying words as they did crying the temple of the Lord the temple of the Lord neither let us cry the Gospell the Gospell and thrust our selves under the figge leaves of a bare profession of it but bring forth fruits worthy of the Gospell that it be not taken from us and given to another nation Why did the Gospell doe them no good Because it was not mixed with faith in them that heard it It is a metaphor borrowed from liquid things A physician prescribes to a man a cup of strong wine but he wills him to mingle it with Sugar lest it fume into his braine and make him sicke if he mingle it not and temper it wel with Sugar he hurts himself So because they mingled not the wine of the word with the sweet Sugar of faith it was their destruction it turned them over even into hell It is fayth that makes the word profitable For the procuring of an harvest it is not enough to have ground and seede cast into the ground but raine must fall from heaven and bee mingled with the ground So it is not sufficient to bring our selves as the ground to a Sermon to have the immortall seede of the word sowen in our hearts by GODS husbandmen but there must be the drops of faith mingled with this seede to make it fruitfull Noah preached to the old world yet they did not believe Lot to his Sonnes in Law but hee seemed to them as a mocker CHRIST to the Pharisees but they derided him Luk. 16.14 Let not us doe so but rather tremble at the threatnings believe the promises and
much questioning now who stands to day If such a one preach I will come to Church if such a one I will not stirre a foote out of doores for it There be diversities of gifts but heare all good Preachers for yee come not to heare man but God yee come to a sword and that a sharpe one Balaams Asse started at the Angels sword and shall not wee feare at Gods sword When that Parasite Damocles had the tyrant Dionysius sword hanging over his head he quaked and when we be at Sermons Gods sword hangs over our heads therefore let us heare with trembling Vpon whom shall my spirit rest Even on him that trembles at my word 2. Seeing it is such a mighty word let us take heede how wee jest with it Sundry there be that will make themselves merry with the Scriptures as they sit at table as they walke together and ride by the high way side they will snatch a sentence out of the Bible to exercise wit withall like Iulian that gave a Christian a boxe of eare and then bade him turne the other cheeke to take another for so scoffingly said he did your master CHRIST command you to doe it is ill jesting with edge tooles The word of God is a sharp toole sharper than any two edged sword therefore use it reverently in all your speeches make not your selves merry with that lest God make you sorry afterwards Will you jest with the writings of a King that learned King Iames whom the Lord in mercy set over us hath many excellent bookes in print dare any of you jest with a sentence taken out of them and shall we sport our selves with the sacred writings of the King of Kings Isack sported himselfe with Rebeccah his Wife God hath given thee many blessings a loving Wife besides many other earthly delights sport thy selfe with them after an holy and religious manner but sport not thy selfe with the Word of God if thou doest it will byte thee ere thou beest aware 3. This graphicall description of the Word of GOD should enflame us with a love of it it should cause us to preferre this above all other bookes in the world There is wit in Seneca Plutarch in Tully in Saint Aug. Chrys. Ierome Bernard yea many excellent pearles of learning to be found in them but not worthy to be named the same day with the Bible For there is an unspeakable Majesty in the Word of God to waken thee up being dull and drowsie to all good dutyes to comfort thee in all afflictions to make thee a new Creature in Christ Iesus Therefore Saint Augustine after he was converted professed of himselfe avidissimè arripui venerabilem stylum spiritus tui Aug. Conf. lib. 7. cap. 21. Illic potissimùm quaerenda est sapientia ubi staltitia titulus apparet Therefore let it be greedily affected by us all let us spend lesse time in other bookes and more in this 4. Seeing it is such a lively mighty and piercing Word let the Preachers especially propound this to the people they shall do more good with one sentence of Gods Word then with thousands of Poets and Philosophers c. those may delectare but these will inflammare did not our hearts burne within us when he expounded the Scripture by the way Those will tickle the eare but these will kindle a fire in the heart that cannot be quenched those will make the people to say of thee when they are gone a fine man hee hath a sweet and eloquent tongue but the proofes of Scripture will make them to say Oh mighty and powerfull man The Philosophers sayes Lactant. have many excellent precepts yet no pondus in them quia sunt humana authoritate majori i. divina curent therefore no man believes them quia tàm se hominem esse putat qui audivit quàm ille qui praecepit we cannot aliunde suadere de rebus fidei quàm ex literis fidei Tertul. At the Councell of Nice there was a Philosopher of singular note for learning that disputed with the Bishops there assembled about three hundred and eighteene he had so many cunning evasions that tanquàm anguis lubricus hee alwayes wound away At length an ancient man which was no Minister but a good professour takes him in hand he encounters with him only in the name of CHRIST and with the naked Word of God the Philosopher was overcome and yeelded the bucklers to him saying to his Schollers donec verbis mecum res gesta est verba verbis apposui ubi verò pro verbis virtus processit ex ore dicentis non potuerunt resistere verba virtuti nec homo adversari Deo Virtus crucifixi in Paulo fuit omnibus poetis philosophis rhetoribus potentior As David sayd of Goliahs sword may be sayd most truly of this there is none to the Word of God I will fight with that in every Sermon But what manner of Word is this that is so lively and mighty in operation Not the word that God speakes immediately with his owne mouth from Heaven as he thundered at the giving of the Law but the word that he speaketh by the mouth of his Embassadours Rom. 10.8 1 Cor. 1.21 1 Pet. 1.25 Though a weake man hath the handling of this sword yet because the Spirit of God striketh with it it will give a sound blow This word is a Discerner a Critick that judgeth soundly and narrowly as Aristarchus and Aristophanes leave nothing unsearched 1 Cor. 14.24 Luc. 2.35 As the Prophet Elisha revealed to the King of Israel whatsoever was done in the King of Syria his privie Chamber so the word of God doth discerne the most secret thoughts of our hearts the thoughts and intents of the heart that is The first conceptions which are as children of the mind the cogitations which delight and consent have apprehended and are ready to bring into practice The consideration hereof should cause us to have a reverent regard of the word of God and to stand in awe of it When ye come to a Sermon ye come to a diligent and narrow Searcher that can lay open all the secret sins that ye have committed your adulteries oppressions backbitings and slanderings thefts your beastly drinking in Tavernes and Alehouses Behold a man that hath told me all that ever I have done said the woman of Samaria and I say behold you are now hearing of that word that will tell you all that you have done You come to heare that which shall judge you at the latter day therefore heare not drowsily loosely carelesly negligently Take heed how you heare If it be not a sword to kill sin in you to mortifie the members of the old Adam in you it will be a sword to kill you everlastingly A strange thing there hath beene wonderfull plenty of preaching in this Land yet small profiting by it and why because wee have not the reverent estimation of the word of God
people the way to heaven to pray for the people in the congregation to carry their prayers to God to celebrate the Sacraments these be the lysts of the Minister The Magistrate hath his bounds and the Minister his Vzziah though a King must not meddle with the Priests office and Azariah the High Priest must not intrude himselfe into the Kings office yet that High Priest of Rome will have both swords hee will bee a Priest and a King too he will be for matters of the world as well as for GODS matters Boniface the eight shewed himselfe one day in the attyre of a Priest another day in the attyre of a Prince affirming that hee was both Bellarmine of late hath somewhat minced the matter that the Pope hath no power in temporall matters directè yet indirectè quoad bonum spirituale he may play Rex In respect of the spirituall good of the Church he may depose Princes at his pleasure and dispose of their kingdomes as pleaseth him So as a man get into an house it makes no great matter whether directly or indirectly and the Papists so as they may thrust the Pope into the possession of temporalities they care not whether directly or indirectly If one kill a man whether directly or indirectly all is one So as the Pope may play the butcher with Kings and Princes at his pleasure what availeth it whether directly or indirectly this is indirect dealing by an indirect distinction to breake downe the wall of partition that God Himselfe hath set up betweene the Priest and the Magistrate Every one shall finde enough to doe in his office and to guide his owne boate though he intermedle not in the office of the other and put his rudder into another mans boate Let the Magistrate look well to his temporall things and let the Minister keepe himselfe to his spirituall things they be both Gods deputies the one in things that belong to God the other in things that per●●ine to men Let them discharge their offices to Gods glory and the good of them that be committed to their charge He insisteth in one particular pertaining to GOD that he may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sinnes that is for the expiation of sinnes The Iesuits will have a perpetuall Priest-hood to be heere described and ordained in this place There must be Priests to the end of the world to offer sacrifice for sinne whereas it is as cleare as the noone day that this description is borrowed out of the law to set forth the spirituall Priest-hood of Christ withall The Apostle here teacheth us not what must be in the time of the Gospell but what was in the time of the law applying it to Christ. An externall sacrifice propitiatory for sin as they will have it is injurious to the blessed and perfect sacrifice which Christ offred on the Crosse for the sins of the world All outward sacrifices for sinne must now cease the bloud of Christ shed on the