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A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

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299. our comfort thereby 299 Christs body a Tabernacle so is ours 310 311. Christ is the sole Mediatour 361. so long as Christ appeares in heaven for us our sinnes cannot appeare 369. Christs second comming notably described 376. Christs flesh called a vaile why 404. Christ more manifest to us than to those of old with the use of it 534 535 Christ his death a cruell death in three respects 541. hee suffered foure kinde of wayes ibid. None so spoken against as he 543 Christians All Christian souldiers especially Christian Ministers 6 7. Reasons why one Christian should be deare to another 28. how and wherein wee are Christs fellowes 67 wee are called Christians of Christ. 68. a Christians dignity 92 93. they should not feare death 95. they are the house of God 121 122. their dignitie 138 139. their dutie ibid. Christians must be simple not subtill 30● cunning cruell Christians are like dogges that will bite before they barke 30● they must be undefiled 302 303. as soone as we become Christians we must looke for afflictions 428. Christians must not be cowards 430 Church how a house or household may be called a Church 7.8.119 All true Churches agree in substance of Religion though not in ceremonie 328. the Arke a lively representation of the Church 334. the Churches protectors and protection how shaddowed out 335. the uses of it 335 336. the Church is Gods house 406. the Ministers are in some sort over it ibid. Vniversalitie no necessary note of the Church 451 452. the Church is compared to a mountaine 572. to a city 573. the Churches universality dignity and stabilily well handled 579 580 c. City the Church compared to a citie 573. Heaven is a city which how we have already see 574 Cloud Its properties applied to the faithfull 536 Comming Christs second comming notably described 376. the joy conceived by Christs comming 390 the differences of Christs commings ibid. the comming of Christs day is fearefull to the sinfull joyfull to the Saints 419 Compasse there are two compassers 539 Condemnation many things condemne a man 452 Conscience It is the soules register to keepe a note of all our sinnes 344. what can secure our consciences ibid. no outward thing can purge the conscience 345. the sting of conscience is grievous 356. there is a conscience in every man what it doth with its divers kindes 385 386. Ministers ought to have a good conscience 635 what a good conscienc● is 635 636. divers definitions of the word 636. Wherein a Minister should examine his conscience 637. a good life is the meate of the conscience 644 Consideration the greatnesse of the word 116. it must goe before provocation 411 Constancie Christians must be constant 622 675. Foure impediments to constancie 677 678 Covetousnesse all a mans doings smell something of it 915 reasons against it 616 remedies against it ibid. a covetous man is never contented 7●4 Countrey how sweete a mans owne country is to him 455 Abrahams forsaking it was a great triall ibid. we must not forsake it without a calling ibid 456. the world is not the Saints countrey 469 Creatures All Creatures are servants to Gods children 510 Cow a red cow in the sacrifice what it signifieth 354 a tipe of Christ. 355 D. DAy how the word to Day is taken 127. Festivall dayes warrantable 333 Dead Dead things and dead workes compared 357 Death good Christians should not feare death 95. there are three that have the power of death 1. God 2. Man 3. the Devill 108 Death is a Serpent without a sting 110. Death common to all men 372. 37● the use of it ibi why the godly should die seeing Christ died for them 373. death is a bitter cuppe but sugared by Christ 374. two benefits come by death 374. after death comes judgement 375. an instance of sudden death 377. they are oft deepest in Gods bookes that are soonest taken away an instance of it 443. Death cannot hurt the godly it rather benefitteth them 4.65 yet the thought of it is bitter to some 469 happy they are that die in the faith 466 a patterne of our behaviour in death 486 487. Death a pretty story against the feare of death 574 Debts they are to be paid before we be too forward in the charges of sacrificing 37. there is little quiet in the honest debter ibid. wee must be marvellous carefull how wee come in debt for others ibid. what debt wee owe to our Ministers 38 Deceive Deceivers there are many 137. sinne deceiveth us many wayes ibid. Deliverance what it is and whom Christ delivereth 109. God doth deliver three wayes 434 Desperation we must beware of it 517 518 Despise Christ is despised two wayes 590 Devill why God suffers the devill to walke up and downe like a Lyon 109 Diligence wee cannot goe to heaven without diligence 231. to diligence we must adde perseverance 232 Diotrephes his name interpreted with the use of giving of names 997 998 Doctrine we must not looke for any mint of new doctrine 55 Doubt Christians must keepe a meane betweene doubting of their salvation and presuming 139 Draw Draw neere the vertues whereby we must draw neere to God 381. what this drawing neere is and how we must doe it 407. Christians must be no with-drawers except it be from the wicked 435 Drunkennesse it pulls on fornication 565 Dulnesse the causes of Dulnesse in hearing 203 E EArth man compared to earth 220 Education wherein childrens Education doth consist 668 Elect Election God hath his chosen among all 25 Enoch of his person and translation to heaven with many cirstances thereof 441 44● c. Esau his Acts especially that of selling his 〈◊〉 right 564. his punishment 566 Erre Errours how Israel Erred 131 Evidence Faith is our Evidence and we must make much of it 431 Evill it is soone imitated 706 what we must doe that are compassed about with Evill men ibid. c. Examples they are more avayleable than precepts 17. we must make use of the Examples of old 134. if good then to be followed 179. Patternes how prevailent 233. wee must follow our Patterne in goodnesse 314. even in all good ibid. three Reasons of the prevailencie of Examples 536 537 Excommunication its definition 705. to be excommunicated is a fearefull condition ibid. Exhort we should mutually Exhort one another 136. Exhor if it be timely taken it will awaken us out of sinne 136 F FAlling whether every falling away be a sin against the Holy Ghost 215 216. the conditions of that falling away 216 Fame of both good and bad with their feete and wings 134. it is compared to a Shippe receiving all passengers 688 Father our Fathers must not bee a Rule for us alwayes to follow 127. foure speciall duties wee owe to our spirituall Fathers 629 630 Faith it is its property to apply God to our selves 11. A justifying Faith cannot be without love 15. unto Faith must bee annexed Hope 122. we must
take a blow in defence of his Childe and doe ye think that Christ Iesus our spirituall Father will not defend us A Hen hides her Chickens under her wings against the Kite and Christ will shrowd us under the wings of his power and providence against Satan and all enemies 3 What Father will see his childe want being a man of ability CHRIST that is the LORD of all the world The Earth is his and the fulnesse thereof will not suffer us that be his children to want the thing that is good Because Wine is hurtfull for young children it inflames their bloud which is hot of it selfe a wise Father will not give his childe Wine yet he loves him well enough so because GOD our heavenly Father oftentimes sees wealth honour ease to bee hurtfull for his children to drowne them in the pit of perdition he keepes them away from them but let us assure our selves of this he will deny us that be his children nothing that is good for the salvation of our soules As we are the children of CHRIST so let us walke worthy of such a Father You are of your Father the Divell sayes Christ to the Pharisees for the workes of your Father ye will doe A fearefull thing to call CHRIST Father and to doe as the Devill bids us A childe must doe the commandement of his Father and if we be CHRIST's children we must doe as he will have us CHRIST would not have us sweare therefore let us not rend Gods name in peeces by swearing Christ would have us to be sober and temperate in the use of his creatures therefore let gluttony and drunkennesse be avoided by us let us shew our selves to be the dutifull children of Christ in this life that we may have the inheritance prepared for children in the life to come VERSE 14. 