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A57537 A godly & fruitful exposition upon all the First epistle of Peter by that pious and eminent preacher of the word of God, John Rogers. Rogers, John, 1572?-1636.; Simpson, Sidrach, 1600?-1655. 1650 (1650) Wing R1808; ESTC R32411 886,665 744

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the pure Word of God This hath many properties 1. It loves for some good actions which condemns the common love of wicked persons as of the Fornicator and his Harlot the Adulterer and his Mate the Drunkards and Thief though sworn Brethren To love any because they can rail against goodness or Dice well or are eager against the Servants of God c. this is cursed love True love rejoyceth not in iniquity a worse note cannot be then for one to love them whom as Rebels and Conspirators against God he sees fighting against God 2. Pure love is that which is grounded on Grace and Religion not on any transitory thing which condemns the carnal love of the world which love onely for worldly respects as strength beauty and the like or if it be for any inward gift of the minde not Sanctified that 's also but carnal as wit skill in Arts Musique c. these are worthy love but to love onely for these is not true and pure love for thus the Heathens loved as Isaac loved Esau for his hunting and many a man his wife for her beauty These are false grounds when they fail love fails 3. Pure love is in respect of the party himself whom we love and for no respect to our selves or commodity of ours which condemns the world which onely loves on such respects as because he is my Uncle my Friend loves me hath done this or that for me or may do me a pleasure therefore I will make much of him or for fear he may do me a shrewd turn This being shak'd out of the clow●s is indeed but self-self-love as having a respect onely to our selves Many a man shews kindeness to others to purchase credit The charitable deeds of the Papists were of self-love for they were done out of opinion of merit So the love of worldlings they have a reach at themselves 4. Pure love reflects chiefly on anothers Soul therefore hates his sin in him whom he loves most dearly advising him from all evil counselling him to all good This condemns all impure love So to love as not to tel our neighbor of his fault for angring or disquieting him this is hatred So Parents that love their children so well as they will not nurture rebuke or correct them do indeed hate them slay them in following their ways He that spares the rod hates his childe It s as if any should be so tender over a childe as not to suffer the wind to blow on it and therefore holds their hand before the mouth of it but holds it so hard as they strangle the childe or as the Ape which hugs her yong one so hard that she strangles it Again friends perswade a man to do this or that for preferment which he cannot do with a good conscience Oh they love him they would fain see him prefer'd woful love to the body by destroying the soul A neighbor hath his Childe or Cattel strangely handled one comes in of love perswading to send to such a Cunning-man or good Witch one of the Devils worsts instruments Is this love Is he a friend that will do that whereby a peny may be gained but many hundred pounds lost So when a Christian is ready to suffer for a good Conscience and a friend comes and says Oh I pray cast not away your self I wish you well do as the times are and as others do This was the tormentors love to Martyrs tormenting love indeed that by saving their bodies their souls might perish Thus would Peter have perswaded our Savior O Master these things shall not be unto thee but if Christ had not suffered we had all perish'd in our sins yea the Saints in Heaven must have come out from thence for they went to Heaven by Christ who was to be crucified What love was this our Saviors Answer shews that he gave him no thanks for that counsel Fervently This stands in two things Earnestness and Constancy 1. For the Earnestness of our love we must stretch it to as many persons as we can and to as many duties as giving forgiving c. and therein we must not be sparing as in giving For he that gives sparingly shall reap sparingly So for forgiving it must not be onely an offence or two Charity covers a multitude thus is God to us in giving for Soul Body Goods Good-name to us to ours day and night never weary never upbraiding us So in forgiving how merciful is he to pass by our many offences and that daily should not we then herein resemble him Again a little love is soon quench'd soon hindred but we must love so as if we meet with many temptations from our selves or the parties whom we are to love our love notwithstanding must last still yea we must not onely do these things when we can well do them or there 's nothing to let us but even forget our ease pleasure and profit to do our neighbor good Love seeks not her own things is laborious we love our selves fervently and therefore must so love our neighbors This condemns the cold frozen love of the world wherein there 's no heat or fervency a little thing lets We are so full of self love that we will not speak so much as a good word in defence of the very best whether man or cause if thereby we may be prejudiced never so little so did not Jonathan so did not Hester when she adventured her life for her people 2. For the constancy thereof Unity must be kept we must seek Peace and follow after it and its a part of fervency when it will not easily be broken off Gods love is constant ours must be so the Devil will assay to break it off we must therefore the more stand in it Oh it s the easiest matter in the world to break off love but we must not embrace any occasion moving hereunto This rebukes the inconstancy of many men that are won with an Apple as we say and lost with a Nut that will upon every slight occasion break friendship I loved him as well as could be will some such say till such and such a thing fell out and what are you now broke off what can worldings do more If God should so deal with us how miserable were we but his love is constant yea he loveth us in our adversity and low estate nay best then and is then nearest with his comforts so it ought to be with us for then our Neighbor hath most need of us and then our love will appear most free not mercenary But how contrary this is daily experience sheweth while men be in prosperity they have many friends which in their affliction forsake them as Doves that come to fair houses not to low cottages whereof Job often complaineth Verse 23. Being born again not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by
those most respectively but even the bad for we must have peace with them though not with their faults and give them their due though if we have occasion to speak of their sins we must deal plainly except we know them to be Gods Enemies then ought we to give them no countenance Reasons hereof may be these 1. It s a good testifying of our love which we should do upon all occasions 2. It s a part of urbanity and courtesie 3. It s a good means to procure love from them whom we do salute so did Absolom c. 4. The neglect hereof as it cannot but bewray some defect in us so it breeds suspicions and thoughts of emulation in our neighbors and works in them no small discontent for our nature can abide nothing less then to see our selves despised 1. This rebukes not so much those that of rudeness or for want of good maners go by and regard no Salutations seeming so to minde their businesses as they regard none but themselves but those that of a prophane minde neglect it especially towards those whom they think not to be of their disposition as some prophane rude wretches that will come by a Minister or godly Christian after a scornful maner without shewing any courtesie This being done in respect of their Religion is abominable and vile and a very bad sign 2. Such as of pride If they have a little more wealth or gay cloaths or any gift more then another they are so puft up that they pass by others scornfully or carelesly What is one worm to lift up himself thus against one that is his own flesh that it may be is as good or better then himself The more God hath given any the more humble they should be 3. Such as of frowardness malice and old hatred cannot speak at meeting are tongue-tyed They have a tongue but the malice of their heart taketh away the use of it They look like Tygers on each other and would as readily kill them if they could as safely and easily This is seen to God before whom he that hateth his brother is a man-slayer 4. Let us labor to purge our hearts hereof that we may give every one his due With a kiss of charity The maner of saluting among the Jews was by kissing Thus did Jacob and Esau at their meeting Laban and his Children at their parting so Joseph and his Brethren Jonathan and David c. we finde it also practised in the new Testament See Luke 7. 45. and Acts 20. 37. It was a Custom in some Churches before the Communion to kiss each other signifying the joyning of hearts this we retain in part But men Salute by uncovering and shaking hands the joyning of our hands signifying the joyning of our hearts This was the use till courtly Congeys and Crouchings have put them by taking one another by the knees and by the elbows c. Of charity But be the Salutation what it will kiss or shaking hands or uncovering head it must be of love and thence proceeds for as we must not be content to have love in our heart except we shew it by outward signs so must all outward tokens proceed from love as the ground and root else its lying diffimulation Those kisses they are elswhere termed holy not a wanton kiss not a dissembling kiss much less a treacherous kiss but such a one as proceeds from a Sanctified affection of love seated in the heart 1. This rebuketh the customary and formal saluting which wants this ground Many do thus greet one another who yet have but small love to the parties they salute This is a taking of Gods name in vain it s a dissembling with our neighbors whereas love should be unfained without dissimulation 2. Treacherous courtesies and greetings when there are fair speeches How do you I am glad to see you well c. when mischief is in the heart as did Joab and Judas Thus the Devil pretended love to Eve this is the note of a wicked man Many after kinde salutations will straight rail gibe slander plot mischief c. Those should rather make known their malice that others might beware of them then cloak their mischief with the shew of love 3. Let every one of us labor to possess our hearts of true love that so we may not onely salute one another but in a right maner do the same O let us labor for this most lovely vertue of love so often commanded of us so highly commended to us It s the bond of perfectness that tyes up all together without which all duties shatter asunder It s the fulfilling of the whole Law It s that vertue which is so pleasing to God that which so long continueth that wherein the Angels and Saints now shine To this end let us labor to be more and more assured of Gods love to us which will make us not onely to love him but our neighbors for his sake the godly best but all because God bids yea our Enemies as who loved us when we were Enemies we must also strive against and purge out the cankers of love as namely 1. Pride which esteems so highly of ones self and basely of others offereth occasions of offence readily and taketh occasion for every thing 2. Covetousness for this also hinders love he that 's covetous cares not how he gets by right or wrong nor how much he wrongs his Neighbor 3. Frowardness and hastiness This also stirs up strife If there have any things fallen out otherwise then well between us and any as there may be even between good persons let us take notice thereof acknowledge and be sorry for the same seek reconciliation be pacified forgive and forget as we are required and expect forgiveness from God O an unappeasable minde is a fearful thing a note of a Reprobate Such are unlike God who is slow to wrath ready to forgive like the Devil who is irreconcileable O woful a poor mortal man to bear immortal hatred How can he look God in the face little doth he think what fearful things he hath done against God did he he would think how ever he could look up to God for pardon of 10000 Talents when he catcheth and holdeth his neighbor by the throat for 300 pence nay it may be if it be truly examined for nothing Peace be with you all c. Now he prays for them by Peace is usually meant outward prosperity as health conveniency of outward things welfare of our selves and ours freedom from grievous evils and a quiet estate and condition in the comfortable enjoying of Gods blessings in our bodies wives children goods names c. also that which is the fountain hereof namely peace with God and our own conscience But I will speak here first of outward blessings Where note That We may lawfully desire for our selves and ours or any other
hath these two things in it 1. That we have brotherly and tender affections one towards another 2. That we shew it forth by brotherly actions and fruits answerable both which must necessarily go together 1. Then In vain do any challenge tender and loving affections except they shew the fruit thereof to their Brethrens Bodies and Souls especially 2. It s not enough to do brotherly offices unless they proceed from brotherly affections Many a man will give frankly and do other duties required of him but defiles his liberality with insulting over the parties relieved upbraiding them therewith and thinking thereby to make them subject unto them whereas a gift should be given chearfully and seeing one that stands in need of our help we ought compassionately to tender his estate as our own remembring Gods commandment for relieving such a one and thanking God we may and though the party ought to be thankful yet should not we stain our liberality with any sinister maner of giving It must be frank that 's the nature of a gift and it must also come from compassion and feeling So for reproving admonishing c. an excellent duty I would it were more usual it must proceed from a brotherly affection not proudly imperiously or harshly So we must invite from a brotherly affection else our brotherly action loseth his grace with God yea with men also if they perceive it And though we are chiefly to love Gods servants Christians professors with us of the same Religion and our fellow Brethren yet we are not to neglect any we must love all all that either be or may be the people of God though they be yet Pagans Heathens c. for they are our own flesh and have in them as ye heard some part of the Image of God as in their Soul which is a Spirit and Immortal and the Majesty of their face above all Creatures A King though an Heathen hath a part of the Image of God in his Soveraignty Then we must love the Devil as having some part of Gods Image We are not because he is pronounced of God as his final and desperate Enemy appointed to destruction So if we knew any such men as the Prophets did we ought not to love them but hate them not pray for them but against them as David did For others though Infidels we must love them and if God cast them into our lot we must do good to them to their Souls and Bodies They be strangers to me So was the Jew that fell among Thieves to the Samaritan and in that Christ taught who is our Neighbor Gods Image ought not to seem strange to us but loved wheresoever we see it They never did ought for me But God hath who bids thee love They have wronged me and are mine enemies This is no sufficient ground for thee not to love them for the rule is not to love for that thou art loved but because the Lord commands it God is not our enemy he deserves well of us and to him we owe all that may be and he hath turned us over to pay some of the debt we owe him to our enemy and he will take it as paid to him O that we could learn this Lesson And if we must love that small part of the Image of God where we see it then where its more we must love more Therefore where we see the very face of his Image renewed in Wisdom Holiness Righteousness and the Sanctifying Grace of Gods Spirit vouchsafing to make a man a new Creature and Holy as he is Holy Oh this we ought to embrace love reverence in a high degree we cannot shew a better tokenof our love to God then to love his Image and the more we see it to love it the more such are dear to God as the Apple of his eye 1. Those that make all alike make one as welcome as another make no difference of good and bad in their countenance help assistance they be not endued with the Spirit of God for where it is it will take knowledge of his own work and make a man love it yea though a carnal man should have some natural parts of civility skill c. more then a Christian man yet we must affect grace most These men be neither fish nor flesh 2. But much worse are those that of all persons like the Children of God worst and that for their zeal and forwardness If 't were not for them they could like them and therefore chuse swearers jesters and prophane persons for their companions and cannot away with the society of Christians who in their liberality will rather give to bad persons fitting in the others light and making them fare the worse for their zeal and godliness Of all men they cannot away with these Puritans and had rather their Friends should be any thing then of that number their Sons Daughters and Tenants c. They would love them if they were not so precise A bad sign such are not translated from death to life are not of God are in darkness to this hour they are not led by Davids Spirit who could not abide the workers of iniquity The more of Gods Image a man seeth in another to like him the worse is a fearful sign of no love to God If you will needs hate hate not them which God loves but whom he hates hate them not because he loves them and because of their goodness for God saith to them as to Jacob I will bless them that bless thee and curse them that curse thee even Balaam himself refused to curse Israel If they shall stand at the last day and be damned that gave them no meat then what shall become of their haters imprisoners and that for their goodness Then would they be glad to be with the least of them but it shall be far from them how little soever they regard them in this world and then shall their time of glory be as is their enemies in this world We must therefore labor to be religious else we can never love them that be so because of their goodness Here also observe a difference between the love we ought to bear to the Wicked Pagans Infidels c. we must love them as our flesh not as our brethren for they have not God for their Father the Church for their Mother have not suckt the same breasts with us the Word and Sacraments Therefore look how natural Brethren be affected each to other so ought Christians Fellow-heirs of the same Inheritance as having a better Brotherhood as much as the Spirit is better then the Flesh and Grace above Nature Our Savior prefer'd the hearers and doers of the Word before his natural Kindred This is a more lasting Brotherhood which abides longer then this life even for ever when it shall be with
we be aware as David Judah 2. Seeing this is a part of Gods Counsel and he that bids we should not steal should keep the Sabbath c. bids us watch let us know it s not safe for us to neglect it when God hath made known the same to us Is it not pity that such a blessed mean to further us so sweetly to heaven through this world should be so little known and so few have help by it O if we would once enter upon it it would save us from many dangers it would make our life fruitful it would bring us so much unwonted peace as we would be so far from being weary of it that we would be grieved that we have been strangers from it so long and came to the acquaintance and use of it no sooner O let us grieve and crave pardon for neglecting such a necessary and profitable duty so long and for the time to come be careful to redeem the season Unto prayer We must adde prayer to watchfulness else what if we spy temptations coming and setting upon us of our selves we have no power to resist the least of them We must therefore upon every occasion have recourse unto God by prayer as Watchmen if there come enemies in the time of War that be too strong for them they raise the City for help and in our ordinary watches if naughty wretches come and set upon the watch and be like to beat them down they cry out for help and so subdue them so must we Temptations at some times come so strong as that we cannot deal with them and therefore must cry to God for help O that we could be much exercised in this duty of prayer It keeps us in sobriety helps our watchfulness turns away evils furthers us in good is the onely mean to supply our wants whether for soul or body O what a priviledge is this O the force and fruit of prayer They that be much in Prayer obtain much grace and peace here and shall finde a large entrance into the Kingdom of Heaven hereafter Vers. 8. And above all things have fervent charity among your selves for charity shall cover the multitude of sins THe Apostle proceedeth to other duties for Christianity is a Tree that hath many branches and a true godly man must have respect to all As a Tradesman must have a care of every part of his Trade and every point thereof though haply he may be more expert in some particulars then in others Above all things Not above the duties of the first Table for that is the first and great Commandment but above all duties of the second Table have a care of love which is a main and most necessary duty without which there 's no society or living have a care of it as of a mother-duty from whence others will arise as upon the wanting thereof they also will be wanting or thus Above all things that is Of all the loves that we owe have a care of the main namely Love to the Saints for though we must love Strangers Wicked men our Enemies c. yet must we must love the Saints above all Here we have 1. An Exhortation to love 2. The maner of it 3. A Reason to enforce the same The Exhortation affords us this note that Love is a most excellent and necessary duty Hereof I have spoken at large on the 22 Verse of the first Chapter where was shewed both what love is the high commendation thereof by its several properties with the means whereby to attain the same c. Fervent The maner or kinde of love required a large continued stretched-out constant love As a cloth folded up is in a little room but when it comes to be cut is stretched out into many mens uses so our love must be stretched out to many persons to many duties as in giving and doing good to body soul goods good-name and that not sparingly but liberally so in forgiving both much and often neither must this be onely when we can well do it or when we have nothing else to do but when it s against our profit pleasure ease c. so as we neglect not our selves too much and thereby more pleasure may be done our neighbors then hinderance come to us Reasons hereof may be these 1. Gods love towards us is fervent and reacheth out into innumerable favors for our bodies souls goods good-name c. and that continually forgiving also our daily offences and bestowing his own Son on us 2. A little love will be easily quenched and hindred by the Devil and his instruments whereunto our brittle nature most readily yieldeth This is not such a love as that whereby the fornicator loves his harlot one enemy to goodness loves another This is not grounded upon any transitory thing or common gifts but is for grace We love thus not for any by-respects but because God requireth of us so to love this is agreeable to the Word of God and therein we must principally aym at the good of our neighbors souls to perswade ones friend to that for preferment which he cannot do with a good conscience or being sick to perswade him to send for a Cunning-man or woman or to disswade him from suffering for a good conscience c. is rather hatred then love Had our Savior followed Peters advice and not gone up to Jerusalem for to suffer we had all perished eternally But of this before For charity shall cover the multitude of sins The Reason There will be through our corruption and frailty of nature many offences one against another therefore must we labor for love to cover them The Papists interpret the words thus That our love to our neighbors will merit at Gods hand forgiveness of our sins but we are justified before God by Faith in Christ Jesus before we can do any good work neither can we love God or our neighbor for his sake till we be assured of his love to us in pardoning our sins True the more we love our brethren the more we may be assured of Gods mercy to us and that we be pardoned and that he will still shew us mercy but not by desert That opposition Prov. 10. 12. Hatred stirreth up strifes but love covereth all sins sheweth plainly that this is not the meaning Faults that love covers be of two sorts namely sins against God and wrongs against our selves Against God whether they be natural infirmities or others so they be not notorious acts or continued wicked courses of bad men as love will not be suspitious but hope the best till it know an evil committed and interpret things charitably so those that be faults yet love will not blaze them abroad but keeps them in and admonisheth the party it utters them not where they be not known to his disgrace and so uncovers his shame and rejoyceth therein as Cham. Against our selves for
good work 117 Verse 18 19. 1. THe third reason of the foregoing Exhortation 118 2. A man may know himselfe redeemed 119 3. Redemption presupposeth bondage and slavery ibid. 4. There 's a way whereby to come out of our bondage 120 5. The whole life of an unregenerate man is vain 121 6. Children readily follow the evil example of their Parents ibid. 7. Whom we are here to understand by fathers ibid. 8. Popish Religion stands in patches 122 9. Parents must give their children good example ibid. 10. To follow the example of our Ancestors is no sure rule 123 11. The things of this world are insufficient to redeem any out of his spiritual bondage ibid. 12. The things of this world are corruptible vain and uncertain 125 13. Christs blood the true price of mans redemption 126 14. In what respects Christ is compared to a Lamb 129 15. We are not to listen to either believe all we hear 131 Verse 20 21. 1. THe prevention of an Objection 132 2. Christ was ordained before the world 133 3. The world shall not always continue 135 4. Christ how manifested ibid. 5. God is constant and unchangeable ibid. 6. Gods promises are unchangeable 136 7. Christ was then exhibited when God decreed he should so be ibid. 8. What God hath decreed shall be in dwe time accomplished 136 9. Three differences of times and why this called the last 137 10. God will no otherwise reveal his will then he hath already done ibid. 11. We now live in the latter end of the last times ibid. 12. Why Christ came towards the latter end of the world 138 13. What we are to do that others may think well of us ibid. 14. We cannot believe in God but by the Son ibid. 15. In Christs Resurrection the whole Trinity had a hand 139 16. The benefits which they reap that believe in Christ ibid. Verse 22. 1. VVHere there 's no love nor fear of God there can be no true brotherly love 140 2. Where there 's the true fear or love of God there 's also brotherly love ibid. 3. There 's uncleanness in us both in soul and body 142 4. Where there is sanctification of the soul there is also sanctification of the body 143 5. The Word of God is the outward instrument of our cleansing ibid. 6. Why the Word is called Truth ibid. 7. The Spirit is the inward worker of Sanctification 144 8. Till we be cleansed by the Spirit we are unfit for any duty ibid. 9. The end of our Sanctification is to be fruitful in good works ibid. 10. What love is ibid. 11. The properties of love 146 12. Two caveats to be observed of them that for redressing of wrongs make use of the Magigrate 147 13. There 's little love in the world 148 14. The causes of the want of love 150 15. The effects of the want of love 151 16. Reasons inciting to the duty of love 152 19. The fruits of love must accompany the profession thereof 153 20. Brotherly offices must proceed from brotherly affections ibid. 21. Love must reach to all ibid. 22. How we ought to love the wicked 155 23. Love must be without faining ibid. 24. Love must be mutual 156 25. The properties of pure love 157 26. A Christians love must be earnest 158 27. Love must be constant ibid. Verse 23. 1. NO unregenerate person can truly love 159 2. Such as are born again must needs love ibid. 3. What Regeneration is ibid. 4. The Lord the Author thereof 160 5. The Lords will the cause thereof 161 6. Without Regeneration all things else we have are nothing ibid. 7. Regeneration of absolute necessity 162 8. The effects of Regeneration 163 9. A regenerate man is not the same he was before ibid. 10. A regenerate man groweth by degrees 164 11. Why men grow no faster in goodness ibid. 12. A caveat for such as complain they do not grow 165 13. There 's no perfection here in this life ibid. 14. Regeneration cometh not by nature 167 15. Gods Spirit by the Word changeth mans heart ibid. 16. Gods Word is the instrumental cause of our conversion 168 17. God doth not always tye himself thereunto ibid. 18. The Ministers of the Word are appointed of God the instruments to convert souls 169 19. Whence it cometh to pass that the Word worketh Regeneration 170 Verse 24 25. 1. VVHerein mans life may be compared to grass 171 2. How to be prepared for death 172 3. The glory of a carnal man but a vain thing 174 4. Nothing in an unregenerate man can abide the Lords examination 175 5. Gods Word the means whereby to live for ever ibid. 6. The Word by preaching made the instrument of Regeneration 176 7. The Word ought to be preached in every Congregation 177 8. The Word must be so preached as that it may be avouched to be indeed the Word of God ibid. CHAP. II. THe Coherence of this Chapter with the former with the sum thereof and of the first three Verses 179 Verse 1 2 3. 1. REgeneration and the love of sin cannot stand together 180 2. There 's no perfection to be attained unto here ibid. 3. To be is a Christian a work of great difficulty 181 4. Under those here named all other corruptions are included ibid. 5. Most of the corruptions here named are inward 182 6. That 's nought which is forbidden in Gods Word ibid. 7. What malice is with the difference between it and anger 183 8. What we are to understand by guile ibid. 9. Guile is to be avoided as well in smal as great matters 184 10. What Hypocrisie is 185 11. What Envy ibid. 12. What evil speaking ibid. 13. The Word of God cannot thrive in an unsanctified heart 186 14. Our desire toward the Word must be earnest ibid. 15. Our desire toward the Word must be constant 187 16. Our desire toward the Word must be impartial 188 17. Ministers must have store of milk for their spiritual children and store of love and much patience ibid. 18. The Word why compared to milk 189 19. Nothing sweeter to Gods children then the Word 189 20. The Word is the common food of all Christians ibid. 21. The Word why called sincere ibid. 22. Why Christians are to desire after the Word 191 23. Christians must daily grow in grace ibid. 24. Such as finde the Word powerful for their Salvation do the more desire it and affect it 192 25. Christ is sweet to a Christian and sweetens all that he hath 193 26. Christ is every way bountiful to his ibid. Verse 4 5. 1. VVHerein Christs bounty doth appear 194 2. A comparison between the Temple of Jerusalem and that which Christ maketh of all that believe in him ibid. 3. Christ why compared to a stone ibid. 4. To believe in Christ which is to come to him is a great priviledge ibid. 5. Christians must come to Christ 195 6. Christ the foundation that bears up his Church 198
