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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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for they have not returned to glorifie me It is love to our selves it 's a self-seeking that makes us pray but it would argue love to God and an honouring of him when we returne praises to him It is therefore the duties of Ministers to press you upon the duty of praising of God as well as of praying unto him Many are horribly negligent in both some are more often in prayer then they are in thanksgiving Whereas God is said to inhabit the praises of his people Psalm 22. 3. as well as he is the God that heareth prayers Psalm 65. 2. God dwelleth in the praises of Israel that is in or amongst Israel continually praising of him or else it is to shew that as a man dwelleth in his house constantly residing there so God is daily administring matter of praises to his people implying thereby that there is no time no place no condition wherein we ought not to bless and praise God Those many Psalmes which David made declare how necessary a duty it is and how much the people of God are to exercise themselves therein Hence it is that David professeth he will never intermit this duty as we are to pray without ceasing so to praise God without ceasing Psalm 145. 1 2. I will bless thy name for ever and ever I will bless thee every day See what an ardent affection David hath to this For although the Apostle James saith Is any man afflicted let him pray is any man merry let him sing Psalmes James 5. 13. implying thereby that there are speciall times wherein one duty is to be exercised more than another yet there is no time wherein the Lord doth not give his people occasion to give thanks to him That your hearts may be both rightly instructed in the manner of this duty and awed against all slothfullness therein take notice of these ensuing particulars 1. What is required to this Duty And 2. The Motives thereunto And First To praise God there is required an acknowledgement by faith that God and God alone is the Author of all the mercies both temporall and spirituall that we do enjoy Hence an Atheist can never be thankfull because he owneth no God the giver of mercies And the practicall Atheist who liveth as if there were no God he like the Swine eateth indeed upon the fruite that he findeth upon the ground but never looketh up to the tree from whence it falleth Now this practicall Atheisme doth raign every where and that causeth the universall ingratitude that is in the world men take these mercies as so many debts belonging to them They look upon them as the things of a naturall course not as the dispensations of a free and voluntary Agent even the great God who giveth them and denyeth them at his pleasure David therefore in his Psalmes doth so often magnifie God by many glorious Titles thereby professing that From God cometh every good and perfect gift Hence also the Apostle James Cap. 4. 15. maketh it the duty of every one in their daily resolutions to buy and sell or to go to such a place to say if the Lord will declaring hereby that it is from God that we are inabled to performe any naturall or civill action I also add that it must be an acknowledgment of God alone because in spirituall mercies many corrupt Teachers have divided the kingdome between Gods gracious power and mans mans free-will Therefore the Papists the Socinians the Arminians these do either in whole or in part destroy the very foundation of thanksgiving to God in respect of spirituall mercies especially in that whereby one man differs from another That which the Apostle doth so evidently attribute to God only 1 Cor. 4. 7. that they appropriate to themselves the good use of free-will or the improving of grace offered is made mans work and then certainly we are to glory more in our selves then in God But if we are to give God thankes for every morsell of bread we eate shall we not much rather for every spirituall mercy to the soul It was Tullies observation that though their Ancestors praised God for their prosperity and success yet they never did for their vertuous actions thinking that absurd as if unless they were not done by their own power there was no commendation due to them and too much of this Heathenish and Philosophicall leaven doth still soure the minds of many Learned men in the Church Know then so much as thou settest up a free-will beyond Scripture bounds so farre thou takest off from the duty of praising and blessing of God Besides we say God must be acknowledged in every mercy temporall and spirituall Thou that prayest God would give thee thy daily bread wilt thou not praise God when he doth it yet how sottish and brutish are many persons and Families when they go to meales and rise from meales and no thankes or praises are given to God should not the example of Christ move thee when he had but some loaves of Barly and a little Fish yet he blessed God before he did eate thereof How then cometh it about that there should be such unthankfull wretches that take their food and yet never thank God that giveth it Thou wouldst account that poore man a proud or unworthy person to whom thou shouldst give some food in his necessity and he never so much as open his mouth to give one word of thankfullness to thee Thou dealest more frowardly and wickedly with God And if for temporall mercies then much more for spirituall if thy meate thy drink thy rayment be Gods mercy much more is thy regeneration thy justification which do so far transcend the power of nature 2. To this duty of praising God is not only required These generall acts of faith whereby we own him for the Jehova and the Creator of Heaven and Earth but also those particular Acts whereby we do apply and appropriate him as our God in particular For it is this particular applying Act of faith that maketh the heart full of praise and thanksgivihg Therefore you may observe David in his Psalmes not only calling God a buckler a refuge a strong tower but his buckler his strong tower his God Neither can we be thankfull in spirituall mercies about pardon of sinne support in temptations till with Paul Gal. 2 we say Who loved us and gave himself for us and this is one reason why we urge the People to take heed of diffidence not to give way to distrust and doubtfull perplexities of soul because while these are predominant they cannot walk thankfully and give the glory that is due to him 3. Love to God Because he heareth our prayers will raise up the heart exceedingly to thanksgiving Psal 116. 