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A10391 The description of fleshly lusts. Or a profitable and fruitfull sermon vpon the first Epistle of Saint Peter, Chap. 2. vers. 11. 12. Preached and penned by that famous, learned, iudicious, orthodoxall, holy, wise, and skilfull preacher and servant of God, now deceased, and with his God triumphing in Heaven, Iohn Randall, Batchelour of Divinitie, pastour of St. Andrewes Hubbart in little East cheape London, sometimes fellow of Lincolne Coledge in Oxford. And now published, to the glory of God, the edification of his church, and the honourable memoriall of the author, by William Holbrooke, preacher of the word of God in the church aforesaid Randall, John, 1570-1622.; Holbrooke, William. 1622 (1622) STC 20669; ESTC S102397 17,941 33

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that ever God bestowed vpon man there ensued a Commandement vpon it as we reade Gen. 2.15.16 that the Lord placed Adam in the Garden of Eden and withall gaue him Commandement that he should abstaine from the forbidden fruit Here then we see beloved the right and true vse of the blessings of God vpon vs so many mercies as he shews vnto vs we must esteeme to be so many spurres to pricke vs forward to well doing and to be so many Messengers sent vnto vs from God to call vpon vs for the due performance of all such Christian Duties as belong to our severall callings Satan himselfe though a malicious depraver and abuser of all Gods blessings towards vs yet doth acknowledge to Gods owne face that his blessings do exact a dutie at our hands Doth Iob serue God for nought saith he Iob 1.9 As if Satan should haue said It is true indeed that Iob is an vpright and iust man one that feares God and eschewes euill but doth he so for nought No he hath great reason for it For thou hast made an hedge about him and about all that he hath on euery side Now Beloued if Satan thought it reason that Iob should serue God because God had blessed Iob oh how wicked is our ingratitude if when we haue receiued fauours and blessings at Gods hands as we doe receiue daily we doe not in lieu and requitall thereof apply our selues to Gods seruice The Apostle in the twelfth to the Romanes ver 1. hath giuen vs an excellent President in this case I beseech you saith he by the mercies of God that you giue vp your bodies a liuing sacrifice holy and acceptable vnto God He hath no better meanes to adiure vs as it were and to bind vs to offer vp our selues a liuing sacrifice vnto God then the mercies and fauours which he hath bestowed vpon vs. To apply this present case more particularly to our selues consider aright I beseech you the case of these faithfull to whom the Apostle makes this Exhortation and when you haue compared their case with your owne case then tell me if this same Exhortation may not as justly nay much more justly be enforced vpon vs. These were Gentiles and so are we these had sitten in darknes and so did we these were aliants from the covenant and so were we but God had chosen them a peculiar people to himselfe and so he hath chosen vs he brought them into a marveilous light and so he hath done by vs he called them to the knowledge of his truth and so he hath called vs he redeemed them with the precious bloud of Iesus Christ and so he hath redeemed vs he regenerated them by his spirit and so he hath done vs therefore this Dutie lies as hard vpon vs as vpon them and this same Exhortation is to be prest as forcibly vpon vs as vpon them wherefore Dearely Beloved I beseech you as strangers and Pilgrims to abstaine from fleshly lusts which fight against the soule Nay to goe a little further in this application because God hath gone a great deale further in blessing vs they were but young Novices in the Faith as it seemes to be implied in the second verse of this Chapter New borne babes but we haue beene long trained vp in the knowledge his blessed Gospell hauing had free passage amongst vs aboue these fortie yeares they were dispersed abroad in the world as appeares Chapter 1. vers 1. and scattered here and there but we enioy the Communion of the Word Sacraments in the vnitie of this one particular Church they were strangers where they liued but we sit at home vnder our Vine and vnder our Fig-tree as the Prophet speakes and Gods holy name be euerlastingly praised for it We need not to gee begge the bread of life in forreine Nations for we haue it brought home euen to our dores much more iustly therefore doe these extraordinary blessings of God bind vs to this Dutie then theirs did them and much more earnestly must this Exhortation be enforced vpon vs then vpon