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A17389 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of vvriters, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seauen yeeres vveeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1615 (1615) STC 4216; ESTC S120678 703,664 509

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insnared with euill opinions either in doctrine and so errour of life is the scourge of errour in opinion or else about practise as that such strictnesse is not required or it is impossible or none doe liue so 4. Many know not what order to appoint vnto themselues 5. Many are confirmed in a heart accustomed to euill and they loue some one sinne wherein they especially breake order 6. Satan striues aboue all things to keepe men in a dead sleepe that they might not awake to liue righteously or expresse the power of godlinesse 7. Many are so set in the way of the vngodly that their very euill societie chains them downe to a necessitie of dissolutenesse 8. Many are put out of all order by their daily distempers and disorders in their families Lastly some faile and fall through very discouragement receiued either from opposition or contempt or scandall Now if any be desirous to know in generall what he should doe to bring his life into order I shall profitably aduise fiue things First that hee doe resolutely withdraw himselfe from the sinnes of the times and keepe himselfe vnspotted of the world in respect of them Now the sinnes of the times are apparant pride of life contempt of the Gospell coldnesse in faith and religion swearing profanation of the holy Sabbath domesticall irreligiousnesse contention vsurie whordome drunkennesse and drinkings oppression and speaking euill of the good way Secondly that hee obserue the more vsuall corruptions of the calling of life he liues in and with all heedfulnesse shunne them whether he be Magistrate Minister or priuate person Thirdly that he especially striue against and subdue the euils that by nature he is most prone vnto Fourthly he shall doe wonderfully profitably if hee would get a catalogue of duties out of the whole law that directly concerne himselfe in particular which is very easie especially by the helpe of some that are experienced to bedistinctly gathered labouring to shew all good faithfulnesse in duties of pietie as well as righteousnesse and to striue for inward pietie as well as outward resoluing to continue as well as once to begin Hence it is if wee marke it that the holy Ghost in diuers Scriptures drawes for the people of those times diuers catalogues either of grace which specially tended to their praise or of duties that most fitted their state or of sinnes that they must most carefully auoid as being most commonly committed yea it could not but be of excellent vse if we did taske our selues to the more strict obseruation of some of those catalogues either of grace or sinnes or duties as wee might perceiue they most fitted vs. But if euer we would goe about the order of our liues wee must in generall 1. labour to weaken the loue of earthly things 2. We must resolue to keepe our hearts with all diligence I meane we must with all care and conscience striue against inward sinnes 3. We must put on a minde to liue by faith whatsoeuer befall vs. 4. If we fall we would speedily recouer our selues by confession and praier and not accustome our selues to sinnes either of omission or commission Vpon the consideration of all this what should we doe but euen pray the Lord that he would make his way plaine before our face and direct the workes of our hands and hold vp our goings in his pathes that our steps doe not slide And to this end we should euery one be peecing and amending his waies making his paths straight being ashamed and confounded for all the disorder of our liues past But if thou goe about this bee not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a man that hath two hearts for then thou wilt be vnstable in all thy waies either goe about it with all thy heart or else let it alone What shall I say but this let vs all learne the way of God more perfectly Thus of order The second thing hee commends is their faith which hee praiseth for the stedfastnesse of it The stedfastnesse of their faith Concerning stedfastnesse of faith I propound fiue things to be considered of 1. That it may be had and ought to be sought 2. What the nature and properties of it are 3. What is the cause why the faith of many is not stedfast 4. What we must doe to attaine it And lastly concerning vnstedfast faith For the first that it may be had is manifest for God that giueth the earnest of his spirit and sealeth and anointeth vs in Christ doth stablish vs in him There is a sure foundation of God vpon which we may found our affiance And God willing more abundantly to shew vnto the heires of promise the immutabilitie of his counsell interposed himselfe by an oath to confirme his promise that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie we might haue strong consolation which slie for refuge to lay hold vpon the hope set before vs which hope we haue as an anchour of the soule both sure and stedfast And wee are commanded to resist stedfast in the faith And wauering is secretly threatned and disgraced by the Apostle Iames after he had charged that wee should pray in faith without wauering Now for the second there are many excellent properties and praises in a stedfast faith for a man that is indeed settled and stedfast in his faith knowes both the truth and the worth of the loue of Christ hee is able to contemne and denie the allurements examples customes and glorie of this world hee can beare aduersitie with singular firmnesse of heart without hasting to euill meanes or limiting God for the manner or time or instruments of deliuerance he can stand in the combat against frequent and fierie tentations and goe away without preuailing infection he can beleeue without feelings The promises of God are not yea and nay but alwaies a sure word and vndoubted He hath a kinde of habituall peace and contentation in his conscience with easefull delights and refreshings in the ioyes of Gods fauour Hee hath a kinde of spirituall boldnesse and confidence when he approacheth to God and the throne of his grace Lastly he can looke vpon death and iudgement with desire to be dissolued And for the third thing the reasons why many men shew not this vnmoueablenesse and stedfastnesse are diuers some haue not faith at all some haue not a true iustifying faith but either rest vpon common hope or an historicall or temporarie faith In many the presumption of certaintie doth hinder stedfastnesse it selfe Some want powerfull meanes that should establish them and some hauing the publike meanes are iustly blasted in their faith because of their daily neglect of the priuate meanes And this reason may be giuen also why some of the better sort are not yet stablished namely because they are so hardly excited and perswaded seriously to trie their owne estates
god meanes to take account of their inward euill thoughts And that if very concupiscence be not mortified it may destroy their soules though they be neuer so free from outward enormities of life Paul while he was carnall was vnrebukeable for outward conuer +sation but when the law shewed him his lusts and euill thoughts he then sawall was in vaine And couetousnesse which is idolatry Now followeth the sinne against the first commandement And it is described both in it selfe and in relation to God In it selfe it is couetousnesse and in relation to God it is idolatry Couetousnesse is a spirituall disease in the heart of man flowing from nature corrupted and insnared by sathan and the world inclining the soule to an immoderate and confident yet vaine care after earthly things for our owne priuate good to the singular detriment of the soule Couetousnesse I call a disease for it is such a priuation of good as hath not only want of vertue and happinesse but a position of euill in it to be shunned more then any disease for as the text saith it is an euill sicknesse And this disease is spirituall and therfore it is hard to be cured No medicine can helpe it but the blood of Christ. It is not felt by the most but hated only in the name of it The subiect where this disease