1. I will love the Lord because he hath heard my supplications That God should hear the prayers of one so unworthy and polluted as thou art that God should do thee good who art so evill this freeness
useth in his Church not in respect of the Lordship and Dominion it self Christ shall never cease to be the King and Lord of his people only that manner of Government which now Christ exerciseth shall cease all Ordinances and administrations the Ministry and Sacraments yea all Magistracy and Civil Power that God might be all in all fot then we shall not mediately by Christ approach unto God as we do here but immediately yet so as all glory and honour will redound to Christ Thirdly Christ was thus a Lord in the state of his humiliation even in his very Infancy as well as after his exaltation and resurrection And here again the Socinians blaspheme denying That Christ was thus a Lord till his resurrection But although indeed the Scripture doth often attribute this glory and great name to him after his sufferings and upon his resurrection yet that is not because he was not so before but partly because then there was a glorious manifestation of his Dominion The Sunne did not appear so admirable in his eclipse Christ in the state of his humiliation did not so fully and palpably discover this his greatness yet for all that he was endowed with it and Christ doth acknowledg himself to have a Kingdom to Pilate even before his sufferings Yea at his birth the Wisemen came to worship him as Lord and King and when he rode in triumph into Jerusalem that Prophecy was fulfilled Behold thy King cometh to thee And certainly if then he was a Saviour and the Messias he must needs be also Lord and King Yea in the greatest expressions of his humane weaknesses as in his birth and death there was also powerfull demonstrations of his Divine Majesty Neither is Vorstius his Objection of any value That because Christ in his Infancy had not that wisdom required to govern which afterwards he did grow up into therefore he could not be Lord For in Christ while an Infant were hidden the treasures of all wisdom though these were not actually to be put forth but when there was an occasion to do so There was no defect in Christ to be Head of his Church while a child because even then he could put forth whatsoever was required at that time to govern the Church with And indeed to argue that he was not Lordor King because he did not actually put forth himself in that way is absurd for kingly or lordly actions did not make him to be a King or Lord but because he was Lord and King therefore he did as he pleased put forth such actions Certainly the Apostle cals him the Lord of glory even while they crucified him 1 Cor. 2. 8. And the Socinians themselves acknowledge him upon his ascension to be Lord of glory when yet the greatest instance of his lordly power is still to be accomplished which is the judging of all mankind at that dreadfull Day of Judgment Christ then was always Lord both in his state of humiliation and also of his exaltation Fourthly This lordly power which Christ hath extends to all things in the world he is Lord over the whole world He is the universal Monarch for God hath given him all the kingdoms of the world Rev. 11. 15. The kingdoms of this world are there said to become the Lords and of his Christ Yea in some sense this great Dominion is given to every Saint Revel 2. 26. To have power over all Nations even as he hath received of the Father Hence it is said John 5. 22. That the Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgement to the Sonne not that the Father hath wholly abdicated himself from the government of the world as the Socinians say but because Christ as Mediator is subordinate unto him in this administration Christ therefore hath an universal power over the whole world And whereas learned men say One man cannot be universal Governour over the whole world much lesse over the Church because no man can have those qualifications fit for to discharge that Government yet in Christ this doth not hold because he is God as well as man but this Dominion of Christ in respect of his Church is of another nature than that of the world for he rules the world with a rod of iron breaking every thing to pieces that shall prejudice his Church So that this power over them is wholly coactive as they do not willingly own or submit to him as a Lord so he doth by his omnipotent power keep them under and makes them servants and vassals for his work and to bring about such glorious ends which they never intended or shall have any benefit by as those that built Noah's Ark were not preserved in it But to his Church there he holdeth out a Scepter of grace For as they do willingly own him as their King submitting to his order and laws so he taketh special care over them and they may more safely lay themselves down under his protection than under the greatest Potentate in the world More might be said Doctrinally about this