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A15525 A commentarie vpon the most diuine Epistle of S. Paul to the Romanes Containing for matter, the degeneration of our nature by Adams Fall; and the restauration thereof, by the grace of Christ. Together with the perfection of faith, and the imbecillity of workes, in the cause of iustification of elect sinners before God. For forme and maner of handling, it hath the coherence and method, the summe and scope, the interpretations & doctrines the reasons and vses, of most texts. All which, are set downe very familiarly and compendiously, in forme of a dialogue, betweene Tlmotheus [sic] and Silas, by Thomas Wilson, one of the six preachers in the cathedrall church of Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1614 (1614) STC 25791; ESTC S120148 882,533 1,268

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the roate be holy so are the branches Tim. VVHat do these words performe Silas A proofe of the former reason touching the vniuersall restoring of the Iewes vnto grace before the end of the worlde where Paul meant both to comfort the Iewes and to warne the Gentiles that they do not proudly contenme the Iewes This proofe is taken from force of the league and promises made to Abraham and to other antecessors of the Iewes who be beere compared vnto the first fruites and roote and the Iewes which came of these antecessors vnto the lumpe and branches The proofe stan deth thus The Iewes are an holy nation by the promises made to their Fathers therefore God will not cast them away 〈◊〉 but as the first fruites and roote being holy doe make the lumpe and branches holy so Abraham and the fore-fathers of the Iewes being holy by vertue of Gods couenant to bee their God will cause holinesse in Gods good time to be deriued to their posterity for there is like condition of causes and effects of roote and branches Tim. Vpon what parts doth this Text consist Silas Vpon two comparisons the first whereof is taken from the obseruation of the Mosaicall Law touching first fruites the other from naturall experience of the root and the branches It is the nature of the root to draw good sap out of the ground and to disperse it into the stocke and braunches to make them fruitfull Therefore what the roote is such will be the branches if the roote be sappy and full of good iuice it wil cause good nourishment to the tree and plentifulnes of good fruites Tim. What was the Law to be obserued by the Iew touching first fruites Silas This of al the encrease of the earth God commanded the first fruites to be giuen him as Num. 15 20. Leuit. 23 10 11. Also when they made a masse of dowe there was a part for God whereof were sweete cakes or Shew-bread made to set before the Arke this done the rest of their fruite and their bread was sanctified vnto them that is the vse and eating of their fruite and bread became holy and wholsome Tim. For what causes did God ordaine this Lawe of first fruites Silas For sundry good purposes and causes First that by such a ceremony the Iewes might know and acknowledge that it is God to whom they owe thanks for all their fruites as being his free guift as worldly Princes will haue their seruants to pay some peny a yeare for some great Lordship bestowed on them onely to testify their dependance vpon their Soueraigne and not to enrich themselues so it it heere Secondly by such Oblations the holy Ministery of Priests and Leuits with their families were maintained and there is such great manifolde and necessary vse of the Ministery of the word as men are to vphold that though vnto their great cost Gal. 6 6. 1 Corin. 9 5 6 7 8 9. Thirdly in all their first fruites were represented Christ the first borne of euerie creature and the first fruites of them which tise againe from the dead whereby all the faithfull are sanctified to an happy resurrection 1 Cor. 15 20. Lastly the first fruits were a type figure of the estate of the Iewish Church wherein the Patriarkes Abraham Isaac Iacob and other godly Fathers were like vnto the first fruites to conuay the holinesse of the couenant made with them to the remainder of the Iewes which came of them And also in this respect they are resembled by a roote which imparteth all the sap it hath to branches so the godly Patriarks impart the grace of Gods couenant vnto their of spring where upon it is not to be doubted but the Iewes which ly now as men dead abiect and without hope to see too yet shall bee receiued to bee Gods people and reuiued albeit they are as it may seeme desperate as men laid in the graue and buried Tim. Now that we haue seene to what purpose Paul vsed these two metaphors and similitudes passe forwardes to the dectrines and tell vs what they be Silas First wee learne that whensoeuer wee reape the fruites of the earth wee ought to shewe thankfulnesse to God by giuing the first to him that is to our teachers to the poore in his name for the equity of this law is perpetuall although the ceremony be ceased Secondly from hence we learn that the couenāt-graces of the parents belong to such children as are borne of them Tim. But how may this bee since the Patrierkes were holy but many of the Iewes were rebellious and experience teacheth that of the best Parents come the woorse childeren In one people some be called onely some be elect and beleeuers also Silas It is true that the personall and inherent holines of the Parents to wit the godly habit of their mindes as faith hope doe not passe from the parents into the children as if vertuous and beleeuing parents should alwayes bring forth such children for these qualities come not by generation but by regeneration 〈◊〉 many outward priuiledges and qualities do descend from Fathers to childrē as free-men be get free-men Iewes beget Iewes Christians Christians by the blessing of the couenant which is made both to parents and their Children Tim. But if we bee all conceiued in sin howe doeth the holy roote make the branches holy Sil. The Iewes are spoken of as they come from Abraham and not as they come from God howsoeuer naturall corruption be contradictory to the grace of regeneration which doth qualifie and take it away yet it may well agree and stand with the grace of the couenant For as one may be borne leprous and yet be a free man when the Parents be such so one may bee borne a sinner by Adam and yet bee borne a Christian and a member of the visible Church too because hee and his parents bee within the couenant of grace which couenant though it bring with it forgiuenesse of that sinne which we draw from our first father Adam yet when it shall haue force wee are ignorant And Scripture doth not teach vs whether original sinne is forgiuen to the Infant in the wombe or at birth or presently after or at baptisme or afterward for it is not giuen to all men at one time as they teach which tye grace and forgiuenesse vnto the Sacraments But for that Infants belong to the couenant of mercy and forgiuenesse wee doe verily beleeue that they are holy and shall be pardoned so many as are elected howsoeuer they come sinners from Adam Tim. If onely such branches be holy as come from an holy roote what is this vnto vs Gentiles which are no branches of this roote Silas The Gentiles be branches grafted in though not naturall therefore the blessing and vertue of the couenant reacheth vnto vs though not by hereditary right yet by free insition and planting in which made the Apostle say of the Corinthians that their children were holy
Paul Tim. Whom doth he meane heere by his brethren Silas The Iewes which were his kinsmen as beeing all Israelites of his stocke and bloud and wheras he saith for his brethren he meaneth in their stead and roome or in their behalfe as Christ is said to haue dyed for vs. Tim. What are the doctrines to be learned from this verse Silas It teacheth that Christians must be carried with a great desire of others saluation and namely of such as neerest vnto them as their kinsmen children seruants stocke or linage The reason is because saluation is the greatest good wee can procure to any therefore in the furthering of it our loue should most appeare Tim. What profit is to be made of this point Silas It reproues such as earnestly desire other good things to theirs but are cold in descrying and seeking the chiefe good Secondly it comforteth all that finde any measure of this desire in them that they are guided by the Spirit of God Lastly it exhorts all men to striue for a greater measure of it because it will be a witnes that they are led by the same Spirit that was in Paul Tim. What other instruction from hence Silas It proues that Christs loue exceedes all loue because hee indeed was made that for vs sinners and his enemies which Paul could haue wished to bee made for his brethren which is to be a curse Gal. 3. 13. Tim. What vse of this Sil. It warneth vs after Christs example especially Pasiors deeply to loue thirst after one anothers saluation Secondly it rebukes all others which either by counsell or euill example helpe forwards others damnation or by keeping away the meanes of eternall life wholly or in part in substance or degree DIAL II. Verses 4 5. Which are the Israelites to whome pertayneth the adoption and the glory and the couenants and the giuing of the law and the seruice of God and the promises of whome are the Fathers and of whome concerning the flesh Christ came who is Codouer all blessed for euer Amen Tim. VVHat is the drift and purpose of this text Sil. To render reasons of his deep loue and griefe for the Iewes for whose sake hee would haue wished himselfe accursed and destroyed to haue had them saued this his exceeding charity he now doth expound and set forth the true reasons thereof Tim. From whence are these reasons drawne Silas They are all taken from the noble properties of the Iewes and those adioynts or qualities which are in number ten whereof now wee will speake in order The first is that they were his brethren or kinsmen according to the flesh this is a great occasion to make vs loue our neighbour so much the more as Christ did this nation and his owne mother and as nature teacheth euen heathen to doe as 1 Tim. 5. 8. Their second property is that they were Israelites that is Gods people such as were Princes and conquerers of God This name God for honour sake gaue to Iacoh who ouercame God in wrestling see Genesis 33. 38. thereof called Israel and he thought it an excellent blessing to haue his children called by his name Israel as ye may see in his prayer Gen. 48. 16 And this is the second cause of his so great griefe for their destruction that a people consecrated to the true God who delighted to be called the God of Israel should 〈◊〉 The third property is adoption by which wee are not to vnderstand that eternall adoption peculiar to the elect whome God purposed before all worlds to make his children in Christ and accordingly doth actually adopt them in time when he calleth them effectually but the external adoption to be accounted and esteemed the onely Church of God all other Nations and people being passed by and refused by vertue of which dignity God himselfe calleth Israel his Sonne yea his first borne yea his treasure c. Exodus 4. 22. and 19. 5. 6. Deut. 32 8. 9. Iere. 31. 20. I am their Father and Ephraim is my childe and first borne And this is the third cause of his sorrow that they should be lost which had so worthy a priuiledge Their fourth property is the glory by which is meant the Atke which was a token of Gods presence 1 Sam. 4. 21. 22. There also God hearde the prayers and prayses of his people and gaue forth oracles vnto such as sought them and in regard of it the Tēple is called the habitation of his glory or the place where his honour dwelleth Psal. 26. 8. Therefore no people as it is in Deut. so noble to whom God came so nigh as to this people Now what a griefe to a good friend is this that such a nation should be cast out and anathanized Their first priuiledge and quality was the couenant that is the Table of the couenants by a Metonymie and hee speakes in the plurall number because there were two Tables Deut. 9. 11. in these God wrote with his owne hand his Morall Lawes and Statutes Some vnderstande it of the couenant which God often made with this people for eternall life by Christ howbeit this was but one howsoeuer it was often renued with Abraham Isaac c. Also the promises which are after named cannot be seuered from the couenant which stoode in promises of eternall and temporall happinesse The sixt property is the giuing of the Law to wit the iudicial Law for the Common-wealth which surpassed all the Lawes of Solon 〈◊〉 Numa Draco Themistocles and Mines For they came from heauen God being the immediate authour and were full of equitie a meruailous credit and renowne to this Nation as Deut. 4 8 32. Their seauenth property was the seruice of God euen the Priest-hood with such outward rites and sacrifices wherein God would be lawfully serued of the Iews till Christ and this was the ceremoniall worship Hebr. 9 1. This was so perfect that nothing could be added to it The eight property was the promises both Legall promising life on condition of keeping the law perfectly also Euangelical promising remission of sinnes with saluation in heauen to the beleeuers in Christ temporal promises and eternall promises and of the calling of the Gentiles No people had such promises by which God sought to alure and inuite this people to his obedience Their ninth priuiledge and dignity was that of them came the Fathers that is they bee the off-spring of the Patriarkes and holy men whose praise is in the Worde which also had the promises of Gods mercie vnto theyr posterity for a thousand generations Gen. 17 4. Com. 2. and this is no vsuall commendation to come and to bee borne of such noble progenitors as Abraham Isaac Iacob were by whose example they might haue great help to piety and pricks to godlinesse yet so farre to degenerate as now the Iewes were this could not but much greeue the Apostle who much loued them The last dignity of the Iewes is that