is is the heart of man For there is the seat or pallace of this vice And therefore S. Mark addes couetousnesse to those vices Saint Mathew had said did defile a man The internall efficient mouing cause of this euill is nature corrupted T is a sinne euery man had need to looke too for mans nature is stirred with it It is an vniuersall quaere who will shew vs any good and yet I say corrupted nature for nature of it selfe is content with a little it is corruption that hath bred this disease The externall efficient causes are the diuell snaring and the world tempting The forme of this euill is an inclination to the immoderate and confident care of earthly things I say inclining the soule to take in the lowest degree of couetousnesse For some haue their hearts exercised in it and wholly taken vp with it their eies and their hearts and their tongues are full of it Now others are only secretly drawne away with it and daily infected with the inclinations to it I adde moderate and confident care because honest labour or some desire after earthly things are not condemned Only two things constitute this vice First want of moderation either in the matter when nothing will be enough to satisfie their hauing or in the measure of the care when it is a distracting vexing continuall care that engrosseth in a manner all the thoughts and desires of a man Secondly carnall confidence when man placeth his felicity and chiefest stay and trust in the things he either possesseth or hopeth for I adde yet vaine because let the couetous person bestow neuer so much care or attaine to neuer so much successe of his cares yet as Salomon saith He that loueth siluer shall not be satisfied with siluer and he that loueth riches shall be without the fruit thereof And after all his trauaile his riches may perish whiles he looks on or if they were more sure to continue yet he shall not continue with them himselfe For as he came foorth of his mothers belly he shall returne naked to goe as he came and shall beare nothing away of his labour which he hath caused to passe by his hand In all points as he came so shall he goe and then what profit hath he that he hath trauailed for the wind The obiect of this care and desire is earthly things For if it were a couetousnesse or desire of the best things or spirituall gifts that were both commended and commanded These words for his owne priuate good note the end of the couetous mans care For if all this care for earthly things were for Gods glory or the good of the Church it might be allowed And I say for his good because that he propounds to himselfe though many times when he hath gotten much together the Lord will not let him haue the vse of it Note the best thing in the description is the effect of couetousnesse and that is the singular detriment of the soule which may appeare diuersly For first couetousnesse doth infatuate and besot the mind of man that it cannot vnderstand The Prophet Esay saith of those dumb and greedy dogs that they could not vnderstand and he giueth the reason For saith he they all looke to their owne way euery one for his aduantage and for his owne purpose and profit And Salomon seems to say that if couetousnesse be in the heart of a Prince it will make him destitute of vnderstanding And it is certaine marke it worldly minded persons are the most dull and incapable persons in spirituall things almost of all other sorts of men For though they would get a little vnderstanding while they are hearing yet the cares of life presently choakes all Secondly couetousnesse pierceth the soule through with many a sorrow The couetous person is seldom or neuer free from one notable vexation or other His heart is troubled and he will trouble his house also As Salomon saith he that is greedy of gaine troubleth his owne house All is continually in a tumult of hast and hurry what with labour and what with passion and contention the couetous man and his household neuer liue at hearts ease and rest Thirdly couetousnesse and the desire to be rich bring into the soule a wonderful number of temptations and noisome lusts enough to damne him if he had no other sinnes Fourthly it is here added that couetousnesse is idolatry it makes a man an idolater Mammon is the idoll and the worldling is the Priest that sacrificeth to mammon Now the couetous man serues his mammon with a twofold worship For with inward worship he loues desires delights in and trusts in his wealth And for his outward seruice he spends all his time vpon his idoll either in gathering or keeping or increasing or honoring it Lastly what should I number particulars couetousnesse why the Apostle saith it is the root of all euills For there is almost no kind of sinne but the sap of couetousnes will nourish it If the Lord had but the ripping vp of the heart and life of a couetous person and would describe his vices before vs oh what swarme of all sorts of euills could the Lord find out well let vs be assured of this generall that howsoeuer couetous persons may colour matters yet indeed they are wonderfull vicious persons Neither are their sinnes the fewer or lesser because they discerne them not for the dust of earthly profits hath put out their eies they cannot see nor discerne as was before shewed Qu. But who is couetous for all men while they cry out against
himselfe in his body from the graue but also because by his onely power all his members shall rise at the last day and also because that in the death of all the righteous hee doth still continue to and in the very last gaspe his assistance and holy presence Secondly hee is fittest yea onely fit to be the head of the Church because it hath pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse onely dwell so that hee is a head in respect of pl●nitude for the behoofe of the members And thirdly hee is a head in respect of influence for from him onely comes downe to the members all peace with God and all the fruits of that reconciliation for it is hee that made peace by the bloud of his Crosse and that hath estated happinesse vpon all the Saints reconciling them to God I say all the Saints both those that are in heauen already and those that being yet on earth hope for that glory in heauen hereafter And that this is so you are able out of your owne experience to auouch for whereas by nature you were strangers from GOD and the life of God you were very enemies to God and all goodnesse and this alienation and enmitie was apparantly seated in your very mindes through the euill workes of all sorts which abounded in your liues yet you know that CHRIST taking our Nature vpon him and in that nature suffering death for you hath reconciled you to GOD and by thee Gospell a-new created you that he might present you to God as holy and vnblameable and without fault in his sight couering your wants and hiding the euill of your workes through his owne Intercession and allowing you the benefit of the Couenant of Grace through which vprightnesse will be in him accepted in stead of perfection Now what remaines but that seeing wee haue such precious Doctrine you should be exhorted to hold out with all Christian perseuerance setling and establishing your hearts in the beliefe of the truth suffering your selues not to be caryed away with any contrary winde of Doctrine from the confidence of that hope of your reconciliation with GOD which hath beene propounded and wrought in you by the preaching of the Gospell and the rather because vnlesse you doe so perseuere you cannot haue sound comfort in your right to the benefits before named Besides there are many reasons may induce you to the resolutenesse of perseuerance in the Doctrine you haue already beleeued and hoped in First it is the Doctrine which all God● Elect with one consent haue receiued throughout the world and vpon it haue founded their Faith and Hope Secondly the consideration of what yee see in mee may somewhat moue you and that if you eyther consider my Ministery or Sufferings for my Ministery I haue so throughly informed my selfe concerning the Doctrine which Epaphras hath taught you that I see it in all things for the substance of it to be the same which I my selfe haue taught in euery place Now for my Sufferings it is apparant to all sorts of men that I haue endured my part of all kindes of Troubles