7. Christ is a living foundation 200 8. The prevention of an Objection 201 9. Christ disallowed of whom and why ibid. 10. Such things are often disallowed of men which are allowed of God 202 11. There 's an union between Christ and believers ibid. 12. How to come to be stones of this building 204 13. The whole Church makes but one Spiritual House 205 14. Every particular believer is a Spiritual House ibid. 15. Such as are united to Christ ore made holy 206 16. Believers are Priests to God ibid. 17. The prevention of an Objection 207 18. Christians are not now without Sacrifices and what they are ibid. 19. Why called Spiritual Sacrifices 208 20. Our service of God must be dòne in a Spiritual maner 209 21. The prevention of an Objection ibid. 22. Spiritual Sacrifices are not regarded of carnal men ibid. 23. Through Christ our Sacrifices are acceptable to God 210 24. Our works though imperfect accepted through Christ ibid. Verse 6. 1. THe Testimony of Gods Word is that which settles us in any point of Doctrine 211 2. The Old Testament of the same authority with the New ibid. 3. Of old people were more ready in the Scripture then they are now 212 4. What the Lord saith he doth ibid. 5. God lays the foundation of his Churches Salvation ibid. 6. The Papists take from Christ his Kingly Prophetical and Priestly Office 213 7. Believers do always finde enough in Christ ibid. 8. The miserable condition of them that believe not in Christ and who they are 214 9. Believers can never fall away wholly nor finally ibid. Verse 7 8. 1. GOds promises are to be particularly applyed 215 2. Christ is precious unto all those that believe 216 3. Such are unbelievers which are disobedient 217 4. Why the Jews did reject Christ 218 5. Succession is of Doctrine or Person 219 6. Such as do least good challenge the goodliest titles 220 7. Such as would be reputed builders are usually enemies to true builders ibid. 8. Ministers must be builders ibid. 9. Every man must be a builder 221 10. The impiety of these times ib. 11. The carelesness of these times 222 12. The enemies of the Church unable to hinder the building thereof 223 13. Ministers must divide the Word aright and give every man his portion 224 14. How Christ and his Word become stumbling blocks to unbelievers 225 15. Nothing so good whereat corrupt nature will not take occasion to stumble ibid. 16. The world hath ever stumbled at Christ ibid. 17. The Papists stumble at him also the ignorant civil prophane and such as will not part with some beloved sin 226 18. Such as stumble at the Word stumble at Christ 227 19. Offences taken against the Word removed 228 20. Scandals of the Papists against it 230 21. Why and wherein they charge our Doctrine 230 22. About auricular confession fasting days marriage ibid. 23. Offences at preaching the Word 231 24. Which the true Church 237 25. Offences against the Preachers of the Word 239 26. Offences against Professors of the Word 241 27. Offences arising from mens selves hindring their zealous profession of Religion 244 28. No end of the Devils devices 248 29. Why so few be saved ibid. 30. Why people have no minde to Religion ibid. 31. Gods word is therefore bestowed on as that we may be guided thereby 249 32. How we are to obey the same ibid. 33. Four sorts of disobedient persons the prophane 251 The meerly civil the ignorant and hypocrites 252 34. Why Christ proves a Rock of offence unto most 253 35. Whether it be lawful and meet to handle the Doctrine of Gods Decree 254 36. God hath ordained some to destruction 255 37. This was of his own will and for no cause out of himself 257 38. The Lord hath done this most justly 258 39. The Lord hath done this unchangeably 259 40. Marks of such as are reprobates 260 Verse 9. 1. MInisters must speak comfortably to the good contrarily to the bad 262 2. And warily deliver the Word that each may take his due portion 262 3. What election is ibid. 4. God before the world hath ordained some men to salvation ibid. 5. The cause hereof was because he would 263 6. The number of the elect small ibid. 7. They that be elect cannot but be saved 264 8. A man may know and be assured of his election 265 9. Notes of election 266 10. Whether we may be certain of anothers election 267 11. Christians through Christ are made Kings Priests Prophets 268 12. Christ and his Gospel preached in time of the Law ibid. 13. The promises and priviledges laid down in the Scriptures belong onely to Gods elect ibid. 14. Election is the foundation of all the good comes to us ibid. 15. Christ how our King Priest and Prophet 269 16. Believers are others then the world thinks for ibid. 17. The Jews why termed an holy Nation 270 18. All that be the Lords company are holy persons ibid. 19. Comfort and counsel for sanctified persons 271 20. The misery of those that are unsanctified with advice to them to come out of this condition ibid. 21. The Church Gods peculiar people ibid. 22. No marvel though he set much by it 272. 23. Gods glory the end of all the priviledges bestowed on us 273 24. We were elected of God that we might shew forth his praises and not to be idle c. 273 25. Gods glory the furthest end of our election ibid. 26. Effectual calling a certain argument of election ibid. 27. Two sorts of calling outward and inward ibid. 28. The Word the outward instrument hereof 274 29. The parts of effectual calling ibid. 30. Gods free mercy the cause hereof ibid. 31. Every one must endeavor to prove his calling ibid. 32. What to understand by darkness and light 275 33. Every unregenerate person is in darkness 276 34. Every true believer is brought to the saving knowledge of Christ ibid. Verse 10. 1. FOr a people or particular persons to look to their beginnings is of good use 278 2. No priviledges can exempt the contemners of the Word from Gods wrath 279 3. Gods mercy power and truth in making the Jews a people again 280 4. Impenitent persons not worthy the name of people ibid. 5. No outward affliction doth nullifie Gods Church 281 6. To be the people of God a choice blessing ibid. 7. Sin unrepented of lets Gods mercy 282 8. What God did for the Jews was of mercy and so all we have ibid. Verse 11. 1. HOliness in heart and conversation must go together 283 2. Ministers must love and affect their people ibid. 3. The Saints are to be the objects of our love 284 4. Wisdom requisit in the Preachers of the Word 285 5. What meant by fleshly lusts ibid. 6. There are remnants of sin in the very best ibid. 7. Two sorts of sinners 287 8. Evil thoughts cast in by Satan or from our selves 288 9. The causes of evil
company ibid. 7. The sending of commendations how useful it is ibid. 8. The preaching of the Word the instrument of Regeneration 694 9. Ministers must love their People as their Children ibid. 10. People must love their Ministers as their Fathers 695 Verse 14. 1. IT s needful that where love is it should be continued 696 2. Christians should salute one another ibid. 3. The ancient maner of saluting among the Jews 697 4. Our saluting one another must be in love ibid. 5. Hinderances of Love 698 6. What meant by Peace ibid. 7. Outward blessings may lawfully be desired and how 698 8. Christ is the fountain of all peace 699 9. Respect is to be had of all Gods people 701 10. The near union between Christ and true Christians ibid. 11. Fervency of Affection and Faith requisite in Prayer ibid. ERRATA In the margent PAge 57. line 4 for inherit read merit page 114. for Iohn 4. read Iohn 8. p. 357. l. 14. for hated of r. haters p. 582. l. 7. for above r. about p. 475. l. 19. adde may before do Words to be amended Page 40. line 15. for scourge read scour p. 46. l. 45. for them read thee p. 56. l. 47. for in r. it p. 57. l. 31. for it r. as p. 66. l. 15. for with r. which p. 149. l. 40. for grace r. disgrace p. 160. l. 3. for conversation r. conversion p. 173. l. 39. for of r. as p. 191. l. 40. for to r. doth p. 202. l. 5. for no r. an p. 218. l. 43. for chief r. Church p. 228. l. 30. for we r. he p. 253. l. 11. for of r. to p. 258. l. 6. for the r. they p. 266. l. 7. for Cod r. God p. 272. l. 18. for of r. as p. 274. l. 33. for calling r. called p. 294. l. 40. for the r. their p. 305. l. 48. for wrath r. word p. 350. l. 19. for them r. him p. 360. l. 1. for our r. one p. 363. l. 4. for from r. for p. 400 l. 37. for out r. one p. 410. l. 45. for unequal r. equal p. 417. l. 26. for discharge r. disgrace p. 419. l. 30. for swin r. swim p. 428. l. 30. for good good r. good for p. 453. l. 10. for mans r. many p. 455. l. 7. for short r. store p. 495. l. 43. for course r. recourse p. 495. l. 34. for in r. then p. 497. l. 33. for Son r. Sun p. 507. l. 31. for up r. upon p. 515. l. 36. for one r. our p. 527. l. 41. for he r. we p. 615. l. 44. for fleet r. fleece p. 630. l. 9. for throne r. thorn p. 640. l. 12. for uses r. verses p. 641. l. 24. for world r. word p. 643. l. 43. for which r. with p 619. l. 29. for of r. so p. 661. l. 20. for partly r. party p. 669. l. 5. for trust r. distrust p. 677. l. 8. for of r. in p. 700. l. 3. for them r. they A Godly and Fruitful EXPOSITION ON THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. PETER THe general scope and intent of this Epistle is To confirm those Christian Jews whom he had procured to the Faith by his Ministery that they might persevere in the same to the end notwithstanding any troubles they should meet with for the same More particularly he layeth before them The wonderful riches of Gods mercies vouchsafed them in Christ Jesus by his Death and Resurrection whereby they were recovered out of their woful estate by sin and brought to an happy and blessed condition even Salvation through him Hereunto he exhorteth them constantly to cleave and not to suffer themselves to be withdrawn therefrom by any means as also that they would walk worthy so great mercy in an holy life and conversation both in the general duties of Christianity and the particular duties of their special Callings and that they would so do notwithstanding any troubles they should meet withal for the same The parts of this Epistle are two 1. The Preface in the first two Verses of the first Chapter 2. The Substance of the Epistle in the following Verses and Chapters to the end This containeth Doctrine and Exhortation Doctrine from the Third Verse of the first Chapter unto the Thirteenth of the same Exhortations in all the rest of the Chapters and Verses and they be of two kindes 1. Unto general Duties belonging unto all Christians 2. Unto special to several sorts of men and women according to their special Callings CHAP. I. Verse 1. Peter an Apostle of Jesus Christ to the Strangers scattered throughout Pontus Galatia Cappadocia Asia and Bythinia Ver. 2. Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ Grace unto you and Peace be multiplied THese verses contain the Preface in which two things 1. An Inscription 2. The Salutation In the former we have a description 1. Of the person writing and that both by his Name Peter and by his Office An Apostle of Jesus Christ. 2. Of the parties to whom he doth write and that both by their outward state to the World-ward viz. Strangers scattered up and down in strange Countreys namely Pontus Galatia Cappadocia Asia and Bythinia and by their estate to God-ward viz. Parties belonging to salvation which he sets forth by the causes thereof and degrees namely 1. Their Election 2. Sanctification 3. Redemption by the obedience of Christ Jesus which shewed it self in his shedding his blood for them In the latter a brief but pithy Prayer to God for his favor as the fountain from whence all happiness was to be bestowed yea multiplied upon them Peter Three Names are given unto this our Apostle in Scripture 1. Simeon of Simon that he had at his Circumcision 2. Cephas by interpretation a Stone which our Saviour Christ gave him at his calling thereby signifying what he meant to do for him namely to make him a stout defender of the Faith on the behalf whereof though he was born of Parents of small note he proved one of notable courage This is in the Chaldee or Syriack tongue 3. Peter which in Greek is all one with the former so that these two Names were in effect but one In his second Epistle he names himself Simon Peter Here learn 1. Christs kindeness to Peter in giving him a Name to assure him of some grace which he would bestow upon him Though we cannot do so yet it behoves us to give our Children such names as may edifie them and put them in minde of some good thing either to imitate some good man or woman whose Name they bear or else to follow some good that the Name puts them in minde of 2. In that he puts his Name to his Epistle he shews his godliness and innocency which makes him bold for Truth may be blamed but cannot be shamed Contrary to many Hereticks and false
Angels were unable to help us herein This hath Christ done for us and that fully the dignity of his person being such that he is both God and M●n in one person Of this the blood of the lamb sprinkled on the Israelites houses was a sign all Sacrifices tended hereunto our Sacraments point thereat all Scripture layeth our Salvation in the Cross Blood and Sufferings of Christ. Here see 1. An admirable mixture of Justice and Mercy so that God is not all mercy as the world imagines Therefore for prophane impenitent ones they shall bear the just wrath of God themselves and not by every late forced Lord have mercy have God at command as they imagine For if Christ was feign to suffer and the Father would not be intreated notwithstanding his strong cries but when he stood as our Surety laid on load and spared him not at all shall his prophane enemies think to escape as they list 2. Gods infinite mercy to mankinde to appoint a way to save some of them whereas no Angel that fell shall be saved 3. It sets out the depth of our misery therefore they that are still in it have no small piece of work to bring to pass 4. It teacheth us how to esteem of sin as being of that weight that nothing but the blood of Christ will satisfie for it 5. Its sets out the infinite and unspeakable love of God to give us his Son and of Christ to give himself seeing no less means would serve Who can sufficiently either admire or express the same 6. Here 's matter of endless consolation to all troubled sinners when Satan and the terrors of Conscience shall pursue them to flie to Christ Jesus and his sufferings This is their Castle their quietus est send Satan to thy Surety all is fully discharged in his death But this is only for humble bleeding sinners that turn to God with all their hearts but as for proud persons that live still in their lusts what have these to do to talk of Christs death yet have these it in readiness Christ hath died for us What for such prophane ones as make his death a packhorse and lay on more load which is to crucifie Christ again No let these know they shall bear the burthen of their own sins but let the true penitent be of good comfort and know that all his sins how great soever be done away Neither let such think that their afflictions are any part of the punishment of sin for it is all done away once in Christ and therefore shall not again be demanded of them but they are loving chastisements to humble them for their sins past and prevent others for the time to come both furthering their Salvation 7. For all that know they have their part in Christs death how should this work with them 1. For sin past it should vex and grieve our hearts for we were the Crucifiers of Christ Judas the Soldiers and Jews but our Servants whom our sins set on work It 's our great fault that we can think of our sins without being humbled shall Christ shed tears of blood for our sins and we not be troubled for our own 2. This should make us hate sin for ever being as it were the knife and spear that killed Christ what father could ever love that knife that should kill his childe 3. How should this inflame our hearts with love to him again and carry us on in a zealous care of obedience all our days our woful coldness in Christs cause and service deserves to be rebuked Alas how little will we do for his sake we ought to be ready to leave Goods Liberty and Life for him we should herein but do as he hath done for us yea who began thus to do for us when we were even his enemies How much more any other thing And may not this stop the mouths of all prophane persons which will be talking they hope to be saved by Christ when they shew no love nor thankfulness to him but live yet in their sins to anger him 8. An exclusion of all feigned and false satisfactions of mens own devising whereof the Church of Rome is full which would strike in for a part with the merit of Christs death which makes a great stir about the Cross when in the mean time they make void its efficacy Sprinkling c. By this word he alludeth to the sacrifices of the Law which all pointed at the sacrifice of Christ and to shew that as it had been nothing that a sacrifice had been killed unless the blood thereof had been sprinkled upon the people for so was the maner so it avails us nothing that Christ died unless his blood be sprinkled on us by the hand of a true faith applying Christ Jesus to our Consciences It s not Christ that saves but Christs death apprehended by a true and lively faith for a particular perswasion hereof are we to labor Here also in this verse is an excellent proof of the holy Trinity three persons and one God which is so to be worshipped all that do otherwise worship an Idol and not the true God Again observe That Election is attributed to the Father Redemption to the Son Sanctification to the Holy Ghost It 's not but that they be the common works of the whole Trinity as all the works of God towards the Creatures are in which respect Sanctification is also attributed to the Father but because of their immediate working The Father elected in the Son and by the Holy Ghost Father Son and Holy Ghost elected The Son is the immediate worker of our Redemption he shed his blood as the Holy Ghost the immediate worker of Sanctification Grace unto you and Peace be multiplied The usual salutation of the Jews asking the favor of God as the root and peace that is all happiness as that which flows from thence for so by peace the Jews meant Peace be with you Peace be to this house c. Hence note 1. That we should seek the favor of God as that which draweth on other things yea all things for in love is no lack Men may have other things without this but they will have an ill farewel as they that have possession but no right title to that which they possess 2. What a Minister should chiefly desire for his people even that they may be brought into Gods favor by Christ have their sins forgiven Christ made theirs and they assured thereof with so much prosperity as may stand with happiness So Husbands and Wives each for other So also Parents for their Children The favor and grace of God is the principal and root of all good Men may have abundance of outward things but if they flow not from Gods love they will have a hard farewel This brings sufficiency In his favor is life yea this were sufficient if it came alone but in
seem for the present will be found to your praise at the great day This being so who should not willingly undergo them If we take pains and toil our selves to get riches and so long as we get them forget our toil should we not much more be concent to endure some trouble that our souls may get the true riches Now particularly for the trial of our Faith afflictions come 1. To try whether we have any at all 2. Whether it be so much as we take it to be 3. To purge and refine that which we have 1. To try whether we have any Faith as God doth it sometimes by false teachers and heresies so doth he also by afflictions wherein many that have not received the love of the truth have been carried away whereas others though haply of less parts but more soundness have resisted and stood to the truth for there be false Faiths and our hearts are deceitful and the Devil is subtile to make as believe we have the right when we have nothing less Affliction will prove this as in those whom our Savior termeth the stony ground They went far yea farther then most in most congregations go yet had they not that which would serve to Salvation affliction discovered what they were that they were not such as before they were taken to be The Israelites were proved in the wilderness whose troubles manifested their unbelief for which they were both plagued in the wilderness and shut out of Canaan Many a one thinks himself a tall man till he comes into the field with his adversary where he proves himself a rank coward many think they can do great matters till they come to it A Mariner is not tried till a storm nor a friend till adversity he that then stick● to one is a friend indeed So afflictions have discovered many that have thought but too well of themselves Many talk that they believe in God and put all their trust in him yet when they are visited with sickness losses and the like they run to witches and wizards for help or in poverty steal lye dissemble or use any other unlawful courses to help themselves Many also that in prosperity profess the Gospel very forwardly when trouble comes fall quite away are not onely shaken as Peter or a good man may be on the sudden or for a while but fall quite away when many poor souls it may be of less gifts have stood out and suffered Seeing then that God will try us by troubles we should labor to have true Faith against troubles come that we prove not dr●ss Therefore let us try the Faith which we think we have by the touchstone of Gods Word if it will abide that then will it endure the furnace of affliction It may be tried 1. By the maner of Gods working it even through humiliation 2. By such companions as go with Faith or follow it as peace joy and the like so if we love God most dearly as they that have much forgiven love much if we love his Saints and people most heartily if we wonder at and admire his unspeakable mercy to us passing by so many thousands of others with one hearts and mouths enlarged praising him secretly and openly for the same if we pity comfort and strengthen others if we long to go hence where we are absent from God and to be with him if we mourn for our sins committed against him who was kinde to us when we wandred from him and have an hatred of all evil with an unfeigned care hereafter in all things to please him they are infallible tokens of a sound Faith It s needful that we should thus try our Faith as being of that absolute necessity that by it Christ and Salvation are made ours without it no hope of either In so weighty a thing we had not need to venture without tryal without it no person or work is pleasing to God and its the foundation of a good life and all true comfort therein 2. To try whether our Faith be as much as we take it to be or more this affliction will discover sometimes we think we have more then we have as Peter who notwithstanding his bold and confident protestations to our Savior Christ shamefully upon the trial denied him Contrarily others think they have little Faith that upon the trial appears more and shines gloriously as Jobs and Davids Who also could have believed that there had been so much in many poor Martyrs if they had not come to the field and encountred with Tyrants and their Torments as who would imagine such sweetness in Spices till bruised We should not be against such afflictions as are sent for this end for what 's more comfortable then to know we have more Faith then we knew of and what more necessary then to know that our Faith is weaker then we imagined that so we may labor to have it strengthned If it appear weaker then be we humbled and distrusting our selves let us ever fly to God for more grace and strength against temptations so will God give us as much as shall stand with his glory but if we trust to our selves and be slack in seeking to God then are we like to bewray our own weakness 3. To purge and purifie that true Faith which we have and encrease the same this also is most necessary for though a small Faith being true will save us yet the more and purer it is the better it will carry us to Heaven and though by a weak Faith and mingled with corrution we shall see the face of God and his loving countenance ye● the cleerer and brighter it is the more certainly comfortably shall we see him As they that have weak eyes yet see so as they are directed to their ways end who if they had cleerer would be there sooner and with less danger As therefore its requisite to have those gross humors purged th●● dim the sight so those corruptions that dim the eye of our Faith Beside such is our corrupt nature that much dross and corruption is mingled with the grace of God in us so as except it be subdued by continual affliction it will wax wanton against God and hinder his grace in us Standing waters corrupt and bodies not exercised are full of gross humors So would it be with our souls were we not continually exercised with troubles as the finest Wheat not fa●●ed will be musty with dust the finest cloaths catch dust and moths if not continually brushed the finest vessels take soil if not continually scoured so our Faith not looked to is quickly overgrown as the 〈◊〉 with weeds if the husbandman plucks them not out As far brush weeding-hook wisp fornace are to these things so afflictions to the children of God We are as an untamed heifer if not held under the yoke God therefore