crosse having purged us from all sinne Yet the Ministers of the Gospell have now some sacrifices to offer up they bee either common with all Christians or proper to their ministerie 1. They must offer up themselves soules and bodies as an holy sacrifice to God as all Christians are bound to doe 2. They must bee plentifull in the workes of mercie to their power as other Christians are for with such sacrifices GOD is well pleased But there be other spirituall sacrifices that are also proper to them 1. To present the prayers of the people to God Ezra praised the great God of heaven and all the people said Amen So the Minister as the mouth of the congregation as a Spirituall Priest must offer up the prayers of the people to God and they in an holy zeale subscribe to him saying Amen Amen 2. We by the preaching of the Word doe sacrifice the people to God The Priests in the time of the law took a knife and cut the throat of a Calfe a Sheepe a Goat and so sacrificed them to the Lord. We by the sword of the Spirit cut the throat of sin of covetousnes pride malice uncleannes and so offer up the people as a glorious sacrifice to the Lord an odour that smelleth sweete Happy are they that bee sacrificed by the Ministers of the holy Word these sacrifices wee must offer to the end of the world and pray for us that we may offer them to Gods glory the comfort and salvation of you all VERSE 2. HE must not only execute his office but in such a manner as God requireth not in rigour and severity but in love kindnesse and compassion Which is illustrated by the persons on whom he must have compassion and the cause why If any sinne on ignorance or weakenesse hee must have compassion on them Such as are seduced by others and carryed out of the way what and if they sinne on knowledge Must they not be pittied Yes God forbid else but if they sin on malice against the knowne truth we must not so much as pray for them nor bee touched with any compassion towards them Pray not for this people neither lift up a cry for them There is a sinne unto death I doe not say that yee shall pray for it Saint Paul had no pitty on Alexander the Copper-Smith but prayed against him Otherwise if any of the people through infirmitie fall into a sinne if upon weakenesse of braine he be overcome with drinke if by the flattering entisements of the flesh he happen to be carryed into Adultery if hee bee somewhat too much in love with the world if he be a little tinckled with pride if he happen to be seduced by any Heretickes that come with a shew of Religion with faire and sugred words and so beguile him ere hee bee aware wee that be the Preachers of the Word must have compassion on such A Minister must not have an heart of flint but of oyle ready to melt at the consideration of the infirmities of the people and there is good cause why Because he himselfe is compassed with infirmities as they are as with a gowne that covers him from top to toe VERSE 3. ANd that he proveth by an evident signe A Minister is compassed with the same infirmities that the people are The Lycaonians would have sacrificed to St. Paul and Barnabas but they refused it O doe not so we are men of the like passions with you Cornelius fell downe at Saint Peters feet but hee tooke him up saying I my selfe also am a man Elias was a rare and admirable Prophet yet a man subject to like passions as we are Though we be never so wise learned or holy yet let the best Preachers in the world remember that they be men cloathed with the ragged Coate of infirmities as others bee Hence it is that Ministers yea famous Ministers doe often fall As Noah did into drunkennesse David into Adultery and murder Peter
sinnes of all the faithfull on him he feared the wrath of his Father yet without any diffidence or distrust He was in a wonderfull perplexity and perturbation as ever any was the power of the deity for a time suppressed thinking himselfe as it were forsaken of his Father God plucked him out of this feare sending an Angell to comfort him and strengthning him himselfe This is no disparagement to CHRIST because hee was a true man It is not in vaine to pray for God will heare us If not ad voluntatem yet ad utilitatem He doth not hearken so much to the externall cry of the throate for Esau cryed but obteined not the blessing Baals Priests cryed from morning to noone but were not heard he hearkens to the internall cryes of his Spirit in his Children 1 Ioh. 5.14 So he heard Anna Hezekiah David the Nine vites when they cryed unto him He heard Daniel Dan 9.23 and Cornelius prayers were in remembrance with God VERSE 8. THe second fruit is his learning by it 1. The Scholler 2. The Lesson 3. The Schoole-master Though he were a Son equall with his Father Phil. 2.6 by those his sufferings hee learned what obedience meant experimento didicit Cajetan hee felt by experience what it was to obey Christ learned as he was man as Luk. 2. ult Afflictions are very profitable for us It is good for me sayes the Psalm that I have beene afflicted that I might learne thy statutes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qua nocent docent In prosperity we are as Calves Oxen and fat Horses kicking against our master pursuing eagerly after the sinfull pleasures and profits of this world but aduersity makes us to retyre home to God and submit ourselves to him by unfained repentance in their affliction they will seeke me early When a Scholler in the Schoole is under the rod he will cease then to play rex he wil cry peccavi keep in his seat afterwards and apply himselfe to his booke So afflictions will make us to consider our wayes and apply our selves wholly to the obedience of Gods word and will VERSE 9. COnsecrate to God and approved of God Hebr. 2.10 Authour Good workes are the fruits of faith seales of our election and pledges of our salvation but Christ is the Authour Eternall Not as some that are saved from the Gallowes and after dye Vnto all To Lazarus and Abraham Iewes and Gentiles rich and poore c. Obey Not to those that talke of him nor heare him in the preaching of the Gospell as 2 Thes. 1.8 but to those that obey him Why doth hee not say to them that believe because obedience is the touchstone of faith As the tree is knowne by the fruits So faith by obedience As Christ obeyed Verse 8. So must we Our Saviour Christ is the Author of salvation not to all that talke of him c. It is a good thing to come to Church heare the Word receive the Sacraments c. Yet we must not set down our staffe here for if we will obtaine eternall salvation wee must obey him Every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall not enter into the kingdome of heaven but hee that doth the will of my Father Not the hearers of the law but the doers of it shall be justified Obedience is better than sacrifice As a Physition is the cause of health to those patients that will follow his directions and obey him So CHRIST is the Authour of salvation unto all those that obey him Let us examine our obedience Christ wils us to avoid sins that cause his Gospell to be ill spoken of by good workes to adorne it to stop the mouthes of the adversaries c. Doe we so doth not drunkennesse covetousnesse pride malice and uncleannes abound As they said and promised to Iosua So let us to Christ. Whatsoever thou commandest us we will doe and whither soever thou sendest us we will goe Doth Christ command us to abandon covetousnesse which is Idolatry and the roote of all evill then let us not be glewed to the world Doth he forbid us drunkennesse malice pride c. Let us have no fellowship with these unfruitfull workes of darkenesse but rather reproove them let us forsake father and mother c. and follow him for without obedience there is no salvation How must we obey him 1. Fully The young man in the Gospell most proudly vaunted that he had kept all the Commandements from his youth let us endeavour that wee may say so in truth and sincere heart and as Zachary and Elizabeth let us walke in all the Commandements and ordinances of the Lord blamelesse 2. Cheerefully GOD loves a cheerefull giver I was glad sayes the Psalm When they sayd let us goe up into the house of the Lord Psal. 122.1 3. Constantly A runner hath not the prize till hee come to the Gole A Taylour hath not his wages till the garment bee finished A Traveller hath not his money till he come to his journeys end Here we are as Children 1 Cor. 13. growing higher and higher in knowledge faith love obedience c. Let us hold out to the end running constantly in the way of obedience that we may have eternall salvation VERSE 10. COgnominatus That his sacrifice being finished he hath this glorious title given him of God Perfectly So we are called Priests now but then more justly offring the sacrifice of praise for ever Hitherto of the lawfulnesse of his Priest-hood Now he is to proceede to the excellency of his Priest-hood whereunto that he might the better stirre them up to attention he useth a new preface to prepare their hearts and mindes to it There be two lets that hinder him from an immediate proceeding to it The one in the matter to bee delivered the other in the persons to whom it is to bee delivered In the matter there bee too branches the multiplicity and the difficultie of it In the hearers there is dulnesse which is to bee removed proved by the effects They that have gone long to the Schoole and have profited but little are dull Schollers but yee have gone a long time to Schoole and profited but little which hee proveth first simply then comparatively They that must yet bee taught the principles of Religion have profited but little but you must yet bee taught the principles of Religion 2. They that stand in need of milke and are not capable of strong meat have made small growth in Christianity you neede milke Both the members are severally ratified in the next words by shewing to whom milke appertaineth and to whom strong meat appertaineth VERSE 11. OR in the Neuter Gender of the which thing of Christ being a Priest after the order of Melchizedec Much speech a long speech that can hardly bee shut up in a narrow roome it must have a large field to walke in Concerning the person of Melchizedec and of Christ too what manner of man Melchizedec was and why Christ