for the Gospell which I would not haue done if I had not had full assurance of the truth of it neyther doe I repent mee of my afflictions but reioyce in them rather and that for diuers Reasons First because they are the Afflictions of CHRIST that is such as he accounts to be his Secondly because I know that in Gods Decree I haue my part of troubles assigned mee and it is my ioy to thinke that in so good a cause I haue almost fulfilled them Thirdly because these Afflictions extend but to my flesh and outward man And lastly because it is for your good I suffer euen for the confirmation of your Faith and for the good of the whole body of Christ which is the Church Thirdly I haue receiued this Commission concerning the Gospell immediately from GOD himselfe with strict charge that for your good I should pursue the execution of it till not onely Faith and Hope were wrought but till we saw the worke and word of God euen accomplished and fulfilled Fourthly what can there be more excellent and worthy to be beleeued and trusted in then this Gospell of IESVS CHRIST and our reconciliation in him seeing it is that dreadfull Mysterie which worlds of men haue wanted as being hid from whole Ages and Generations hitherto and now by the vnspeakeable mercy of GOD is reuealed by preaching vnto the Saints as a peculiar treasure entrusted to them And fiftly the rather should you hereupon settle considering the admirable subiect of the Gospell for it is the good pleasure of GOD in this rich and glorious Mystery of the Gospell to make knowne to the poore Gentiles Christ Iesus himselfe and that by giuing him therein to dwell in your hearts by Faith and as your assured and onely hope of immortall glory Sixtly neyther should you euer cast away the confidence of your assurance and hope or grow weary herein seeing it is the drift and end of all our preaching wherein wee eyther admonish or instruct you leading you through all sorts of wisedome in the word of GOD. I say the end of all is to present you at the length perfect and compleate euery one of you in CHRIST IESVS in some acceptable measure of Sinceritie and Knowledge in him And seauenthly being incouraged with that successe which the LORD hath giuen to my ministery I will labour as I haue laboured and still striue with all possible diligence and endeauour in this glorious worke hoping that this also may proue a motiue among the rest to perswade with you to keepe Faith and Hope to the end with all Constancie and holy Perseuerance CERTAINE OF THE Chiefest things obserued in the Notes vpon this first CHAPTER WHat rules wee must obserue in alledging the examples of godly men sinning fol. 4 The assurance of a lawfull Calling serues for many vses fol. 5 Gods Children called Saints in this life in foure respects fol. 7 Comforts for the despised Saints with answere of some Obiections fol. 7.8 How Saints may be knowne 9 Christian faithfulnesse is to be shewed in fiue things in spirituall things and in three things in temporall things 10.11 Idlenesse in Professors taxed 11 Seuerall Vses arising out of the consideration of this that wee are Brethren 13 How wee may get into Christ and how we may know whether we be in Christ. 13.14 Spirituall things are the best things for nine reasons 15 The Motiue and the manner of Thankesgiuing to God 20 Foure Rules of tryall in our Thankegiuing to God for others 21 A Childe of God neuer giues thankes but he hath cause to pray and contrariwise 21 Foure sorts of prayers for others 21. 68 Fiue reasons to warrant praying euery day 22 The Sorts Obiects Parts Degrees Benefits Le ts Signes of Faith with the misery of the want
two things may be obserued First wee had neede to be often vrged and put in minde and stirred vp to seeke knowledge wee are naturally so vnapt to spirituall things that line must be vpon line and precept vpon precept Of our selues there is none of vs haue any great minde to vnderstand or seeke after God or if wee begin we soone leaue off to vnderstand to doe good and some of vs are so wayward and wilfull that wee know not nor will not know but walke on in darkenesse though all the foundations of the earth be moued Secondly men are not onely to seeke knowledge that they may be conuerted and sanctified and liue a righteous life but euen after all these are attayned wee must still be industrious to get more knowledge because knowledge inlarged giues the comfort and sence of grace receiued else a man may haue Faith and yet for want of knowledge liue without the comforts of it Besides it furthers the sanctification of our callings and the Creatures wee vse Further it makes vs able to discerne things that differ and in matters of saluation to trust our owne Faith and it keepes downe corrupt affections and in what measure we retayne our ignorance we retayne feare and the spirit of bondage Increasing The adiunct increase followes Here are two Doctrines First that wee must increase in knowledge else that wee haue will decay and knowledge is giuen but in part and not all at once Besides it is a speciall part of Gods Image and therefore of great both necessitie and honour If men be neuer weary of seeking for wealth and riches why should a Christian be weary of seeking Wisedome which is better then all treasures Secondly that increase of knowledge is a great furtherance of holy life the preuayling of sinne in the life of the Iewes was caused by the preuayling of ignorance Therefore there is no mercy nor pietie in the Land because there is no knowledge of God in the land God shewes his righteousnesse to them that know him And therefore neyther the Papists must tell men that Ignorance is the Mother of Deuotion nor the common Protestant so idly aske what needes all this Knowledge More particularly three Questions may be here resolued Quest. 1. What are the letts of increase Ans. There are many letts 1. Ill opinions about knowledge as that it is vnprofitable vnnecessarie c. 2. Abuse of our Callings 3. The loue of other things 4. The smothering of doubts difficulties and preiudice in the vse of the meanes 5. Securitie when a man growes proud of what hee doth know and presumes of Gods mercy for what hee wants 6. Presumptuous sinne as it hinders other graces so it casts men behinde-hand in knowledge 7. Resisting of Gods Spirit pricking the conscience to get it awake and smothering of terrours 8. Internall euils nourished as lust euill thoughts passion c. Quest. 2. How may we know when wee increase in knowledge Ans. We increase in knowledge 1. If wee increase in the affection to any vse of the meanes for God is neuer wanting in the successe 2. If we increase in the power of godlinesse it is certaine wee grow in knowledge if wee grow in grace 3. If we grow stayed and setled and more resolued in the doctrine of Gods grace and practise of holy life Quest. 3. What must we doe that wee may increase Ans. Wee must obserue these Rules 1. We must practise what we doe already know 2. We must not be ouer-curious or suffer our selues to be drawne aside with fond questions controuersies and speculations but be wise to sobrietie 3. We must redeeme the time and watch to all the opportunities for the vse of the meanes 4. Wee must vse the world as if wee vsed it not 5. Wee must acknowledge that is confesse and professe what we know least God by our vnthankefulnesse and fearefulnesse be prouoked to scourge our spirits with a slumber or reprobate sence 6. We must minde our owne way Lastly wee must vse Gods ordinances and all of them and without interruption constantly and chearefully Thus of the Grace it selfe and the Measure of it the Obiect followes Of God Our knowledge must be of God foure wayes for the first it must be spirituall and diuine knowledge not humane naturall and earthly 2. It must be of God as hee is the author of it we must seeke it from aboue by prayer 3. It must be of God as he is the end of it it must draw vs nearer to God Lastly God must be the obiect of it we must know Gods Name In this last sence here are two things imported First that euen after regeneration there may be sometimes some working of the seedes of Atheisme So wretched is the euill nature of man that in this respect there is cause many times to hang downe the head with horror shame and bitter mourning of heart and confusion of face Secondly that