1 A Description of CHRISTS incarnation 2. An application of it Verse 17. In the description 1. The equity of it 2. The ends of it 3. An exaggeration of it by a comparison Verse 16. The ends are two 1. The overthrow of the Devill 2. Our deliverance out of the hands of the Devill Verse 15. In the comparison 1. The nature refused 2. The nature assumed verse 16. In the application 1. A repetition of the incarnation 2. An illustration of it by the ends thereof 1. That he might be a faithfull high Priest in making our reconciliation 2. A mercifull high Priest in succouring us in our temptations He inferreth upon the two testimonies going before in the 12. and 13. Verses a plaine conclusion of Christs humanity and makes it open to all the world Hee concludeth it à pari They that were to bee redeemed by him were men therefore he also would be a man This is amplified by the end and by a comparison Our humane nature is here described by the matter and the substance whereof it consisteth By flesh and bloud sometimes is signified the corrupt nature of man 1 Cor. 15.50 Flesh and bloud defiled with sinne subject to mortality and corruption cannot inherit heaven Sometimes it is taken for the substance of mans nature as here and Matth. 16.17 Gal. 1.16 The children did all communicate of flesh and bloud it was the common condition of all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even as they did as milke is like milke That hee might be their neighbour and kinsman our Immanuel he participated of flesh and bloud too He tooke part of it .i. The substance but not the vicious qualities hee knew no sinne A spirit hath not flesh and bone as yee see mee have He was the fruit of his mothers wombe made of a woman hee names that part of our nature which is visible the other also being included namely the soule which quickned this flesh and bloud But here is the difference 1. Wee take flesh of both our Parents hee but of one Filius hominis is here of the feminine gender 2. Our flesh is polluted with sinne so is not his 3. We are meere men he both God and man 4. Our mothers ceased to be Virgins when they brought forth us his was a maide and a mother too Here we have a lively description of man he is but flesh and bloud which is weake fraile and subject to many miseries A knife may easily cut it the heate scorch it the cold benumme it it is subject to thirst hunger faintnesse wearinesse c. All flesh is as grasse With them is an arme of flesh with us is God We are not steele yron brasse but flesh and bloud A wise Salomon a strong Samson a beautifull Absalom Bathshebah a learned Paul that spake tongues more than all a Lord a Lady are but flesh and bloud dust and must returne to dust the consideration whereof should humble us all The fowles of the ayre the beasts of the field are flesh and bloud too yea theirs excells ours 1. Their flesh and bloud is clothed at their first entrance ours naked 2. Their 's well fenced ours soone pierced 3. More profit may bee made of their flesh when they dye they will sell for something so not ours 4. As sound as a fish they are free from diseases Sicknesses grow in ours and GOD makes our's meate for Wormes Let this appellation then pull downe our Peacocks feathers and make us walke humbly before our God But as CHRIST did participate of our flesh and bloud So shall we of his he shall change our vile bodies that they may bee fashioned according to his glorious body Phil. 3.21 Now hee proceeds to the ends of Christs incarnation 1. The overthrow of the Devill 2. Our deliverance out of his clawes 1. He describes him 2. He names him The cause why CHRIST tooke our humane nature upon him was that being compassed with flesh and bloud he might ●ye and so conquer the Devill and deliver men out of his clawes If he had not beene man he could not have dyed and then we had not beene delivered The meanes for the vanquishing of the Devill sinne and death was his owne death As the brazen Serpent was lifted up and by looking on it the Israelites were delivered from the fierie Serpents So Christ was lifted on the crosse and we are saved by looking on him with the eye of faith The death of this immaculate Lambe was the overthrow of the Devill and of death too which Hosea in the spirit of prophesie foretold and was afterwards accordingly verefied Hos. 13.14 1 Cor. 15.54 As Sampson by his owne death vanquished the Philistims Iud. 16.30 So CHRIST by his death overcame death and destroyed him that had the power of death that is the devill and that with his owne sword He doth not say that he might weaken the Devill diminish his force or give him a wound but destroy him So that he hath nothing against us Ioh. 12.31 Not death alone but the Devill too the LORD of death The Devill by carrying men into sinne had power also to carry them into
death the wages of sinne is death Rom. 6.23 First hee entises men to sin and then he hath power and autoritie from God to give them the wages they have deserved that is death thus he has the power of death as a thiefe and murderer Not to hold us in suspence he names him the Devill who compasses the earth to and fro ranging up and downe like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devoure 1 Pet. 5.8 There be three that have the power of death God Man and the Devill 1. GOD He strikes men dead and that suddenly he rayses up from the dead as Hannah speakes in her song The Lord killeth and maketh alive he bringeth downe to the grave and raiseth up 1 Sam. 2.6 hee hath supremam potestatem Gods power is immediate absolute and unlimited 2. Man a King or a Iudge hath the power of death As Pilate said to our Saviour Iohn 19.10 Knowest thou not that I have power to crucifie thee and have power to release thee True man hath a delegatam potestatem 3. The Devill hath power that is rule and empyre sed consequutam potestatem tanquam carnifex he may not kill us at his owne will and pleasure no more than the hangman may execute a malefactor at his will but according to the appointment of the Iudge VERSE 15. NOw he comes to the second end of Christs incarnation and death that hee might deliver us from the divels hands non liberaretur humanum genus nisi sermo Dei factus esset humanus August Deliver them set them free quaking at the cogitation of death in regard of eternall damnation which it brought with it for their innumerable sinnes whereof their owne consciences accused them Deliverance is a comfortable thing most welcome unto all Galley-slaves and Prisoners are glad to heare of their deliverance Not some but all so many as imbrace his deliverance Not onely those which were bound but subject to bondage that had willingly subjected themselves to the Devill which had bound themselves apprentises to him Rom. 6.16 The Indentures were made betweene them and the devill we will serve thee thou shalt be our Master this was our estate Why were we subject to him what kept us in subjection the feare of death all our life time they were subject to bondage that is to the stroake of death which they expected every moment The devill threatned death to us all our life time every houre being sinners we might looke for death every moment not onely for a temporall death but for an eternall in hell-fire Death is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we quaked at the mention of death this kept us in bondage to the devill A miserable condition but Christ hath delivered us out of it he hath taken away the feare of death that made us to shake the fetter wherewith the Devill kept us bound Now death is but a sleepe a passage to a better life yea it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Basil speakes Thus he hath rescued us out of the divels clawes and made us free Iohn 8.36 The devill sin and death are left still ad agonem to exercise us withall as Antagonists to wrastle withall but the victory through Christ is ours We sin we dye and the devill like a roaring Lion walkes up and downe seeking how to devoure us but none of these shall be able to prevaile over us Sinne though it remaines yet it doth not reigne in us 2. The guilt and the punishment of it is taken away so that it shall not condemne us Rom. 8.1 The sting of death is gone O death where is thy sting Cogitur non abesse sed non obesse hence the servants of God have wished for it Phil. 1.23 I desire to be dissolved c. Neither can it separate us from the love of God in Christ Iesus The malice of Satan that shall turne to our good GOD may suffer him to tempt and assault us he walkes up and downe like a roaring Lion 1. That wee should not be secure 2. To stir us up to pray but 1. we are no longer in his jurisdiction 2. we shall be conquerors over him God will tread him under our feet Rom. 16.20 and will give us an issue with the temptation 1 Cor. 10.13 Satan may plot against us 1 Thes. 2.18 Luke 22.31 but God will confound him he may make us sin but he cannot make us continue in sin Sin the Divell and Death are three of the mightiest enemies that we have all these are destroyed by Christ for us therefore let us be thankefull to Christ that hath wrought for us so great and gracious a deliverance Let us not stand in an immoderate feare of death Death is a Serpent without a sting Though he gripe us yet he cannot hurt us Damocles the Parasite extolled the magnificence of Dyonisius affirming that there was not an happier man in the world than he wilt thou have a taste of my happinesse I he caused him to be set in a chaire of