to the throne of grace with broken hearts and contrite spirits that so we may find favour in this life by Iesus Christ that came into the world to save sinners and eternall happinesse with him in the life to come Now followes the manner of the punishment and the guilt of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to their owne condemnation Rom. 2.5 But after thy hardnesse and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous Iudgement of GOD. There can bee no renewing but by the death of Christ now Christ dyed and was crucified once for all that believe and abide in him If any fall quite away from CHRIST they cannot bee renewed unlesse CHRIST bee crucified againe but that is impossible therefore the other That they should bee renewed to repentance They tread under foote the Sonne of God Hebr. 10.29 The greatest indignity that can be offered greater than to spit in a mans face The foot is the lowest member of the body they will have Christ the King of Kings under their feet the greatest contempt that can be before they had an honourable opinion of him that hee was the Sonne of God the Saviour of the world but now they count basely of him They count the bloud of the Testament a prophane thing what is the bloud of Christ shed on the Crosse the bloud of a malefactor is as good as that ô horrible blasphemy And despise all the graces of the spirit which they have received And put him to an open shame exemplificantes make a mocke Matth. 1.19 Then Ioseph her husband being a just man and not willing to make her a publike example as those that be made publike examples and pointed at by all exposing him to the reprochfull death of the Crosse on the which he was derided of all or CHRIST being once crucified and dead is made immortall and living for ever To crucifie him againe were to make him mortall againe which were an egregious mockerie Or they despise CHRIST once crucified and would faine have him to be crucified for them againe which is to make a mock of him Or it may be a reason drawne from the malice of men seeing they are so spitefully set against Christ as that they could finde in their hearts to crucifie him againe if it lay in their power and so to make him a mocking-stocke to all the world accounting the crucifying of CHRIST to bee but a ridiculous thing to make sport withall of no moment to life eternall therefore it is impossible they should bee restored As much as lyeth in them they crucifie the Sonne of GOD and make a mocke of Him which are such horrible sinnes as that GOD cannot in justice give them Repentance for them Now he describeth them that sin against the Holy Ghost comparatively hee sets them out by a lively similitude taken from the earth As the earth that is painefully tilled and hath plentifull raine powred downe on it and yet for all that instead of good fruit bringeth forth pricking thornes and scratching brambles is good for nothing but to be burnt So those men who having bin washed with many sweete showres of the Word of God and enriched with diverse excellent graces yet prooving pricking thornes in the end hurtfull to men and God too they are good for nothing but to burne in hell fire for evermore Before he comes directly to this lamentable end of the reprobates he doth illustrate it by a comfortable Antithesis in the good and godly which might provoke them with all cheerefulnesse to contend to perfection in Religion VERSE 7. THe Protasis only is set downe the Apodosis is to bee supplyed 1. For the Protasis The earth which is apparant to us all none can be ignorant of it As a thirsty man taketh in drink which is dispersed into his bowels So doth the drie and thirsty earth the raine she takes it and conveys it into her bowels It comes into the earth but because it must come upon it before it can come into it therefore the HOLY GHOST useth that phrase not seldome but often God being bountifull to the earth to send it much raine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bringeth forth as a mother her Children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by a Synecdoche is put for all the fruits of the earth because the herbe is one of the first fruits that it bringeth forth Not onely herbes but trees and all kinde of corne for hee speakes of such an earth which is tilled whereas herbes spring up without tillage What manner of fruit Which doth benè reponere gratiam requites the cost and charges which the dressers have bestowed on it Receiveth blessing from God without whose blessing the earth would be as brasse and yron for all the labour of the husbandman As such an earth is blessed of God God blesseth it with a rich and plentifull harvest to the joy and comfort of men so is it with all those that profit by the Word of God For a more particular opening of every branch in the similitude The earth is every Christian man and woman in the lap of the Church Man was taken out of the earth and therefore may fitly bee resembled to the earth bad hearers are called bad ground and good hearers good ground Luke 8. verse 15. The raine that falls upon it is the Word of GOD Deuteronomie 32. ver 2. Isaiah 55. ver 10. 1. Raine comes downe from heaven So the word 2. Raine comes down to us by the clouds So the Word by the Preachers 3. Raine refresheth the earth So the Word our soules 4. Raine never returnes in vaine So the Word accomplishes that which the Lord pleases and prospers in the thing whereunto he sends it it never returnes voyd either we are the better or the worser by it through our owne fault The fruits that they bring forth is increase of knowledge and of all vertues The dressers of this ground are God and the Ministers Ioh. 15.1 1 Cor. 3.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The blessing that good hearers receive is a further increase of all graces in this life to him that hath shall be given c. Mat. 13.8 and eternall blessednesse in the life to come Blessed are they that heare the Word of God and keepe it 1. All people are as the ground that stand in need of the Raine of the Word of God the earth must have Raine all the yeare long more or lesse else it dryeth and withereth away So doe we if wee want the Raine of the Word In what a miserable case were they in Israel when there fell no raine by the space of three yeeres and sixe moneths and in what a pittifull taking are those townes and countries though they feele it not which want the Raine of the Word of GOD You that have it be thankfull to God for it and learne to esteeme more highly of this blessing than ye doe If it raine on your wheat
who thus professeth of himselfe I was a blasphemer a persequutor and injurious but I did it ignorantly and therefore hee sinned not against the Holy Ghost If they do it on weaknes as St. Peter did who cursed and swore he knew not Christ it is a grievous sinne yet not the sinne against the Holy Ghost An Eunomian or Macedonian that deny the deity of the Holy Ghost may repent and be received into mercy Sabelliani or Patripussiani that oppugne his person may also repent and bee forgiven but if they doe it on malice then they commit that sinne that cannot bee forgiven in this world nor that which is to come these bee the thornes and bryars which the Apostle pointeth out in this place Such a cursed earth bringing forth thornes and bryars were some of the Pharisees they could say of CHRIST this is the heyre yet they said let us kill him Such a thorne was Alexander the copper-smith which resisted Saint Pauls preaching very soare hee set his feet against Saint Pauls feete hee resisted not his person but his preaching not sleightly but vehemently with might and maine Such a thorne was Iulian sirnamed the Apostata that fell quite away hee was baptized into the name of Christ hee was a professour of the Gospell and that a zealous one as it seemeth he was a publike Reader in the Church of Nicomedia who so forward as he yet afterwards hee proved a vile pricking thorne hee washed away baptisme with bloud in contempt of it he abjured Christ and sacrificed to the Gods of the Gentiles he scoffed at Christianity mocking them that would believe in a crucified God If they came to have wrongs righted he sent them away with a flouting speech why your Master bids you put up wrongs turne the other check when you be smitten To the last gaspe he spewed out his malice against Christ taking the arrow out of his side that gave him his deaths wound he tooke the bloud into his hand hurled it up into the ayre crying v●cisti Galilaee he was but a plaine Galilean with him to the end These be the speciall thornes that the Scripture speaketh of in this place whose end is to burne in hell for evermore O cursed ground that hath the raine of the Word of God falling on it and yet bringeth forth such thornes The Lord grant that we bee never such ground For the preventing of it let us bring forth good fruit answerable to the raine that falleth on us let us take heed of the staires that may carry us headlong into the sinne against the Holy Ghost let us not bee patrons and defenders of bad men and evill actions against the light of our conscience that is a step to this fearefull sin Let us beware how on any sinister affection we oppose our selves to the preachers of Gods Word The Devill by little and little may cause us to set our selves against the Word of God it selfe Let us not carelesly neglect or any way contemne those heavenly points of doctrine that are delivered to us As we have the raine of the Word of God in great plentie among us so let us bring forth fruits in some measure worthy of it that we may not only escape the fire where these thornes burne but may bee received into GOD his kingdome there to reigne with him in eternall happinesse for evermore VERSE 9. NOw least they should imagine that they are the men hee shewes that they are perswaded better of them that they are the elect Children of GOD and shall bee eternallie saved Here is 1. The substance of the perswasion 2. The foundation on which it is builded In the former 1. The matter of it 2. A qualification of it by the mitigation of the harshnesse of his former speech that is a fearefull piece of earth which thou hast mentioned that brings forth bryars and thornes c. doest thou take us to be such a ground No sayes he be it farre from us we have a better perswasion of you Beloved of God and us too He winds himselfe into them by a kinde appellation of them Hee doth not say wee expect better things from you wee are in good hope you will prove better than thus or the like but we are perswaded and nothing can remove us from this perswasion wee take you to bee other manner of men farre different from the former The things that bee in them are starke naught but wee perswade our selves most excellent things of you They are reprobates but we are perswaded that you are the elect Children of God This is a goodly commendation may some say as if a man seeing a company going to execution should say to one that stands by him I am perswaded that thou art a better man then these I but this is a good perswasion there are but two sorts of people godly and wicked reprobates now being perswaded that they are better then the reprobate he is perswaded they be elect and what greater perswasion can