shall stand trembling and be cast into the lake which burneth with fire and brinstone yea though our Faith be tryed by afflictions and persecutions yet we should rejoyce for they will turn to our glory Our shame reproach infamy imprisonment and troubles will turn to our praise and honor and glory at that day when we are reviled by private persons when persecuted by publique Magistrates and false Witnesses coming against us yet we should not be troubled but rejoyce For great shall our reward be in heaven our poverty shall be recompenced with great riches our shame with honor and if we be rejected of men we shall be taken in of God Yet do not our afflictions or persecutions deserve any of this honor as the Papists would gather from hence and from 2 Thess. 1. 5 c. Alas no For the afflictions of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us God indeed will crown his own graces in us and hath promised to reward the sufferings of his servants with glory and so he is become our debtor not by taking any thing of us but by promising us all things We should therefore be comforted in all our sufferings and oppose unto the ignominy thereof the glory and honor we shall then have which is infinitely greater O who would not endure casting out by men being a token that we shall be honored of God and taken in at that day Indeed if there were no day of Judgement nor reward we might be sorry but seeing there is let us lift up our heads and wait for that day As the wicked shall have a second course to mar all their mirth so contrarily the godly to swallow up their sorrow At the appearing of Jesus Christ. Namely to Judgement True it is as we have heard our souls enter into glory at death but our perfect happiness is not till the end of all besides that which we have at death is not seen but to our selves whereas then it shall be manifest to all We must be content to wait for our full Redemption till then on that most solemn day shall we be honored by the Lord himself Then shall our Savior come to judge the quick and the dead and though he defer to gather his Elect and be gone into Heaven yet he will come and that in another fashion then he came first namely in wonderful majesty glory and power which cannot but be a terror to his enemies 1. This must needs comfort all that have and do still embrace Christ Jesus as their Savior and King for he shall be their Judge and therefore shall it go well with them 2. But wo to them that have despised him where shall they appear Not to appear is impossible for He numbreth the stars and calleth every one by their name he will not be bribed for he is more just and besides we have nothing to give To escape also is impossible for he filleth all places and whether can he go that hath this revenging Judge over his head Hell under his feet to swallow him on each side Angels and Devils to torment him within a tormented Conscience and without all the world on fire And to abide his wrath its intolerable for if when it s but a little kindled no man can stand then how when its all on fire to consume his enemies utterly Kiss therefore the Sun seek to be reconciled get him thy Savior and thy King get pardon of that which is past not adding more to the score against thy self One thing more The phrase here used seems to imply that The reward of Gods servants shall not be privy but seen and known yea and that of those that have most hated disgraced and persecuted them accounting them mad and esteeming basely of them even before them I say they shall be honored of God As it will be a torment to the wicked to see Christ whom they have pierced to be in such high dignity and power so will it increase their torment to see them whom they so basely esteemed of as not worthy to live to be received into honor and stand on Christs right hand and themselves of whom they were so well conceited cast out But its just with God that they which willingly and of purpose have vexed and disgraced his servants here on earth should against their wills see the glory that he hath prepared for them Verse 8. Whom having not seen ye love in whom though now ye see him not yet believing ye rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory HEre he proceeds to commend these believing Jews yet withal admonishing and exhorting them and that for the great measure of their faith and the fruits thereof love and joy which are described by that which might have hindred their faith namely that they never saw Christ and yet believed in him and rested on him for salvation and so loved him as they were well content to suffer for his Name yea and rejoyce with such a joy as for the excellency and greatness thereof could not be expressed In that he commends them it s to this end that he might encourage and provoke them to go on forward and increase more and more To this end doth the Lord commend the good Churches in the second and third of the Revelation and S. Paul in all his Epistles even that he might provoke them to go on in well doing And this must be the end of all good Ministers in the commendation of their people not of flattery that were abominable and being men-pleasers they could not be Christs servants nor out of a conceit that they have gone far enough and now may stand at a stay that were sensless for that we have is nothing to that we might have had or should have and want but to be a spur to provoke them to go on forward it being a shame for them not to satisfie the expectation of such as have a good opinion of them and so must the people take such at any time not being lifted up therewith but rather humbled thereby conceiving that the Minister rather sheweth what he would were in them or should be in them then what is indeed in them and that he would not have them stand at a stay but proceed and go on more and more Speak we particularly first of their faith though last set down as without which there can be no true love They never saw Christ yet they believed in him they saw the Scriptures speaking of him to come they heard of him also by faithful witnesses the Apostles had preached of his person birth life death resurrection and ascension and that he came to save them that were lost This they believed and so believed in him for salvation though they saw him not This shews the nature of true faith namely to believe things not onely that we see
not and are hidden from our sense but such things as are above the reach of our reason and which we cannot comprehend So Abraham when a son was promised by Sarah stood not to scan this by reason but believed it and is accordingly commended for it So Joshua and the Israelites compassing the walls of Jrricho Therefore both Zachariah and Sarah failed in that they doubted of Gods Promise for that it was against reason Hence it is that our Savior rebuked for his Thomas infidelity If all that Thomas had gone and preached to should have been of his minde he would have made a poor preaching Christ must have come to the earth again and here tarried No Faith hath eyes as well as the body Abraham saw Christs day and rejoyced and Moses endured as he which saw him that was invisible Yea it hath a more certain eye then the body for it depends upon that which is more constant then Heaven and Earth even Gods Word which shall endure when the others shall vanish away therefore is faith called a knowledge not a guessing uncertainty Hereby we believe the Incarnation of Christ the framing of his body in the womb of the Virgin she untouch'd of man so the mystery of the Trinity and the Resurrection the Union of Christ and Believers the glorification of our bodies in the Kingdom of Heaven and the like yea we so believe them that as Moses was content to part from the honor of Pharaohs Court for the Kingdom of Heaven so for the assurance we have of them we are content to forego both pleasures and profits which we have eagerly followed after yea to endure present pains and losses and that grievous ones for the joys to come not seen but believed whereof we have store of Examples both in the Scriptures and Church Histories 1. This condemneth Atheists that reject all that they cannot conceive in their foolish and corrupt brain but Religion is not a matter of Reason but of Faith Wo were to us if there were nothing for us but that which we see with bodily eyes the wicked were then in better case 2. It stirreth us up to try whether we have faith or not If we so believe the things to come as whatsoever would let us from the joys of Heaven we avoid it and would rather endure any thing then be deprived thereof we are not without faith The wicked will not do so they will provide for the present time they will have their will will here take their ease enjoy their unlawful profits and pleasures as for the time to come they are ignorant of it what it will be If any come after so it is but they will make sure work for the present a Bird in the hand is worth two in the bush Neither will they suffer any thing for Religion or the Gospel or hope of Heaven a sign they want that grace of true faith They have Carnal eyes to see these things here below but no Spiritual ones of faith to see the things to come and so give no glory to God But the just shall live by faith and We walk not by sight but by faith Thus must we do here for maintenance thus for deliverance out of dangers As Historical believing the truth of these things puts a difference betwixt Atheists and common Christians so the particular believing and applying these things between these and true Christians The servants of God would not lose their part in that which is to come for all that is here present They say the Bird in the bush is worth two of that in the hand If the world count themselves wise that can save themselves from danger and Gods servants fools for suffering be it so it shall one day appear who hath made the best match Oh say they we are sure of this we have it in hand that you look for is uncertain Well as uncertain as it is we will not change with you for we know whom we have believed If this be so then why may we not believe that Christs body is bodily in the Sacrament under the signs of Bread and Wine though our sense and reason say otherwise seeing our faith goeth beyond both Though faith believeth that which no sense nor reason can comprehend because God hath said it yet it crosseth not our senses and the things which are daily subject to the same wherein there is certainty If we might give no credit to our senses there would be no end of conceits therefore seeing all our senses say it is Bread and Wine we are to believe it to be no other Whom having not seen ye love Now of the fruits of Faith love and joy for its impossible for us to love him unless by faith we be assured of his love to us for we have not loved him but he us first so is it not possible but believing in him we should love him and his love must constrain us having done so wonderful things for us Then True love is the fruit of faith and it cannot be sundred from love to God and our brethren for his sake He that knoweth and believeth that he hath much forgiven must needs love much 1. This confutes the Papists which distinguish faith into formed and unformed and that this latter is sufficient to the salvation of the people Charity giving a form to it but we must know that there 's no true faith without it 1. It serves to confute that Slander wherewith they burthen not us but the Doctrine of the Gospel namely That Justification by faith onely is a Doctrine of licentiousness But while we establish faith we set up good works as who teach that they cannot be sundred Though works have no place in our Justification yet they are necessary to our Salvation 3. Perceive the force and power of faith faith made them love Christ though they had never seen him as which told them of so great things done for them by him whereby they could not but be exceedingly knit in love unto him and be content to suffer for him It s an encrease of love to love one we never saw for sight moveth much and draweth the heart but by faith we love that we never saw as we love many good Christians which we never saw because by faith we believe that they be members of Christ and fellow-members with us So we love Christ because we believe what great things he hath done for us and that we shall see him one day in his glory when we also by him shall be set in possession thereof so that if we believe these things we cannot but love Christ though we never saw him Faith is not idle but worketh by love to God and to our brethren and hereby we may try our faith as our love by the fruits thereof namely 1.
so did he that quickly which we could never have done Therefore let every man trust to this if this be not a sufficient way thou mayest say I am content to perish thou mayest well enough and I with thee for company 1. This confoundeth all other false and devised satisfactions by any other and sheweth the most fearful state of all that know not nor embrace Christ as 1. The Jews that look for another Christ 2. The Turks that trust in Mahomet and do not acknowledge Christ so the Pagans that are utterly ignorant of him The Papists also that make him but half a Saviour and adde a number of other Merits and Satisfactions with their blasphemous Idol of the Mass their Pilgrimages Penances c. yea not onely say they are the sufferings of the Saints meritorious for themselves but even to put something into the common treasury to help others These also among our selves that hope to be saved by their good meaning good prayers and civil life and either do not at all look to Christ or but to halves being as good as not at all So those that make God an Idol all of mercy and no justice when as they are both essentially in him and he could not be God without both and the one is infinite in him as the other yet by crying God mercy they think to escape never considering how his justice should be answered but he should not be just nor God if he should let thy sins go unpunished 2. This sheweth the fearfulness of sin such was our case that as if one had committed a fault and there were no way to scape unless he could obtain the Kings son to dye for him we could not but perish unless the Son of God had dyed for us 3. This should much grieve and humble us to think what our sins have done even that they occasioned all the torment our Savior was put to It was not Judas nor the Jews Pilate nor the Soldiers that crucified Christ but our sins they being but our servants and executioners How should this go to our hearts that our lying swearing whoredom pride profaneness c. was the cause that put our Savior to all those indignities Shall he be pierced yea to the very heart for our sins and shall not we be pierced with grief for our own sins Shall he shed Tears of Blood and shall we have dry eyes Shall he say his soul is heavy to the death and shall not our hearts be heavy could we having a friend that loved us so dearly as he would take our room to endure much for us could we I say stand by and see him tortured for our cause and look on it with dry eyes 4. This should make us take heed of sin for the time to come and avoid it above all things in the world look upon every sin in blood no sin but hath a bloody face when we have committed it all the world cannot satisfie for it it must be blood the blood of the Son of God one drop of which was of more worth then Ten thousand worlds if it were but the blood of a man must be shed for every sin were 't not fearful but it s Christ Blood therefore how careful should we be But O Lord How small account is made of sin How doth the world make a May-game thereof How do men think they can appease Gods Wrath with a broken sigh or a Lord have mercy upon us for we are all Sinners or by making some counterfeit shew in their sickness or on their death-bed And do not the Papists think that it may be done away by auricular Confession Penance Pilgrimages Holy-water Popes Pardons the saying over of so many Ave-maries Paternosters c. But those that set so light by sin are such as never knew the weight of it nor have part in the remedy and therefore in vain do such say they hope to be saved by Jesus Christ and he dyed and shed his Blood for their sins and yet they still live in sin What is this but to make a light account of Christs blood a treading of it under foot an accounting of it an unholy thing a despiting of the Spirit of grace Yea if even Gods Children did so weigh this unspeakable price as they should they would be more afraid to offend then they are This also should awaken those that know no part in their Redemption that they have the greatest matter in the world to seek Such should never be quiet till they finde themselves discharged for without this there 's nothing but eternal destruction they shall bear their own burthen 5. This setteth out the unspeakable love of God and Jesus Christ that when we had plunged our selves into this miserable estate and could not onely not help our selves out but not so much as devise a way out that he did both finde out the way and was content to bestow his Son on us to suffer the curse and death that we had deserved that so we might be freed What man would beat his Son to spare his Servant What man would kill his Son to save his Enemy What Prince would give his onely Son and Heir for a base Subject nay to redeem a Traytor and that not to bondage but to death yet all this hath the Lord done God so loved the world O wonderful that the Father did not rather suffer all the world to perish then that his most blessed Son should suffer the least of those indignities that he indured And was not the love of Christ infinite that for us gave himself and did willingly lay down his life for us which could do nothing to deserve or requite it nay which were his very enemies so to endure such base and cruel dealing from men who himself was Lord of the world and could have commanded the earth to swallow them so to be spitted on mocked scourged nailed to the cross c. but above all that he would undergo his Fathers displeasures for us Rake-hells that had so provoked him 6. And what doth this call for at our hands again but admiring at the infiniteness of the price we study all our life how to walk thankfully before him giving our Bodies Souls Lives and Labors to him again most zealously faithfully serving him in all obedience yea if he should call us to lay down our lives for his Names sake to do it chearfully as he did for us we are not our own but the Lords who hath bought us and paid dearly for us and so must have neither Wit nor Will Body nor Soul Hand nor Foot but for him and which we are to employ in his service If one should redeem us with a great sum of Money we would ever be thankful and count our selves his if one should give all his Substance more if one should give himself to serve and be bond for us yet more but to lay down his
Christian love wherein we have 1. The ground of it The grace of God which they had received namely for that they were Justified and Sanctified which is set out by the part purified Their Souls the outward means whereby the word called Truth which they did obey and the inward worker the Spirit 2. The end of it which was as to all good duties so to true love amongst the rest as if he had said Seeing you are pardoned and purged to this end that you should love purely see that you do so This ground is a Reason of the Exhortation where it seemeth the Holy Ghost keeps a good order both in his Exhortations and Reasons Before he exhorted to the fear and love of God now to the love of the Brethren Before he had used Reasons both from the Godhead in general vers 15 16. and from the first two persons of the Trinity the Father vers 17. and the Son vers 18 19. Now he useth one taken from the third person the holy Spirit of God who had wrought grace in them and purified them to this end From the order which the holy Ghost useth Note we two things 1. Where there 's no love nor fear of God there can be no true Brotherly love that being indeed the root from whence this springeth 1. Therefore there can be no true love amongst the wicked Drunkards meet together and Pot-companionship is common but this is no love its conspiracy Love rejoyceth in good not evil No more is a company of Thieves and Traytors that conspire together or many or fewer that combine against a good part they may stick close and hold together in evil but this is no love nor in those Towns where there 's scarce any or but mean teaching where people meet twice or thrice a week to Bowls and women to Stool-ball or other games thus to spend out their time and to no good is far from love and yet if one speak against such things Oh say they You are an enemy to love and friendship and It was as a peaceable Town till such a one came as any other whatsoever now there 's no good-fellowship c. But our Savior Christ saith He came to bring no such peace in evil but rather debate The Devil is content with this peace because they strengthen one another in evil for if any good come to cross this merry prophane world then will it be opposed What hold is thereof their love they go arm in arm to the Tavern yet straight ready to stab one another or betray each other as Joab did Abner and it was between the men of Sechem and Abimelech if they be once out at deadly defiance it s seldom forgiven never forgotten 2. Nor can the wicked love the children of God truly they may be convinced in their conscience as Saul that they be the Servants of God innocent men and God may encline their hearts to favor them as Cyrus to set the people at liberty to return and build For if a mans ways please God his very enemies shall be at peace with them and Ahasuerus and Artaxerxes favored Ezra and Nehemiah yea as God kept Daniel among the Lyons so he can and doth keep his children among the wicked and as he made the Ravens bring Elijah meat so he can make even the wicked instruments for his childrens good but love them they cannot They may do a man outwardly some good and not amiss to take it but to do it aright they cannot as neither to pray or do any other duty and what hold of their favor If they cry Hosanna now within a while they will cry Crucifie him as those of Lystra would have sacrified to Paul and Barnabas as gods but by and by upon a lying report of some stoned them and as Herod reverenced John the Baptist yet at the perswasion of Herodias her Daughter cut off his head Judas betrayed Christ and David complained that it was his familiar friend that did him the greatest hurt If some great body shall say to them I perceive or hear you are a great favorer of Puritans they are gone and hide their heads if the multitude go the other way or it be any thing dangerous when there 's most need of them they are gone 2. Upon this coupling of these two together Note further that Wheresoever there 's the true fear and love of God there will be also love towards our Brethren 1. Therefore they that declare no love but that they are void of all bowels of compassion being all for themselves are also void of the love of God 2. They also that malign mock and persecute the better sort no worse brand of such that they have in them not the least dram of the love of God He that loveth him that begetteth loveth also him that is begotten and they that love God make much of them that fear the Lord having all their delight in such The contrary is a black mark and as bad as may be as bad a brand as any can bear as hereby we may know that we are translated from death unto life so by the contrary that we are yet under darkness 3. They that are contentious giving or embracing every trifling occasion conducing hereto and can fret and fall out and live in enmity and that day after day week after week moneth after moneth let these suspect themselves either the love of God hath no place in them or else it s in a very small measure and their corruption overgrows the same Having purified your souls These words are the Ground and Reason of the Exhortation namely That forasmuch as they were Justified and Sanctified by the Spirit of God to the exercise of all good duties and so of love that they would do that for which they had this cost bestowed upon them This presupposing a former impurity notes the uncleanness that is in Soul and Body They were created pure but are now defiled in the sight of God and that with sin which God who is of pure eyes cannot abide we are guilty of Adams sin born in Original sin therewith tainted throughout so with infinite actual sins Not only are our eyes full of adultery our feet swift to shed blood our mouthes full of cursing c. but our very souls defiled and every faculty thereof the thoughts of our heart being onely evil continually thereout proceeding Murthers Adulteries c. whereby we are defiled This is implyed in that of the Prophet Cease to do evil learn to do well and that of Saint James Cleanse your hands ye sinners and purifie your hearts ye double minded We are not without filthy nakedness we are so corrupt that our nature taints all our actions be they never so good in themselves yea the best and most holy of Gods Ordinances the Word Sacraments and Prayer making them
is not any dram of true grace in them and all the seeming good things they do are in hypocrisie and to no purpose for the love of evil and of good cannot be at one time in one heart O look to it will you lose all your comfort here and all your labor yea Heaven it self for some one sin 2. The end of our Sanctification is to be fruitful in good works and to set upon good duties Such therefore as profess themselves to be Sanctified must be more fruitful Touching the grace here exhorted unto speak we both in general and particular In general where consider 1. What Love is It s a Sanctified affection of the heart wherewith whoso is endued endeavoreth to do all the good he can to all but especially to them that be nearest unto him It s an affection seated as is said in the heart as the others of Hope Fear Joy Grief c. are They were all good and well ordered in Adam but ever since his fall wofully corrupted and utterly disordered and perverted as this of love is turned either into an hatred of that we should love or into self-self-love It s a Sanctified Affection For ere a man can love he must be Regenerate and Sanctified throughout which comes by being united to Christ by Faith whereby our affections are in some measure purged and restored to their former integrity as to hate evil and love good God and our Brethren for Gods cause Love is a fruit of the Spirit and must come from a pure Heart good Conscience and Faith unfained and therefore cannot be in an unregenerate person there may be indeed a shew and shadow of it but that 's no true love They do not love one another neither possibly can love the people of God There 's no trust in them they do but watch their opportunity when to do them mischief O the wretched condition of such how needful wert for them to be wearied thereof And for the people of God they must not trust them or too much open themselves to them He onely that fears God is to be trusted he dares not deceive Wherewith whoso is endued endeavoreth Though love be in the heart yet it must and will shew it self forth in the Life Words and Deeds to Soul and Body else it s like the love of bad men to God who yet keep not his commandments or like the worldlings Faith which is without Works To do good For it s the nature of love it can do no hurt but what good it can it will do to Soul and Body and wheresoever any true good is done to Soul or Body Goods or Name there was love love did it To all For though brotherly kindeness be to the people of God yet love reacheth to all whether near or far off to Strangers Enemies such as are not yet called under the Turk Pope Pagans c. for whom we are to pray and to do them all the good we can with the pitiful Samaritan But especially to them that be nearest So God gives leave nay commands that our love begin at our selves and ours and so go on forward to them that be nearest by nature Therefore they that prefer Strangers before Kinsmen and Kinsmen before Children are blame-worthy and to bestow upon any to the undoing of ones Family is not love but folly as in them which wil spend in lewd company their Wives and Children at home being in want So must it be to them that ●e nearest by grace This is often commanded and highly also commended in the Scriptures This is the bond of perfection It bindes up all the duties that we owe to our Neighbor which are many holds them together as the bond of a Fagot and makes every duty easie as where this is not every duty is irksome nothing comes well off hand It ties Societies together and Families O how it keeps out evil how it sets up good By it small things have become great and for want of it great things have come to nothing It s the fulfilling of the Law It s a most beneficial vertue other vertues benefit our selves but this doth good to others Faith draws all from Christ to us Love lays out it self for others good as the Sun that hath no light for it self other vertues be like the Bung of a Barrel Love like the Tap that sets it abroach to the benefit of them that need If a man be as full of gifts as a Tun of Liquor if he have no Tap others may starve so for Temporal things without this all gifts are nothing but as sounding Brass We are not born for our selves but the perfection of all we have is to employ This is the lasting vertue which when others as Faith and Hope shall end shall spring afresh abound and abide for ever that vertue that makes us like to God for he is Love and doth good to all even his enemies though he have a special affection to his Children O that I could paint out the face of this lovely vertue that every one of us might grow in love therewith 2. The properties thereof whereby we may try whether it be in us and in what measure They are laid down by the Apostle unto the Corinthians Charity suffereth long and is kinde Charity envyeth not Charity vaunteth not it self is not puffed up doth not behave it self unseemly c. Take we notice of a few of them 1. Love will interpret things doubtful to the best that is speeches or actions of men towards our selves or others and if they may be taken well will not take them ill Our nature is to take every thing in the worst part Love doth otherwise the Mother saith a pin pricks the Childe or it breeds teeth when it may be its of frowardnes that it cryes Thus Josephs Brethren sold him spitefully into Egypt afterward when by reason thereof they were afraid what construction made he thereof God saith he did send me before you to preserve life If a thing be plainly evil yet it will make it no worse then it is nor say it was done deliberately when it may be it was done rashly or maliciously when it may be it was done weakly and in temptation for one may do injury to a bad action in making it worse and its better to judge a little better of a thing then worse then it is Always provided this be understood not of palpable notorious foul evils nor of continued courses in sinning for what good or charitable construction can a man make of these Therefore such say foolishly when being informed hereof they Reply Oh ye must not judge what can be judged of this case but onely that there may be Repentance It s a fault in Ministers and others that will extenuate foul sins in bad persons and wicked livers in the mean time aggravating a
