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

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giuen vp Rom. 1.24 to serue their owne lusts that profited not by that one light of nature whereby they were constrained to acknowledge a superiour power that made that excellent frame of heauen and earth If the Pharisees were thus sharpely charged and reprooued for not amending their liues at these few sermons of one Iohn Baptist much more may wee feare lest wee be swallowed vp of present destruction that haue had so many sounds of the Lords trumpets and yet haue not retired from our owne waies that after so much dressing and pruning and lopping haue brought foorth nothing but briers that haue deuoured so many full yeares of peace and yeeres of preaching and plentie and yet continue leane and ilfauoured in the course of our liues for now at the time of the Gospel as we see heere beginneth iudgement Secondly learne how faithfully Iohn executed and performed his ministery which stood in two parts as was foretold by Malachy chap. 4. to preach mercie and iudgement both which he performed in this one sermon Heere the Iesuits take occasion to say that we should dehort men from euill for feare of hell and exhort them to doe well in hope of heauen We say with Paul who is our patterne and forerunner that we haue weapons for all those that shall despaire after the obedience of Gods Saints fulfilled but we preach not onely to worke well in hope of heauen for as we are seruants we deserue nothing but as children wee are receiued to an inheritance bought for vs before we were so we striue not that men should keepe themselues from sin onely for feare of hell for the Lord will neuer account of such a soule as will doe nothing but for feare of the whip for hee loueth a free giuer and hateth constrained subiection and it is not the horror of damnation but the commemoration of the Lords mercie shewed toward vs in giuing his owne Sonne to so ignominious a death to ransome vs from that curse wee had incurred This is that containes vs within the bounds of obedience for if the heart bloud of the Lord Iesus will not make thy heart to relent and thy hands to tremble to put them forth to wickednesse then art thou in a desperate case Shall the feare of the gibber or the ghastly shew of death make one that was a traitor and now pardoned and aduanced vnto high place by the meere mercie of his Soueraigne shall this make him afraid to commit treason againe and nothing else nay the grace of his Prince shall rest alwaies before his eies and shall most forcibly perswade him to perseuere in his loialtie For this is the most effectuall of all others to mooue vs in the bowels of the mercies of Christ to keepe our selues cleane and washed because wee are already purified in his bloud and not for feare of falling into the pit againe Thirdly note that if any man will escape and auoide damnation he must of necessitie liue wel for he must be a tree bringing foorth good fruit Where first consider what is good fruit which is implied in the text it cannot bee good except the tree be good as Christ saith If the casting out of a diuell be a good worke why am not I a good man Matt. 12.28 Ioh. 7.21 So as first the person must be accepted before the worke be accepted and no person can please without faith that purifieth the heart and there is no such heart where religion dependeth not vpon the true worship of the law of God and by consequent there is no good faith where the heart is not cleansed by the spirit of God Since then a man must first be good before he can doe good it is impossible that anie man erronious in religion should produce a good worke Externall righteousnesse and the morall vertues of the Papists is a vizard that bleares manie mens eies and wee say that they are honest as well may we say it of them that hanged vp the Lord Iesus thinking he had spoken blasphemie because being but a poore wretch to see to he challenged himselfe to be the Sonne of God and in this doing they thought they had done God an excellent peece of seruice And for Paul before his conuersion who could except against his life nay as he testifieth of himselfe Philip. 3. ● hee walked according to all the ordinances the law prescribed yet after hee was called he accounted all his morall righteousnesse but as the excrement of a dogge And if religion do not distinguish betweene men the heathen shall condemne both vs and them who by the meere instinct of nature liued in the hatred of grosse sinnes and walked soberly without exception and yet are they already damned For first we must be good by grace and being adopted into Christ then we doe good and of all the trees of the forest as Ezec. 15.3 there is none but is better then the vine if it beare not grapes for the oake is good for timber and euerie tree may serue for some good vse but the farments of the vine if it be not clustered is fit for nothing but for the fire The Papists are good as okes to build monasteries and to set vp houses and places of religion but an vnfaithfull and vnfruitfull Protestant and Professor is good for nothing being but a rotten bough or branch of a fruitlesse and barren vine but to be burned So that to iudge a worke to be good it must bee good both quo ad fontem quo ad finem proceeding from an honest heart and driuing to a right end the glory of God to whom I owe honor Further to come to the true knowledge of good fruit let vs know what bad fruit is which is double first sinnes in substance such as are contrarie to the expresse commandement of God as adulterie is absolutely a sinne in Dauid as wel as in any other secondly sinnes by circumstance as giuing of almes Matt. 23.5 onely when the trumpet sounds to be seene of men or to come into the sanctuarie with a purpose to pray and presently to returne to his vomit againe for the Lord abhorreth what himselfe commandeth Esay 66. if it be not do●● with that heart he commandeth The sacrifice of a sheepe is 〈◊〉 his sight as the bloud of a man not that he hateth the action but the hypocrisie in the action which staineth the whole a Hagg. 2.13 if an vncleane person touch the holy flesh the flesh it selfe is vncleane but holie flesh maketh not other flesh holy which was not so before Further obserue where it is said Euery tree that bringeth 〈◊〉 foorth good fruit shall be hewne downe that it is not enough not to doe euill but it is damnable not to do good for he doth not say the tree that brings foorth no fruit but that brings not forth good fruit For it is not enough for Zacheus Luk. 19 after his conuersion to be no poller or robber of
is with you and as Iohn 5.35 for a season to reioice in this light but that is onely spoken of the elect which is Malac. 4.2 that vnto them that feare the name of God shall the Sunne of righteousnesse arise and health shall be vnder his wings And as it is in the Prophet Esay The Sunne shall neuer go downe Esay 66.23 nor the Moone be darkned that is their light shall neuer be put out Againe the reprobate may conceiue and retaine a knowledge of reconciliation but it is a confused knowledge but the elect hath a more particular knowledge that he can receiue it to apply it to the reforming of his life whereas the other haue it onely to make them vnexcusable or to make them burst foorth into some confession of their sinne without repentance Examples here of we haue Esau Gen. 27.38 losing the blessing wept and Peter Luke 22.62 losing Christ by his denials wept bitterly Heere are teares alike but not in trueth alike So Math. 27.3 Iudas betraying Christ saith I haue sinned and 2. Sam. 24.10 Dauid numbring the people against Gods commandement said I haue sinned here is repentance in both the worke alike but the faith vnlike So as the reprobate haue a common beginning with the children of God vnder the veile and couering of hypocrisy but they can neuer come to that height wherin the elect do stand as 2. Cor. 3.17 to behold the Lord with open face or to be transformed to his image or as Reu. 1.7 to haue receiued that true cie-salue as to see Christ comming in the clouds with comfort or as it is said in the Prophet Ieremie that true anointing of the Lords grace which neither wasteth with time nor decaieth in vertue The second grace which is diuers in substance is adoption which no hypocrite can perswade himselfe to haue in such measure as the elect may for indeed this spirit of adoption is alwaies denied them And this may bee knowen by two parts that are to bee performed first by praier to GOD secondly by affections towards GOD. For the first it is impossible for an hypocrite to praie aright hee may babble or vse the externall gesture in prayer as the Pharisee did in the open streetes yea Sathan may suffer him to vtter some words without feeling sometime so farre as to condemne his owne sinne Mat. 27.4.5 as Iudas did his selling of Christ but yet his conscience neuer disalloweth it for this is an inseparable marke set vpon the praiers of the elect Rom. 8.26 Neither haue any this sanctified spirit to pray as they ought but they which are of God And as Galath 4.6 For that assurance in praier whereby wee crie Abba Father the reprobate cannot possibly haue nor feele that force in praier for as the Apostle there saith it is proper onely for the sonnes of God The reason is because the reprobate want the second grace which accompanieth and waiteth vpon the spirit of adoption that is good affections toward God for hee doth but dissemble his loue of God that hee might still continue as a bay●rec euer florishing the reuerence that he yeelds him is but in hypocrisie Iames. 2.19 and the obedience that he giueth him is but constrained as is the diuels Howbeit with the elect it fareth farre otherwise for their praiers are auailable because they are taught of God and their affections are good because they are changed by his spi●●e and they can come to God as children to a father only loking to speed in the name of father for this sheweth reconcilement after our first enmity and setteth foorth more sound loue than nature can affoord And this his loue draweth our feare to oftend and our care to please and we doe lift vp our voice with an assurance we shall be heard Ioh. 5.15 because we humble our selues in a detestation of our sinnes and with a resolution to be obedient to his commandements which the reprobates cannot doe for though the Lord doe often euen shew mercy to them in their praiers and other Christian exercises so as they may thinke they haue their sinnes forgiuen as he did to Ahab 1. King 21.27.29 who hauing solde himselfe to worke wickednesse in the sight of God vpon the iudgement pronounced against him sitting but within the shadow of praier and fasting was spared that the euill should not fall in his daies yet can they not possibly loue the Lord of heauen but in a confused sort nor come before him but with a slauish feare But it may be said If the Lord sheweth mercie to hypocrites and yet their praiers nor auaileable it may be thought the Lord is deceitfull No for the hypocrite is taken with the sweetnesse of the Lords mercy but he not apprehending it as hee should in obedience it proueth to him but a decaying sweetnesse Neither yet doth this any whit proue the will of God to be changeable though after his mercy disclosed he doth withdraw it from them for they relie onely and stay themselues vpon the present mercy not seeking further euen as Esau Gen. 25 34. who so he might presently haue to fill his belly cared not for his birth-right whereas the elect ground themselues vpon Gods mercy in all maner of tempests and doe gather together as many remembrances of it as they can in any of their afflictions after the example of Dauid who 1. Sam. 17.37 armeth himselfe against Goliah vpon the remembrance of the Lords mercy formerly shewed him in deliuering him out of the paw of the Lion and of the Beate Neither yet doth the spirit of God at all deceiue the reprobate for the Lord did not so extend his mercy as to take them to bee his and keepe them as his but did cast that seed into them to make them without excuse and to double their damnation Mark 4.5.6 in that they loued darknesse more than light so as for their ingratitude it was taken away Now for the second difference which is betweene the elect and the reprobate which is discerned by the working of this spirit it is to be obserued that it worketh more effectually in the elect than in the reprobate for the grace offered them doth but puffe them vp with a dexterie of wit and volubility of speech that they can conceiue and speake something of the Lord as the Pharisees could in Christ his time but this grace worketh farre otherwise in the elect and by no comparison for the Lord doth not onely enlighten the iudgement of his chosen to make them know his Gospell but changeth also their affections to make them worke foorth their saluation with feare and trembling And as it is Ezechiel 18.31 they shall haue a new heart giuen them to walke in the commandements of the Lord and as Danià speaketh Psal 40.6.7.8 they haue a new song put into their mouths and the Lord hath so prepared their eares as they can say Here I am O Lord I desire to
he must sauour of death which cannot be proued by this The wisedome of the flesh is enmitie to God but he that is borne of God cannot be Gods enemy on the other side hee that walketh in the wisedome of the flesh obeieth not the law of God and by consequent saith the Apostle cannot but sinne Whereupon it followeth that they that liue after the inclination of the heart of man cannot please God and so cannot bee saued now hee that is in Christ cannot but please God because he cannot but performe his will Another reason that being a true Christian a man cannot but amend his life is taken out of Rom. 6.5 Whosoeuer is made partaker of Christ is made partaker of the death of Christ then is he dead to sinne proued thus Christ by his death deserued not onely remission of our sinnes but also to haue the holy Ghost in those that bee his to mortifie their sinne and this spirit cannot bee idle but worketh and his worke is to d●●troy o●●●nemie that is sinne Lastly it is proued thus Whosoeuer is in Christ hath the spirit of Christ he that hath this spirit liueth in the spirit for the life of the spirituall man is the Lord Iesus euen as the life of the bodie is the soule and hee that hath a soule must needs breath and walking Galat. 5.24 in the spirit hee cannot fulfill the lustes of the flesh for the flesh and the spirit bee contrary And vers 24. it is said They that are Christs haue crucified the flesh with the affections thereof and who these bee appeareth 1. Peter 4.2 such as suffer in the flesh and these be they that cease from sinne Now then for thee to say thou art flesh and blood is not a shelter pleadable when thou art reprehended for sinne for he that is a good Christian cannot but forbeare it and if thou art all flesh and blood then hast thou not the spirit of God which is proued 1. Corinth 6.16 Do you not know how he that coupleth himselfe with a harlot is one flesh with her and hee that is one flesh with a harlot cannot bee one spirit with Christ Iesus Euen so for wrath toward thy brother thou saiest thou canst not loue him Consider that if the Lord should iudge thee out of thine owne mouth thou couldest not bee saued Thou wilt say the iniury is so great as no man can put it vp but hee that is more then a man can doe it and if thou beest all man Christ Iesus will neuer put vp thy name among the Saints Looke 1. Ioh. 5.3 Hee that is borne againe counteth all the commandements of God light so as if thou be of God it is an easie matter to forgiue the brother If he repent not of the wrong done vnto thee leaue the vengeance to God Rom. 12.20 and heape thou coles of fire on his head and if he do repent and seeke reconcilement it is the easier to forget it and flesh and blood doth pity the case of the suppliant For the third point which is the way how to assure our selues to be the sons of God wee must learne that there is no so certaine a marke to discerne a man to be of God as holinesse of life not but that Gods children may fall most grieuously and blemish their profession most foully but that if Sathan happe to blindfold them that they goe astray yet with the lost sonne they will returne with double sorrow and vnfold to their shame their owne sinne Example w●●ere ●f wee haue in Dauid who though he was ingaged to the Lord by his many benefites that tooke him from the sheepe-hooke and g●●e him a Scepter that by his protection had made him escape the snares of his enemies and by his mercy had freed him from many tribulations yet did he fall into great vncleannesse euen the sinne of adulterie 2. Sam. 11.4.5.6.7 which by the law of God deserued depriuation of this humane life When he had done this hee glauered and flattered with the womans husband and bad him goe home to refresh himselfe with his wife seeking thereby to father the bastard on him When this succeeded not he thought to make him drunke that he might thereby bee more irritable to lust and so to haue gone to his wife And though Vriah answered hee could not doe it because the Arke of the Lord was in the field which had not Dauid beene desperatly sicke in his soule how could he haue beene so forgetfull of the Lord as to haue dealt so with him that was no Iew but a conuert to religion heereby to make the name of the Lord euill spoken of Yet when this preuailed not hee went further and vnto adultery hee added murther that hee might make his sinne knowen and his vnholy life to appeare both to God and man and carry as the greefe of it in his heart so the shame of it in his fore-head And in this hee wrought worse then Iesabel for hee made Vriah the instrument and messenger of the letters for his owne execution yea hee sent them to Ioab who had himselfe beene a murtherer which might harden his heart in that sinne seeing Dauid that was the King not onely a fauourer but the cause of such bloody actions And after what manner should this be done namely that hee should fall by the sword of the vncircumcised a most ignominious and shamefull and grieuous death for so Christian a Gentleman and that hee should so murder him as to colour the grieuousnesse of his fault not hee alone but many other should die innocent and that hee should continue senslesse in this sinnefull course by the space of a yeere yet when it pleased God to cure his disease of hypocrisie and to cleare his eyes that hee saw not his sinne but his chaine of sinnes be●●●●●im then he calleth himselfe not a man of blood but of blo●●● ●nd then ●is conscience is open to grieue for it and then with his teares he washeth away his vncleannesse and wall●●●●●s a man cleansed and purged from his filthinesse So as if a●y bee a whoore let her remember the teares of Mary M●g●alene if a persecuter of the Saints let him repent with Pa●● Luk. 7.38 Gal. 1.15 Mat. 26.75 if a murtherer let him soundly confesse his sinne with Dauid and if he be Apostasied weepe with Peter for these be the workes of righteousnesse whereby they are knowen to be of God And seeing others deliuered from the pit wee must learne as Dauid saith Psal 56.3 to feare and to trust so as wee must alwaies feare to fall into the sinne before being fallen we can trust to bee deliuered for this is one part of the righteousnesse of Gods children to tremble at the sight of sinne and then shall wee neuer swallow it without remorse Secondly from hence learne that a man may know in what state another man is If I see thee a despiser of religion a profaner of the Sabbath a butcher to the poore and an vncleane liuer what shall I beleeue thee to be but the child of the diuell for this may I know by thy fruites Why but loue biddeth you hope the best 1. Cor. 13.7 and beleeue the best True it is loue biddeth me beleeue all things but not a sow to bee cleane wallowing in the mire or a dogge not to bee filthy that is regorging vp his stomacke Mar. 6.44 or that grapes can grow vpon brambles or that mercy can bee found in the heart of an vsurer or that thornes may bee touched and will not pricke For as loue bids mee not to determine too soone so not to bee abused too late and God bids me looke vpon the tree to iudge of the fruite I may say thou art in the state of damnation for by thy snarling I know thee to bee a dogge Mat. 7.6 and I see thy heart through thy hands but whether thou shalt be finally damned I leaue thee there for the Lord may haue mercy on thee vpon thy repentance I may come to the tree and say heere is no fruite or here is small fruit or heere is bad fruit but I cannot say Neuer fruit grow on thee heereafter as Christ did Mark. 11.13 And it is not the commers to Sermons but the doers of Sermons
religion For if God be not with thee to direct thee that thou stray not to correct thee that thou swell not to preserue thee that thou famish not to pardon thee that thou despaire not to curb thee that thou stumble not to strengthen thee that thou fall not to sanctifie thee that thou sinne not and to glorifie thee that thou perish not Psal 145.14 Psal 19.12 so many be the errors of thy life as thou canst not heale them and so safe is thine iniquitie sealed vp as thou canst not chuse but haue change of sorrowes I haue therefore presumed in a Christian loue of thy soule if not to cure thy iealosie of the world yet to prescribe thee Physicke to crucifie thy selfe It is a field sowne by the hand of another though some fell not vnfruitfully I hope into my ground and albeit many yeeres haue now ouergrowne my papers since I first plowed it and that the seeds-man himselfe sleepeth in the earth yet somewhat to awake the memory of the righteous and to quicken and giue heart to the desires of the religious I haue shot some few arrowes that I had of his which if thou peruse with diligence and lay vp with conscience thou shalt find of greater force then the shafts of Ionathan since these forewarne thee of the fury not of Saul 1. Sam. 20.21 but of Satan who reioyceth more in thy damnation then he sorroweth for his owne So hoping thou wilt either looke vpon me in loue or lay me aside without shame I commit thee to God who giue thee and forgiue thee much Grayes Inne Decemb. 24. 1604. Thy friend H. Yeluerton To the Christian Reader CHRISTIAN Reader when thou takest a view of the bookes already abroad and daily increasing as also according to thy measure of grace receiued doest discerne of and censure the weaknesse and insufficiency of too many I speake not now of those idle and vaine oh that I might not say tending to Atheisme and prophanenes which are rather to be bewailed in a Christian common-weale than censured but of those whose subiect is profitable and workmen desirous to profit Euen in too many of these thou hast cause iustly to complaine there is no end of making many books the reading of such being but wearisomnes to the flesh and so breedeth a distast of the necessary vse of reading But when thou shalt lift vp thine eies and spie out as in a foggie mist Eccle. 12.10 diuers also wherein is an vpright writing the words of truth able to teach and to conuince thou art now to be encouraged and not to be wearie to exercise thy selfe as thy calling and meanes will affoord in bookes that are necessary pretious and godly Among these if thou wilt take the pains to read thou wilt easily condescend that these Sermons deserue both for their matter and penning to be preserued for the vse of Gods Saints Which will appeare if with mee thou wilt a little neerer obserue the frame and comelinesse of this work namely the doctrines naturally raised the reproofe of the aduersary soundly concluded and that in such a pithie phrase and words sauouring of grace that thou canst not but with me acknowledge diuers excellent graces of God shining clearely in the Author in the Penman By the Authour the word is truly interpreted and in a most excellent maner brought home to thy conscience both for mortification of life and quickening in heauenly duties as also for setling thee against that accursed heresie of Popery which is too much neglected of too many able teachers In the Pen-man obserue diligence wisedome godlinesse he tooke this pains only for his owne priuate vse for very hardly could hee bee drawen to communicate this to the common good yet so carefully is it performed that vndoubtedly not a sentence yea hardly will it appeare that a word of moment escaped him as those who were diligent hearers with him may remember and can witnesse His godly wisdome appeareth not only in attending on the Lords own ordinance the publike ministery of the word on the Lords day and other set times but also in treasuring the same vp by writing knowing well that the voice working inwardly for a time through mans weaknesse and infirmity doth quickly perish to this end that with his ordinary sanctifying of the Sabbath he might and that liuely set before his owne eies this powerfull meanes also of saluation therby nourishing the same faith and godlinesse in himselfe which he saw from his infancy and daily doth see to dwell in that reuerend and truely religious Iudge his father and in that vertuous Lady alwaies ready to refresh the bowels of the Saints his mother to whom I also owe my selfe both for encouragement in my entrance to the worke of the ministery first begun in that their well ordered family as also for many fauours since principally for that charge where I now dwell bestowed on me by that worthy most religious carefull disposer of the Church-liuings the right honourable Sir Thomas Egerton Knight Baron of Elsemeere Lord Chancelor of England Lastly Christian Reader with me consider of the blessing of God vpon the labours of this godly and learned Gentleman in his owne profession who hath taken these paines now for thy good euident to all those that know him which doth clearely conuince that the keeping of the sabbath is not the losse of one yeere in seauen as too many of his rank I would they only by their practise do discouer they think Indeed if the fourth commandement were ceremoniall and consequently abrogated if there were no heauen no hell and that man were only for this life they might haue some colour But that the care of thy calling and of holy religion may go together yea hand in hand heere thou hast a paterne and example benefite thy selfe by this his paines and tread in the same steps of godly wisedome Thine in the Lord George Bard Minister of the word of God at Stanes in Middlesex GEntle Reader whereas by some ouersight the 19.20.21 and 22. verses of the eight chapter to the Romans follow not in their due place thou art to be aduertised that they are handled in the end of the chapter after the 38. and 39. verses where thou art to looke for them MATH chap. 1. vers 1. verse 1 The Booke of the Generation of Iesus Christ the sonne of Dauid the sonne of Abraham c. to the 18. verse THE foure Euangelists haue beene resembled by some writers to the foure beasts spoken of Ezec. 1.10 and Reu. 4.7 This Euangelist Mathew being compared to a man because he begins with the pedegree of our Sauiour Christ S. Marke to a lion because hee begins with the preaching of Iohn Baptist who roared like a lion in the wildernesse the doctrine of Repentance S. Luke to an Oxe or Bullock because he begins with the story of Zachary the Priest whose office was vnder the Law to offer sacrifice and