many Israelites which were Abrahams children after the flesh do loose saluation Tim. What is the summe of this text Silas That the promise of grace and saluation was restrayned vnto Iacob by election onely before he was born not by his birth nor by his workes for then Esau should haue obtained the blessing promised who came of the same Parents and yet was reiected and hated of GOD therefore all which carnally come of Abraham be not the children of the promise Tim. How doth Paul knit this example to the former Silas By a gradation as a thing greater and stronger to proue his purpose that the promise of grace and saluation doth not indifferently and equally pertaine vnto all the posterity of Abraham but to such of them onely as were elect For the Iewes might obiect that Ismael was reiected because hee was borne of a bondwoman to wit Agar whereas no such thing could be alleadged in this example of Iacob and Esau who both came of Isaac Abrahams lawfull Son and of Rebecka at one time and by one birth yea and Esau was the elder of the twaine so as this example fits the Apostle much better to she we that the prerogatiue of carnal birth is not the cause of receiuing the promise Tim. Yea but the Iewes might alleadge that Esau being a prophane man and behauing himselfe ill was therefore reiected whereas Iacob was loued and had the effect of the promise because he was a good man and did well Sil. The Apostle meeteth with this obiection in saying that Gods purpose was declared touching them both ere euer they were borne and therefore their present good or euill works for they had done none when God had vttered his counsell of them could not moue God to loue the one and hate the other Tim. Yet it may be said that God decreed of them both for the fore-seene workes of them both Silas Paul denieth this saying it was not of workes and affirmeth the quite contrary that the purpose of sauing Iacob and of refusing Esau came of his free election whereby of his loue he chused the one not the other Thus whereas the Iewes stood much vpon the priuiledge of their birth and their works Paul reiecteth them both as no causes of Gods promises which are applied and take place by the decree of Gods election The mystery whereof vpon this occasion he beginneth to open both particularly by example and generally by testimony of Scripture verse 15 16. and in the rest of the Chapter Tim. What instructions are to be gathered from this Text thus vnfolded Silas That faith nor good workes neither present or foreseene are any cause why God electeth any vnto saluation And contrariwise infidelity and badde workes whether present or foreseene doe not moue God to refuse any man and cast him off from hauing any parte in Christ and the promises by him The reason is faith and good works doe proceede from election therefore cannot bee the cause thereof for one thing cannot bee the cause and effect in respect of another Now that faith and workes be effects see Acts 13 48. Titus 1 1. Ephe. 1 4. No man hath any good but what God purposed from euerlasting to put into him Secondly Gods election depends vpon his will onely verse 15. therefore not vpon foreseene faith and workes Thirdly infidelity foreseene and bad workes were not the cause that men were refused because all sinning in Adam God could see in whole mankind no other thing but vnbeleefe and concupiscence which hereditarily flowed from Adam vpon all his race and so all had beene reiected for sinne foreseene if any were cast out Tim. But if wicked men be destroyed for vnbeleefe and bad works then God decreed to destroy them in respect of these Sil. It is true so he did but hee refused and did not chuse them onely because hee would not chuse them without all respect to their ill qualities and works It is otherwise with the elect whom God did appoint in his eternall decree vnto saluation not in respect of their workes but in and for Christ yet so as hee purposed in time to call to iustifie and to sanctifie them ordaining to these things not for these things Tim. What vse of this point Silas It reproues such as tye Gods predestination to mens merites whereas it is independant and without all relation to the worthinesse and vnworthinesse of men Secondly it moueth the beleeuers to thanke God for their free election and to ascribe all to grace because free election is not onely in it selfe a great mercy but it is the spring of all other mercies both earthly and heauenly whatsoeuer For sinners beleeue and receiue the holy Ghost and are borne anew and blessed with repentance and good workes because they are Gods chosen and elect ones DIAL VI. Verse 11. For ere the children were borne and when they had neyther done good nor euill that the purpose of God might remaine according to election not by workes but by him that calleth Tim. VVHat is the drift of these words Silas To proue that God cannot be charged with failing of his word so long as he keepes it with the elect Tim. What is the meaning and substance of these words Silas That the saluation of beleeuers depends not at all on our selues but is all wholy to be ascribed to the election of God Whereas all men are alike by creation and nature and yet some beleeue doe good workes and are saued others beleeue not but liue wickedly and doe perish the cause of this difference is not in nobility of birth and bloud or dignity of workes as the example of Esau Iacob sheweth but in the election of God chusing some to life according to his will and refusing others because hee would not chuse them Summarily that which putteth the difference betweene one man and another all men beeing alike is Gods eternall election before all worlds Whence it is that some are not called to Christ and some be and of those which bee called some beleeue being elect some do not beleeue being not elect Election being the fountaine of all our weale therfore it would be taught distinctly and well vnderstood for it is a fundamentall doctrine reuealed in the Scripture Tim. From whence is this word Election taken Silas From the manners and affaires of men who will haue that to be firme and to continue which they haue by election chosen and vpon good aduice 〈◊〉 Whereas they are wont to alter such things which they rashly appointed but hold fast what by good election they haue purposed so are we to thinke of God of whom the Scripture speaks after the manner of men for our infirmity sake noting to vs in this word the stablenesse of his decree Tim. How manifold is Election Silas Two-fold one humane whereby men chuse whō and what they like aboue others And another diuine whereby God chuseth what
hee insinuateth that neyther they could performe by any power of their owne what hee had moued them vnto nor yet hee inable them to doe what he taught But of all his instruction the successe depended wholy in Gods blessing and helpe and therefore but requisite that Sermons and exhortations should begin end with prayer to God as to assist speaker and hearer to doe their duties well so to make all prosperous when they haue done In seeking and suing to God alone it so checks the inuocatiō of creatures as it teacheth the faithfull to resort to God alone for euery good guift God alone doth both know and fulfill the desires of his children and it is an honour peculiar to him to be trusted in and called on Psal. 50 15. The matter of his prayer is that wherein he saide Chap. 14. ver 17. That the kingdom of God stood so now he prayeth not That they might bee filled with meats and drinks but with peace with God in themselues towards their Brethren and ioy that is encrease of peace euen spirituall gladnesse of the heart freed from terrors of Gods wrath and cheared with the sence of Gods loue in Christ and hope of glory All Ioy signifieth solid and firme ioy such as lasteth not like the vanishing ioy of worldlings who reioyce in prosperity and are sad euen heauy to death in calamitie as Ionas gourd grew in the day and dyed in the night but durable ioy which will not be taken away or quenched with the sharpest crosses Of this peace and ioy he noteth the true causes and the nearest to wit Faith or the righteousnesse of Faith a sure grounde of all Christian peace and comfort and Hope which is a sure expectation of all good things needefull for vs and namely of eternall life Of which infallible expectation the mercies and truth of the Father the regeneration of the Spirite the merites of the Sonne be both the fountaine and props Note further that of these graces he sets downe the hiest cause the holy Ghost by whose power that is mighty working they are giuen and encreased vnto a great measure which is heere expresly begged God fill you that you may abound in all ioy Tim. What is the Doctrine of this 14. verse thus interpreted and analyzed Silas The first is that it is God alone in whom Christians are to fixe all their hope and trust for he is called the God of Hope not only with respect to the verse 12. or for that he is the author of Hope engendring all liuely hope as he is tearmed God of patience 1 Pet. 1 3. but especially for that he is the obiect of hope being hee in whom alone all hope is to be placed and that for these Reasons First God not onely commands to trust in him alone but threatneth a curse to such as haue hope affiance in men 1 Tim. 6 17. Ier. 17 5. Secondly examples of holy Patriarkes and Kings which hoped in God and were not confounded but deliuered Our Fathers trusted in God and were saued saith Dauid Thirdly God besides his mercies fidelity and omnipotency hath infinit means to succour his which relie on him Therefore let all men trust strongly in God and renounce all other hopes either Popish in their owne merits a rotten post to trust in or worldly as in horses friends riches c. which are but vaine thinges to saue a man Ps. 20 7. Tim. What is the second Doctrine from this 13. verse Silas That godly Christians must labour after the greatest measure of Faith hope peace ioy and other graces neuer contenting themselues with any portion till they be filled and do abound The reason is because such is Gods will else Paul would not haue asked fulnes and aboundance of God As couetous men neuer thinke they haue Gold enough so let Gods childe neuer think he hath graces enough for he is bound to waxe spiritually as plants and young children do naturally and the more grace he hath the more and better seruice shall he do to his God Also it is a signe of sauing grace when it growes and abounds Tim. What vse is to be made of this doctrine Silas First it reprooues such as sweate and take paines to thriue in the world but do not so to thriue in grace Such also as rest in beginnings and couet not perfection Also such as go backwards and fall away And encorageth all Christians by all good means of reading meditation hearing prayer conference keeping a good conscience by right vse of the Lords Supper to labour after encrease in spirituall things Tim. What is the last thing which we learne from this 13. Verse Silas That Faith is the parent of hope and both togither bring forth sound peace and ioy and of them all the holy Ghost is head cause and worker And lastly that Pastors must pray effectually for their people Tim. Passe to the 14. verse what obserue you therein for edification Silas Paul passeth forwards to the conclusion of this Epistle wherein first he praiseth them verse 14. and then defendeth his writing to them verse 15. From his commendations of them Ministers and others learne that we are not alwayes to exhort and reprooue our hearers there is a time for praises also namely when the parties vppon our knowledge deserue praise Secondly when the thing praised is excellent Thirdly if the persons be capeable to wit such as will not be puffed vp thereby but excited more to their dutie Fourthly when Gods praise is chiefely aymed at without base flattery then it is wisedome to praise for praise is a spurre in the praysed to piety and witnesseth the charity of the prayser Our Apostle might haue beene thought to haue beene sharpe considering former and round admonitions and somewhat suspitious of the Romanes hauing so feruently and often prayed for them as if all had not been well but farre amisse but by his present praises hee quickens them to godlines and quitteth himselfe from sinister and vncharitable suspition whose example is to be followed of Ministers and other Christians Tim. But what is the subiect or matter of his praise which he giueth the Romanes Silas After he had louingly saluted them by name of Brethren to intimate his owne loue and inciteth theirs and shewes that he spake not by hearesay or anie ydle report but of a strong perswasion grounded onely vpon the profession and effectes of their Faith which was verie famous thoroughout the Christian worlde Romanes 1 8. then hee prayfeth them in three respects First because of their great goodnesse Full of Goodnesse that is enriched with piety towards God and men and namely with mercy and kindnes towards the brethren Secondly their excellent faith and skilfulnesse in diuine things wherein they had attained such a perfection not absolute which had no want for then they needed not mutuall admonition but such as in this life may bee attained vnto in comparison of
saue sinners propounding life indeed but it is vnto the perfect keepers whereas the Gospell offereth and performeth Saluation to the beleeuer euen to euery beleeuer without difference of Nationꝭ and so the promises of the Gospell are vniuersall both in respect of al beleeuers which receiue it and also because no Age Sex Nation Estate or condition is excluded from perticipation of Christ life eternall so they belieue Lastly in the tenth Chapter of this Epistle verse 13 14 15. Paul frameth the Ladder as I may so speake by which the Gospell causeth men to ascend and climbe vnto the marke of eternall Saluation in Heauen whereof the first steppe is sending of Teachers to preach the Gospell The second is preaching The third is hearing of the Gospell preached The fourth Faith by hearing The fift Confession and Inuocation of God The sixt and last is Saluation it selfe Tim. What reasons may moue men to beleeue Silas First the commandement of God Mark 1 15. Secondly the promises euen of eternal life and of all other good things bee made to Faith Thirdly examples of good men in Scripture who haue 〈◊〉 Fourthly the danger of vnbeliefe which is eternall death besides manifold temporary miseries Fiftly the profit of beleeuing Sixtly the truth of God the promiser who cannot lye or deceiue Seauenthly his almighty power being most able to keepe his promises Lastly we belieue men which are lesse faithfull then God by many thousand degrees and if we belieue the witnesse of men how much more ought we to receiue the testimony and record of God 1. Iohn 5 9. By these reasons we must fight against all motions of vnbeliefe and inforce our selues to vse all good meanes to preserue and increase Faith DIAL VIII Verse 17. For by it the righteousnesse of God is reuealed from Faith to Faith Tim. VVHat Coherence and dependance hath this Verse with the next before How are they knit together Silas It containeth a proofe or rendereth a reason of that which he had saide touching the Gospell by the proper effect whereof to wit that by Faith we should be Iustified he now confirmeth the Gospel to be The power of God to Saluation for wee are certainly saucd by that whereby we are Iustified This Text then dooth well and fitly serue to a double purpose and end First it is brought in as a reason of the definition of the Gospell set down in verse 16. For if by the Doctrine of the Gospell be plainly and effectually shewed and taught the onely right way of attaining righteousnesse before God which neither Law nor Philosophy nor anie other learning can teach then is the Gospell the mighty Instrument vsed of God to saue beleeuers Secondly it briefly putteth forth the whole state and proposition of the disputation following to the end of the 11. Chapter to wit That by Faith alone without Woorkes elect sinners be Iustified before the iudgement of God Which is proued by a testimony of Habakuk Tim. What is the sum of this Scripture Silas That the Gospell doth open the way howe to come vnto perfect righteousnesse such as shall make an Elect sinner stand vnblameable at the tribunal of God Tim. What is the drift Silas To proue that saluation is had by the Faith of the Gospell because perfect Iustice and saluation cannot bee diuided therefore from whence Iustice dooth come to vs from thence also eternall life in heauen doth proceed and flow Tim. What is heere meant by righteousnesse Silas The integrity of humaine Nature beeing conformed wholy to the will and Image of God this integrity is only to be found in Christ inherently and such as he will impute it vnto of fauour and mercy By the righteousnesse of God in this place we may neither vnderstand his essentiall righteousnesse whereby he is iust and righteous in himselfe louing Innocencie hating Iniquity Psal. 11 7. 