state the Table furnished with all delicates singing-men and women making melodie with voices and Instruments noble attendants to wait on him but therewithall he commanded a sharp naked sword to be hung over his head by a slender Horse-haire the which he espying tooke no pleasure in that Paradise but besought him earnestly to take him out of his happinesse againe So though we have the world at will though we be Gentlemen c. yet the sword of death hanging over our heads continually must needs quaile the courage of the greatest Gallant O quàm pulchrum esset dominantibus hic dominari Si mors non posset dominantibus insidiari It is appointed for all men once to dye when and how suddenly we know not our breath may be stopped on the sudden as Valentinians Luc. 12.20 We are all obnoxious to the feare of death but Christ hath delivered us from a slavish feare of it VERSE 16. HEre you have the amplification of it by the comparison of a more excellent nature refused by him the Angels far surpasse us yet he tooke not on him their nature but ours Not the seed of Adam of Noah but of Abraham because the promise was made to him In thy seed shall all Nations of the earth bee blessed If he should have taken on him the nature of Angels it was either for the good Angels or the bad The good needed it not because they never fell as for the evill Angels there was no such reason because they sinned in a more high degree than men 1. They sinned of themselves without the instigation of any man fell by the subtile provocation of the Serpent 2. They sinned in heaven in the Court of the King of Kings we sinned on earth which is his footstoole 3. They were indued with more excellent gifts of wisdome knowledge and understanding we are but babes and children to them 4. They were only of a spiritual essence they had no flesh to intise them to
the Church are Christs afflictions 500. who afflicteth and the use of affl●ctions 548 549. the difference of afflictions and punishments 549. we must not onely take but endure afflictions 550 two reasons to incite us to endure afflictions ibid c. the benefits of afflictions 555. the sharpenesse sweetnes of afflictions 556. the after-reward 557 afflictions not to be imputed to Planets Dogge-dayes or secondary causes 559 Age old age is to be reverenced Almes It is a singular worke above others 18 19. an excellent example in Nazianzens mother 19 20 Alone the evills of being alone 537 Ambrose Theodosius praise of him for being the onely Bishop 573 Amen what it signifieth 46 Anchor or ancre hope and an ancre compared 243. our angre is in heaven 245 Angels they are inferiour to Christ in divers respects 62 63 65. compared to fire 65. their nature and offices 75 76. God used much their ministery 80. why Christ tooke not on him the nature of Angels but of Man 110. their number order wisedome power and office 574 575 c. whether every one of Gods elect have a particular Angel 577.578 Anger wee must not continue in it 27 28. It should be but like the sting of a Bee but not like the sting of a Serpent 28. who doe provoke God to anger 140 Annointing divers good observations from Christs being annointed 67 68. vid. Oyle or Oyntment Apostacie Wee must beware of it 435 Application It is the propertie of faith to apply God to our selves 11 Arke it is a representation of the Church 334 451 Ashamed We must not be ashamed of our Religion 410. not of our heavenly Father 470.471 Assurance assurance of salvation how had 581 B. BAbes how wee should be babes and wherein strong men 204 Baptismes why the word is used in the plurall number 209. The red-sea and baptismes paraleld 511 512. Bastards many brands of infamie laid on them 551 Beauty it is a good blessing but not too much to be doted on 492 493 c. It is the inward beauty that God accepts of 493 Birth Birth-right Its appurtenances and why so called 564 Blessing it is double 1 proper 2 improper 270. the Papists ascribe too much to the Ministers blessing ibid the Parents blessing is highly to be regarded 483. children should so behave themselves as to obtaine it ibid. Bloud Christs bloud is the price of our Redemption 352. what it teacheth us 353. a double benefit by the bloud of Christ. 356 the bloud sprinkled on the people significant 364. of resisting unto bloud 546. how Christs bloud speaketh better things than the bloud of Abel 588. how wee should prize it 624 Body how our bodies are tabernacles 310 311. so is Christs 349. the bodies of the Saints are holy things 39● with them we must draw neere to God also 408. the body not to be neglected 637 Boldness Min●sters may be bold in the execution of their office 20. the boldnesse of Christians through Christ. 403 Bondmen two kindes of them 599 of what kinde of bondmen we must be mindfull ibid. Booke All the Scriptures make but one booke 392. Christ is to be found onely in that booke 393. excesse of bookes condemned 680 Borne first-borne the Church so called 500. the many dignities of the first borne ibid. Bowels what is meant by the bowels of the Saints 18. a good lessen from them 28. the bowels of Gods Saints are refreshed divers wayes 40 Brother all the faithfull are brethren 4. three duties to wit of love accord and support implied in the word brother 4 5. Donatists were angry with Saint Augustine for calling them brethren ●0 a brother is more than a servant 33 34. the spirituall brotherhood is to be preferred before the naturall 34. Christ hath many brethren and that in a manifold respect 102 103. wee should doe nothing that might shame this brotherhood of Christs 103 Buriall we must not be too curious about our burialls 490 Burthen sinne is a heavie burthen 61 C. CAlling it is most requisite in all things 197. examples of Popes that came into their Popedomes without a calling ibid our calling is 1. of God 2. of the Church ibid. none must praech without a calling 280. a twofold calling 361 Censer the golden censer what it signifieth 330 331 Censure Censurers Wee must beware of rash censuring 517 Ceremony All true Churches agree in substance of Religion though not in ceremony 327 Changing In the world there is nothing but changing 278 Cherefulnesse God loves it in all our doings 30 Cherubins their signification and what they are 335 Child Children All the faithfull are Christs children 105. and so the Preachers that convert them ibid. the use of it 106. God hath a care of his children when they are dead 441. A multitude of children a blessing of God 463. how deare they are to their parents 478. examples ibid. we must take heede of doting on them ibid of their education and wherein it consists 668 Children their education in what it stands 668. they must be catechised ibid c. they must be taught manners 669 Christ described three wayes 1. a dignitate 2. a charitate 3. a Sanctitate 9. All things were made In For By Christ. 58. how he resembles the person of the Father 59. The comforts comming to us by his sitting at the right-hand of God 62.63 six arguments to prove Christ to be above the Angels 63. the proofe of it 62 63. his Throne and Scepter 66 67. Christ is a builder heaven and earth is his workemanship 71. Christs similitude and dissimilitude with a garment 72 73. hee is without change 73. Christ is Lord Iehovah 87 88. his death sufficient to all but efficient onely to beleevers 94. why Christ tasted of death for us 95. he is our onely Sanctifier 100. his Incarnation described and applied 106 107. c. the difference betweene his and our nature 107. how he was like unto us in all things 111. Christ-masse how it is now kept 112. he is our friend in the court of heaven 114. Christ is our Prophet with foure reasons why we should attend his prophesie 114 115. how Christ is denied 673. Christ two inducements to attend to Christ. 116 117. wherein Christ was both alik and unlik above Moses 117 118. the difference betweene Christ and Moses 120. Christs entrance into rest is an assurance of ours 153. how Christ descendeth to the lowest of his brethren 188. an excellent example to great ones to doe like wise 189. hee suffereth with his ibid. how Christ ruleth 252 he is our peace ibid. Christ in his Priesthood excelleth all Priests 274. Christ prefigured by Melchizedec in many circumstances 275. his Priesthood is above all others 276. the use of Christs being called the Lord Christ 282. Christ a Priest after the similitude of Melchizedec how 283 284. Christ is our suretie in the covenant betwixt God and us 294. Christ how hee maketh intercession for us 298