there be then that therefore hee addeth such things as accompany salvation Saint Augustine reades it cohaerentia saluti ad Crescen Such as have salvation we are perswaded you are in the number of them that shall be saved 1. His perswasion is propounded then strengthened against that which might seeme to overthrow it Though we have somwhat sharpely chidden you and introduced a fearefull example of vile and wicked apostates a father may set before the eyes of his child thieves murderers drunkards blasphemers and yet be perswaded that his child is none of them only he doth it to warne him not to treade in their steps so as a loving Father I have told you of these men yet I am perswaded better if you A Preacher must not alwayes be inveighing against the faults weaknesses and imperfections that bee among the people hee must sometimes speak kindly and lovingly to them manifesting the good opinion he hath of them they are the fathers of the people they must bee wise and discreet fathers they must neither bee like to David that never reproved Adonijah and said to him why doest thou so neither like the contentious woman in the Proverbs as the continuall droppings of the raine ever scolding with the people they must play the part of the Samaritane that after Wine which made the wound to smart powred in oyle for the suppling of it So wee must sometimes come with the sharpe wine of reprehension sometimes againe with the oyle of consolation Before Saint Paul came with salt and vinegar when hee spake of the reprobate earth now hee comes with hony and sugar but we are perswaded better things of you Generosus animus magis ducitur quàm trahitur sweet and comfortable words will prevaile more with some then rough and hard speeches both in wisedome must be used by Gods steward severity and lenitie must be tempered together if by any meanes we may save the people committed to our charge Before Saint Paul like
God and one another in love in some calling or other The eye serveth one way for the benefit of the body the eare another way the hand another way and the foote the lowest part of the body serves too the service whereof is so necessary as that the body cannot be without it We may serve God to his glory and our owne comfort in the meanest calling that is and let us all so serve him in our severall places in this world that wee may raigne with him in the world to come The Apostle doth not say whereof no man ruled at the Altar It cannot bee denyed but that Ministers in some sort are rulers of the people obey them that have the oversight of you in the Lord yet our office must not puffe us up with pride we must remember it is a service yea a painefull and an honourable service He that desireth the office of a Bishop desireth a worthy worke on us rather than honos prodesse rather than praesse 2 Cor. 4.5 Our selves your servants for CHRIST 's sake Yet it is not a base service as some imagine and in reproch they will say of a Minister hee serves at such a towne Wee grant we are servants yet in an high and honourable place we serve in the Church the house of God as stewards do in a Noble mans house we dispense to you the foode of life Therefore as all the household honours the steward so ought all the parish to honour the Minister VERSE 14. TO put it out of all doubt hee sheweth to what Tribe this Priest appertaineth he proves it by the common voice and testimony of all it is a cleere case all confesse it Of whom it is said the Lord said to my Lord sit thou on my right hand c. As the Sunne dispelling the clouds and darknesse of the night riseth in the morning and scattereth his beames over all the world So the Sonne of righteousnesse rose dispelling the foggie mists of the ceremoniall law and spreading the light of the Gospell over all the world Iudah both on his supposed fathers side Luk. 2.4 and on his mothers side Luk. 1.27 It seemes that Christ pertained to the Tribe of Levi too 1. Elizabeth was Maries Couzin she was Wife to Zacharie which was of the Tribe of Levi now they were to marry in their owne Tribes Sol They of the Tribe of Levi might take Wives out of other Tribes so as the inheritance were not transported out of the Tribe as 2 Chron. 22.11 yet the men not the women gave the denomination of the Tribe and the child was not said to be of that Tribe whereof his mother was but whereof his father was 2. Nathan was of the Tribe of Levi yet Christ came of him Luk. 3.31 It was not Nathan the Prophet but one of David's sonnes of that name 2 Sam. 5.14 It is manifest Christ was of the Tribe of Iudah the Sonne of David concerning which Moses Gods Scribe and Pen-man of that that was deputed to the Priest hood The Tribe is changed ergo the Priest-hood It pleased CHRIST to come of the Tribe of Iudah not for any holinesse that was in Iudah above the rest of the twelve Patriarchs Iudah himselfe committed incest with his daughter though unknowne to him at the least hee tooke her to be an Whore and lay with her but our Saviour made choice of this Tribe of his owne gracious goodnesse Though CHRIST descended of the Tribe of Iudah yet all of that Tribe were not sayed There are seald as many thousands of all other Tribes as of that and of that Tribe as Kings and others are noted to be wicked men Therefore wee must not flatter our selves in any outward prerogatives as the Papists doe They have a part of the coate wherein Christ went to be crucified some of the nailes wherewith hee was fastned to the Crosse they make pilgrimages to the Sepulchre of Christ c. All these are nothing to salvation Though thou couldest derive thy generation from Christ according to the flesh though thou haddest beene one of Christs brethren if possible lien in the same wombe yet that makes thee not the neerer to the kingdome of heaven Lay hold on Christ with a lively faith labour to say with Paul I live and yet not I but the Son of God liveth in mee then thou shalt be eternally saved Our LORD CHRIST is often honoured in Scripture with this title it may worthily bee adscribed to him He created us of nothing preserveth and upholdeth us being created hee bought us with his precious bloud when we were worse than nothing therefore justly is he our Lord. This we confesse in our Creede And in Iesus Christ our Lord this we professe in our prayers which end thus through Iesus Christ our Lord. Yet we use him not as our Lord yee call mee Master and Lord and yee doe well but then yee ought to behave your selves as dutifull and obedient servants to me Servants goe and come at the commandement of their Lord. I have servants under me sayes the Centurion I say to one goe and he goeth doe this and he doth it Doe we deale so with Christ our Lord hee sayes come not at the Ale-house there to sit quaffing and swilling till reason be buried in you yet we will be as drunken as Apes as wee use to speake Our Lord sayes your bodies are mine they bee my members and the temples of the Holy Ghost doe not prostitute them to Whores and Harlots yet we will do it Our Lord sayes one thing is necessary preferre the hearing of my Word before all worldly businesses yet if there be a Sermon in the Towne and a paltry faire a little from the Towne we will preferre the faire before the Sermon Christ shall speake to the walls for all us Our Lord sayes use my name reverently in all your talke yet we will make it as common as a Tennis ball and sweare by God and Christ at every word Is this to call Christ Lord Christ hath the name of our Lord and the Devill hath our service what a monstrous thing is this As in word we call Christ Lord so let our deeds shew us to be his servants we are bought with a price wee are not our owne but Iesus Christs therefore let us glorifie him in our Spirits and bodies which be his VERSE 15. THe second Argument is taken from the discrepant creation of Priests he that is made a Priest after an heavenly and Spirituall manner is greater then they that are made after an earthly and carnall manner our Saviour Christ is made after an heavenly and Spirituall manner they after an earthly and carnall manner therefore he is greater then they Hee makes an entrance into it by the cleerenesse and evidencie of the case More abundantly evident that the Leviticall Priesthood is gone and the Priesthood of Christ is come into the roome of it If after but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is
of the Old Testament and shewing the defects of it he said to them The dayes come namely at Christ's comming in the flesh and at the revelation of the Gospell I will make when I will perfect or consummate whereas it is in the Hebrew Caratti pangam A new covenant This is more effectuall that was but an imperfect covenant this shall be a perfect and a full one With the house of Israel upon the house of Israel this shall rest upon them whereas the other passed from them And the house of Iudah These two houses bee now rent one from another but by this covenant I will unite and conjoyne them Some by the house of Israel understand the Gentiles by the house of Iudah the Iewes The New covenant is more sweete and comfortable than the Old As God promised so he performed He is not as man that He should lye nor as the Sonne of man that He should repent Men say and unsay they promise mountaines and scant performe molehills but God will ever be as good as his word as hee promised to make this New Testament so indeed he did VERSE 9. THe New Covenant is described two kinde of wayes 1. What it is not 2. What it is It is not like the Old Testament where there is a threefold dissimilitude betweene them 1. In respect of the Persons that was made with their fathers in the time of the Law this shall bee made with their posterity in the time of the Gospell 2. In respect of the time that was made at their delivery out of Aegypt when the Law was given by Moses this at their delivery out of the spirituall Aegypt by Christ. This was not the same day they came out of Aegypt for the Law was not given till so many dayes after but day is put for time That deliverance is amplified by the Author and the manner how The Author was God the manner was kinde loving and carefull as a father taketh his Child by the hand least he should fall or miscarry by the way 3. By an effect that ensued on the imbecillity of the covenant it was broken because of the hardnesse of it In the Hebrew it is which they brake St. Paul followes the Septuagint the sence is all one One condition of the covenant was that they should continue in obedience to me but they did not therefore that covenant being broken it was time for a new to come let us pray to God for grace to continue in that which we promised in baptisme And I regarded them not whereupon he was even with them they cast off Him and he cast