45 7. nor yet his Distributiue Iudiciary righteousnesse whereby he rewards the Good and in seuerity of Iudgement is reuenged on the Wicked Rom. 1 23. 2. Thes. 1. 5. for these are not or can bee communicated to men by Faith neyther yet by Righteousnesse is meant that habite of Iustice and Charity infused of God into our minds whereby wee are made apt to do good-workes For this is manifested by the Law and stands in working not in beleeuing Rom. 3 20 21. But whither we vnderstand the perfect Iustice of Christ in his Nature actions and sufferings satisfying fully Gods wrath for sinne with the communicating application thereof to elect sinners by Faith or the Mercie grace and clemency of God declaring it selfe in freely pardoning sinners iustifying them also renewing their hearts withall that they may loue the Law abhorre vice Lastly giuing them pure and sincere actions and manners which be the necessary fruits companions of forgiuenesse of sinnes and imputed Iustice it skilleth not much For in many places the word Righteousnesse signifieth the goodnesse and mercy of God remitting sinnes and deliuering from the punnishment thereof for the merit of Christ as Psal. 31 2. and 35 4. 1. Sam. 12 7. and often elsewhere and may so bee taken heere Howbeit the best Interpretation is to expound it of the full obedience of Christ to death imputed to faithfull persons for remission of sinnes and perfect Iustice before God which is therefore called The Righteousnesse of God because it is his meere guifte and commeth not by workes or any humain strengths Rom. 9 30. Secondly it alone satisfieth the most rigorous exact Iustice of God and makes sinners iust not before men but in the sight of God Tim. Why is this Righteousnes called Righteousnes of God shew this more distinctly Silas First because it is his guift Secondly because he giueth it to shewe himselfe righteous and true of his word Thirdly it is that righteousnesse alone which he in his most strict and exact 〈◊〉 approoueth and will Crowne Lastly because his righteousnesse is opposite vnto the righteousnesse of Workes Rom. 10 3. Tim. How or in what manner respect is this Reuealed by the Gospell Silas First it is there contained taught and read of Secondly it is vnknowne to the Gontiles Thirdlie the prophesies of the Prophets do but obscurely shadow it and not plainly teach it as the gospell dooth Fourthly the gospell as an Instrument both openeth it and giueth it to vs which beleeue From whence we may learn that the gospell ought to be most precious vnto vs seeing we haue such a treasure by it and therefore al they are most wretched who either neglect or despise the gospell Tim. How may 〈◊〉 declare our precious reckoning which we do make of the Gospell Silas First by our continuall and hearty thankfulnesse to God for it Secondly by our study to know it soundly and distinctly Thirdly and chiefly by our beleefe practise of it Fourthly by our daily and earnest prayer to God for encrease in the knowledge and obedience of the gospell Tim. What
the Conenant standing in reconciliation with God and newnesse of life It consisted of a reciprocall promise GOD promised pardon and grace the people promised faith and obedience Gen. 17 1 2. Tim. Vpon what things or in what respect was this Sacrament profitable to such as did keepe the law by performing morall obedience vnto God Silas In these respectes First it did serue to distinguish Gods people from al other people Secondly it did serue as a Seale to assure them of the forgiuenesse of their sinnes and of Gods fauour Thirdly it did admonish them of their duty that they must abandon all sinfull and wicked desires and affections and remaine holy to God Lastly it was an instrument of the Holy Ghost to the mortification of sinne Tim. What was further taught from this that hee saith Circumcision was profitable Sil. Namely to grant and yeeld vnto any with whom we haue to doe in causes of Religion what is in reason and truth to be yeelded Tim. What was learned from this that he saith Circumcision profiteth him that is a doer of the Law Sil. That the fruite and profit of sacraments dependeth vpon the faith and godlinesse of the receiuers and not vppon the action done and the word spoken for sacraments they doe not make a wicked man righteous but he that is already righteous they confirme him in his righteousnes and encrease graces giuen but as for wicked men neither sacraments nor any other externall thing can profit them whilest they liue wickedly without faith and repentance Tim. Then sacraments haue not grace inclosed in them as the vertue of healing is enclosed in the medicine nor do not regenerate iustifie and saue men by the very worke done Sil. No verily but all their vertue is from God who at his good pleasure maketh them profitable to his children which feare him and receiue them duely walking before God and being vpright Tim. But sithence none are so vpright but that still they be transgressors and therefore no keepers of the Law which implieth an exact performance of the whole Law therefore the Sacraments cannot bring profit vnto any And then in vaine were they ordained Sil. This Text which saith Circumcision is nothing to such as keepe not the Law speaketh of impenitent transgressors such Hypocrites as doe sinne and continue in their sinnes without any godly griefe for their falles or confidence in the grace of Christ for remission of their faults to these indeed Sacraments bring no benefit at all Howbeit such as do transgresse the law by infirmity against their owne purpose and resolution being heartsorry vpon their disobedience once espied groning with vnfeigned sighes for the offence of God thereby and endeuouring to arise by repentance such haue fruit by the holy Sacraments because they stand to the condition vpon which the force and benefit of the Sacraments do depend For they keepe the Law tho not in their owne person yet in Christ in whom they beleeue and for whose sake their daily slips and faults of frailty are not imputed Christ being made to the fathfull the end of the Law for righteousnesse Rom. 10 4 5. of which righteousnesse as Circumcision to Abraham and the godly Fathers before Christ so Baptisme the Lordes Supper since Christ his comming be seales assuring vnto the godly Beleeuers their iustification with God by faith in Christ. Whereas to the vnfaithfull wicked liuers they are vtterly voyde and of no force except it be to seale vp their iust condemnation and to be a witnesse against them Sil. How do you proue that godlinesse is required in them that shall profitably receiue the Sacraments and that to vngodly men they are vaine and of no vse Tim. By 1 Corinthians 11 24. the end of their examination is to finde faith and repentance which wicked persons do want Also by the example of Iudas and of Simon Magus and by infinite testimonies of holy Scripture namely by this Text which vnto the promise of grace on Gods behalfe mentioneth on the peoples part the conditiō of obedience without which God is not bound to stand to his promise Tim. What is the profit that a godly man taketh by the Sacraments if he come repentantly and doe beleeue the promises of the Sacrament Silas Manyfold and verie great First it stirreth vp and strengthneth faith in the forgiuenesse of our sinnes by Christ and so knitteth vs more straightly vnto God the Father by him Secondly it kindleth our loue vnto God Thirdly it kindleth our loue one towardes another Fourthly by it God mortifieth and killeth our corrupt lusts Fiftly it encreaseth hope of heauenly glory in the faithfull Lastly it prouoketh thankefulnesse praise to God for all his free mercies by Christ Iesus DIALOGVE XVII Verse 28 29. For he is not a Iew which is one cutward neither is that Circumcision which is outward in the flesh but hee is a Iew which is one within and the Circumcision is of the heart in the spirit not in the letter whose praise is not of Men but of God Tim. WHat is the drift of this Text Sil. To teach who is the true Iew and what is true Circumcision and who is the false Iew and counterfeit Circumcision Tim. What is false Circumcision and who is a false Iew Also what is true Circumcision who is a true Iew. Sil. The false Circumcision is that which is outward onely in the flesh and in the Letter whose praife is of men True Circumcision is that which is inward also in the heart and in the spirit whose praise is of God Tim. What do ye call outward Circumcision and a Iew outward Silas That is outward Circumcision when the foreskin of the flesh is pared away without any mortification of sinne and he is an outward Iew which is one by profession onely and before men without any inward renewing of his minde by the spirite of God working Faith and conuersion of the heart vnto God which was the thing promised on the part of the Circumcised Tim. Let vs heare now more fully the difference betweene one that is a true Israelits and one that is a counterfeit by consequence of a true Christian and an Hypocrite Sil. The differences are many which I wil rehearse in order First of all the true Israelite loues God for himselfe The counterfeit loues God for his benefites the one loues the word because it is his word the foode of his soule the other because of knowledge which delighteth him which is a natural thing The one loueth Gods Children because they belong to God the other loues them for some carnall respect as for profit credite kindred The true Israelite seeketh the praise of God the false praise and reputation of the worlde the one desires chiefly to haue himselfe and his dooings approued of God the other chiefly desireth this that he and his workes might be seene of men The true Christian looketh as much to the manner of doing as to the
because he is so man as he is God also Thirdly because he is appointed to bee the person that should reconcile mankind Iohn 6 26. Tim. Why is it added By his blood Sil. This may bee ioyned either with faith to shew whereunto it leaneth namely to Christ crucified or ynto atonement because the propitiatory was sprinkled with blood by the High-priest when he entred into the holy place to teach that without blood is no remission of sin but whereas Paul doth onely mention his bloud thereby he would signifie the whole entire passion of Christ by a 〈◊〉 Bloud a part being put for the whole Sacrifice of Christ which was the consummation of his obedience Tim. What doth this put vs in minde of Silas First of the fiercenesse of Gods wrath and his wonderfull Iustice against sinne in that he could not be satisfied but by the bloud of his onely sonne Secondly of Christs aboundant loue to vs and what loue we owe to him againe Thirdly it giueth much comfort vnto great sinners being afflicted in soule and humbled that such an vnvaluable price was laide downe for their sins Lastly it sheweth that the fauor of God is of very great worth more then all the world seeing it could not bee purchased but by a price greater then the world Tim. But what means haue we to apply the bloud of Christ to vs Silas Onely by faith by the power whereof wee vnderstand and beleeue that blood to be shed for vs vnto our full attonement with God And note that there be two meanes or Instruments of our redemption First without vs on Christ his part which is his death or bloodshed Secondly within vs on our part Faith DIAL XV. Verse 25 26. To declare the righteousnesse of God by the forgiuenesse of the sinnes that are Dassed through the patience of God Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To expresse the cause or end for which God doth iustifie elect sinners which is the manifestation of his righteousnesse patience to the glory of his name Tim. What is heere meant by righteousnesse Sil. The truth and fidelity of God in sending his son according to his promise to worke the work of our redemption Secondly the Iustice of God in inflicting the whole punishment of sinne vpon the person of his Sonne Thirdly the mercy of God in smiting his Sonne that he might spare vs. We may vnderstand it of that which before was called the righteousnesse of Faith which God hath manifested to be the true iustice wherby men are iust before him Silas What learne we from this Tim. Seeing that God in reconciling the world vnto him by his Sonne did secke his owne glorie that is the marke which we our selues are to ayme at in seeking our saluation not seeking so much to be saued which may come of selfe-loue as that in our saluation God may haue his glory Tim. May not this bee vnderstoode of the righteousnesse which Christ wrought in his Man-hoode Sil. True it may be called the righteousnesse of God because the person was God which wrought it that is the onely righteousnesse which God doth allow and by which wee are acceptable For when this righteousnesse of Christ is giuen vs euen in our Iustification both sins past present and to come are forgiuen vs. Tim. Why doth he say then by forgiuenesse of sinnes passed Silas Some do vnderstand it of sinnes done vnder the old Testament but it is of others otherwise interpreted offinnes already committed because forgiuenesse is properly of sinnes past which men haue formerly done But the former interpretation seemeth to bee the best because of that which followes at this time present So then the meaning is this that as well the sins done before Christes comming in the flesh as those done since his first comming are forgiuen Gods Children which beleeue Tim. What was the vse of this Sil. To teach vs that the merit of Christs death looketh backwards and not onely forwards to them beleeuers that liued in the world before his passion aswell as to them that liued after his death and so he is the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world For from the fall of Adam no forgiuenesse of sinnes to any but thorough Christ beleeued on Tim. Why is this added Through the patience of God Sil. Because he would shew that God doth bear with those sinners whom he will forgiue Tim. What is the patience of God Silas It is that propertie