Dominion of Christ but let us consider what comfortable and usefull improvement is to be made of it And 1. Is Christ thus a Lord and that above all Lords Then what ground is here for our faith under all discouragements and affections How little doest thou posfess thy heart with this Lord of glory Doest thou doubt about the pardon of sinne conquering of corruptions preservation under temptations Is not all this because thou doest not remember Christ is Lord of Lords Will not he bear thee up Doth he want either knowledge or power Especially this should encourage us in any work for him Thou fearest the frowns of man the oppositions of man thou doubtest thy cause will sink and is not all this because thou lookest upon earthly power as greater than Christs power Was ever any temporal lord able to do such things as the Lord Christ Never than saint or be discouraged under his work Use 2. If he be our Lord then here is ground for duty as well as for comfort Joh. 13. 13. Ye call me Master and Lord ye do well saith Christ but from that consideration he puts them upon duty And certainly i● Christ be our Lord where then is our honour our obedience to him May not he impose what duties injoyn the Church what Laws and order to walk by he pleaseth Shall we be our own lords Our tongues our hearts are not our own but our Lords Take heed of being in the number of those who shall deny the Lord that bought them 2 Pet. 2. 1. for such as do so bring upon themselves swift destruction if he be not thy Lord in grace and favour he will be thy Lord in wrath and in thy confusion They that said Psal 12. 4. Who is Lord over us found that God would be above them SERM. XXIX Of the Duty of Thankefulness Blessing and Praising God for all his Mercies 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the
the Trinity but as assuming our Nature for otherwise the truth would be no wayes comfortable to us if the Sonne of God had not also been made man The Observation shall be the words in the Text viz. That God is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Which truth shall be first explicated and confirmed Doctrinally and then illustrated Practically As for the Doctrinal part the Socinians they have raised up much dust and have obscured the point with their subtill heretical depravations For whereas the Church of God formerly did believe Christ to be the Son of the Father by eternal generation They deny this reason and assert some new ones of their own invention Yea and the Remonstrants also though they assert Christs Sonship from the Father by eternal generation yet they affirm also a second way of communication of this Sonship and that is By a gracious vouchsafing of supream power and glory to him So that they must acknowledge two filiations in Christ the one Eternal by that secret and ineffable generation the other Temporal or in time viz. A gracious communication of supream power and glory to him But this is false as is to be shewed But to explain this Consider First In the Scripture we read of four ways whereby a person may be entituled to be the Son of God and to have God his Father For as for that more common and general notion whereby God is said to be a Father in respect of Creation and so to all men Isa 54. 8. And the Apostle sanctifieth that expression of the Poet For we are his off spring we do not here meddle with And 1. There is a Sonne of God by Creation after the Image of God Thus Adam Luk. 3. ult is called The Sonne of God and the Angels also Job 1. 6. These are the Sonnes of God and have him for a Father because they they were at first created after his Image in holiness 2. God is a Father by gracious Adoption Thus all believers have received The Spirit of Adoption being thereby enabled to call God Abba Father 3. A Person is said to be the Sonne of God by communication of some power and office Thus our Saviour argued from the lesse to the greater That if they were gods to whom the word of God came viz. who were appointed by God to be Magistrates how much more was he God Lastly There is the Son of God by eternal generation and thus Christ is onely Hence he is called His only Sonne Secondly Take notice That Christ is called the Sonne of God only from one respect and that is because of eternal generation from the Father It is not my purpose to enter into a Dispute about this secret and unspeakable mystery This is enough for us to know That Christ is never called the Sonne of God or God said to be his Father but because of that eternal generation as the Apostle proveth Heb. 1. from Psal 27. Thou art my Sonne This day have I begotten thee which is so attributed to Christ that thereby he hath a supereminency to all the Angels who yet are called the Sonnes of God upon a gracious foundation Hence 1. Christ is not called The Sonne of God because he is predestinated to be the Mediator of his people 1 Pet. 1. 20. For he is not therefore the Son of God because fore-ordained to be Head of his Church but this latter doth presuppose and is grounded upon the former because he was the second Person in Trinity and Son of the Father therefore was he ordained thus to be a Mediator for his people 2. Christ is not called the Sonne of God because of his Incarnation or that wonderfull manner of the production of his Humane Nature in the womb Indeed some orthodox Divines and so Maldonate the Papist do grant That Christ was called the Sonne of God because of that extraordinary conception Luk. 1. 