increase in holy conuersation doth abate the mouings of Atheisme as any be more holy so they are more freed from the trouble of them Be first holy and then be an Atheist professed or resolued if thou canst Concerning the knowledge of God foure things are to be considered 1. How hee is made knowne 2. Who they are that God chargeth with this that they know him not 3. How it comes to passe that man knowes not his God 4. What wee must doe that wee may know God God is made knowne 1. in his Sonne in Christ God is as it were visible 2. By his Spirit 3. By his word both by the testimonie it giues of God and by the relation of Prophesies accomplished and Miracles wonderfully wrought it shewes a God as it is a sacred treasury preseruing the memory of wonderfull things 4. By his workes and that either in generall as God hath stamped vpon them some markes of his invisible things or in his particular workes as the founding of the Earth the hanging of the Clouds the spreading out of the Heauens the recoyling of the Waters leauing an habitation for man terrours of Conscience Plagues vpon wicked men at their wish answearing of Prayers Miracles the Soule of Man and state of Diuels 2 There are many sorts of men yea euen in the Church besides professed Atheists that are hated of God and charged with this that they know not God as 1. All that keepe not his Commandements 2. All that heare not vs 3. All Persecutors 4. All that honour not such as feare God 5. All that deny the Natures or Offices of the Sonne of God 3 This wretched Atheisme and Ignorance of God and euill thoughts of his Nature Presence Attributes c. is caused first by corruption of our natures in the Fall 2. It is increased by the custome of all
Matth. 15. The traditions in the Churches of the Gentiles may bee considered two waies 1. As they were in the times of the primitiue Church 2. As they were in the times after vnder Antichrist In the primitiue Church they had by degrees one after another a great number of traditions such as these To stand and pray euery Sabboth from Easter to Whitsontide The Signe of the Crosse to pray towards the East the annointing of the baptized with oyle the canonicall houres Lent and diuers kindes of fasts the mixing of water with wine the addition of diuers orders in the Church as Canons Exorcistes Ostiaries Holy-dayes to sing Halleluiah at Easter but not in Lent and such like Now if any aske what we are to thinke of those and the like traditions then in vse I answer 1. That the Church had power to appoint traditions in indifferent rites so that the rules of the Apostles for indifferent things were obserued as that they were not offensiue nor against order or decency or edification As to appoint the time and place of publike praier to set downe the forme of it to tell how often the Sacraments should bee administred c. 2. We must vnderstand that the word Traditions vsed by the Fathers did not alwaies signifie these and such like things deuised by men but sometimes they did meane thereby such things as were warranted by Scripture though not expressely As the baptizing of Infants the obseruation of the Sabboth c. 3. There were some Traditions in some Churches in the first hundred of yeere that were directly impious as the Inuocation of Saints and Images 4. Someother things were then vsed that were not euery way impious in their owne nature and yet not greatly iustifiable in their vse and such were diuers of the aforenamed obseruations 5. That diuers things at the first brought into the Church with good intents and to good purpose afterwards grew into abuse as for example In the Primitiue order of Mounks 6. The worser traditions were brought in by false teachers and too pertinaciously obserued by the people the Fathers bewailing it and sometimes complaining of it 7. The Fathers themselues in some things shewed leuity and vnconstancy of iudgement sometimes to please the people approouing things and againe sometimes standing vpon the sole perfection of the Scriptures Lastly it cannot well bee denied but that the libertie taken in the primitiue times to bring in traditions opened a doore to Antichrist Now concerning the traditions in Popery vnder Antichrist their doctrine is abhominable for they say that the word of God is either written or vnwritten and they say their vnwritten verities are necessary as well as Scripture yea that they are of equall authority with Scripture And those traditions they would thus exalt are for number many for nature childish vnprofitable impious and idolatrous But that we may be fully settled against their impious doctrine of traditions we may profitably record in our memories these Scriptures Deut. 12.32 Reu. 22.18 Matth. 15. 1. Pet. 1.18 Galat. 1.9 Isay 8.20 2. Tim. 3.16 Ier. 19.5 Col. 1.28 Luke 16.29 1. Cor. 1.5.6.7 Ob. But our Sauiour told his disciples I haue many things to say vnto you but yee cannot beare them now but the spirit when hee is come shall lead you into all truth Ergo it seems there are diuers truths of Christ which were not reuealed in Scripture but by the spirit vttered by tradition after Sol. This may be vnderstood of the gifts of the Apostles and of the effects therof and not of doctrine for of doctrine he had said in the chap. before all things that I haue heard of my father I haue made known vnto you 2. If it were vnderstood of doctrine yet he doth not promise to lead them into any new truths but into the old and those Christ had already opened which should be brought to their minde and they made more fully to vnderstand them For so he saith of the Comforter in the 14. chapter he shall teach you all things and bring all things to your remembrance whatsoeuer I haue sayd vnto you 3. Be it he had not reuealed all as yet what did he therfore neuer reueale it why the very text is against it for hee said I haue yet many things to say vnto you therefore he did say them namely after his resurrection 4. Let it bee noted that he saith ye cannot beare them now the things he had to say they could not then beare why should we thinke that they could not then beare these graue traditions as the Annointing and Christening of bels and such like Lastly let them prooue it to vs that those toies are the things Christ promised to reueale and then they say somewhat Ob. But in the 20. of Iohn he saith there were many things which were not written which Iesus did Answ. He saith that the things which are written are to this end written that we might beleeue and beleeuing might haue eternall life so that what is needefull to faith and eternall life is written 2. Hee saith there were other things not written he saith other things not things differing from these other things in number not in substance or nature much lesse contrary things Ob. But the Thessalonians are charged to hold the traditions they had beene taught Sol. The Scriptures were not then all written 2. The Apostle vnderstands not traditions as the Papists doe For in the same place hee calleth the things written in Scripture Traditions as well as those were not yet written To conclude this discourse concerning traditions we must further vnderstand that the traditions in any Church though they be things indifferent in their owne nature become vnlawfull if they be such as be taxed in these eight rules 1 If they be contrary to the rules of the Apostles concerning such things ecclesiastically indifferent 2. If they bee vrged and vsed with superstition 3. Or as any parts of Gods worship 4. Or with opinion of merit 5. Or as necessary to saluation 6. Or if they bee equalled with the Law of God or the weighty things of the Law neglected and those more vrged 7. If they be light and childish Lastly if by their multitude they darken and obscure the glory of Christ in his ordinances Thus of the second thing The third thing from which hee doth dehort is the Rudiments of the world The Rudiments of the world By the Rudiments of the world hee meaneth the lawes of Moses especially concerning meats washings holidaies garments and such like ceremoniall obseruations Those lawes were called Rudiments or Elements as some thinke because the Iewes and false Apostles held them as needefull as the foure elements of the world or else because in their first Institution they did signifie the most choice and fundamentall principles of the Gospell that were necessary for all to know that would be