them wherefore Dearely beloued I beseech you you that haue receiued this full measure of loue and mercy at Gods hands I beseech you to abstaine from fleshly lusts which fight against the Soule If we had giuen to him first then these his blessings had beene but requitalls of our former kindnesse but now seeing he hath loued vs when we did not loue him seeing he hath thus blessed vs of his owne free good will oh how streightly doe these vndeserued fauours of God exact this Christian dutie at our hands euen our holines of life wherefore I beseech you nay you must know that the loue of God doth beseech you or rather impose it vpon you as a necessary Dutie to abstaine from fleshly lusts c. And let this suffice to be obserued concerning this point Now I come to the Insinuations and first of the first Dearely Beloved I call it an Insinuation because the Apostle by this terme of Kindnesse doth artificially close with them and wind both himselfe and his Exhortation into their hearts For commonly the nature of Man when it is counselled and advised by others is wont straight wayes to looke into the heart of his Counsellor to search out with what affection he speakes it and accordingly as he findes the affection of his Counsellor so will he esteeme of his Counsell If a man willes vs to amend our manners thereby vpbraiding vs with our faults or bewraying any bitternesse against vs we will reiect his counsell though never so good If a man advise vs to any good course for his owne profit or for some advantage that himselfe may get by it wee refuse his advise though never so profitable but if once we be perswaded that he loues vs and that for loue and good will he advises vs to any courses presently we hearken to him and embrace his counsell and are willing and readie to put it in practise Wherefore our Apostle deales very skilfully here with these Christians first protesting his deare and tender loue towards them that he doth not counsell them to this for any shame he would bring vpon them or for any vantage that hee should procure to himselfe but meerely for his heartie loue and affection that he beares vnto them therefore they are in no case either to contemne it or suspect it but rather to embrace it with all willingnesse And here is an excellent Rule for vs to frame our counsels by that whensoever any of vs reprooues his brother for any sinne as for drunkennesse swearing vncleannesse or any such prophane carriage and counsels him to amend it we must take heed that it come not from any gall or bitternesse in our hearts for then it marres our Exhortation and hardens him more in his sinne but it must come from loue within vs and that from a tender and deare loue towards him if ever we desire that our counsell should take
effect with him in his heart to the reformation of his life and sauing of his soule Againe in that he calls them here his Dearely beloued here is another observation offered vnto vs. He had shewed in the former Verses that they were the dearely beloued of God and therefore here in this Verse he is bolde to call them his Dearely beloued for seeing that Christ did loue them dearely his Apostle must needs loue them dearly too For the Lord neuer bestowes his loue vpon any but withall he bestowes many amiable Graces vpon them such as may procure them loue and fauour amongst men I say not amongst carnall men that cannot looke any farther then vpon flesh and bloud nor yet amongst worldly men that onely loue those that are like themselues but amongst spirituall men such as can discerne the louely gifts and graces of God shining in a mans soule Wee reade Genesis 39.3 4. of Ioseph that the Lord was with him Putiphar seeing the loue of God vpon him did set his loue vpon him too and in the 21. verse of that Chapter the Master of the Prison saw that the Lord loued Ioseph and then he loued Ioseph too and in the 41. Chapter the 39. Verse euen Pharaoh himselfe saw that the spirit of God was in Ioseph and therefore he fauoured him and preferred him exceedingly Thus was it also with Christ himselfe of whom we reade Luk. 2.52 that he grew in loue and fauour with God and with men first in fauour with God and then with men for men loued him because God loued him first Here is then a perfect Rule whereby to frame our loue towards men if first we behold and descry in them certaine testimonies of the loue of God then may we be bold also to set our dearest loue and affection vpon them Wee must take heed that we be not too light of our loue in bestowing it vpon euery one for our Christian loue is and ought to be a well setled affection proceeding from a good ground and therefore we must bestow