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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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also in respect of their falling by infirmities when it proves a griefe and affliction to them Gal. 6.1 Iude 22. 2 Cor. 11.29 So likewise in the case of the prosperity of others we ought to rejoice with them that rejoice and be affected as if the blessing had beene ours Rom. 12.15 3. The reasons are manifest First because hereby we prove our selves to be fellow members in the mysticall bodie of Christ which is to be doubted if this sympathie be not in us in some measure 1 Cor. 12.12 25 26. Secondly because hereby we shew our selves conformable and like to Christ our Head who excelled in this vertue Heb. 4.15 Mat. 25.40 Thirdly because that which is the case of others now may be our case hereafter as the Apostle shewes in the case of temptation Gal. 6.1 Fourthly a reason may be drawn from the excellency of the grace it excells almes and outward workes of mercy for when a man gives an almes he gives somewhat without himselfe but when we shew compassion we relieve another by somewhat that is within our selves and from our selves And lastly the coherence shewes that this may be a meanes to keepe us from trouble our selves The Use may be first to import the miserie of living in this world This life must needs be a vale of teares when we have not only occasion of sorrow many wayes from our own estates but also such varietie of occasions of sorrow from the condition of others deere unto us Neither is our case the better but the worse if we doe not sorrow with others Secondly this may greatly humble all sorts of men for their Apathie or want of care or feeling or sympathie in the distresses of others and the rather now when whole Churches are in great distresse Amos 6.6 Thirdly this should greatly move true Christians to strive after this vertue and to expresse it lively and shew it forth in all the fruits of it as first by declaring our affection to the afflicted with all tendernesse of heart and words of comfort secondly by using all our meanes and power to relieve them and help them out of distresse thirdly by pouring out our soules before God for them Love as brethren This is the third dutie charged upon them viz. the exercise of brotherly love This is vehemently urged in many Scriptures Rom. 12.10 Heb. 13.1 Iohn 13.34 1 Iohn 2.7 4.21 Now for the explication of this doctrine foure things would be distinctly considered of viz. 1. Who are brethren 2. What priviledge they have by the brotherhood or by being brethren 3. For what reasons we should so love them 4. With what kind of love we should love them For the first Men become brethren one to another many wayes as first by propagation when they are borne of the same bloud and so the children of the same parents are brethren and in a remoter sense kinsmen of the same bloud are brethren Luke 8.19 Secondly by Nation When men are countreymen they are called brethren especially when they descend originally from the fountaine of the same ancient families and so the people of the twelve Tribes were brethren Exod. 2.11 Thirdly by profession especially the profession of religion makes all professors brethren Acts 11.1 1.16 And this was one of the first titles of love and relation in the Christian world Fourthly communion with Christ and so we become brethren either by his incarnation Heb. 2.16.17 or in respect of our mysticall union with him in his mysticall bodie Col. 1.2 Mat. 25.40 and so we are brethren with the Angels as they also are joined under this head Christ Jesus Rev. 19.10 22. So then if any aske who are the brethren here meant that we must so love I answer they are such as are professors with us of the same religion and fellow members of the body of Christ. But that we may more plainely see who are meant by brethren in the Scriptures it will be profitable to observe that they are described by their holinesse The brethren we must love are such as are partakers of the holy calling Heb. 3.1 such as are begotten of God 1 Iohn 5.1 such as will doe the will of God by sound practice Mat. 12.47 49. They are the holy brethren wee are here charged to love 1 Thes. 5.27 For the second Our relation to the godly as brethren ought not to be despised for as we are brethren by religion we enjoy many excellent prerogatives for thereby we partake of a heavenly calling Heb. 3.1 we stand all in relation to God as his owne children by adoption Eph. 4.6 and so peace and the blessing of God as a Father is upon us all Eph. 6.23 Gal. 6.16 and wee are greatly beloved of God Rom. 1.7 and brought up in the same familie Eph. 3.17 fed with the same diet and entertainment in Gods house and estated into an inheritance better than all the kingdomes of the world Rom. 9.17 And hereby also we enjoy the fruit of the love of all the godly in the world even those that know us not in the face For the third There are many reasons why we should love the godly as our brethren above all the people in the world For first if to be all the children of one father have such a power over the naturall affections of men then should it not be without power in religion Secondly this is charged upon us above many other things yea above all things we should put on love Col. 3.14 and yet he had reckoned many excellent vertues before This was the speciall and one of the last Commandements of our blessed Saviour which he gave in charge when he was going to his death 1 Iohn 3.23 Iohn 13.34 Thirdly because this love comes of God and is a signe that God is in us and dwells in us and that we doe indeed love God himselfe 1 Iohn 4.7 8 12 16 20 21. Fourthly we have the example of God himselfe and Christ his Son that love them as their peculiar treasure above all the world and he shewed them love by unspeakable benefits 1 Iohn 4.10 11. Fiftly because our soules will thrive and be edified as brotherly love is continued and encreased in us Eph. 4.16 Sixtly because the godly must be our everlasting companions in heaven 1 Pet. 4.8 1 Cor. 13.8 and if we cannot see so much it is because we are pu●blinde 2 Pet. 1. For the fourth point If any aske with what kinde of love we should love them I answer that our love must have many properties in it 1. It must be a naturall love that is such a love as is not by constraint but ariseth out of our dispositions and inclinations as we are made new Creatures in Jesus Christ Cor. 8.8 2. It must be a sincere love a love without dissimulation Rom. 12.10 not in word but in deed 1 Iohn 3.18 3. It must be a fervent love we must love them earnestly and with great