off them The Greeke here is much different from the Hebrew but if the Hebrew words bee read with an interrogation the sense of the Greeke agrees well with them And should I bee still as an Husband to them they have played the Harlot and broken the covenant on their part and shall I stand to the covenant shall I bee as an Husband to them when as they are no Wife to me Nay I will set them as light as they doe me I regard them not I cast off the care of them Though the words differ the sense is all one therefore that must be no stone for us to stumble at Hebrew Et ego dominabar in eis I shewed my selfe to be their Lord and master in punishing them which is the right of Masters to doe Properly to speake God hath no hand to take us by but this is spoken metaphorically for our comfort As if the child bee fallen into a ditch the father in kindnesse takes him by the hand and pulls him out so deales our heavenly father with us who is farre more mercifull than earthly parents can bee to their Children The incomprehensible love of God towards us is set forth by diverse similitudes in Scripture Sometimes he is compared to an Eagle that fluttereth over her birds and preserveth them from all dangers sometimes to an Henne gathering us as Chickens under his wing Sometimes to a father as in this place and many others In all calamities he takes us by the hand and leads us out Hee hath not only committed us to the Angels hands as Psal. 91. and the Angell tooke Lot by the hand and brought him out of Sodom but hee gives us his owne hand If the King should take us by the hand when we are in any distresse it would greatly cheere us The King of Kings whose power none can resist takes us by the hand in all our miseries Let that bee a staffe of comfort for us to leane upon As hee tooke the Israelites by the hand and lead them out of Aegypt So though wee cannot see it with our bodily eyes hee takes us by the hand in all miseries If men should be in prison for righteousnesse sake as Ioseph was till the iron entred into his soule God at the length takes us by the hand and pulls us out If we be in poverty ready to starve as Elias was under the Iuniper tree God takes us by the hand of his mercy by some meanes or other and helpes us out If we be in banishment as the Israelites in Babylon and as many of our Country men were in Queene Maries dayes God takes us by the hand and brings us out If we be in some terrible and dangerous sicknesse as Hezekiah was even at the point of death God takes us by the hand and pulls us out of it If we bee on the Sea ready to be drowned as the Disciples were God takes us by the hand and delivers us out of the raging tempest O singular comfort that we have such a friend as God Almighty is Hee takes us by the hand in all calamities Let him have our hand and heart too Let us be carefull to please him all the dayes of our life He doth not say they never begun to keep my Testament but they continued not in my covenant It is like they made many faire beginnings were very forward at the first but they shrunk in the wetting and continued not Therefore God shooke them off Yee are they that continued with mee in my temptations Be faithfull to the end c. I will runne the way of thy Commandements to the end said David Let us not run apace for a while but let us hold out running to the end else we shall misse of the gold of eternall life Remember Lots Wife she went out of Sodom but because she looked backe she was turned into a pillar of Salt Let us not turne out of the way of Gods Commandements but continue in his covenant else hee will cast us off Now of our selves we have no power to continue no more than we had to begin Let us entreat him that hath begun a good worke in us to finish it to the day of Christ. Many flatter themselves in Gods mercies ô God is mercifull though we sin he will not punish us he will wink at our iniquities therefore we need
speaketh to us by whom hee revealeth the knowledge of his Majesty to us Christ knew there should be plentie of knowledge at his comming yet he bade his Apostles goe and teach all nations The Lord opened the heart of Lydia yet it was by Saint Pauls preaching the Lord catechized the Eunuch yet it was by Saint Philip the Lord added three thousand soules to the Church yet it was by Saint Peter How can they heare without a Preacher These be the Schoole-masters by whom God teacheth us to the end of the world The head Master of a Schoole doth not take away the Vshers Saint Augustine tract 3. in 1. Iohann Si unctio docet de omnibus nos sine causa laboramus Let us put you all over to the annointing then they might reply why doest thou write this Epistle to us why doest thou teach us nos extrinsecus admonemus magister intùs est qui docet Matth. 23.8 Nos abusivè magistri appellamur Neither doth hee send downe the HOLY GHOST on them in the similitude of cloven tongues as he did on the Apostles at the beginning they must be brought up in Schooles and Vniversities to attaine to the knowledge of the tongues and the right interpretation of the Scripture Paul mentions it as a blessing that he was brought up at the feete of Gamaleel hee disputed in the Schoole of Tyrannus but hee never wished the Schoole of Tyrannus to be pulled downe This doth declare to us the wonderfull abundance of knowledge that shall bee in the time of the Gospell above that which was in the time of the Law yet there bee a number of ignorant persons in the lap of the Church like them that knew not whether there was an Holy Ghost or no They have a confused knowledge of God but they doe not know him so distinctly in CHRIST as they ought to doe they have the more to answer for that living in so great light are still overwhelmed with darkenesse like to Tantalus up to the chin in water and yet drie like carelesse and negligent Schollers that have beene long at Schoole and learn't nothing the fault is not in God who gives them the meanes but in themselves that neglect the meanes 2. As wee have greater knowledge so greater obedience is required of us The servant that knowes his masters will and doth it not shall bee beaten with many stripes Wee know much and practise little therefore our condemnation shall bee the greater at the latter day VERSE 12. THe third branch of the new covenant is remission of sins In sence it agreeth with the Hebrew only the Apostle following the seventie hath for our further comfort enlarged it by the addition of one clause which is not in the Hebrew The first part of Verse is not in the Hebrew In my Sonne CHRIST IESUS I will be mercifull to their unjust and unrighteous dealings to all the injuries they have offered me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faults in manners when as we swarve from the marke of the Law of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in generall signifies all transgressions of the Law He useth many words to signifie to us that all our sinnes by what names soever they be called are forgiven us In acquittances we use to put in words enow for the declaration of a full discharge So doth the Lord when he acquitteth us of all our sinnes whether they be unrighteousnesse slips or violations of the Law they bee all forgiven hee professeth hee will remember them no more hee will cast them behinde his backe rase them out of the booke of his remembrance If wee minde to be revenged of a man wee say well I will remember thee I will one day pay thee home for it but God will not so much as remember our sinnes Oh blessed thing The just man falls seven times a day yet GOD will not remember his falls Hee remembred the sin of Amalek and of some hee sayes their sins shall be written with a penne of a diamond and sealed up in a bagge but he will keepe no register of our sins they shall bee quite forgotten Hee doth not say because they by their workes of penance have made satisfaction to my justice for their sinnes therefore I will remit them I will doe it of my sole mercy and goodnesse for my owne sake c. Object Was he not mercifull to the sinnes of the people in the time of the Law Sol. The forgivenesse of sins is now more cleerely manifested to us To them it was shadowed out by sacrifices and washings but now the Lamb is come offered on the Crosse whose bloud purgeth us from all sin This is a comfortable covenant the heavenly triacle and hony of the soule Our sins are innumerable besides our blasphemies besides the abhominable drunkennesse and whoredome that is amongst us our greedy scraping in the dunghill of the earth seldome or never lifting up our hearts to heaven wee sin daily in our best actions we sin in preaching of the Word for who preaches with such wisedome sincerity and zeale as he ought to doe wee sin in hearing our mindes oftentimes are on wooll-gathering our bodies in the Church our hearts on our Sheep and Oxen we heare more like Iudges to censure Gods Ambassadour than as Schollers to learne of him wee sinne in praying no sighes no groanes no fervency in our prayers no Amen at the end of them wee sin in giving of our almes wee give rather for vaine glory then for Gods glory we sin in our dayly talke and conferences one with another in them we seeke the ostentation of our own witte and learning not the edification one of another Who can cleere himselfe of pride wee are proud of our wit wealth beauty learning yea some are proud of nothing Good Lord then if God should call us into the counting house for our sins alas what shall we doe we cannot answer him one for a thousand and the least sinne deserves eternall death Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy thought if one evill thought remaine unforgiven we are in a miserable case Against all these let us hold up the buckler of this new covenant of the remission of our sinnes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sins are bitter accusers In what a pittifull case was Caine who said my sinne is greater than can bee forgiven what a howling kept Iudas O I have sinned in betraying innocent bloud what makes men to hang themselves as Achitophel did to drowne themselves to lay violent hands on themselves save that they cannot be perswaded of the forgivenesse of their sins Therefore let us blesse God for this covenant and let us entreat him to seale in our hearts a comfortable perswasion of the remission of our sinnes dayly more and more VERSE 13. HEre followes a collection inferred on the former testimony which he gathereth out of the word new it hath his force from the contraries New and Old cannot stand together