32 35. for the Evangelist seemeth to favour such an interpretation because when the Angel had said The holy Ghost should overshadow the Virgin Mary he presently addeth Therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Sonne of God Now though these men hold Christ was called thus the Sonne of God because of that extraordinary and peculiar way of the production of his Humane Nature yet they acknowledge his Sonship by eternal generation also But it is well observed by other learned men That it is an impudent concession to the adversaries of Christs Divine Nature to grant Christ is ever called the Sonne of God but because of eternal generation And therefore that expression Therefore also c. is not an argument from the Cause but the Sign That extraordinary conception was not a Cause but a true and sure Sign that he was the Sonne of God and therefore it 's said He shall be called not be the Sonne of God which relateth to the manifestation and notification of it And no doubt the Angel doth allude the ninth of Isaiah where a Virgins bringing forth a Sonne is made a Sign of his being Emmanuel God with us For if this extraordinary conception had been a cause of this filiation he would rather he called The Sonne of the holy Ghost then of God the Father because immediately conceived by him Neither is that of Maldonate true excepting against this interpretation That a pure man might have been so conceived by the holy Ghost and it would not follow that he was God properly For besides that it is a bold assertion to say so we must take this extraordinary conception in its circumstances as it was fo promised by the Prophet and thus it could not agree to any but to God 3. Neither is Christ called the Son of God because of his sanctification and mission into the word as John 10. 35. Nor 4. Because of his Resurrection from the dead His eduction from the earth as it were a womb to life being like a new birth Nor 5. Because of his being placed at the right hand of God Heb. 1. 4. For although in those Texts Christ is proved to be the Sonne of God by his Sanctification and Mission into the world by his Resurrection and by his Exaltation yet not so as if these did make him to be a Sonne So that he was not a Sonne before but by way of declaration and manifestation When these things were done there was a plain discovery that he was the true and proper Sonne of God he was the Sonne of God from all eternity but none could so rise and be exalted but he who was so And therefore the Socinians who make Christ the Sonne of God by degrees by his Incarnation and first and afterwards more perfectly a Son in his Exaltation do most palpably wrest the Scripture The Summe therefore of this Discourse is That as Christ was called the Sonne of man only because born of a woman so the Sonne of God only because by eternal
and so worshipped Now to trust in our selves or creatures is to erre in the object we set up another thing in Gods roome Thy parts are thy God thy graces thy Christ thy repentance thy Saviour thou givest that to thy tears which alone doth belong to the blood of Christ If then God doth so often proclaime his jealousie in worshipping of other gods will he not also about trusting in any thing but himselfe What are the duties of the first Command but to love God to trust in him and to depend upon him for he onely is the proper and adequate object of trust because in him is infallible verity and truth Truth of being so that he can never die but be alwayes the same and truth of promise so that Heaven and Earth shall sooner passe away than his Word Againe he is willing and ready to help he manifesteth his freeness of grace to thee whereas the Devils and the damned they cannot trust in God because they have no promise from God yea they are sure he will never help them Lastly God is omnipotent nothing is impossible to him Therefore if thou canst meet with a creature that is eternal unchangeable omnipotent then mayest thou put trust in that but the whole world respectively to God is lesse than the dust of the balance which doth not turne the scale one way or other so neither is all the power and all the wisdome of the world able to turn thy condition to supply thy wants if God doth not interpose Lastly It is a foolish and unprofitable sinne as Jer. 17. Cursed is he that trusteth in man God delighteth to blast all the things thou hast hoped in so that commonly we may know what we trusted too much in by Gods removing of it or what we would rest upon too much by denying us such helps and comforts No sooner have we with Jonah got under a gourd to keep our selves from the scorching heat but God causeth a worm to devour it how unwise art thou then by resting thy soul upon any comfort Thou canst not take a more speedy way then to make God break it under thy arms Even as the Aegyptiane because they boasted of the waters of Nilus and trusted in them God turned them all into blood Be sure God will make thy confidences thy sorrows and breakings of heart that can never enough be received which Jonah preached from his own experience They that observe lying vanities forsake their own mercy Jonah 2. 8. Those very mercies God had purposed for thee and was in the way of performing of them by observing of and trusting in other means and helpes thou hast utterly deprived thy self of Even as God did with the Israelites Jerem. 2. 37. Thou shalt goe from Aegypt with thine hands upon thy head for the Lord hath rejected thy confidences and thou shalt not prosper in them Thus thou art many times bewailing the losse of thy confidences SERM. LXXI Of the Nature Object and Matter of our Divine Trust or Dependance upon God 2 COR. 1. 