vs safe Heereupon it is that the Angels are called fierie in two respects First because they may stay vs in all our weakenesse and cherish vs in all infirmities to esteeme him as our rocke and the truth of his word as a most stable tower that cannot totter hauing this warrant from himselfe in this place to vrge him with his word and promise of deliuerance who as he faithfully performed it to Dauid so will he gratiously remember vs euen when we are most tossed in tribulation and in the least hope Feare not to take Mary to thy wife This is the first part of the message where the Iesuites obserue that Mary was Iosephs true wife yet he knew her not so as say they there may be true mariage where notwithstanding the parties vow to liue in continency We answer it was true in this example but this particular is not to be giuen in precept because though it be commanded in this singular person of Ioseph yet we finde no warrant for it in any generall place or commandement set downe in the Scripture Wee must therefore know that the Saints of God are not to bee followed in two things First in their infirmities as wee may not lie with Rahab Iosh 2.4 Gen. 26.7 c. Exod. 34.28 Mat. 14.29 2. King 1.10 nor dissemble with Rebecca Secondly in their personall and miraculous works as Moses in fasting forty daies Peter in walking on the Sea Eliah in calling fire from heauen nor Ioseph heere in a parpetuall separation from his wife for this example was altogether extraordinary and what flesh and blood durst touch that vessell the Lord by his spirit had taken vp for himselfe Otherwise that mariage cannot bee lawfull where the parties meane to separate themselues continually for as S. Paul saith 1. Cor. 7.5 man and wife may not defraud one another except it be first by consent secondly but for a time otherwise as 1. Pet. 3.7 they must dwell as heires together of the grace of life Secondly the Iesuites note this that where Christ vouchsased to be borne in mariage yet of a Virgin that in this he honoured both but principally Virginity We answer that mariagein it owne nature is better then virginity for God in the first creation Gen. 2.18 saw it was not good for man to be alone but euen in his innocency that he should haue the woman as a helpe before him And therefore Saint Paul 1. Cor. 7.26 is not to be vnderstood as enioyning virginity to any or as commending it before mariage but onely as perswading and praising it for the necessity of those times that were so troublesome as the Church of God could scarse finde rest in any place and therfore such as had no families were more free readier for the seruice of God otherwise continency is not better as a better ordinance of God but the betternesse of that came in by the disorder sinne hath brought in because mariage is clogged with so many cares as distracteth the minde much from religious exercises and men in their single estate be more emptied of cares and so more vacant for praier and other holy duties And where they say that virginity in mariage is better then society in mariage it is an accursed speech this example of Iosephs only excepted for it is a plant growing onely in this garden in respect the wombe of the Virgin was the bed of the Lord Iesus and yet if their owne speech bee true that virginity in mariage be better then virginity out of mariage it were good for their Priests and Nunnes to mary In that it is said Feare not obserue that all our security from feare standeth on the Lords word for flesh and blood auailed Ioseph nothing at all neither could his owne iudgement leade him to any stable comfort till the mouth of God had sent it Howbeit we see the blind boldnesse of the diuell who Gen. 3.4.5 would needes take vpon him to rid our first parents from all feare in their breach of Gods commandement but we haue found him a lier and the Lord true from the beginning let vs therefore qualifie our selues according to his prescript to tremble when he bids vs feare and to runne on reioycing when he saith Feare not for he hath alwaies the tempering of the cup. And in that there is a reason added why Ioseph should not feare we may beholde the tendernesse of the Lords compassion towards his children who will not onely haue them to stay vpon the maiesty of his commandement but in reliefe of their infirmities will giue them a reason of it that comprehending it in their iudgements they may the more safely lay hold on it Euen as our Sauiour Christ Luk. 12.32 comforteth his disciples and armeth them against the troubles to come saying Feare not Why for your Father will giue you a kingdome the power and yet the comfort of the commandement resting vpon the reason of it in this sort Those that haue a kingdome prepared for them neede not to feare but such are you therefore away with feare Out of the reason it selfe namely That which is conceiued of her is of the holy Ghost we note that his humanity was so sanctified that euen from the moment of Christs conception there was a setting apart of that nature from all vncleannesse so as Christ was borne the Sonne of God for Christ-man was neuer adopted to be the Sonne of God for adoption presupposeth wrath but his manhood was personally euen at the first vnited to the Godhead and was no person of it selfe as shall appeare afterward Now the third thing Ioseph was enformed of by the Angell was to name him Iesus with a reason of the name Wherein consider two points first from what he shall saue from sinnes Secondly whom he shall saue his people and these be very few as himselfe saith Luk. 12.32 Mine is a little flocke For the first in sinne consider these three things first the disobedience to the law secondly the originall corruption thirdly the condemnation for this corruption and disobedience The first of these is double either in breaking the law or not fulfilling it the second is the originall cause of this disobedience which is the euill inclinations of our heart and our corrupt affections and the third is the punishment of this disobedience namely hell fire These be three running sores satisfied and cured by three running streames in Christ for our rebellion to the law is satisfied in Christ who not onely paied for that wee had broken but actually fulfilled euery point of it For the second which is our originall corruption wee haue the holinesse and sanctification of his nature who was euer seperate from all vncleannesse so as in Christ wee are better then Adam was in his first estate for though hee was made good yet it was changeably good but wee in Christ are absolutely good and as the stoutest mountaines that cannot be stirred For the third wee haue Christ
name as a thing that Ioseph could not be vnmindefull of And this indeed is the duty and ought not to be the labour of euery trembling Christian to lodge as it were with the booke of God in their bosome and with the Noble-men of Beraea Act. 17.11 to receiue the word with readinesse and to search the Scriptures daily which is the garden of the Lord where runneth the riuer of wisedome to resolue all doubts and where is to be had the oile that softeneth all our afflictions Now in the testimony it selfe heere alleaged consider two things first the person that should beare a virgine secondly the person that should be brought foorth Emmanuell consubstantiall with vs in nature for both these the Prophet beginneth with a word of wonder Behold as of a miracle neuer performed but once If it be asked how it was possible a virgine should conceiue we must beleeue it was so and rest in this nothing to bee impossible with God Mat. 19.26 For as it was possible at the first to make a woman out of a man without the helpe of a woman as wee may see in the first creation Gen. 2.22 so was it possible for him in this new creation to make a man out of a woman without the helpe of a man Which was done to this end because if there should haue beene any corruption of the seed of man in Christ he could not haue sanctified others Concerning the person that should be brought forth it is Emmanuel the same that Iesus and they both imply one thing for he that is Emmanuel is God with vs as Iesus is God sauing vs. Now he is God with vs many waies and albeit in the Arke vnder the law the Lord was alway speaking through the Cherubins insomuch as the very enemies of God the Philistims 1. Sam. 4.7 could say when the Arke came that the God of Israel came and therefore cried woe vnto vs yet is he farre neerer with vs namely in such a spirituall manner as the Prophet speakes heere a God not onely present and fauourable to vs but connaturall to vs and vpon which did depend all the graces of God formerly giuen to his Church Therefore if Moses did say in admiration of the Lords goodnesse Deuter. 4.7 Looke if euer the like came to passe that God from heauen should speake vnto his people and shew his glory so to appeare on earth much more may we breake foorth into the like astonishment to whom God is come so neere as to be of the same nature with vs and to speake vnto vs not in the publication of the killing law but in the manifestation of the quickening Gospell whereby we may receiue comfort in the deepest dangers that gathering our selues vnder his wings and seeking rest and refreshing at his hands he will first giue vs a generall charter of grace for the pardon of out sins And because pardon of our sinne will not saue vs from hell but our iudgement shall be iust vnlesse we yeeld full obedience to the law hee will secondly impute and lay all his obedience and righteousnesse vpon vs so as in him we shall fulfill it And yet because we are still sinners as carying about vs the orignall vncleanenesse we brought with vs Ephes 5.30 the third rest he will giue vs is so to sanctifie vs as we shall be bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh not that we are absolutely sanctified in this life but that that which this our Christ brings vs is al-sufficient to saluation And being sure of this we need not to be dismaide for the waters of trouble are but a bath to cleanse and purge vs from those corruptions we gather by walking in this dirty world Further let vs consider heere why it was necessary that he that should be Iesus should also be Emmanuel first it was necessary he should be the Emmanuel that is the strong God for when wee were all enwrapped in sinne and shut vp vnder death then was there neede of remedy And what shall that be Mercy No God is iust and we hauing smitten his Maiesty by our sinne must bee smitten againe by his punishment Shall it then be iustice No for we haue need of mercy Heere so to be mercifull as not to disanull his iustice and so to be iust as not to forget his mercy and to make a way both to appease his wrath that his iustice might be satisfied and yet so to appease it as his mercie might be magnified in forgiuing there must needes come a mediation and if all the world should be offered to God for satisfaction it is nothing for it is his owne the worke of his owne hands If Angels should step in before the Lord it were nothing for they are engaged to him for their creation and being but temporally good they cannot satisfie for an infinite sinne howbeit he that must satisfie must bee infinit to suffer infinite punishment for an infinite sinne committed against an infinite Maiesty therefore he must be God he must be also Emmanuel with vs for how can there bee satisfaction for our apostasie but by humility nor procurement of life but by death Now when God comes to obey hee must needes bee humbled and when he comes to deserue hee must needes serue which God alone cannot doe and when he comes to die he must needes be mortall which God cannot be Therefore hee was man to be himselfe bond God to free others man to become weake and God to vanquish man to become mortall and God to triumph ouer death The situation also of the Ladder spoken of Gen. 28.12 is an euident demonstration of the two natures of this Emmanuel for the word must bee vnderstood of the second person in the Trinity By the foot to satisfie his Fathers wrath as being of our nature that he might stand close to Iacobs loines and to his Church militant and by the top to expresse his diuinity which toucheth the seate and reacheth to the bosome of God that he might in time bring thither his Church triumphant Now euery ladder is a Medium or meane whereby weascend to some place that otherwise we could not reach vnto which this Emmanuel is to vs for wee being euill debters and God a seuere creditor Colos 2.14 Christ is the meane to cancell this debt and to set it on his owne score and we being ignoant clyents and God a skilfull Iudge not able to vnderstand our tale Christ must be our aduocate 1. Ioh. 2.1 to pleade our cause for vs. And as betweene God and vs so betweene the diuell and vs he is a mediator for he casteth fierie darts against vs which we onely driue backe by the shield of faith in Christ Ephes 6.11 Further in the word Emmanuel obserue three things first the truth and verity of the subsistance of both these natures in Christ secondly the reall distinction of them thirdly the personall vnion of them And these three points wisely and
bloud hath not reuealed this to thee but God and in another place it is said when his Disciples were going to Emaus he opened their hearts And for the ministery which is a meanes to call men 1. Cor. 12.6.8 it is said to be the worke of God and Eph. 4.11.12 it is said Christ gaue some to be Apostles some Pastors c. for the worke of the ministery and the repairing of the Saints Thirdly remission of sinnes and iustification is the worke of God as it is said Esa 40.29 It is that holy one that giueth strength vnto him that fainteth that is it is God that forgiueth sinnes and Mat. 9.6 the some of man as sonne of man hath this power to forgiue sinnes and Stephe● Act. 7.60 praieth Lord Iesus lay not this sinne to their charge Fourthly sanctification is onely the worke of God Iohn 1.13 We are not borne of the will of man but of God and vers 12. As many as receiue him he giues prerogatiue to bee the sonnes of God and Mat. 3.11 Christ will baptize you with the holy Ghost and againe himselfe saith Without me you can doe nothing which is true onely of God and Ephes 5.26 Christ gaue himselfe for his Church to sanctifie it and Heb. 10.10 We are sanctified by the offering of the body of Christ Fiftly to giue glory is the worke of God and this doth Christ as appeareth by the speech of the theefe vpon the Crosse Luke 23.42 Lord remember me when thou commest into thy kingdome and Iohn 10.28 I doe giue eternall life vnto my sheepe Now for the fourth that he is knowen to be God by the diuine worship is to be giuen vnto him and worship is due onely to Iehouah Prov. 16.4 the Lord hath made all things for his owne sake And for this worship first it is not lawfull to serue any so much as God now Christ is to bee serued only for as himselfe saith I have the keyes of life and of death Secondly it is not lawfull to beleeue in any but God and Iob. c. 5. c. 6. Christ saith He that beleeueth in we hath eternal life Thirdly ●im whom we ought to loue aboue all things is God Christ Mat. 16. saith Loue me better then thine owne soule Fouthly ●hom we ought to obey in all things is God and Mat. 17.5 〈◊〉 is said This is my beloued Sonne heare him speaking of Christ ●iftly it is not lawfull to sweare by any but by God and S. Paul ●●m 9.1 sweareth by Christ and saith I say the trueth in Christ 〈◊〉 not Sixthly inuocation or praier is for none but God as Da●id saith Psal 50.15 Call vpon me in the day of trouble and I will hea● you and Stephen Act. 7.60 when he was stoned praied to Christ Lord Iesus receiue my soule and with praier to Christ end most 〈◊〉 S. Pauls Epistles Seuenthly Iehouah onely must be blessed fo●euer and S. Paul Rom. 9.5 saith Christ God blessed for euer an● in the Reuelation it is said Reuel 19.7 All praise and glorie be to the Lambe and 2. Pet. 3.18 Grow in the grace of Christ to whom be praise f●●euer Eightly God onely is to be bowed vnto and it is said 〈◊〉 Christ Heb. 1.6 Phil. 2.10 Let all the Angels in heauen adore him and by S. Paul H●● hath a name giuen him whereat euery knee must bow And thus b● these many parts of Gods worship it doth appeare that Christ● God equall with the Eather For the second point which is the reall distinction of the●● two natures wee say they be not confounded against the thi●● heresie of Eutiches who held that the person eternall of the wo●● of God was turned into flesh for by this it followeth that ●ther there must bee an abolition of the Godhead or a permi●●●●● of both the natures both which were blasphemous but 〈◊〉 say according to the scripture Phil. 2.6 that Christ became th●● he was not before namely man and retained that he was befo●● namely God and he was man not that it was transfused in●● his Deity or any property of the Deity transfused into his h●manity but by assuming the flesh and so by personall vnion b●came both and albeit the humanity of Christ be much magnai●●ed by the Diuinitie yet is the Diuinitie nothing altered by 〈◊〉 humanity For the third point which is the personall vnion of both the natures from hence hath arisen that fourth heresie of Neft●●us who sayd that Filius Maria was not onely Aliu● but Ali●● that is that as there were two natures in Christ distinct so 〈◊〉 there also two persons We say that the same person that 〈◊〉 the sonne of Mary was the sonne of God so as the grea● matter heere i● whether Christ be one person wherin let vs ●●derstand these two things first what a personal vnion is secon●ly what is the fruit and effect of this vnion For the first 〈◊〉 is a person in Christ Is it a thing compounded of Deity 〈◊〉 humanity God forbid Nay Christ by his humane nature ●●perly considered is not a person but the Diuinity assuming his flesh his humanitie subsisteth and staieth it selfe in his Diuinity for his humanity neuer vpheld it selfe till it was vnited to the Diuinity It was a nature before but no person his Diuinitie was both a nature and a person before so as out of them neither compounded nor confounded doeth arise Christ Iesus out Emanuel And as in the Trinity there be three persons and but one nature so in Christ there is but one person and two natures vnion of nature in the vnity of his Deity For the second which is the fruit and effect of this vnion it is two folde first the exaltation of his humane nature by being ioyned to his Deitie secondly the communication of his properties For the first that the Deity that vnited the flesh did so glorifie the flesh that by vnsearchable degrees it hath made it farre aboue all Angels is proued by three priuiledges which it hath first by the dignity of his personall vnion as he was the sonne of man he was naturally the sonne of God and he that was God was borne of the woman for Christ is one sonne of God in two respects first by generation eternall secondly according to his humane nature not as man nor by adoption for hee was neuer the sonne of wrath but by personall vnion for he was the sonne of God The second priuiledge is that all gifts that can be in any of the creatures Col. 2.9 are powred without measure vpon the flesh of Christ namely all that can be giuen to any creature or to any nature that keepes it a nature still and doth not defie the creature for as hee is man hee knoweth not the day of iudgement Mark 13.32 nor is not in euery place for these bee essentiall to the Godhead but his humane nature was so beautified by the Godhead dwelling in it bodily as that Heb. 1.6
all the Angels must worship him and yet as man no essentiall quality of the Deity rested in him The third priuiledge is this that his Diuine nature hath giuen the participation of his office to him as man that as God is Mediator so is man as God hath deserued saluation so hath man and that hee as man shall iudge the quicke and dead not that he shall iudge by his manhood but Christ-man shall iudge the world The second fruit of this vnion is the communication of properties not that the properties of the one are communicate to the other but that one may bee attributed to both as Christ God died Christ man is eternall and this is either when we giue that to the humanity which is proper to the diuinity or giue that to the diuinity which is proper to the humanity as God by his bloud redeemed his Church yet God had no bloud but Christ God had bloud so this man Christ forgiueth sinnes not that this power is in his manhood but hee doeth it meerely as God for these and such like speeches be true in Concreto not in abstracto as they be both ioyned together and not as they be separate one from the other Lastly in the word God with vs obserue that Christ is not only God with vs in nature but in person for the reprobate are of the same nature with him and he with them yet is he not God with them but against them but we as the Apostle speaketh are flesh of his flesh Ephes 5.30 and bone of his bones euen as man and wife which are not onely one in nature as all other men and women are but one person by speciall couenant and euen so are wee one person with Christ by the couenant of grace being one with him we are also one with the whole Trinity as himselfe saith I and my Father will come and sup with him and according to his last praier Iohn 17. Father I beseech thee that as I am one with thee and thou with me so these speaking of the faithfull and pointing at them may be one with vs both which bringeth great comfort to Gods children that through Christ we haue the whole Godhead reconciled to vs and dwelling in vs. And Ioseph did as the Angell had commanded him This is the third generall part spoken of before namely the obedience of Ioseph according to euery thing that was prescribed out of which gather generally that when we are acertained it is Gods pleasure wee should doe such a thing that wee stand not still consulting with our owne peruerse natures n●● inclining too much to tender our owne frailties but that knowing it to be the voice of God we admit of no contradictions but we are to constraine our affections to bee pacified and perswaded according as the Lord hath disposed This was the infirmity of Sara Genes 18.12 who laughed when the Angels promised to come againe according to the time of life she r●●●●ting rather the order of nature then beleeuing the promise of God And this likewise was Lots fault Gen. 19.16 who prolonged the time when the Angels bad him arise and be gone for the which hee might iustly haue beene destroied in the punishment of the City But the contrary to this we see in Abraham Gen. 22.3 who when he was commanded to sacrifice his sonne than which what could be more contrary to nature than for a father to be the butcher to his owne sonne yet being assured that it was the voice of God speaking by the Angell he presently commended his affection and rose vp early to execute that bitter message Wherein obserue that all the children of Abraham must be children of obedience which must be shewed by walking in euery thing according as it is written For now seeing onely the voice of the Lord is the voice of the scripture Luke 16.29 which is as certaine as if Christ were to speake immediatly from heauen so farre as is commanded so farre is to bee performed howsoeuer it may cost vs deare and crosse vs much yea though it bee with Ioseph to embrace her for a wife whose honesty we might iustly suspect And if Ioseph did this at the first word of the Angell what shall bee said to vs who haue heard the voice of God so often beating vpon vs that we should forsake our sinnes and yet we spread curtaines ouer them But that as his obedience is heere recorded for his praise so our stubburnnesse and disobedience be regestred in our punishment that it may be as a hissing and astonishment to other nations Further obserue hence that the obedience of a Christian standeth not in a generall subscribing to the truth of that is taught them no nor yet in a verball confession of it but the commendation of a Christian resteth in his works of obedience as it is said ●eere Ioseph did as he was enioyned 1. Ioh. 3 1● so that the hand and the mouth must goe together as our Sauiour Christ teacheth Not euery one that saith Lord Lord Mat. 7. ●● but he that doth the will of the Lord shall be an heire of heauen Whereby we must learne that the calling of a Christian is noidle but a painfull calling wherein we must striue daily to plucke vp some weedes or other that ouergrow our godlinesse and to liue as children in the sight of our Father alwaies doing what hee commendeth vnto vs. For if Ioseph after this time had no more suspected his wife yet if hee had not taken her againe and dwelt with her as his wife he had failed in his obedience and had been like Lots wife Gen. 19.22.26 who beginning well in going out of Sodome and yet forgetting halfe her obedience to the commandement in looking backe behind her is left as a monument to this day for vs to take heed by And he knew her not till she had c. Though it be said he knew her not till shee had c. yet it doth not follow necessarily he knew her after for the word till in the Hebrew tongue signifieth as well that a thing shall not come to passe in time to come as that it came not to passe before as Mat. 28.20 I am with you vntill the end of the world not that he will leaue vs then but that he will by his spirit be with vs then and euer after Like to this is the phrase vsed 2. Sam. 6.23 Michol had no children till the day of her death and it is certain she had none after So in the speech following Christ was her first begotten Sonne it doth not therefore follow shee had any more sonnes for the phrases only exclude the time before And this we are to beleeue vpon our saluation that Ioseph knew her not till Christ was borne and that Christ was the first borne And it is very probable agreeable to the best churches that he knew her not after nor that she had any more
when they came to their iournies end set downe by fiue circumstances First that they went when they were resolued Secondly that the starre appeareth againe and goeth before them Thirdly that it stands vpon the particular place where the babe lay Fourthly their exceeding ioy Fiftly how comming thither they find the babe in a base place yet they are not discouraged but reuerence him and giue him gifts For the first it is shewed that they went alone not one with them though this was the King specially borne for the saluation of the Iewes Wherein wee may admire their ingratitude and the impiety of the Scribes that pointed the way to others and yet vouchsafed not themselues to goe one foot to enquire after Christ Thus may Preachers be as Mercuriales statui set vp a● directors of others shewing the way to heauen and yet goe themselues to hell Perhaps they feared the cruelty of the king that if they should haue beene caried with an affection of seeing him it might haue cost them their liues or at least their honours Though it were so yet doth it not excuse their vngodlinesse to preferre the feare of a King that could but kill the body and touch the goods Mark 8.36 before the feare of the great King of the heauens that can destroy both body and soule For though the disciples and Apostles Act. 4.18 bee commanded that they should teach no more in the name of Iesus yet if the burden of the Lord be vpon them they may not but speake vers 20. the things which they haue seene and heard And though Micaia● the Prophet 1. King 22.13 doe know what message will please the King yet though he be smitten on the cheeke and cast into prison hee must deliuer the counsell of the Lord. For as Saint Paul saith Gal. 1.10 If in these things I should please me● I were not the seruant of Christ. In that none of the people accompanied these Wise-men obserue their dulnesse and Atheisme that they all stay at home and yet they kept an outward shew and deuotion in seruing God and offered sacrifices which vnlesse they knew that they praefigured the death of Christ what made they of their temple but a butchers shambles Yet by their idlenesse that they would not steppe one foot to see him is perceiued that of the Messias spiritually they knew nothing Which is likewise to be feared of vs in these daies that we onely rest our selues within the reach of the Gospell for that it hath brought vs peace which peace hath purchased for vs profit and promotion but if the state might stand in quiet though Christ were banished from vs or if we might gaine more by Diana of Ephesus Act. 19.24 then by the God of Israel it is to bee doubted Christ might lodge long enough at Bethlem before we would goe to visit him Further obserue if these Wise-men had not left Herod to his canuassing of the matter the Scribes to their speculation the people to their trades if they had respected the example of the mighty or of the learned or considered the danger that it was a matter of treason if it had so beene taken they had not had this glory and honour to haue seene the Messias but they are glad to goe alone though they would be desirous to haue company Whereby we learne that to embrace religion and to ioyne our selues with the congregation of the Saints it is good in going if wee can get company for the greater blessing fals vpon a multitude howbeit we must haue this resolution to go what danger soeuer may befall and not to stay vntill others goe for thou shalt neuer see the Lord Iesus if thou stay till all Hierusalem doe goe with thee to Bethlem These Wise-men might haue said with themselues Wherefore should we goe see him since his owne people will not as Iudas asked Christ Ioh. ● 22 Why doest thou shew thy selfe to vs and not to the world but they take no occasion of stay but are resolute to goe alone Now if these heathen men were so earnest as to admit of nothing which might hinder them from beholding Christ in the flesh how much more ought wee to bee eager to heare Christ in his word and to see him in the Sacrament The Queene of Saba shall rise vp in iudgement against vs that came so farre to heare the wisdome of Salomon 1. Kings 10.1 and yet as Christ speaketh Mat. 12.42 a greater then Salomon is heere yet are we negligent in attending the voice of God Now for the second circumstance namely that the starre went before them consider the wonderfull wisdome of God that he doeth so qualifie and moderate the trials and afflictions of his seruants that euen to the greatest temptations if they mistrust not he giueth a most blessed issue for it might haue stricken these men with a strange astonishment and driuen them into great perplexity that they being of speciall reputation in their country and comming this tedious iourney and hauing such colde entertainment both in the Kings court and of the meaner people and hauing lost their direction the starre being vanished these things might greatly haue dismaied them not to haue gone any further yet they proceeding forward in their obedience the light that was quenched was againe of the Lord reuiued and with this they were comforted greatly seeing the resolution of the Priests concurring with the dumbe message of the starre Wherein also marke that the starre guided them to the particular place where the babe lay for if they had come to Bethlem it is likely none there knew it Christ his birth being a thing not dreamt of and he being a babe vnregarded and so much the more because he comes of the house of Dauid And if they had enquired of wicked men for such a thing they would but haue scorned them or else sought to haue intrapped them if of good men they had indangered themselues by discrying it Therfore not to need any helpe the Lord from heauen pointeth out the place vnto them wherin for our further instruction learne that God in euery good purpose doth goe before vs by his grace to make vs willing Phil. 2.13 as Saint Paul speaketh and with the same grace doth follow vs and confirme vs in the first worke that we shall neuer wash our hands in vaine but that as we are by his direction come to Ierusalem to seeke after Christ so wee shall by the same direction go strait to Bethlem where we shall see him as Dauid saith Psalm 25.12 They that feare the Lord shall know how to choose the right way For their reioycing at the sight of the starre appearing againe it implieth they were strangely discomforted at the losse of it Where note that if the Lord doe at any time quench the light of his spirit in vs or change the pleasure and eclipse the ioy of his countenance if sometimes wee cannot apply to our soules the sweet