hath borne the sinnes of us all therefore let us not feare death 2. It is but a sleepe Lord if hee sleepe then shall hee doe well enough Men are refreshed after sleepe so we after death Apoc. 3.14 13. There bee two benefits which wee shall receive by death 1. Wee shall rest from our labours Here wee are like Noahs Dove wee can finde no rest either day or night wee shall rest from the workes of our calling Now indeed wee are early up in the morning sit up late at night and eate the bread of carefulnesse all the day long but then wee shall rest from that toiling and moiling wee shall rest from the workes of piety and Religion All that wee shall doe then will bee to sing Hallelujahs to our blessed redeemer Wee shall rest from sinne wee shall no longer cry out like tyred Porters Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver mee from this body of death We shall rest from all miseries and sicknesses cry out no more my head my head nor complaine of troubles in our selves Wives Children or servants Wee shall rest from weaknesses and infirmities Now wee eate drinke sleepe c. but then wee shall eate of the tree of life which is in the midst of the Paradise of God and never hunger or thirst any more 2. Their workes follow them our labour is not in vaine in the Lord. The almes of Cornelius the garments of Dorcas the Centurions Synagogue a Cup of cold water given in CHRIST 's name shall be rewarded so that we may sing like a Swanne before our death as St. Paul did 2 Tim. 4.8 henceforth there is layd up for mee a Crowne of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Iudge shall give mee at that day and not to me only but unto them also that love his appearing 4. Comfort against death is a glorious resurrection Iob 19.25 26.27 Phil. 3. Christ's glorious body Our bodies putrifie in the earth yet there is not an end of them We have praeludia in the Old and New Testament the Widow of Sareptas Son raysed up by Elias the Sonne of the Shunamitish Woman by Elisha In the New Testament Christ raised up three the one in domo Iairus daughter the other in feretro on the Beare the Widdowes Sonne of Naim the third in Sepulchro that was Lazarus which had lyen foure dayes and began to stincke all which are pledges of our resurrection The same God that raised them up will raise us up at the last day Death goes not alone there is one that followes her and that is judgement Iudgement either of absolution for the godly come yee blessed of my Father or of condemnation for the wicked goe yee cursed into c. If there were no judgement after death the godly of all others were most miserable and if no judgement the ungodly were the happiest men But let us know that after death comes a judgement one way or other salvation or damnation We must all appeare before the judgment seate of Christ c. The drunkard must give an account of his drunkennesse the covetous man how he hath imployed his riches we must give an account of our oppressions thefts secret or open of our negligent comming to Church and contempt of the Word of God Let this cause us with a narrow eye to looke into our lives let us judge our selves in this world that wee bee not condemned hereafter Yet there bee a number in the Church that thinke it a scare Crow and make a mocke at this judgement as the Athenians did at the resurrection Acts 17.32 they will believe the Assizes at Bury and in other places but count this a tale of a tub Felix though a wicked man trembled at it Let us all tremble at the naming of this judgement Let it be a meanes to pull us from sin and to make our peace with God in this world that we may stand without trembling before the Sonne of man Iudgment followes upon the neck of death either come thou blessed or goe thou cursed The good thiefe the same day he dyed was with Christ in Paradise that was his judgment the rich man the same day he dyed was in hell in torments that was his judgement Wherefore whilest wee have time let us repent while God giveth us a breathing time on the face of the earth for when death commeth it is too late then there is no mercy but judgement to be expected While we be alive Christ knocketh at the doore of our hearts with the hammer of his Word if we will open to him he will sup with us and we shall sup with him in the kingdome of glory but if now we shut him out and will not suffer him to enter he will shut us out and though we cry Lord Lord with the foolish Virgins he will not open to us VERSE 28. AT the which offering he dyed To take away not existentiam peccati but reatum dominium paenam Of many Matth. 26.28 he dyed for all sufficienter What is CHRIST dead and gone then wee shall never see him againe Yes he shall appeare in the heavens with his mighty Angels Without sinne Why the first time he appeared without sinne for He knew no sinne I but then hee came with his fraile body to offer up for sinne Verse 26. Now he shall appeare with no more sacrifice for sinne Then he came as a Lamb to be slaine for sin now as a King and a Lion Then he came as a Priest with a sacrifice to offer now as a Iudge to sit on the Throne To the salvation of the godly but to the damnation of wicked and reprobate men Here is another argument against the Masse Men may as well dye often ordinarily as Christ be offered up often As this is an unmoveable truth that a man ordinarily dies but once So this is a firme position in Divinity that CHRIST can be but once offered properly But to whom shall the day of Iudgement be comfortable to them that are weary of the loade of sin and looke for their deliverer Phil. 3.20 Tit. 2.13 2 Pet. 3.12 The mother of Sisera looked out at a window for the comming of her Sonne So we the spirituall mother brethren and sisters of Christ must looke out at the window of our hearts for him A Woman lookes for her Husband and we look to our money our Sheepe and Oxen but we looke not for Christ. It is to be feared if he were a comming we would entreat him to tarry still and say with the devills why art thou come to torment us before the time hee is our deliverer let us looke for him as faithfull servants for their masters and say come LORD IESU come quickly The second comming of CHRIST is here notably described 1. He shall come potenter because it is said he shall appeare 2. Innocenter without sinne 3. Finaliter to them that looke for him 4. Vtiliter to salvation He
adversitie and prosperity too Though wee bee not thrust out of our houses spoyled of our goods banished the Country clapt up into prison carryed to the stake for the profession of the Gospell yet if wee belong to CHRIST wee shall alwayes have our Crosses All that will live godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persequution If any will be my Disciple let him take up his Crosse. God will exercise us one way or other either he will send us sicknesse or stirre up some rayling Shimeis against us he will evermore be trying of our faith Therefore we have need of patience It is as needfull as our meat and drinke Patience is the foode and nourishment of the soule Therefore the Lord in mercy give patience to us all From hence some conclude that good workes are necessary to salvation Patience is a good worke The Apostle avouches that it is necessary not only ratione praesentiae being good workes they cannot bee separated from faith sed ratione relationis ad salutem for here hee doth not simply say that patience is necessary but with a reference to eternall life that yee might receive the promise Wee grant good workes are necessary to salvation none can be saved without them but how not as meritorious causes of salvation that is CHRIST alone which hath purchased heaven for us with his owne bloud but necessary as fruit for a tree and the way for a passenger to goe by to his house and Country Good workes are the way to heaven and so necessary for us all to walke in In that respect we have need of patience of vertues and good workes VERSE 37. HEre is a remedy against impatiencie taken from the shortnes of the time wherein we are to suffer Thou callest for patience thou wouldest have us to be patient in our afflictions but how long shall we continue in them To that he answers parvum quàm quàm the ingemination of the word augmenteth the signification of it as Toboth Toboth Raagnoth Raagnoth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee that is the Lord Iesus Christ and deliver you out of all your miseries I he will come but it may be long first Nay he will make no tarrying If wee bee in any kinde of affliction wee thinke the time long though it be never so short As the Saints in the Apoc. 6.10 cry how long Lord So if wee be sicke we say how long Lord how long will it be ere this sicknesse be removed from me how long shall we endure the taunts of the wicked how long shall Christians in some Countries suffer banishment imprisonment losse of goods how long shall the Devill and his instruments tyrannize over them but a very little while even the turning of an hand the twinckling of an eye in respect of eternity What is tenne or twenty yeeres calamity if it should be so long What is thirtie eight or fortie yeeres as Ioh. 5. a man was so long diseased in his feete what is this to life everlasting who would not fight a while that he might have the victorie who would not take physike a while that he might be whole our light affliction which is but for a moment causeth unto us a farre most excellent and an eternall waight of glory Therefore let the shortnesse of our suffering comfort us hee that should come will come in his due and convenient time GOD comes to deliver us three kinde of wayes 1. By plucking us out of the temptations in this world as hee did Saint Paul out of the mouth of the Lion the Emperour of Rome 2. By our particular death he takes us out of the world by death and then there is an end of all our sorrow 3. By his comming at the generall judgement that is not long behold I come quickly Then shall we both in our bodies and soules in heaven where all teares shall be wiped from our eyes for ever Let us be of good comfort yet a very little while and the Lord will come graciously to us one way or other VERSE 38. THe second pillar for sustaining them in afflictions is Faith Where 1. The excellency of Faith 2. The application of it Verse 39. The excellency is 1. Set downe then illustrated Beemunatho Every man must live by his owne faith he cannot live by the faith of another In the Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by my faith that is by faith in me which is all one Here we see whereby a Christian lives not by the ayre as Camelions doe not by love as we use to say not simply by his meat and drinke by that indeed through Gods blessing the body liveth but the soule lives by faith Gal. 2.20 and they that want faith are dead even while they live as Saint Paul speaketh of the widdow A just holy and righteous man lives by faith I know whom I have believed Wee know what joy is laid up for us in heaven therefore