crany to escape by but we shall find none he makes them Iudges I appeale to your owne selves Iudge you He doth not say if we contemne secretly or openly but if we neglect The carelesse neglect of the Gospell shall pull damnation on us He doth not say so great a word as before but so great salvation A glorious and comfortable title which cannot be ascribed to the law that killeth it doth not save Saint Paul calls the law a killing letter the ministration of death and of condemnation but the Gospell sayes It is the word of salvation Act. 13.26 The power of GOD to salvation Rom. 1.16 So that they which contemne it contemne their owne salvation So great as can not be expressed by the tongue of men and Angels wrought by so great a Saviour Tit. 2.13 So great as eye hath not seene eare heard neither entred into the heart of man to conceive not a saving of us from our enemies in this world but of soule and body from the Devill death and damnation in the world to come Great also in eternitie and durance for it shall never have end The greatnes of this salvation is amplified three kind of wayes 1. By the first Preacher and divulger of it 2. By those worthy instruments that succeeded him 3. By the miracles wherewith it was graced That which wee heare is salvation a matter of great weight and singular importance therefore let us not neglect it If a man lye in a deepe pit ready to be drowned and one come to him offering him his hand to pull him out will he not listen to him The preaching of the word is Gods hand to pull us out of the pit of hell and shall wee neglect it If a man tell thee of a Lord-ship which thou mayest have for a little money wilt thou not give him the hearing We bring you tidings not of an earthly Lordship but of an everlasting kingdome which you may have without Gold and without Silver only reaching out the hand of faith to apprehend it and shall we turne away our eares and not regard it How shall wee escape if wee neglect so great salvation When men are at a play they will be attentive and the preaching of the word whereby we may be saved in the life to come is had in small estimation What a lamentable thing is this This must needs pull the wrath of GOD on us Wee count it a small matter to neglect the Word of GOD yet they that doe it shall hardly escape the vengeance of GOD how shall they escape sayes the Apostle Certainly with great difficultie therefore let us be diligent hearers of it The threatnings of Angels if despised were severely punished and shall not the threatnings of the Sonne of GOD in the ministrie of the Word The Preachers in the name of CHRIST thunder out GODS judgements against swearing profanations c. A number heare them and are no more moved than the stones in the wall but GOD will meet with such they shall hardly escape GOD will one way or other make them feele the smart of his heavy hand there is no way of escaping for them Therefore let us with reverence tremble at the word Which at the first began Having taken a beginning to be preached by the LORD which brought it first out of the bosome of his Father he did not introduce it into this world by stealth secretly as heresies and phantasies are wont to be but openly Christ alwayes taught in the Synagogues and in the Temple The Lord. That is the LORD IESUS the LORD of heaven and earth The LORD often so called not by Angels as the Law but by the LORD the naturall SON of GOD not by mortall men as Plato Aristotle c. In this respect the Gospell should be most welcome to us The LORD IESUS Himselfe was the Preacher of the Gospell he went up and downe through Citties and Townes preaching the Gospell The first Sermon hee made was in Nazareth where hee was brought up from thence he went up to Ierusalem c. CHRIST was a Preacher and shall we thinke basely of Preachers Was it not an high office which the Sonne of GOD will take on him CHRIST would not be a King be refused that then what wretches are they that will rayle on Preachers gibe and jest at them make songs of them Reverence the Preachers seeing CHRIST Himselfe was a Preacher And was confirmed unto us c. Some expound it thus and after them that heard it of Christ it was confirmed to me that is after it was preached by CHRIST and the first Apostles that heard him on the earth it was confirmed to me also as a later Apostle yet one that heard and saw CHRIST from heaven rather Paul in modesty and humilitie puts himselfe in the number of the common Saints and Christians to whom the Gospell was confirmed by the miracles of the Apostles or by the Apostles that heard Christ. Or he doth not speake here of his doctrine as if he received that from the Apostles but that hee was confirmed in the truth of the Gospell by the miracles of the Apostles which was no disparagement to him This is the strongest argument to perswade some that this is none of Pauls Epistle Saint Paul is wont to stand stiffely on the reputation of his Apostle-ship hee had his doctrine not from men but God he was not inferiour to the chiefest Apostles whereas the Author of this Epistle was one of the Apostles Schollers he had the doctrine of the Gospell not at the first hand but at the second This may be answered diverse kinde of wayes 1. Both these may well bee applyed to Saint Paul the LORD IESUS first preached the Gospell to him from heaven when he called him and he was confirmed in it by Ananias 2 It may be a rhetoricall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 frequent in divine and prophane writings when as the speaker assumes that to himselfe which is proper to the hearers and by a Synecdoche includes himselfe in their number as the Penman of this Epistle sayes how shall wee escape if we neglect so great salvation yet he was none of them that neglected this salvation Heb. 10.26 Yet he did not commit that wilfull and horrible sin against the Holy Ghost Paul 1 Thes. 4.17 sayes We that are alive yet he was not alive at Christ's second comming so though he say which was confirmed to us yet he speakes in the name of the Hebrews not of his owne as 1 Pet. 1.12 where S. Peter seemes to exempt himselfe out of the number of the Apostles yet he was one 3 S. Paul by conference with the Apostles that heard Christ preach when he was on the earth might without any disparagement to him be the more confirmed in the truth of the Gospell 4 He doth not say he was confirmed but the Doctrine was and that clause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports not the persons but the
time Was confirmed to us that is to our time by those that heard him some of them being still alive even in our time the Law and the Prophets were to Iohn that is to Iohn's time The Gospell in England hath beene continued to us that is to our time not by me alone which am a secondary Apostle borne out of time but by the first Apostles of all those after Christ preached to you Hebrews VERSE 4. GOD Himselfe was a witnesse to the Gospell therefore let us beleeve it But how did GOD beare witnesse to it by signes and wonders c. Then they came not from Satan but from GOD. Signa quia significant the Divine Power and Majestie of God Signes are any miracles in generall as the fleece to Gedeon c. Hezekiahs signe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prodigia quòd porrò dicant Some call them praedicidia because they doe praedicere aliquid mali terrible miracles of GOD's wrath and judgement as the striking of Ananias and Sapphira with sudden death the killing of Herod by the Angell the blindnesse of Elymas the Sorcerer but it is sometimes taken also for miracles of mercie And with diverse miracles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereby the power of God is shewed to the world Act. 2.43 cap. 5.12 The distributions of the Holy Ghost 1. Because they be freely and frankly bestowed by him 2. Because liberally and bountifully vid. 1 Cor. 12.8 9 10. The reason moving him to this distribution is no merits in us but his owne blessed will his gracious goodnesse is the cause of all both of sending the Gospell by Christ and of confirming it by so many miracles and gifts There be counterfeit miracles Matth. 24.24 2 Thes. 2.9 and true miracles they may be distinguished by the matter the cause and the end 1 Sometimes they seeme to be that which they are not as the walking of spirits in Church-yards bloud in their breaden god whereas they be but a cousenage 2 They may be substantiall for the matter and yet effected by a wrong cause as the Sorcerers in Egypt brought forth true Frogs c. yet by the Devill not by the finger of GOD and they may be wrought by a naturall cause which men see not nor can comprehend as they shut up Mahomet in an Iron-Chest brought him into a Temple and made it hang aloft which was done by Loadstones that the silly people were ignorant of There was a Lampe in Venus Temple that burnt continually which some thought to be a miracle whereas it was done by a certaine stone called Asbestus which was found in Arcadia 3 By the end If it be to confirme falshood it is a bad miracle Deut. 13.1 though never so glorious Whereas a true miracle is effected by the power of GOD exceedeth the bounds of Nature and is for the confirmation of the truth The Gospell at the beginning was adorned with many miracles 1. Because it seemed strange to the world a new doctrine 2. Because it seemed repugnant to the law of Moses instituted by GOD. 3. Because it could not bee proved and confirmed by naturall reasons But now since the famous miracles of CHRIST Resurrection ascension into heaven of the sending of the Holy Ghost of the spreading of the Gospell over all the world we must not still curiously gape after miracles that is reproved Matth. 