9. But in God WE now come to that blessed and medicinal effect of the grent trouble which came upon Paul in Asia as it is positively described For we have the sinfull and unlawfull object of our trust removed which is our selves and the proper adequate and only object thereof asserted and that is the Lord. From whence observe That God alone is the proper object in whom we are to trust As we are not to believe in any but the omnipotent God so neither to trust in any besides him Because this Text is so proper I shall enlarge my self about this great duty of trusting in God it being of such great practical concernment For there is no grace more difficultly and rarely exercised than this There is indeed much presumption in the world and carnal confidence but little spiritual dependance upon God alone and relying upon his promise and power overlooking all means and instruments That therefore we may be fully acquainted with the nature of this grace and may accordingly exercise it all the day long for every moment every time we breathe we have need of trusting in God Let us lay down several Propositions And First Consider that to trust in God is a gracious gift wrought in us by his Spirit No man is able of himself or by himself to rest upon God alone not regarding or looking above all second causes unless he be enabled thereunto by God For to trust is an act of faith as is to be shewed and faith that is in many places made to be the gift of God and not accomplished by our strength Whereas then you have many people whose mouths are full of trusting in God you must know that such speak they know not what For none can trust in God but he that is enabled thereunto by the grace of God For as Peter's body could not walk upon the waters without sinking because of the natural weight of the body unlesse Christ had in a wonderfull manner supported it So neither can a man look higher than means than instruments unlesse the Spirit of God lift thy soul up Yea because man is so apt to live by sense consisting of a sensible body and therefore the things of sense most affect him Hence it is that if there be more difficulty to work one grace than another because of the more immediate opposition of the soul against some duty more than another We may say that a man is sooner brought to be just liberal and to performe the duties of the second Table yea many duties of the first Table than this No wonder then it be made a gracious gift of God Hence In the second place There is none can trust in God but such as are regenerated and are made new creatures For as none have true saving faith but such so none have spiritual and heavenly dependance upon God but such It is an easie matter to say We trust in God when we have the helpes and supply of all creatures but when all props are removed then to rest on God as securely and quietly as if thou hadst all external abundance this cannot be done but by a gracious heart Therefore the unregenerate man he doth but delude himself It is not God that he trusteth in but his wealth his power some refuge or other he hath in the creature neither can he live upon higher principles Hence we have that place thrice mentioned The just shall live by faith Faith is trusting there and it is applied both to our life in respect of temporal things in afflictions as Heb. 10. 38. as also in respect of spiritual things especially our justification in the sight of God as Gal. 3. 11. It is the just man then and the sanctified man alone who can live by trusting on God only Sinne is such an heavy load that it presseth down and maketh a man creep upon the ground Now all those creatures that did
above other private Christians yet remember thou wantest their prayers They that cannot help thee by counsell and advice they that cannot help thee by direction yet may by prayer Therefore do nothing that may abate their zeale and love in prayer for thee It may also teach thee humility in this respect When thou findest great inlargements good success in thy Ministry be not lifted up as if God did this for any righteousness it may be in thee but because of other mens prayers attribute such things to their prayers rather then thy graces But we proceed to the second Doctrine which is Secondly That people do owe unto their spirituall guide as a debt of service their earnest prayers for them Thus much you heard was implyed in the Greek word Those that sow unto you spirituals are not only to reap of your carnals but also of your spirituals you are not to communicate only with him that teacheth you in your temporall good things but your spirituall also Thus the Church looked upon it as a duty to make supplications for Peter when he was in Prison and certainly the spirituall labourer is not only worthy of his wages but of your heartiest and most fervent prayers and those people who do neglect this duty it is a signe that they never get good by the Ministry nor is it their desire to do so Hence so much labouring and Preaching becometh so ineffectuall to thee Thou art the same ignorant and prophane man as thou wert many years ago Is not this because thou never rightly prayest to God that the ministry may be blessed to thee But to inlarge on this Consider 1. That it is a wild and absurd opinion of the Socinians who hold that prayer is only commanded in the New Testament That Christ made it a new precept to pray so that although the godly in the Old Testament did pray yet they say they had no command for it This they make one of the new Evangelicall precepts Christ brought into the Church but this doth openly contradict Scripture Doth not the Scripture say Call upon me in the time of trouble doth not the Old Testament say Seek ye the Lord while he may be found was not the Temple of God called the house of prayer doth not Solomon in the Dedication of his Temple suppose that its a peoples duty under judgments to pray and humble themselves under Gods hand that so they may be removed from off them It was therefore alwayes a duty both in the Old and New Testament to pray to God 2. Though prayer be the meanes whereby God accomplisheth great things for his people yet we must not put any merit or confidence in our