that he is able by his power to disappoint the decree of God which is the nature of all Atheists to challenge absolute dominion vpon the earth thinking God to be shut vp in heauen but he that sitteth there laugheth them to scorne for Herod thought to haue had the life of the babe but the babe had his when the measure of his sinnes were fulfilled For the second generall point which is the obedience of Ioseph learne how willingly he takes vp his crosse he might haue thought himselfe a miserable man to haue maried such a wife as he might not accompanie with and the babe which was borne to be the cause of these vnseasonable troubles for these no doubt were the suggestions of flesh and bloud but he laieth aside consulting with the old man and fixeth his eie vpon God and casteth his care vpon the highest that as he had giuen the temptation so he knew he would likewise giue the issue like Abraham Gen. 22.8 who answered his sonne saying God will prouide a sacrifice and like this babe himselfe who afterward in his conflict of death Mark 14.36 though most tedious and grieuous to the flesh did yet submit himselfe to his fathers will So as the obedience of Ioseph is here commended by this that he presently dispatcheth not standing reasoning with the Angell nor waiting for the comfort of the day for cursed is he that doth the worke of the Lord negligently He knew this babe was the Lord of glory and that all the world could not murder him as yet because he had a worke to doe for the King of heauen yet seeing there is at this time no other doore of escape but flying hee is neither negligent nor carelesse but he accounteth all haste too little and in the night trusseth vp all he had whereby we may thinke he was exceeding poore and maketh no delay Where we learne that though we be sure the Lord will defend vs yet if we be in danger and the Lord hath opened a window for our deliuerance that we vse all possible dispatch Dauid was sure Saul could not surprise him because the Lord had promsed him the kingdome yet 1. Sam. 24.1 he hideth himselfe in caues and flieth frō one place to another to auoid his fury because though he had Gods oth that he should be king yet he would not tempt God by exposing himselfe to danger So Ioseph though he had the babe of life in his hands yet flies which is a matter of no distrust but of singular obedience because he is willed so to doe For the third point which is the fulfilling of the prophesie The Prophet Osea ch 11.1 after he had set downe the sinnes of the Israelites and had brought in God threatning them with his iudgements and with this iudgement as the greatest that he would distinguish the light of Israel by taking away his sonne which was their glory then hee is sent from God to comfort them againe after this sort that although they had beene rebellious whom the Lord had chosen in his couenant though they had not profited by his corrections and though it might agree with the Lords iustice to depriue them vtterly of his sonne yet forasmuch as Israel is his childe though he hath sent his sonne into Egypt that thereby they might consider their owne vnwoorthinesse yet for his meere mercy sake he will bring him forth againe and restore him vnto them Where we learne first that though we breake our couenant with God yet hee is faithfull that hath promised and will neuer breake his couenant with vs for his thoughts be not like our thoughts but he is the same for euer howbeit if the Lord do beare vs in his armes as he did Ephraim Osea 11.3 and leade vs with the bands of loue Iam. 1.17 if he take the yoke from our iawes and yet we will not acknowledge by whom wee are healed and in whom we are eased we shall wander in the desert of our owne lusts and languish as it were in torment of conscience before the Lord will vnfold the brightnesse of his Sunne and discouer the light of his countenance vnto vs. For though Christ shall be called out of Egypt at the last yet many sorrowes shall runne ouer the hearts of the Israelites before they shall see him Secondly in this prophesie obserue that there was neuer any thing shewed should come to Christ which was base but it was foretold before that when it came it might not seeme strange nor men might not be offended at it as heere is foretol● his flying into Egypt and his basenesse that no man would vouchsafe to looke vpon him was foretold by Esay chap. 53.2 So was it foretold that not many mighty or noble should be called for as S. Paul saith 1. Cor. 2.8 none of the Princes of the world haue knowen the wisedome of God to the end we may not be offended with the base professors of the Gospell but may be as S. Paul calleth them 1. Cor. 4.10 fooles for Christ his sake So was it foretold that in the latter daies there should be scarse faith found vpon the earth as S. Paul speaketh 1. Tim. 4.1 that we may not be discouraged with the profanenesse of the world but that wee may labour to bee of the number of those fooles to whom the riches of the Gospell is reuealed and in the company of those few whose lampes shall bee found burning and whose faith shall be found grounded vpon the perswasion of Gods loue in his sonne MATH chap. 2. vers 16 17 18 verse 16 Then Herod seeing that he was mocked of the Wise-men was exceeding wroth and sent foorth and slue all the male children that were in Bethlem and in all the coastes thereof from two yeeres old and vnder according to the time which he had diligently searched out of the Wise-men verse 17 Then was that fulfilled which is spoken by the Prophet Ieremias saying verse 18 In Rhama was a voice heard mourning and weeping and great howling Rachel weeping for her children and would not bee comforted because they were not NOW followeth the persecution it selfe the perswasion of the Angell being like a flash of lightning before a clap of thunder wherein the Euangelist deliuereth three generall points First by what occasion Herod was so set on fire and exasperate to beethinke himselfe of these murthers namely because hee thought himselfe abused Secondly the execution of this massacre with the circumstances first of the place it was in Bethlem and the townes adioyning to it secondly of the persons they were children of two yeeres old and vnder Thirdly the Euangelist noteth the fulfilling of a prophesie anciently foretold that this comming to passe they might know it was no small matter and withall that the sonne of God was sent not to raigne as a Monarch but to be persecuted vnto bloud For the first Herod thought himselfe mocked not that he was so but onely deemed himselfe so Where
foreskin of their hearts that is that they should change their vile affections but how this must be done appeareth Deut. 30.6 The Lord thy God will circumcise thy heart so Deut. 39.19 there is a commandement to chuse life That thou and thy seed may liue the performance whereof is Ezech. 36.26 A new heart saith the Lord I will giue you and a new spirit I will put into you and I will take away the stony heart out of thy body and I will giue you a heart of flesh which place doeth fully answer all suppositions of our owne ability for if there bee any pliablenesse in a stone then is there so in man For the second we are commanded to liue well and to worke but whence this proceedeth appeareth Philip. 2.13 It is God that worketh in you both the will and the deed so 2. Cor. 7.1 there is a commandement giuen by S. Paul that we should cleanse our selues and 1. Iohn 3.5 Euery man that hath hope purgeth himselfe and 2. Tim. 2.21 He that is a vessell of honour purgeth himselfe but how this is done is set downe Ezech. 36.25 I saith the Lord will powr● cleane water vpon you and yee shall be cleane and as the Apostle saith Hebr. 9.14 The bloud of Christ purgeth the conscience from dead workes For the third we are commanded to stand fast and to hold fast our profession so Acts 14.22 Barnabas exhorteth to continue in the faith but from whence this commeth Paul teacheth vs Ephes 4.30 The Lord make you strong for it is ●ee that hath sealed you to the day of redemption and 2. Thessal 1.11 The Lord make you woorthy of this calling and fulfill all the good pleasure of his goodnesse and the worke of faith with power and 1. Thess 5.24 Faithfull is he which calleth you which will also doe it By which wee may perceiue that this exhortation to Repent and other such like inserted in the Scripture are but to whe● vs on and to set an edge vpon our praiers and desires that wee may fetch these graces out of the closet and bosome of our Sauiour Christ who is as ready to giue as wee to aske Further learne hence that forasmuch as the most vehement and pithy exhortation to obedience is taken from the manifestation of Christ that the Gospell euen as it is the Gospell requireth reformation of life howsoeuer it bee charged either to giue too much occasion to sinne as that being cleansed in the bath of Christs bloud we may abandon our selues to vncleannesse or to make too much restraint as it were from sinne as that wee must abstaine from all apparence of euill for saith the Gospell 2. Thess 5 2● 1. Iohn 3.8 Hee that doeth not labour to purge himselfe in euery thing is of the diuell Wherein we must consider that there is a double couenant first of workes by the law which being obserued giueth life but being broken but in cogitation onely doth damne a man secondly of grace that all that beleeue shall bee saued Now in euery couenant there is a restipulation or mutuall agreement of both parties ours in the law was that we would doe what was commanded in grace that wee will beleeue that we may bee saued for as no man can be saued by the law but by absolute obedience so no man shall be saued by the Gospell but by faith and repentance for this is that God requireth of vs to beleeue and amend Againe obserue that when we preach repentance we preach not the law but the Gospell for the law admits of no repentance for though wee could now obserue all that is written in the law yet should we be damned vnlesse we could satisfie for that was broken in our first conception we being borne in the filthinesse of nature Now there is no way of saluation for circumcised or vncircumcised for Iew nor Gentile before the law nor after either before our conuersion in the time of our infidelity or after our conuersion in the time of repentance but onely in the bloud of Christ whom by the power of the holy Ghost by the instrument of the word as the second cause we doe by faith apprehend vnto our euerlasting peace Thus much is set foorth by Saint Paul Rom. 8.1 that there is nothing but condemnation to ●hem that are without Christ and none are in Christ but they ●hat haue receiued the spirit of Christ and none hath this spirit ●ut he that hath receiued the gift of faith which doth ingraft vs ●●to Christ and none hath faith but hee that hath repentance and none hath repentance but he whose soule is changed cleansed in his conscience reformed in his affections so that howsoeuer he slippeth through infirmity yet his full endeuour is alwaies to please the Lord and no mans soule is changed whose life is not already amended For this must declare a purified conscience and none hath amended his life who doth deliberately persist in any grosse sinne so that whatsoeuer purposelie grieueth the spirit and smiteth God by his sinne hee is not in Christ but consequently in the state of condemnation except hee repent for this that is spoken of 1. Iohn 5.3 Hee that is borne of God keepeth his commandements and they bee not burdensome to him For this is the new couenant saith the Lord Ier. 31.31 I will make with you I will pardon your sinnes and write my Law in your hearts that is whomsoeuer I will pardon I will reforme their hearts both inward and outward mortification that they shall be obedient to my Law So that whosoeuer hath not receiued power to amend his life hee neuer felt the power of God to the pardoning of his sinne for he neuer giueth saith alone but it is euer ioyned with an ability from the same spirit 〈◊〉 amend the life so as vnlesse outwardly thou bee amended that thy light doe shine before men both in thy conuersation and in thy actions for any peace the Gospell can preach vnto thee thou maiest feare thou art in the state of condemnation And if thou hardenest thy heart against this sweet sound of the Lords voice hee will at the length scorne thee and thou maiest crie and not be heard for Esau may weepe too late Gen. 27.38 for we are therefore to repent because by grace we are sure to bee saued as Saint Peter saith 1. Pet. 1.17 if yee call God Father that is if ye will be his children passe your time in feare because he hath redeemed you by his bloud Luke 1.75 Leuit 11.44 So saith the Gospell It yee holy as your heauenly Father is holy for children must be of li●● disposition to their father and he that worketh euill is of the d●●● as Christ speaketh Iohn 8.44 So Paul Rom. 12.1 doth besee● them by the merits of Christ a forcible argument to perswade that they offer vp their bodies a holy sacrifice vnto God she●ing that the greatest matter to inforce vs to reformation is
Neither is this contrary to that God willeth not the death of a sinner for the difference is this God willeth not the confusion simply of any man as a thing wherein he delighteth but he willeth it as it is his iustice and what greater or better iustice can there be then to bee glorified in the condemnation of some that haue deserued it and he must be no more vnwillingly iust then vnwillingly mercifull Further learne that euen in this life the godly are gathered to heauen and so of the wicked that though they liue yet they are in hell So S. Iohn saith he that beleeueth is already passed to life Iohn 5.24 and Heb. 12.22 we are gathered already to the Patriarks and to the soules of iust and perfect men through hope and wee are as sure to haue that we hope for as we are of this we haue already namely the pledge of Gods spirit and Ephes 2. vs he hath gathered to the celesticall places vnder hope speaking as if it were already done though the reall gathering shal be at the latter day On the other side of the wicked it is said by the same spirit He that beleueth not is already damned the words are fearefull but it is so set downe to expresse the certainty of it not but that hee that is not beloued Ose 2.23 may be beloued and he that is not vnder mercy 1. Pet. 2.10 may obtaine mercy But looke in what state a man is in the Church in the same shall hee be after this life for whatsoeuer is bound on earth is bound in heauen and they that bee not bound heere being priuy hypocrites are notwithstanding bound in heauen and shall be so in hell also For the last which is vnquenchable fire thereby is meant the condemnation prepared for the reprobate not that wee must imagine there is any naturall fire there for first this fire can not pierce the soules of men nor the spirits of diuels and the paine must extend both to soule and body Secondly it is no more naturall fire then it is a bodily worme spoken of in the Gospell which shall gnaw the hearts and consciences of the damned Mark 9.44 Thirdly in Esay 30.33 it is said there was a great lake prepared for Kings with fire of much wood and it is absurd to thinke there is any wood there and a riuer of brimstone burning by the breath of the Lord which is not to bee intended of materiall brimstone but it is set out by such termes to expresse the vnspeakable torment of it not to be comprehended much lesse to be endured for the torment of fire and brimstone euen to flesh and bloud are strange and terrible therefore these speeches are vsed to conuey to our vnderstanding what we could not before conceiue So it is said in the Gospell that they shall bee bound hand and foot not that there be any bonds or chaines there Mat. 22.13 but the meaning only is that they are the prisoners of the Lord for euer neuer to be released but to be restrained from all libertie wherby they might in any sort be eased Againe hell fire is called Gehenna or Topheth which was a litle place where the Israelites did sacrifice their children in fire to the Diuels this being taken for the torment of the reprobate Now this torment is expressed two waies first in the extremitie of it secondly in the permanencie of it The first two waies First by that they shall feele both in soule and body secondly by that they shall lose both of them expressed 2. Thess 1.9 they shall be separated from the power of his presence and bound in chaines in euerlasting darknesse The greatnesse of this torment is expressed two waies first it shall be vniuersall in all parts and it is most fearfull in this life to be pained in euery part of the body at one time Secondly the particular torment th● euery one in hell shall feele as that Princes shall be tormented like Princes euery one according to the sinnes that he wrought in his body Mat. 10.15 as it is said in the Gospell It shall bee easier for Sodome then for them and yet they be in hell already for the damnation of Belzebub shall be the greatest and then of them that sinned against the holy Ghost and none of these shall haue so much as a drop of water to coole their toongues but they shall continually bee blaspheming of God for the which they shall continually be tormented And though this shall be great and grieuous such as they cannot yet they must abide yet shall it be a farre greater hell vnto them to thinke they haue lost heauen seeing Gods children to reioice that their persecutors be now plagued and that God is so auenged of them for their sakes For the second which is the endlesnesse of this torment it is a fire that shall neuer go out nor the flames wherof can neuer be●bated If there were but as many yeeres to endure it as there be grasse piles on earth or starres in heauen the conscience might somewhat through hope bee eased because at length it should cease but the end thereof cannot be imagined and this word neuer is fearefull Let this therefore teach vs rightly to embrace the Gospell that we may be wheate in this earthly floore of the Lord to the end we may be gathered into his heauenly garner MATH Chap. 3. vers 13 14 15 16 17. verse 13 Then cam Iesus from Galile to Iordan vnto Iohn to he baptized of him verse 14 But Iohn earnestly put him backe saying I haue neede to be baptized of thee and comest thou to me verse 15 Then Iesus answering said to him Let be now for thus it becommeth vs to fulfill all righteousnesse so hee suffered him verse 16 And Iesus when he was baptized came straite out of the water and lo the heauens were opened vnto him and Iohn saw the Spirit of God descending like a Diue and lighting on him verse 17 And lo a voice came from heauen saying This is my beloloued Sonne in whom I am well pleased NOW the Euangelist proceedeth to shew now Iohn exercised part of his Ministery euen toward the Messias himselfe and setteth downe how after Christ had liued long in Nazareth containing himselfe in Iosephs house till his heauenly father should consecrate him and call him forth to the great worke of the Ministery and of maiestie hee being now of thirty yeeres of age commeth to Iohn and requireth to be baptized in as much as he appearing in the flesh of man was to ioyne himselfe to them that confessed their sinnes Iohn by reuelation perceiuing that he was the Lord for they neuer met before this being in wise dome prouided of the Lord lest it might haue seemed a compact betweene them two to cosen the world refuseth to do it and put him backe earnestly acknowledging Christs excellency and his owne vnworthinesse In this bewraying the error of his
that of Angels euen that which hee had in his humane soule yet were they created and finite and it is no vitious or blame-worthy ignorance not to know that as a man which commeth not within the compasse of his humanity as the certainty of the latter day is not reuealed as himselfe saith to the sonne of man Mark 13.32 Further in that the spirit doth now annoint him learne that whosoeuer shall challenge any calling from God must shew himselfe to be qualified in some sort more then he was in his priuate life for that which is true in Christ as the head is also in the inferiour members And as it is intolerable in a man to vsurpe any place in the Church without authority from men so is i● high presumption to take it vpon him except with the outward calling he can shew the inward seale of the holy Ghost for without this the approbation of men is but as a seale set vpon water and if he pretend the allowance of the holy Ghost let him shew some competent sufficiency to discharge it Secondly is to bee considered why he descended in the shape of a doue Where note first that wee vnderstand not the shape spoken of as if the done appeared but as in a shape for it had a reall and a bodily being and substance and the word shape is to bee referred to the holy Ghost which is in all places as God and so not visible in himselfe but truely represented in the doue all signes being as they must bee proportionable to the representing of that is to bee signified In Acts 2.2 the spirit appeareth like the rushing winde to shew the power and feruency of the Gospell secondly like a clouen tongue which should speake and be as it were diuided to all thirdly like a fiery tongue to purge vs and to wast mens filthinesse And heere like a doue to testifie Christs kingdome to be in all lowlinesse and harmlesnesse to be a preacher of peace of such a doue like simplicity Esa 42.2 Mat. 12.20 that as is spoken by the Prophet he should not lift vp his voice in the streets and of so compassionate a heart as not to breake the bruised reede Heere further consider the difference between the manifestation of the Law and of the Gospell in the deliuery of the Law blowes the sound of a trumper appeares fearefull lightning a●● dreadfull thundring Exod. 19.16 so as the people could not abide to heare it and Moses himselfe being astonished and said I feare and quake Heb. 12.21 But when the Gospell is giuen there is nothing commeth foorth that is fearefull to testifie that Christ would not terrifie with thundring threates but by a mild and a still and a familiar voice would call men how long soeuer they haue continued in their sinnes and how many soeuer they be yea if they be distressed in their hearts and anguished in their soules as a milde doue he allureth them and promiseth to saue them Whereupon if any man doe bleed that he hath wounded the Lord by his offences and do grone with sighes vnspekeable and be confounded with his owne sin and ashamed of himselfe let him not feare to goe to Christ who is yet euen to this day a doue The least grone of a repentant heart the Lord will not refuse for it is his nature to be mercifull and his glory and ioy to saue and if there be but a litle worke begun in vs the Lord Iesus will quicken and cherish it which may comfort vs to powre foorth our soules before him for hee lieth in waite for our returne with the lost Sonne Luk. 15.20 and hath not deposed not laid aside his compassion Now if neither the voice of Moses 〈◊〉 terrifie Luk. 1.32 nor the voice of Christ allure vs if piping will not make vs dance nor weeping will make vs repent then this is our condemnation that this meeke doue is not embraced and that wee beleeue not the Gospell whereby we may haue accesse to Christ and so be saued Thirdly heere is to be considered how Iohn could call the doue the holy Ghost since the essence of this spirit is not discernable nor the power infused into Christ to be seene Againe he that is euery where and in no place circumscribed cannot be discerned how is it said then that Iohn saw him Wee most vnderstand they are both figuratiue and borrowed speeches hee saw not the Essence of the holy Ghost nor the power infused into Christ is not to be discerned for this was to be seene onely with the eye of the soule but the sight of the doue perswaded him the spirit was there after a speciall manner singualr and extraordinary Againe hee saw not the spirit descend but the doue which did really signifie that as verily and truly the spirit was light vpon him But is the holy Ghost that Doue as Ioh. 1.32 I beheld that spirit come downe from heauen like a Doue and it abode on him This is to be vnderstood not that the holy Ghost was inclosed in the Doue or personally vnited to the Doue but it is a sacramentall speech whereby that which is proper to the signe is giuen and attributed to the thing signified as we say the bread is the body of Christ but if substantially the holy Ghost be present in the Doue then so is the body of Christ in the Supper Not like for the holy Ghost is euery where because he is a spirit but the body of Christ is circumscribed and bounded in a place certaine and so they be not of the same nature Againe we do not say the Doue was a type of the substantiall presence of the holy Ghost for it was then euery where and it was not there present as in essence but it was a type to signifie that he was so there as in no place so much and it must be intended of a sacramentall and of no essentiall presence as if he were no where else but of the presence of his essence in a speciall maner Againe it is absurd to aske how there can be a true giuing of the thing vnlesse the thing be there as that Christ cannot be giuen by the bread vnlesse he be in or with or vnder the bread for it is not the locall presence or absence that makes the truth of giuing it but if the verity of the thing be there it is enough for God can giue man leaue to eate his flesh being in heauen The fathers did eate it otherwise they could not haue beene saued Iohn 6.31 and then Christ was not onely not present but not at all as touching his humanity so as Christ began not onely to be flesh when he was manifested but they did eate Manna and in that by faith they did eate Christ So in the water the conscience is washed and yet is there no bloud transfused with the water but it is as truly there as this Doue did testifie Christ to be filled with