12.39 Ioh. 4.48 Luk. 23.8 To the law and the testimonie Isai. 8.20 the people must resort The glory of miracles with the Papists is a note of the Church and they bragge much of their miracles they have one thousand miracles to our one Bernard the Monke restored sight to a blind man Dominicus raised up three from the dead Antoninus 38. Franciscus Xavorius the Iesuite cured many dumbe lame and blind in India As for us we have no miracles therefore ours is not the Church What of all this Iohn Baptist wrought never a miracle yet he was a good Preacher sent from God But for the determination of this point In some sence we will not deny but that miracles may be notes of the Church but here we must distinguish of notes and of miracles too One true note of the Church is the sound preaching of the Word where that is to beget men and women to CHRIST there is the Church yet miracles may bee an ornament to the Church a confirmation of it in the truth of the Gospell But what miracles 1. Not forged or counterfeit as the miracles of the Papists be their jugling being brought to light and detected to all the world but true miracles wrought by the finger of GOD. not lying wonders with the which Antichrist should come and delude the world 2. Not new miracles that came yesterday out of the mint but the old and ancient miracles of CHRIST and his Apostles are a demonstration of the Church and of the truth of the Gospell that the Gospell might be carryed more speedily throughout the world miracles were requisite at the beginning but now no such necessitie of them A wicked and crooked generation seeketh a signe Herod would faine see CHRIST that he might see some miracle done by him Let us not now gape after new miracles the miracles wherewith God honoured the Gospell at the first were sufficient for the confirmation of it to all posterity The rich man in Hell would faine have had a miracle for the saving of his brethren Lazarus must be sent from the dead to them but it was answered him they have Moses and the Prophets that is enough if we will not believe for the preaching of the word all the miracles in the world will not save us Yet the Gospell at this day has many miracles though they be not observed men are metamorphosed and changed by it of proud they become humble of Devills Saints men are raised from the death of sinne by it they that were blind in the knowledge of CHRIST are come to a cleere sight in matters of religion they that were lame and could not walke in the way to the kingdome of heaven are made to runne cheerfully in it they that were dumbe and could not speake for CHRIST are made to speake wisely and boldly in his quarrell These are excellent miracles which might procure an estimation of the Gospell in our hearts Now for so much as the LORD honoured the Gospell with so many miracles let us yeeld a reverent attention to it and not neglect so great salvation which with so many great and wonderfull miracles hath beene so much graced by GOD let us lay it up in our hearts let us frame our lives according to it that wee may feele the power and comfort of it in our hearts and be saved eternally by CHRIST in the world to come He returnes to CHRIST where 1. A farther confirmation of his deitie 2. A transition to his humanitie Verse 10. His deity is confirmed by this argument He to whom the world is subject is God the world is
them they were not personally united to them as ours are Otherwise there is no great difference no not betweene the Angels and us How are wee to magnifie God that hath so highly exalted man The consideration hereof should cause us to lead a life in some acceptable measure worthy of that honour whereunto we be advanced We are not much inferiour to the Angels yet a number of our lives are as ill nay worse than bruit beasts The Oxe knowes his owner the Asse his masters crib but wee will not know love and feare that God which feedeth us A Dogge will love his Master that makes much of him wee will not love no not those that deserve well at our hands A Dove will keepe her selfe to her owne mate many of us will not keepe our selves to our owne Wives bring an horse to the water to the sweetest water in the world he will drinke no more than will doe him good we are excessive and more than brutish in drinking all places ring of this sinne this beastly sinne of drunkennesse what a vile thing is this How doe wee forget our selves Hath GOD made us but a little inferiour to the Angels and shall we live like bruit beasts and give over our selves to all uncleannesse How doe we disgrace that worthy estate whereunto God hath advanced us As we draw neere to the Angels any kinde of wayes so let us so farre as is possible lead an angelicall life with the Angels in this world that we may remaine with them in the world to come Thou crownedst him He shewes wherein our excellency doth consist he hath made him a King and set a Crowne on his head With many glorious gifts that are a wonderfull honour to man both externall and internall especially with the knowledge of CHRIST wherein consists eternall life One part of that glory is that he hath a Soveraigntie and dominion over all creatures which was given him at the creation Genesis 1. renewed and ratified by GODS seale after the floud Genesis 9. enlarged no doubt to the faithfull by CHRIST 1 Cor. 3.21 VERSE 8. VNder his feete This agreeth to all men in generall to the faithfull in speciall whom God hath made Kings and Lords over all his creatures by CHRIST But principally it is to be understood of our SAVIOUR CHRIST who is the chiefe Lord of the world the King and mediatour of the Church he hath all power in heaven and earth All things yea even the Devils themselves are put in subjection under his feete God hath given him a name above every name that at the name of IESUS every knee should bow Phil. 2.9 We also by him because wee are members of his body and his brethren we have an interest to all creatures all things throughout the wide world are ours The heaven the earth the birds the beasts the fishes the trees the flowers are ours Death is ours the very Devill himselfe is our slave and subject God hath put him under our feet 1. Here we may behold the dignity of Christians all things by IESUS CHRIST are under our dominion O what a bountifull GOD is this that hath given us so large a possession Let us sound forth his praises for it and use his liberalitie to his glory As God said to Peter arise kill and eate when the sheete full of all kinde of creatures was let downe to him from heaven so doth hee say to us all we may freely eate of all creatures whatsoever but let us not abuse GODS creatures to his dishonour and our destruction Let us use them soberly religiously to make us more cheerefull in the service of our God 2 Let us not stand in a slavish feare of any creature of the stars the windes no not of the Devils themselves for all are put in subjection under our feet by Iesus Christ that loved us and hath given us a superiority over all we shall be conquerers over them all a singular comfort to the faithfull Satan may tempt and assault us but God will tread him under our feet 3 For this dominion let us thanke the Lord Iesus Christ. Of our selves we are worth nothing starke beggars in CHRIST and by CHRIST we have all that we have Let us magnifie him for it Then he concludeth from the generall to the speciall If all things be subject to him then nothing is exempted from his Dominion no not the Angels themselves To the former the adversaries againe replied thou talkest of a glorious Empire Rule and Dominion whereunto Christ is advanced but it is an imaginary conquest for we see not all things subdued to him The Kings and Princes of the earth cast away his yoke and submit not themselves to the Scepter of his Word Satan and his instruments rebell against him sin and death still play the tyrants and are not subdued to him VERSE 9. TO that he answers 1. Though we see it not yet all things may be subject to him we see not God yet there is a God we see not our owne soule yet we have a soule Here it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is a difference betweene videre and cernere wee doe discerne so as it cannot be denied a man may see a thing and yet not discerne it 2 He answers it by a distinction of submission or subjection The one is externall conspicuous to the eye of the world the other internall seene by the eye of faith Christ's kingdome is not of this world it is not temporall but spirituall all things are subdued to him though he suffer his enemies for the triall and exercise of his children to tyrannize over them for a time A Beareheard may have a Beare under his rule and authority though he suffer him now and then to range abroad so hath Christ the Devill Yet we see Iesus that was made a little lower than the Angels through the suffering of death to be crowned with glory and honor These words Through the suffering of death may be referred to that which goes before or followes after after he had suffered death he was crowned with glory as Phil. 2.9 But rather refer them to the former he was made a little lower than the Angels through suffering of death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a little while refer it to the time that is during his death passion continuance in the grave 3. dayes and 3. nights all this while he was inferior to the Angels not at the time he lived upon the earth for Mat. 4.11 The Angels Ministred to him as servants to their Lord. But in his Passion and Death the Deity withdrew his power and the humanity was left alone then he was lower than the Angels the Angels are immortall and dye not Christ was mortall and died in that respect he was inferior to them But he was afterwards exalted to all glory and dignity placed at the right hand of God and so superior to the Angels We that are the faithfull see him