to signifie that he died for other mens sinnes Now for the second viz. the buriall of Christians they may be said to be buried euen whiles they liue for of the buriall of the bodie he cannot meane here in diuers respects 1. In respect of disgrace and reproch the throats of wicked men are often an open sepulchre into which if the names of the godly fall they are buried for the extremitie of disgrace and reproch with which they couer them 2. In respect of abnegation or the deniall of the loue and care for earthly things and so we are buried to the world when like dead men we care not for it but deuote our selues to the contemplation of heauenly things 3. In respect of mortification of our sinnes the scripture by diuers metaphors expresseth the diuers degrees of mortification For first there is the wounding of sinne when the sinner is pricked with remorse by the law Secondly the condemning of sinne when the sinner keeping a spirituall assise doth examine confesse and iudge himselfe guiltie before the Lord. Thirdly the crucifying of sinnes when the sinner racks his owne soule by godly sorrow driuing in the nailes of Gods threatnings with acknowledgment of his owne deserts and restraining his flesh through a spirituall reuenge not caring to expose himselfe to the shame of the world so that in Christ hee may finde atonement for his sinnes Fourthly the killing of sinne when the sinner puts off the bodie of sinnes and forsaketh his euill waies Now then after this followeth the last degree and that is here the buriall of sinnes Certainly there remaines euen after true repentance in the very godly a great deale of hidden corruption of nature inward wādrings distractions after the world sudden euill propositions against God or his word or prouidence or presence or promises or peoplei mpatience secret pride and somtimes hypocrisie a frequent rebellion within against good duties vnthankfulnes frequent omissions e●ther of holy duties or the care of the power of them hastines or anger impure desires thoughts of reuenge besides a great deale of disorder he may finde in desires thoughts of reuenge besides a great deale of disorder he may finde in himselfe both at home and abroad Now it is not enough nor may he rest in the former repentance but he must proceed euen to the remoouing of these remainders of corruption death commonly ariseth out of the disease of someone part but buriall couers all The worke of reformation and repentance many times begins at the care of some few principall sinnes but wee must neuer be quiet till we burie the whole old man with his works so that in one sense the buriall of sinnes is nothing else but the progresse of mortification Againe after we haue forsaken our sinnes to burie them is to keep a diligent watch ouer our nature and to take downe our flesh yea sometimes with refraining of lawfull delights or pleasures Further the buriall of sinne it may import our care after we haue left our sinnes to remoue them out of sight both out of Gods sight by suing out our pardon and out of the sight of our consciences by quieting them in the application of the bloud of Christ and the promises of grace and out of the sight of others so farre as our sinnes were scandalous also by shewing forth our repentance and care to auoide all appearance and occasions of like sinning Great is the glory and happinesse of Christians that haue attained to this buriall of sinne for these serue God in a neere acquaintance with him these haue ouercome the world these can stand before death and iudgment vnapalled these are mightie in the power of Gods ordinance these know the secrets of the kingdome of God these are without the reach of the Law and feele not the sting of crosses these are had in singular honour with God and the holy Angells of heauen and the prouidence of God is vsually eminent towards these Now for the third might someone say what hath the Christians buriall to doe with Christ how is there any relation between them Answ. Our spirituall buriall in the progresse of mortification depends vpon Christ diuers waies 1. In that he hath required and made gratious promises to it 2. In that the efficacie of the meanes by which it is wrought comes from Christ. 3. In that it is accepted of God onely for Christ and through his intercession 4. In respect of example he was buried as well as we But chiefly in respect of vertue our buriall of sinne is wrought by a vertue arising from Christs buriall in the graue The Vses of all this followes First for information here we may see how God stands vpon mortification and that men must not thinke alwaies they haue done inough when they haue left their faults and withall wee may see how dangerous a course they take that so soone giue ouer the exercises of mortification for by this meanes we cause the old sinnes many times to breake out againe and their consolations are small and seldom crosses daily trouble them and the heart is often grieued and griped with feare and terrible doubts or else they are quickly ouergrowne with a spirit of slumber Secondlie for instruction to be carefull to bury our sinnes but here take heed of the dissimilitude for in some things the comparison cannot hold as here in two things for first when we bury the bodies of our friends we bury them in hope they shal rise againe And secondly we mourne because we must part with them but both these must be denied here It is the propertie of the wicked to part with their sinnes with sorrow because they must leaue them or else with hope that at length they may returne to them againe But let all such as feare God be otherwise minded especiallie let vs learne from this comparison of buriall to aduantage our selues in what we may in mortification if the master be buried we know all his seruants will attend the funerall so is it with vs in the mortification of sinnes if wee light vpon the master sins and drag them to the graue we shall be sure of all the attendants they will follow to the funerall The Iewes manner was to bury with odours so should we our odours and sweet smelling pra●ers offered vp in the mediation of Christ. And howsoeuer this worke may seeme difficult yet God many times strangely releiues our infirmities After Iezabel was cast downe and dead ●hey had not been long within but sending out to bury her they found nothing but the skull and her feete and the palmes of her hands so many times would it be with vs if we cast downe the Iezabels our sinnes when wee come ●o fin●sh our mortification we may by the strange help of God finde the body of the master gon we know not how so as wee shall not be troubled vn●esse it be with some skull or
thus If in Christ we be deliuered from the power of our sinnes by his quickning grace and from the guilt of them by the free pardon which is to be had by his meanes then wee need not goe any whither else neither to philosophie nor traditions c. but so it is and so the very Colossians found it in their case as the words of the text expresse Ergo. The words in themselues expresse the twofold estate of Christians in this world what they are by nature in their vnregenerate estate and what they are by grace in the state of grace In the state of corruption two things are true of them and are true of all men 1. They were dead in actuall sinnes 2. They were then in the vncircumcision of the flesh and likewise dead in it In their estate of grace he puts them in minde of two benefits 1. Regeneration 2. Remission of sinnes Thus of the coherence and order of the words Diuers things may be noted in the generall 1. We may from hence be informed of the fruitlesnes of philosophie traditions or ceremonies of Moses they cannot make a miserable man happie they cannot infuse the least sparke of spirituall life into any 2. We see the Apostle thinks it meet to put men often in minde of their miserie by nature and great reason for it exalts the praise of the riches of Gods grace in Christ And it may serue to humble men for their falls after calling and to keep them still suspitious and watchfull ouer a nature that hath been so prone to sinne and securitie in sinning it may serue to eat down the pronenesse of our nature to vaine boasting and confidence in the flesh and it should