prayers To be proud of thy prayers is a great absurdity for thy prayer to God doth testifie that thou art nothing that thou canst do nothing for if thou canst do things of thy selfe why needest thou pray That is the reason the Socinians give why in the Old Testament there needed no precept of prayer because there was then nothing promised but they were able to fullfill the condition thereof by their own power But the foundation of that is rotten for they had the same spirituall things promised only more obscurely that we have and were no wayes of themselves to performe their conditions otherwise we will grant that what a man can do of his own power independently upon God he needeth not pray for it but there is nothing wherein man doth not need the gift of God whether for temporall or necessary things and seeing the way to have it is only by prayer this exalteth God and debaseth man so that it is a contradiction to the duty in hand when we rest upon our prayers as if the beggar should be proud from his asking of almes 3. The duty of prayer is reciprocall Ministers are to pray for their People and People for their Ministers This Paul who so often desireth the Churches prayers doth as often demonstrate his continuall and fervent prayers for them yea though a people be never so unworthy so wretched and malicious yet they will say with Samuell God forbid I should cease to pray for you so that thy prayers for those who labour in the work of the Lord are not in vain They are recompenced with prayers again and never are people a blessing and comfort to a Minister nor is a Minister a blessing to them till there be this mutuall praying for if the prayer of one man doth prevaile much how much then will the prayers of many righteous persons for each other So that we see why the Devill and his instruments are so busie in sowing of discords and contentions between Pastor and People why instead of praying for one another there are slanderings detractitions and malicious oppositions of one another for by this discord the Devils Kingdome is promoted and their prayers for one another are hindred 4. When we say That its a debt which people owe to pray for their spirituall guides this supposeth that the people whom he watch over should be both a gifted and a gracious people Gifted Such who are able to make their requests known to God and that with others as well as alone for how can it be expected that he who cannot pray for himself will ever pray for the Minister Would it not be very ridiculous to desire the prayers of many who live under our continuall teaching Pray Alas they never prayed in their lives They never pray for themselves or for others But gifts without grace are like a tinckling Cymball God will not hear the prayers of wicked men Therefore our people ought to be gracious as well as gifted They must have pure hearts and pure hands how uncomely are holy prayers in an unholy mouth There must be no dead flye in this precious box of Oyntment Oh then that our Congregations were awakned to be such a people that can discharge spirituall duties to a spirituall overseer Do you by your prayers help on the work of their ministry for our Preaching alone without your effectuall praying will not have its blessed effect 5. There are many particulars in which your soules are to be emptyed in prayer for them for their preservation and safety As here Paul prayeth for their workes sake they are exposed to the hatred and rage of man if the shepheard be scattered the sheep will quickly flye now because their calling is to remove the sinnes of people to set the Kingdome of Christ in the place where they live therefore none meet with more absurd and unreasonable adversaries then they do for this Paul desireth their prayers 2 Thes 3. 2. That he might be delivered from unreasonable men 2. You are to pray for them in this particular also that their Ministery may be successefull That the word they Preach may find roome in the hearts of the people As it is the Ministers duty to give himself to study and to
spending all upon their pleasures they regard not their children but leave them in poverty and misery Now it's Gods gift to thee informing of thy parents heart to their duties concerning thee Thus if wives love husbands love children all this is Gods gift Gerson relates of his parents who desired to instruct him in this that he had all things from God as a gift that they made an Engine whereby descended from above whatsoever he desired or cried for as if it came from God immediately Fourthly Even those things that are brought about for us by the art and skill of others as well as their bounty we are to acknowledge God the giver of them Thus if Physicians by their art and skill have been a means to recover thee out of any disease thou art to confess it Gods gift It was Asa his great sinne That he relied on the Physician in his disease more than on God And men think themselves bound to reward the Physician to see he hath his fee but how little do they think to glorifie God and to give him the praises due to his name It is the midwives care and skill that brings the child into the world yet we have David taking notice of God as if he alone had done it Psal 22. 