crowned with glory and honour in that he raised up himselfe from the dead ascended into heaven in a cloud in the sight of his Disciples the Angels attending on him in that Stephen saw him sitting at the right-hand of God in that he sent downe the Holy Ghost from heaven and by a few simple men to look to through the preaching of the Gospell conquered all the world We may all see him crowned with glory and honour Thus he is higher than the Angels though through the suffering of death he was for a time lower than they Christ truly suffered death not phantastically in a phantasticall body as the Manichees and Apollinarists dreamed he felt and indured the bitter pangs of death Which is illustrated by two causes the efficient and finall the efficient is the grace love and mercy of God Iohn 3.16 the finall that as much as lay in Christ all men might be saved CHRIST's death was sufficient for all 1 Tim. 2.4 effectuall only to them that beleeve Isay 9.6 Mat. 26.28 Physick is offered to many sicke Patients that may doe them good if they will receive it but many are so froward that they will none of it the fault why they doe not recover is not in the physicke nor in the Physitian but in themselves so CHRIST offers the soveraigne medicine of salvation purchased by his death to all but some reject it and will not beleeve it can save them It is effectuall for all those that be sanctified that be his brethren as it is expounded afterwards Whereas it is said that Christ tasted death therein he dealt as the Physitian doth he needs not the physike prepared for his patients yet the better to induce them to take it he tastes of it himselfe before their eyes So death belonged not to Christ because he had no sinne yet he would taste of it that we might be more willing to taste and drink of that cup. The Metaphor must not be pressed too farre as if Christ did but sip and taste of the cup of death as a man tastes vinegar but drinkes not of it for he swallowed it up quite 1 Cor. 15.54 It is a borrowed speech Death is resembled to a cup whereof CHRIST did taste let this cup passe from me This hath reference to the time that hee continued in death not to the sharpenesse of his death They that taste of a thing tarry not long at it their lips are quickly removed from it so CHRIST did not continue long in death not past three dayes and three nights hee did but tast as it were of it and so away yet he truly dyed and it was a most bitter taste to him Thus the tasting of death was no dishonour but an honour to Christ. By it hee brought many to eternall life for all that hee is above the Angels and all other creatures whatsoever CHRIST hath tasted of death before us therefore let not us that be Christians be too much afraid of death There is a potion brought to a sicke Patient which the eye loathes and the mouth distasts The poore sick man is loath to drinke of it the Physitian takes it into his hand tasts of it before his eyes by that he is encouraged to receive it so is it with us death is a sowre cup which nature abhorreth we are all unwilling naturally to drink of it but for so much as Christ our loving and heavenly Physitian hath tasted of it before hand let us not be afraid of it The godliest men in the world cannot but in some measure feare death Christ feared it Et non est fortior miles quàm Imperator yet let this be as Sugar to sweeten this bitter Cup to us CHRIST tasted of it and overcame it so shall wee doe by his vertue and power As after the receit of a purgation the body is the better more sound than before so after we have drunk this bitter Cup of Death both in soule and body we shall be the better farre more glorious than before therefore let us be willing whensoever it shall seeme good to the Lord for us to taste it All of us should have died eternally At what time thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye both thou and all thy posterity Wee should have trodden the Winepresse of GOD's wrath and beene tormented with the Devill and his angels in the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone for ever but CHRIST hath tasted death for us all O the wonderfull and unspeakable love of Christ as if a company of Traytors were going to the Scaffold to be executed the Kings Sonne should step forth to dye for them what an admirable thing were that We by nature are enemies to God traytors to his Majestie the Son of the King of Kings comes from heaven and dies for us Is not this to be admired of us all scarce will any dye for a righteous man we were unholy unrighteous defiled with the scab of sin in soule and body yet the Lord Iesus died for us Life is sweet who will dye for his friend but will any dye for his enemy The consideration of the death of Christ should occupie our mindes continually we should ever be thinking of it it should cause us to be alwayes singing of that song Worthy is the Lambe that was killed for us to receive all honour c. But why did Christ tast death for us what moved God to send his Son to dye for us Surely his owne grace mercy and favour eternall life is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So God loved the world that he gave c. There was no goodnes in us that might procure Christ to die for us no praevisa opera nor praevisa fides it is the grace of God that we are preserved from eternall death by grace ye are saved not by workes Let us not part stakes with the Lord give halfe to our selves and halfe to him but let us ascribe the whole praise of our salvation to the grace of God alone not to us O Lord not to us but to thy owne name and mercy in thy Sonne Christ Iesus be given all praise for ever and ever VERSE 10. NOw he descendeth to Christs humanity by preventing an objection of the adversaries Well you have affirmed Christ to be God above the Angels and all other creatures and that his suffering of death was no derogation from the glory of his Deity but a declaration of Gods grace and mercy to mankinde by his death to preserve men from death eternall but seeing hee was GOD what need was there that hee should become man suffer afflictions and dye Hee might have saved men by the power of his Deity yea even by his bare and naked word whereby he made all things at the first Answer indeed GOD being omnipotent might have saved mankinde if it had seemed good to him by some other meanes than by the incarnation and death of his Son yet this seemed to be the most fit and convenient
sinnes of all the faithfull on him he feared the wrath of his Father yet without any diffidence or distrust He was in a wonderfull perplexity and perturbation as ever any was the power of the deity for a time suppressed thinking himselfe as it were forsaken of his Father God plucked him out of this feare sending an Angell to comfort him and strengthning him himselfe This is no disparagement to CHRIST because hee was a true man It is not in vaine to pray for God will heare us If not ad voluntatem yet ad utilitatem He doth not hearken so much to the externall cry of the throate for Esau cryed but obteined not the blessing Baals Priests cryed from morning to noone but were not heard he hearkens to the internall cryes of his Spirit in his Children 1 Ioh. 5.14 So he heard Anna Hezekiah David the Nine vites when they cryed unto him He heard Daniel Dan 9.23 and Cornelius prayers were in remembrance with God VERSE 8. THe second fruit is his learning by it 1. The Scholler 2. The Lesson 3. The Schoole-master Though he were a Son equall with his Father Phil. 2.6 by those his sufferings hee learned what obedience meant experimento didicit Cajetan hee felt by experience what it was to obey Christ learned as he was man as Luk. 2. ult Afflictions are very profitable for us It is good for me sayes the Psalm that I have beene afflicted that I might learne thy statutes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qua nocent docent In prosperity we are as Calves Oxen and fat Horses kicking against our master pursuing eagerly after the sinfull pleasures and profits of this world but