we beare patiently all the afflictions of this present life We doe not only live by faith at our first conversion and justification as Saint Paul disputeth in his Epistle to the Romans but all the dayes of our life we live by faith Therefore let us entreat the Lord to encrease our faith that in all calamities we may live by it in this world and live without it in his kingdome in the world to come This is illustrated by the contrary but if any withdraw himselfe my soule shall have no pleasure in him So the Seventy have it The Hebrew in words is much different from it yet in sence they are all one Gnuphlah hee makes himselfe a tower whose heart is not upright in him He trusts to himselfe not to God that is he withdraweth himselfe from the Lord and if his heart bee not upright in him then God hath no pleasure in him But wee need not busie our selves in the reconciling of these places for Saint Paul doth not of purpose alleadge it as the Prophets testimony but only useth the words of the Scripture in them to commend faith to them If any with-draw himselfe by infidelity and thinke it a better course to sleepe in an whole skinne then to suffer any thing for Christ and his Gospell My soule Either it may be spoken in the person of the Apostle or in the person of GOD neither any good Christian nor GOD Himselfe will take any pleasure in such a one but hee is rather detested of God and man therefore let us live by faith and not withdraw our selves by infidelity VERSE 39. THen followes an application of it to the Hebrewes which is partly negative partly affirmative Though I have spoken of some unfaithfull persons that with-draw themselves or depart from the living God yet I would not have you imagine that I meane you that I put you into that black bill nay you are of another stamp you are birds of another feather yea he includes himselfe in their number that they might conceive the
better of it to be coupled in the same yoke with him 1. He tells them what they are not Wee are not of the withdrawing Either the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be supplyed after the manner of the Grecians or the noune 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the custome of the Hebrewes we are not the Children of the withdrawing to the destruction of our soules but we are the Children of faith to the conservation of our soules in this Sea of miseries wherein we are tossed 1. Here wee learne that when the Preacher hath occasion to terrifie the wicked hee must comfort the godly least they take it to themselves and bee discouraged So Hebr. 6.9 1 Thes. 5.4 2 Thes. 2.13 Many weake consciences are soone cast downe and ready to apply that to them which the Preacher never meant of them therefore we must use this wise and heavenly discretion that the Apostle doth 2. Here we see that good Christians must be no withdrawers of themselves Wee must withdraw our selves from the wicked come out come out my people from the middest of them We must not withdraw our selves from the Church of God because of some pretended spots in her as the sectaries doe but we must withdraw our selves from Gods enemies There is a time also when we must withdraw our selves from the company of our friends into our secret chambers and pray to God as Daniel did But in the time of persecution we must not withdraw our selves through infidelity and run out of the field wherein God hath set us We may read of some with-drawers Ioh. 6.66 Demas was a withdrawer so was Iulian the Apostata but let not us be such Let us say with them Ioh. 6.68 to whom shall we go thou hast the words of eternall life Iosua would be no withdrawer choose yee whom you will serve but I and my house will serve the Lord Ios. 24.15 Saint Peter would be no withdrawer though all forsake thee yet will not I he did deny him for a time and withdrew himselfe but he wept bitterly for it and stood better to his tackling If the storme and tempest of persequution should arise let us not withdraw our selves and refuse to suffer for CHRIST but let us sticke to him all the dayes of our life Yee are they that have continued with me in my temptations CHRIST loves continuers Be faithfull to the end and I will give thee the Crowne of life Let nothing make us to withdraw our selves from CHRIST but let us cleave stedfastly to him in this world that wee may reigne and triumph with him in the world to come CHAP. XI IN the substance of that exhortation derived out of the doctrine of CHRIST 's Priest-Hood three severall vertues were commended to us the first faith the second hope the third love Now followeth a particular explication of all these Faith is painted out to us in this Chapter Hope in the twelfth Love with the fruits thereof in the thirteenth This Chapter hath two principall parts a definition of faith and an illustration of it 1. By Example 2. By instance Verse 3. It is defined Verse 1. Where the nature of it is expressed It makes them existent not onely in intellectu but also in corde voluntate It is a full perswasion that wee shall have these things which we hope for nay it puts us into a reall possession of them VERSE 1. FAith is the evidence of things which are not seene The holy and celestiall Hierusalem where there is no Sunne but is enlightned with the glory of the Lamb continually where there is no night crying or weeping where all teares shal be wiped from our eyes for ever cannot be seene with mortall eye yet faith makes it evident to us even in this life The blessed and glorious Trinity GOD the Father Sonne and HOLY GHOST cannot be seene no man hath seene GOD at any time yet faith makes GOD visible to us standing by us in all afflictions Our SAVIOUR CHRIST the King of the Church and mediatour of mankinde clothed with our nature sitting at the right hand of GOD in all glory and Majestie cannot now be seene of us Stephen saw him when hee was on earth but that was extraordinary now we cannot see CHRIST in his glory yet by faith we see him and know that so soone as we are dissolved we shall be with him The holy and celestiall Angels that are our gua●dians that hold us in their hands that sing prayses to God continually in heaven cannot now bee seene of us yet by faith we see them and are assured that they will take our soules at our dying day and carry them into heaven The spirits of just and perfect men of Adam Eve Isaak Moses David of the Patriarkes and Prophets of the blessed Virgin Mary Saint Paul Saint Peter of the Apostles and Martyrs cannot as yet be seene of us but by faith we know they are in heaven and we our selves one day shall be with them Wee cannot now see or apprehend the joyes of heaven no eare hath heard them no eye hath seene them they cannot enter into the heart of man yet by faith they are evident to us The resurrection of the body cannot now bee seene wee see many carryed to the Church and Church-yard to be buryed but we see none rise again yet by faith it is evident to us so that we can say with Iob our Redeemer liveth and with these eyes shall wee see him and no other for us Faith is an excellent eye The eye of the Eagle is very sharp and piercing shee can see from heaven to earth she can espie her prey a farre of she and her birds can look on the Sun but the eye of faith is farre more piercing that sees Christ the Sun of righteousnesse and by it we looke into the Sanctuary of heaven and behold what is there Some write of one Lynceus that he could see an hundred thirty thousand paces off but wee by the eye of faith can see further this one eye is better than all Argos his eyes Howsoever the eyes of our bodyes waxe dimme let us entreat the Lord to preserve this eye to make it brighter and brighter every day Faith is the evidence of things not seene Let us make much of this evidence If wee have an evidence whereby we hold our lands we will shew it to some Lawyer to see of what validity it is we will keepe it safe under locke and key Let us examine this our evidence of faith if there bee a cracke in it let us seeke to have it amended and let us take up that prayer of the Apostles Lord encrease our faith Lord strengthen the eye of our faith that even on earth we may see heaven VERSE 2. HEre is an illustration of it 1. Ab exemplis 1. In generall If for this faith our fathers were well reported of then this is the true faith but our fathers were well reported of
make gatherings for the poore we may quench a fire we may fight with our enemies if wee be urged and there bee necessity for in all these and the like cases that rule must take place I will have mercy not sacrifice VERSE 31. THe second example of them before the full possession of the Land of Canaan is the harlot Rahab who by faith was preserved from the common destruction of the whole Citty whose preservation is amplified 1. By the instrumentall cause 2. By the estate of the party preserved 3. By the goodnesse of God extended to her 4. By the motive of her preservation Not by any strength or prwes of her owne for shee was a woman and by force could not have wrastled out of this danger Her faith shineth cleerely as in a Chrystall glasse Ios. 2.9 1 By faith she was perswaded that GOD had given them the Land although as yet they were not firmely settled in it 2 She reckons up the wonderfull workes which God Almighty had done for them 3 Shee shewes how the feare of GOD had fallen upon them all 4 Shee acknowledgeth the supreame power and the authority of their God 5 Shee requires no better security and assurance for her delivery then a sacred oath in the name of God All these are lively demonstrations of her faith Though shee did speake nothing of the promised Messiah the true and proper object of faith yet it may bee shee had some glimmerings of that heavenly mystery specially before the spies departed out of her house they perceiving good affections in her already might Catechize her further in the principles of religion certaine it is that she had faith Where first it may be demanded how she came by faith Rom. 10.14 faith comes by hearing of the Word there were no Preachers in Iericho the trumpet of the Word Preached did not sound in that Citty It pleased God to bring her to faith by the report of Gods wonderfull workes which he had done for his chosen people The Preaching of the Word is the ordinary meanes whereby wee come to faith but God is not tyed to that he may worke faith in men and women by extraordinary meanes 2 In all Countryes and Nations God hath His faithfull and elect though they be not knowne to the World In Vz he had Iob in Syria Naaman in Ethiopia a worthy Eunuch For her former condition of life shee had beene an harlot Some of the Rabbies supposing it to bee a blot of ignominy to their Nation that any of them should be reputed harlots