Professors oversight 2. It will depart from its own rather then break love as give way in conference and yield though we know we have the truth so it be in small matters after offences yield and sometimes seek Reconciliation though it were meet the other should seek to us for why it more prizeth and esteemeth love then small matters It will lay down the bucklers go on the lower ground yield the way or the wal when there 's no reason for it 3. It doth no hurt it s against the nature thereof so to do whether in life chastity goods and good name See it in God a perfect patern of love He doth all good no hurt to his Children It provokes not but strives by all means to please all as far as may be with a good conscience it seeks not its own things but others as well 4. It s not easily provoked but forbears forgives puts up c. It wil cover natural infirmities such things as be weaknesses in our brethren natural defects not done of set purpose or breaking out into extremities As some be a little too quick some a little too slow some seeing a fault are too ready to speak some a little too slow to speak or reprove some a little too fine earnest negligent merry solemn others a little too homely and plain remiss sad sullen c. If they were not so much on either hand it were better These love will cover or nothing love will not stand upon them rebuke or reproach them it will not deal hardly with them for these things but wisely bear them Thus will a loving husband bear with his wife that fears God though haply somewhat quick and curst haply not so cleanly or provident altogether as were to be desired So a wife with her husband though haply not so affable or whose nature will not suffer him to use such complements to his wife as some can with facility So if a servant be very trusty and careful to please onely somewhat slow the Master must not hereupon rebuke him too oft too openly too sharply sometime lovingly in private he may So a Neighbor confers with a Neighbor and the one is a little too quick love will not see it but consider its a natural infirmity it s not much out of the way though somewhat it is love will not exasperate him or answer him tartly but go on friendly in a maner not so much as taking notice thereof Love will also cover and put up wrongs done unto it not seeing small ones but forgiving and putting them up saying Thus ought I to do he is a man I am also subject to offend my Neighbor and would be forgiven and stand also in need that others should pardon me And as a Christian I must do For I sin daily against God and so crave to be forgiven of him as I forgive others If they be greater matters yet love will easily accept of any indifferent conditions of agreement and that unto Seventy seven times If they be so great that without great prejudice to our estate and reputation they cannot be passed by then its lawful to have recourse unto the Magistrate and use the benefit of the Law but so as there be no malice and the revenge be not in any case sought after Herein two Caveats must be observed It must not be for trifles which ought rather to be forgiven and it must be the last remedy when all other ways of more peaceable and quiet agreement have been tried as the cutting off of an arm or leg when no ways else will help Hereto belongeth also that love covers folks faults from the World except it hath cause and calling to speak thereof commonly it speaks of their vertues The contrary is most wofully common little of mens vertues except a word or two to make way to speak of their faults and these we delight to be much in As the Crow that likes the Carrion and the Hog that delights in mire rather then to lie on the green grass or the Flie that is more on a galled or sore place of a Horse then on his whole body or one that passing by sweet flowers in a garden gathers Hemlock onely 5. It s bountiful beneficial and helpful not having that to it self which it hath but ready to distribute and communicate to the good of others whether they be gifts Spiritual or Temporal Spiritual for love begins at the Soul and doth good to that first whether of our Children Servants or Neighbors Love taketh to heart their Spiritual wants giving counsel to the ignorant doubtful comfort to the afflicted admonition to them that be out of the way exhortation to them that be in the way and especially if they begin to slack adding prayer for all Temporal It will give to the poorest that are to be helpt by alms as it is able it will give in greater measure on solemn times yea of the main stock in persecution or hard times it will give cheerfully and such God loves it will also give quickly that is to give twice it will also lend to them that be a degree above the poorest which having a Trade Skill and will to follow their Trade onely want a stock to employ themselves and theirs These a man is as much bound in conscience to lend unto according to their ability and honestly to pay again as to give a piece of bread or a peny to a poor miserable creature by this help many have lived in good sort and brought up their Families To the wealthy that have no need of us yet we must be neighborly and friendly communicating in kindenesses with them inviting them also sometimes to us and going to them being invited so we must visit them in their sickness and heaviness and comfort them in the best maner we can Now love being such a thing and these being the properties thereof if we try the world by the same we must needs conclude that there 's little love in the world 1. Who takes not things in the worst part hardly construing mens words and actions the doubtful ones haply not bad they judge to be evil those that be evil indeed they make far worse then they are Thus did Ely judge amiss of Hannah when her lips onely moved the Jews with our Savior Christ when he said Destroy this Temple this is the cause of innumerable contentions and breaches among men 2. For departing from right who doth it who stands not out stifly to the uttermost This is an usual speech It s my right and I will have it I ask no more but my right and that I will not lose this is thought but reasonable and he is thought but an honest man that will have but his right but it s an ill speech and resolution whether it be in conference If a man know he hath the truth
men contend for trifles Oppress use false weights and sleights as also hinders from inviting and meeting together 4. Envy at the thriving and wealth of others about them or equal to them as Labans sons did at Jacob Cain that Abels Sacrifice was better regarded then his Esau that Jacob was blessed and Ismael that Isaac was the son of the Promise 5. Frowardness and shortness of spirit breaks love very often for angry words stir up strife 6. These very days of peace make men grow hollow and strange and to set little one by another As when Sheep see a Dog they run all together so trouble makes men to make much one of another whereas its otherwise in peace These be woful causes 4. The effects of this want of love are lamentable every where both in Church and Commonwealth O what woful breaches and contentions what wrongs and enmities So in Families so among particular persons how break they out to the dishonor of God yea sometimes Professors one with another to the shame of their Profession the interrupting of their Prayers or either the hindring of themselves from the Sacrament as many a time it is or slubbering it over and coming with festred hearts and so depriving themselves of the benefit thereof nay provoking the Lord by their unworthy receiving Seeing these things be so O let every one of us finding our selves faulty humble our selves crave mercy and labor to be reformed herein To this end learn we to pluck out of our hearts those noysom weeds that this precious plant of love may grow We must strive against infidelity and labor for more faith In humbleness of minde we must labor to esteem every one better then our selves we must labor for a moderate affection to outward things setting more by peace then them we must also avoid envy We have more then we could have look'd for Is our eye evil because our Masters is good we must also cease from frowardness and be gentle and meek and labor we that this love to our brethren may shew forth it self in all good fruits as in judging the best departing from our right not provoking or being easily provoked but forbearing and forgiving Alas we have need that others should forgive us for who lives and is not subject to offend God forgives us many and great debts and shall we catch our neighbor by the throat God bids us ask forgiveness on no other condition but to forgive our offenders and there 's no better sign that a man is forgiven of God then to shew mercy to men none can be assured of that but they will forgive Let us therefore from the sea of compassion that God sheddeth out upon us let fall some drop thereof on our neighbors and not seek revenge which every bad man yea beast can do but pass by offences which is the glory of a man Besides revenge is the Lords Office and to revenge is indeed to resist the Lord without whose Providence nothing is done this kept David from revenging himself on Shimei Not to revenge is always the best way for us and the worst for him that wrongs us There 's no dealing with a man that commits his cause to God more safe to anger a Witch then an Innocent meek spirited man that hath his recourse to God thou hadst better deal with one that will take revenge on thee to the uttermost To this end keep we out anger if we can if not yet let it not rest in us as it were sowring in our hearts Let not the Sun go down upon it This indeed the world accounts a base thing but its honorable it makes us like God Neither must we labor for this a little or some few times but for a long skirted love that will cover even a multitude of offences And let our love shew it self in giving Spiritual and Temporal things for God gives to good and bad and makes us but Stewards of that he gives us that we may dispense the same yea the more we give the more we have as which encreaseth by giving and for Temporal things the high-way to thrive therein is to be merciful as to beggary to be pinching 5. The general reasons inciting to this duty of love 1. God requireth it of us who is love and if we perform it we do not so much serve our Neighbor as please God who takes it as done to himself If we neglect it we neglect not our Neigbor onely but God who takes himself wronged in this point 2. We are all one flesh and all have some part of the Image of God upon us But for the people of God 1. We be members of the same body The members of the Natural body not onely hurt not but help each other else quickly would the body be brought to confusion 2. Brethren not Natural ones but a better Brotherhood a nearer Bond Now between Brethren there must be no contention and it were a shame for such to contend 3. Both the Word requires it and the Sacrament of the Lords Supper calls for and puts us in minde of it 4. No better Argument that we are in the light love God are Christs Disciples and translated from death to life then this 5. The beauty of a Christian is love he 's the best Christian who loves most whose lips feed most whose branches spread widest 6. As it brings us much peace to our conscience and will comfort us not a little on our death-bed that we have not lived to our selves but to be useful to many especially to Souls so it procureth us love in the places we live in and in the Church of God where we have a good name No man is well beloved though he have good things in him if he be not loving Oh say they he is a good honest man but a harsh Censurer Contentious and so hasty that no man can tell how to speak to him he is a strait man no man is the better for him by counsel encouragement admonition so for other things But if a man be full of love Oh it shall procure him love again he shall be commended while he lives and mourned for when he dyes as they wept for Dorcas but a proud churlish close man he shall live without being desired and dye without being mourned for Many would have Love and Good-will and Credit but will not seek this way to procure it they live closely to themselves neither being useful or any way liberal to their Neighbors let them never look for it Many care not so they may scrape all to themselves for their good name let it go whether it will but these are bafounded and its a curse so to live Thus in general In particular Touching the love to the Children of God which is here chearfully called for consider we both the duty and the maner how it s to be performed For the duty it self it
a most intire affection each to other which often in this life is not because of the weakness of Grace It s unseemly for Kinsmen to disagree much more Brethren but most for Christians to fall out to contend wrangle and be at odds Do we not profess we are members of Christ and perswade our selves our Neighbors are so We do then let Nature teach us See how the natural members be affected Are we not Fellow-Brethren When therefore we live in enmity with our Neighbor that is a Christian we do as much as in us lies put him out of the Lords Roll and unbrother him for is he our Brother of the same Father and Mother and can we jar with him especially though somewhat should fall out otherwise then well can we suffer the Sun to go down upon our wrath God forbid When we come to Heaven we shall love all our Fellow-Brethren better then ever two Brethren loved in this World and shall we not aym at it now and come as near it as we can and we have need so to do for the World loves their own therefore hates us shall not we then hold together shall we be divided within our selves O what wrack comes of this in the Church of God in these days whiles Brethren differ and contend the common Enemies Atheists and Papists multiply For the maner of it It must be without faining love unfained God hates dissembling in every thing loves simplicity and plain dealing as in Jacob and Nathanael If love which is the main vertue be counterfeit and false what shall become of all the duties that proceed from thence Two sorts of persons may be here chiefly taxed 1. Such as pretend to love but indeed hate as Joab to Amasa Saul to David Judas to our Savior Christ such have a mark of Rebrobation workers of Iniquity to whom belongs some notable judgement of God they be like the Devil who pretended to love Eve and our Savior Christ of these see Psal. 12. 2. 55. 12. 62. 4. Pro. 26. 24. Jer. 9. 2. 1 Sam. 18. 17 25. 2 Sam. 20. 9. Those are more dangerous to them they hate then if they bare open hatred as one enemy within the walls is worse then ten without it s also worse for themselves for any vice cloaked or masked under shew of vertue is double iniquity such shall receive greater damnation yet how common is this Many will speak men as fair as may be yet lie in wait to do them a shrewd turn and as soon as their back is turned raise a slander of them and do them all the hurt they can Others haply have done so with us but so must not we do 2. Such as pretend they love but do not Many will salute with Good morrow and Good night when as there 's no true love one handful of true hearty love is worth ten armfuls of their Court holy-water crouchings and congees down to the ground These are clouds without rain vessels with false bottoms that have onely a little water in the top Such are they who pretend they love the poor who yet coming to them can get nothing of them but what they are enforced to and that very hardly So many good Ministers have proved the good-will of a number that have made goodly shews but have found small kindeness at their hands What love call you this its dead as Faith without Works Such is theirs who will speak well of such and such and seem to pity them saying They are worthy men and pity they should want but yet relieve them not at all If God should so feed and deal with them they would soon complain See that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently Here 's the Exhortation wherein we have again both the duty required which is to love one another and the maner also with a pure heart fervently Love one another This noteth 1. A mutual love It must come from one to another mutually and be at every hand As others are to love us so are we to love others none free Many wil look for a deal of love from others that yet care not how little they themselves part with would be visited but care not to visit others would have their own vertues commended but will not do so by others have their infirmities covered but will not do so by others would not be provoked yet will provoke would not that others should be quickly angry with them who will yet be angry with others Alas this is weakness It s a more blessed thing to give then to receive and we should rather strive to go before and set others in our debt by love A good minde rather remembers the debt that is going from him then that which is coming to him This often comes of pride in some men to look for much of others and perform little themselves The husband often looks his wife should walk at an inch with him though he will break many ells out of square So the wife will look for much of her husband not caring how little she perform This is no equity We must do as we would be done to It s more dangerous for us to neglect our duty to others then for them to neglect theirs to us let us therefore strive who shall perform most each to other Husbands Wives Neighbors c. 2. A community We must not love one or two or a few but all that fear God in the place wherein we live Love communicates it self and is not ingrossed to a few Many can be content to love one or two or a few but they oppose and justle against many others and live unkindely with them This is no true love nor ought love so to be yet in many Towns there is siding which at the length turns to its undoing yea we must love the meanest that fear God and not neglect them as the meanest member of the Body is regarded of the chiefest we must not have the Faith of Christ in respect of persons God hath vouchsafed to give his Son to Redeem them his Spirit to Sanctifie them and Heaven to be possessed of them and shall we despise them Nay we ought rather to encourage and hearten them on in well doing seeing so few of that sort fear God If we regard them they will bear their poverty the better and it will be a great chearing to them There 's nothing more comely then for the wealthy to be thus affable and kinde to them The Lord is the Maker of both and being fellow-Brethren and fellow-Members the one as dear to God as the other a little wealth must not puff up the ones minde over the other With a pure heart Every kinde of love is not that which is here required it must be the fruit of the Spirit proceeding from a Sanctified heart and be agreeable to
the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever THis duty of love is of such use and we so untoward to it and so hard a thing for us to love as we ought that it s urged with a Reason True it is so and no more then needs for the spirit that is in us lusteth after envy The Reason is taken from the grace of Regeneration bestowed upon them They were born again and therefore were to shew the fruits thereof as in other things so in this of love Where might be noted 1. That such as are not born again cannot love no more then men can gather Grapes of Thorns or Figs of Thistles or pour Wine out of a Bottle full of Vinegar but as Grapes are gathered of the Vine so must love come from a Regenerate man not otherwise 2. That the Regenerate man must needs love therefore they that declare no love but hate their Brethren the people of God especially shew they be not born again nor of God But I proceed to the words Being born again Here 's occasion offered to speak of the grace of Regeneration Touching it consider briefly these particulars 1. What it is to be born again It s to be made new creatures to be cast in a new mold to have the corrupt Image of Sin which we have by Nature and wherein we were conceived and born put off throughout and the contrary good one wherein we were at the first created put on to have the understanding enlightned with distinct knowledge of God the heart bowed to the obedience of God c. new thoughts desires speeches actions In the new Creature all things must become new Thus it s done to all that were elect before the foundation of the world They are changed up and down from a good state by Creation to a bad in Adam from thence to a good one in Christ by grace here in expectation of glory hereafter For the wicked they are changed from good to bad and there remain the same but still worse and worse for ever we should give God thanks that made us so good at first be humbled to see our base and woful state now and seeing there is help never to be quiet till we recover our first condition 2. That the Lord is the Author hereof he takes away the stony heart and gives a new heart an heart of flesh It s his work onely nor Man or Angel can change the heart to work a deadly hatred of that which by nature we love as our lives and to love and take delight in those courses duties companies which sometimes were as a Prison Alas the best Paul and Apollos cannot often even of their Children or very Friends not a few remain unconverted though haply in the mean time God bless their labors to convert many others Yea if an Angel should take a man and carry him to Heaven and shew him the Joys thereof and thence to Hell and shew him the Torments thereof yet this would not convert him neither all Mercies Afflictions or Plagues of Egypt It s a great work of God and so great as if all things were not possible to him he could not do it It s a greater work then the Creation of the World In that there was no opposition in this much we have not onely no aptness to good or to be wrought to goodness but a violent opposition against it there but to make the things here both to put out the corrupt nature and to put in the contrary good then he made all of nothing now he makes good of nought As its easier making a thousand glasses then the setting together one that is broke so it was easier to speak quo ad nos for all things are alike easie to God to make the world then to repair the broken Image of God in man It s a miraculous work of God greater then any miracles that Christ or his Apostles wrought our Saviors several miracles upon the bodies of men are all done in the conversation of a sinner sight restored to them that were blinde and darkness it self hearing to the deaf speech to the dumb feet to the lame Devils cast out yea many for the Devil possesseth us and all our Parts and Members Hearts Hands Eyes Tongues Feet c. as any Captain holds a Castle and hath it at command Thus it s a wonderful work of God to see a mans Soul and Life his wit will desires affections and all altered from black to white It was a wonder to see the Criple go and for him that was born blinde to see but it s more marvel to see a man converted for whereas God gave power to work all these miracles the raising of the dead not excepted to men this of regenerating is his own onely If we finde it ascribed to Ministers as Paul is said to have begot Onesimus and as a Father the Corinthians we must not conceive as if it were not proper to God onely but know that it is for that God would keep them the instruments by whom he works from contempt A good Husband or Wife may be a good means each to other but have no power of themselves Adam could easily cast away himself but none could restore him but God onely as a Childe of half a year old may break a glass which all the men in the Town cannot set together again It s wrought of God by uniting us to Christ by Faith through his holy Spirit which works this alteration when pardoning our sins past he taketh away the guiltiness and punishment thereof in his death Let all that can prove it give all glory to God for so unspeakable a mercy even that when they were going headlong to destruction when as vile as any he yet called them passing by thousands which yet lie in their sins And for them that can prove no such thing let them not delay nor put off to the last as the fashion is as though it could be dispatcht in a trice or with a wet finger but seek it both earnestly and quickly in the means appointed Why do men think they shall repent on their death bed rather then now Is it because the pain or fear of death will make them Alas all the Plagues in the world cannot change a man without God and will God be near to work then Nay he that was rejected in health and life will more likely cast off in death and if he will not bless his Word will he work in the end by other means This is little better then Sauls practise to go to the Devil when God would not help him 3. That the Lords own will is the moving cause hereof As he Elected freely and gave Christ of his love so this Nothing in us could move him hereto but whom he elected before the world those doth he of the
nourishing nature thereof it s called Milk the purity its sincere Milk and the end thereof that they might grow thereby He had before willed them to lay aside all malice c. now to desire the sincere milk of the word Hereby implying that The Word of God cannot thrive or prosper in an unsanctified heart neither can a man either affect it earnestly desire it or truly delight in it as long as he lives in any one sin For 1. The Word of God is holy and will not abide in an unclean heart no more then Rose-water will keep good in a musty or foul vessel 2. It crosseth all our sins and corruptions whoso therefore loveth any one sin cannot love the Word Hence it is that so few affect the Word soundly even because it crosseth that which they love and so few grow by it because their hearts be defiled with some sin Therefore let us abandon the love of all evil and sin from us if ever we mean to finde the Word sweet unto us or to prosper thereby so far doth any man profit in the love of Gods Word as he profits in the hatred of sin The best nourishment taken into a corrupt stomack yet nourisheth not so it s with the Word The most come to Church with hearts over-grown with rank weeds more or less therefore cannot the Word thrive in them and so the carnal people of the world receive no benefit after long preaching and they that have good things in them yet when they suffer some corruptions in themselves to wax too rank do not thrive in grace The duty required is As new born babes to desire the sincere milk of the word so being much conversant both in the hearing and reading thereof The desire that new born babes or yong children have after their Mothers breast is 1. Earnest 2. Constant 3. Impartial Such must ours be towards the Word 1. Earnest the new born babe hath not only an aptness to suck at the first but makes aym at the dug wrings and turns the head and gapes which is the wonderful work of God nay desires it so earnestly as it will cry for it yea and if it hath it not nothing else will still it and after it hath been accustomed thereto no dancing rocking or gingling will still it but the Big it must have and that satisfieth it Such must be our desire to the Word an earnest fervent desire so as nothing can satisfie us without it but we esteem it above all both profit and pleasure Such as be new born do thus desire it and no wonder for it made David wiser then his Teachers his Enemies his Ancients It makes us wise to Salvation its able to save our souls it s the instrument to convert to build up to teach instruct convince correct c. and to make perfect to every good work Every part of it is so holy and profitable the Promises so comfortable the very Threatnings also able to subdue our rebellious Corruptions and the Instructions thereof to teach us the way we have to walk in O there can be no part thereof spared 1. This condemneth those that have no desire at all to the Word had as leave be at home as thereat no Sermon but for names sake that care not to come to the Word or if they come for company or fear of the Law yet it s without any appetite or desire and therefore they come no more then they must needs for shame or danger Tell whether Papists or others amongst our selves that care not for the Word of profits or pleasures they like it well but as for a Sermon they have no appetite thereto finde no savor therein some had rather be with their Oxen and at their Farms some at Bull baiting or some Play some had as leave be in the Churchyard as in the Church love the Word as one would love a Prison This is a certain sign of carnal persons dead in their sins as if a childe after it were born or at any time should lie a day or two and make no aym for the Big would not every body say it were dead Many other would seem to desire Preaching and wish they had a good Preacher but in the mean time it troubles them not they seek not to compass it nor mourn for the want nor will they take pains to stir abroad to hear elswhere till they have one of their own Certainly these men have no life of grace in them if they had they would not onely wish for it but earnestly desire it Doth the childe onely sometimes make aym for the big No but if it be well it will cry for it These profit accordingly when they hear because they hear not with a desire others can be kept from the Word by every trifle and wonder that others are not For this sin of the contempt of the Word God may justly visit the Land as he doth every year with one Judgement or other and why rather then for this mother sin and great unthankfulness for this most precious and invaluable Jewel 2. It may comfort those that long after it and so earnestly desire it as nothing can please them without it a fair house fertile ground wholesom ayr a good farm all this gives them no content without the Word which should sweeten and teach the use of all O if they had thought they should not have had the Ministery of the Word they would never have come there and now labor by all means not coldly but with endeavor to compass it going where it is till they have it taking great pains about it hot and cold in winter and summer a good sign of health of such as are alive born again when men are not held away by any small occasion are never so glad as when they are at it never so grieved as when withheld therefrom These be they that shall profit 2. Constant A yong childe having newly suckt is quiet a while but by and by will desire the dug and cry for it again and ever and anon must be sucking So should we always be desirous of the Word still hungring after it Regenerate persons or true Christians desire it again and again for why they seek so much to know that they desire still to hear more they finde their Faith feeble therefore desire more still that it may be strengthened They finde many and strong corruptions therefore they would hear that which might subdue them they finde many doubts and much weakness therefore they desire to hear still as often as they can and all too little therefore they think the time long from one Sabbath or Exercise-day to another 1. For them that care not how little they hear with whom once a Sabbath is full enough once a moneth for a need yea once a quarter would serve the turn It s a sign of clung and starved