9. Thou art he that took me from my mothers womb Thou art my God from my mothers belly Oh how thankfully how humbly should we live did we consider how we are compassed about with Gods gifts Every thing we enjoy is the gift of God Lastly If all these things that yet seem to be the proper effects of second causes are yet the gifts of God Then how much more are all those enjoyments wherein mans wisdome and power cannot claim any worke at all Such are now all those favours of God in a temporal may that are cast upon us without any care or providence of ours That as God provided a wife for Adam while he was in a sleep Thus doth the Lord bring about many providences of love for his children that they never thought of that they could not in the least manner imagine To this head we may referre Paul's mercy in the Text. It might well be called a gift because he was pressed above strength and had no hope of life yet even then God did deliver him Such mercies also must needs be Gods gifts which are bestowed upon us while we are asleep while all the senses are locked up our preservation then from outward dangers yea and from many other wayes which might be our death or ruine when we have no use of reason to prevent them they must needs be Gods gift And lastly All the providences of God to us while little children having no wit or power to help our selves but exposed to danger every way all these were the gifts of God But who doth with thankfulnesse remember and meditate upon Gods mercies to him while a little child when he did eat and drink and play and thought of no God yet even then did God vouchsafe mercy to him David did acknowledge this Psal 22. 9. Thou didst make me hope when I was upon my mothers brests David was a sucking child then he could not put forth the actings of hope or any grace at that time but I meaneth God was he that did then support and preserve him though he did not know of it Thus you see that if you let your thoughts runne over all the good things you enjoy let them come in what channel they can yet they are all gifts from God So that we are to overlook all natural causes all means all men all our own wisdome and labour and take them from Gods hand alone That which David saith in reference to the creatures belongeth also to man Psal 104. 27. These all wait upon thee that thou mayest give them their meat in due season That thou givest them they gather thou openest thy hand and they are filled Now the grounds why they are Gods gifts are First Because there is no necessity upon God either natural or moral to vouchsafe them to thee He is not bound to give th●… life senses wealth there is no natural necessity for he made thee out of his meer good pleasure and he made thee a man whereas thou mightst have been a Toad or a Serpent Nor was there any moral necessity thou doest not deserve any thing at Gods hand thou doest not deserve a morset of bread nor a drop of water therefore all is the meer gift of God It is his free gift God doth it purely out of his love according to that saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Favours are to be free and naked not dissembled and counterfeited Thus God having nothing from thee to move him doth it from himself alone Secondly It 's Gods gift Because thy sins are such that he is provoked to blast all thy comforts to continue them no longer to thee As God threatens Hos 2. 8 9. I will take away my corn in the time thereof and my wine in the season thereof You see God calleth it his corn and his wine because he giveth it Thus all thy mercies are Gods gifts upon a two-fold account both because he gave them at first and also because he continneth them still unto thee notwithstanding thy unworthiness Thirdly They are Gods gifts Because we are commanded to pray unto him for them In that short summe of Petitions our Lord remembers this when he directs us To pray for our daily bread and this the rich man must do as well as the poor a Dives that hath his barns full as well as a Lazarns that wants crums If then we pray to God for it it is plain that it is his gift Use of Exhortation Are all the comforts we enjoy Gods gifts Then walk more thankfully Think of God more do not mind second causes and instruments so much David Psal 27. 10. saith David's parents did not forsake him but he compareth himself to a little Infant exposed as Moses was and God did take him up to provide for him Thus we are to regard God more than father or mother Labour to speak the language of Scripture more Say God hath given this God continueth this and be diligent to use these gifts to the honour and glory of the giver for that is the chief end why he giveth them Shall God give to thee and then wilt thou take off from his glory and honour Provoke not God to repent as it were that ever he did thus and thus to thee as he did about the making of man and preferring of Saul Those that said Their tongues were their own Psal 12. 4. were thereby encouraged to wickednesse whereas to consider thy wealth is not thy own thy health is not thy own thy eyes thy tongue thy body these are not thy own they are Gods gift How carefull wouldst thou be to improve them all for his glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let this
the Church but that is finaliter not originaliter because the end of their office is for the good of the people They have not these Offices for their own honour and dignity but meerly for the good of others So that although in respect of Christ they are meerly Ministers and servants yet in respect of the Church and the people they are Fathers and Pastors having a spiritual rule over them 3. Neither doth this expression encourage a licentious boundlesse questioning of the Doctrine that the Ministers of the Gospel do deliver because they are not infallible because they are not commanded absolutely to depend on them Therefore some runne into a disorderly extream cavilling and questioning every thing that is taught But you must know that although every Christian be allowed a judgement of discretion and he is by his own faith to be saved Hence the Bereans are accounted more noble because they compared the Doctrine delivered with the Scriptures yet withall they are commanded to hear the Ministers highly to esteem of them for the workes sake To obey them and to submit themselves to them