whereby hee suffereth them long exercising it towards the Reprobate in taking frō them all excuse and towards the godly in giuing them space of repentance Tim. What may we learne from hence Silas First to vse patience towards such as do offend vs that we may be like vnto God Secondly not to 〈◊〉 though God doth verie often for beare offenders because they may be such as God meaneth to forgiue and eternally saue to his owne praise DIAL XVI Verse 26 27. To shew at this time his righteousnes that he might be iust a Iustifier of him which is of the Earth of Iosus Where is then the reioycing It is excluded By what Lawe Of workes Nay but by the Law of Faith Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To set foorth now fully the finall cause or true end for which God sheweth mercy to sinners for the pardoning of their sinnes which was to declare his righteousnesse Tim. What is meant by this time Silas That time when the Apostles liued and preached the Gospell and so forwardes to the end of the world neither the sinnes of former times nor of times present or future are forgiuen any other way then by faith in Iesus Christ. Tim. What learne ye by this Silas That there is but one way for forgiuenesse of sinnes to all men which liued before and since Christ euen by faith in him Therefore the Religion not of Papists but of Protestants is the ancient true religion Tim. That he might be iust what is that to say Sil. That is to say that hee might bee manifest and known vnto vs to be iust as he is in himselfe God doth shew himselfe to be iust vnto vs-ward two wayes First by punishing our sinnes seuerely in the person of his Sonne Secondly in pardoning them mercifully vnto vs which beleeue for his promise sake For as God is iust in himselfe so this Iustice is communicated to vs thorough faith in Christ. Tim. How is God called a Iustifier Silas Because he it was which gaue his Sonne as also which offered him and who doth impute him with his obedience for righteousnesse vnto the beleeuers which be of the faith of Iesus that is to say whosoeuer hec is that by faith embraceth Iesus Tim. Why is faith required in them who are to bee iustified by Christ Sil. That men may be shut out from any matter of reioycing in themselues For if righteousnesse came by our workes wholly or in part then wee shoulde haue
iustified namely by beleeuing the promise This is proued by authoritie of Scripture the Scripture saith that Abraham was iustified by beleeuing therefore he was so iustified The text hath a Question For what c. Secondly an answer thereunto Abraham beleeued c. Tim. What learne we from the Question Sil. That the points of Religion are to be proued by Scripture Secondly from authority of Scripture an argument followeth affirmatiuely Thirdly that proofes of Scripture ought to bee brought fitly and sparingly Fourthly the wisedome of Paul in obseruing the phrase and course of Scripture Tim. Now let vs come to the answere the faith spoken of in Gen. 15 6. which the Apostle heere citeth was not meant of Christ but of an infinite posterity andissue Silas The answere heereunto is this First Abraham by Faith had chiefe respect to that which was promised in the beginning of the Chapter that God would bee his shield and reward Secondly Abraham in his posterity foresaw Christ who was to come out of his loines Thirdly in all promises the promise offering Christ was wrapt as the foundation and roote of them all Fourthly it was Christ which spake to him at that time Gen. 15 6. for it was the second person who spake vnto the Fathers and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 beleeued in Christ. 〈◊〉 the mercy of GOD whether it appeareth to vs spiritually or temporally is the obiect of faith and God is not mercifull but by Ielus Christ therefore they that beleeue any promise of mercy beleeue in Christ. Tim. What more doe ye obserue here Sil. To beleeue God and to beleeue in God are all one for to beleeue God is to giue credite to his word and to put our confidence in his goodnes thus Abraham beleeued God Tim. What more was learned hence Sil. That it is a wonderfull thing to beleeue God or in God because it obtaineth the praise of righteousnesse to him that doth it as it is written He beleeued God and it was accounted to him for righteousnesse This one thing should be sufficient to moue all Christians to rely vppon God his promise by faith Tim. What other reasons may moue men to beleeue God Sil. Very many and substantiall as first because of Gods commandement Secondly because God being most true is worthy to be beleeued Thirdly there is great danger if wee doe not beleeue euen eternall death and the losse of heauen besides all temporall goods Fourthly it is a speciall seruice of God to trust in him Fiftly it is the cause of all other duties which spring from faith as the roote of all Sixtly therein is God most honored when he is trasted in and by the contrary much dishonoured for hee is thereby made a liar so much as lyeth in vs. 1 Iohn 4. 20. DIAL II. Verses 4. 5. Now to him that worketh the wages is not counted by fauour but by debt but to him that worketh not but beleeues in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for rightenesse Tim. VVHat is the drift of this text Sil. To proue iustification came not by woorkes but of faith by an argument of contraries three contraries set against three as first he that worketh not and hee that worketh The second contrariety is betweene fauour and debt the third is wages and imputation Tim. How stands Paules argument from these contraries Sil. Thus if Abraham were iustified by merit of works then he had his righteousnesse by debt and as a wages but his righteousnesse came to him not of wages and debt but of fauour and by imputation therefore hee was iustified not by workes but by faith Or more briefly thus If Abraham was iustified by fauour and imputation therefore not by desert of works but by beleeuing Tim. What is meant by him that worketh Sil. Not one that hath or doth works but one that desireth to deserue by his workes which appeareth by this First a beleeuer must be a worker and such an one was beleeuing Abraham Secondly wages and debt is giuen to merit not to works Tim. What learne wee by this that the reward is counted according to debt to him that will clayme it by merite of workes Sil. That eternall life is due to him that can fulfill the law this commeth by vertue of a compact or couenant which God hath made promising to them which doe the law that they shall liue by their works Tim. What is meant by him that worketh not Sil. Such an one as either hath no workes to commend him to God and deserue his fauour or hauing workes do put no affiance nor trust in them Tim. What was the doctrine here Sil. That wee must claime nothing by our workes the reason hereof is first because our good workes are ioyned with many euils Secondly our workes be not our owne Thirdly there is no proportion betweene our workes and the kingdome of heauen Fourthly our workes are a due debt Fiftly our best workes haue their imperfections and wants that we do not all good workes neyther do we them in perfect loue of God and our neighbour Tim. What is it to beleeue in him that iustifieth the vngodly Sil. To put trust in him that he will bee mercifull to our sinnes to forgiue them to vs for Christ. Tim. Who are the vngodly Tim. Such sinners as be straungers from God as all the elect be before their calling Tim. Doth God accept wicked men to fauour while they are wicked Sil. No but first hee forgiueth their sinnes And secondly of wicked hee maketh them good putting his holy spirit into them to regenerate and sanctifie them But at their iustification he findeth them vngodlie and maketh thē godly and he doth it both by taking away the guilt of all their sins by free pardon also by cleansing away the filthinesse of sinne by a powerfull sanctification Tim. What is meant heereby That his Faith is counted to him for righteousnesse Silas That the righteousnesse of Christ is reckoned the righteousnesse of that person which doth by Faith embrace Christ. DIAL IIII. Verse 6 7 8. Euen as Dauid described the blessednes of the man vnto whom God imputeth righteousnesse without workes saying Blessed are they whose vnrighteousnes is forgiuen whose sin is couered Blessed is that man to whom c. Tim. VVHat is the drift of this text To proue that righteousnes is imputed vnto faith and commeth not by Workes The which the Apostle prooueth by the testimony of Dauid Psal. 32 1 2. Tim. What be the parts of this Text Sil. 2. First the Preface or entrance Euen as Dauid c. Secondly the testimony it self Blessed are they c. Tim. What note ye out of the Preface Sil. These thinges First that the testimony is cited without naming the Psalme or verse Secondly that the righteousnesse of Christ was preached to them that liued before Christ. Thirdly Paul so citeth the testimony as hee giueth the summe and meaning of it in few words which is thus much that Iustificatō is the
accesse into the grace of God The second is a standing in this grace The third is ioy vnder the hope of glory Tim. What is meant heere by grace and by accesse vnto this grace Silas Some do vnderstand by grace the grace of a good conuersation or of imputed iustice which here is called Grace because it is freely giuen and then to haue accesse is freely to be brought into such an estate wherein Christ with his merits is imputed to vs so soon as we beleeue But by Grace I vnderstand the free fauor of God and to haue accesse to this grace is to haue a libertie to come or approach to God in all our wantes being through Faith in Christ made gracious and fauorable to vs. This is the same with that of Paul Ephes. 3 12. Wee haue entrance with boldnesse through confidence and faith in Christ and also with that Heb. 4 16. Wee may with boldnesse come to the throne of Grace hoping to finde helpe in the time of neede Tim. How doth this fruite follow the former Silas Very fitly for as our sinnes not forgiuen doe shut vs out so sinne being pardoned and God reconciled we may now resort to him being made propitious to vs. This may be declared by the example of Absolon who beeing in his Fathers displeasure might not come in his sight but atonement being made by Ioab hee afterwards came before his Father This then is a maruailous great benefit that we so litle and vnworthy should be allowed to enter once into the glorious presence of so great and worthy a God It is a great priuiledge for a meane subiect obnoxious through some crime to punishment by the mercy of his Prince not onely to bee pardoned but so honoured as he may at all times haue accesse to his Prince and entreate both for himselfe and his friends Here is then an amplification of the first benefit For it is more to bee brought to presence then onely to be reconciled Tim. By whom haue we this priuiledge Silas By Christ Iesus alone For hee alone it is who presenteth our Prayers in his owne name and by the merit of his death cleaoseth our Prayers that God may accept them And heerofhee is called our Intercessor because his death commeth betweene Gods iustice and our sins to make way for our prayers to come before his Mercy-seate Tim. What thinke ye of them who come vnto God by the Saintes Silas First it is vaine and needelesse seeing we haue Christ our atonement spokesman by whom we may come to his Father Secondly it is iniurious to Christ to ioyne any with him in the office of Mediatourship But whereas it is obiected that wee may well vse the Saints by them to come to God as we come vnto Kings by Dukes and Earles my answere is that the comparison is not like First because earthly Kinges cannot bee euerie where to heare and see all whereas Christ is infinite and is euerie where Secondly God alone hath appointed vs to come vnto him by Christ and by him alone Tim. What then thinke yee of them who say Wee must come vnto God thorough Teares sorrowe Repentaunce and good workes Silas They honour those things too much and make Christ of them by whom alone it is that wee haue accesse to his Father we must bring those things to God as fruites of his grace but by the merite of them wee may not looke to be brought into Gods fauour and acceptance Tim. Why doth he mention Faith Silas Because both Christ himselfe and all his benefits come to vs by the meanes of Faith Tim. Rehearse the third fruite of a iustifying Faith Silas 〈◊〉 in the grace of God By which is meant the perseuerance of beleeuers in the grace and fauour of God and in that blessed estate into which they are brought by his fauour that this is here meant may appeare both in Scripture speech common speech perseuerance and continuance is noted by standing as Psal. 1. 1. 122. 1 Cor. 16. 13. Thess. 2. 8. And we vse to call a place of continuance a station or a standing also of a man that is resolued we vse to say he stood to it Tim. What then do ye gather from hence Sil. That a true beleeuer which once hath peace with God beeing reconciled to him by Christ cannot wholly and for euer fall from this grace of reconcilement but abideth to the end in that grace Tim. Why do ye say he cannot wholly fall Sil. Because partly or in part hee may loose grace that is he may loose many tokens and gifts of grace as peace of conscience touching the secrete feeling of it ioy in the spirit cleerenesse of vnderstanding feeling and affection to goodnesse feruency of loue holy boldnesse confession of God with many such like as appeareth in Dauid and Peters case For as a healthfull sound man falling sicke he may loose many benefites and comfortes of life as health strength liuelinesse fauour beauty appetite and such like but yet retaine life it selfe So he that once by faith liueth to God cannot wholy loose this life of faith though hee loose many effects and companions of this life which the godly doe loose when they waxproud grow secure or fal into some grieuous sins Tim. Why doe ye adde that beleeuers cannot fall for euer Sil. Because the falles of the faithfull are but for a time for they rise againby repentance and after recouer themselues as in Dauid and Peter and others Tim. Why do ye say that beleeuers cannot fall from the grace of reconcilement Sil. Because all others which are not true beleeuers may vtterly and for euer loose all grace and beleeuers themselues may loose many graces and fruites of faith but the grace of atonement with God beeing once by true faith laid hold on can neuer totally be lost nor that faith wher by it is imbraced because Gods loue and couenant bee eternall Tim. Nothing is vnchangeable but God therefore grace is changeable and may be lost Sil. Grace is double first a grace making vs gracious and freely accepted with God this is vnchangeable as God himselfe for it is his free loue and fauour Secondly a grace freely giuen that is euery gift which floweth from his free fauour as the grace of sanctification of faith repentance hope loue c. These graces in themselues bee chāgeable but being preserued of God by a second grace they be durable and lasting to the grace of faith God addeth another guift of perseuerance by which the former gift is kept also 1 Pet. 1. 5. Tim. But Saul Iudas and Esau did wholy loose grace Sil. The grace of reconcilement and true faith whereby it is receiued they neuer lost because they neuer had it they lost onely that they had euen a generall illumination and common gift of the spirit Tim. But Solomon had the grace of reconcilement for he was Gods child yet he fell from that grace Sil. It is true he