aduersity makes us to retyre home to God and submit ourselves to him by unfained repentance in their affliction they will seeke me early When a Scholler in the Schoole is under the rod he will cease then to play rex he wil cry peccavi keep in his seat afterwards and apply himselfe to his booke So afflictions will make us to consider our wayes and apply our selves wholly to the obedience of Gods word and will VERSE 9. COnsecrate to God and approved of God Hebr. 2.10 Authour Good workes are the fruits of faith seales of our election and pledges of our salvation but Christ is the Authour Eternall Not as some that are saved from the Gallowes and after dye Vnto all To Lazarus and Abraham Iewes and Gentiles rich and poore c. Obey Not to those that talke of him nor heare him in the preaching of the Gospell as 2 Thes. 1.8 but to those that obey him Why doth hee not say to them that believe because obedience is the touchstone of faith As the tree is knowne by the fruits So faith by obedience As Christ obeyed Verse 8. So must we Our Saviour Christ is the Author of salvation not to all that talke of him c. It is a good thing to come to Church heare the Word receive the Sacraments c. Yet we must not set down our staffe here for if we will obtaine eternall salvation wee must obey him Every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall not enter into the kingdome of heaven but hee that doth the will of my Father Not the hearers of the law but the doers of it shall be justified Obedience is better than sacrifice As a Physition is the cause of health to those patients that will follow his directions and obey him So CHRIST is the Authour of salvation unto all those that obey him Let us examine our obedience Christ wils us to avoid sins that cause his Gospell to be ill spoken of by good workes to adorne it to stop the mouthes of the adversaries c. Doe we so doth not drunkennesse covetousnesse pride malice and uncleannes abound As they said and promised to Iosua So let us to Christ. Whatsoever thou commandest us we will doe and whither soever thou sendest us we will goe Doth Christ command us to abandon covetousnesse which is Idolatry and the roote of all evill then let us not be glewed to the world Doth he forbid us drunkennesse malice pride c. Let us have no fellowship with these unfruitfull workes of darkenesse but rather reproove them let us forsake father and mother c. and follow him for without obedience there is no salvation How must we obey him 1. Fully The young man in the Gospell most proudly vaunted that he had kept all the Commandements from his youth let us endeavour that wee may say so in truth and sincere heart and as Zachary and Elizabeth let us walke in all the Commandements and ordinances of the Lord blamelesse 2. Cheerefully GOD loves a cheerefull giver I was glad sayes the Psalm When they sayd let us goe up into the house of the Lord Psal. 122.1 3. Constantly A runner hath not the prize till hee come to the Gole A Taylour hath not his wages till the garment bee finished A Traveller hath not his money till he come to his journeys end Here we are as Children 1 Cor. 13. growing higher and higher in knowledge faith love obedience c. Let us hold out to the end running constantly in the way of obedience that we may have eternall salvation VERSE 10. COgnominatus That his sacrifice being finished he hath this glorious title given him of God Perfectly So we are called Priests now but then more justly offring the sacrifice of praise for ever Hitherto of the lawfulnesse of his Priest-hood Now he is to proceede to the excellency of his Priest-hood whereunto that he might the better stirre them up to attention he useth a new preface to prepare their hearts and mindes to it There be two lets that hinder him from an immediate proceeding to it The one in the matter to bee delivered the other in the persons to whom it is to bee delivered In the matter there bee too branches the multiplicity and the difficultie of it In the hearers there is dulnesse which is to bee removed proved by the effects They that have gone long to the Schoole and have profited but little are dull Schollers but yee have gone a long time to Schoole and profited but little which hee proveth first simply then comparatively They that must yet bee taught the principles of Religion have profited but little but you must yet bee taught the principles of Religion 2. They that stand in need of milke and are not capable of strong meat have made small growth in Christianity you neede milke Both the members are severally ratified in the next words by shewing to whom milke appertaineth and to whom strong meat appertaineth VERSE 11. OR in the Neuter Gender of the which thing of Christ being a Priest after the order of Melchizedec Much speech a long speech that can hardly bee shut up in a narrow roome it must have a large field to walke in Concerning the person of Melchizedec and of Christ too what manner of man Melchizedec was and why Christ
of sores at his gate ever under one Crosse or another If there were no resurrection where this should be righted that sentence of the Psalmist might bee inverted verely there is no reward for the righteous verily there is no God that judgeth in the earth The third pillar is the Solemne funeralls that be in all nations All which are so many glasses wherein wee may behold the resurrection When we goe to a buryall we goe to a sowing the seede that is sowen lies covered in the earth all winter in the spring it shoots up againe and a goodly harvest ariseth of it So the body is sowne in corruption it rises in incorruption more beautifull then ever it was before The fourth pillar is that which Saint Paul urgeth to Christians 1 Cor. 15.12 Christ is risen therefore we shall ryse As Ionas was three dayes and three nights in the Whales belly So Christ was three dayes and three nights in the heart of the earth on Thursday he kept his Maundy he eate the Passeover and supper with his Disciples on good Friday he suffered and was crucified all Saturday being the Iewes Sabbath he lay in the earth on Sunday morning the first day of the weeke the Lords day the Lord Iesus rose triumphantly from the dead and this is the day of his resurrection on this day hee rose victoriously from the dead This is the day that the Lord hath made let us rejoyce and hee glad in it for Christs resurrection is a pledge of ours The first fruits are in heaven therefore the second fruits shall be there the head is in heaven therefore the members shall be there The Husband is in heaven therefore the Wife shall bee in heaven also we shall mee●e him with joy in the clouds and be translated with him into the kingdome of glory and abide with him for ever After the resurrection comes judgement it is appointed to men once to dye and then commeth the judgement Death were nothing if there were no judgement The Assi●es were nothing if there were nothing if there were no Gallowes no execution but as we must arise so wee must all appeare before the judgement seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that hee hath done whether it be good or bad Let us all thinke seriously of this eternall judgement It is called eternall judgement 1. Because it is of things eternall eternall life or eternall death 2. Because the sentence of that judgment is eternall the force and power thereof remaines ever both to the elect and reprobate they all goe eternally to the place appointed by the Iudge 3. Because the Iudge is eternall 4. Because the persons judged are eternall Some are to enjoy eternall happines some to suffer eternall punishment The judgement it selfe is not eternall that lasteth not ever but the fruit and event of it is eternall Oh that the cogitation of this judgement were deeply fixed in the harts of us all A great number even in the lap of the Church laugh at it in the closet of their hearts the Preachers talke much of a generall judgement that shall be after this life but if God let us alone till that day we shall doe well enough GOD grant we may escape the judgements here a flie for that judgement Yet Felix himselfe trembled at 〈◊〉 when Saint Paul spake of righteousnesse and the judgement to come though he were a judge himselfe he quaked at it Let us all feare this eternall judgement after an holy and religious manner and tremble at it In these judgements we may have Lawyers to plead for us then none shall be for us all against us especially our owne consciences as a thousand Lawyers and witnesses if our sinnes are not washed away in the bloud of CHRIST Therefore let us judge our selves here that wee bee not judged by the Lord hereafter let us bewaile our sinnes here that wee come not into the place where is weeping wayling and gnashing of teeth for ever Let us remember this eternall judgement that it may bee as a bridle to restraine us from sinne That godly Father St. Hierome professed of himselfe whether he did eat or drinke or whatsoever he did this trumpet rang alwayes in his eares surgite mortui venite