faine to flie to preserue his life Exod. 2.15 So Paul when he was a Pharisie no man in greater credit nor more commended for being zealous in their religion but when he began to preach Christ crucified then was there none more buffeted by Sathan nor more exposed to contumelies nor in greater perill of his life then he so as once he was faine to bee priuily conueied away by being let downe in a basker Act. 9 25. and a second time to be rescued from the Iewes malice by a Centurion Act. 23.23 And this policy and stratageme of the Diuell is confirmed to vs by our owne experience for when a Minister beginneth to make a conscience and to stand soundly in the doctrine of Christ and the holy life of his Apostles then Sathan stirreth vp instruments to bring his name in question and kindleth such coales as in the end he is either remoued or by the multitude of disgraces made weary of well doing The cause of this in Sathan is two fold first his malice against the Maiesty of God secondly his enuie against the saluation of man For being adiudged to torment he laboureth to be auenged on God his iustice and sinneth against the holy Ghost of purpose to despite God and seekes to disglorifie him by seeking to destroy the seed of the woman Hereupon it is noted that Angels sinning were neuer restored because they sinned without temptation meerely of malice being created excellent and pure spirits But yet howsoeuer Sathan bestirreth him to heape vp the displeasure of the world vpon vs and is euer at our heeles with some floud of waters or other let vs not be discouraged but proceed on in that sanctified course we haue begun for the Lord will either stirre vp the earth to drinke vp our affliction or else our faces shall shine notwithstanding his temptations For Christ till he began to exercise his office was quiet and though he was thus troubled yet ceased he not to performe his worke For the second which is the place he went into the wildernesse partly to imitate that Eliah had done 1. King 19.8 being in the mount of Horeb in the wildernesse and fasting there forty daies but especially to prouoke Sathan the more and to giue him all aduantage that might be that in the end be might shew himselfe the stouter champion And for this cause they that were possessed with diuels were cast into solitary places that the spirits might haue the greater power ouer them Now heerein Christ sheweth his greater courage giuing Sathan as it were leaue to appoint the field and to set downe his weapon like them that being determined and resolute to fight and to trie their manhoods go apart by themselues where they may haue no companie to part them Euen so Christ as a victorious Captaine dealeth where sathan himselfe will chuse that he ouercomming as it were at vneuen weapons it might be an incouragement and confirmation to vs that this was hee who was sent of God to breake the Serpents head and that hath the power to disarme him Where notwithstanding obserue that though Christ who was indeed the stronger did lay himselfe thus open to his enemy yet that this is no example for vs to imagine that we can follow who are lighter then vanity but that we must auoid solitarinesse as much as can be except we will prouoke the diuell for this is the humor that lieth fittest for his temptation when we are destitute of the comfort of company to worke the more violently vpon our affections Heereupon the Philosophers are wont to say and that truly that he which liued alone was either a God or a diuell For the third the guide by which hee was directed thither was the holy Ghost where we learne this comfort that seeing the diuell could not haue tempted Christ but that God by the wisedome of his spirit had so appointed both the time the place and the occasion wee may heereby haue good security giuen vnto vs that since Sathans power is limited and he deales but by commission and all temptations outward and inward are so sent from God that he intermedleth but as an instrument for the hardening of the reprobate and for the triall of the elect and since he hath no absolute power to exercise his tyranny but runneth like a dogge that is chained by the arme of the Lord we may returne this ioy to our soules that though we be compassed with clouds of calamities yet wee shall neuer be temped aboue our measure for hee cannot do it but by permission And since God is the maister of the prize to iudge who fighteth most valiantly if wee feare and tremble before him and walke according to the direction of his spirit prouided alwaies that we tempt him not to trie his goodnesse wee may assure our selues that as hee hath begunne a good worke in vs so hee will end it to the praise of his glory and as Esay 49.24 the iust captiuity shall be deliuered and the pray shall be taken from the tyrant for the Lord is stronger then he and therefore is able and hath better title then he both in creating vs when we were not and in redeeming vs being lost and therefore we shall be victors in this strong man Christ For the fourth the end why hee was tempted which was to sustaine the vttermost assaults Sathan could make by suggestion to seduce him Heere it may seeme strange at first that our Sauiour Christ should bee so farre abased to bee subiect to the temptations of the diuell and to bee directed to it by the spirit of God True it is there was no matter in Christ to worke vpon his nature being fully sanctified from his conception free from all corruption yet hee was apt and capable to be tempted that is it might glaunce as a thought thorough him but it was presently repulsed For such was the state of Adam at first that though he had no inward concupiscence yet hee was such a one as might be tempted to heare and to see if he would but this is the difference it clasped about Adams vnderstanding but it could not possibly lodge with Christ and it is no more disparagement to him thus to be tempted then it was for him to take and assume our flesh Heereupon consider that there be three kinds of motions in the minde of man The first which glaunceth and passeth thorough the minde without any troubling of it at all The second more permanent when somewhat assaults the minde and yet without any consent of the minde The third is that kinde of motion to which the heart consenteth The first of these is against no commandement the second is against the tenth commandement the third against the other nine commandements And this is singular comfort and consolation to vs that Christ was tempted for now we may bee bold to assure our selues that we may powre foorth our soules vnto him and may approach to him in all our
Act. 22.13 was suddenly called to preach and Amos from his sheephooke Amos 7.15 to prophesie let vs know that the Lord that called them had power to giue them gifts in a moment for he hath the fulnesse of the holy Ghost to dispose at his pleasure but men that want this power must trie the gifts first and the Church must allow of none vnlesse they be perswaded he be such a one that if Christ were on the earth he would giue his consent Thirdly learne by the word Fishermen that the ministery is no easie nor idle but a laborious office wherein they must alwaies be either casting their nets or mending their nets or sorting the fish trauelling sore both night and day As Peter could answer Christ Luk. 5.5 We haue trauelled sore all night and caught nothing so as they that thinke much to take this paines are not fit for this calling For the fourth which is their obedience it sheweth that it was more than the voice of a man that thus wrought vpon their conscience for he secretly and inuisibly spake vnto their hearts by his spirit and he might as easily haue drawen Caiaphas as Cephas if it had beene his pleasure for he mollifieth the soule on the sudden and can open the doores of death with the least breath of his mouth Secondly learne that no affection or delight ought to make vs to forsake or driue vs from following Christ in our calling These men we see left their father whom they loued and their nets by which they liued and 1. King 19.19 Elizeus left his oxen and made haste after Eliah had cast his mantle on him And Mat. 8.21 one whom Christ called would but haue done his duty to haue buried his father and was not permitted Howbeit heere men must beware of two extremities first that they frame not excuses but willingly leaue their nets when they are called Secondly that they leaue them not till they be called and leaue into the Ministery of themselues being as fit for it as a blind man to be a painter For the last point which is the effect that came of Christs teaching it is said The multitude followed him where learne that when the Gospell is fresh and greene and first flourisheth men are very greedy to taste of it but if it continue long among them euen Manna proueth horsebread and men are soone weary of it For so it fell out with this people against whom Mat. 11.23 Christ denounceth a fearefull iudgement for their vnbeliefe making them worse than Tyrus and Sydon which were before condemned Whereby we may see how dangerous it is to grow cold in our first loue of the truth and to suspect them that in a preposterous zeale will seeme to run after Christ bragging with the yoong man in the Gospell that they haue kept the commandements and yet know not the least point of charity how to distribute to the poore LVKE 11. vers 24 25 26. verse 24 When the vncleane spirit is gone out of a man hee walketh through dry places seeking rest and when he findeth none he saith I will returne to my house whence I came out verse 25 And when he commeth he s●●deth it swept and garnished verse 26 Then goeth he and taketh seuen other spirits worse than himselfe and they enter in and dwell there so the last state of that man is worse than the first IN this text there bee fiue points to bee obserued first what is meant by the going out of the spirit secondly his behauiour after his departure namely that there is a restlesse desire in Sathan to reenter into his former habitation thirdly the fit opportunities hee obserueth for the regaining of his possession there be two set downe in this place hee staieth till he finds it swept and garnished and a third is expressed Mat. 12.44 he findeth it empty that is deuoid of all cares quiet and swept of the grace of God and yet notably garnished with hypocrisie fourthly the vehement inuasion he maketh at his re-entry that hee will so garrison and lay such munition about the house as he will neuer be dispossessed againe for he bringeth seuen spirits worse than himselfe the Lord doth so darken the hart of that man that was for a while enlightned fiftly the lamentable and damnable estate of such a man his end is worse than his beginning For the first how Sathan is said to be cast out wee must vnderstand so cast out as he still continueth in for if he were once vtterly dispossessed then could he neuer returne againe And this kind of casting out heere meant is matched with diuers other places of the Scripture as Heb. 6.5 It is impossible that they which haue tasted of the good word of God if they fall away should be renued againe And Heb. 10.25 If wee sinne willingly after we haue receiued the knowledge of truth there remaines no more satisfaction or sacrifice for sinne and 2. Pet. 2.21 It had beene better neuer to haue knowen the way of truth than after they haue knowen it to turne from it If a man then may know the truth and yet forsake it bee enlightned and yet fall away be sanctified and yet crucifie Christ againe by the same reason may Sathan be cast out of a man and yet continue in that man For when these tearmes be thus vsed either of casting out Sathan or of letting in the truth and yet by the sequel of the words vsed by the spirit we see the ruine of such men set downe wee must neuer take it for any effectuall working of the spirit of God but onely of the greatnesse of the Lords mercy offered them in the outward meanes of their saluation namely in the word and Sacraments to cast out Sathan according as it is said Luk. 10.11 The kingdome of God was come neere them but not at them or as Luk. 17.21 Christ speaking to the Pharisies saith The kingdome of God is within you as if he should haue said Ye looke about for a Messias as if hee were absent but he is euen among you and in the middest of you though not by spirituall operation So that obserue hence that as often as we partake of any of the Lords graces it is to cast out Sathan and to root out his kingdome in vs though we receiue it not with that effect it should haue and therfore though that for a time Sathan seemeth to haue lost his dominion in vs yet by the vnright receiuing of Gods blessings and the vnreuerent vsing of them he doth still continue in vs. Againe so far Sathan may be said to be cast out of a man and yet he a reprobate as the spirit may be said to bee quenched in a man and yet he a Christian and that the comfort of a Christian may be much abated and sore eclipsed if we will not beleeue it Dauid may wel perswade vs Psal 32.4 who found such leannesse and emptinesse of grace in him as if
these for all that were before him and shall come after him being true beleeuers thirdly the graces of Christ doe farre exceed the sinne of Adam else would Sa●●● in perswade thee thou art halfe saued and halfe damned for if the vertue thou hast by Christ were but equall with the corrup●●on thou hast by Adam it could not produce so incomprehensible a worke as thy saluation is and therefore Rom. 5.17 it is said If by the offence of one death raigned through one much more shall they which receiue that superfluity or superabundance of grace raigne in life through one that is Christ thereby shewing that the righteousnesse of Christ made ours by grace is of greater power to bring life then was the sin of Adam to bring death to his posterity Therefore seeing through faith God reuealeth to thee these riches laid vp for thee in Christ bend thine eie toward him and he will so supply thee with spirituall wisdome as thou shalt answer with ease and comfort the sophistry and deceits of Sathan who willingly would plunge thee into terror and trouble of conscience Which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit Vnto such as thus walke there is no condemnation and this is the third thing spoken of at first namely that a sanctified life must be the sure euidence of our ingrafting into Christ for howsoeuer the spirit which is within vs testifieth thus much that we are Christs and Christ is ours as 1. Cor. 2.10 The things which God hath prepared for them that loue him he hath reuealed to vs by his spirit and vers 12. We heaue not receaued the spirit of the world but the spirit which is of God yet because through selfe loue no man will say but he hath the spirit therefore steppes in the other testimony of holinesse of life and this is visible reall vndeceiuable and true as 1. Ioh. 3.6.8 Whosoeuer abideth in him sinneth not and he that committeth sinne is of the diuell which place we must not vnderstand simply of sinners for all of vs are so but of such as fauour themselues in their sinnes blesse their soules in them make a trade of sinning and persist in it so as we that are made mystical members of Christ must labour to extinguish the life of any grosse sinne and not to make them the members of an harlot of an vsurer of an Idolater of a flatterer and such like for being ingrafted into Christ it is as odious in Gods sight for vs to commit these sinnes as if Christ should commit them and by them without repentance we doe rend our selues from Christ for the Sonnes of God are led by his spirit Rom. 8.14 And they are led by it that liue in it Gal. 3.25 And this life is knowen by the effects that is by walking in the spirit And they walke in it that fulfill not the lusts of the flesh Gal. 5.16 And they fulfill them not that haue crucified the flesh vers 14. And they onely haue done this that cease from sinne 1. Pet. 4.2 with a full purpose of heart to liue better for as the dead body hath no breath so must sinne haue no strength in vs and he that doeth not this is a reprobate I speake not of a finall reprobate but of a reprobate for the time for such stand in the state of condemnation But if we labour to liue godly as neere as we can after the example of Christ and make holinesse of life as the load star whereby we may be seen to direct our iourney toward heauen then this doth knit vs in the persawsion of our vnion with Christ prouided alwaies that there be speciall repentance for speciall sinnes extraordinary repentance for extraordinary sinnes great repentance for grosse sinnes and daily repentance for daily sinnes Threfore let euery of vs examine our selues what sinnes remaine in vs vnrepented and what vnsubdued what be blushing and shamefast and what be crying and insolent sinnes and let vs take the same course with them all cast them from vs and purge our selues cleane of the leauen of Sathan for a sinne supprest and not destroied will at lengh breake forth to the hinderance of our walke in the spirit and if we be stopt in this course then so long do we stagger in the assurance of our being one with Christ which is the only helmet of our saluation Secondly obserue hence the order the scripture setteth down namely that first we must be in Christ which is the cause and then we shall walke after the spirit which is the effect euen as iustification goeth before sanctification our ingrafting into Christ being our iustification and being so it causeth holinesse of life so as both must goe together making no difference betweene faith and a godly life in the person but onely in the properties and maner and therefore if it be asked who shall be saued Such as leade a sanctified life But if how we shall be saued the answer is by the merits of Christ apprehended by faith so as by faith wee are saued for the fruit maketh not the root good but the root the fruit the streames are not the cause of the fountaine but the fountaine of them and the streames are but the effects euen as breathing is the effect of life so we are not saued because of our workes and walking in the spirit but because of our faith for workes are the fruits of faith yet we shall receiue according to our workes 2. Cor. 5.10 and shal be recompensed for them not for the dignity of the worke but in the benignity of the Lord who hath accepted our persons in Christ and therefore Tit. 2.11.12 the Apostle doth not say Because we deny vngodlinesse therefore the grace of God hath brought saluation but saluation being offered in the Gospell we must thereby learne to be profitable schollers in holinesse of life So Mat. 11.28 Christ doth not call vs to ease vs of our sinnes because we liue godly after his example but faith being wrought in vs by the power of his calling vs we then liue godly euen as the thiefe vpon the crosse Luke 23.40 was no sooner called but he brought foorth fruit his confession being a token of his faith So we must first be within the couenant of God and then we shall walke in the couenant as Gen. 17.1 God said to Abraham I am sufficient therefore walke before me so that he made not his couenant with him to be his God because he walked before him but first he made his couenant with him that being assured of his protection he might more chearefully walk before him euen so fareth it with vs we are first made members of Christ and then being vnited to his body we must shew forth the life of Christ in our cōuersation And here we must further learne to answer two obiections First the carnall man will say Christ hath satisfied for his breach of the law and supplied the imperfection of his
the profanenesse of our mindes we make a sauour of death and as it were a trumpet of debate and sedition to consume each other yea Ioh. 6.66 we see how diuers of Christs disciples went backe from him when hee preached a long sermon touching the sacrament of the supper which is a badge of our friendship with God with our brethren which proceeded not from the sacrament but from their rebellion that their sinne might bee made more sinfull yea such contagion is there in our nature as wee make Christ himselfe the authour and finisher of our hope to bee our condemnation a stone to stumble at and a rocke of offence 1. Pe. 2.8 the cause not being in him who is the light of the world but in our selues making him an occasion of our darkenesse Iohn 3.19 which by this light shall be made in the end farre more sinfull and damnable Since then the power of our corruption is so forcible as it is able to peruert all the meanes ordained for our saluation as to make the commandement of God in his law the promises of God in the Gospell the seales of God in his sacraments and the loue of God in his sonne to be vaine and of no value this must teach vs to humble our selues in the lowest degree in a hatred and detestation of our flesh and sinfull faculties of our soule which are as the poisoned soile that either casts vs or corrupts all the seeds of fruitfulnesse or wholsomenes that we throwen into it whereas our sin being disclosed both by the law and Gospell it is the more to bee hated and abhorred because it turneth the edge and benefit of both these to our destruction For what could the Lord doe more to preserue our first parents in their innocency than to set as it were a double fence about his commandement forbidding not onely the eating of the fruit but the touching of it binding the hands that they should not conuey it to the mouth and yet more hath he done for vs taking vs out of the fire by casting as it were his Sonne in the fire though as if we had neuer beene scorched or else being past sense we carrie still the coles in our bosome and will not haue them quenched with the water of the spirit to newnesse of life But let vs not be so wilfull peruerse so strong headed and stifnecked as not to bee turned into the way by the rod of the law but hauing spent the portion of the flesh and wasted the lusts thereof let vs grow in loue with our fathers house for what fruit can we haue in those things whereof we shall be ashamed or which at length shall bring shame on vs Let vs therfore shake off the sinnes we haue delighted in and then haue we suffered in the flesh and then hath Christ suffered in the flesh for vs which if he haue then is our flesh destroied in vs which if it be then shall we cease from sinne which if we doe then shall we liue after the will of God though not in perfection yet reformable to the perfection of his will and then to vs that are sanctified shall not the law be grieuous nor burdensome as Saint Iohn saith 1. Iohn 5.3 but it shall reioice the heart giuing light to the eies and sweetnesse to the taste as Dauid saith Psal 119.7.8.9.10 God sending his Sonne c. This is the second generall p●n spoken of at first namely that what was impossible to the law is made possible in Christ wherein obserue foure things First the person which sendeth Secondly the person which is sent Thirdly the maner how he is sent Fourthly the end of his sending For the first which is God consider the cause mooued him to this mercy not any thing in vs but his owne loue and compassion towards vs as it is expressed Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the world that he sent his sonne and Ezek. 16.3.4 It is said concerning the Church of God that at the beginning she was born and begotten of the heathen her father an Amorite her mother an Hittite at the day of her birth shee had no mid-wife neither was shee washed but remained filthy shee had not so much as a swadling clout to couer her neither did any that passed by pitie her but shee was cast out in the open field lay polluted in her blood ready euery houre to perish In which words the meaning of the holy Ghost is to set forth our vnworthinesse our shame and our nakednesse If now an honorable person shall passe by and open his compassion on her and bring her home and spread his owne skirts ouer her feed her at his owne table make her beautifull and aduance her to great honour whereby she that was despised comes to be beloued of all nations and yet she should againe fall to her pollution and become a common strumpet if notwithstanding this vnthankefulnesse and apostasie he should draw her home againe and renue his former fauours towards her no reason could be giuen of this but the free mercy of him that did it euen so hath God like an honorable person full of all power and riches strength and maiesty mercy compassion seene vs polluted in our bloud before our birth borne of corrupt parents brought forth into a more corrupted place which is this world yet hath he said we shall liue he hath caused vs to bud as the flower of the field yea our time hath beene as the time of loue hee hath spread the skirts of his protection ouer vs entred a couenant with vs and we are become his now for vs to enquire the cause of this we can finde none but his willing loue to haue it so but let vs striue by the fruits of our liues to honor him and with the calues of our lippes to praise him that hath thus aduanced his mercy on vs and let vs not doe the worke of a presumptuous whore either in giuing rewards to the flesh or taking rewards of the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof lest the Lord diminish our ordinary as Ezek 16.27 and feed vs with the blood of wrath and lealousie Againe heere note that the Lord neuer worketh but when it is impossible and the cure desperate in the eies of men for when the Law could not saue vs then rather than hee would want a people and lose the glory of his mercy hee sent his sonne to saue vs. The woman Mar. 5.25 that had her issue of blood twelue yeeres and had spent all her substance among Physitians and auailed not when man could not heale her then Christ did it when he that had beene diseased 38. yeeres and had line long at the poole of Bethesda Ioh. 5.6 and could get none to helpe him in when the water was troubled then did Christ bid him take vp his bed and walke when Ioh. 11.39.42 Lazarus had been in the graue foure daies that it was impossible for man to restore
speaketh absolutely powerfully A new hart will I giue you I will take away the stony hart For howsoeuer it is meet Adam should haue this free election being made a perfect resemblance of the image of God yet is it not meet for vs in this second creation lest heereby we should make the death of Christ of no effect neither his grace nor spirit for if we had it then should we fall from Christ because of that flesh infirmity that is in vs therfore as the Lord doth begin with vs by his spirit to conuert vs without any thing in vs to further it but altogether to withstand it so doth he proceed with vs by his spirit and end with vs by his spirit that he may be all in all in our weldoing and in the worke of our saluation And yet notwithstanding this we haue neede of exhortations threatnings praier and such like to strengthen and stirre vp our dull and senselesse wils for the inward working of the spirit which frameth our wils to will good doth not abolish the instrumentall causes but we haue need of these meanes first because they are sanctified of the Lord and ordained to make vs lay hold on the spirit secondly because without these the spirit and graces of God would soone perish which counsell is giuen Heb. 3.13 to exhort one another daily lest we be hardened through the deceit of sinne for though God could doe this onely by his spirit yet hee will haue these meanes vsed that we be neither high minded nor idle for since we cannot doe good why should we be proud and since we so hardly keepe good we must not be idle but as Phil. 2.12.13 end and worke forth our saluation with trembling for as one holdeth a great masse of lead or other vnremoueable weight not to remoue it for hee knowes hee cannot but onely to trie his strength so though we cannot nor need not performe the law because Christ hath done it yet must we make it the rule of our obedience and of a sanctified life that heerein we may resemble Christ who alone hath sanctified vs. We are then to consider how Christ hath fulfilled the righteousnesse of this Law and that he hath done two waies partly by abrogating it and partly by establishing it he hath abrogated the law in two things First in the power of separation between man and man which was the law of ceremonies so as what was enmity betweene Iew and Gentile that hath Christ abolished and therefore as it is said Ephes 2.14 Christ is our peace which made of both one and hath broken the stop of the partition wall through his flesh in abrogating the hatred that is the law of cōmandements which standeth in ordinances for to make of two one newe man in himselfe Secondly in the power of malediction betweene God and man whereupon it is said Gal. 5.23 There is no law against vs that is the curse of the law for sinne is not due to vs because Christ hath taken it away and therefore it is said 1. Tim. 1.9 The law is not giuen vnto a righteous man that is against a righteous man there is no law the curse of the law belonging onely to the reprobate and not to the elect howbeit we must not thinke we are so deliuered from the condemnation of it as that wee are freed from the obedience of it Christ therefore hath likewise established the law and this two waies First in the doctrine Secondly in the obedience to the doctrine For the first that not any thing of the doctrine is abrogated but perfectly taught by Christ as appeareth Mat. 5.22 2● That the least euill thought is damnation That anger in heart is flat murder That he that lusteth but in hart after a woman committeth adultery and Saint Paul saith Rom. 7.7 hee knew not what lust was till he knew the righteousnesse of Christ Againe as was touched before Christ came but for these two ends first to make peace betweene man and man secondly between God and man now the moral law made no enimity betweene Iew and Gentile but the ceremoniall law for that was the wall parted vs and them and that onely is broken downe by the comming of Christ and for the other the curse of the law made all the warre betweene God and vs the rigor of it Christ hath satisfied but the doctrine of the law made none for we yet in the precise keeping of it challenge life Christ hauing fulfilled it in vs and for vs so as Christ giueth vs no new righteousnesse but that wee our selues could not perform yet we claime it as done in our person by the righteousnesse of the law that Christ in our flesh performed for the second he doth also establish it in the obedience to the law and this two waies Fi●●t b●●●he person of Christ for by his inherent holinesse was fulfilled all the law which is imputed to vs Secondly as by righteousnesse inherent in him so by his spirit of sanctification dwelling in vs hauing the whole man in part changed that we are able to doe what God will and in iudgement to allow in affection to embrace and in action to execute what he commandeth so as if we consider our filthinesse we haue the blood of Christ to bathe in if our nakednesse wee haue the robes of his righteousnesse if our beggery we haue his riches filled with all graces yet must we alwaies ioyne bloud and water faith and works in the person iustified for they are notes of our religion signes of our conuersion seales of our election fruits of our iustification testimonies of a good conscience in their end they are referred to the Lords glory they are causes to stirre vp others to the seruing of the same God they are of the Lord accepted and recompensed in the mercy of the rewarder and not at the merit of the worker for he can accept of none by desert but that which is according to the precise couenant of the law but water is to be stood vpon as a signe that bloud hath gon before and the writing of his law in our hearts by sanctification of life is a proofe that our sinnes are purged in the blod of Christ and pardoned through the mercy of God And in respect of these seuerall operations and workes of Christ in aboli●●●● the law in the curse and establishing the law in the obedien●● 〈◊〉 it we that are elect are said to be dead to the law Rom. 7.4 and also liuing to the law wee are dead to the law in three respects First to the condemnation of it because being iustified by Christ we cannot be condemned by the law for the wrath of God is taken away through the imputation of his righteousnesse Secondly to the constraint of the law for it doth not constraine vs which are Gods elect as it doth the reprobate because Christ by the worke of his spirit doth bend our wils to