the elect also his obedience putteth vpon the faithfull a righteousnesse which meriteth a farre better condition then wee lost by Adams vnrighteousnesse this vnlikenesse is pointed at verse 15 and further laide open verse 16 17. Tim. What be the profits that will arise of this comparison Sil. These First it will serue to confirme our minds touching the certainty of hauing the righteousnesse of another giuen to vs to make vs happy this beeing as reasonable as that the vnrighteousnesse and sinne of another should be deriued to vs to make vs guilty Secondly it will serue much to humble Gods Children to consider well the nature and force of sinne and what hurt they haue taken by it Thirdly the great benefit they haue from Christ will bee better knowne more hungred after and esteemed of vs more greatly by setting before it the contrary euill as a cure is more commended being compared with the danger of the disease Tim. What be the parts of this 12 verse Silas Two First a proposition of the double harme which is come vpō the whole world by Adam through whom all men are vnder sinne and death Secondly a reason heereof in as much as all men were in Adams loynes when he sinned and so sinned in him In whom wee all haue sinned Tim. Now to the words and tell vs what is meant by that one man heere spoken off Sil. Adam as verse 14 vnder whom Eue also is contained for sinne came by them both Psal. 51 5. but the man is named and not the woman because hee being the man was the more worthy person Secondly because hee was more in fault then Eue in regarde of his more eminent power and grace Thirdly sinne is propagated and deriued to vs rather by the Father then by the Mother because he is the principall agent in generation Tim. What were we taught heereby that Adam beeing but one man so great and generall a mischiefe came of him Silas Two thinges First the infinite hurt that may come of one person being euill the meruailous good that may redound to many by one being good Tim. Whereunto should the knowledge heereof serue vs Silas First to admonish Parents verie carefully to looke to the education of euery one of their Children Secondly that it behooueth the publicke state much what manner of person he is that beareth gouernment Thirdly it behooueth them who haue gouernement to watch ouer the manners of all men vnder their charge because one man neglected may marre all as Achan did Iosh. 7. Tim. What was the other thing gathered from hence Silas An exceeding comfort to great offenders so they turne and beleeue the Gospell which may bee raised thus Adam and Eue which sinned so heynously also wrapt their whole kind euen a worlde of people within sinne and destruction were yet receiued to mercy and saued therefore let no sinner how horrible soeuer be out of hart if they come to the throne of grace for pardon with trust to haue it Tim. What is further to bee obserued from this that it is saide Sin entred by one man Silas Euen this that God is not to bee blamed as cause and author of sinne seeing it came in by thorough man For whereas Adam might haue refused the temptation if he would he freely obeyed and willingly yeelded and so sin entred by him without any fault in God who had made him righteous and giuen him freedome of will Tim. Was there not a necessity herein that Adam shold yeeld Silas True there was so in regards of Gods counsel who had decreed not to strengthen his wil in the temptation but to forsake him yea further that being left to himself he shold follow the suggestions that so there might be occasion of giuing and sending his Son to redeem the world to the manifestation of his Iustice and mercy But notwithstanding this yet Adams disobedience was voluntary because Gods decree tho it ruled the euent businesse yet offred no force to Adams wil which could not be compelled therfore of it own accord enclined it selfe to fulfill the motions of the Serpent and his wife and therefore the whole fault of our fall lieth vpon Satan and our first parents as the proper cause of sinne For God made man righteous but they found out sundry inuentions Eccles. 7 31. Tim. What was further learned by this that sinne entred vpon al by meanes of one man Sil. That sinne is not by creation but came in afterwards Secondly how dangerous it is to hearken to ill counsell by meanes whereof Adam being depraued did depraue the whole world Tim. What is meant heere by the world Sil. The men which dwell in the world whither elect or reprobate as it is expounded afterwards Death came ouer all men The word World somtime signifieth that fabricke or frame of heauen earth as Iohn 1 10. The world was made by him Secondly it signifieth elect mē onely which are the chiefe part of the world Ioh. 3 16. And God was in Christ reconciling the world 2. Cor. 5 19. Thirdly it signifieth the wicked reprobate onely Iohn 17 9. Fourthly the corrupt qualities and fashions of the world 1 Iohn 2 15. Loue not the world Fiftly the whole masse of mankinde good and bad as here in these words Sin entred into the world Tim. What is meant heere by sinne Sil. That hereditary disease called commonly originall sinne or birth-sinne spread ouer our whole kind as a Leprosie and hath tainted the whole race of vs. That this onely is heere meant may appeare First because he vseth the singular number but when he speaketh of the fruites of it he vseth the plurall number Secondly that which he calleth sinne heere he afterwards in verse 17. calleth disobedience of one man which must needes be the first or Originall finne Thirdly hee saith verse 17. by this sinne many are made sinners and this is only by originall sin Fourthly there was no other sin brought death ouer all men except that therefore that sinne is onely meant heere In that I call it hereditary it is because as a disease which resteth in any stocke and descendeth from father to sonne so is this sinne it runneth from Adam through his whole progeny from Parents to the Children euen to the worldes end as it is sayde heere It came ouer al men Tim. What may this teach vs Sil. That this sinne is hard to be expelled out of mans Nature as hereditary diseases are hard to be cured and therefore must the more be striuen against Secondly that Children haue no faults which they doe not borrow and deriue from their parents of whome they haue corruption which is the spawne of all sin which should cause in parents commiseration and patience towardes their Children Tim. How many things are contained in this sinne Silas These foure thinges First guilt or fault Secondly deseruing of punishment Thirdly corruption of nature Fourthly priuation or absence of Originall integritie euen
the godly must fight against sinne with assurance of hope to ouercome in the end so they striue lawfully 2. The godly must bee so sure to ouercome as that they doe reioyce and triumph as if they had already ouercome Thirdly their trust to ouercome relieth not so much vpon their owne vertues workes and merites as vpon the mercies of God the Father by whose aide grace they looke certainly to preuaile Lastly their hope of helpe and aid from the mercies of God is grounded vpon the merites and grace of our Lord Iesus Christ and not vpon the law or good works or good conscience not these things but Christ hath appeased Gods wrath reconciled and continually pacifieth him Tim. What are we to learne from the last words Sil. First that Paul deuides himselfe into two parts mind and flesh not wholly flesh nor wholly the mind but partly the one partly the other Secondly that according to these two beginnings or grounds his purposes and endeuors were diuers for in his mind he serued the law of God to know and to do it and in his flesh he serued the law of sin that his corruption which still stuck in him did solicite him to euill and sometimes ouercame him Tim. What vse of this Sil. Snfull infirmity must keepe the Saintes from pride and their grace must stay them from despaire they cannot nor ought to be proud which carry sinne in their heart as a law neither neede they faint which haue grace for a gouernour in their mind Tim. What obserueye in this that he saith I my selfe Sil. First that he speaks of no other then himselfe Secondly that he speakes not in time past but present which serues to consute the Palagians and Libertines who take it so as if Paul spake all this from the 14. verse forward in the name and person of a meere natural man and had set forth no other fight but that which is between reason directing to things right and honest and affection or will drawing vnto thinges crooked and vnhonest as if Paul had in all this shewed himselfe an Arestotelian and not an Apostle extolling the power of nature and not the force of grace debasing and disgracing sensuality and not sin and birth-corruption which both in reason and will euen after regeneration vttereth force and great power like a mighty rebell striuing and fighting euen against the good worke of the Spirit in regenerate ones CHAP. VIII DIAL I. Verse 1. Now then there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus which walke not after the flesh but after the Spirite Timotheus WHat is the summe and scope of this eight Chapter Silas It doth conclude the doctrine of iustification sanctification of the faithfull through Christ amplifying and applying it to their comfort against temptations Tim. What be the parts of this Chapter Silas Two The first a doctrinall or exhortatory comfort against the secret corruption of nature or against the remainder of sinne and corruption still sticking and dwelling in the godly for though sin remaines yet it is not damnable to the godly This part continueth vnto the middle of verse 17. The second part containes a comfortable exhortation patiently to suffer afflictions for the name of Christ because their afflictions haue most equal and wholesome causes and most healthful effects This part continueth to the end of the Chapter Tim. What is the summe of this first verse Silas It doth propound and set downe the comfort against dwelling-sinne that albcit sinne doth abide in the godly yet condemnation doth not abide but is taken away Secondly a description of the godly negatiuely and affirmatiuely Tim. How is this comfort limited Silas Two wayes First by the circumstance of time and secondly of the persons It is declared by the circumstance of time thus Now that wee are iustified by faith and sanctified by the Spirite there is no condemnation to vs. Secondly the persons to whom this comfort doth belong are described by two conditions First that they are in Christ and secondly that they walke not after the flesh but after the Spirite Tim. But how doth this generall comfort belonging vnto all the godly depend vpon the former Chapter where Pauls particular conflict with sinne and his complaint against it was set out vnto vs together with his thanksgiuing for his deliuerance from it by Christ Silas Indeed one would thinke that vpon these premises he should haue inferred there is no condemnation to me but measuring all the godly by his owne sence feeling he doth enlarge the comfort propounding it more generally thus Now then there is no condemnatiō to such that are as I am This sheweth that he sustained the person of all regenerate men in the seauenth Chapter Tim. It is now time that we come to expound the words Tell vs therefore what is meant by Condemnation Silas A damnatory sentence of the law to wit that euery one is accursed that transgresseth it Or thus more plainely The sentence of God the Iudge of the world pronouncing guily and adiudging to eternall death such as transgresse the law Tim. What is meant by no condemnation Sil. Full and perfect freedome from this damnatorie sentence and punishment of death also that the godly that are thus freed from diuine condemnation and most dreadfull destruction are also accepted for righteous and worthie of eternall saluation through Iesus Christ nay there is not onely no condemnation but certaine saluation vnto such This may be collected to be the sence of these words thus Where there is no condemnation there is no wrath where there is no wrath there is grace where there grace there is neither sin nor death and where death is chased away there must needs be life and saluation Tim. What is that we are to learne from hence for our profit and 〈◊〉 Silas First we learne here a difference betweene the doctrine of the law and the Gospell and al other doctrines whatsoeuer which appeares herein that this doctrine of comfort can bee fetched and drawne from none other but from the doctrine of the Gospell Secondly it is a comfort that exceeds all other comforts to be exempted from condemnation and the wrath of God without the which men were in farre worser case then the bruite beastes because they liue securely without feare wheras men if they be without this comfort that they shall not bee condemned cannot but all their life long liue in a continuall feare of condemnation which must needs disquiet their hearts and rob them of al true contentment rest in their soules This comfort may be set forth by the comparison of a fellon or traitor which haue great comfort and quietnesse of mind being by the kings gracious pardon freed from deserued and sentenced death and of other malefactours liuing in dayly expectation of death to which they are adiudged without hope of pardon Tim. To whome may this comfort be most effectuall Silas Though it be very ioyfull