souls for as they that be in health must eat oft so they that have spiritual health in soul must hear oft Therefore they that loath and are weary of the Word it s a sign of sick souls having no Stomack to this food it s a sign they are dead at the heart 2. For those that feel an appetite from Sermon to Sermon and to hear oft it s a sign they see their wants and finde the goodness of the Word 3. This may stop the mouth of barkers at such as go to the Word Why were you not at Church last Sunday must you go again to day must you go on the week day too Why know ye not that growing persons eat oft are often hungry They are growing and therefore that they may grow more must use this means they that see no wants in themselves a Sermon now and then will serve their turn 3. Unpartial As the childe cares not whom it sucks rich or poor so the milk be good so must we not look at the man or at his outward appearance so as he deliver the Word of God soundly truly and sincerely that it may appear good milk Many look upon pomp and outward complements so as they set light by the Ministery of them that want them counting them plain men simple men to see to let such know that not painting of the Cask makes good wine These being the duties of the people thus earnestly constantly and impartially to desire the Word of God by the way in a word Ministers must learn their duty and how to carry themselves 1. As the People be the Children so Ministers be the Nurses therefore they must be no dry Nurses then the people shall desire and miss but have full breasts that their Children may have enough to nourish them They must Study Read Meditate Pray that their breasts may be full as good House-holders they must have old and new for every bodies turn give every one their portion and as good Nurses that fear they shall want milk eat and drink spoon-meat more then they are willing so must we study against our ease to satisfie our spiritual Children not woo-meal our Children 2. Ministers as they must have milk enough so must they have love good store to lay out their breasts publiquely and privately upon all occasions as the kinde mother that sometimes a whole day together doth not pin up close her things but lets her breast always be in readiness 3. Ministers must have much patience that though the people some or all be wayward and take not the breast handsomly yea sometime fall out with the breast when it comes too fast and fall a crying as Children do They must I say have patience and wait putting it again in their mouthes though they cag and puke it up again Milk of the Word The Word is here and elswhere compared to milk as to wine and bread this being to the Soul as those to the body as in respect of the plainness of it to yong children which is therefore opposed to strong meat that is harder Points and Mysteries of Religion so especially for the nourishing nature thereof 1. Therefore they that may hear the Word and will not starve their own souls and are wilfully guilty of their own destruction They that take away the Word from any place pluck away the childrens bread and leave the people to perish for want of knowledge 2. Christians must desire it and hunger and thirst after it praying God to continue it and that of all punishments he would not send a famine of the Word The Soul hath a life as well as the Body bodily food will do it no good therefore the Word must be had 3. This also stops the mouthes of those that wonder at Christians because they hear oft they can never be content They did hear on the Sunday must they go on the week day too Did not you eat yesterday yet will dine to day again and no marvel for you cannot live without it no more can the Soul without the Word the Spiritual food thereof And though your Soul be a small feeder and little will content it indeed nothing at all because you have no Spiritual life in you yet the children of God that are alive must have it again and again We say They that are growing must eat oft and are hungry so must growing Christians hear oft It s also compared to milk for the sweetness of it nothing sweeter to a childe then the mothers breast so is the Word to a new born Christian. They that feel no sweetness therein their mouth is out of taste with sin as they also to whom it seems bitter contrarily they that finde it sweet pleasant delightsom yea every part thereof and to whom even the threatnings thereof are welcom as whereby their corruption may be subdued it s an infallible sign that they are Gods children Besides as milk is a general food for all Christians rich and poor so is the Word the common food of all Christians the means of their begetting and edifying the greatest must look for no other so neither the poorest none must neglect it it s the common food of all that shall be saved Happy is the Land therefore that flows with Peters milk and Davids honey they have the best Spiritual complexions that be fed therewith Sincere That is Pure Unmixt a borrowed speech from honey that is not mixt but sine cera without wax and it s so called not onely because its the purest thing in the world and therefore we o●ght to desire it the more earnestly but because there be such as will deal with the Word as Hucksters that sell milk and mingle it with water so some mix the Word with Errors and deliver it not sincerely whereof accordingly they were to take heed Hereof he had great cause to warn those Jews because there were false Teachers that labored to draw them from Christ altogether others joyned Law with Christ as if Salvation were not by Christ alone This was to put poison in the milk 1. This teacheth Ministers to preach the Word sincerely without mixture For matter all must be according to the Law and the Testimony and the Ballance of the Sanctuary so that they may boldly avouch thereof that Thus saith the Lord they must speak as the words of God and his Oracles And for maner it must not be carnal in humane eloquence and curious words of mans wisdom such teaching darkens the Word The Lord hath left us marvellous things in his Word and yet in a very plain maner He saith they be wonderful in one Verse and in the next That the entrance into them giveth wisdom and sheweth light So must Ministers deliver it in an holy kinde of plainness not mingling therewith carnal and fleshly eloquence
where it may be they receive conversion and even that terror of conscience though it were occasioned by some outward thing yet it is the Word that indeed works it as which tells them both of their sin and danger The parts of it are 1. An enlightening of the understanding with a distinct knowledge of the principal points of Salvation 2. The opening of the heart to believe 3. The changing of the whole man from that ill nature that was in him to a quite contrary The Law prepares and make them see their deadly danger and by the Spirit makes to feel it grievously and then the Gospel works by little and little hope to comfort and so a change The cause that moves the Lord to do this to any is his meer mercy and no desert as is Election and Redemption so is our effectual calling free And this inward effectual calling is an infallible argument of Election past and glory to come They are links of the golden chain of mans Salvation that cannot by all the Devils be sundred but have one and have all Hereupon me thinks every mans heart should burn within him to prove his calling that hereby he might have a mark of his Election They that can prove it may have exceeding comfort and they must also beware lest being calling out of the world to God they look any more back or be more and more defiled with the fashions and maners thereof and every day in hearing the Word obey every part thereof and walk worthy of your holy Calling Much are they to be blamed that do no more honor their Calling but drop into things like men of this world yea are overcome of the world and covetousness But haply thou doubtest of thy Calling because thou findest not these fruits or not so plentifully as thou would'st be not discouraged though thou beest dull and full of infirmities and strong corruptions yet unfainedly hating and resisting them and being grieved at them and using the means against them thou art not to call thy foundation into question yet must thou humble thy self and as occasion requires set on more earnestly use the means more carefully and daily renew thy repentance But for those that shew no fruits of their Calling but though they have had the Word and been Hearers yet remain prophane and impenitent altogether or seeming to go some steps yet are not changed throughout through Faith they are not yet called for never imagine that every one that hears Sermons yea usually and with joy and mends many things and lives in some good fashion is straight truly called not onely the high-way ground but even the stony yea thorny which went far and beyond most in Congregations yet were not effectually called and numbers among our selves that think well of themselves are not truly called are not Believers nor turned to God Well let every man examine himself throughly being not called I dare not speak a word of comfort to you in this case you have not onely no mark of Election but the contrary when God hath by all means called as by promises threatnings c. and none have prevailed O now use the means with all diligence and though hitherto you have disobeyed the words of Gods calling yet let them now open the doors of your hearts If you do God will be merciful and blot out all if you will not when you shall hereafter call you shall not be heard and you which would not obey this gracious voyce of the Gospel to believe and repent that you might be saved shall one day hear another kinde of voyce from him which you shall obey nill you will you to your own confusion Out of darkness into his marvellous light Here are the parts of calling both from whence and whereto By darkness is meant ignorance of Christ Jesus and sin which are the works of darkness and tend to utter darkness In this case they were How could these Jews be said to be in darkness which had the Law and were skilful therein and stood not a little upon it They had knowledge of the Law but Christ Jesus the accomplishment of the Law they knew not to know whom aright is life everlasting All knowledge without this is nothing but darkness still so that he means not that they were without the means of knowledge as the Gentiles were for one may have the means and yet be in darkness nor that they were called out of ignorance to some knowledge by the means for one may have much knowledge and yet be in darkness but that they were called out of darkness that is out of ignorance of Christ and Salvation by him out of the state of corruption and sin and working the works of darkness and going to utter darkness To his light that is to know Christ by a saving particular and effectual knowledge to Sanctification and Holiness of life which are the works of the light and so to the hope of the eternal light of happiness Hereunto they were called out of the state of unbelief and sin which tend to death for so sin is called darkness and holiness light Sin is termed darkness because it comes from the Devil the Prince of darkness loves darkness and goes to darkness Holiness comes from light even God the Father of lights loves and can abide the light and goes to light and God the Fountain of Holiness is called light Here note What every mans estate is till he be called even that we are not onely darkened but darkness it self We were all made light in Adam full of knowledge and holiness since the fall we are all darkness and when God means to save any he pulls them out of darkness Darkness hath a power indeed which were it not for the Almighty power of God delivering us therefrom would hold us under for ever and as long as we be in this darkness we have no right to the Kingdom of God nay we have nothing to do with God we are neither his sons people nor servants The man that is not effectually called and sanctified what gifts soever he hath is yet in darkness and never wrought other then the works of darkness He may do good things and the works of light but they be not so in him being darkly performed by corrupt nature without Faith or the Spirit neither tending to the right end This may be said of every unregenerate person though never so old civil or of good parts 1. This confutes the Papists that teach that there are some such pure Naturals left in man some Free-will to goodness which if God stir up a little and help can work and that they can merit of Congruity which crosseth both this and other Scriptures as That the thoughts of mans heart are onely evil continually That the wisdom of the flesh is enmity with God and That
boyl with corrupt lusts First he begins with cleansing the heart as from whence must come good conversation the onely true discerner of the purity of the heart The parts of this Verse are two 1. An Exhortation where we have both the maner wherein it s delivered namely by way of beseeching and the matter exhorted to namely To abstain from filthy lusts whereby we are to understand not such sins as be acted by the body but the lusts of the heart for even body and soul is flesh naturally that is sinful and corrupt Fleshly lusts that is sinful and carnal corrupt lusts such as have place in the heart ere they break out from those we are to abstain even to take heed they prevail not in us but resist and mortifie the same 2. The Reasons thereof 1. Because they fight against the Soul 2. They were and we are Pilgrims here not of this world therefore not to follow the lusts of this world but to minde Heaven and be Spiritual Dearly beloved We must know he dissembled not but spake as he thought and meant and felt Hence note What affection of love Ministers ought to bear to the people they have taken charge of If people have chosen one and entrusted him with their souls he is then to be between God and them O what a near conjuction and what great love must there be The Apostle writeth to the Corinthians That he was their Father and to the Galathians That he travelled in birth till Christ was formed in them and to the Thessalonians That he was affectioned towards them as a nurse cherisheth her children He loved them at the heart root and was content not onely to take any pains for them but to lose his life for their good as a good Shepherd Love also being so necessary a duty in the people as without which nothing can go aright as it should and that most are full of self-self-love but very cold in love to their neighbor Ministers must be very much and often in perswading hereto and the several parts thereof consisting in giving forgiving patience and forbearance and doing all good both to their souls and bodies and that both by word and deed and that not onely by precept but also patern But chiefly this is the Reason he should be so full of love to the people that they may be moved the more by his Ministry and it may prevail the more effectually with them when they see that whether it be admonition or rebuke yet it cometh from one that entirely loves them in the Lord and is hungry of their souls and desires above all to win and gain them to God which would be above all riches to them if not our nature is sickly and full of self-self-love If we think our selves not to be loved we make little use of whatsoever we are taught though this be indeed a fault in us for the matter it self ought to move us But as if the sick person knew the Physitian to be one that besides his skill bears him good will it will make him willing to take physick of him whereas if he thinks he bears him no good will he cannot be brought to meddle with him or take any thing of him so it s with them that are well or ill perswaded of their Pastors love towards them Therefore the Minister ought to provide for this for what is the joy of a Minister but to see the fruit of his labors and that he does good and gains men home to God sees knowledge and conscience wrought and people converted Oh what man sows and looks not to see it come up grow and have a crop who plants a vineyard and looks not for the fruit thereof and shall we onely lose the most precious labor and seed and study and preach as we care not whether it do good or no and never look after it God forbid 1. This teacheth Ministers their duty to love the people tenderly them not theirs By reason of the contrary there 's so little good done some live altogether from them others live with them but so that it were better they were further off 2. It teacheth people to profit by that which they hear though not delivered haply with such hearty affection as it ought for its Gods Word however but especially look that being delivered in love and unfeigned care of your good you take heed that you despise not the same lest one day it rise up in judgement against you He had before described them as Believers and excellent ones now here he calls them Beloved yea Dearly beloved Hence note That The Saints or they that be endued with Grace and the Image of God are to be the objects of our love This is worthy love commands love wheresoever it be seen True we must love all because we know not who may be the Lords haply even such as are yet bad and love that part or parts of the Image of God we see in any but where we see the true Image of Grace and Sanctification in any they be the parties which are chiefly to be beloved we are to do good to all but especially to the houshold of Faith we must love all but brotherly kindeness is to the godly as our Brethren yea fellow-members yea among Christians we must love them most where we see most Grace and be most familiar with them affect them most and most regard them 1. As they be led by an ill Spirit who love either all alike or those worst which shew most tokens of towardness in Religion making as much or more account of a civil person then of one truly Religious 2. So let people strive to grow and exceed in grace that they may get the highest and largest room in their Ministers heart which be faithful which howsoever the world makes little account of yet they that are wise know that their sentence and love is to be regarded as the Testimony of the Church is a great matter either for a man or against a man so of a Faithful Minister and if such a one give a full and large Testimony of a man it s a Crown to his head above all his wealth if his Testimony be against a man or a weak doubtful Testimony it s an hard case If a Minister have joy of a people and may give a chearful account of them to God its profitable for the people The contrary is grievous I beseech you He had power to command them being from God in a thing for their own good and so necessary but he saw their toward disposition therefore chose rather to use entreaty Whence note That It s the duty of Gods Ministers to be wise in their delivery of the Word and when they see that loving beseechings and entreaties will be as profitable and prevail as much then so to do rather then use any other course True it is the
we know no Reason we should be subject to them He answereth you are free indeed I confess Christ hath purchased and that dearly a happy and blessed freedom for you but this as every other good thing may be abused and stretched beyond the reach thereof as you do this for it s not such a freedom as sets you at liberty to do what you list or to shake off Government and live at your pleasure and which is not to be used as a cloak of naughtiness and carnal liberty but you must use it as those that be freed from sin and the Devil but not from God and your obedience to him but to be his servants and so to obey him as in all things so in this amongst the rest even in obeying Magistracy which is one of his Commandments Here three things are considerable 1. The liberty of Christians As free 2. The abuse of Christian liberty not using your liberty as a cloak of maliciousness 3. The right use of it but as the servants of God all needful to be known that in a right maner we may use our Christian liberty to the glory of God our own good and the benefit of our brethren As free Freedom presupposeth bondage By nature we are all bound till we be freed through Christ. 1. We are all guilty of Adams sin born in Original sin infinitely defiled with actual rebellions whereby we stand under the wrath and curse of God and all evils in this world and that which is to come for ever There is no curse in all the Scripture threatned or executed or any other that God hath in his infinite store-house whereunto we are not lyable and daily subject God is just and no whit of this can be called back a fearful condition 2. We are all the very vassals of Satan and slaves of sin taken prisoners of him in the fall and we have no power of Soul nor part of body but are all fast bound to his will our understanding darkness it self our will altogether averse and rebellious to that that is good carried forcibly to all evil as are also our affections and other parts The Devil holds us as a Captain doth his Castle naturally he rules in our hearts at his pleasure till through Christ we be delivered out of this power of darkness He is the strong man that keeps the house till a stronger then he comes which is Christ alone We have no power to think a good thought to stir a finger in any good though about the matter of our Salvation Our wisdom is enmity against God All our thoughts are onely evil continually It s as impossible for a natural man to do any good as for a bramble to bear grapes or figs nay which is worse and makes up our bondage we cannot see we be in this case believe when we be told it desire to come out of it as being weary thereof nay we delight in it think it the onely liberty spend body goods name soul and all in the service of it the basest master and most cruel the basest work and most woful wages and this yet is worst that we like of it and liberty being offered we loath it No vassal among the Turks that hath been there never so long but yet retains a free minde he would be gone if he might or could tell how but such are not we we have no desire from Satan or sin our bondage being thus made known unto us we are a little the fitter to listen to the freedom here spoken of we being in this most woful bondage God of his infinite mercy found out a way a strange way to free us and that was by Jesus Christ who hath procured our liberty and makes us free This is called Christian liberty because it s purchased by Christ for Christians namely Believers and no others Its a Spiritual and holy freedom not Civil such as the Jews looked for even great advancement in an earthly Kingdom or the Anabaptists dream of which shake off Magistracy nor Carnal such as that of the Libertines which live as they list in all silthiness and procured it is by Christ alone no other could do it It stands in these four things 1. Through Christ we are freed from the wrath and curse of God and all the punishment of our sins here and hereafter and this he hath done by his precious blood having redeemed us and became also a curse for us He was arraigned before a worldly Judge that we might not be arraigned before the Judge of the whole world He was condemned that we might be absolved He dyed that we might live He hath become our surety and so freed us from the wrath and justice of God and his payment was most royal because he was God and by his Resurrection he declared that it was full and perfect So that now to all that believe in him there is no condemnation It hath nothing to do with them for though God be just and will have it once paid yet not unjust to require it twice 2. We are freed from the service of Sin and the Devil which he hath done by the vertue of his Word and holy Spirit working faith in our hearts So Regenerating and Sanctifying us washing us in his blood enlightening our understandings renewing our wills reforming our affections and whole man working a quite change from that was before an hatred of the sin that before was onely loved a love to the good that before was not regarded yea of all sin and of all good with some power to resist and overcome the one and perform the other so that though Satan tempt us yet shall he not have us at command as before though our heart and flesh lust after evil yet the Spirit resisteth it and provoketh to good and sin reigneth in us no longer Thus were Zacheus the Jaylor and Mary Magdalene quite altered from that they were before So among our selves through Gods goodness they that understood nothing to purpose are now enlightened and ashamed of themselves in respect of their former conversation hate their sins and old companions and are turned to love God and to delight in his Word Saints Prayer good Duties have tongues that cannot now speak for their liyes as before but are ready to speak gracious words which before they could not and where before they were lame to any good now they are active and can finde their legs now to carry them to goodness but we are only thus freed in part we cannot do what we would as we would and oftentimes also we do also what we would not yet shall we draw vertue from God by his Spirit in the daily use of the Word Sacraments and Prayer to be more and more freed therefrom till at last we shall attain the same even perfect freedom in glory for ever 3. We are freed from the rigor
set up their Inferiors in them yet are they to use them kindely and with respect Yea a man is bound to honor himself for he is the workmanship of God he may not therefore defile or abuse himself at his pleasure He must therefore keep his hands free from cruelty and oppression his tongue from lying swearing railing mocking as his whole body from evil and filthiness Its Gods will that we should possess our vessels in holiness and honor we must not disgrace or deface the work of the Lord they that thus do shall not enter into Heaven for no unclean thing shall come there And as we desire to procure honor unto our selves we must labor in all things to honor God and in all our doings aym at his glory them that thus do God will honor Contrarily they that seek themselves and not God in that that they do living even openly to his dishonor and not regarding at all to glorifie him disgrace and shame shall be cast on them the honor they seek flies furthest from them yea such have often fearful and shameful ends Dishonoring God he dishonoreth them and as we are to labor to be approved of God so also to have good report in the Church of God for a good name is greatly to be respected is of much worth and an especial blessing of God Thus as men are to us As they are in themselves they are either good o● bad both which we are to honor Honor all men saith the Apostle good bad Jews Gentiles Believers Unbelievers Regenerate Unregenerate Christians Pagans c. for the good there is no doubt and that is to be spoken of in the next Exhortation but the doubt and difficulty is of the bad how and why we must honor them We must have a good respect to all though not to all alike and there are none so bad but there is something in them to be regarded some scratch of Gods image if ancient men an image of Gods eternity reverence that and speak to them as to aged men if wealthy an image of Gods infinite abundance if wise to manage matters of the world reverence Gods wisdom if a Father or Master an image of Gods Fatherhood and Authority Besides they have many active parts of good use for Peace or War by Sea and Land are skilful in the Tongues in Arts and Sciences are Civil Kinde Courteous Pitiful and the like for every of which we are to honor them to reverence them to give them their due so much as in us lies living peaceably with them In their prosperity we must use them friendly in all points of Neighborhood Lending Borrowing Commercing Dealing Justly and Righteously with them to bring them to the love of Religion in their adversity we must be helpful to them if hungry give them meat if thirsty drink if naked raiment at all times give them a good example pray for them and give them their due for any thing that 's in them that they may see themselves regarded not despised and so keep peace holding out contention which is the floodgate of all evil Thus dealing well with them and walking wisely towards them we may bring them in time to a liking and love of Religion 1. Therefore for Christians let them not reject men altogether whom they see to be bad but give them their due we know not what good may come by our amiable and wise carriage towards them but if we shall despise them we do thereby harden them against us and Religion too 2. For them that be yet carnal let them labor for grace which deserves true and large honor If God will have you regarded for your natural parts how will both he himself honor you and cause you also to be honored of others having grace ye see Christians use you kindely and respectively for your common and natural gifts O how should they embrace you if they saw the lively image of God in you Love the Brotherhood More especially he now teacheth our duties to godly men to the true servants of God These we must embrace with an intire and hearty affection we must love all and do good unto all but especially unto the Brotherhood brotherly kindeness which is a very natural and intire inward affection is due to the children of God Speak we first of love to their persons then to their fellowship and Company For their persons We must love them with a more then ordinary affection The more lively we observe Gods image to be in any the more we must love such others we are not bound to love with the like affections Those did David love in such did he delight a fit patern for our imitation We must love such 1. Because of their nearness to us if we belong to God They are our Brethren we have the same Father God the same Mother the Church of God born of the same immortal seed nourished up with the same sincere milk of the Word have the same Sacraments the same Savior our eldest Brother Christ Jesus and look also for the same Inheritance in Heaven and is not this very near They are also members of the same body that we be fellow-members with us and of the same Houshold and Family even the Houshold of Faith 2. In respect of their excellency They are washed in Christs Blood covered with his righteousness are more glorious then the Sun endued with the sanctifying Spirit have Angels to their attendants all the Creatures theirs they live under the hope of eternal glory the world was made for them and abides for their sakes If a man saw the honor of a Christian and Childe of God he would fall down before him and kiss the ground he stands on 3. For that they are in great favor with God He loves them dearly and hath rebuked even Kings for their sakes He that toucheth them toucheth the apple of his eye Now those whom God loves we should also love yea whatsoever is done to them good or ill he counts it as done to himself 1. This rebuketh those that are so far from thus affecting them as that of all persons they cannot away with them but mock them as Ishmael did Isaac and Michol David but rail on them as Shimei tell Tales of them as Doeg persecute them as Saul seek to entrap them as the Scribes Pharisees and Herodians yea and like Judas betray them of this sort all places are full neither is there any so base in a Town or so ignorant that he cannot say the Lords-Prayer but he can mock and rail on them that make conscience of their ways yea the Devil is such a cunning School-master as that though we can beat nothing into some mens heads they be so blockish yet the Devil can teach them to be very expert to jest at them that fear God and this hath ever been the fashion of the world