much excite men to the loue and care of godlinesse and pietie with all life and power seeing they haue been so long slaues to sinne And lastly the Apostle rips vp this matter of purpose to withdraw their mindes from traditions and philosophicall dreames Dead in sinnes They were dead in sinnes both if you respected their publike estate or each particular person If you looke vpon publike states before they are framed and reformed by the word what are they but heaps of men dead in the graues of sinne and senselesse in their sinfull courses and thus it is with euery particular person the words import that he is guiltie of many sinnes and he is dead in them also Naturally euery man is guiltie of secret atheisticall conceits of vnbeleefe of ignorance of hardnes of heart of swarms of euill thoughts and affections of hurtfull passions and lusts besides his defects of the knowledge of God and that warmth of the holy affections of loue feare trust and ioy in God Who can sufficiently rip open the vnthankfulnes lukewarmenes hypocrisie inconstancie and presumptuous profanenesse that is in our hearts by nature in matters of Gods seruice how do men daily offend either by not calling vpon the name of God or by taking it vp in vaine who can number the othes lyes reproches curses flatteries and filthy communication hath and did daily infect the mouths of men Oh the world of sinnes wee are actually guilty of against God or men or our owne selues publike priuate secret open inward outward in prosperitie and aduersitie in the Church or familie or abroad in mens conuersation Alas we can discerne but a glimpse of that sinne and guiltinesse that is in vs by nature and this is the increase of their miserie in all their sinnes they are dead in them Dead There is a fourefold death temporall corporall spirituall eternall The state of man being in miserie he is dead temporally The bodie of man being in the graue hee is dead corporally The soule of man lying in sinne is dead spiritually And both soule and bodie being cast into hell are dead eternally The Colossians were dead spiritually there is a death to sinne and a death for sinne and a death in sinne a death to sinne and so the godly die by mortification a death for sinne and so malefactors die by execution and a death in sinne and so euery naturall man kills himselfe by enliuing his sinne The spirituall death in sinne is an vnutterable losse of the life of God by which the sinner is senselesse and carelesse in extremitie of miserie vnto his owne euerlasting ruine if the Lord preuent it not by regeneration Now that men are in this case by nature these Scriptures proue Eph. 2.1.2 Math 8.22 Ioh. 8.25 Rom. 8.10 Luk. 15.32 Reuel 3 2. Iud. 12. 1. Tim. 5.6 Neither let any deceiue themselues about their estate for a man may be dead in sinne and yet be aliue in the flesh yea thou maiest be a wise man in the flesh or a prince of this world yea thou maiest haue a name that thou liuest spiritually and yet be starke dead Now this spirituall senselesnes is called a death because it is a priuation of spirituall life from the soule as the naturall death is from the bodie 2. because it tends to eternall death The vse may be fourefold 1. For information No wonder wicked men can come and goe from the word of God and not be touched alas they are dead men and so is it with them in respect of the iudgments of God alas if thou couldest rowle a mountaine vpon a dead man he would not feele so is it with a man dead in sinne and further we may here obserue that to liue yea to die quietly is no signe of a man in a happie case for if this death in sin be not cured thousands of people may die quietly because they die senseleslie they feele no more of the feare of hell or iudgment or Gods anger then if they were already dead in their bodies they would feele outward extremities I know that God many times can lay terror vpon the flesh of wicked men and make their spirits drinke in of the bitter anguish arising from the feruencie of Gods burning displeasure but I say if God let them alone vsually the most would die in a wretched senselesnes and inconsideration being neither able nor willing to entertaine the thoughts of what must presently and necessarily befall them 2. This may serue for confutation and so 1. of the Papists about their freewill How can there be this free will in a dead soule we are dead in sin and therefore of our selues mooue not vnto life till God quicken vs by his word and spirit 2. Of the carnall Protestant that beares himselfe so strongly vpon his supposed couenant with death and hel● his agreement must be disanulled nay his very securitie imports his vnauoidable destruction if it be not remooued by the power of Christ. 3. For instruction art thou a man that hearest this that hast liued all thy time without remorse for thy sinnes and neuer yet entertained the care of reformation of thy life be here warned of thy miserie let it be enough thou hast been dead
in sinne doe not lie still rotting in the graues of iniquitie but rise so soone as thou hearest the trumpet of the Gospell the voice of Christ sounding in thine eares and pierce thy heart 4. Lastly here is consolation implied vnto weake Christians If thou canst feele thy miserie and struggle in any measure of true constancie against the corruption of nature and the transgressions of thy heart and life thou art not dead there is some breath of life in thee there is motion and therefore life Thus of their actuall sinnes Their miserie in respect of originall sinne is exprest in these words And in the vncircumcision of the flesh These words be diuersly interpreted some thus In the vncircumcision of the flesh that is in the flesh which is vncircumcision that is a thing hatefull vnto God Some make these words to be the signe of their death in sinne as if he would say your very vncircumcision that is in your flesh which are Gentiles is a token that you are strangers from the life of God Some thus And you hath hee quickned which were dead in respect of your sinnes and carnall life which ye liue in the vncircumcision that is in your estate of gentilisme Some make these words expresse the cause of their death in sinne Thus in the vncircumcision of the flesh that is for your fleshly vices which caused that death in sinne But I thinke with those that vnderstand by the flesh originall sinne and by the vncircumcision their miserie in respect of it implied in the allusion to the circumcision literally taken Originall sinne is called flesh because the flesh is the instrument by which it is propagated 2. Because it is the subiect in which it is 3. Because it is the end it driues vs to viz. to satisfie the flesh and to seeke fleshly things This originall sinne here called flesh is a spirituall kinde of disease gall leauen and poyson which daily diffuseth it selfe throughout the whole man and still infecteth it though this be not the whole nature of the sinne for to speake distinctly in originall sinne there are three things 1. The guiltines of Adams fact deriued vnto vs by iust imputation 2. The want of that originall iustice was in vs in the creation 3. The deprauation and corrupt disposition of our natures Here the word vncircumcision imports our miserie in respect of our very corruption of nature for it imports 1. That we are hatefull to God children of wrath 2. That we haue no portion in the heauenly Canaan 3. That we haue no fellowship in the communion of Saints 4. That we haue no part in the promised Messias for all these were shadowed out by the want of circumcision in the time of the Law The vses follow First from hence wee may informe our selues in diuers things as first we may see why the faire works of wicked men as their almes prayers teares sacrifices prophecyings preaching fasting and professing are not accepted of God for the fountaine is poysoned the flesh infects all it puts to either ill ends or ill effects or ill meanes besides that it keeps the person still loathsome to God Oh what cause haue ciuill honest men to know that though they come to Church and pay euery man his owne and be no drunkards nor adulterers c. yet their case cannot be good for though they liued neuer so honestly outwardly yet the very vncircumcision of the flesh makes them miserable the inward corruption of nature is an