purchasing and possessions if couetousnesse did not delight thee nor profanenesse and cursed speaking so please thine eares if ignorance and contempt of God did not so seale vp thy conscience as thou canst not see thine owne deformity Hobeit in this thy iudgement of others obserue 3. rules First iudge thy self first lest while thou reprouest others thy self may be cōdemned Secondly giue thou no final iudgement for that pertains to God alone before whose eies all things are open Thirdly iudge not according to the inner man but by the outward that euery man may see as much as thy selfe though they want that heauenly wisedome to mislike for what sow did euer finde fault with other for wallowing in the mire secondly consider the phrase or metaphor vsed by the Apostle borrowed from trauellers or those that vndertake dangerous iournies for as one is subiect to fall if he walke in slippery places or to be hindred in his walke if blocks doe lie in his way so fareth it with the child of God he walketh through slippery places and gets many fals but riseth immediately because he meets with Christ in the way he trauaileth ouer mountains as it were in the wildernesse and is much wearied but refreshed by Christ who is vnto him the water of life yea he hath many stones laid on purpose to stumble at but through the strength of Christ he creepes ouer them and comes at length to his iournies end which is his rest in heauen Thirdly marke the difference betweene the way of the elect and of the reprobate the first as Mat. 7.14 is strait and narrow the other broad and wide now though the labour be greater to croud into the narrow way yet heerein is the benefit greater also that being narrow when thou art once in thou canst not lose it and being strait thou maiest goe on as by a line and cannot misse it yea if thou fall as needes thou must through frailety being in the way that God prescribes thee thou hast Psal 91.11 the Angels to protect thee so farre as thy fall shall not hurt thee whereas now the wicked that take such elbow roome in their walkes they may and do easily wander and being once out of the way the further they goe the further they are off the end they desire nay they haue such windings and turnings in the lusts of the flesh wherein they liue as it carieth them at length among the wolues of their soules that will deuour them and though as Iob speaketh cap. 15.20 The wicked man is continually as one that trauelleth of childe being euer conceaued with some mischiefe as Esa 59.4 yet God so disappointeth them as it were of their midwiues as they bring forth but a lie as Dauid saith Psal 7.14 And therfore it fareth with the children of God and the wicked as with two setting forth together the one going strait toward the place appointed the other turning backeward from it the first will come to his iournies end at the time appointed the other neuer euen so will God in his due time bring vs whom hee findeth watchfull and vigilant to that place that Christ hath prepared for vs in his house and shut the dores vpon them that wandred all their life as in the darke that since with darkenesse they were delighted in darkenesse they shall be tormented Fourthly obserue the maner of the hypocrites walke For as the Hare when she is started by the hounds by reason of that naturall instinct sagacity God hath giuen her runneth toward the market way not for any desire she hath to the way it selfe but that the hounds might lose her tract by the continuall passage of the people euen so doe the hypocrites walke in the tract of Gods children as come to sermons ioyne in praier reproue swearing lispe out somthing for reformation and such like but why do they this onely because wee should not trace them like foxes into their form whither their carriage for the flesh is gone before so as they are but clokes to couer their filth withall that looking into their profession they will deceiue vs but if wee cast our eie but vpon their feete we shall finde their steps tend to death And whereas policy hath diuided the state into three branches the King the Clergy and the Laiety the scripture affordeth vs examples of hypocrisie in euery one of these Herod for a King Mark 6.20 will grace the doctrine of Iohn Baptist so farre as he will heare him gladly and fauour his person so much as he will yeeld to many things at his request but yet he had a swing in the flesh he could not bee turned from for you might haue traced him home to his brother Philips house and haue sene a most filthy nest he had there made for his walk in the flesh Looke vpon Iudas a Disciple a follower and preacher of Christ he pretends a worke of mercy and a religious care of the poore Ioh. 12.5 there is too much ointment wasted on Christ that might better haue beene spent and bestowed in mony vpon the poore heere are good words and faire shewes but the Lord vneaseth his hypocrisie and discouereth his priuy way to be but for the filling of the purse which he c●●ied that he might spend it on his lusts for faith the text vers 6. He was a theefe Lastly steps in Ananias and Sapphira the foundation of a family being man and wife they Act. 5.1.2 will be such hot followers of the Apostles as none shall goe beyond them for the reliefe of persecuted Christians they will sel a possession pretend to bring the whole price of it and lay it at the Apostles feete but marke they haue a secret chest they thought no man should see one corner of couetousnesse in their heart must be filled by keeping part of the mony to themselues which dissembling of theirs was suddenly and seuerely auenged that we may beware by their destruction After this sort doth the Lord in all ages discouer the skirts of hypocrites that if they be but watcht ouer in a holy wisdom they haue euer some backedore which we shall at length espie whereat the lusts of the flesh doe enter which heapeth but heauier desolation at the last because they thought to haue mocked God who in truth will not be mocked Now some will say if they walke in the right way at any time it sufficeth alledging for their example the thiefe vpon the Crosse Luk. 23.40.41 who made but a short confession for that long happinesse he hath in heauen and therfore thinke thy need not take so long a iourney as Abraham and the rest of the saints of God haue done But how can he that setteth foorth in the euening finish the same iourney he doth that went out in the morning It is true God calleth at all houres yet must we not looke for such miracles at the moment of death as the conuersion of the thiefe was for if we deferre
courts of God then a thousand in the kings palace and if this spirit was in him in the time of the law then ought there to bee a double spirit in vs that liue in this golden time of the Gospell But I would it might not be said of vs that the children of this world are wiser in their generation then the children of light for they lie stretching themselues vpon their beds straining their wits how to please the flesh with choice and variety of delightfull sinnes whereas wee through the smoke of that corruption that flieth vp to our eies are so blinded as wee thinke our selues incumbred with the comlinesse of the spirit straitning the times wherein the graces of God should be blowen vp and cherished in vs and giuing too large an allowance to the portion we share out for the flesh therefore if we will be spirituall men indeed we must lay vp the word of God in our hearts binding it as a signe vpon our hands wearing it as a frontlet before our eies and writing it vpon the posts of our houses that it may be as a master to instruct vs and as a line to direct vs that as neere as we can our thoughts may be hedged in that they range not after the concupiscence of the flesh our affections restrained that they rise not against the worke of the spirit our actions so squared as they may be fit timber for the building of such Temples wherein the Lord shall dwell by his spirit Lastly obserue the fruits the wisdome of the spirit bringeth which be two peace and life euen the two speciall benefits that the carnall man seeketh for yet misseth of for the flesh neuer giueth peace but is continually perplexed eating and being neuer satisfied flying and chacing themselues when none pursueth them neither can it bring foorth life the wicked being euer groping as in the darke so as we see what worldly men most seeke for that they are most destitute of for we all agree in the end of our desire that we would be blessed but in the substance wherein true blessednesse consisteth there is great difference The Philosophers speaking of happines were distracted into two hundred eighty eight opinions euery one intending some thing and yet resoluing nothing some pointing to the right hand some to the left some to the vally some to the plaine and yet all of them out of the way yea and the inlightened Christian that hath a true contemplation of right happinesse doth notwithstanding by the halting of his conscience confute that in practise which hee in heart alloweth confessing it to be ascribed to the spirit and yet seeketh it in the flesh placing it in heauen and yet looking for it in hell whereas it is better goe to heauen a begger then to hell an Emperour and as Mat. 8. better goe to heauen lame then to hell sound and yet such is our spirituall blindnesse that we had rather put it on the hazard of our soules then to lose any present comfort in the body But how canst thou thinke to finde hony in a waspes nest or to make a good garment of a spiders webbe or to receaue holesome food of a cockatrice egge or to perswade thy selfe of peace and life in following the flesh which the Lord hath cursed The onely happinesse of a Christian resteth in his wisedome in the spirit for by this he hath peace about him and peace aboue him though iudgement smiteth on euery side yet it spareth him for his conscience being vpright hee hath euer his pardon in his hand to plead though he be compassed with all the crosses in the world yet hauing the first peace in the forgiuenesse of his sinnes he is assured of his last peace also that is his lasting peace in life eternall That king was miserable that vnder his cloath of estate had a sword hanging ouer his head by a little threed and in this suspensed felicity he was so perplexed that he wished to be out of his rich misery much more may they wish it that haue the sword of the Lords vengeance shaking ouer them for studying onely the wisedome of the flesh which is so far from peace as it would hide it selfe vnder the hils and so farre short of life as it is the vndoubted messenger of a most desperate death But these be onely fruits of such a tree as the feare of God hath made wisely old betimes being planted by the spirit and growing vp in the spirit shewing by their conuersation vpon what stocke they are grafted and by what sap they are nourished tasting nothing but the true seruice of God wherby they are able to stand before him with a cleere conscience which is walled about in euery corner with the peace and fauour of God and reserued in his due time for the perfection of glory in the life to come ROM chap. 8. vers 7. verse 7 Because the wisedome of the flesh is enimity against God for it is not subiect to the law of God neither indeed can be THe drift of the Apostle in this verse as in the former is to shew that our sanctification is the onely security we haue of our saluation for to them that are in Christ there is life and peace and this our vnion with him is discerned by our walking in his spirit and this shall wee know when the things wee doe sauour of the spirit and this sauour is seene by performing the fruits of the spirit in the course of a godly life And that this is so he hath proued by opposing two contraries as namely by the godly life of a spirituall man and the godles life of a carnall man Now heere he sheweth a reason why the wisedome of the flesh is damnation because it is enimity against God So this verse standeth on two parts First he sheweth what the wisedome of the flesh is at plaine hatred with God Secondly patience that coles of fire may be heaped vpon their heads and whether these three meete together in any one man or any of them alone possesse him the wisdome of the flesh euer rebelleth against the wisdome of God and this I speake not of the folly of man but of the very best actions that flesh and blood can doe for the very best wisdome of the flesh was that of Peters toward Christ Master pitty thy selfe Mat. 16.22.22 and yet for this he was called Sathan so that to consult with flesh and blood is but to take aduice how to damne our selues for if we be at enmity with God it must needes follow wee are at friendship with the diuell Now for the second part which is the reason of this enimitie betweene God and the flesh obserue that if we will know how to please God it is taught vs in his law for if we would yeeld our selues subiect to it it being giuen and pronounced at first by the mouth of God written with his singer and sent by his Angell deliuered
life for direction and of the commandements of God for instruction yea do taste in som measure of the sweetnesse of grace for our inlightning yet if we suffer our soule to be the fountaine of all vncleanenesse and doe make the members of our body as so many pipes or conduites to conuey that vncleanenesse into our liues the most part of our thoughts of our words and deeds of our affections and desires tending more to the dishonoring of God the satisfying of our delights in the flesh then to the furthering of our saluation making riches our hope the wedge of gold our confidence and trusting in the strength of our malice as Dauid saith Psal 52.7 Then are wee in the damnable state of flesh these being iniquities to bee condemned and as Iob saith chap. 31.28 A plaine denying of God which must of necessitie displease him in the highest degree Further obserue hence that none but sanctified men can please God and that all the workes of carnall men and reprobates with what face soeuer they be done are hatefull to him the reason is because none of them consent to the law of God in any other sort then to make them inexcusable for the vnderstanding whereof wee must know that there is a two sold writing of the law in the hearts of men the one by the singer of God the other by the spirit of God and that which is written by the spirit is onely in Gods children the other is in all men and in all nations being the law of nature which is the light of reason and by this they doe know and see their sinnes and so farre they consent to the law but not in this to loath their sin or to be grieued at it hauing a striuing with the sinne but not against the sinne against the sense and feeling of it that they may more eagerly follow it for hauing this law written in his conscience which accuseth him for sinne he laboreth to race it out that he may sinne without controulement for pride selfe-loue cruelty hatred and such like are passions alwaies working inwardly vpon their members that is vpon their wils vnderstandings affections which sometime lie hid like a toade vnder a stone this proceeding from the goodnesse of God for the loue he beareth to his Church 〈◊〉 if the Lions of the field should euer roare what should bec●●●e of the poore lambes And if they should hatch all the sinnes they haue conceaued they would liue worse then wild beasts wee should haue no peace nor face of a Church among vs and therefore what the Lord cureth in his elect he restraineth onely in the wicked by ●n inferior working of his grace that they burst not forth into outragious sinnes he being likewise hindred from the height of his impiety partly for feare of punishment and partly for feare of shame and discredit the world euer liking it well that men should liue ciuilly lest a ruine of the whole might ensue And yet herein we may see the exceeding bountie of God that euen for liuing morally and aiming but at earthly praise and commendation without any respect of the loue of God these being fruits not of the woorst sort he rewardeth them in this life with his outward blessings for their ciuil obedience and outward cariage in the life to come though not with heauen yet with mitigation of their punishment in hell Iehu we know was but a carnall man for he departed not from the sins of Ierobeam that made Israel to sin 2. Kin. 10.30.31 yet because he did diligently execute that was right in Gods eies he rewarded him in this life with the promise of posteritie to the fourth generation to sit vpon the throne notwithstanding all that the wicked do tend to death because they performe onely the letter not the sense of the commandement in their best works Now in that the wicked are recompenced in this life it is in two respects first to encourage vs to performe the like duties outwardly which they doe secondly to comfort vs in this that if the Lord carrieth his eie of bountie toward them that are without and strangers from his fold much more will he reward vs which are his elect and sheepe of his owne pasture And yet in that their best fruites bring death vpon their soules and cannot please God it is to meet with the bold presumption of them that think they shall be saued what profession soeuer they be of and that they be greatly in Gods fauour if their actions be a little varnished ouer with hypocrisie which is as much as if they should thinke to goe to heauen backward which will deceaue them for if a theefe going to the gallowes should thinke himselfe in as good case as a true man would we not iudge it madnesse since the one escapeth and the other is hanged yet fareth it thus with worldlings and profane men who sleeping in the middest of the sea thinke to escape drowning and liuing in the lusts of the flesh imagine to escape damning which cannot be no more then they that sleepe in the toppe maste without any hold can thinke to escape falling Now in that the Apostle saith Yee are not in the flesh we must vnderstand he speaketh generally to all the Iewes who at this time were the house and garden of God for then none were admitted into the church but onely such as were outwardly reformed and seemed to be regenerate by their submitting themselues to the publicke ordinance of God in the word and prater and as for outragious and shamelesse sinners as adulterers blasphemers prophaners of the Sabbath and such like they were not to bee receiued without repentance that as they signified their disobedience by their sinne so should they testifie their sorrow by their confession and then they ceased to be such for as it is treason in the Chancellor to passe any thing from the Prince without the Prince his seale so they accounted it in those times treason against God to set the seale of Baptisme on that childe that had neither of the parents a beleeuer where we may learne that we must esteeme hypocrites as regenerate and to be in the spirit of Christ because they are outwardly reformed in their liues and in profession doe resemble the children of God but if they be open and notorious offendors in any grosse sinne committed with a high hand then ought they to be excluded for a time till shame and separation from their brethren may worke their humilitie to amendement but if they continue obstinate not to be reclaimed then are they to be cut off as putrified and rotten members that may infect others otherwise dissembling hypocrites must bee wrapped vp in the praiers of the Church and the tares must be suffered to grow vp with the wheate and the goate may giue as much milke as the sheepe and for the goodnesse of it it must be left to the secrets of God till
God can haue no roome to dwell in such a soule Further from the Metaphor or borrowed speech dwelleth note that there is a residence of the holy Ghost in all those that be his so as it must not be a so iourning of the Lord with vs to come like a stranger for a night or for a meale and away againe but he must be a houshold guest to go in and out with vs so that we must know it is not euery pang of conscience or fit of prayer or hanging downe our heads for a day whereby we are sometime perplexed and wringed with sorrow that is the dwelling of the spirit in vs no more then was that fit of Balaam Numb 23.10 when he praied that his soule might die the death of the righteous and that his last end might be like his Neither is this spirit knowen to bee in thee by doing many good things for Herod Mark. 6.20 did many things at the perswasion of Iohn Baptist yet was he a most cruell incestuous bloudy ty●ant nor yet by leauing many euill things vndone for the very Heathen had many morall vertues which made them decline from many vi●●● ●ut by this shalt thou know that thou hast this spirit if a●●● 〈◊〉 ●●osseth and repugneth thy affections if thy affections ●●e ●●t against it but that in the meditation and purpose of sin thou please thy selfe and take part with thy affections against God to fulfill it as Balaam did when by the proffer of riches Num. 24.13 he would faine haue cursed where the Lord had blessed it is certaine this spirit of God abideth not there but the diuell Lastly obserue since there is no hope of the resurrection but so farre as wee are sealed in this life to that glory wee shall haue heereafter by the earnest of Gods spirit giuen vnto vs we may truly say of the wicked whom the Son neuer kissed Psal 2.12 that when they die they go to the damned for he that hath not his part of this spirit in this life vnlesse the Apostle be a liar which were blasphemy to thinke that man shall neuer haue the glorie of the life to come And therefore such as do scorne and scoffe at the seruants of God as Ishmael did at Isaac Gen. 21.9 calling them Men of the spirit they do commit most sacrilegious scurrilitie and in this state wherein they stand they are as surely the diuels as the diuell is not Gods yea in this they do with their owne mouths pronounce and subscribe to their owne damnation for the Apostle saith we must haue this spirit else it is impossible to bee saued Heere it may be said Since there is only ioy and peace in the spirit how is it that the wicked runne on in the course of their life prosperously and in the end of their daies go away quietly whereas the godly walke through many snares and are in their life scratched as it were with many thornes and in their death oft times are much troubled and depart in great agonies True it is the wicked may perhaps die quietly and to the sight of man comfortably hauing as Iob speaketh no bands in their death Iob. 21.13 Psal 73.4 but looke thou iudge him no more by his death than by his birth for many women haue had more easie trauell of a reprobate than an elected child of God especially the cause of their quiet being because hypocrisie hath put their consciences to silence heere that they may soone after roare out in hell and there is such a crust growen vpon their hearts 1. Tim. 42. that they rot and fester within and feele it not whereas in the elect the 〈…〉 is kept alwaies open and wee cannot feele the least b●● 〈…〉 Lords displeasure but we are anguished neither can wee 〈◊〉 that we euer feare enough which tender heart of a Christi●● is like the Adamant to draw the oile of comfort into his soule and to hasten and quicken the life of the spirit in him Let vs all therfore earnestly pray for this spirit hauing obtained it let vs cherish and welcome it so as it may take delight in vs for wee all know it must one day come to this In manas tuas Domine commendo spiritum meum Into thy hands O Lord I commend my spirit and it is now at this In manas tuas homo commendo spiritum meum Into thy hands O man I commit my spirit And therefore as we will haue the Lord gratious to our spirits at the latter day so let vs well vse and entertaine his spirit in this acceptable time which vouchsafeth to dwell with vs. ROM chap. 8. vers 12. verse 12 Therefore we are debters not to the flesh to liue after the flesh VPon that which went before the Apostle inferreth a most vehement exhortation to this effect that seeing Christ hath saued them and freed them not onely from the condemnation of sinne but also from the power of sinne therfore the Lord doth indent with them and in them with vs all not to merit saluation but because saluation is already merited for vs to be engaged and obliged to the Lord and that since he hath taken the hand writing away from Sathan Coloss 2.14 and hath cancelled it in Christ that therfore we should be debters not to the flesh but to the spirit H●●reupon obserue that the greatest argument to per●● 〈◊〉 rather to inforce vs to good workes is taken from 〈…〉 of our redemption as appeareth by Saint Paul who 〈◊〉 ●●●t argument Rom. 12.1 I beseech you by the mercies of God that you giue vp your bodies a liuing Sacrifice vnto the Lord that since the Lord hath beene so mercifull vnto you as not to looke vpon your nakednesse but as you are cloathed in Christ you would therefore returne vnto him conformitie of obedience in sacrificing your selues vnto him After the same manner doth Saint ●eter perswade 1. Pet. 2.11 I beseech you as stangers and pilgrimes abstaine from fleshly lusts As if hee should say Since you are now a chosen generation and a people set at liberty by the death of Christ and by this meanes made Citizens of heauen walke according to the lawes of that heauenlie citie Heere are they condemned that say If by doing good works we can deserue nothing what heart can we haue to doe them And since we are bought already why should the Lord be twife fatisfied Whereto we answer that though we can deserue nothing Luk. 17.10 yet by this meanes we shew our thankfulnesse in doing as much as we can and though in all things we are vnprofitable seruants yet must wee bee thankfull for that which Christ hath done for vs. And since Christ hath fully satisfied for vs it is not further required that wee keepe the law to satisfie it but to testifie our obedience and thankes that wee are made partakers of such grace and haue receiued so great a pardon And so by this our working we