present state They were once in a poor case in a piteous taking in a miserable and dangerous case but now through Gods mercy they were come home to Christ who most carefully did and would protect them to their Salvation Before they came to Christ their case was woful and dangerous as is the state of all unregenerate persons but now having taken hold of Christ their condition was safe happy as it s with all believers and penitent persons For ye were as sheep going astray Speak we first of the miserable state of all unregenerate men of all men without Christ they are as sheep going astray 1. Every Natural man is like a beast who is therefore in Scripture compared to several sorts of beasts for one ill quality or another as to Dogs for their malicious barking and biting at them they live with to Wolves for their greedy devouring of the poor to Lyons for their cruel tyranny to fat fat Bulls for their proud abuse of their prosperity to Hogs for their rude and unreverent base esteeming of Spiritual things as the Word and Sacraments and Gods Ministers to Foxes as Herod for their craft so to Horses and Mules for their ignorance and unruliness yea sometimes the beasts are preferred before them to shame them and sometimes they are sent to school to them nay all Gods Creatures are more serviceable then Man they obey God in their kind and abide in their first estate the Sun Moon and Stars obey God in their courses the huge Sea rageth and is calm at his bidding if he command it to stand as a wall it doth so to let Israel go through and will return again upon the same warrant and drown Pharaoh if God bid the Whale swallow Jonah and cast him up again it obeys him in both if he forbid the Lyons to touch Daniel they stir not though very hungry as the fire did not burn the three Children c. But man that should be best of all and for whom all were made as he for God yet walk stubbornly and rebelliously omitting what 's required of him and doing what 's again and again prohibited therefore God calls all Creatures to witness against man yea they are many times to set themselves against us as when the heavens become as brass and the earth as iron c. and to groan because of us as being weary of doing any further service to such as we are O how ought this to humble all that be such that know no mark of conversion or change in themselves from their unregenerate condition small cause hast thou to be proud the Horse thou ridest on is far better then thou art it doth that for which God did ordain it but thou doest not that which the Lord requireth of thee nay the Dog that keeps thy Yard and ears bones under thy table is in a better case then thou art its serves God in its kinde thou never didst any thing that God set thee here for O humble thy self before God crave of him to work an alteration in thee for he onely can do it and that by the Ministery of his word Thus can he bring it to pass delivering thee from thy brutish nature turning thee into a Christian man renewing in thee his image and working of grace that so thou mayest serve him in a better maner then other creatures either do or can do so shalt thou be more happy then they for they as they have no pain so they shal have no glory but thou shalt go from hence to everlasting glory in the Kingdom of Heaven But as for all that continue in their Rebellion as they are worse then beasts in their life so shall they be in their end for their death is but a beginning to eternal misery O how happy were it for every man that shall dye in his sins if he were turned this day into a Dog or Toad and no further account to be taken of him 2. As a Sheep that wandereth is out of his way so is every natural and unregenerate man quite out of his way out of the way to Peace and Happiness We were created in the right way but in Adam all went astray we have no minde but of wandering and roaming further and further the longer we live till God take us into the right way so that whosoever dyes in the way he was born in and lived in first must needs perish it s the way of ignorance of sin the broad way to destruction Some go out of the way by ignorance some by superstition some by prophaneness by hypocrisie by trusting to civility c. naturally we do all go from God and Peace to Hell and the Devil Abraham was out of his way whilest he was an Idolater so Paul whilest he was a Persecutor The wicked they go astray even from the womb they wander from every good work and do nothing well or pleasing to God They delight to wander and take pleasure in their sins yea that they thus wander may appear by these signs They refuse instruction and reproof whether publike or private whereas the regenerate account those to love them indeed which tell them of their faults they live even in known sins they are altogether for the world having no communion with God in holy duties they have no love to good company but associate themselves with others like themselves and of their own stamp If they do good duties it s for sinister respects not out of conscience Thus the Devil misleads some Antichrist seduceth thousands by false Doctrine and miracles as wicked Ministers by seldom or erroneous teaching and bad lives So is the world a great deceiver by bad examples by false reports of the servants of God and by the profits and pleasures thereof yea a mans own heart is a great deceiver as whereby many think they are in the way to Heaven when they be in the way to destruction Ignorance also of the Scriptures is a great cause of being deceived Ye erre saith our Savior not knowing the Scriptures nay God in justice gives some over to believe lyes as Ahab was seduced by false Prophets to his destruction they may provoke God so long by their wandering that he will never reclaim or bring them home but swear in his wrath they shall never enter into his rest they may despise the means so long as no Sermon shall do them good These are in a fearful state marked to destruction as Trees to be felled This also should humble men for what are they but stragling creatures and make them desire to get into the right way But how few will take knowledge they be out of their way thinking still their case to be good enough as the Lord complained by Jeremiah I hearkened and heard but none spake aright no man repented him of his wickedness saying What have I done c. There
members If we shall do thus for others shall not they do the like for us Herein Nehemiah may be our patern though he were in great prosperity yet hearing of the miseries of Gods people he so mourned that it was seen in his face he used his best credit with the King and by his permission undertook a painful journey with much hazard to remedy the same 1. This rebuketh those which rejoyce at the destruction of the Church and members thereof as the Papists would have done had their Powder-treason been effected and as carnal people do when the godly fall either into any trouble or sin Thus did the Edomites in the day of Jerusalem but he that is glad at calamities shall not be unpunished Job rejoyced not at the destruction even of him that hated him who so thus doth the Lord will not turn away his wrath from him 2. It condemneth those which instead of grieving at the afflictions of their Brethren are the onely authors thereof by Oppression Bribery Extortion and such cruel dealing so was Pharaoh unto the Israelites as Paul a cruel persecuter till he was converted Now if they that grieve not with them and help them not in their miseries will be found guilty and condemned at the last day what shall become of those men of blood that have been the cause of their overthrow The cryes of Gods poor servants ascend against them and will bring destruction upon them as the Israelites upon Pharaoh 3. It condemneth those that whatsoever be the case of the Church or Christians or Neighbors have no regard thereof but give themselves over to Ease Pleasure Belly chear Thus did Ahasuerus and Haman thus the rich Glutton in the Gospel but there 's a curse prepared for such others are like stocks and stones neither grieve in heart pity in tongue nor afford any comfort to those that are in distress they may sink or swine for all them They think it well if they hurt no man but this will not serve their turn O what comfort can such look for either from God or men in their extremity yea it s also a great fault amongst Christians that they minde so much their own matters that they are little affected this way seldom pray for such as are in distress slowly visit them and slenderly relieve them Who knows what temptations they may meet with It s no easie thing to go alone through trouble without help it s an Argument such have shrewd obstruction by Self-love and Covetousness wherewith they are much benumb'd half dead through want of Spiritual moisture We must labor to put away those to be purged and rid of them and labor to finde our souls to be in a good state and plight by our sensisible sympathizing at our brothers miseries Are we guilty herein It concerns us to be much humbled for the same and to labor for Reformation then shall we with comfort look up to God in our afflictions and may be assured that if God shall lay his hand upon us not a few will help shore us up and that 's no small comfort in affliction Love as brethren Love as children of the same Father love each other as it becometh Christians love one another with a brotherly love Hereof I have spoken on Chap. 1. ver 22. Here onely consider wha● Christians are to do and what to avoid that they may love one another 1. We are 1. To provoke one another unto the duties of love 2. In all we do to or for the Saints we must strive to do the same in a loving maner 3. We must hide our brothers infirmities not blazing them abroad to their disgrace not estranging our selves from them for wrongs they do us but gently rebuking them for the same 4. If our brother trespass against us we must shew our selves easie to be entreated upon his acknowledgement thereof 2. We must avoid 1. Familiar society with the wicked of the world 2. Take heed of such as sow discord 3. Not desire worldly greatness whether in Church or Commonwealth 4. Not be wise in our own conceits but esteem of others judgement as well as our own 5. Not be altogether addicted to our own worldy affairs thereupon affecting retiredness from the society of others 1. This reproves those that love like and use all alike the loose and prophane give them as good content as the good and vertuous 2. It reproves them that like the godly worst or could like them well were they not so precise 3. It reproves the contentions between Christians we should love one another with brotherly affection and shew the same by brotherly actions but how do many fall out for trifles What a fearful thing is this How monstrous and prodigious for one member to offer violence unto another To see brethren contend before God their Father in the face of the Church their Mother and before their fellow-brothers and Christians in Christ that grieve at it yea before the wretches of the world that laugh at it how strange is it When two Christians fall out and be at variance do they not unchristian and unbrother each other O the strength and violence of our corruption breaking asunder this band What shall tye men together if the Spirit of Love be not strong enough O that we could remember with Abraham that there are Canaanites and Perizzites in the land O that the unregenerate would labor for Sanctification whereby they may begin to love God and their brethren and the regenerate labor to pull out all these weeds of Pride Covetousness Envy Frowardness c. that this tender plant of Love taking root in their hearts may so thrive that it may fructifie in their lives and conversation and they may abound more and more therein Be pitiful Pity is an holy compassion of the heart whereby we are ready to relieve them that are in misery whether our selves or others Herein there must be both the affection of the heart and help of the hand For our selves we are by nature in a most woful and fearful condition we are sinners and so under the curse of God and subject to eternal condemnation hereafter and therewithal the vassals and slaves of Sin and the Devil Now we are bound to love our selves first therefore to pity our selves in any misery If we be in any bodily misery as pains poverty or the like we moan our selves complain and grieving seek to relieve our selves so ought we to take knowledge of the miseries of our souls and labor to get our selves out of the same We must not be quiet till we have got the assurance of the pardon of our sins and that there is no condemnation unto us we must give no sleep to our eyes nor slumber to our eye-lids till we finde our selves thus delivered And considering that of our selves we have no strength to any thing that is
which is That thus to put up wrongs were the way indeed still to have more and more wrongs put upon us as if they should precisely follow the Rule of the Word in their dealings poverty and beggery could not but quickly come upon them both which are and have been found contrary 2. Whoso desires to live and that peaceably let him take this course hating and avoiding trouble and vexation so much as in him lieth Let us learn to be wise and thus provide for a quiet life that we may be the fitter to serve God and do good to our selves and others if we do not believe and practice the same we shall do him less honor then we do a Physician whose prescripts we use for procuring health and when trouble comes upon us we may justly blame our selves for the same O be guided by the Word how else shall you live a comfortable and quiet life David and Peter who here urge the same knew this by experience What is herein required of us hath been throughout all ages long taught though not much learn'd Thus in general For he that will love life Life and long life are blessings of God to be desired and delighted in of Gods children See to this purpose Gen. 25. 8. Exod. 20. 12. Job 5. 26. 1 Chron. 29. 28. Psal. 128. 6. Prov. 3. 16. yea the Apostle counts it a mercy of God that Epaphroditus was restored to health To be taken away untimely is as an apple pulled from the Tree before it be ripe by living long we shall get to our souls an assurance of Gods love with more and more evidences thereof to the encrease of our joys hereby also we have time and means to grow in grace and sanctification and to have the image of God restored in us more clearly and fully hereby also we shall do God much service in Church and Commonwealth and that better at the last then at the first as being bettered through experience and hence it is that Gods servants have sometimes prayed against death and desired still to live as David and Hezekiah Quest. How is this to be counted a blessing seeing many of Gods dear servants go without it and are taken away betimes R. It s but a Temporal blessing and so Gods people may be debarred thereof as of health wealth and such like and that sometimes for correction of sin howsoever God saveth their souls as on the Corinthians for their unworthy receiving of the Sacrament so good Josiah going to war without Gods command was killed in the battel so many a Minister is taken from his people for their making no better use of him as many a husband from his wife for not regarding him or trusting too much on him the like might be instanced in other sometimes in mercy that they may not see the evils to come and thus also amends is made them they are paid weight in gold for weight in silver in stead of long life in this world they have longer time in Heaven Q. How is long life a blessing seeing even many of the wicked enjoy it R. Though it be in it self a blessing as whereby they enjoy many good comforts in this life and are not so soon in Hell as they deserve and besides have space and time to repent yet as they handle the matter it s no blessing but contrarily proves a means of the encrease of their sin and so of their condemnation Quest. How is life and the continuance thereof to be desired as a blessing seeing it hath been the desire of Gods people to be dissolved and to be with Christ R. We must not desire to live because we would live but because we would live to Gods glory our own and the good of others neither must we desire to dye for it self for that is against nature nor because of our crosses and troubles but that we may cease to sin and be with God in his heavenly Kingdom perfectly both holy and happy We must desire to be with God but yet we must not be so importunate as though we would prevent the Lord and make away our selves wittingly or negligently shorten our lives Again we must not so love our life as that we should be unwilling to yield it up if God will or to redeem the continuance thereof with an ill Conscience and denying God for he that so loves his life shall lose it and his soul too Both then may be desired but because we know not what is best we must not be our own carvers but commend our selves to God to be disposed of It s a base thing to desire life to be great enjoy pleasures be revenged of our enemies and the like Q. Whence is it that most men are strongly carried after long life R. 1. Through the corruption of nature To love life is natural but to love it so exceedingly is of corruption 2. Through ignorance and unbelief of the things of a better life 3. Through the love of worldly profits pleasures and prefermentss That such fail herein may thus appear we should not love the world nor the things thereof The whole world cannot satisfie the soul our life is but a breath a blast our days are determined beyond which we cannot pass we are here but strangers and pilgrims So long as we live we are lyable as well to sin as crosses by reason thereof Of the things here wherein we place happiness what certainty is there friends may forsake us fail us remove from us dye wealth also and honor are uncertain There 's no small labor both in getting and keeping them as there cannot but be grief in parting with them yea for the most part they prove hurtful and drown men in perdition In a word the commodities of a better life are infinitely beyond all those in this life 1. Seeing long life is a blessing we ought to be heartily thankful to God that we have lived thus long and do yet live 2. When we crave of God the continuance thereof we must so use it as that it may be a blessing to us wherein we may get the assurance of our Salvation grow in grace and do good They that do thus may account their life a blessing for those that do otherwise it had been good they had dyed long ago 3. We must take heed that we do not shorten our lives and so deprive out selves of this blessing through Whoring Drinking Gaming too too many thus do as if they should not be ni Hell time enough 4. We ought to use all good means for the continuance of their lives that be dear to us be careful especially not to provoke God to deprive us of them so should Subjects of their Prince and godly Magistrates People of their faithful Pastors Husbands and Wives each of other c. And see good days That is enjoy here in this world
acknowledge Christ Jesus and our Faith and Hope of Salvation in him as of whom the Prophets foretold and who did every way for time place maner c. fulfil their prophecies of him This we must believe with our hearts and confess with our mouthes in this Faith we must both live and dye The like might be instanced about Justification if by Papists we should be called to an account Thus Moses came often before Pharaoh to justifie his demand thus Elias did acknowledge and maintain the true God and his pure worship against Ahab and his false Prophets so Daniel and the three Children so the Apostles so the Apostle Paul so the Church of Pergamos so the holy Martyrs they could not be drawn from the truth either by promises threats or torments so in this Land in the days of Queen Mary Gods servants shewed good skill in the Word and made known their Christian courage Reasons hereof may be these 1. That it may appear God hath some that know and love and will defend his Truth as the Devil also the contrary 2. That we may declare we be not ashamed nor afraid of men to confess the cause of God 3. That we may confirm our own consciences and may also if possible win others to the truth as Paul had almost done Agrippa No doubt many standers by were won by Pauls defences and the Martyrs and not a few weak ones confirmed the rest being left without excuse 1. This condemneth that horrible wicked practice of the Church of Rome in keeping the people in miserable blindeness and holding it a deadly fin for them to read any part of Scripture in a tongue they understand or any book touching the true Faith and Religion nay read both Scriptures and Prayers to them in an unknown tongue and lock up all knowledge from them and means thereof like the Scribes and Pharisees that took away the Key of Knowledge How shall they then be ready to give an account of their Faith They must believe as the Church believes and that is all they can get onely they preach to them in their own language which yet is but lyes and errors for truth This is most gross robbery of the people Christ bid Search the Scriptures they charge the contrary and curse them that do It s cruel tyranny and murther of their souls they take away their weapons that they may make a prey of their souls as the Philistines did from the Israelites to keep them under Those are not of Moses his minde that wished That all Gods people might prophesie nor of St. Pauls That the Word of Christ might dwell in them richly in all wisdom c. None have need to be discouraged from seeking knowledge for most be too careless and lazy 2. This rebuketh the gross ignorance of most part of people that notwithstanding this light that we have and so many helps of preaching liberty of reading and so many Books of all kindes and of the grounds of our Religion yet know not what they hold nor what be the points of their Religion but as Market news they hear they must serve God and come to Church and must be saved by Jesus Christ but to prove that he is the true Christ or that they must be saved by him and by no other in whole nor in part or that the Scripture is the Word of God they are altogether ignorant and so might be carried away to any Religion This is an horrible sin especially considering the helps and liberty which we enjoy What notorious carelesness is this must we not buy the truth prize the truth know it hold it fast not part therewith Most have such skill in worldly businesses that they are altogether unskilful in the Word regard not the means of their Salvation This is condemnation that light is come into the world and men love darkness more then the light O how many perish for want of knowledge yet are there some which having knowledge but not the love of the truth nor Faith in God will flinch from it if ever they be tryed for there is no hold of him that loves not the truth though he have never so much knowledge as we may read of Dr. Pendleton and others in Queen Mary's time Such if they be in company of Papists of Cavillers or Railers they can stand or sit still and say nothing How would these confess the truth with peril of their lives when they be affriad of a great man c Let such know that Christ esteems them as his enemies For he that is not with him is against him they being ashamed of him in this world he will be no less ashamed of them on the last and great day 3. O then let all of us labor for knowledge and to be grounded in our Religion and to know the points of Catechism and be able to prove them by some place of Scripture so as we may be bold to believe them and stand to the defence of them To this end we must give ear to Catechizing read the grounds of Religion and study the Scriptures in humility and with Prayer having a care to know the will of God and to be guided by it and to stand in the defence of it to Gods glory against such as oppose it This is the glory of a man of a Christian to make confession of his Faith in Christ and stand to the defence of it this God may justly expect of us it hath been performed by them which had not the hundredth part of the means which we have O let us both love and live in the Truth sticking close thereto whatsoever it cost us And if at any time we shall hear it spoken against we must have the zeal of God in us to stand in the defence thereof Thus confessing Christ here among men he will confess us before his Father in Heaven and his holy Angels Of the hope that is in you Faith and hope must be rooted in our hearts ere we utter the same with our tongues In vain do we talk of things whereof we have not the inward feeling With meekness and fear Here 's the maner for good things must be done in a right maner we must temper our courage and zeal in setting out the truth with meekness and fear we must avoid pride and insolency by forgetting our places or those we have to speak to or breaking out into violent speeches mockings gibings or such like for so we may do much hurt and this is unbeseeming the Spirit of Gods Servants Besides the things we speak of being the matters of God our speech and behavior must be sutable thereunto This rebuketh the preposterous zeal of some which defending the truth and a good cause forget duty and respect to their Superiors and break out into violent and unseemly speeches and be at defiance by and by and straight condemn