So that the liberty a believer is allowed must not tend to the overthrow of the office of the Ministry It is true here is much wisdome and grace required in bounding the peoples liberty and yet asserting their dependance upon the Ministers whom God hath set over them and from whom they are to seek direction and guidance but this work is not to be done here It is certain they may mutually stand together yea they were appointed by God for the mutual good of each other and therefore it 's nothing but corruption that maketh a contrariety herein sometimes by the Ministers pride and affectation of power and sometimes by the peoples pride and conceitednesse whereby they refuse humbly to submit to such order and officers as God hath commanded them But this deserveth a large Tractate For all evil ariseth in the Church because these bounds are transgressed In some ages the officers tyranny in other ages the peoples licentiousness have much hindered the power of godliness and the beauty of Ordinances Lastly By this is not excluded that duty whereby Ministers ought with holy zeal and courage reprove sinne and that in the greatest of men Yea and whosoever are obstinate and impenitent sinners to refuse the administration of the seals of Church-communion unto them When the Apostle commanded this incestuous person whom some think to be a man of great place among the Corinthians to be cast out when he delivered Hymenaeus and Philetus up to Satan when he commands If any walk disorderly to withdraw from such 2 Thess 3. 6. Yea and if any obey not his word to note or signifie such a man All these are demonstrations of power but not lordly dominion yea where reproof admonition and excommunication are rightly administred to a spiritual heart awakened they become more dreadfull than civil or bodily punishments because what is done this way God bindeth in Heaven God casteth such out of his communion and commands them as David to Absolom not to come in his presence Thus the Apostle doth not exclude these necessary ministerial duties although distastfull to flesh and blood Yea though corrupt persons account them nothing but the expression of lordlinesse Even as when Lot reproved those wicked Sodomites they replied He would be a Judge over them Gen. 19. 9. and Moses when he rebuked the Hebrews striving one with another How scornfully did the injurious person answer him Who made thee a Prince and a Judge over us Exod. 2. 14. By this we see how imbred a thing it is in all sinners if they be reproved and controlled in their wickednesse to account all nothing but dominion and lordlinesse Even the holy Government of the Church appointed by Christ for spiritual and supernatural ends and so wholly for the good of those that go astray yet by evil men hath been complained of as worse than Turkish slavery How little do such men consider what their Christianity obligeth them unto What it is to be baptized into the name of Christ and to acknowledge him the Head Lord and Governour of his Church For if they did they would not say Let us break his bends and cast his cords away from us Is not the Discipline of Christ to be received as well as his Doctrine Did not the Apostle rejoyce to behold the faith and order of the Colossians Col. 2. 5. Thus you see what is not excluded Let us then consider in the next place What the Apostle doth positively shut out by this negative expression Not that we have dominion over you And 1. It doth exclude all abuse and excesse even of lawfull power For those who are true officers of Christ having a lawfull power committed to them may yet abuse it they may shew much rashnesse too much austerity in the exercise of it Therefore in the next Chapter we see this holy Apostle though zealous to have this incestuous person cast out yet when truly humbled and repenting he is no lesse carefull to have him received again requiring them to confirm their love to him lest he should be swallowed up with too much grief Some learned men have thought that the primitive Bishops did exceed in their austerity herein as appeareth by many Canons made against some sinners who for two or three years were not to be received into Church-communion though truly repenting yet some excuse them because the condition of the times did then they say require it that the Churches zeal against sinne might vindicate her against those abominable calumnies cast upon her by the Heathens as if she did secretly nourish all impiety And although she was thus severe yet the Novatians did refuse communion with the Church as being too remisse in that she would at any time receive such who through fear apostatized in time of persecution though never so sincerely manifesting their humiliation Thus all unlawfull austerity even in lawfull power is excluded 2. By this the Apostle doth disclaim all civil and political Government Hence the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth one in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Varinus and one that hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Budaeus The Apostles did not invade the Magistrates office neither would Christ the fountain of all Church-power be a divider of an inheritance A civil power is coactive and compelling by force which church-Church-power is not And although Bellarmine say Ecclesiastical power is ridiculous and in vain if it may not civilly compell Yea a prophane Papist saith Our Lord Christ had been indiscreet if he had not given this temporal power also Yet they speak this according to their humane apprehensions transforming Christs kingdome into an earthly and external one 3. Hereby he excludeth a magisterial power though in an ecclesiastical way over consciences That is he doth not assume to himself to be Lord in the Church but