declare our gratfull mindes to God the Sonne by whom we are redeemed and to God the Father to whom we are redeemed for none of vs can satisfie for that he hath broken onely Christ hath made vp the breach and broken downe the wall that parted God and vs and therefore when wee shall heereafter keepe all the lawes of God in heauen it shall not bee to satisfie for that we kept not in this life for by doing but that we ought then to do we cannot free our selues from that paine we deserued for that we did not before Here ariseth the difference betweene the law and the Gospell The Law commandes workes to merit saluation the Gospell because saluation is already merited that therefore b●● 〈◊〉 good works we should testifie that wee are bound and 〈…〉 to the Lord. Hereupon note that there is in the Gospel a double couenant the first of mercy the second of morti●●cation The couenant of mercy going first which is I will saue thee I will write my law in thine heart Ier. 31.31 My soule shall delight in thee Thou shalt be beloued and such like gratious words and promises Then followeth the couenant of mortification Thou art saued therefore liue well Thou art pardoned therfore ●●fend no more so as first we must be forgiuen Iohn 5.14 and then wee become debtors Wee are not then saued because we doe good workes but we are saued therefore this mercy of saluation maketh vs fruitfull in good workes as Iohn 5.14 the sicke man was not healed because he should sinne no more but thou art healed therefore remember this mercy of the Lord that thou do sinne no more So Luke 14.23 who be they that come to the wedding Call saith the King the halt the lame and the blind So as such as are emptied of al opinion of all worthinesse in themselues and be starke beggars must come yet when they are come they must haue the wedding garment so as wee are bid to come not because wee haue the wedding garment but because wee are bid to come in the mercy of Christ being beggars wee must striue to get that garment that is a good conuersation So Luk. 19.4 Zaccheus was not saued because hee gaue halfe of his goods to the poore but Christ first spake inuisibly to his soule to make him clime vp to the tree being conuerted then he giueth as testifying a fruit of mercy to others for the mercy himselfe receiued So Lu. 7.41 in the speech of Christ of the two debtors they were both forgiuen but who loued most Peter could say he that had most forgiuen and what made the debt forgiuen but the meere mercy and good will of the creditor So as in that place of Luke not because the woman loued much Luke 7.47 therefore was much forgiuen her but much was forgiuen her therefore she loued much for where the mercy is great there must our labour in mortification be great also According to this it is said Mat. 11.28 Come vnto me all ye that are weary and laden and I will ease you But marke th●●stipulation and indenting of Christ with them againe ver 29 ●ake up my yoke and learne of me to be meeke and lowly that is after this great mercy obtained of disburdning you of that yoke which pressed your soules with discomfort euen downe to hell returne this fruit of thankefulnesse to God againe deny your selues and your affections and be you yoked to the obedience of the Gospell Verse 13. For if ye liue after the flesh ye shall die but if ye mortifie the deeds of the bodie by the spirit ye shall liue Before the Apostle perswaded vs by the benefit of our redemption which is wrought in Christ to bee humbled and to acknowledge our selues indepted vnto Christ that as by him we are saued f●●m Sathans tyranny and freed from his slauish seruice in acceptation of this liberty we should shew our selues to serue God in righteousnesse and holinesse of life Now because this would not sufficiently subdue the rebellious disposition of hypocrites and to stirre vp the dulnesse of Gods weake children he doth in this verse adde a reason to make the former perswasion more forcible first by a denunciation and peremptory speech to the hypocrites that besides the plague of God inflicted vpon them in this life at the separation of the soule from the body their soules shall bee caried to the damned ghosts there to bee reserued to the iudgement of the great day Iude 1.6 secondly by a prouocation to the faithfull wherein he proposeth to them the hope of immortalitie Vnderstand generally as all Scripture is earnest in perswading these two things first remission of our sinnes secondly repentance from our sinnes according to the speech of S. Iohn of bloud and water that is the grace that pardoneth and the grace that reneweth so S. Paul is more precise in those two than any other in vrging grace and meere mercy and nothing but faith in the point of our iustification before God and doth also vrge pre●se mortification in our selues to shew by our sanctified liues that wee are sealed vp to the day of redemption that as Christ our Passeouer was sacrificed for vs 1. Cor. 5.7 so wee should keepe a continuall feast vnto the Lord in the vnleauened bread of a ●●●cere and sanctified life Now with these two hath the wisedome of the world beene greatly offended and hath deuised against them two errours first against meere mercy Sathan in his subtilty and enmitie to man hath stirred vp the heresie of Pharisaicall righteousnesse ioining merit with mercy and secondly against the strictnesse of mortification he raised vp the heresie of Libertines that is of them that maintaine worldly prophanesse and licencious loosenes so as one cries out if there be nothing but mercy then there neede no repentance and the other crieth out since it is done by mercy what neede such strictnesse and precisenesse in life But howsoeuer these be laid as blockes to stumble at Mat. 11.19 wisedome will be iustified of her children and the latter ●●i●e shall not fall in vaine vpon the hearts of Gods chos●●● Yet whether the Gospell preach either of these or both of them together the hypocrites and prophane worldlings will take occasion of offence as Iohn Baptist is too precise preaching repentance so earnestly Mat. 11.18.19 And if Christ bee affable gracious and to bee conuersed with then is he a friend of vnrighteous persons At Iohn Baptist the Libertines at Christ the Pharises be offended so as whether Iohn weepe sorrow for sinne or Christ pipe deliuerance from sinne neither of these can please the itching humours of wauering minded persons In the words are comprehended first a commination or threatning to the wicked secondly a prouocation or encouragement to the godly by proposing a reward and both being set downe conditionall in the word if they compare contratie courses of life to contrary ends
man deceiue you he beginneth with a preoccupation to possesse their minds before hand He that doth righteousnesse saith he is righteous not he that can discourse and talke of righteousnesse and therefore one saith truely Tace lingua loquerevita talke not of a good life but let thy life speake This the Apostle there proueth by the contrary for he that committeth sin is of the diuell that is he that committeth f●●●● the world doth and doth not purge himselfe for the Apostle opposeth sinning to purging and he that is of the diuell cannot please God For therefore was Christ sent to destroy the workes of the diuell so as if these workes be not destroyed in thee and his building pulled downe Christ was neuer sent vnto thee Againe he proueth it by the contrary He that is borne of God doth not sinne for he hath the seed of the spirit therefore it is as if he should say when such wicked men shall bee saued the diuell shall be saued This is further proued by the words which Christ himselfe spake in the flesh Ioh. 8.34 He that so sinneth as to make a trade of it he is the seruant of the diuell vers 44. and if no chastisements nor benefites can reclaime you ye are the diuels for the lusts of your father ye will doe Lastly adde to this that of the new couenant made with Israel and so with vs Ier. 31.31 I will write my law in their hearts vers 33. And I will be their God and they shall bee my people So as if God pardoneth any hee doth promise him grace to amend his life and if that grace be denied him he neuer couenanted to saue him The couenant then implieth thus much If thou hast not grace to abstaine from grosse sinnes thou shalt be damned and if thou hast the grace of sanctification giuen thee thou shalt be saued But if ye mortifie the deeds of the flesh by the spirit c. This is the second proposition which the Apostle layeth downe namely that a good course of life leadeth to a good end Wherein first is questionable whether it standeth in the power of the heart of man to subdue the corrupt desires and affections of his nature as well as it doth to fulfill the lusts of the flesh for 2. Tim. 2.20.21 Paul shewing how that in a great house there be vessels some for honour and some for dishonour some for base and some for higher seruices which house he meaneth to be the Church of God saith that if any man purge himselfe hee shall be a fit vessell for Gods house and 1. Ioh. 5.18 He that is begotten of God keepeth himselfe from that wicked one which is the diuell that he touch him not Which places may seeme to attribute the purifying and cleansing of our selues to our selues by our owne inclinations and wils but it must be vnderstood that the Scripture in these and such like places setteth not downe the cause of this cleansing but the execution of it For the cause of this our mortification appeareth Ezech. 36.26 I saith the Lord will giue you a new heart and a new spirit so as there it must be had euen of God but it must be in vs otherwise we pertaine not to the Lords election Hereupon the Scripture vouchsafeth vs that honour to say we do it because notwithstanding the reforming of our iudgements and the changing of our affections is wrought by the supernaturall power of the holy Ghost working in vs yet this holy Ghost doth worke in vs as the subiects and by vs as the instruments as when it is said I will write my law in your hearts the spirit writes but the heart is the place and whatsoeuer is written in our hearts is ours To make this more plaine by a naturall proportion As a man that rectifieth and guideth the hand of a child to write the writing is said to be the worke of the child and not of him that directed him though without such direction the child could not haue done it euen so the Lord doth guide vs in all things we doe well and what doth hee guide but our wils so as the worke proceeding from our wils is ours yet without the guide of the spirit we could not doe it And in this working there is not a double effect one of the holy Ghost and another of our selues but we doe it euen as before there were not two writers though the child was directed but the child onely writ it Secondly where it is said If ye mortifie c. ye shall liue it may be demanded whether by the same reason we deserue saluation by this mortifying of our flesh● as by walking in the flesh we deserue damnation It is certaine vnlesse we doe well we can not be saued yet the holy Ghost sheweth that there is not the same perfection to doe well in our natures as there is in vs agilitie and dexterity to follow wickednesse For by our fall we are throughly corrupted as the Prophet Esay speaketh chap. 1.6 From the sole of the foot to the top of the head there is nothing but wounds and swelling but by our regeneration in this life we can neuer perfectly bee renued It sufficeth we haue obtained the blessing of Iacob Gen. 32.28.29 to haue such power from God as to be lame in sinne all our life long So Paul Rom. 6.23 saith The wages of sinne is death but the gift of God is eternall life through Christ whereby appeareth that the contraries themselues are not perfect for sinne of it selfe deserueth death but being good of it selfe deserueth not life for it is the gift of God and so the consequents of these two cannot be perfect and agree together Againe it is one question to aske who shall be saued and another to aske how we shall be saued for true it is that none shall be saued but they that mortifie themselues if they liue and for children they are changed in a moment by a supernaturall power of the Lord. As it is said Esa 33.14 Who shall dwell with the deuouring fire He that walketh in iustice and speaketh righteous things refusing the gaine of oppression shaking his hands from taking of gifts stopping his eares from hearing of blood and shutting his eies from seeing of euill And Dauid Psal 15.1 asketh the question and bringeth in the Lord to answer it Who shall dwell in thy tabernacles He that walketh vprightly he that taketh no reward against the innocent and such like as it followeth there as if the Lord should say Such and none else for the words haue an exclusiue nature So if it be asked who they be that shall be set at the right hand of God in heauen Mat. 25.34.41 it must be answered They that visite the members of Christ in affliction and leade their liues answerable to their religious profession And if Who they be that shall be set on the left hand the answere is They that refuse to releeue the
Saints of God and put religion on their faces as a maske to hide the foule deformitie hypocrisie of their hearts Therfore vpon the question demanded Whether more in number shall be saued or damned Christ resolueth it Luk. 13.25 shewing that some shall haue bestowed such paines and walked so farre in the course of Christianity as euen to knocke at heauen gates and to challenge the Lord to let them in and yet he shall not know them that whatsoeuer profession they haue made in the face of the world as to come before the Lord as a p●●ple yet because they haue not liued as a people he will not acknowledge them So as true it is that none shall enioy the presence of the Almighty but they that haue their lampes burning at the houre of their death Mat. 25.10 none but they that haue their foundation setled vpon the rockes Mat. 7.25 as not to be shaken with the blast of any persecution none but they who like faithfull seruants by spirituall trafficke haue employed their talents to their Lords aduantage Luk. 19.24 none but they that are able to testifie by the fruites of the spirit that they haue the spirit But vpon demand how we shall be saued our answer is Onely by the blood of Christ as the cause and effectuall meanes thereof for heauen is giuen operantibus non operibus to workers not to works as 2. Cor. 5.10 The Lord shall giue to euery man according as he hath wrought not for that he hath wrought Heb. 13.21 none shall see God without a pure conuersation but not because of his pure conuersation for though we must be perfect in workes yet this working must bee wrought in vs by God as the Apostle there speaketh So likewise none but the obedient child shall be heire not because he is obedient but because he is heire and yet only the obedient child shall receiue the inheritance And euen as we adore and worship Iesus Christ man but not his humanity Hominem non humanitatem so holinesse of life speaking in the abstract quality doth not saue but holy men shall be saued so faith and workes in the person iustified must concurre but in the matter of iustification faith onely and alone hath the place If therefore it be demanded whether workes be necessary to iustification we answer yea as absolutely necessary in their place as faith for wee can not assure our selues of faith but by the visible fruite of workes so as they be not Concausae causes concurring and iumping together but they are Consectaria consectaries and consequents of faith Vers 14. For as many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God This is a confirmation of the reason before going on both parts for as many as mortifie the flesh by the sprit are the sonnes of God and they that doe not so are the sonnes of the diuell So the force of the argument is they that are Gods sonnes are led to mortifie the flesh and being his sons they are inheritors of heauen and this the Apostle assumeth and taketh as granted that the sons of God must needs haue eternall life Whereupon the contrary proposition is true he that liues after the flesh is not the son of God for if he were he would liue after the spirit but hee that doth not mortifie the flesh hath not the spirit therefore he is not the son of God Hereupon followeth if they be sons and not Gods they are as Christ speaketh Iohn 8.44 the children of the diuell Wherein we learne that if we be asked by what title and interest we can challenge or lay claime to heauen it is by none but by this that we are the sonnes of God and we are his sons onely by adoption and wee are adopted to it onely in the naturall heire and son of God Christ Iesus by whose blood we are iustified and sanctified by his spirit Being then adopted to this inheritance as heires we are not borne to it for adoptiō excludeth birth being not borne to it it is purchased for vs in the obedience of Christ wee must learne then to resemble Christ in being obedient to the will of God as he was and shew foorth and expresse our obedience by keeping his commandements Mat. 26.42 and keepe them by leauing of grosse sins and walking according to his will with a full purpose of our hearts to performe it alwaies excepting our infirmities and inborne weaknesse which cleaue so fast to vs as we cannot shake them off nor be deliuered of them till we ouercome all in death Hauing then no title to heauen but by inheritance nor no title to this inheritance but by Christ there is excluded all merits to deserue it and only because we are to be saued we must do well for it is giuen vs as the inheritance of children and not as any stipendary wages of a mercenary man Herupon we must wisely vnderstand that when Christ saith Mat. 25.35 Come ye blessed c. for ye haue releeued the poore c. that this releeuing of the poore and such other workes of faith and loue there mentioned are not set downe as causes of blessednesse for these speeches for and because do not alwaies inferre and bring in a cause but they are such words and particles as sometime ioine the cause with the effect and sometime the effect with the cause as when wee say it is spring time for it blossoms not that the blossoms are the cause of the spring but an effect and euidence that the spring is come So when we say he hath a soule because he breatheth and yet the soul is the cause of breath and breathing but an effect of the soule euen so when Christ saith come and receiue a kingdome for ye haue done such and such particular works of loue it is onely a knitting of the effect with the cause for God hauing preelected or chosen vs before all worlds to this saluation giueth vs this his spirit by whose power and vertue wee worke these good things And in this kinde and phrase of speech the cause is ioyned with the effect as if it should be said Come you that haue releeued the poore that haue comforted the distressed that haue sorrowed with the afflicted receiue the kingdome for it is your inheritance So as the speech of Christ hath this meaning in it You haue done good workes to testifie my kingdome to be yours come take the inheritance prepared for you in the preelection of God for you are the inheritors of heauen because of these fruites and effects which you haue shewed in comforting the aflicted members of Christ We may not take it then that heauen which is the inheritance of the saints is giuen for any desert for when we haue attained to the highest degree of mortification and haue done all that we can we are as Christ saith but vnprofitable seruants Luk. 17.10 True say the Papists vnprofitable
to couer our nakednes with the robes of our elder brother Christ Iesus and to remedie and cure our vnrighteousnesse in the righteousnesse of the blood of Christ So as with the hearers of Peter Act. 2.37 the law ●●ging and pricking our consciences wee shall crie out in a holy distrust of our selues What shall we do And this kind of despaire pr●pareth vs to saluation for the spirit sheweth vs our pouerty and where to buy gold that shall cost vs nothing it sheweth vs our wretchednesse that haue nothing but rags to put on and withall the wardrobe of Christs righteousnesse where wee shall haue garments fit for the Saints of God it sheweth our Apostasie how we haue fallen and by our fall haue euen broken and cut as it were our owne throats and sendeth vs to the Physitian Christ who is onely good at such a desperate disease it sheweth our blindnesse and withall the eie-salue of the holy Ghost to cleare vs 1. Ioh. 2.20 it sheweth vs our debt and the sergeant the diuell ready to arrest vs and then sends vs to the God of heauen in whose hands is all treasure to discharge what we owe it sheweth vs how we stand vpon the scaffold ready for the hatchet and then out of this astonishment sendeth vs an absolute pardon from heauen sealed with the blood of Christ and subscribed with Gods owne hand So as it teacheth vs onely to mistrust and despaire in our selues and to seeke to be releeued and refreshed with that water of life whereof hauing once drunke wee shall neuer thirst againe Iohn 4.34 Howbeit on the contrary this same spirit bringeth the wicked into a sense and feeling of this same horror and leaueth them in the astonishment of their conscience so as Sathan continually hath their sinnes to scourge them with and their corruptions wherewithall to vpbraide them And the cause why they bee left in this hellish plight and suffered to be thus perplexed and tormented of themselues is their owne infidelity that they haue stopped their eares against that comfortable sound of the Lords mercy and so poisoned their hearts with sinne that the power of the word could not worke vpon them and so the Lord most iustly hath hardened them in their irkesome and tedious hypocrisie that the sinnes they commit should be the punishments of sinnes past and the deserts of punishments that are to come And as to that that the holy Ghost working this same feare and terror in the hearts and consciences both of the elect and of the wicked and should leaue the reprobate euen when they are brought to the depth of despaire it were blasphemy to say or thinke that he doth it for and to the same end tha●●● than doth for Sathan doth it to prooue God a liar as that being in that case it were not possible for God to saue them whereas the mercy of the Lord is aboue all his workes But the spirit of God doth this that God may be iustified in the iust hardening of that mans heart whom hee found sinfull and whom hee was not bound to saue and so his end is to take vengeance of his hypocrisie for the Lord is as iealous of his iustice as he is of his mercie Sathan promiseth saluation to whom God pronounceth damnation and lulleth them in security whom he findeth carelesse to watch ouer their steps neuer greatly troubling or mouing any of his owne till they come to such a deepe exigent and to such a narrow pinch euen to hels mouth that they cannot goe from him then they taste euen of hell fire in this life and feele a fearefull beginning of that shall neuer haue end Now God threatneth damnation to all to his elect that they may seeke and hasten to be shrouded vnder the shadow of Christs wings and to feele the vertue of the hemme of his garment to the reprobate that they may bee the more hardened Mat. 14.36 because it is in the corruption of their owne hearts that they heaue refused the acceptable time of grace and reiected the pearle which they might haue bought It will be said But why should the holy Ghost leaue them in this despaire He is not properly the author of despaire but if the reprobate being brought to this be not recouered it cometh of his owne wickednesse As for example a man sheweth vnto a triator his indignity and hauing done this with great and vehement passions hee sheweth him the detestation and vglinesse of his offence and leaueth him with some doubt and scruple of conscience as amazed at his owne wickednesse if the traitor vpon this make himselfe away by violence as Iudas did hee that thus laid the quality and nature of his offence open before him Mat. 27.5 is not the cause of this his desperate end hee was the cause and meanes of making him to bee affraid and angry with himselfe onely and that was lawfull so the holy Ghost by laying open the riches of Gods mercy at the first thine owne wilfull rebellion to forsake him Rom. 7.12.23 his giuing of thee a law to bridle thee and the h●● and feruencie of thy corruption to breake through all lawes worketh this terror in thy heart that art a reprobate and sheweth as it were before thee the smart and execution of thy sinne If now thou despairest and restest there the cause is in thy selfe for thou sawest light and louedst it not and heardest the sound of retrait and yet weatest on to thine owne destruction Further this spirit of God is not the author of despaire as it is despaire for a man should neuer despaire of Gods mercy as God was not the cause of the lie in the false Prophets as it was a lie 1. Kin. 22.7 but he shewed his iudgement on them by giuing them thus ouer to this sinne So despaire in the reprobate wrought by the wickednesse of their hearts is after this sort reuenged by the spirit in giuing them ouer to the extremity of this sin so as it commeth from the spirit not as an euil author but as a iust reuenger of their former sinnes Now the instruments the spirit of God vseth to bring and perswade the conscience to feare damnation are two first the law naturall for in the nature of euery man something is ingrafted and written of euery sinne that howsoeuer it bee acted and performed with pleasure yet euen in nature it endeth and is left with remorse which doeth shew that there is a God to punish it This was that which made the heathen to haue an apprehension and vnderstanding of infernall furies as that for some sinnes they should bee so exagitated and tormented with them as they could haue no rest For this cause they tearmed them by speciall names as the fury of Nemesis that should plague the proud man Eumenides because shee was implacable and would not bee intreated Alecto because it was a torment that neuer ceased Alasto that should pursue
with Gods saints Heb. 10.35 that they haue done it in this respect as hauing regard to the recompence of reward set before them in a hope that cannot faile Let vs therfore not scrape so greedilie in the earth as the blind moles doe nor wallow our selues in the mire of this world like swine nor root our affections in the things of this life but let vs sigh with desire and wait with patience the generall redemption of the sonnes of God and restitution of the creatures to their first perfection at least let vs look to our owne particular departure out of this life for there is no priuiledge nor protection can come from the court of heauen but depart we must and how soone we know not the Diuell would faine take vs in the lurch and the world will intice vs to deferre the buying of oyle for the keeping of our lampes burning till the Lord do knocke Mat. 25.10 but let vs euer be furnished for the way let our faith hold vs and our hope containe vs within the compasse and assurance of our saluation These be the daies of our pangs and pilgrimage happy shall that day be when we shall be deliuered and when our iourney shall be ended Heere we haue to walke a most tedious and craggy course happy shall that day be when we shall come to our heauenly country Heere wee sight a troublesome though no doubtfull com● happy shall that day be when wee shall be crowned as conq●●rors heere we sow with sorrow happy shall ●hat day bee w●●● we shall reape a plentifull and perpetuall haruest with much ●●y heere wee are full of wounds and our eies stand full of teares happy shall that day be when our wounds shall be healed and our teares wiped away ROM chap. 8. vers 26.27 verse 26 Likewise also the spirit helpeth our infirmities for wee know not what to pray as we ought but the spirit it selfe maketh request for vs with sighes which cannot be expressed verse 27 But he that searcheth the hearts knoweth what is the meaning of the spirit for he maketh request for the Saints according to the will of God THE Apostle proceedeth to minister consolation in all those afflictions we must passe thorow and sheweth that there is no cause wee should shrinke or faint since we are maintained and supported by a heauenly power against which the gates of hell cannot preuaile for the Lord doth assist vs by the holie Ghost which doth excite and stirre vp in vs gronings that is heauenly praiers which doe reach and pierce the very throne of God which being made according to his will we must needs obtaine whatsoeuer we shall request In the words obserue three things first generally that the ●●●ly Ghost doth relieue vs in our infirmities and weaknesse se●●ndly by what meanes he doth it namely when we are low brought by stirring vp in vs such vehement and feruent praiers as cannot proceed from any naturall man nor the power of man but from a power farre aboue man thirdly the powerfull working of these praiers namely that being made according to Gods meaning the Lord must needs shew himselfe exorable and to be intreated and it is not possible they can returne emptie from the throne of grace For the first consider that it were impossible for vs to stand one minute if no other power did sustaine vs but flesh and bloud for euen in the choisest of Gods children faith is verie weake and our hope verie wearie and flesh and bloud through selfe loue desireth ease and doth mone it selfe and is fearefull to see or to suffer the crosse yea Sathan doth buffet vs by our inward infirmities for sinne lieth heauie within vs and this maketh vs to grone outward afflictions make the flesh to smart the world tempteth vs on both hands one way with the peace of the wicked another way with the troubles of the godly alluring vs to the vaine glistering shewes of the one and terrifying vs from the ghastfull and hideous sight of the other So as hauing sinne within vs Sathan without vs and the world about vs all enemies to the peace and rest of our soules euerie houre should we perish were we not supported by the mightie hand of this inuisible spirit and therefore flesh and bloud hath no cause to be proud but ought in trueth to glory in it owne weaknesse because it hath such an helper and so strong an helper and so certaine a helper as is this spirit which is nothing else then the very power of God himselfe as it was said to Paul My grace is sufficient for thee Further in that it is said He helpeth our infirmities obserue that hee doth not free vs fully from them or remooue them fully from vs but hee doeth onely helpe and releeue vs in them And this is that Christ praied for in his bitter agonie Iohn 17.15 I praie vnto thee Father saith hee not that thou wouldest giue them an exemption and freedome from trials but that they may bee so kept from euill as euer they may finde some comfortable deliuerance So in another place Christ saith vnto his Apostles Mat. 9.15 that when the Bridegroome was with them they could not mourne hee sparing them for that time but afterward he saith Hitherto haue yee liued in peace haue ye a sword if not buy one for tribulation shall come and then he said A little while I will be from you that is during the time of my death but I will send a better comforter and then followeth The world shall reioyce but ye shall mourne mourne though ye haue a comforter but not mourne vntill ye haue a comforter which setteth forth the riches of the Lords mercie that prouideth a remedie before we receiue the wound and layeth himselfe as it were in our bosome before he sendeth vs cause of sorrow To this purpose is that Paul speaketh 2. Corinth 4 8 9. we are afflicted on euery side yet not in distresse in doubt but we despaire not persecuted but not forsaken cast downe but perish not because by the same spirit that was in Christ the inward man is renewed daily And this was the answer which Paul himselfe receiued from God being sore buffeted by Sathan 2. Cor. 12.9 Content thy selfe saith the Lord my grace is with thee therefore striue thou and I will helpe thee This also is prefigured in the combat betweene the Angell and Iacob Gen. 32.25 who had his bone in his thigh shrunke but yet would not forsake his hold till he had a blessing So as by this combat we are sure to receiue such a blow as we shall halt all our liues after to this end that we may seeke for Iacobs staffe the blessing of the Lord to strengthen vs. And this was Moses comfort when his hands were faint and wearie in holding of them vp in prayer so that they fell downe Exod. 17.12 then did the spirit of the Lord support