on Christs passion O it s a fruitful mother of many children To know that sin is enmity against God fights against the soul brings death with it is not so available to kill sin as to know and meditate on this That Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh From the necessity of Christs sufferings whereof I have already spoken in the foregoing Chapter Note 1. Our woful and miserable condition as we are of our selves 2. The ugliness and hainousness of sin in Gods account 3. The admirable mixture of Justice and Mercy with the unspeakable love of God and Christ Jesus The Jews said He loved Lazarus well because he wept for him much more may we say That he loved us because he hath dyed for us David loved Absolom well who wished that he might have dyed for him how much then hath Christ loved us having indeed dyed for us O what love do we owe for this so great love 4. The happiness of such as do truly believe and repent their debt is fully discharged and having right unto Christ there 's nothing that the Lord will deny them 5. That we are to renounce all false ways of Salvation the Jews the Turks and the Papists way all other ways besides this 6. That we are to labor to know we have part in this yea Christ having suffered we must also bear afflictions patiently Arm your selves likewise c. The duty whereunto we are exhorted is to suffer in the flesh to mortifie our flesh that is our corrupt and sinful nature and the lusts and sins thereof both inward and outward But 1. Most are so far from mortifying their lusts that they follow them with greediness and cannot endure any to speak against them These be fools indeed to destroy their own souls by living in enmity and opposition against God 2. Some it may be refrain some lusts but others they live in and yield to and yet these will claim part in the death of Christ hope to be saved by Christ but so long as it s thus with them its impossible that they should have any part in Christ. Do we therefore labor for mortification applying the edge of the Word of God to the throat of our lusts That we may not give way hereto le ts often call to minde the threatnings of the Word the Sacraments of Baptism and the Lords Supper what God offers us there and what we convenanted with him for the crosses which our lusts have drawn on us Gods manifold mercies unto us but especially meditate on Christs death and passion which is indeed a strong corrasive to eat out sin for our corruptions remain too rank and through want of care and too much yielding thereto be not subdued as they ought Let us know that he is the best Christian not that hears most or knows most or can utter most but he that hath most power over his affections and heart Note further from hence That as our lusts fight against us so we must furnish our selves like Soldiers that we may prevail against them It s no easie thing to get out of sin or to get the Mastery thereof it s to mortifie our members to pluck out our right eyes and cut off our right hands It s easier to take any pains in offering sacrifice nay fast extraordinarily and to part with our goods with thousands of Rams and ten thousand rivers of oyl yea with our first born then to part with one beloved sin They that would overcome their lust must not stand still or be without weapons we have that within us which rebelleth against the Law of God and would lead us captive to the Law of sin which is in our members Hereunto the Devil addes his power the world also joyns herewith by ill examples bad counsels mockings revilings c. and therefore we must be resolute and play the Soldiers if we would get out of our bad course Through want hereof some even under a powerful ministery be never converted some get a little way but hang behinde in sin some are a great while ere they can get out whom the Word having called and awakened the world the Devil and their own lusts do again freshly assault nay some being truly converted yet fall back again into foul security and have yet strong corruptions and many odde qualities c. 1. This rebukes most of the world who do indeed joyn with these enemies few fight against them but fewer resolutely and therefore are led captive of them to their destruction 2. This may provoke us to put on the whole armor of God to arm our selves on all occasions and in all temptations with good thoughts and meditations of the ugliness of sin danger of it its hatefulness to God with the passion of our Savior Christ O how few arm themselves or when they do it s but to halves O this must be put on and kept on continually night and day we shall sleep never the worse there can be no truce between us and our enemies This must be kept even in the times of greatest prosperity Ships usually are cast away in storms but Christians may miscarry when its calm Thus was it with David he abode constant in all Sauls storms but in the time of peace was carried away with Bathsheba's beauty It must be kept on even in our old age and till death for then will the Devil set himself most against us and both Noah Moses and others did then catch worse foils then ever before Suffered in the flesh To mortifie our corrupt nature is called suffering in the flesh and the truth is its hard to say whether is harder to suffer bodily torments and pains or to mortifie a mans lust O it s a death to part with them yea when in a man after long strife between the grace of God and his corrupt nature in the work of his conversion grace prevails it s even as the pangs of death as when the Devil went out of the childe he threw him down and he lay foaming as if he had been dead O it s not so easie a matter as the blinde and prophane world imagine Hath ceased from sin That is living in any sin For he that is born of God sinneth not and He that committeth sin is of the Devil That he no longer c. The whole time of our life that remains after we are called to repentance ought to be spent in the service of God and practice of Repentance and a new life We owe all our life to him all the days of our life the whole time we owe all to him who hath made and preserved us nothing to any other What time therefore we have spent in sin we have robb'd God of it and so ought willingly to give him the remainder redeeming that is past with all diligence The time past we know but
in our thoughts It s his will that we should be patient but we burst out upon small occasions It s his will that we should keep holy the Sabbath day but we do for the most part prophane the same Herein we do but foolishly for if we mark it as we do if we be of God and I speak to such we have ever checkings of conscience and smart for it as peace in cleaving close to his will O how often do we lose our comfort and pull crosses on our selves Note we further from these words 1. That to live after the lusts of men and to the will of God be opposite each to other our inward lusts with the desires and fruits thereof are enmity against God and as contrary to the holy will of God as light and darkness God and the Devil for the Devil and our corrupt hearts be much alike no marvel then if we think so well of our selves and make so much of our lusts 2. That we cannot at one and the same time both walk after our lusts and live to Gods will or live to Gods will and walk but after our lust God and Satan can never dwell in one heart together as neither the love of sin and goodness This well considered would discover some to be in a worse case then they think they think seeing they have renounced many lusts and most sins and are in many things obedient one sin is not so much but though they love that they do love God and goodness too Deceive not your selves its impossible it should be so one lust loved is sufficient to prove a man unconverted sufficient also to condemn him and all his other obedience is vain If thou wouldest indeed please God and be saved renounce the love of every lust and walk in obedience to all Gods Commandments 3. That in the course of Sanctification we must begin at renouncing our own will and the lusts of men None sow or plant till weeds be pulled up None put on new apparel till they have put off their rags So must we abandon all the love of evil ere we can entertain any good This rebukes the common course of the world that set upon goodness ere they have bid adew to their lusts All their service is abomination before God 4. That it s not sufficient that we do renounce our lusts and evil except we yield obedience to the will of God Thus the Scriptures run Cease to do evil and learn to do well abhor that which is evil and cleave unto that which is good deny godliness and worldly lusts and live holily and soberly c. dye to sin and live to righteousness put off the old man and put on the new cast off the works of darkness and put on the armor of light It s nothing or at least but half if a man hath renounced ill company if he hath not taken up the love of good It s not for il-doing that men shal be condemned but for the not doing good Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit shall be hewn down and cast into the fire It s not enough we have no disorder in our families or be no ryotors or ill example givers therein except we take up good orders in stead thereof It s not enough we do no hurt if we do no good He that gathereth not scattereth and he that doth no good in a Town doth hurt An house empty and swept if it be not garnished with goodness its fit to be possest of Satan again yet how many think highly of themselves because they have done no hurt have not wronged oppressed defrauded any who yet have done no good 5. That it s not one action or two whereby a man is discovered what he is but his constant course of walking or living The best man may be and is overtaken as Noah Lot David Peter doing according to his own lusts and will not Gods but such is not his constant course yea when he doth otherwise then is fit he is grieved and humbled unfainedly repenteth and earnestly desireth to be more watchful over his own ways We must not because of some corruptions conclude against our selves that we are not the Lords if in the mean time our hearts bear us witness that what we do is contrary to our intent and purpose our course and drift of life on the contrary it s not one good action or two that makes a good Christian if a mans course be contrary thereto for even a Thief will be sometimes in the Kings highway when it s for his advantage whereas usually he keeps in back lanes and blinde ways Thus many a bad man will come to hear the word this is one of Gods ways but all the day after he will be in his own course even lying swearing drinking deceiving without any reformation either in heart or life Verse 3. For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles when we walked in lasciviousness lusts excess of wine revellings banquettings and abominable idolatries HEre are more Reasons to perswade to holiness of life They had already spent a great deal of time in the service of sin and following their own lusts and therefore were not now to continue any longer therein Again whereas before the Gospel they lived in ignorance now having the light thereof another maner of behavior judgement and practice was looked for of them But one would think a few words might serve to disswade men from such filthy lusts so odious in themselves so hateful to God so harmful to the doers thereof and to perswade to holiness of life so beautiful in it self so acceptable to God and so profitable to those which did seek after the same True if we were as we should be or as we were in Adam but we are altogether corrupted and depraved and now we have no minde to that which is good nay its death and bonds to us but that which is evil we eagerly minde and seek after whereunto may be added that hereunto the Devil and the world egg us on as they hang on us to hold us back from goodness Hence it is that so few are converted that men count goodness a prison naughtiness their heaven that they mock at goodness and onely except against some men because they are good whom they could love for all other things but for that they hate him 1. Let us take knowledge of our vile disposition le ts not follow the bent thereof lest we perish It misleads us altogether let us use all diligence to mortifie our lusts and to strengthen us to good for it s no easie matter to attain this 2. Let us be perswaded that there is continual need of preaching and all other good means to bring this to pass and not say with most What need all this preaching c 3. Let Ministers be
to 2. Having any ability for the discharge thereof give the glory to God the giver thereof That God in all things may be glorified The Confirmation or Reason why we ought to do our duties faithfully even that we may thereby glorifie God Hence note 1. That God is glorified in the careful performance of our duties in our places He is glorified by a Magistrates wise zealous and impartial execution of Justice for hereby sin is curbed sinners it may be brought to repentance the poor and innocent comforted and so stirred up to praise God for his Ordinance of Magistracy So when Ministers are faithful in their places the ignorant are enlightened the wicked humbled the heavy in heart comforted the weak strengthened the drowsie awakened and so have cause as many do daily to praise God highly for the ministery of his Word Thus Housholders in their places husbands and wives in theirs the rich by their liberality and hospitality nay even Servants by their conscionable discharge of their places may glorifie God 1. This should provoke us much to faithfulness in our places not onely others shall have good our selves comfort and a good report but God shall be glorified which is most of all and the end of all things and we may think our selves happy that God will be honored by any thing we can do 2. How much are those blame-worthy which do not at all regard the faithful discharge of their places whether they be Magistrates Ministers or others whoso careth not for Gods glory God will set as little by them and theirs nay there are some which can see God dishonored before their faces and might redress it but do it not yea some which do even dishonor God with their gifts and in their offices assuredly God will meet with these in his due time 2. That the mark whereat we must aym at in our places is to glorifie God This rebukes those that are wholly for themselves aym altogether at base sinister carnal ends profit pleasure credit and the like They are thieves robbing God of his due They are treacherous as if one sent to woo for another and had Jewels given him for that purpose as Abrahams Servant and should make suit for himself All waters come from the Sea and return thither so should all our gifts be employed to the glory of the giver Through Jesus Christ All glory comes to God by Jesus Christ for its by him that we receive all grace and whatsoever good we enjoy He having suffered for our sins and reconciled us to the Father hath thereby purchased for us whatsoever is good grace and glory to whom alone we are beholding for all 1. This teacheth us to be exceeding thankful for Christ as without whom we could not have right to any thing we enjoy without whom it were even fearful to think of God 2. It teacheth us to labor to be united to Christ by faith that whatsoever good we need we may receive as the members from the head To whom be praise c. Having instructed others in the faithful discharge of their duties in their places and that especially that God might be glorified He now wisheth and prayeth that all glory and praise may be given to him and that for ever testifying the servency of his affection and his assent thereto by the word Amen But of this hereafter Verse 12. Beloved think it not strange concerning the fiery tryal which is to try you as though some strange thing happened unto you Verse 13. But rejoyce in as much as ye are partakers of Christs sufferings that when his glory shall be revealed ye may be glad also with exceeding joy HAving exhorted us to be good Christians he now arms us to the Cross the inseparable companion of true godliness for all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution and that both patiently and chearfully which accordingly he backeth by many forcible Reasons Each of these Verses contains an Exhortation with a Reason to enforce the same In the former Exhortation consider both the maner how it s propounded and the matter therein contained Beloved Here 's the maner He writes lovingly to them and that doubtless from an entire affection and love which he bare them Here note two things 1. What entire love should be between Ministers and people they should love one another as fathers and children mothers and children Nurses and such as have suckt their breasts Brethren c. See 1 Cor. 4. 15. Gal. 4. 19. 1 Thess. 2. 7. 2 Thess. 2. 13. Reasons hereof may be these 1. God hath committed them each to other and so they be nearly knit 2. Such as be won by the Ministery are they that must comfort their Ministers here and be their Crown hereafter the more they be the greater is their Crown whom therefore their Ministers are to love them also are their people to love no less dearly as on whom they should depend for all comfort and the means of their Salvation whose lips must preserve knowledge who are also to pray for them and teach them 3. Ministers by loving their people shall be provoked to live with them to take all courses to do them good publikely and privately as also to bear with the dulness of some the unkindeness and weakness of others Hereupon their people will reverence them regard their Teaching and chearfully allow them maintenance which did they not truly love their persons they would not 1. This teacheth both Ministers and People to be most tenderly careful to preserve mutual love and avoid all occasions of unkindeness or dislike removing them speedily when at any time they do arise for oftentimes of a small spark neglected ariseth a great flame of all unkindenesses and contentions those between Ministers and People be most unprofitable and hurtful whoso hath a hand herein and goeth about to alienate the mindes of each from the other that the one cares not for the other work journey work to the Devil in a high degree 2. This condemneth that common and most woful abuse in this Land even the miserable want of love on both parts not a few Ministers care not how seldom they come among their people and when they do how little pains they take how often do they sue them for meer trifles on the other part what light and base esteem have people of their Ministers How unkindely do they use them How pole they them of their maintenance Where it s thus God is not for God is love and there 's no good done to be sure Here the Devil may sleep till he snort he shall not be hindred but where Ministers and people live in godly love there let him look to himself 2. That we should love men never the worse for their troubles but rather the more as who are worthy to be honored for their Faith Patience Constancy and being
s through too much earthly-mindedness 3. Le ts labor for such grace as whereby if God call us forth to suffer we may not onely not flee back but endure any thing and that with joy To this end we must 1. Endeavor for a sound Faith and assurance of Gods love to us in Christ that so we may so love him again as we may suffer for his Name and being assured of our deliverance from everlasting pain and that he hath freed us from shameful sufferings which for our sins he might have brought us to may endure these glorious sufferings for his Name joyfully Being thus assured of his love and thereupon of eternal happiness in heaven we will be content to suffer any thing to obtain it 2. Withdraw our mindes from earthly things and set them on heaven and heavenly things as our onely treasure 3. Mortifie and subdue our lusts and affections bringing our hearts in subjection to God in all things and bearing our present afflictions quietly and comfortably This joyfulness in sufferings doth well become Christians daunts their adversaries and puts a difference between them and all others whether hypocrites civil persons or Time-servers who will never thus do Christians must be like Davids Worthies even excel others do more then ordinary men If we do onely love our friends what singular thing do do not even Publicans the same If we profess Religion in prosperity what great matter do we do not even Hypocrites the same We must learn to take out higher lessons and be perfect as our Father which is in heaven is perfect It s an easie thing to rejoyce in prosperity but so to do in adversity is a good hard lesson and so the more worthy a Christians labor Inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christs sufferings The first Reason of the Exhortation We are partners with Christ therefore we may think our selves advanced and so rejoyce The sufferings of Christians are called Christs sufferings 1. Because they are suffered for his sake which may be no small comfort to them that suffer for Religion for it s for Christs sake and so he counts it therefore he will put our tears in his bottle take our part defend and reward us as David took care of Abiathar having lost his Father for his sake 2. Because he bears a part of them with his Saints there 's so near a conjunction between him the Head and the Saints his Members as what 's done to the one whether good or ill is counted as done to the other as the godly hearing Christ railed on are so grieved that they had rather themselves had been so used much more doth Christ Jesus account their troubles his which as it may terrifie their adversaries so it may much comfort them But here they be called Christs sufferings in another sense namely as his own sufferings which he bare in his own person whereof we partake when we also suffer the like things we are set up to be like our Master Christ Jesus and is it not cause of rejoycing that he vouchsafeth to make us like himself to bring us into his order to pledge him of the same Cup he began to us He suffered his whole life was nothing else They misconstrued his words and mistook his deeds and said He cast out Devils through Beelzebub the Prince of the Devils How often was he railed on how hardly used especially towards his latter end If we be so dealt with at any time we need not think hardly but rejoyce not think hardly He was the glorious Son of God we poor mortal Creatures dust and ashes He most holy and righteous and perfectly pure we miserable sinners which though not at mens hands which wrong us yet at Gods have deserved all evil both here and in Hell If God turn our opprobrious sufferings here and perpetual torments of Hell into a sew short and glorious sufferings we have no cause to think hardly yea he having suffered all for us we may well suffer for him we can never lose hereby nor can ever suffer so much for him as he hath done for us nay not onely we must not think hardly at our sufferings but we have cause to rejoyce that we are advanced to be like our Master made conformable to our head Christ Jesus He is a bold Servant that is not content to fare as his Master fares Those Worthies that have gone before us have accounted it their honor and a special favor that they have drunk of this Cup. When therefore we do at any time suffer for Religions sake let 's thus encourage our selves I am herein made like all the Prophets Apostles and chief of Gods Friends and Saints yea as his onely Son and thus our Savior comforted his Disciples That when his glory shall be revealed ye may be glad also with exceeding joy The second Reason our sorrow shall be turn'd into joy as in part when we dye namely in our souls so perfectly when he shall be made glorious in all his Saints whilest he was here in the world he was put to an ignominious death but he rose again from the dead and ascended into Heaven and shall come one day to judge every man according to his deeds even to bring into happiness all those for whom he dyed and to confound all his Enemies He came the first time in meekness because he came to suffer but the second time he shall come with glory and magnificence even with thousands of his Angels in flaming fire c. which as it may comfort all those that have believed in him and stoopt to his yoke so it may terrifie all those that have not believed or repented through obeying the Gospel The end I say of the afflictions of Gods Servants will be joy for Christ will receive them all into eternal glory They that suffer with him shall reign with him and their joy shall none take from them See John 16. 33. Rom. 8. 18. 2 Cor. 4. 17. 2 Tim. 2. 12. Jam. 1. 12. O how should this not make us patient onely but joyful in persecution If we sow in tears we shall reap in joy If we suffer for Christ we may rejoyce and be glad for great is our reward in Heaven If we forsake father or mother or house or land c. for Christs sake we shall have life everlasting Is not this an happy change This made the holy Servants of God set light by all they had not that they were fools and knew not what they did or were senceless no the assurance of an eternal joy and inheritance in Heaven swallowed up all and so should it be with us Verse 14. And if ye be reproached for the name of Christ happy are ye for the spirit of glory and of God resteth upon you on their part he is evil spoken of but on your part he is glorified A Third Reason to
and then how will they answer that to God 2. It rebukes those also that living among their people yet care not thus but think themselves discharged that they meet them at Church on the Sabbath and then preach them a Sermon whereas all the week after they consider not of them nay scarce visit the sick but either are so entangled with cares and businesses of the world that they cannot or so addicted to their pleasures that they will not minde this Thus they are less fit for Preaching do the less good and receive all at a venture to the Sacrament which is a fearful thing 3. As people must be careful for their Ministers who had need of no worldly care hanging on them that they may attend on their care of them so they must be willing that their Ministers have a care of them and deal privately with them and theirs This many cannot away with but would that the Minister should content himself with seeing them at Church but not to look into their behavior in their Families or to pry into their lives or deal privately or particularly who yet if they have a shepherd look that he should diligently tend their sheep all day and look to them particularly as well as feed them they should be glad when the Minister will come to their Houses and sit with them conferring with them and theirs of heavenly things c. But if they should know when he would come they would be sure to be out of the way this is a sign of an ill conscience that they cannot abide the tryal and which is worse of a bad heart that is not willing to mend But there 's another extremity when people will expect too much at the Ministers hands as to visit them at their houses more often then the largeness of the place and his strength and time will permit which though it be a good fault and a rare therefore to be much born with for there is nothing more comely in the world then to see Ministers delight in their peoples company and people in theirs and thereupon to be much together yet it must be done as it may stand with the publique There must be convenient time to Preach that we may not come unpreparedly and if a Minister Preach also on the week days he cannot have much time for private especially in a great and wide Parish Not by constraint but willingly Now for the maner A Minister is not to perform the forementioned duties by constraint as for fear of Gods wrath mens Laws or shame c. but willingly To do by constraint is base and servile what any doth thus they do but homely no better then needs must and besides what hope of Gods blessing can they expect upon such work God loves a willing heart and a chearful doer There 's a constraint that is good whereof the Apostle writeth to the Corinthians The love of Christ hath constrained me c. namely because Christ hath pardoned my sins dyed for me hath called me to this high and holy calling to be his Ambassador to his people hath entrusted me with the souls of his People c. I will therefore in all and every these respects do my duty in the most faithful and careful maner that I can neither can I do otherwise other constraint is base A man cannot endure his Servant should thus do his work much less the Lord who hath no need of any man and if one do it not he can set up another at his pleasure 1. This rebukes those that never Preach but so often as they are bound by Law once a moneth or once a quarter as also those who for avoiding the shame of dumb idols step up and do a little but like hirelings who have no love to their work are at it in body their mindes being far therefrom 2. It may perswade all Ministers to readiness and willingnes in our duty private and publique when we finde any loathness to our study and drousiness therein le ts think what an honorable Calling ours is and that whereas others are employed on earthly things ours is in the Scriptures searching in the rich Treasures of the Word and dealing altogether in Spiritual and Holy things and again what a trust is laid up with us and what weight lyeth upon us and what a reward remaineth for us we serve a good Master in an excellent work in the assurance of most rich wages 3. People must learn also to do their duty not by constraint but willingly Thus must they reverence their Ministers hear them obey their Ministery allow them maintenance but how grudgingly do most pay their Tythes which is for want of finding good by the Word They should so take part of the Ministers Spiritual things as they may put themselves into his debt and see cause to allow him means O suffer not any of the tenth part to cleave to your fingers neither seek to enrich your selves hereby but by the remaining nine parts whoso think to enrich themselves by working on the Lords day or keeping back their Tythes deceive themselves they shall not prosper Be the Minister good or bad give him willingly all the Law gives him If he do not his duty he shall answer for it Be not you Trespassers also stoppage is no payment but if he be a sufficient and painful Minister your custom will not priviledge you from paying him his due by Gods appointment you must give him his due to the utmost and he is worthy of it But O the woful covetousness and corruption of men in this behalf They think any thing enough for a Minister though it be but from hand to mouth whereas they look to encrease themselves and think their Trade bad and themselves ill Husbands if they leave not store to their Posterity Not of filthy lucre but of a ready minde It s not enough to do our duty willingly for so we may do for filthy lucre and gain but it must be of a ready minde even the love of God and zeal of his glory and the care of the peoples Salvation and winning them to God It were a base thing that lucre should set us on work or any thing else but those high and holy ends Obj. None would preach but for their maintenance they look for it Sol. Suppose it to be so yet many preach and have not half the maintenance they spend where they live but either spend of that little God gave them by their friends or else rob other Churches as the Apostle speaketh to preach to them but it s one thing to be set on work for gain and another to expect an honest and necessary mainteinance which is a necessary help to the doing of the duty and without which it cannot be well done It comes in I say by the by as a necessary help to the duty not as the end that sets