sake he maketh noble or base Eightly Paul saw no other cause of election but the will of God and it is dangerous to assigne that to bee a cause of election which Paul purposely entreating of this matter saw not this is to make our selues wise and him blockish nay our selues wiser then the Holy-Ghost Ninthly if the cause of election were workes or faith or vnbeleefe cause reprobation what need he say Oh the depth or obiect Is their iniquity with God and therefore it necessarily followeth that election is most free and absolute without any dependance vpon them Yet God did not chuse vs to the end without respect to the meanes for his decree concerneth both meanes and the end This is sufficient to stoppe the clamours of the Lutherans Tim. Doe ye thinke so of reprobation that it is free also without dependance on infidelity or ill workes fore-seene Silas In that some are not chosen to life it is without all respect of their vnbeleefe as a mouing cause but in that they are not onely refused but also appointed vnto destruction this is not without reference to infidelity sinne which as it is the proper cause of damnation so it moued God to ordaine to destruction but not to refuse and cast out from saluation for this was done to Esau ere he had done euill Secondly it is written God hardneth whom he will his will then is the high and first cause why men are not saued Thirdly God as a Potter may make vessels to ignominy for his wils sake Fourthly as we were corrupt in Adam God could see nothing in any man saue vnbeleefe and sinne And therefore if these had moued him not to chuse all had beene reprobated then Paul also should haue said that the purpose might remaine according to merite Lastly there is no vnrighteousnesse to cast off and refuse for sinne all will confesse this to bee iust Tim. What is the end or finall cause of election Sil. The vtmost end is the praise of his free grace Eph. 1. 5. hence elect are called vessels of mercy Rom 9 23. The nerest cause is mans saluation to attain eternal life and the final cause of reprobation is the praise of his iustice and the destruction of sinners Tim. What be the effects of election Silas Two First grace in this life as redemption by Christ vocation faith iustification adoption sanctification repentance good works perseuerance in grace Secondly vnspeakable and endlesse glory in heauen Tim. Are men and women elected to both these Sil. They be so for first Iacob and Isaac were chosen to the grace of the promise verse 8. but this comprehends al. Secondly it were absurd to separate the means from the end or end from the meanes Thirdly Scripture speaketh thus Acts 13 48. So many as were ordained to life beleeued Fourthly hec speaketh of election which is a preparation of the Vessell of mercie to glorie and which is ioyned with loue which is a willing of eternal life to men and all things which bring thither Tim. What vse of this point Silas It confuteth the Papists which say it is to grace and not to glory this they attribute to mans merits Secondly it reprooues such as thinke themselues elect to life they wanting notwithstanding the meanes of effectuall calling and good life Thirdly it comforts such as haue the means that they are sure they be elected to the end for meanes and end be linked together Ti. May they perish whō God hath chosen purposed to saue Sil. No they cannot for the purpose remaines firme Secondly God is vnchangeable and his loue is so too Thirdly then God should not be Almightie if he were not able to saue such as hee was once willing to saue Fourthly there would be no sound comfort to the godly except this foundation of God remaineth sure God knoweth who are his 2 Tim. 2 19. Tim. May such as be elect know themselues to be such Silas They may know it by their calling therefore is election heere ioyned with calling and before Rom. 8 28 30 because the counsel of election being hid before in the counsell of God is manifested in our calling Tim. What should this teach vs Silas First that such as haue but an outwarde calling by the Gospell ought to hope well of their owne election that it cōmeth of his purpose to saue them by saith Secondly because many are called which be not chosen it should stirre vp all sorts of Christians to examine their owne hearts whether they haue obeyed their Calling hauing their hearts changed from vnbeleefe and loue of sinne to faith and loue and practise of righteousnesse Thirdly let such as yet feele not this calling not dispair for who knoweth what may be tomorrow God calleth and turneth at all houres Mat. 20 1 2. Example in Paul and the theefe c. Tim. What are we to thinke of the election of others Silas First let euery man be most careful of his owne to assure it to himselfe by graces of the Spirit 2 Pet. 5 6 7. Secondly in charitie we are to hope well of all which heare the word and outwardly obey it 1 Thess. 1 6. Leaue to God the iudgement of certainty and the searching of hearts DIAL VII Verse 12 13. It was sayde vnto her the elder shall serue the yonger as it is written I haue loued Iacob hated Esau. Tim. VVHat is the end and scope of these words Silas To declare that the difference betweene one man and another touching grace and eternall life depends onely vppon Gods purpose and election and not vpon our worthinesse or vnworthinesse This is declared by two Oracles of God or testimonies of Scripture The first is taken out of Genes 25 23. The latter is taken out of Mal. 1 2. Tim. What is the meaning of the former place of Genesis Sil. That Iacob the younger brother should be Lord and Esau the elder should serue him Tim. This difference might come by chance or by their own deserts Silas Not so for first it was spoken ere they had done good or euill Secondly by another place of Malachy it is shewed that Iacobs dominion came from Gods loue and Esaus bondage from his hatred therefore it is Gods onely purpose which discerned between them and consequently betweene all other men Tim. But doe these words taken out of Genesis fitly belong to proue Gods eternall election to be the soueraigne cause of eternall saluation in heauen Silas Yea they are so or else Paul being ledde by the Spirit of God would not haue alleadged thē so for it were blasphemy against Christ to say that Paul did alleadge the Scriptures false or vnfitly being an Apostle of Christ who in his doctrine was priuiledged from erring as all other Apostles were Tim. Tell vs then how the lordship of Iacob and seruitude of Esau may proue that for which it is cited men may bee poore and lye in prison and be
his purpose for where the equity and cause is common there from a singular example may be gathered a generall doctrine as here seeing no good comes vnto any man but by Gods mercy therefore election is no lesse to be ascribed the run to then Gods reuealing himselfe to Moses so familiarly Tim. What is here meant by mercy and compassion Silas Mercy in the Hebrew comes from a word which signifies pitty or free fauour and compassion from a word which signifies to loue with such tender affection as mothers doe their children Tim. What may the often repeating of these wordes mercy and compassion teach vs Silas First that Gods mercy is most free and not due vnto vs as if he should say In that I shew mercy I find no cause but in my mercy and not in any mans goodnesse or merite Secondly that it is arbitrary proceeding meerely from his owne good will and not depending vppon any mans goodnesse vppon whome bee will c. Thirdly that Gods mercy is vnchangeable and most constant asin Pilats speech Iohn 19-22 What I haue written I haue written that is I will not change my writing So this speech I pitty whome I pitty is thus much I will not breake off the course of my mercy towardes my childe I am Iehouah I change not Fourthly that Gods mercy is vnmeasurable and infinite reaching it selfe not to some one but to many and manifold good things as if he should say to whome I shew mercy in decree I will she 〈◊〉 mercy in act on whom I will haue compassion in electing them I will haue compassion in iustifying sanctifying glorifying thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doe collect Hence is God in Scripture to armed the Father of 〈◊〉 God of compassion rich in mercy See Psal. 103 11. And is said to giue grace vpon grace lohn 1. 16. also see Rom. 8. 30. Tim. What is the vse that wee are to make of the properties of Gods mercie Silas First it giues comfort to consciences afflicted with their sinnes in as much as wee knowe that God will not deale with vs after our 〈◊〉 but after his infinite mercies Secondly it serues to humble Gods children in who 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no cause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 him to she we them the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but must setch and draw it 〈◊〉 from himselfe euen from his owne good will and pleasure It is not a more vile pride in a begger to attribute the almes giuen him to his owne deserts then to ascribe the mercies of God vnto our owne 〈◊〉 either in whole or in part Thirdly it must moue the godly vnto true thankfulnesse which consists in two thinges namely the confession and imitation of his mercies to bee mercifull vnto others as we haue found him mercifull vnto vs according to Christs precept Math. 5. good reason we should bee mercifull to our brethren seeing he expressed much mercy to his enemies not in a few things but in many not for a while but with continuance Lastly it confutes such as make foreseene faith and good workes or either of them the mouing cause of Gods 〈◊〉 them as the Patagians wherof one expounded these wordes thus on whome I will that is sayeth he whome I shall know to be iust and obedient to my precepts Tim. What doctrines 〈◊〉 from this sentence 〈◊〉 together Silas These first that election seeing it comes from mercy doeth therefore 〈◊〉 misery for mercy hath relation vnto misery therefore God did not chuse men as they are in 〈◊〉 but as in the 〈◊〉 and fall Also that so 〈◊〉 seene 〈◊〉 could 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God to chuse or refuse because then all had beene refused seeing all were lost in Adam Secondly wee learne that election is not vniuersall seeing mercie is not vniuersall but pertaineth onely to such as God would shew mercie to Thirdly that the mercie of God is most free and absolute depending vppon nothing without himselfe but wholly and absolutely vpon his owne will so as if question be why was mercie taken on Isaac and not on Ismael The aunswere is because hee would But why would hee Heereof no reason is to be giuen Tim. What vse are we to make heereof Silas First it admonisheth vs to ascribe the whole glory of our election and saluation to the free fauour mercy of God Secondly to teach vs to exercise our mercy freely towards others not vpon any sinister respect as for gaine and credit to our selues but onely for pitty sake that so we may imitate our heauenly Father as well in the manner of shewing mercy as in the matter it selfe Howsoeuer in the execution of Gods decree there shall bee place for Iustice because it shall bee rendred to euerie man according to his worke yet in the decree it selfe mercie beares 〈◊〉 whole sway choosing them on whom hee would haue mercie and leauing those to be hardened on whom hee woulde not haue mercie DIAL IX Verse 16. Now then it is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that sheweth mercy Tim. VVHat doth the Apostle 〈◊〉 this text Silas It is a conclusion of his answere concerning election to wit that God electing some whom he would hee is not therein vniust seeing he did it out of his free mercie as he proued by a testimony of Scripture in the former verse So farre off is God from being vniust as in choosing some hee shewes 〈◊〉 most good Hence then the Apostle infers that seeing election comes wholly of mercie and there is no cause of Gods mercie but in himselfe Therefore it depends not at all vpon the will and workes of man Nowe then it is not in him c. Tim. What be the parts of this Text Silas Two First it remoueth that which is the falsely supposed cause of mans election to wit our willing and running Secondly it putteth downe the verie true and sole cause to wit the mercy of God Tim. What is meant by It Silas Either election and Gods purpose is to be supplied out of verse 11. or his loue out of verse 13. which comes all to one as also to supply saluation is the same in effect Tim. What is meant by Hm Silas We may particularly vnderstand it of Iacob mētioned before but the best is generally to expound it of many euen Iacob and all others which be chosen For the Apostle nowe deliuereth a generall doctrine touching the cause of election Therefore they are deceiued which interpret this Him of God referring to God all three following willing running and shewing mercy Tim. What meaneth he by Will Silas The thoughts purposes and endeauours of the minde euen whatsoeuer it is that men doe striue and attaine vnto by all the inward faculties of their mind and soule Tim. What must be vnderstood by Running Silas All mans outward actions his words and deedes whatsoeuer Not of Esaus running to hunting or Iacobs running to dresse the Kid for this is absurde but of all good workes done by
Secondly sencelesse security when such disobedient sinners are neither mooued with the benefits nor correctiōs wherby they are called to repē tance nor yet allured by promises nor terrified by threatnings hauing harts like brawne or an adamant and yron Thirdly desperate obstinacy when after all meanes vsed of God by his worde of iustice and mercy instead of being better and better sinners grow worse and worse more carelesse to please God and keepe his commeandements and more frowarde in their behauiour toward God and man Tim. What is the vse of this doctrine Silas First it affoords comfort to all soft and melting heartes which by the worde and iudgements of God are moued to relent and turne from their sinnes vnto God by true and serious repentance such are no reprobates Secondly it teacheth the miserable condition of all such men as haue stony and brawny hearts they bee in a fearefull condition and had need to looke to it betimes Thirdly it admonisheth all men to beware of and striue against hardnesse of heart whereunto the neerer they are the neerer they are to reprobation and therefore let euery man examine himselfe and with al diligence vse al means to soften their owne hearts See Dialogue on Chap. 2. verse 4 5. DIAL XII Verse 19 20 21. Thou wilt then say vnto me why doth he yet complaine for who hath resisted his will But o man who art thou which pleadest against God Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made me thus c. Tim. VVHat doth this text containe Silas A new obiection against predestination with an answere to it The first obiection was touching Gods vnfaithfulnesse if he did reiect the Iewes to whom hee had promised to be their God The second was of iniustice if hee should elect some and not other some without respect of any worthinesse or vnworthinesse in themselues Now in this our text they charge God with cruelty and extreame rigor For if God harden whom he will and after punish them for that hardnesse this seemes vnto carnall reason to be cruelty This obiection is fortified and backt by two reasons closely coucht in this text The first is this It were cruelty in God to bee reuenged on that hardnesse which himselfe willeth verse 19. But Pharaoh and all wicked men are hardened because God will as before verse 18 therefore he hath no cause to be angry or to punish or if hee doe it seemeth to mans reason to bee all one as if a man should binde his seruant and after beate him because he did not his worke or as if a Magistrate should bid a prisoner breake the Iayle and yet hang him when hee hath done The other reason is this that God must bee accounted cruell if he should punish that which men cannot resist and auoyde but the omnipotent will of God whereby reprobates are hardened cannot bee resisted therefore the hardened without cruelty cannot bee reprehended and punished Tim. What are we to learne for our instruction