fruition of Gods glorie which we shall possesse heereafter Looke vpon the poore widow of Sarepta though she had but a little oile 1. King 7.14 yet had shee more then the rest when Eliah came to her for theirs consumed and hers through the secret blessing of God serued her turne wasted not Dan. 6.17 So Daniel in prison fared better with bread and water by reason of Gods chearfull presence with him then did the king with al his sumptuous and princely diet And in our naturall iudgements we can say that hee hath more that hath but a bottle of wine that runneth by droppes then he that hath a whole cesterne full that is broken for the prouidence of God neuer leaueth those that be his and his eie is vpon their wants to supplie them And as Paul saith Colos 1.16.17 By Christ all things were created he is before all things and in him all things consist that is haue their being for his glorie for no man can complot or contriue anie secret snares for our life no man can breath out any threatnings against Gods Church as did Saul Act. 9.1 Matt. 14 1● not execute any crueltie vpon the forerunner of Christ as did Hero● but Christ hath his full glory in it Let vs therefore k●●● our persecutors can doe vs no harme for as our being is for Ch●●●● to must our bodies be yeelded vp to Christ wee stand in him and his power in these afflictions is seene in vs so as when they hate vs and reuile vs torment vs they are but as A pothee●ies to make drugges to heale our infirmities they are but as Masons to hammer and polish vs in the quarry of this world that we may be fit stones for the heauenly building yea they are but as fire to refine vs being of our selues drossie as furbushers to varnish vs being through fleshly ease rustie as scullions in the Lords kitchin to scoure the vessell of his houshold lastly they are those that haue receaued a commission from God contrarie to their owne intention to doe vs good for when they are come to the perfection of their tyranny they can but kill the bodie whereby they hasten our blessednesse in the soule Heere may be demanded if all things worke for our good whether the infirmities that be in vs do vs any good or no. The answer is Yes many waies but principally three waies First they remaine in vs to subdue the pride and presumption of our hearts that would aduance it selfe against God if it were not humbled by the sight of it owne corruption as Paul must haue a buffeter lest he grow insolent 2. Cor. 12.8 For the Lord will trust vs no more with perfection since Adam lost it in Paradise and therefore he exerciseth vs with infirmities lest wee should steppe into our mother concepit to thinke our selues Gods This is proportionablie to that spoken of Deut. 7.22 That the Lord would roote out the Canaanites from among his people by little and little Psal 59.11 not all at once lest the wild beasts should grow in vpon them These Canaanites bee our infirmities the wild beasts are self-loue pride of life and such like which would waxe strong within vs if we were throughly purged from our weaknesse And thus we see the Lord cureth poison by poison keepeth out grosse sinnes by keeping in naturall infirmities euen as the best treakle is made of poison and the skinne of a viper is the best cure against the sting of a viper Secondly these our infirmities serue to cure our ingratitude for if the Lord should bestow vpon vs all his benefites at once we would soone forget him We see how the Lo●● 〈◊〉 vp the red sea to make passage for the Israelites Exo. 14. ●● which one would haue thought should haue bee● as 〈◊〉 sigh● on their finger alwaies in their sight and yet Psal 106.7 ●●●t is said 〈◊〉 the Hebrew phrase they made haste to forget it though it was so miraculous a worke For this cause Dauid praieth Psal 59.11 O Lord do not destroy the enemies of thy Church that is slay them not together lest the people forget thee but do it by little and little that the people may often come vnto thee yea Dauid himselfe in many places confesseth that the prolonging of the Lords mercies giue as it were an edge and sharpnesse to this spirit of thankfulnesse And such is the nature of man to wait no longer in humility then he hath hope of benefit The lost sonne had no sooner fingred his portion Luk. 15.13 but his fathers house was vnsauoury to him and he must needs ruffle it in another countrie For as willingly we would wait no longer on the Lord then he is giuing so when hee hath giuen vs somwhat wee would bee out of his sight while we spend it And this maketh him more scant in his blessings then otherwise he would be because he will teach vs to depend vpon him both till we haue them and while we vse them and that employing them in a spirituall kinde of trafficke to gaine credit to the Lord he may furnish vs afterward with better store Thirdly our infirmities serue to restraine our spirituall sluggishnesse and securitie of the flesh for where no feare of the enemie is there the weapon rusteth so as we are sifted and tempted by Sathan that we may finde our infirmities to be relieued by the Lords power and that wee may pray for his gracious strength to withstand him in Christ to ouercome him and that by our experience in fighting with Sathan we may become wise and watchfull for we doe not praie to bee deliuered from temptations but not to bee left in them Our infirmities indeede are the fuell that Sathan laieth and they are as it were the coals hee bloweth to consume vs. Now euery Christian when hee feeleth such a fire of enmitie within him against God and his law bestirreth himselfe and striueth by a cleane contrary blast of the spirit to quench these coales and entreth such a comba●● 〈◊〉 ●●seth in death which wee would not doe if there we 〈◊〉 not so●● ski●● of sinne and some remnant of corruption left 〈…〉 vs but wee would fall asleepe like idle seruants and hide 〈…〉 that is the strength of Gods graces in vs. Iob Iob 13.15 though he were neuer 〈◊〉 painefull a Christian yet neuer more commended the power of God in him then by his fight hand to hand with the diuell in resisting and keeping off such blowes of blasphemie and despaire as Satan would haue had him cast at God and would haue had to sticke in himselfe Paul when he fought with bulles at Ephesus neuer obtained such a victorie as when he left Satan in the lurch and left himselfe persecuting of the Gospell nay after his conuersion there was left a sting in his flesh lest either he might wax sluggish or become proud And therefore it pleaseth God to honour
sense that all the sonnes of God are not yet reuealed for part are in heauen part in earth and part of them not yet borne Secondly touching the sonnes of God on earth they are not all yet reuealed in regard that the Lord calleth daily and maketh as it were a fresh addition to his church by the power of his word as he did in the Apostles time Peter by one sermon Act. 2.41 conuerting three thousand soules to Christ Thirdly they are not all yet reuealed on earth because the wicked cannot discerne them for as Christ was visible heere with vs yet was not knowen to the Scribes and Pharisees their eies through ignorance and malice being so shut as they could not see him euen so though the members of Christ are visible in themselues yet to the malitious and vngodly they are inuisible because they haue not the eies of faith to spie them out Fourthly the sonnes of God here on earth are not yet reuealed to the children of God for Elias 1. King 19.14.18 thought there had beene none left but himselfe to serue God when the Lord vnknowen to him had reserued seuen thousand that had not bowed their knees to Baal Fiftly there are many hypocrites among vs in which respect the sonnes of God on earth are not yet reuealed but at the latter day when the Angell shall come to make a separation then shall the fish be knowen from the frogges the sheepe from the goats and the sincere professor from the dissembler for then there shal be two in one bedde the one receaued the other refused who before were so linked in fellowship as it was vndiscernable that in their deaths they should haue such seuerall ends Howbeit the better sense for these words When the sonnes of God shall be reuealed is this When the sonnes of God shall be receaued vp to glory for then shall they know as they be knowen and then shall the restitution come when the sea and the graue shall yeeld vp all their dead and all the creatures receaue as it were their first robes of puritie and goodnesse wherein they were created Now vers 20. the Apostle setteth downe the reason why these insensible creatures doe thus waite for mans glorious libertie because they themselues are subiect to vanitie wherein wee are to consider two things First to what they are subiect Secondly by whom they are made subiect That the creature is subiect it is not to be stood vpon because it is granted of all men but this is no willing nor voluntarie subiection but by force and constraint for the horse must haue his rough rider or else the snaffle will not hold him in and the oxe must haue his yoke on his necke and his goad in his side or else he will not draw well and the mule as Dauid saith Psal 32.9 must haue his mouth bound with the bitte and bridle lest hee come neere thee with his heele Now that which the creature is subiect to is heere saide to be to vanitie and vers 21. to the bondage of corruption that is to a vanishing and fleeting estate and they are said to be so in three respects First in respect they haue lost their first comelinesse and order their first beautie and their first perfection in which they were created for as there is great difference betweene that gold that hath beene tried seuen times in the fire and that which is taken out of the veines of the earth mixt with other mettals betweene that sword that is newly varnished and that which hath line so long by as it is eaten through with rust betweene the shining of the sunne in his brightnesse when it is eclipsed or shineth in a gloomy day so is there as great or greater difference betwixt the heauen and earth all the host therein which then were made for the furnishing of Gods house toward the entertainment of Adam his sonne in paradise and the heauen and the earth which now are left vnto vs poisoned by the curse of God for Adams sinne with thornes and thistles barrennesse and vnholsome smels that the very corruption in the aire killeth both them vs. Secondly they are subiect to vanity in regard the wicked do enioy them and the godly oftentimes abuse them for the rust of the money which the vsurer hoordeth vp crieth in the eares of God because it is deteined by the vniust owner the gay apparell of the proud and ambitious do fret as it were themselues that they should hide the shame of them that are so shamelesse to snatch at the maiestie of God to shake his seate by their sinne the wine which is swilled in by the drunkards doth boile as it were in wrath that it was pressed out of the grape to heate their stomacks that deserue only to be inflamed by the fire of hell yea and euery morsell that falleth into the mouths of gluttons and wicked persons the Sunne that shineth on the vniust and the raine that lighteth vpon the fields of the oppressors and all creatures else that come within their fingring are grieued and doe wait with feruencie for the end of all flesh that they may no longer be forced to serue and sustaine the enemies of their maker for the sinnes of the wicked are so heauie and burdensome and their abuse of the creatures so intollerable that the earth groneth that it cannot swallow them vp as it did Korah Dathan and Abiram Numb 16.32 or otherwise bee disburdened of them though to her owne desolation as it was in the vniuersall floud Gen. 7.21 And againe if we that are sanctified vse them otherwise than they are ordained of God as that the Sunne should giue vs light to wander out of the way of holinesse that we should otherwise be clothed then as becommeth Christians or any further refreshed by recreation then to make vs the fitter for the ranging of our selues within the compasse of our callings heerein do we also make them subiect to vanitie because wee should vse the world as if we vsed it not with such moderation and comelinesse as not to snatch at any of them or to profane them for it is against the law of truce when we are at league with any either to surprise them or abuse them and wee through Christ are at league and peace with all the creatures as Iob saith Chap 5.23 Thirdly they are subiect to vanitie in regard those shal die which haue life in them and the rest shall be cleane melted and dissolued for this heauen and earth we now see shall heereafter be abolished as it is said Esay 65.17 I will create new heauens and a new earth and the former shall not be remembred nor come into mind and Psal 102.25.26 The foundation of the earth and the heauens are the works of thy hands saith Dauid to the Lord they shall perish but thou shalt endure they shall waxe old as doth a garment and Reuel 21.1 I saw saith Iohn a new
in hell then feele this great want and sustaine this great torment of recouering it againe For first when thou considerest the losse of thy former paines which thou spentest in the mortifying of thy flesh that secondly when the spirit is abated Mark 9.18 the power of Satan is increased and that he cannot be dispossessed without great violence and euen rending thee in peeces as appeareth by the dumbe man in the Gospell Thirdly that if thou die at this time as Ezech. 18.24 all thy former righteousnesse shall not be remembred but thou shalt die in thy present sinne and fourthly that as a man dangerously sicke and somewhat recouered and after by misgouernment falling into a relapse it doth exasperate and increase the disease and as a wound halfe healed to come to a new incision cannot be without greater paine then before and for a man halfe in his iourney to returne backe againe when hee must needes goe thorow cannot bee but a great discontentment So when thou remembrest the great conflicts thou hadst at first when thou didst enter thy name into the schoole of Christ and considerest that now thou must abide greater it shall be halfe a hell to thee to be brought seriously without guile of spirit from the detestation of thy sinne as we may see Psal 32.4 before Dauid could be brought to confesse his sinne of filthinesse and of murther hee saith that very care had eaten his bones not but that in his priuate chamber hee had confessed it to the Lord but before he could come to taske his conscience and to set it as it were vpon the racke to bee rent in peeces by his confession of it before men and to abide patiently the shame of the world for it hee seemed to bee plunged into the deepe of deepes as himselfe saith Out of the deepes O Lord haue I cried vnto thee Euen so when the spirit of the Lord is abated in thee thou shalt finde it will not bee regained by some sleight worke and ssubbring vp a short praier as Lord haue mercy vpon me but thou must come to the case of Dauid euen to pine and wast away and to haue the moisture dried vp within thee yea consider his tedious trauell before he could repent suddenly And if he was beaten thus farre of the Lord with Scorpions of whom the Lord had protested that he was a man after his owne heart shalt thou thinke by a pang of deuotion and superficiall praier to recouer that sweet comfort thou hast lost in the Lords spirit Nay know that if thou temptest the Lord so farre as to withdraw his spirit from thee it shall cost the deere before thou canst inioy it againe and if thou breake foorth into sighes and grones which fill the heauens euen in this doth the Lords mercy greatly appeere for hee might giue thee vp into hardnesse of heart and neuer trouble himselfe to restore his spirit againe vnto thee But thy sorrow must be so great thy praiers so feruent and thy sighes so many as to crie out with Dauid Psal 51.8 Heale the bones O Lord which thou hast broken Let vs beware then how we distemper our selues spiritually for feare the arrow-head of the Lords wrath should rankle in our sides and let vs take heed with the Apostle how we greeue this spirit for if Adam might haue had the whole spirit taken from him in respect of his Apostasie who was perfect in his creation how much more may wee that haue receiued but the earnest of the spirit and the first fruits thereof in Christ Iesus Howbeit as the euill spirit in an hypocrite may be cast out and yet hee may returne to his vomite againe 2. Pet. 2.22 and his casting out was but in regard of his enlightening for the time and he was not gone out indeed so in the elect the spirit and the working of the spirit may be interrupted for a season but it cannot cleane be taken away Againe consider where it is said Quench not the spirit that all Scripture commandeth alwaies the contrary to that it forbiddeth as 2. Tim. 1.6 the contrary vertue to this heere spoken of is commanded I charge thee saith Paul to Timothy that thou stirre vp the graces of God which bee in thee the word in Greeke signifieth To keepe the fire burning giuing vs to vnderstand that this spirit is a flame kindled by the holy Ghost which Satan the flesh and the world labour to blow out so much the more carefull therefore must wee bee to foster it and maintaine it that it neuer go out Heere then must be considered the sleights of Satan-to blow it out and alwaies by the cleane contrary wee must labour to keepe it in for as the flesh lusteth against the spirit so must the spirit likewise against the flesh The first motion therefore Satan stirreth vp in vs to quench the spirit is to lust after euill not to lust after nothing which temptation he threw into the eies of Dauid as hee walked vpon the roofe of the Kings palace 2. Sam. 11.2.3 to lust after Bathsheba Vriabs wife As earnestly then as the flesh lusteth after euill so earnestly and more must the spirit lust after good things as to say with the Prophet Dauid I am ready vpon euery occasion to do thy will O God neither yet must we not deceiue our selues for euery lusting after good things is not of the spirit for it is easie to doe many good things wherein thy affections are not strained and to abstaine from many euill things to which thou art not tempted but thou shalt know whether the spirit do fight against the lusts of the flesh by this if any thing do directly oppugne the affections of the flesh if thou take part with the spirit and crosse thy affections in this thou maintainest and dost cherish the spirit As Dauid 1. Sam. 25.13 vpon a churlish answer giuen by Nabal in a passion of anger was resolued to kill him but vpon the intreatie of Abigail Nabals wife hee was pacified and entred into consideration of the greatnesse of the sinne of murther and blessed the God of Israel and the counsell of Abigail that had kept him from shed ding of blood Secondly if Satan cannot get vs lust for euill he will striue to get vs either doe nothing or else to spend our time in trifles and in pastimes to driue away dumps with vaine delights which may sometimes bee vsed for recreations to make vs more fit to walke in our callings but if we play to play that is suffer our hearts to be stollen away and snared in the pleasures of this life then the Lord will iudge vs as vnthrifty seruants that haue not gained by our talents Our labour therefore must be on the contrary since euery man hath his taske set him and God is our ouerseer though presently not our reuenger that wee fall not asleepe with new wine but according to the Apostles rule Ephe. 5.16.18 that we redeeme
the time from vanitie and walke worthy of that calling wherein God hath set vs. Thirdly if Satan cannot blow out the fire of the Lords spirit in vs by this but that wee resolue in our hearts to doe some good if we will needes doe it he perswades no to doe it by and by but to pawse vpon the matter and to procrastinate and defer it by this reason We may as well do it another time as now But wee must labour the contrary vnlesse wee will suppresse the power and soundnesse of the spirit for if we be not apt to day we shall be lesse apt to morrow and it is good to take the time while it is offered for we know not whether our life shall passe this present occasion Christ commeth not to thee at all times and therfore if he knocke now and we let him not in though hereafter we pine away with the desire of hauing him wee shall not get him according to that speech of the Prophet Esay 55.6 Seeke the Lord while he may be found and call vpon him while he is nigh for though he suffereth long yet will he not be mocked Therefore in doing good we must resemble and be like those that hauing earnest businesse as soone as they wake in the morning start out of their beds to auoide and shake off their sluggishnesse and say not as the stothfull doe Prou. 6.10 Yet a little sleepe yet a little slumber c. for when we are mooued and resolued to performe any good thing we may not grieue the spirit by deferring it but we must do it presently like Abraham Genes 18.6 who made haste and ran in to prepare meat and entertainment for the Angels for we must not looke vpon the clouds if we will sow nor gather the winds if we will reape nor defer good motions and actions if we will receiue comfort by them Fourthly the spirit is quenched by this If Sa●han cannot make thee lust against good nor spend thy time 〈◊〉 trifles and to no good purpose nor to deferre the good thou hast resolued to doe by some by-thought that hee shall suggest if thou wilt needes do it then he striueth to make thee doe it languishingly droopingly and coldly and thereupon perhaps thou makest a few praiers but when thou findest the comfort not so great as thou wouldest or as thou hast felt at other times then thou breakest off and euery good exercise though 〈◊〉 bee short seemeth tedious vnto thee But the spirit must labour the cleane contrary as to do good things so to doe them seriously for the worke of the Lord must not bee done negligently Though therefore thou findest thy selfe vndisposed to holy exercises yet striue by continuance in them if it be possible to make the spirit easie and though at first thou feelest great difficultie in praying yet resolue to continue in it some long time in ripping vp thy sinnes by praier and if at the last by often strife thou canst come to pray with ease and to feele the sweetnesse of the Lords mercy comforting thee in thy perplexed thoughts and in thy weake petitions it is a notable signe of thine election Lastly Sathan would quench the spirit by this if we will not bee worse he would make vs not to be better nor to goe forward in religion We will all graunt that we must professe the Gospell now since Sathan cannot weane vs from this opinion hee laboureth to keepe vs at a scantling in this porfession but it is certaine hee that goeth not forward in the porfession of the truth goeth backeward Hast thou not more zeale now then thou haddest when the Gospell was first brought thee then feare lest the spirit bee much quenched Wouldest thou haue a man stand at a stay till he come to his full stature or one halfe cured to send away the Physition or eat and not be nourished or spend of thy stocke and not increase it And why shouldest thou not bee as wise in the spirit as in these things Wouldest thou haue the Israelites make league with the Canaanites Deut. 7.16 No they must not cease till they haue cast them all out of the land And so if thou bee at league with any sinne it hindereth thy growth in religion and if thou come not to a full and perfect age in Christ thou canst not bee saued Thou must know though thou hast thy lampe burning yet the oile wasteth with flaming and if thou haue not oile to supply thy want thy light will goe out and thy selfe shalt sit in darkenesse Yet so farre hath this policy of Sathan preuailed that many who in King Edward and Queene Maries daies were zealous for the Lord are now frozen in their dregges and they that before heard the ioyfull message of saluation with singular comfort and could not haue their thirst staled but by the waters of wisedome are now by this long peace growne secure and waxen neither hot nor cold Of these men to say no worse they are right Laodiceans against whom the wisedome of the holy Ghost long since pronounced a fearefull doome that the Lord would spue them out of his mouth for shall Christ who is his Fathers counseller while he was in the flesh increase in wisdome Luk. 2.52 and shall we who are as blind as Beetles thinke it enough for vs to retaine the rudiments and first principles of religion and not to wax strong and able in the truth of God Nay certaine it is if we continue children in vnderstanding and do not grow from loue to patience 1. Cor. 14.20 2. Pet. 1.5 6. from patience to temperance from one grace of God to another if wee increase not I do not meane in peeuish and preposterous zeale but in sound substantiall zeale and from being fed with milke to desire strong meat it shall be as lothsome for the Lord to take vs that be thus decayed in our soules and which from good substantiall Christians are falne to bee most miserable beggerly banke-rupts as for a man to receiue againe into his stomacke that he hath once gorged vp As Satan therefore laboureth to quench this spirit by our coldnesse in religion and by standing at a stay in Christianity so let the spirit of God in vs striue for the contrary Reu. 22.11 that he that is righteous may bee more righteous and that wee may increase in faith and bee daily set on fire with the zeale of Gods truth for we may not bee worse than the ground which by the raine is made more fruitefull not then the herbes which by the Sunne are made more flourishing Heere some will say he that is once faithfull and whom the Lord hath once sealed that man cannot haue the spirit taken from him therefore though the operation and working of the spirit be for a time hindered and interrupted yet it shall bee restored againe because the Lord hath promised that whom hee loueth he will alwaies loue It is true that