abomination to God who searcheth the heart and reines yea what cause haue all men to be humbled and abased in themselues considering how vncleane a beginning they haue how can men be so quiet and yet be so diseased with so filthy a leprosie as is originall sinne if this disease were in the bodie as it is in the soule how would men lament their distresse Hence also may we see what a wofull estate all wicked men are in that take care for the lusts of this leprous flesh and sow to it What should I say may we not see hence the necessitie of regeneration assuredly except we be borne againe we can neuer enter into the kingdom of heauen this impure poysoned nature of ours may not enter into Gods holy place Secondly we may here discerne the fountaine of all actuall transgressions when we fall into euill courses we must not cry out of our ill fortune or of ill companie or of the deuill only but especially we must lay the fault vpon our ill natures t was thy wicked disposition made thee so to sinne Lastly from hence we may learne to know our selues and accordingly to keep a narrow watch ouer our wretched natures and daily striue and struggle against this infectious corruption and disease that hangs so fast vpon vs yea we should by confession and contrition indeuour the daily crucifying of our wicked flesh with the lusts thereof condemning our selues by a daily verdict and sentence as we are men according to the flesh so suffering in the flesh that we may cease from sinne yea we should learne constantly to denie our selues and not to giue way to the reasons or obiections or desires or excuses or delaies of the flesh yea and to this end we should be willing to suffer afflictions and to endure any hardship rather then the flesh should preuaile in vs. You hath he quickned Hitherto of mans miserie and the state of corruption now of Gods mercy in the state of grace In two things is their happinesse here described 1. In their quickning 2. In their forgiuenes We are quickned two waies 1. In Christ. 2. In ourselues when our head Christ Iesus was raised from the graue we were quickned in him In our selues we were quickned three waies 1. Sacramentally in baptisme 2. By inchoation in our conuersion 3. Perfectly by hope of perfection in heauen by baptisme by conuersion by hope The quickning he here speaketh of is the quickning of conuersion when we are begotten to God This life is called the life of God the life of grace the life of Iesus the life of immortalitie It is begotten in vs by the whole Trinitie the Father calleth vp these generations the Sonne giueth this life so doth the Spirit quicken also The meanes by which we are quickned is ordinarily only the word and that preached also which is therefore called the word of life Psal. 19.8 1. Pet. 1.22 Phil. 2.15 Ioh. 5. The necessitie of this quickning is such as without it wee cannot possibly enter into the kingdome of heauen Ioh. 3.5 They that are thus quickned and conuerted are stiled by diuers names or titles they are called the holy seede the called of Iesus the children of the most high the brood of immortalitie they that follow Christ in the regeneration and the heires of eternall life Many are the singular prerogatiues of such as are conuerted
with great pompe thus did Christ to the wicked spirits either vpon the crosse or in his resurrection Quest. But might some one say what appearance was there of any victorie when Christ suffred Answ. Great euery way for if wee obserue it in euery branch of the processe there is euident signes of victorie For doe they attach him why first the officers are smitten to the ground with a very word and Iudas the chiefe leader is made to goe and hang himself the eare of Malchus was miraculously cured and they are suffred to do no iote more then will fulfill the scriptures Will they arraigne him in the Consistorie why there sits a high Priest that was made whether he would or no to prophesie of Christs death for the people and Christ casts a spirit of giddinesse vpon the witnesses so as their testimonies could not agree yea he there foretells them of his most glorious and terrible second comming in the clouds of heauen and then miraculous recouers Peter a lapsed sinner Will they arraigne in the common hall why there he ouercomes by patience no indignities could stirre him and the Iudges wife from a dreame giues warning that he was a iust man yea the Iudge himselfe was compelled to pronounce him innocent Will they haue him to the crosse there are wonders of victorie a theefe without meanes saued the vaile of the Temple rent signes in heauen and earth and a title of victorie superscribed by his very aduersaries This is the King of the Iewes besides his incorruption in the graue and glorious resurrection and visible ascension to heauen All this being considered where is the ignominie of the crosse seeing the deuills erected a crosse for themselues when they plotted to crucifie Christ And why should we be afraid of suffrings seeing the crosse is Christs triumph and let vs resolue also to ouercome by suffrings T is an excellent and loftie praise to ouercome by suffring Lastly let vs neuer iudge of Christ or Christians by their outward shew great things may be done in the kingdom of Christ which are not discerned by carnall reason Here we see a great adoe trophies triumphs yet the world tooke no notice of it so is there incomparable glory euen in this world in the soules and liues of Christians which the blinde multitude neuer takes notice of And thus much of the second interpretation The third and last interpretation is of those that limit not the time of this victorie to the crosse but consider it generally and in steed of the words vpon the same crosse read in himselfe and thus doe the most Interpreters new and old read it And so this victorie is vnderstood not so much of what Christ did attaine in his person as what he doth in vs by the conuersion of sinners by the Gospell he daily spoyles principalities and powers and triumphs ouer them c. and so these words are a consequent of the putting out of the hand-writing mentioned in the former verse Foure things are in these words to be considered who whom what and by what meanes For the first it is the second Adam that vndertakes this battel he that is God and man he of whom the prophecies ranne he that by a voice from heauen at his baptisme was acknowledged the only champion t was he that sent the challenge by his fore-runner Iohn Baptist he it is that foyled Sathan in many Monomachies this is he that now comes forth in the Gospell in the seuerall ages of the Church to spoyle these principalities and powers Now for the second the spoyled are called principalities and powers Principalities and Powers These termes are giuen to the good Angells Eph. 3.10 and to great Magistrates and Princes on earth Eph. 1.23 In effect they are giuen to Christ Esay 9.6.7 but vsually they are restrained to euill angells and so they are called either considering them as they were before their fall or as it is vsually conceiued it notes their estate euen since their fall The two words note two things in the euill Angells Excellencie and Abilitie Excellencie so they are principalities Abilitie so they are powers Their excellencie is two waies to be considered 1. in themselues 2. their soueraigntie ouer the world In themselues and their owne nature euer since their horrible fall they are creatures of wonderfull knowledge swiftnes discerning and such like And in respect of the vnregenerate world they haue a principalitie hence called worldly rulers the prince of this world yea and the god of this world We may obserue here in the holy Ghost a wonderfull patterne of candor he praiseth what is praise-worthy euen in his enemies and it may wonderfully comfort Gods children in their acceptation with God for if God can yeeld these titles and acknowledge that is yet good in the very deuills sure then it cannot be he should not like what he findes good in his owne Saints though they haue many wants and sins seeing they sinne not of malicious wickednes as the deuills doe As they are called principalities so for their abilitie and force of working they are called powers The wonderfull power the deuills haue may be considered either in the world or in the Church In the first race of