it especially vpon those whom we see the Lord hath peculiarly endued with his sanctifying and sauing grace neither yet on the other side must we be too sparing of our loue in bestowing it onely vpon some few that fit our owne humor best but as many as the Lord hath vouchsafed to admit into the bosome of his Church and to call to the profession of our Christian Faith except we see in them some euident cause to the contrary as that they are hypocrites or yeeld any other manifest signes of impietie those we must loue as presuming and well hoping that God doth loue them But howsoeuer the Apostle had many respects to draw his dearest loue to these faithfull ones partly because they were his brethren in the flesh but much rather because they were his brethren in the Lord embracing the same faith worshipping the same God regenerate by the same spirit and liuing in the communion of one and the same mysticall bodie yet there was one reason further then all these that inflamed his heart with most feruent loue towardes them aboue all other and this was the charge which was giuen to him ouer them that he should be their Instructor to Preach the Doctrine of saluation vnto them For the Ministeriall charge which was assigned vnto Peter ouer the Circumcision Gal. 2.7 did knit his heart vnto them faster then euer the heart of Ionathan was knit vnto the heart of Dauid so that in this respect he might well call them his dearely beloued Wherein he giues an example to the Ministers of God teaching them how they ought to esteeme the flocke of Christ whereof the holy Ghost hath made them ouer-seers that they must carry a loue and affection towards them and that not any common loue but such as proceeds from the dearest and the deepest seate of their hearts Deare is that loue which must preuaile with vs so farre as to make vs to lay downe our liues for those whom we doe loue It is so deare and such a great loue as that our Sauiour Ioh. 15.13 telles vs there can be no greater Greater loue can no man shew then this when a man bestowes his life for his friends and yet such must be the loue of a Pastor toward his flocke euen to lay downe his life for them as Ioh. 10.11 A good Shepheard c. Thus it was with Moses that would rather be blotted out of the Booke of life himselfe then that the wrath of the Lord should be powred out vpon the Children of Israel Exod. 32.32 And thus it was with Paul that would wish himselfe to be seperated from Christ for his brethren and kinsmen according to the flesh Rom. 9.3 And thus it was with the great Shepherd of our soules Christ himselfe who did lay downe his life for his Sheepe and expose himselfe to all those dangers which by our sinnes we had incurred and thus it ought to be with all the Ministers of God they must loue their seuerall Charges euen vnto death embracing them with their dearest affection The second Insinuation is in these words I beseech you For although by that Apostolike authoritie which he had receiued he might command them yet he had rather to deale with them by entreatie to beseech them For this was a course fitter for him and fitter for them also Fitter for him as being a Minister of the Word it is for a Magistrate to command it is for a Minister to beseech and fitter for them the young tenderlings of a Vine are to be handled gently and charily and so these being but young Christians as hath beene alreadie shewed out of the second Verse were to be mildly dealt withall In matters of Religion though sometimes men may be compelled by strong hand and by force to obedience yet the readiest way either to winne those that are without or to conteine those that are alreadie wonne in the bond of obedience is for the most part by fayre meanes and by kind perswasions Suadenda potius est pietas quàm cogenda sayth a learned Father Sooner is godlinesse fastened vpon vs by perswasion then by compulsion And the very Heathen man Seneca could tell vs that in good causes Faciliùs ducimur quam trahimur It is easier to lead vs on by kind entreatie then to draw vs on by constraining meanes Here then is controuled that imperious Spirit which raignes in the Chayre of the Romish Sea that takes vpon him to commaund all the world He challengeth himselfe to be Christs Vicar and Peters successor but whither he be either of them let his commaunding courses testifie Christ sayd Learne of me for I am meeke and lowly What meeknesse is there in him that sends forth his Mandamus nothing but commands and threatnings to the people of God And Peter as you see here beseeches these Christians to be advised by him but he that challenges himselfe to be Peters successor lookes for it as