the alarms either of mercies or judgements He sees not one step of the way to Heaven nor the danger he is in Though he wallow in the mire of foul sins that a good man will stop his nose at yet he smells nothing he cannot taste good and evil asunder but calls sweet sower The Word good Counsel good Company c. wherein Gods people take most delight are bitter to him Though the word hit him never so hard blows he feels not as neither though he wound his own conscience with never so foul sins And 2. As a man asleep loves not to be awaked so a natural man out of his sins and to be called upon to repent 3. As in sleep men dream of that they have not so a natural man dreams he is in a very good case hath faith repentance love c. when it s nothing so and when he awakes he confesseth it 4. As a man in sleep speaks some good words but knows not what and by and by is out so a natural man in good company will speak good words but hath no feeling of them and will again be quickly out of them 5. As a man before he sleeps gives direction that none awake him and turns from the one side to the other sleeping now on the one then on the other so a natural man will not be called upon to repentance having slept long enough on the one side in prodigality will haply turn on the other and lie as long in covetousness 6. As a man that hath been in a long deep sleep can hardly be awakened though it thunder though the winds be ready to blow down the house he hears nothing so it s hard to awaken any out of sin especially when they have lain long and lived therein no Preaching or calling on no Judgements of God though never so apparent can awake them from their security 7. As sleep is an image of the first death so is sleep in sin of the second Therefore we must endeavor for faith and set upon a good life we must learn to watch and keep us well while we be well To this end we must make use of the Trumpet of the Word daily sounding in our ears and take notice of Gods Judgements both on our selves and others What may not induce us hereunto Reasons are many 1. We are of the day and the light of the word shines in our faces It s enough for them in the night of Popery and where the word is not to sleep in sin he is a sluggard indeed that sleeps when the Sun shines his face Some of you have slept till nine a clok till high noon till three in the afternoon for shame awake 2. He that sleepeth in Harvest is the Son of confusion This is the plentiful harvest of the Gospel Now there is good to be done good gathering of faith knowledge repentance and such other graces 3. It s a shame to sleep when others be at work Many through Gods grace be awakened by the word and are busily working out their Salvation laboring for grace and using the means diligently and will you lie snorting in sin then will they be provided of necessaries when you will perish 4. It s a shame to sleep when all one's work lies to do but many among us have done just nothing of that that God hath set them here for nothing done towards their Salvation but all against it awake therefore ere night come when you cannot work 5. It were strange if a man should sleep when he were in great danger the house burning over their heads or in an hideous Tempest ready to be cast away but every natural man hangs as it were over the pit of Hell by a twined threed 6. It were strange if one should still sleep having many Messengers sent to awake him Some will say If any had called me I would have awaked with all my heart we are called by Sermon after Sermon by this Preacher that Preacher the other c. to whom the Lord will say Did not I send you and you to awake such a man c. you are now come under the means of awakening O that it might please God to bless his Word in piercing the ears of your soul to this end And be not half awaked and afterward when you be gone hence fall asleep again as a man in a deep sleep being called upon he begins to stir and lift up an eye and it may be his head from his pillow but hearing no more he lies down again and falls again as fast asleep as before let it not be so with us Some I doubt not begin to think with themselves about awaking and that it were good for them so to do but beware when you be gone hence you lay not your head down again but come and hear again and again till you be soundly awakened that you may not hereafter sleep any more if you be not awaked you must perish for ever A man would be loath to dye in his Natural sleep having gone well to bed and thinking of no such thing yet this cannot hurt a good man but to dye in the Spiritual sleep is damnable And I beseech you yong men and women be awakened betimes defer no longer the longer the worse Come to a man newly gone to bed ye may easily awake him come an hour after more hardly but come at midnight and then though you call and shout you can scarce awake him Sleep not till your middle age you can hardly be awaked then but if till your old age with exceeding difficulty if at all But of this also I have spoken before Because your adversary the Devil as a roaring Lyon walketh about seeking whom he may devour A Reason of the forementioned Exhortation By yielding thereto we shall take away advantage from the Devil who else will draw us into manifold temptations He is here described by all things that make a dangerous Enemy as Malice called therefore Our adversary the Devil Strength called therefore A Lyon A roaring Lyon Subtilty That he walketh about seeketh by all ways and means as by violence and craft to draw us into evil Diligence That he walketh about c. His malice is exceeding against God and man especially Gods people and against all goodness It hath been so from the beginning from his fall he was filled with malice against God laboring by all means that no reasonable creature might praise him on earth His envy also against mankinde continueth he is still a most deadly enemy against all goodness and means thereof against good persons good duties good meetings the Word Sacraments Prayer Fasting c. laboring to hinder these and the good success of them as the good Angels are filled with love and zeal to God and goodness rejoycing at the conversion of a sinner so is the Devil on the contrary yea his malice is deadly nothing will content him but our
put altogether O Lord who shall escape him 1. No marvel that most men go the broad way and perish and so few be saved seeing there is such an enemy and so armed and so followed that hath sworn all mens destruction he so malicious and we so careless of our Salvation he so strong and we so weak he so subtile and we so simple for our souls and in Spiritual things he so diligent and we so retchless and lazy in the great matters of our soul. Every man by nature loveth sin and carrieth along with him as ready a disposition to yield to temptations as Satan is to tempt him Marvel not that so few but that any are saved and if thou hast any hope and assurance wonder and praise If God were not infinite in wisdom power love and care over us we should certainly perish 2. See what wonderful need there is of diligent continual zealous earnest and plain preaching of the Word it s that must cast the strong man out This is the mean to scale his walls batter his Kingdom were it not for this he would do what he list in the world and carry all to destruction Where this is not he may sit and sleep for his work and will goes forward What should let therefore it s no marvel he is such an Enemy to it and the Preachers thereof O what should become of Gods people already pluckt out of his Kingdom if they had not the Word to shew his subtilties what is the will of God what good what evil how to do it what be the advantages that Satan takes and how we may be able to resist them Hence Gods servants are made wise and strengthened against his Temptations they come weak to the Word but go from thence mightily strengthened What do they then that seek the hinderance of the faithful and zealous preaching of the Word but gratifie the Devil in an high degree and work journey-work to him in the best maner it s to learn the Devil to have his will to devour what souls and as many as he lists 3. We may wonder and praise God that seeing there be so many Devils and such as we have spoken of that the Church of God can be upon the face of the earth that it is not rooted out and swallowed up the Devil having so many and such armed instruments in the world A wonder the Church hath any abiding but that God Almighty hath a care of it and will defend and preserve it Christ Jesus the Husband thereof will not suffer his Spouse to be trodden under We may wonder we be yet a people under this peace of the Gospel there being so many Papists within and without the Land and such an infinite number of most subtile and malicious Jesuits that like the Devil go up and down compassing the earth to work mischief That poor weak men and women in themselves sinful and poor creatures should yet be got out of Satans power and then defended from his malice not in body goods and name onely but from his deadly temptations and to escape them and get safe to Heaven O this is Gods Almighty power and goodness so may every poor Christian man say and wonder 4. This rebuketh 1. Such as make a League with the Devil to obtain their purposes It was death by the Law of God and so ought to be still What fools be these They think the Devil serves them and is at their command when indeed he hath got them to serve him and that in an high degree of sin to their destruction 2. Such as seek to such for things lost or for cure from them for them and theirs Those woful Creatures seeking to the sworn Enemy of mankinde for help are like to speed as if a Lamb should run to a roaring Lyon to be kept from harm Think they that he will do them any little pleasure outwardly unless to fasten deadly on their souls to work the ruine of them His help is as the milk which Jael presented unto Sisera 3. All such as live in sin and so serve the Devil These count him not a deadly Enemy if they did they would not be at his beck as the most part be Though they stop their ears against God their Parents Magistrates Friends yet they open them to all his temptations no Servant can serve his Master so diligently as the world doth the Devil even with all the might both of their bodies and mindes speaking and writing and employing both their goods and pains on his behalf and for sin and that both night and day What he bids them do they do Lye Swear Curse break the Sabbath Oppress Cozen Mock c. who yet for that their humor likes it and its agreeable to their own minde observe not Satans policy herein nor suspect him for an Enemy They will say they hate the Devil as much as any and defie him alas he can give them leave so to do as long as they serve him and do his works This is as good as Popish holy Water and crossing themselves 4. All civil persons that say they never found the Devil so troublesom as they hear folks talk They never doubted of their Salvation were ready to make away themselves were never troubled with such wicked and blasphemous or troublesom thoughts were never so troubled but that they could go to Church and serve God quietly c. True the Devil tempts them not to dispair because he hath them fast enough in pride and presumption He tempts them not to foul sins because he sees God hath restrained them and so that there 's no great likelihood he shall prevail neither cares he seeing he hath them fast enough in the main namely in ignorance unbelief or carelesness of the first Table He troubles them not with thoughts it may be when they go to good duties because he knows they are likely not to do any good duty yet he tempts them in things which through blindeness they discern not as being none of the foulest things as they think Though in the hearing of the Word they have many wandring by-thoughts they feel not that the Devil is at their elbow and at work with them because they make no account of such smal things also about worldly idle speeches on the Sabbath they see not Satan going along with them because they count them small whereas a good Christian in these espies Satan and is troubled thereat when the strong man hath and holds his Possession all things are at peace the Devil having these fast enough he cares not for troubling them but let him be about to be cast out and then I le warrant you he will bestir himself and they shall have trouble Let a civil man that lived never so quietly before be smitten in conscience for his sins and begin to be converted he shall finde his case altered and that the Devil will do him all the mischief he
their soul and so have these either they get no knowledge or if any onely a little swiming in the brain but not sinking down into the soul to the changing thereof 2. It teacheth all Ministers so to preach the Word as by all means possible they may win some what should our desire be but so to do whether we consider the love we owe to God or to our people that their salvation will be our crown To this end we must preach those points most diligently and carefully that be most effentially necessary to work conversion we must beat upon mens misery labor to bring them to Faith and Sanctification c. without these all other points will be unprofitable Unpreaching Ministers have no possibility of winning souls 3. People should so hear the Word as they labor and pray it may be powerful by the Spirit to their conversion and new birth they must have a Spiritual Father as well as a Natural Father must be born again ere they dye else happy had they been if they had never had their first birth le ts try our selves herein It s not hearing the Word yea with joy and reforming some things that is Regeneration it s not to be restrained from the gross evils of the world or to be somewhat changed in some things alas Regeneration is another matter then that wherein many deceive themselves and perish knowing no more what is Regeneration then Nicodemus when he first came unto Christ nor laboring after it to finde it with the fruits and signs thereof My Son He calls him so also of tender love as Paul One simus his own bowels Here note That The Ministers of God ought exceedingly to love all Gods people but chiefly such as have been won to God by their means They must cherish and further such all they can as the Hen when she hath hatched her Chickens broods and tends them and as the Mother after she hath brought forth her childe is careful to keep it from harm and to provide all necessaries for it they must watch over them preach to them pray for them not depart from them but in the case of absolute necessity as the Apostles having won any to God would come again to them exhorting them to continue in the grace of God confirming their hearts c. so must we they be our comfort and joy here and crown hereafter our Epistles of commendation the seals of our Ministery they that make us rejoyce and give thanks therefore we are much beholding to them and must love them most dearly and desire the work begun may be happily perfected knowing it s no less wisdom and thrift to hold that we have gotten then to get more Accordingly must the Spiritual Children love their Spiritual Fathers dearly They ought to love all Instructers but as Children their Parents so they them best by whom they have been begotten to God They ought to give them double honor to reverence them and not to suffer them want necessary comforts In doubtful cases of Conscience they must resort to them for counsel as Children to their Father They must obey all their godly precepts endure their severity be guided by all their godly directions receive no accusation against them under two or three witnesses c. A childe will not hear much less believe any evil reports of his Father For those people that set light by their Ministers can suffer them to want fall out with them if he be gone we shall have one as good as he c. its questionable whether ever they were converted by their Ministery for we see by experience that such as are converted their hearts be so knit to their Spiritual Father that they think best of his counsel praise God for him as the instrument of their conversion love him dearly c. we love the fathers of our bodies and ought so to do and yet they help us to a being in sin and into a sinful world and state and should we not love our Spiritual Fathers through whom we are changed therefrom The Separatists therefore are either unconverted persons as I doubt not but sundry are or else they be most unnatural and unthankful persons in railing against all the Ministers of England and so against their own Spiritual Fathers They spi on their faces and call their Mother Whore O most wretched requital Verse 14. Greet ye one another with a kiss of charity Peace be with you all that are in Christ Jesus Amen THe last part of the conclusion consisting 1. Of an Exhortation to embrace each other with love and to testifie the same by outward signs 2. Of a Prayer for them that all that be true Believers in Christ Jesus might have all prosperity and welfare to which he joyns the note of his faith and fervency Amen So concluding his Epistle with all signs of love In general That he contents not himself that he loved them but labors to further love among them we may note how needful this duty is where love is we must endeavor the continuance and encrease thereof where its crazy we must use means to heal it Blessed be the peace makers It s a sign they are endued with the wisdom which is from above All our words should tend to make love the Devils Cole-carriers and Bellows that blow up strife rejoyce in folks contentions and further encrease the same A woful office who gets hereby but the Devil except the Lawyers hap to get too Greet one another To Salute each other hath been an ancient custom in the Church of God whereof you may finde the forms Judg. 6. 12. Ruth 2. 4. Psal. 129. 8. Luke 1. 28. and 10. 5. John 20. 19. and elsewhere Ours also are commendable when we meet any we say God save you when any goes from us God be with you or Fare you well in the morning we say God give you a good morning in the afternoon God give you a good night when any is at meat we pray God that much good it may do them when one goes a journey we say God speed you in your journey when at work God speed your work when one is come newly to an office God give you joy of your office c. These ought we to use as occasion serveth both to our Superiors more reverently by the Titles that are due to them of worship honor c. our equals with good respect and somewhat familiarly as we look they should to us and to our inferiors that they may not think themselves despised and so be discontent with their place and with God and it s a base thing to tread under ones inferiors Thus we must salute not our friends onely but strangers but our enemies Even blessing them that curse us and praying for them persecute us Else we shall be but like the Publicans who salute those that salute them so we must salute not onely good men though
of our Ancestors is no sure rule Use. Pro. 10. 19. Doct. The things of this world are insufficient to redeem any out of his spiritual bondage Reas. 1. Psal. 24. 1. Psal. 50. 10. Reas. 2. Reas. 3. Reas. 4. Prov. 6. 35. Reas. 5. Pro. 11. 4. Ezek. 7. 19. Zeph. 1. 18. Reas. 6. Psal. 49. 7. Reas. 7. Use 1. Acts 8. 20. Use 2. Mat. 4. 9 10. Heb. 11. 25. Use 3. Iob 1. 11. Doctr. The things of this world are corruptible vain and uncertain 2 Pet. 3. 10. Use 1. Pro. 23. 5. 1 Tim. 6. 17. Iames 2. 5. Use 2. 1 Tim. 6. 17. Prov. 10. 15. Iob 31. 24. Use 3. Use 4. Doctr. Christs blood the true price of mans Redemption Rom. 5. 19. Phil. 2. 8. Acts 3. 15. 20. 28. Isa. 53. 5. Acts 4. 12. Rev. 13. 8. Heb. 13. 8. 10. 14. See Rom. 3. 25. Eph. 1. 7. 1 Pet. 2. 24. 1 Iohn 1. 7. Rev. 1. 5. Object Sol. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Use 4. Heb. 10. 29. Use 5. Simile Iohn 3. 16. Use 6. 1 Cor. 6. 2● Simile Use 7. In what respects Christ is compared to a Lamb. Iohn 1. 29. Isa. 53 7. Isa. 53. 9. Iohn 8. 46. Mat. 27. 4 24. Luke 23. 41. See Heb. 7. 26 27. Object Sol. Isa. 53. 6. 2 Cor. 5. 21. Use 1. Use 2. Iohn 21. 15 16 17. Eph. 5. 15. Iob 31. 35 36. Luke 1. 6. Dan. 6. 5. 1 Sam. 12. 3. Use 3. Rom. 8. 17. Mat. 18. 15 21. Object Sol. Obser. We are not to listen to either believe all we hear Ier. 26. 20. Acts 24. 5. The prevention of an Objection Acts. 1. 4. Doctr. Christ was ordained before the world Gen. 12. 3. 3. 15. Rev. 13 8. Iohn 6. 27. Eph. 1. 4. Object Sol. Object Sol. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Ioh. 3. 16. Use 4. Rev. 13. 8. Ioh. 8. 56. Rom 9. 33. Use 5. Mat. 6. 33. Ioh. 6. 27. Obs. The world shall not always continue 2 Pet. 3. 10. Use. Christ how manifested Heb. 9. 26. Doctr. God is constant and unchangeable Acts 13. 48. Use. 1. Use 2. Acts 11. 29 30 Psal. 76. 11. Gods promises are unchangeable Neh. 1. 9. Use 1. Use 2. Obser. Christ was then exhibit it when God decreed that he should so be Gal. 4. 4. Doctr. What God hath decreed shall be in due time accomplished Acts 16. 6 7. Mat. 10. 5. Mat 28. 19. Rom. 11. 25. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Three differences of times Why this called the last time Obser. God will no otherwise reveal his will then he hath already done Heb. 1. 1. Use. Doctr. We now live in the latter end of the last times Use 1. Use 2. Why Christ came towards the latter end of the world Use. What we are to do and how to carry our selves that others may think well of us Doctr. We cannot believe in God but by the Son Reas. 1. 2 Cor. 4. 4. Heb. 13. Reas. 2. Iohn 14. 6. Eph. 3. 12. Heb. 10. 19 Iohn 17. 3. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Use 4. Obs. In Christs Resurrection the whole Trinity had a hand Phil. 2. 9. The benefits which those reap that believe in Christ Doct. Where there 's no love nor fear of God there can be no true brotherly love Use 1. 1 Cor. 13. 6. Iudges 9. 23. Use 2. Prov. 16. 7. Acts 14. 15 16 19. Doct. Where there 's the true fear or love of God there 's also brotherly love 1 Ioh. 1. 1 Ioh. 4. 12. Use 1. Use 2. 1 Ioh. 5. 1. Psal. 15. 4. Psal. 16. 3. 1 Ioh. 3. 14. Use 3. Obser. There 's uncleanness in us both in Soul and Body Gen. 6. 5. Matth. 15. Isa. 1. 16. Iam. 4. 8. Rev. 3. 17 18. Use. Iohn 3. 5. Mat. 5. 8. Heb. 12. 14. Psal. 15. 2. Obs. Where there 's sanctification of the soul there 's also sanctification of the body Doct. The Word of God is the outward instrument of our cleansing Ioh. 15. 3. 17. 17. Iohn 15. 5. Acts 15. 9. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. 1 Sam. 15. 22. Ier. 25. 12 1● 2 Thess. 1. 8. 1 Pet. 4. 17. Why the Word is called Truth Iohn 17. 17. Iames 1. 18. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Use 4. Heb. 13. 4. Doct. The Spirit is the inward worker of Sanctification Acts 11. 21. and 16. 14. Use. Rom. 8. 7. 1 Cor. 3. 6 7. Obs. Till we be cleansed by the Spirit we are unfit for any duty Use. Obs. The end of our Sanctification is to be fruitful in good works Eph. 2. 20. Iam. 1. 18. Use. What Love is Gal. 5. 22. 1 Tim. 1. 5. See Psal. 41. 9. 55. 13. Mat. 10. 21. See 1 Ioh. 3. ●7 Iames 2. 14 15 16. Rom. 13. 10. Luke 10. 34. ● Tim. 5. 4 8 16. Gal. 6. 10. Rom. 12. 10. and 13. 8. Col. 3. 14. Rom. 13. 8. Gal. 5. 13 14. Psal. 133. 1 Cor. 13. 1 2. The properties of love 1 Cor. 13. 4. Gen. 45. 5. Mat. 17. 27. Gen. 13. 8. See M. Perkins Christian Equity Rom. 13. 10. See Mr. Perkins cases of Cons. 1. 3. cap. 3. pag. 135. 1 Cor. 13. 5. Mat. 6. 12. Two Caveats to be observed of them that for redressing of wrongs make use of the Magistrate 1 Cor. 6. 7. Simile Mat. 5. 42. Deut. 15. 10. Acts 4. 37. 2 Cor. 9. 7. Prov. 3. 28. Obs. There 's little love in the world 1 Sam. ● 14. Iohn 2. 20. Exod. 10. 9. Mat. 24. 12. 2 Tim. 3. 2. The causes of the want of love Luke 17. 4 5. Prov. 13. 10. Eph. 4 2. The effects of the want of love Use. Mat. 18. 26 28 Pro. 19. 19. 11. Mic. 7. 18. Prov. 10. 12. Pro. 11. 24 25. Reasons inciting us to this duty of love Isa. 58. 2. Gen. 13. 8. 1 Cor. 6. 6. Ioh. 13. 34 35. 1 Ioh. 3. 14. See Pro. 10. Acts 9. 39. Rom. 12. 16 17. Obser. The fruits of love towards our brethren must accompany the profession thereof Obs. The doing of brotherly offices must proceed from brotherly affections Love must reach to all Object Sol. Object Sol. Luke 10. 33. Object Sol. Object Sol. Matt. 5. 44. Rom. 5. 10. Note 1 Ioh. 5. 1. 3. 14. Zech. 2. 8. Use 1. Gal. 6. 10. Use 2. 1 Iohn 3. 14. ibid. 10. Psal. 15. 4. 16. 3. Gen. 27. 29. Num. 23. 8. How we ought to love the Wicked Gen. 13. 8. See 1 Cor. 6. 8. Iohn 15. 19. Doctr. Love must be without fainng Rom. 12. 9. 1 Iohn 3. 18. Use 1. Psal. 28. 3. Gen. 3. 5. Mat. 4. 3. Use 2. Iames 5. 17. Obs. Love must be mutual Acts 20. 35. Obser. In love there must be a community Iames 2. 1. Prov. 22. 2. Iames 2. 5. Gal. 5. 22. 1 Tim. 1. 1. The properties of pure love 1 Cor. 13. 6. Gen. 25. 28. Mat. 5. 46. Use. Lev. 19. 17. Prov. 13. 24. Simil. Mat. 16. 22. Obs. A Christians love must be earnest 2 Cor. 9. 6. 1 Pet. 4. 8.
watchfulness is here required What Spiritual watchfulness is A man must be awakened before he can watch Eph. 5. 14. By nature we are asleep in sin which is diversly prov'd Use. Iohn 5. 25. Reasons for watchfulness 1 Thess. 5. 5. Prov. 10. 5. See Ionah 1. 5. Satans malice exceeding great Rev. 12. 12. Satans strength Satans subtilty Matth. 4. 3. Rev. 12. 9. Gen. 3. 1 3 4 c. Matth. 4. 2. Satans Diligence Use 1. Use 2. Acts 26. 18. Use 3. Use 4. Exod. 22. 18. Simile Use 5. Psal. 18. 2. Col. 3. 16. Psal. 121. 4. Rev. 5. 5. Satan is to be resisted Reasons 1 Cor. 16. 13. Eph. 6. 10 11. Iam. 4. 7. Rom. 16. 20. Use 1. Use 2. Faith gives Satan the foil Eph. 6. Use 1. Use 2. Eph. 6. 1 Iohn 5. True faith rare What faith it is that prevails over Satan Use. Matth. 14. Obj. Sol. Simile All Gods children are liable to Satans temptations 2 Tim. 3. 12. Use. God enables his children to overcome Satans temptations Use. Obj. Sol. Ministers must endeavor as to inform the understanding so to work on the affections of their people People must joyn practice to their knowledge There 's a near conjunction between believers Use 1. Use 2. Gods Church is dispersed throughout the world Use. The Saints in Heaven are free from temptations Use 1. Use 2. Note Gods Ministers must further their peoples Salvation by all means Num. 6. 24. Use. 1 Cor. 3. 6. 1 Tim. 4. 16. See also Acts 26. 18. Simile God is the author and give● of all grace See Exod. 31. Rom 15. 13. and 16. 20. 2 Cor. 1. 3. Iohn 1. 16. Eph. 4. 7. Use 1. Use 2. Psal. 4. 6. Use 3. Doctr. Whom God will save those he doth effectually call Use. Eph 1. 4. Luke 1. 75. Iam. 1. 18. Such as are effectually called shall partake of glory Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. God will not forsake them whom he hath called Rom. 11. 29. 1 Thess. 5. 23. Iohn 17. 11. All good comes to us by Christ. Eph. 1. 4. Use 1. Use 2. Gods children must here suffer before they can partake of heaven Psal. 34. Iohn 16. 33. Acts 14. 22. 2 Tim. 2. 12. Reasons Iob 33. 17. Isa. 27. 9. Simil. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. The afflictions of Gods children are small Rom. 8. 18. 2 Cor. 4. 17. Isa. 4. 5. Rev. 2. 10 Use. 1 Cor. 3. 9. Phil. 3. 13. Gods people must labor for perfection 1 Thess. 4. 1. 2 Thess. 1. 3. Use. 1. Rev. 2● 5. Use 2. Use 3. Christians must hold out to the end Use. Gal. 3. 1. Col. 3. 3. 1 Pet. 1. 5. Our Election and vocation should move us to praise God Rev. 4. 8. Holy things should be handled by holy persons Note A good name is to be labored for See Heb. 11. 2. Eccles. 7. 1. Prov. 22. 1. Such as are faithful in the Ministry draw their peoples hearts to them Use 1. Use 2. We ought to speak and think so well of others as we have ground for Use. We ought to be wary in our commendations The profitableness of writing Epistles Heb. 13. 22. Gods wisdom in providing for us his Word and goodness in ordaining Ministers to re-reveal unto us his will therein People must particularly know that the Religion they profess is the truth of God Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Christians must persevere in the truth Prov. 23. 23. Constancy in well-doing difficult Use. Doctrine and Application must go together Use. 1. Use 2. Christians must be mindful one of another how far distant soever God hath some even in the worst places This place not meant of Rome See Dr. Willets Synops. Hereticks wrest Scripture Use 1. Use 2. Election diversly taken Isaiah 44. 1. Iohn 6. 70. It s not enough to live in an elect Church but we must finde that we are Elect. Why the Apostle calls them an Elect company Use. The sending of commendations how useful it is Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Acts 15. 37. 38. The preaching of the Word is the instrument of Regeneration Use 1. Simile Use 2. Use 3. Ministers must love their people as their Children So people their Ministers Use. It s needful that where love is it should be continued Christians should salute one another Reasons 2 Sam. 15. 6. Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. 1 Iohn 3. 15. Use 4. The ancient maner of saluting among the Iews Our Saluting one another must be in love Rom. 16. 16. Use. 1. Rom. 12. Psal. 28. 3. Use 3. Col. 3. 14. Rom. 13. 10. Hinderances of love Rom. 1 31. See Matth. 18. 28. What meant by peace Outward blessings may lawfully be desired and how See Psal. 1. 3. and 112. 3. 128. 3. and 84. 11. Matth. 6. 33. Christ is the fountain of all peace Hosea 2. 18. Obj. Sol. Iob 21. 7 8 c. Iob 20. 8. See Psalm 37. 2. 20. Iohn 14. 27. 2 Cor. 6. 9. Use. Isaiah 48. 22. Respect is to be had of all Gods people The near union between Christ and true Christians Simile Fervency of affection and faith requisite in Prayer