words Rom. 4.2 Abraham was not iustified by workes and therefore they must be so reconciled as both places may bee true lest contrariety and variance appeare in the spirit of God which cannot be This is like those speeches vttered by Christ My Father is greater then I Ioh. 5.17 19. Iohn 10.30 and in another place I and my Father are all one and I count it no robbery to be equall with my Father which is spoken in a different respect the first in the person of a mediator the second in the person of the Godhead So Saint Paul taking the word iustifying for iustification before God said true and Saint Iames taking the word iustifying for iustification or approuing of his faith before men saieth true also but the word being taken in one and the same sense it were impossible for an Angell from heauen or for Christ himself to reconcile them And the reconciliation which the Papists make of these two places fighteth directly with Paul for they say faith and workes doe iustifie Paul saith faith onely iustifieth So as when Paul speaketh of iustifying by faith hee meaneth that whereby wee are acquitted by Christ and doe appeare perfect before God in him and Saint Iames taketh it for being iustified in the sight of men that is declared and approued to bee iustified when our holy life answereth to our holy profession And that the word Iustified is thus vsed and taken in this sense as Saint Iames doth appeareth Psalme 51.4 That thou maiest be iustified when thou art iudged that is declared to bee iust So Luke 7.29 the Publicans iustified God that is declared him to bee iust and in the same place it is said Wisedome is iustified of her children And Luk. 10.29 it is said the Lawyer was willing to iustifie himselfe that is to shew that hee was iust and it is likewise prooued out of the text it selfe Shew mee saith Saint Iames thy faith shew it to mee not to God Againe Saint Iames had falsified and abused the Scripture if he had taken the word iustifying in the sense to be made iust for the sentence that Abraham was iustified had passed the Lords mouth many yeeres before the sacrificing of his sonne for this that hee was iust was pronounced long before Ismael was conceiued as appeareth Genes 15.6 and therefore taking the word iustified to bee made iust hee could in no sort bee iustified by offering vp his sonne because he was iustified before but the meaning of Saint Iames is that it was approoued by this act and worke of Abraham that God had not saied before in vaine that hee was iustified and Rom. 4.10 it appeareth Abraham was iustified in his vncircumcision and this worke Iames speaketh of was done long after his circumcision To this the Papists reply thus Though Abraham was iustified before hee did this worke before God yet there is a degree to bee more iustified and so this place of Saint Iames may bee taken to bee a further iustification and an increase of faith before God as well as not To this wee answer that one pardon from God sufficeth for all sinnes and one droppe of blood serueth for all offences but because our faith is weake that we are not able to apply this bloud all at once therefore it is said that we must grow from faith to faith and he that is washed in the bloud of Christ is all cleane but our sanctification in this life leaueth some grudge and tang of corruption and maketh our feete impure as Christ speaketh Iohn 13.10 so as with God wee are iustified all at once and there is no proceeding by degrees in respect of him for blood pardons all but water that is our renewing groweth by degrees Now for the speeches of Saint Paul Rom. 4.4.5 and Rom. 8.30 that none are iustified by workes the Papists say It is to be taken of the workes of the law ceremoniall but not of the law m●●ll But we must note that Paul speaketh there of the law written in the tables of stone of that law that manifesteth sinne to bee sinne Thou shalt not lust c. which is the law morall and so their distinction false and friuolous Besides they were both the lawes of God and therefore a man may bee iustified as soone by the one as by the other for as Paul saith 2. Corinth 3.5 All our sufficiency is of God and of our selues we can doe nothing and but that the vaile is taken away in Christ the same couering remaineth which was in the old Testament vnder Moses And where Saint Paul saith Abraham was iustified without workes and no man shall bee iustified by the workes of the law True say the Papists by none of the workes of the law that he doth in the time of his infidelity but by them that hee doth after his conuersion he may be iustified And they say that forasmuch as the Apostle saith The workes of Abraham were done in beliefe therefore by this hee excludeth onely those workes done before faith to helpe his iustification So as by this wee see the aduersaries make two iustifications the first when of an infidell a man is made a professor which they say is by congruity when there is a certaine inclination in the heart of man to performe some good workes and yet for want of grace cannot the Lord seeing his heart thus prepared to be iustified doth call him and meerely of his grace doth iustifie him The second when a man is freely iustified by the grace of God then by this grace of God and his owne free-will say they hee may increase his iustification before God For the first we answer that none can be iustified by workes before faith for this is as if a tree should bring foorth fruite without a roote or a body should liue without a soule so in vaine is it to make a question of that cannot be for before wee haue faith it is impossible to worke or to thinke of a good work Secondly where they say that speech concerning Abraham is taken and to be vnderstood of his workes done before faith and that he was iustified by his good workes in faith this doth wholly eneruate and take away the strength of the Apostle his reason for Paul saith If hee were iustified by workes then had he whereof to glory with God Rom. 4.6 which speech extendeth as well to workes after faith as before faith for hee that deserueth any way may glory Secondly the Apostle saith Not to him that worketh but to him that beleeueth is righteousnesse due for if hee worketh hee hath his wages by desert that is say they he that standeth vpon his owne workes before faith without the assistance of Gods grace this man challengeth it by desert because hee did them without faith and grace which euasion and shift is most vaine for a man is not therefore made euill because he doth euill but he doth euill because he is borne euill so a man is
faith were spiritually conioined to Christ who is the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world and they were not saued by their regeneration and workes of faith for these were but effects of their first vniting to Christ spiritually which speech of our coniunction with Christ is like that of the true Catholike Church who are said to bee members of another though they be seuerall persons in respect of the mysticall reference which they haue to Christ their head Further they obiect Rom. 5.19 As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one many are made righteous Whereupon they inferre that it must be proportionable euery way and that as corruption is naturally deriued from Adam to vs and his very corruption really abideth in vs so Christ must really deriue his righteousnesse from himselfe to vs or else say they the example holdeth not To this we say as in Adam we are truely sinners by his sinne and that not by imitation but by imputation for that one sinne of Adam which condemned all the world was onely committed in the person of Adam so the iustice of Christ is no more in vs then was that sinne onely of Adam which made vs all to be damned and the punishment of that sinne brought originall sinne and the generall corruption And say they though all are saued through the obedience of Christ yet as after the sinne of Adam originall sinne was deriued to vs so must Christ his righteousnesse needes be in vs. We answer true it is they agree in this Adam giueth vs that be hath by the participation of his flesh Christ giueth vs that he hath onely by the communication of the holy Ghost Againe we say as euery man dieth of his owne disease and yet it may be he had that contagion from another so for Adams sin as it was imputed vnto vs we die and yet not for Adams sinne aloue but for our owne for in vs there is the very matter of corruption but Christs righteousnesse is not in the flesh but in the spirit for though we may haue perfect sinne yet we cannot haue perfect righteousnesse Againe there be three degrees in Adams sinne first by imputation secondly by propagation and drawing the filthinesse of Adams sinne really into the soule and flesh of man Thirdly we are condemned iustly by the imitation of Adams sinne in as much as when we come to discretion we sinne as Adam did but rigteousnesse is spirituall and hath but one degree onely by imputation and not by imitation for who would goe to hell to suffer as Christ did And yet there is somewhat in Christ not imputed to vs but deriued to vs yet no matter to iustifie vs that is the sanctification of his nature which is the renewing of ours and this holinesse we must haue actually in vs but all this is after our conuersion wrought meerely in the obedience of Christ his blood IAMES chap. 2. vers 25.26 verse 25 Likewise also was not Rahab the harlot iustified through works when she had receiued the messengers and sent them out another way verse 26 For as the body without the spirit is dead euen so faith without workes is dead VNto the example of Abraham the Apostle matcheth this of Rahab to shew how by this excellent worke she did proue her selfe a conuert Israelite from a cursed Cananite wherein first is questionable why the holy Ghost should vouchsafe to sort Abraham that most reuerend father of the faithfull and of the Patriarkes with a woman who was for her condition base because a victualler for her country cursed because a Cananite for her conuersation infamous because a strumpet and leaue other excellent examples of worthy men which might seeme to haue beene a lesse disparagement to Abraham whereto is answered that there is a speciall cause why saint Iames setteth this example downe aboue the rest because to the example of Abraham it might haue been replied that he was a singular and rare man so 〈◊〉 might be compared with him none did euer exceed him and many were inferiour to him and yet haue beene saued and therfore that the Apostle should not too much insist vpon the example of Abraham for this cause he hath chosen such a one as there is so many degrees betweene Abraham and her as if it bee aboue our reach to match Abraham yet wee may bee ashamed not to onermatch a whoore And if wee can neither imitate the highest nor bee equall with the lowest let vs boast neuer so long of good workes and faith it is certaine wee are monstrous hypocrites and cannot bee saued Secondly in this example wee must wisely consider what worthy things there are in this worke of Rahab taken out of Iosh 2.1 that it should receiue this honour to bee matched with the noble acts of the Patriarkes both by this Apostle and in Hebr. 11.31 Wherein wee must examine the lawfulnesse of her act not onely to conceale them that came as spies but to abet comfort and conuey them away since they came to espy the land which tended to the desolation of the whole countrey and subuersion of the state Which maketh nothing for them that send Emissaries and Iesuites into this our land to steale away the hearts of the people from their lawfull Soueraigne For in that Rabab did thus aide comfort and abet them shee did it not because they came to vsurpe and assault the countrey for if they had had no right but onely had come to haue made a larger extent of their Princes territories it had beene in them a fellonious purpose and as much as rouing vpon the sea and robbing by the high-way and if shee had suspected they had come to this end without hauing any better right vpon paine of her soule shee should haue discried it otherwise she had beene disloyall to her Prince and State but in that shee did conceale it shee knewshee had her security from heauen that cursed should all those bee that resisted the seed and race of Abraham she knew that by the mandate of the almighty the land was giuen vnto them and that they that dwelt therein were but vsurpers and therefore were bound to yeeld it vp as from God And if vpon this knowledge she had not protected them as 〈◊〉 did the Angels Genes 19.8 she had beene guiltie of their bloud she might haue beene vsed like Tarpeia among the Romanes who when shee had ingaged them to deliuer vp their bracelers vpon recompence of yeelding vp the Citie and Tower the fouldiers ouerwhelmed her in stead of giuing her the bracelets but all conditions made by Rahab were performed by the spies to shew that the whole worke proceeded from the Lord. Now for the letting them out by night though it bee not lawfull by the lawes of such defenced cities and places to scale the walles in the night time yet vpon the equitie of the cause and in the case of necessitie it may bee excused
for shee set them out at a window a thing done without mutinie or any fraudulent purpose to escape and therefore iustifiable euen as the letting downe of Paul in a basket was Acts 9.25 And in this whole worke shee sinned nothing but in making of a lie which though some excuse and extenuate because it was Mendacium officiosum an officious and dutifull lie yet it is no way excusable for no lie to saue a soule is lawfull Wherein wee obserue that euen the Saints of God in their best purposes haue in some things followed their mother wit and their owne corruption Withall note the louing kindnesse of the Lord that this particular blemish in the worke doth nothing derogate from the excellencie of her obedience no more then Rebecca Genes 27.8 who notwithstanding she subscribed to the oracle of God that Iacob should ouercome Esau yet shee by indirect meanes sought to preuent this worke of God which the Lord in mercie did winke at in respect of her generall resolution to be obedient The like may bee saied of Abraham who because hee thought the feare of God was not in the house of Abimelek and that they would haue slaine him for his wiues fake Genesis 20.2 dissembled Sarah to bee his wife and caried her vnder the name of his sister which infirmitie the Lord passed by because in other his actions hee was faithfull Heere some to debase this worke of Rahab may say Why was this such a matter to ha●● 〈◊〉 few messengers of the Lord and why should this commend her faith since she neuer came to triall to auouch this worke We answer that the resolution she admitted was very great since it might haue cost her the greatest torment that could bee and shee might so haue stunke in the sight of the people by thus betraying them and their countrey as either the people in a mutiny or the King in iustice might seuerely and cruelly haue executed her so as by this it argueth that she was perswaded that the God of Israel was onely to bee worshipped and the seede of Abraham onely in the world to bee esteemed and heereupon shee did practise the rule of our Sauiuor Christ euen to hate her owne nation Mat. 11.20 and tooke her life as it were into her hands to saue theirs that were the seruants of God So as though in the former example the Ramme onely was sactificed and not Isaak and in this example Rahab safely deliuered and her parentage reseued yet the resolution of them both was nothing lesse and so the speech of Christ true that they that for his sake forsake all Mat. 10.37 shall haue more comfort in that little that is left hauing peace of conscience then of all the former store nay that they that suffer for his sake shall bee free when their persecutors shall bee fettered as appeareth Ieremie 39.11.15 Ieremie that was in desolation and in prison was safe when the King himselfe had his eyes put out and Ebedmelech the Kings counsellour was promised not to perish when the rest should fall by the sword because hee had made the Lord his arme Further this example of Rahab to stand so resolutely for the deliuerance of the Lords messengers conuinceth all those that howsoeuer religion twang vpon their tongue that they can prate of it yet proue that they haue nothing in them but the Laodicean luke-warmth Reuel 3. in that they so professe it as they shrinke in the day of triall and dare not aduenture to harbour the Lords Embassadors and to succor them as Rahab did Yea and this example condemneth others who are so farre from forsaking lawfull things as wife possessions life c. for the Gospels sake as they will not forbeare vnlawfull things no not to leaue off the least shew 〈◊〉 pride or the least profit in biting gaine Whereas by this example wee are taught to take vp our crosse and not to looke backe-like Lots wife Genes 19.26 for there is no tarying in Idolatrie or other profanenesse to fetch any thing from the house toppe Mat. 24.17 or to runne backe into the fields to take our garments though they bee necessarie for this life as our Sauiour speaketh in the Gospell But more iustly the example conuinceth them that row with the tide and professe with the parliament for he that doth therefore professe religion because he hath his protection from the Prince and State would with the State serue the diuell Nay in matters of religion wee must not ground vpon examples but vpon the trueth of the religion for as we must not follow a multitude to do euill so neither must we follow a multitude to do good onely because they do it Exod. 23.2 For it is not the religion of God which we enioy because the parliament enioineth it but therefore it is by parliament commanded because it is the religion of God and fearefull it is to thinke that a Prince can prescribe a law to the eternall God which is farre more disparagement then for a subiect to make a law how he will obey his Prince which notwithstanding is not sufferable But as Rahab was perswaded that the God of Israel that sent those men was the onely God and that the loines of Abraham for whom this land was to be gained were the true owners by the speciall promise of God and in this respect she regarded not her Prince nor her countrey nor her owne fathers house but that by speciall mercy they were exempted but she did most faithfully and in great obedience and in a most Christian resolution willingly resigne vp the countrey to them to whom the Lord had giuen the title Euen so must wee in matters of the Lords seruice alwaies preferre and stand for the will of God to be obserued rather then either to haue our countrey preserued or our Prince obeyed For as Peter saith Act. 4.19 It is better to obey God then man yet still so as we submit our selues to the power and authoritie of the higher powers vnder whose sword are our bodies though our soules be vnder the shadow of the Almightie Againe where it is said She receiued the messengers obserue the cause why she did it be●●●se she was perswaded the God of Israel sent them so that it was not to gratifie the men respecting the men sauing that religio●● did constraine her and her loue to them arose in respect of her loue to God that had conuerted her Whereupon we no●●●●at the world determineth wrongfully of good workes 〈…〉 man may be an honest man and liue well and doe good 〈◊〉 neighbor though he be not greatly religious for all actions wherein the glorie of God the loue of God in Christ the comfort of our consciences and the desire of the saluation of our brethren do not concurre those are not good so as a good action without religion can no more be good then a house without a foundation a tree without a root water without a
wel-head or to bee good without God for where there is no zeale there is no faith where no faith no conscience where no conscience no loue and shewing our loue not for conscience we may for our charitie go to the diuel for a man must first be good before he can doe good and good he cannot be without God 1. Sam. 6.17 The workes such a man doth may bee perhaps like the Emeraulds of the Philistims varnished ouer with gold that is make a faire shew in the sight of men but if they proceed no further that is to haue the testimonie of the spirit that they bee wrought by his hand they are most abominable before the face of God Wilt thou set a face as if thou wroughtest well because thou wilt not take the penaltie of an obligation and yet thou wilt prosecute a matter against a preacher for a superstitious ceremonious beggerly element What good worke is this to speake well of all men and yet at euerie word to wound to bloud to heart the holy one of Israel What is it not to hurt thy neighbour to be a friend to thy friend and yet to be an enemie to the friend of God What great worke is it not to beate false witnesse and yet priuily to suggest against him thou darest not reproue to his face So as vnlesse our doing of good arise from religion wee may easily straine at a gnat and swallow a Camel heare Iohn Baptist gladly for a time Mat. 6.20 and chop off his head afterward as Herod did Matth. 14.10 Now as for moralists and such as transforme themselues according to the times they are as Iude 13. tearmeth them the raging waues of the sea foaming out their owne ●●me as the wind serueth and like the wandring starres of the ●●●ament vnconstant and vnsteddy void of faith for sides must be firma non ambulatoria we must haue a standing not a walking faith and as without faith they cannot please God so except they please God they shall not be saued She tooke them and sent them away Where learne it is not enough for vs not to hurt a man that professeth religion but wee must doe him good euen as this harlot wrought not enough in receiuing the spies and then to haue left them to their owne hazard but as in obedience she did receiue them so in faith she must safely send them away Yea we are bound by praier by purse by person by credit by countenance to releeue them not onely to thinke well of them and to like them so farre must we be from vexing them For if Obadiah 1. King 18.4 had onely hid the Prophets of God and had not fed them it bad beene but halfe a good worke Heereupon is it that in the last day in the sentence of the reprobate shall neuer be mentioned what euill they haue done as that they haue bitten by this vsury or polluted their bodies by that whoredome but there shall be recited onely the good they did not as Mat. 25.41 for not clothing the naked for not visiting the sicke for not releeuing the poore brethren for Rahab must not onely conceale and hide the spies but shee must send them away safe And if the sentence of iudgement drawne in this forme cannot affect vs let vs further know that though euill is the absence of good yet good is not the absence of euill for Rahabs worke is but lame if she doe but harbour them and if she doe not finish it by letting them foorth it shall neuer bee registred as a worke of faith For looke Iudg. 5.23 Cursed be Meroz that came not to helpe the Lord against be mighty not because he did persecute the Lord or did him any hurt but because he helped him not And wee see Rahab vpon this least knowledge of God ●entred her life to saue them Besides we shall read in the Gospell that the greatest torment of the glutton is Luk. 16.25 that he gaue La●aru● no water not that hee was an extortioner or that hee spurned the poore man from his doore By all which examples we are taught that where religion is opp●●sted by all meanes and in all things we can to releeue the Gospell for the good we haue omitted and the euill we haue committed shall come to iudgement Lastly marke the words Rahab the harlot which reprochfull speech must not bee referred to the present state of her conuersion but to her former conuersation as if hee should say Rahab that once had beene a whore for none truly conuerted can remaine in their former sinne but if hee doe after his conuersion fall into some grosse sinne as Dauid did in killing Vriah 2. Sam. 11.17 the Lord will scourge him as hee did Dauid And to bee raised vp of the Lord after such a relapse must not bee by slubbering vp our repentance but we must so be humbled as to feele drinesse in our bones with griefe as Dauid did Psal 32.4 And we shall neuer receiue comfort vntill wee haue soundly and seriously repented Whereupon we gather that the Lord regardeth not what sinnes we haue committed before our regeneration so that after our conuersion we walke worthy of our calling for many that were whores and wicked were conuerted As Luk. 7.37 she that washed Iesus feete with the teares of her eyes and heart and wiped them with the haire of her head had beene a whore but wee read not that after that she was any more so So Zaccheus Luk 19.5 was an extortioner before Christ called him from the tree but we reade not that he euer tooke peny vsury after And Mat. 20.20 such bee inuited to the supper as bee patched and lame to expresse our spirituall beggery but after we are come thither wee must haue the wedding garment of a good conscience For Saul was a persecutor of the Church before hee was called Act. 9.2 but wee nerer reade that he was so after his conuersion For if we continue in a sinne looke what followeth euen in this life 1. Cor. 5.11 If any that is a professor be a whore-monger eate not with him that is forbeare thy priuate familiarity with him so then being conuerted wee must shew our repentance from those sinnes wherein before we were fallen as the repentance from vsury is liberality the repentance from pride is bumility from whoredome chastity for repentance is the leauing of thy sinne and the cleauing to the contrary vertue and it is no repentance to leaue thy sinne when it must or hath left thee as vpon thy death bed to re●e●● thee of thy vsurie when thou canst take no more or in thy age to repent thee of thy lecherie when thou canst satisfie it no more but to repent from thy sinne is as 1. Peter 4.1 to suffer in the flesh to suffer in the flesh is to cease from sinne and to cease from sinne is not onely to leaue thy sinne but to spend the rest of thy time
in a holy conuersation Heere will be obiected since workes are so precisely vrged what say wee to the faith of the theefe vpon the crosse what workes did he and by this example many betray their soules in presuming of the like grace Wee answer that this was a particular priuiledge giuen to that theefe euen as a pardon may bee giuen to a man vpon the gallowes and if any embolden himselfe heereupon perhaps the rope will be his hire and it is not good to put it vpon the Psalme of Miserere and the necke-verse for sometime he proueth no Clarke And for this theefe the Lord neuer did it but to one that none might presume and yet hee did it to one and did saue one in the exigent of his life that none might despaire Secondly this was a worke reserued for the manifestation of the power of the Sonne of God that he should beleeue in his fellow sufferer and desire him to saue him that when the Pharisees denied him to be the Sonne of God yet a poore wretch and a theefe should confesse it Thirdly we must not regard the shortnesse of his confession but consider the time and circumstance when and before whom this confession was made euen then when no man durst defend the innocencie of the Sonne of God when the Pharisees left him when all his Disciples were scattered and when Marie his mother that stood a farre off and knew him to be the Sonne of God and yet spake nothing in his defence whereby she finned against the first table She was his mother and saw him put to death vniustly and yet would not testifie of his innocencie whereby she bore false witnesse against him so sinned against the ninth commaundement being her sonne she did not comfort him vpon the crosse and so sinned against the fift commaundement yet when all these either doubted of his diuinity or despaired the poore theefe did confesse him to be that Christ the Sonne of God who ●●d Paradise to dispose Lastly know that he was such a wretch that he neuer knew God before and therefore was it no maruell though he committed felonie but as soone as the Lord knockt at his heart first he confesseth Christ to be God and to die an innocent Luk. 23.41 We suffer righteously but this man hath done nothing amisse wherein he wrought a worke of the first table secondly he reprooued his fellow who raned on Christ wherein he wrought a worke of the second table So as this example of the theefe is no warrant to deferre or trifle off our repentance till the last houre for hee wrought as soone as hee was called If therefore the Lord hath offered vnto vs the riches of his mercie let vs in the acceptable time embrace it and not abuse his long suffering by growing more leane and ill-fauoured by these many yeeres wee haue had of religious peace and plentie but let vs returne vnto him while he is in the way before darknesse too fast ouer-grow our soules and before death snatch vs away into the graue For the similitude which is vers 26. obserue onely that it agreeth not in all points for the soule is the cause of the life of the body but so are not good works the cause of faith but only an effect and fruit of it for faith giueth life to good works and faith worketh by loue in the person instified for we must as hath bene said first be good before we can do good and we are made good spiritually by our regeneration in Christ and we being ingrafted into him then we do good so as the meaning only of the Apostle is by this similitude to shew that when a dead man being dead can speake which is impossible then faith which hath no workes and so is but a dead faith shall iustifie and saue vs. 1. IOHN chap. 3. vers 9.10 verse 9 Whosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not for his seed remaineth in him neither can he sinne because he is borne of God verse 10 In this are the children of God knowen and the children of the diuell who so doth not righteousnesse is not of God neither he that loueth not his brother THE Apostle in the beginning of this chapter first setteth downe that God the Father by his euerlasting loue in his Sonne hath bestowed vpon the faithfull this priuiledge to be called the sonnes of God in the sonne of God Christ Iesus Secondly that this dignity to bee the sonne of God and so to be called is not to be discerned by the men of the world because they haue not knowen the Sonne hauing not his spirit for spirituall things cannot be discerned by them that haue nothing but fleshly policy Thirdly as this cannot be discerned of the world so it is impossible our selues should sufficiently conceiue of it while we remaine in the tabernacle of this life because there is another glory we expect vers 2. Fourthly he setteth downe an effect inseparable from this adoption As many as are the sonnes of God and haue this hope of future glory they striue to reformation of life not to be equally pure but to bee like pure to the Lord Iesus This hee prooueth first from the institution of the law God neuer ordained the law neither after our creation nor after our redemption but to bee kept and the reason is thus The breach of the law is a disparagement swinge and sinne it perfect strength Thirdly the godly e●e said not to sinne be 〈◊〉 he laboureth to walke in all the commandements of the Lord. Now he that walketh in the right way may somtime fall but if hee doe he● striueth to regaine it by greater carefulnesse and speedier passage● but the wicked goe cleane out of the way as if heauen stood at hell gate Lastly because in the godly there is a combat for there is two men in them in the inward man they would faine please God and by the outward as Saint Paul saith they are made captiue to sinne Rom. 7.23 but in a meere naturall man there is nothing but flesh and so no combat for where all is one there is no diuision and if there be any strife in him it is betweene his conscience and himselfe in iudgement conuincing him that it is sinne and not betweene his conscience and his affection misliking it as it is sinne for this is easily seene by his often relapse into the same sinne Now for the reason hee doth not sinne because the holy Ghost which is the seed of our second birth remaineth in him neither can he sin and this is proued by two places of scripture first Rom. 8.1 where the Apostle proueth these two graces inseparable iustification from sinne and sanctification from sinne thus There is no condemnation to him that liueth a spirituall man this is proued vers 5. by contraries They that liue after the flesh sauour the things of the flesh but he that is borne of God cannot doe so for then