from this obiection or first part of our Text Silas That the will of God cannot bee withstood and made voyde The reason heereof is because God being himselfe almighty there is nothing to crosse and hinder what he willeth Tim. Yet Steuen accuseth the Iewes Acts 7. that they resisted the will of God so doe the Prophets blame the Iewes of brason faces iron sinnewes stiffe-neckt vntamenesse Silas True the will of God is daily resisted to wit his reuealed will his will manifested in his worde and workes But our text speaketh of the secret and hidden wil of God De voluntate bene placiti non signi as Schoolmen write and distinguish Tim. What vse is to be made of this instruction Silas It affoords matter of singular comfort to all the godly who beeing assured by true faith and the fruites thereof of the good will of God from euerlasting may surely resolue that doe Sathan or sinne or the worlde what they can against them yet shall they neuer perish 〈◊〉 Gods will cannot be resisted Tim. What other instruction are wee to draw out of the 19. verse Silas That mans reason corrupted doth draw or gather false conclusions out of true propositions an example heere of we haue in this text For it is true that God hardeneth whom he will and that his will cannot be resisted but heereof it followes not that he may not iustly complaine of and punish obstinate sinners which set and willingly settle themselues in a course of disobedience Againe as it is true that we are freely iustified by faith alone but heereof it will not follow that wee neede not doe good workes as Papists blindly and badly collect Also because in some Churches the Ministry or Leiturgy may be faulty we ought not therefore to conclude that we may not liue in such Churches where such defections be not amended as if any would affirme a body to be no body because it is a lame one or an eye no eye because there is a web and pin in it Tim. But what error is in the conclusion of this obiection Silas First there is a falsity or error heerein that they put the secret will of God for the cause of perishing vnto the reprobate whereas none of them are destroyed but for the contempt of the knowne manifest will of God Secondly though there be a necessity that they be hardened on whome God will shew no mercy yet no reprobate is hardned against his owne will for they are so farre from auoyding the hardnesse of their owne hearts as that they rather contract it by their owne voluntary faults as Pharaoh did and as the obstinate Iewes did also Iohn 8 44. Tim. What vse is to be made of this last instruction Sil. That we must diligently beware how we conferre with mans vnreformed reason in the matter of Gods eternall predestination because thereby we shall bee carried into infinite errors and blasphemies against God Our duty therefore is with meekenesse and reuerence to stoope to that which God reucales in the Scripture admiring with Paul Rom. 11 33. Or with Mary pondering what our dull minds cannot at first conceiue Luke 2 51. Tim. Come we now to the answere of the Apostle to the former obiection and tell vs how he proceedeth Silas First by his Apostolicall authority he beateth downe the malepertnesse of man in disputing with God and this he performes by comparing the exceeding infirmity of man the creature with the high maiesty of God his Creator O man who art thou that pleadst against God Tim. What is meant here by pleading Silas A saucy ouer-bolde questioning with God to call him his decrees and doings vnto our account or examination Tim. What is the instruction out of these words Silas That it is a great impudency for any man to subiect the deepe counselles of God to the blinde poore and beggerly reason of man This is proued first by Deut. 29. 29. where it is written that secret
vnder his snaresat his pleasure whatsoeuer they thinke to the contrary 2 Tim. 2 26. Secondly it warnes all Christians greatlie to feare God which hath such fearefull executions of his anger Who wil not be afraid to disobey the word of that God which for the cup of mercy truth and sounde Doctrine being dispised can giue men to drinke a cup of fury of error and madnesse Not that hee powers into men any naughtinesse but stirs vp that which before lay hidden which causeth sinners to drinke in more sin greedilie and to delight in doing euill with continuall thirst in such poysonfull and deadly cups Silas Proceede now to the second part of the description of an hard heart and tell vs what it is to haue eyes where-with one cannot see and eares wherewith one cannot heare Silas To haue eyes and eares vnfit to see and heare or such eyes and eares wherewith they were not able to see and heare as in Math 13 15. eares dull of hearing and their eies heauy and shut as in Esay 6 10. and 29 10. Men vse to say As good neuer a whit as neuer the better so as good not to see or to heare as by hearing and seeing to be neuer the better But this is not altogether to be meant of bodily eares and eyes but by a metaphor which translateth to the soule that which is proper to the body and then eyes and eares doe signifie here such a minde so blinded with ignorance as it cannot knowe the true doctrine of saluation and such an hearte as cannot obey the Gospell The summe then heereof is thus much that the reprobate Iewes though they had eares and did heare Gods word and eyes to see Gods workes with the sence of the body for they heard Christ and his Apostles and saw their myracles yet not all with the assent of the Soule which was so farre from taking any profit to amendment and saluation by that which they saw and heard as they became rather blind in their vnderstandings and in their wils more peruerse and obstinate Tim. What are the parts of these latter words being thus opened Silas Two parts or things to bee obserued First an vndeserued mercy Secondly a iust and sharp punishment Tim. Wherein did mercy 〈◊〉 goodnesse shine forth towards the reiected Iewes Sil. Foure wayes First in this that their power of hearing and seeing was not taken from them This mercy though it be contemptible because it is common yet it is a great mercy as would bee well perceiued and felt were any of vs depriued of those corporall faculties Secondly there was affoorded them the best obiects of sight and hearing to wit the word of God which the Prophets first and after Christ declared to them thereby calling them to repentance and faith Also many and most excellent myracles of healing the sicke quickning the dead restoring sight to the blind c. Besides innumerable works of creation and gouernment I say workes both of mercy and iustice ordinary and extraordinary which were continually before their eyes to moue and stir them to God-wards Thirdly that the things which they did heare and see were not onely wonderful and singular but also that oftentimes and not seldome they did see and heare them which is signified by the doubling of the verbe Math. 13 14. In hearing they shall heare For whensoeuer a verbe is put before and thereunto is added an infinitiue moode beeing turned by a gerund thereby is signified an often and vehement action Lastly that besides these externall means offering grace to them they had inwardly engrafted into them some iudgement of conscience and there was giuen them some light of vnerstanding which none can deny but that they are the good gifts of God Tim. But alas they had no profite by all these but hurt rather Silas It is true that they had no profite by them but it was through their own default but as the sunne is no lesse glorious and bright because weak eies are offended therwith nor a plaister or oyntment lesse precious because it preuailes not to health So Gods good guifts his good word and workes are not the woorse to be esteemed because they did not benefit such as had them For as the vncurablenes of the wound or disease may make the Phisition or medicine frustrate without verbue which yet loose not their value so obstinate maliciousnes of the heart in wicked men maketh voyde Gods mercies which yet in themselues be such as deserue to be loued and praised Tim. What is the doctrine from hence Silas That there be no castawaies so wretched which doe not in some sort tast of Gods mercies as may appeare by Psalme 145 9 also by Rom. 2 4 5. and by Heb. 6 4 5 6. Euen such as blaspheme the Spirite by malicious hating and reproaching the known truth of the Gospell yet haue plentifully and diuersly felt Gods goodnes yea the diuels are not without some sence of it in that they are spared from their full torments til the time of fianll iudgement Art thou say they to Iesus come to 〈◊〉 vs before the time Mat. 8 29. see Ephes. 2 2. Also the bodyes of the wicked lye in the graue vntill the day of iudgement without any paine which is Gods great mercy The reason of this doctrine is to take from the wicked which shall perish all excuse this reason is laide downe in Rom. 1 20. The heathens had some knowledge of God by his creatures to leaue them without defence and apology least they should say We knew nothing of God had wee not beene ignorant we would 〈◊〉 liued better And secondly it serues to commend the very great kindnesse of God to vs for our imitation as in Luke 6 35 36. Mathew 5 45. Tim. What is the vse of this doctrine Silas It doth reproue such as doe euilly entreate Gods children vsing them without mercy How farre vnlike be these to God who hath mercy euen towards such as be not his owne but are vngodly sinners yea enemies and strangers from him Tim. What was the sharpe punishment obserued in these last words Silas To take no fruite at all but harme rather by that which these men heard and saw euen a farre greater blindenes and obstinacy both of minde and heart which are more besotted dulled and indurate or hardened by the doctrine and actions of God And it is so much the greater because wicked men feele it not it being such a greeuous curse and iudgement as there is none to bee matched with it for horror no not sicknesse plague nor deafenesse nor lamenesse nor imprisonment nor banishment nor dearth nor languishing death nor cruell bodily torment nor any other iudgement whatsoeuer can bee compared with a deafe and blinde soule that is to say with an hardened heart when it is the punishment of former disobedience and sinnes My reasons heereof be first because this punishment is spirituall and hath in
the preseruer of man and beast and sustaines all thinges by his mighty worde Heb. 1. 3. Tim. In what meaning is it sayed that all thinges are through Christ and doe consist by him 1. Cor. 8. 6. Colos. 1 17. Silas Not as by an instrument and one inferiour to the Father as the toole is inferiour to the crafts-man as the Arians would haue it who are confuted by this our present text where it is said of God the Father that all things are through him yet he is very God in which sence it is elsewhere of Christ written that all thinges are thorough him as by a working cause or as by the wisedome of the soueraigne creator of the world see Pro. 8. 27. 28. 29. as an Artificer exerciseth his art by his wisedome so God rules all by his Sonne Iohn 5. All iudgement is committed vnto the Sonne Tim. What is the doctrine from these wordes thus expounded Silas That the same God who is the maker of al things is both the ruler and supporter of all things disposing of all things as he will or sustayning them so long as he will for hee doeth whatsoeuer pleaseth him Psal. 115 3. and worketh all things after the counsell of his will Ephesians 1. 11. hence he is called the iudge of the worlde Gene. 18. 25. the King of nations Icr. 10 7. because hee hath all thinges subiect to his direction and becke both within without the Church he turneth the hearts of Kinges as the riuers of waters Prou. 〈◊〉 1. The answere of the tongue is from God Pro. 16 1. and verse 33. Though the lot saith Salomon be cast into the lap yet the disposition is from God and he is tearmed in scripture The God of battell Now if the issue of Lots and warres be through God guided by his prouidence then other thinges that are further off from chaunce and fortune must needes bee ordered by his will Tim. What profite may wee draw from the knovvledge heereof Silas It instructeth Christians to depend on God alone for all good thinges and in the vse of meanes by prayer to seeke vnto him for a blessing for as his goodnesse giues vs the meanes so his prouidence must make it effectuall to our benefite Secondly it exhorteth all men that receiue any good spiritually or bodily thankfully to acknowledge it to come from God and in euill things to bee patient and wel-pleased with God because they are sent of him after the example of Iob 1 21. and of Dauid Psal. 39. Tim. Wherefore doth the Apostle say that all thinges are for God Silas His meaning is that all things are of him and of no other moouing cause and by himselfe none other helping him so they are onely for his owne glorie and for no other end for he made all thinges for himselfe Prou. 16 4. Reuel 4 11. hee predestinateth adopteth and iustifieth men to the praise of his glorious grace Ephes 1 5 6. Hence our duty is to giue him glory in and for all things 1 Cor. 10 30. as the riuers which flow out of the Sea returne thither againe so God is to bee praised for all good things because of him alone they proceed herein true children are discerned frō Bastards who haue no affection toward the glory of God whereas his adopted children make it the scope of all their actions Tim. What may we learne by the last wordes To him bee glory c Silas That all must effect and approoue Gods glorie vpon all good occasions desiring it with all our heartes and gladsomnesse willingly ratifying it which is a very sure token of an adopted childe of God to wish and approoue his Fathers honour with griese to thinke of the hurt done to it by blasphemies and other wickednesse and with much ioy studying how to promote it in their liues and callings by praiers and praises good practises especially where there is this good minde in any measure after the hallowing of Gods name it is a good mark of one who in truth saith O our Father CHAP. XII Exhortation to morall Duties DIALOGVE 1. Verse 1. I beseech you therefore Brethren by the mercies of God that ye giue vp your bodies a liuing sacrifice holy acceptable vnto God which is your reasonable soruing of God Timotheus SHew vs how this Chapter dooth depend vpon the former Silas In the former Chapters Paul had handled doctrinal points of Faith as Iustification Sanctification Predestination vnto the end of the eleauenth Chapter Heere at the 12. Chapter hee beginneth the next part of his Epistle which is pareneticall or exhortatorie for he exhorteth all Christian professors in the person of the Romanes vnto duties morall in this chapter Secondly vnto ciuill in the next Thirdly vnto charity about things indifferent in the 14. part of the fifteenth Chapters and then descends vnto familiar things Chapter sixteenth Tim. What Method and Order doth the Apostle keepe in this Chapter Silas Hee exhorteth vnto generall duties belonging vnto all Christians affirmatiuely in the first verse shewing what they should do and negatiuely in the second verse warning what they should not do after that from the third verse vntil the ninth verse he perswadeth vnto particular duties which are to be done in respect of some degree or function ecclesiasticall Lastly in the ninth verse hee returneth vnto common duties which appertaine vnto al professors vnto the end of the Chapter Tim. Tell vs what is the sum of this first verse which wee haue chosen for our Text Silas It is an earnest exhortation to stirre vp al christians whatsoeuer with all their power to study and endeauour to leade their liues holily and iustly In this exhortation there are to be noted two things chiefly first the matter which is to become a liuing sacrifice to God This Sacrifice is qualified with fiue conditions and confirmed or vrged with two reasons Of the conditions the first is to be voluntarie in these words the yee present Secondly that it must be of the body that is of the whole man by a Synecdoche Thirdly a liuing one Fourthly holy Fiftly reasonable Now the reasons of the exhortation be two one from the mouing cause Gods Mercies the other from the finall end That GOD may be pleased Tim. What is the other grand or maine thing to be considered in this verse Silas The manner of the exhortation which is by a sweete obtestation I beseech you and by a louing compellation Brethren that is all Christian professors which haue one common faith and religion Tim. What instructions may we take from this milde manner of exhortaion Silas That the Ministers of Christ must not alwayes stand vpon their authority nor alwayes vse seuerity but sometimes deale by milde intreaties and perswasions Philē 8 9 10. For Ministers be fathers who be milde and deale gently Secondly the Spirite of the Gospell is the spirite of loue Thirdly the Children of God being of an ingenuous