adjudicium When wee goe to bed in the evening when wee arise in the morning when we are about the affaires of our calling when Satan provokes us to stealing lying coofening purloyning c. Let us remember this eternall judgement let us call our selves to an account for our sins in this world repent seriously of them let us cast away our sins not as we do our coates when we goe to bed and put them on againe in the morning but throw them away and have no fellowship with these unfruitfull workes of darknesse then wee shall have fellowship with Christ both in this life and in the life to come then we shall not need to feare this eternall judgement The Iudge is our SAVIOUR our elder brother our head our husband to whom we are married therefore we may lift up our heads at that day because our redemption is at hand we may rejoyce at his comming for we shal sit on the bench with him and judge the world and reigne with him for ever The Iesuits collect from hence that the Christians had a Catechisme delivered to them by tradition which they learned before they were acquainted with the Scriptures If every one should pick his faith out of the Scripture there would be madd rule Indeed if they had such heads as the Papists have that are bold to call the Scripture a nose of Wax But to answer 1. These Hebrewes to whom St. Paul writeth were exercised in the Scripture for Rom. 3.2 Vnto them were committed the oracles of God 2. Here is nothing in this Catechisme but is derived out of the Scripture 3. How shall men picke their faith out of the Pater-noster Ave-Mary c. being in an unknowne tongue Here wee have a short Catechisme consonant to the Scripture that was used in the Primitive Church Such as is at this day the Lords prayer the ten Commandements and the Articles of our beliefe These be profitable points but we that professe the Gospell must not always be in these they are to be propounded continually in the Church unto Children to them that bee rude and ignorant but Christians must not dwell in these wee must bee carryed to perfection till wee come to a ripe age in CHRIST IESUS wee must be able to answer all Heretickes and gaine-sayers and to defend the sacred truth of Christ his Gospell against them all VERSE 3. LEst hee should seeme to have presumed upon his owne strength when he said let us be lead forward to perfection here he referreth all to God that must be the leader of us all hee must give us feet to walke to perfection by Wee both we that are to teach and you
into the denyall of CHRIST and grave and reverend Preachers are subject to falls at this present day which are rather to be lamented then insulted of therefore being clad with the same infirmities let us pitty our brethren when they sinne Gala. 6.1 So let us consider our selves lest wee be tempted also One poore man will pitty an other one sicke man may well pitty an other Thou art sicke of the disease of sin as well as the people therefore pitty them when through weakenesse they are carryed into sinne Are the people heavy and drowsie at Sermons pitty them thou hast the same lump of flesh as they have Is any overtaken with drinke pride uncleannesse and other sins Winke not at their iniquities yet pitty those poore soules even wee that be Preachers if GOD take away his hand may fall as they doe therefore have compassion on them and with meekenesse pull them up out of their sins VERSE 4. A Calling is most requisite in all things we take in hand especially in the ministerie Who will meddle with the Sheepe of a man unlesse he be called to it and shall wee meddle with Christs Sheepe without a calling The Iesuites triumph in this place If Luther Calvin Beza were examined by this clause there would be found foule matter against them Nay if Pope Iohn the twenty two that chose himselfe Pope Hildebrand that entred the seat with the murder of his predecessours if Pope Sylvester the second that came in by conjuring if Pope Eugenius that came in by Simonie there would be found foule matter of damnation if all the Popish sacrificing Priests were examined by this clause which take upon them to offer up Christ without any calling nay the whole Scripture calling them from it they would be in a miserable case As for our calling 1. It is of God 2. Of the Church of God We have Gods seale to our calling because he hath furnished us in some measure with gifts for it yet who is sufficient for these things 2. Wee are called by the Church which by imposition of hands representing Gods hand hath separated us to this office Let every one be assured of his calling The Brownists harpe much on this string but I pray you who called Hunt a Souldier a meere ignorant man to be a Minister or De la cluse a Cardmaker to be a Preacher Who calls Taylors Weavers and other artificers to be expounders of the Word A lamentable thing to consider what a number of intruders there be that have thrust themselves into this holy calling In Ieroboams time every one that would consecrate himselfe became one of the Priests of the high places I pray God we live not in those ●imes every one that hath mony that can fee a greedy patron may have a benefice and leape into the Ministry A wofull thing Shall wee have them to make cloth that have no skill in cloathing will any make him his Shepheard that knowes not what belongs to Sheep and wilt thou deliver Christ's Sheep into the hands of a blind and ignorant Shepheard Wilt thou have him to build thy house that hath no skill in building wilt thou make him the Schoole-master of thy child that hath no learning but any is good enough for the Ministerie If men did looke as well to the charge as to the dignity of the office if Onus were as well considered as honos men would not make such hast to it as they doe They watch over the soules of the people as they that must give an account The day of taking in our profits is sweete but the counting day will be terrible when CHRIST will require every lost Sheep at our hands Therefore let none take this honour to himselfe but see that he be called of God as Aaron was If thou comest uncalled God will say to thee Friend how camest thou hither binde thee hand and foot and cast thee into outer darkenesse But if we come in by Gods calling he will protect us in our office against the Devill and all his instruments hee will blesse us in our office in this life and of his mercy not of our merits crowne us in the life to come Therefore let us all examine our calling internall and externall for an Asse may bee in a Lions skin an Ape in a purple Coate endeavour therefore that in some measure we may be sure of our calling Before the qualities required in a Priest were generally propounded now they are particularly applyed to Christ. VERSE 5. 1. HIs calling to the office 2. The exequution of his office 1. In things belonging unto God Verse 7 and 8. 2. In things pertaining unto us Ver. 9 and 10. His calling is iterated as the foundation of all Which is first affirmed then confirmed by two testimonyes the one obscure the other plaine Aaron had his calling mediately by Moses Exod. 28.1 Christ had his immediately by God Ioh. 8.42 Aaron was the Sonne of a man Christ is the Sonne of God Thou art my Sonne tu singulariter In calling him his Son he calls him a Priest for the first begotten was a Priest In the next words it is aske of me He appoints him to pray for the Church which is the office of the Priest VERSE 6. SAcerdos Sacer dux docens orans offerens They were Priests after the order of Aaron he after the order of Melchizedek They for a time CHRIST for ever Hebr. 9.24 VERSE 7. THe Priest did offer for the people So CHRIST for us Which is amplified by the time when the things what the manner how the person to whom the fruits which are two 1. The hearing of it 2. His learning by it The Priest was a man So Christ. In the dayes of his flesh that is of his mortall and weak flesh compassed with infirmities Ioh. 1.14 In heaven he hath flesh still but immortall and void of these naturall weakenesses no need of meat drinke sleepe not subject to wearinesse without any possibility of dying As CHRISTS flesh is in heaven so shall ours bee there too with him Offered up prayers c. that in the garden He useth the plurall number because it was made thrise and so three prayers signifying wants and necessities for things wanting of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indigeo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 venio because they went after a meeke and submisse manner Father if it be possible let this cup passe c. There is his crying Teares droppes of bloud Luk. 22.44 Exauditus à metu Though Chrysostome translate it reverence yet Nazianzen and Theodoret translate it feare Calvin in this last time found it out raked under ashes but he was not the first founder of it but Nazianzen and Theodoret. Mark 14.33 Hebr. 11.7 The Iesuits translate it feared Christ as he was man did not only feare the death of the body the separation of the soule from it but also having the loade of all the