men before the floud how soone had they drawne away Cains race into apostacie and not long after Sethes till they had chased the light of sinceritie within the walles of one house and not all sound there neither After the floud the world is no sooner filled againe but together with the building of Babel a most dreadfull confusion was wrought by the deuills euen the beginning of a generall falling away into gentilisme and idolatrie which will neuer be vtterly recouered againe while the world stands all the families making apostacie in the beginning of the Babilonish Monarchie and such an apostacie as they continued in for many hundred yeeres in the generalitie of them so as there was only a little light left in the race of Sem. Now leauing the whole world lying vnder this powerfull wickednesse come to Abraham a brand taken out of the fire of the Chaldeans in whom the light shined with great glory see the power of these wicked spirits ouer his race the Ismalites went quickly of to gentilisme then the Edomits were easily gained after then in Egypt the light that did remaine was almost put out the bondage of the Isralites being as great in soule as it was in bodie In Moses time the light was diffused in that people all abroad againe and a kingdom of Priests was raised vp to God this light held with various increases and decreases till the captiuitie after which time it waxed dimmer and dimmer till Christ the day-starre arose and filled heauen and earth with the brightnes of his comming After in the very first hundreds of yeares these cursed spirits not only persecuted religion by incredible tyrannie but infected it with
part past feeling and many of them deliuered vp to a reprobate sence as ascourge of other sinnes and and foule vices which abound in them these are the shame of our assemblies and many times visited with secret and horrible Iudgements Inordinate affection the originall word notes internall vncleannesse especially the burning and flaming of lust though it neuer come to action or the daily passions of lust which arise out of such a softnesse or effeminatenesse of minde as is carried and fired with euery occasion or temptation this is the lust of concupiscence and howsoeuer the world little cares for this euill yet let true Christians striue to keep their hearts pure and cleane from it for they were as good haue a burning fire in them Secondly those lusts fight against the soule they wound and pierce the conscience Thirdly the diuell beginnes the frame of his worke in these hee desires no more liberty then to be allowed to beget these lusts in the hart He is not called the father of lusts for nothing he can by these inordinate thoughts and affections erect vnto himselfe such strong holds was nothing but the mighty power of God can cast downe Fourthly the Apostle sayth lust is foolish and noysome and drownes men in perdition Fiftly they hinder the efficacy of the word that 's the reason why diuers men women are euer learning are neuer able to come to the knowledge of the truth euen this they are carried about with diuerse lusts Sixtly they greatly purge vpon faith and hope they hinder or weaken the trust on the grace of God brought vs by Iesus Christ and therefore the Apostle Peter counsels Christians not to fashion themselues according to the lusts of their former ignorance Seuenthly those monstrous crimes mentioned in the first to the Romans grow originally from these lusts The vses of all these together now follow And first wee may hence see great cause of thankefulnesse if the Lord haue deliuered vs and kept vs from these monstrous abhominations and especially if the Lord haue made vs sincere to looke to and pray against and in some happy measure to get victory ouer those base lusts of the heart and euill thoughts if there were nothing else to breake the pride of our natures this should to consider seriously what monstrous diuelish filthinesse Sathan hath wrought others too and if God should leaue vs might bring the best of vs to But especially this should teach vs to vse all possible remedies against these or any of these vncleanesses The remedies are of two sorts First for such as haue beene guilty of any of the former vncleanesses Secondly for such as would preserue themselues against them that they might not be defiled with them There are two principall remedies for the vncleane person The first is marriage or the right vse of it if it be in single persons they must remember the Apostles words it is better to marrie then to burne and if they be married they must know that the loue of their husbands or wiues is the speciall helpe to driue away these impure pollutions for such is the counsell of the holy Ghost in the fifth of the Prouerbes to them that are infected with these vicious and predominant inclinations and if they finde as it is certaine euery vncleane person doth finde want of loue to their owne husbands or wiues then must they begge affection of God by daily and earnest prayer But in the second place vnclean persons must know that marriage alone will not serue turne but they must adde repentance for lamentable experience shewes that marriage without repentance abates not the power of lust And therefore such as would deliuer their soules from the vengeance to come due vnto them for vncleannesse whether inward or outward must seeke to God and with many prayers and teares begge pardon they must bee washed from filthinesse by the bloud of Christ and the teares of true repentance Neither let men deceiue themselues a little sorrow will not serue turne for these pollutions and therfore the Apostle vseth the word washed to note the repentance of the Corinthians from these and such like sinnes Now there can be no washing without water neither will a drop or two serue turne Secondly that those that are not guilty may be preserued against vncleannesse these things are of great vse and profit First the word of God and the sound knowledge of it for sayth the Lord in the second of Prouerbs If thou wilt receiue my words and hide my commandements within thee if thou callest after knowledge and criest for vnderstanding if thou seekest her as siluer and searchest for her as for treasures then shall counsell vnderstanding preserue thee deliuer thee from the euill way and from the strange woman which flattereth with her words and forsaketh the guide of her youth and forgetteth the couenant of her God and heereunto agreeth Dauid for propounding this question by what meanes a young man might cleanse his heart hee answereth by taking heed to the word So Saint Iohn speaking to the young men sayth the word of God abideth in you and ye haue ouercome the wicked one Secondly meditation is another great preseruatiue wouldst thou remoue wickednesse from thy flesh euen all the vanities of youth then thou must remember thy creator in the dayes of thy youth Thou must much and often think of the Lord God that made thee not that thou shouldest wallow in the mire of these swinish pollutions Besides it is profitable to force thy hart to the often meditation of thine owne mortallity that the thoughts of thy death may be a kind of death to thy lusts this the Apostle Peter implies when he sayth as strangers and pilgrims abstaine from fleshly lusts manifestly importing that if we did seriously thinke that we are heere but strangers and pilgrims it would tame the violence of these hatefull lusts Also we should much ponder vpon the examples of such as haue sinned and the Lord hath fearfully visited them both for and in their sinne for all those things came vnto them for ensamples and were written to admonish vs vpon whom the ends of the world are come The third preseruatiue is daily earnest and constant prayer vnto God against them And if we feele the beginning to rise in vs we should labour for speciall sorrowes euen with griefe of heart to racke and crucifie them Lust will not vsually out of the soule if it get any footing till it be fired out with confession and godly sorrow And therefore the Apostle vseth the phrase of crucifying the lusts of the flesh And that praier is a remedy the Apostles ownly practise shewes for when sathan buffeted him he praied vnto God and that thrice that he might get the temptation to depart from him The fourth preseruatiue is to walke in loue