It is by Ezra to the Iew and by the Prophet Esay to Ezekiah imputed as a fault that they forgat his mercies and rendred not to God according to his great goodnesse Tim. What is the second reason Silas It is taken from the effect of this sacrifice because GOD accepteth such a sacrifice so well qualified for they are after his owne heart For God being a spirit and holy cannot but delight in holy and spirituall 〈◊〉 being offered vp in the name of Christ 2 Pet 2 5. and proceeding from faith the Spirit of God Heb. 11. 5 6. Gal. 5 22 23. A great encouragement to euery Christian to labour harde in the deniall of himselfe and mortification of his lusts to know this to bee accepted with God Must wiues study to please their husbands 1. Cor. 7. 34. and seruants their Maisters Ephe. 6 5. euen their vncourteous maisters 1. Pet. 2 18. How much more then ought you to please God your Lorde husband father and redeemer who hath forgiuen you all your sinnes and called you to an inheritance immortal in the heauens 1. Pet. 1 4. These two reasons can be of no force with an vnregenerate or euil man or woman which neuer were partakers of his sauing mercies no not of one crum of them nor yet euer had their hearts framed by the Holy-Ghost to any sound care of pleasing God but the godly which haue receiued but one drop of Gods mercie in Christ and are led by his Spirit these will be mighty perswasions to make them more vpright zealous in Gods seruice DIAL II. Verse 2. And be not conformed vnto this world but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mindes that yee may prooue what is that good that acceptable and perfect will of GOD. Tim. WHat is the matter and method of this Text Silas It containeth the second generall precept concerning all Christians of euery degree and sort For the forme of it is set downe negatiuely then amplified by the contrary affirmation We are forbid to follow the fashions of this worlde and 〈◊〉 enioyned if we will please and serue God to make the will of God reuealed in his word the rule of our life and manners which will is set forth by three especiall qualities First good Secondly acceptable Thirdlie persect This verse then hath it in the explication of the former expressing plainely what was there figuratiuely set downe teaching vs the manner how Christians may offer themselues to God namely if they auoid the corrupt lusts of the world and endeauour thorough the regeneration of the Spirit which beginneth at the change of the minde the principall part of mans soule to allow and do the thinges which God willeth and approouerh being good acceptable and perfect Tim. What is meant by the world and by being conformable vnto it Silas Men vnregenerate and meerely naturall and all which is contrary to Gods will which is heere called the world as often elsewhere Iohn 14 17. 1 Iohn 2 14 15 16. and chapter 5 19 c. because such persons do still sticke in the vncleane and filthy mire of worldlie lustes which they obey with greedinesse Also for that they wholly minde earthly things louing them and caring for the thinges of this life neglecting heauenly things The conforming to these men is to like and allike them and to bee like them in their conditions to follow their fashions forme and guise of liuing shaping our courses semblable vnto theyrs putting on their forme and shape in our behauiour What the fashions of the world be see 1 Cor. 6 9 10. Galath 5 19 20 21. 1. Pet. 4 3. 1 Iohn 2 14. Ephes. 4 18 19 20. Tim. What is our doctrine from these words of the Text thus explained Silas Gods children must not in any wise make the manners of worldly and wicked men the rule and patterne of their life action The proof hereof see Psal. 1 1. Walke not in the way of the wicked c. and Prouer. 1 10. and Chap. 4. 14. we are forbid to goe after sinners wherunto agreeth that of Mat. 7 13. forbidding to enter into the broad way and that of 1. Pet. 4 4. that wee should not run with the wicked vnto the same excesse of ryot nor to be companions with the workes of darkenes Ephes 5 7 11. All which do teach vs that in framing our conuersation we may not imitate the fashions deeds of euill men The Reasons heere of be these First Gods people are a kingly Priesthood Pet. 2 9. therefore the fashions of worldly men do not become them For since the elect are made Priests vnto God it behooueth them to haue the whole life and all the parts of it wel ordered saith Chrysostom The Priests vnder the Law might not touch any vncleane carkas of men or Beasts neither may Christian Priestes meddle with polluted rotten lustes such as carnall men wallow or welter in Secondly the lusts of the world are not of God but of the diuel Iohn 2 16. But Gods children in their baptisme haue by solemne promise renounced the Diuel and all his lusts and therefore may not follow them without running into the guilt of perfidiousnesse and promise breaking Thirdly the faithfull haue put on Christ Iesus Gal. 3 27. and haue him dwelling in their hearts by faith Ephes. 3 17. Therefore they may not put on the sinfull affections and foolish fashions of this world for what communion between Christ and the world from which he hath redeemed vs Also his Gospell and grace teacheth vs to deny worldly lusts Titus 2 11. Fourthly God and the corrupt custome of sinners cannot both bee loued for if we loue the world and the things thereof the loue of God is not in vs 1. Iohn 2 15. Iames 4 3. The amity of this world is enmity with God but Gods children are bound to loue God aboue all yea alone all thinges bee for him and in him therefore they ought to abhorre the world Fiftly it is dangerous euen in this life for the godly to do after the customes or to delight in the company of sinfull men Peter among worldly men learned to deny and sorsweare his Sauiour Iehosaphat was forbid familiarity with Achab Wilt thou loue him whome God hateth 2. Chron. 19 1. and Iosias by conuersing with and conformining himselfe vnto an heathen king loste his life 2. Kings 23 29. The Israelites by framing themselues to the Egyptians in idolatry Exo. 32 1 2 3. and to the Moabites in adultery Num. 25 1 2. pulled due iust vengeance from God vpon their owne heads Dauid amongst the Philistims learned to dissemble and was in hazard see the title of Psalme 34. Sixtly the ende of the children of this world such as fashion themselues like to it is damnation Phil. 3 19. also see 2. Thes. 1 9. 1. Pet. 4 5. Lastly the fashions delights pleasures and lusts of worldly persons doe in a
nothing but God which giueth the encrease 1. Cor. 3 6. Heerein is the cause that many without all fruit nay with much hurt do study Scriptures because they seeke not to God by faithfull hearty prayer for his blessing as if the worke done would make them beleeuers good followers Tim. What is the thing in this 5. verse prayed for Silas It is agreement or consent in wils and affections each desiring and seeking others good and edifying as verse 2. for it is God alone that makes men to bee of one minde of which concord Christ Iesus is made the glue Cement and band As all meanes of peace without God are in vaine so all agreement which is not founded on Christs Faith and religion is rather conspiracy then a concord like to the agreement of Simeon and Leuy brethren in euill Genes 49 5. or of Absolon and Ach 〈◊〉 banding against Dauid Such is the agreement of Heretickes Idolators Papists Turkes Iewes Pagans and wicked men which meete in malice to doe mischiefe not in charity to builde one another Of this matter see Dial. in Rom. 12 16 18. Tim. What doth the sixt verse teach vs Silas That the vnion of Christians must be in profession outward as well as inward in affection in minde and mouth Also that such vnity is the rather to bee embraced with all readinesse because it tendeth to the praise of God whose pleasure and honour it is when his children liue louingly and peaceably as it is to his dishonor greatly that such as be called brethren and children to God do hate and striue one with another Tim. Giue vs a briese touch of the 7. verse Silas To receiue signifies charitably to iudge patiently to beare louingly to affect one another that is the weake the strong and the strong the weake The particle As noteth quality not equality for what proportion betweene Christs infinite loue and the finite charity of men The sincerity then is pointed at not the degree and measure as in Iohn 17 21. and Math. 6 12. In the last words of this seauenth verse lieth an Argument perswasorie from the more vnto the lesse thus If Christ receiued vs vnto the glory of his Father euen to make vs partakers of so great a benefite as of glorie and immortality in heauen with his Father this is the better sence then to say that Christ either propounded his Fathers glorie as his end whereby he receiued vs or that wee should receiue one another for the glorisying of God which both are true but not so fit as this that hee did loue vs so far as to make vs partakers of his Fathers glory therefore it followes that much more we should receiue one another to peace and concord which is the fruite of our receiuing to the benefite of his and therefore if he did such things to enemies how should not we be ready if wee will approoue our selues good Christians to receiue friends and Brethren Tim. How doth Paul proceede in verse 8. to v. 13 Silas Paul prooueth that Christ hath receiued vs in this excellent manner by a distribution of vs into Iewes meant heere by circumcision to whom he ministred by preaching and dying to performe the truth of God that is that he might be found true who had promised vnto their Fathers Isaac and Iacob c. to send them a Messias And secondly into Gentiles vpou towards whom he fulfilled the mercies meant them of God and mentioned in sundry Testimonies which are heere set downe till verse 13. Tim. Now with like breuity obserue the cbiefe doctrines which arise from the eight verse to the 13. Silas First we haue a singular example of rare humility in Christ who beeing the Sonne of God equall to his Father yet by taking our nature subiecting himselfe to circumcision and the whole lawe by his diligent teaching miracle-working his passion painefull and reprochfull his resurrection victorious did minister vnto the Iewes his enemies being made their seruant whose Lord hee was yet seruant to all being Lord of all Which should admonish vs of his loue to mankinde for whose loue and sake he was so abased comming not to bee ministred vnto but to minister so of our dutye in bearing the same minde as he did 〈◊〉 no seruice how seruile or abiect soeuer to expresse zeale to God or our brethren Phil. 2 5 6 7. Secondly Christ may be a patterne as of low linesse to all so of diligence and fidelity to Ministers of the word whose dignity stands not in titles solemnities Robes pompes processions papall massing c. but in teaching the people constantly and soundly also in feruent prayer for them and example of an holy blamelesse life for thus Christ in his owne person ministred to the Iewes and afterwards to the Gentiles by his Apostles Thirdly heere is a proofe of that glorious property of God to wit his truth that hee is most true and faithfull of his word namely because such promises as vpon the fal he made to Adam touching the womans seede and afterwards to the Patriarkes concerning the same to come out of their loynes to make all Nations blessed were in due time accomplished by sending Christ borne of a pure virgin to be a common Sauiour of elect Iewes and Gentiles Let this moue all Christians to put confidence in him being so mercifull and true who will not deceiue Secondly to imitate his properties beeing faithful in their words bargaines couenants vowes and promises Thirdly to praise and magnifie him for his free and gracious calling of vs Gentiles to the grace of Christ whereof vnlesse hee had made vs truely partakers we could neyther celebrate and confesse him as it was sorespoken of by Dauid Psal. 10 50. 2. Sam. 22. Neyther reioyce together with his owne nation the Iewes called by the Gospell as was foresaide Deut. 32 45. Nor haue praised God as we are commanded Psal. 117. 1. Nor haue hoped or put our trust in him as Esay 11 10. except hee had become our Sauiour and redeemer To whom therefore for his vnspeakeable mercies in visiting the Gentiles and being their light be all ioyfull praise and thankes in all the Churches of the Saints DIAL III. Verses 14 15. Now the God of peace fill you with all ioy and peace in heleeung that ye may abound in hope through the power of the Holy Ghost And I my selfe am perswaded of you brethren that yee also are full of goodnesse filled with all knowledge able also to admonish one another now therfore brethren I haue written vnto you somewhat more boldly in some sort as putting you in minde of the grace which is giuen me of God Tim. SHew vs what is done in these verses begin with the 13. and so goe on to the verses following Silas In the 13. verse Paul finisheth his exhortatory speech touching loue and concord amongst the Romanes with a short pithy prayer wherein hee so declareth his ardent desire of their saluation as withall