they will have the word to bee derived from another roote of Zun and translate it an Hostesse or Inkeeper Rahab that Vitler or Inkeeper but harlot she was none But 1. the most native signification of the word is an harlot neither is it otherwise taken or by probability can be in the Old Testament Let all the places be examined where it is used 2 The 70. translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so doth the Author of this Epistle and the Apostle Iames now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth import nothing save an Harlot that sels her chastity makes a gaine of her body It doth never signifie an Inkeeper therefore undoubtedly before her conversion she was an Harlot yea a famous and notorious strumpet Hazzenah Here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Harlot which was publikely knowne all the Citie over 1 Let none take occasion from hence to set light by preaching where it is God can save mee without preaching therefore a flye for it what need I goe to Church and bee such a diligent hearer there As if a man being at a Table furnished with all kinde of dishes should say wherefore should I eate GOD can preserve me without meat as if a sick man having learned and expert Physitians about him should say Why should I take Physick God can restore me to my health without it as if a man should say God can give me light without the Sunne therefore I will close up my eyes when the Sun shineth or as if a man being on the top of a Pinnacle as Christ was should say wherefore should I goe downe by the stayres though I cast downe my selfe headlong God can keepe me If God vouchsafe thee the preaching of the word beware how thou contemnest that Ladder Let us say with the Prophet David Lord how love I thy Law It is deerer to me than thousands of gold and silver 2 Therefore let none say of any Countrey as Nathaneel did of Galilee Can any good come out of Turkie Muscovie Indie I surely God is not the God of the Iewes only but of Spaine Ireland England of France Italy c. Of all Tribes some were sealed and of all Nations some shall be saved They shall come from the East West North South into the Kingdome of Heaven 3. Even among Publicans hee had a Zacheus among persecutors hee had a Paul an Abraham among idolaters among them that were possessed of devils hee had a Mary Magdalen among the Pharisees a Nicodemus among Harlots he had a Rahab Therefore let us peremptorily condemne none Let us not shoot our fooles bolt rashly with the Barbarians doubtlesse this man or this woman is a reprobate there is no hope of salvation for such an one the mercy of God is wonderfull As the wind bloweth where it will so the Spirit breatheth where it pleaseth him notorious sinners may be called when glorious hypocrites shall be condemned Whereupon Christ said that the Publicans and harlots enter into the Kingdome of Heaven before the conceited Scribes and holy Pharisees as they seemed Many may be written in Gods book whose names we would scorne to set downe in our bookes Let us examine our selves whether Christ be in us 4 Though we be egregious sinners have led a loose life and defiled our selves with many sins yet let us not suffer our selves by the malice of Satan to be plunged in the pit of desperation I have beene an Harlot an Adulterer therefore I can have no place in Heaven Indeed the Scripture saith Whoremongers and adulterers God will judge he will judge them though they bee his owne children with temporall plagues in this life for their owne instruction and the terror of others as he did David The childe borne in adultery dyed all his fasting and crying would not serve the turne hee lay with Vriahs Wife GOD stirred up his owne Son to lye with his wives David lay with Bathshebah in secret Absalom lay with his wives in the open sight of all Israel Thus God judged him for it Yet David escaped eternall judgement There is no sin but the sponge of repentance will wipe it away If they that have sinned against the Holy Ghost could repent they might have beene saved It is impossible for them to be renewed to repentance therefore they are damned but at what time soever a sinner repenteth c. Let drunkards thieves murtherers harlots repent and GOD will receive
the husband of one wife not which is So. So wee may say of the rest such a one must bee chosen which was sober which was modest which was apt to teach 2. Tit. 1.6 The Verbe of the Present tense is plainely expressed Ob. 3. Bell. Soule that Saint Paul doth not make a law that a Bishop should have a wife but that he forbiddeth him to have moe wives then one So. But if it had not beene his meaning to permit a Bishop a wife why doth hee make mention of his wisedome in the education of his children unlesse hee should have children without a wife as the Pope and his Clergie sometime have had if their owne Authours say true 3. If it bee lawfull for a Minister to demande maintenance at the charges of the Church for the keeping a wife then may hee lawfully have a wife But it is lawfull as Saint Paul disputeth by many reasons Who goeth a warfare at his owne charges what shepheard doth not live of his flock why should not the spirituall Shepheard of the soule bee maintained himselfe his wife and children by the sheepe whom he feedeth Ob. This is to be referred to those women which served the Apostles of necessaries as certaine wealthy women following Christ ministring unto him of their owne substance Luc. 8.3 So. 1. It cannot be understood of them They were wealthy more able to give then to receive but it is the drift of Saint Paul in that place to proove that hee might lead about such a woman as should be maintained by the Church 2. Having put the name of Sister in the first place for so the words are to be translated according to the Greeke not as it is in our English Bibles He addeth the name of Wife in the next place to shew what manner of sister he meant not any common woman but a wife It were ridiculous thus to translate it Have we not power to lead about a sister a woman as if there were a sister that were not a woman 3. Those women were wont to follow the Apostles of their owne accords they were not carryed The Greeke word importeth that right which the husband hath over the wife to carry her about with him 4. Clemens Alexandr as Euseb. reports l. 3. c. 35. doth interpret this place of the Apostles wives 4. All the Apostles were marryed All save two at the most Saint Paul and Saint Iohn Saint Philip also the Evangelist was marryed for hee had foure daughters that were Prophetesses Act. 21.9 Sundry might be alleadged in the Ecclesiasticall histories Gratian and Platina both reckon up many Popes whose Fathers were marryed Priests as Boniface the first Felix 3. Gelasius the 5. and others yet hee saith they were not borne in fornication but in lawfull marriage One exception they have that they were marryed before they had taken Orders not since and that afterwards they lay not with their wives But how proove they that The Apostles indeede forsooke all and followed Christ but it is like they left their wives no more then they did their goods rather affectu then effectu as one speaketh for Matthew retained his house still and made Christ a great feast in it Luc. 5.39 Iohn 19.27 it is not like they would keepe their houses and not their wives 2. Saint Paul affirmes 1 Cor. 9.4 That the brethren of the Lord and Peter did then lead about their wives when they had long since taken holy Orders and hee prooveth that hee himselfe being then in holy Orders hath authority to doe the like 3. If the High Priest in the time of the law after he was anoynted with the holy oyle might marry then Ministers now after they bee in Orders may marry for greater sanctity was required in the High Priest being a type of CHRIST then the Ministers of the Gospell but hee after hee was consecrated might marry Levit. 21.10 13. A virgin hee might marry but not a widdow Wherefore let the Ministers of the Word as just occasion is ministred unto them take upon them this estate which the Lord pronounceth to be honourable among all and let us heartily give thanks to GOD for this happy reigne of our gracious Sovereigne wherein wee may safely enjoy the libertie which GOD hath left unto us in his Word Here a Question may be demanded whether it be honourable among them that marry the second third or fourth time c. As for the first marriage all confesse except it be the Tatians Eustathians Eucratitae that this is lawfull The Papists doe not condemne second marriages yet they count them not so honourable as the first for they subtract benediction and blessing from them Tertullian writing to his wife perswades her not to marry againe the second time but in his Booke de monogamia hee shewes himselfe plainely in his colours and is very bitter against second marriages his principall reasons are as weake as water 1. Vnum matrimonium novimus sicut unum Deum A strange reason God lives ever therefore there needs but one God a wife lives not ever but dyes therefore there is no necessitie of one wife when one is dead in the feare of God we may take an other 2. It is not good for man to bee alone Faciamus ei adjutorium adjutores dixisset si eum pluribus uxoribus destinasset There was but one man then in all the world therefore one helper would suffice him 2. This is spoken of a wife in generall not of the first wife alone every woman successively is an helper the second third or fourth is an helper God provided but one helper at once yet successively hee may have many helpers 3. They that be of Faith are Abrahams children Now when Abraham beleeved God and it was imputed to him for righteousnesse he was monogamus praepatiatus therefore they that be Abrahams children must be Monogami Recipe digamiam admitte Circumcisionem 1. Abraham believed God after hee was marryed to Keturah his second wife as well as hee did when hee had Sarah his first wife therefore digami may bee Abrahams children as well as monogami 2. Circumcision and a second wife are not relatives for Abraham was circumcised when he had his first wife Then they that have but one wife must also be circumcised 4. Ioseph had but one wife hoc nomine audeo dicere patre meliorem Aaron and Iosua had but one wife Anna one husband Saint Peter one wife We may oppose many holy men to them that have had two wives 5. Christ supped at the first marriage not at a second Whether it was the first or second is not expressed All the acts that CHRIST did are not recorded hee might afford his presence to a second marriage 6. This was the Institution of Matrimonie they twaine shall be one flesh A second wife is aliena Caro and a second marriage is adultery The first twaine are one flesh so are the second twaine and the third