he is not more unperfect in generation than any other creature for First the Virgin Mary did beare Christ-man in her wombe and Christ-man is said to be of the seed of the Virgin and yet his soule was created of God as hath beene shewed before Secondly though there bee some dissimilitude in the generation of man and of a beast yet it doth not follow that man is more unperfect As for instance The bea●t begets his young and brings him forth strong covered with a hide able to feed himselfe presently full of leaping and other actions But man brings forth an Infant weake crying naked unable to feed it selfe What is man therefore more unperfect No for the perfection of generation doth not consist of these things or in these things For here man excels all other living creatures in the world in generation because he is Gods instrument for the begetting of a body fit to be united to such a soule God also doth hereby commend the generation of man and dignifie it that he is pleased so to worke in mans generation as he doth not in any other creature vouchsafing to give unto mans generation such an admirable soule to his body For therefore was the creation of the first man more excellent than the creation of other creatures because God having framed his body of the dust of the earth did infuse such a soule into him Object 3. It is a peevish objection that some make thus If God create the soule in all men then when any is borne of Adulterie God should cooperate with the adulterer and so be either the author or the approver of sinne that will give the soule to such a wicked generation Sol. Some answer thus That God is not the author or approver because out of evill he onely workes good for his owne glory Others answer That God onely cooperates with the action not with the sinne of the action or the evill of the action or the evill which is in the will of the agents But the best answer is theirs that answer by a similitude thus The earth hath received her nature and vigour from God to nourish and bring forth the seede that is cast into it without difference whether the seed be lawfully taken out of the barne or stolne by fraud The stolne graine doth not cease to grow in the earth nor is it to be expected that nature should cast out such seed and yet the earth doth not justifie the action of him that stole the graine so is it with God that workes according to the grounds of nature and his owne decree and providence Hee is not to bee blamed for the evill of the action when hee workes according to the rules of nature and will glorifie himselfe by raising a frame of good out of that which by men was ill done Object 4. Wee see that children resemble the vertues or vices of their parents and therefore as from the bodies of their parents they receive a likenesse to them in body so is it that from their soules they receive this similitude of their vertues or vices Solut. Experience shewes that this is not alwaies true For many children have no resemblance in them of their parents qualities Secondly where this is true it is not because their soules are derived from the soules of their parents but they have it from the bodies of their parents For the soule after suffers from the sympathie with the bodie as by reason of certaine humours in the bodies of parents that incite wrath or griefe or lust or the like may come infection to the child but not from their soules Thirdly rather the argument may be retorted upon them that in asmuch as the soules of all children are not like in qualities to the soules of their parents that therefore they receive not their soules from their parents Ob. 5. Gen. 9. Lev. 17. The soule is said to bee in the blood Now it is evident that the blood is from the parents Solut. The soule is in the blood but how By the effect of it which is life otherwise the soule is neither devoured in the blood nor depends upon it in it selfe Ob. 6. It is said Gen. 2. That God rested from all his workes Now if hee did daily create new soules then he rested not from all his workes but continues creation still Solut. The meaning of Moses cannot be that God rested simply from all creation For then it must needs follow too that the soule of Christ was not created but propagated which cannot be true But his meaning is that hee rested from creation of things in specie hee made no more new sorts of things That hinders not creation in individuo which is a worke of God preserving those sorts he had made at the first by creating successively a new supply as in this case of the soules of men That God did not rest absolutely is plaine by the words of our Saviour Christ My Father worketh hitherto and I worke Ioh. 5. Hitherto of the originall of the soule The union of the soule with the body followes which is a consideration of no lesse difficulty than the former no lesse needfull to be knowne no lesse certaine That it is united to the body so as to make it one man is apparent by the words of God in the creation Hee breathed into him the breath of lives and so Adam became a living soule Hee became then a man or a living creature distinct from other creatures upon his conjunction of the soule with the body And by this union with the body doth the spirit of man differ from the Angels who are spirits separate and such as exist without relation to a body whereas the soule of man in the creation of it and the disposition of it also tends unto this conjunction with the body and doth not fully exercise it selfe living without the body and that is the reason why man is not absolutely perfect after death in his soule till the day of judgement For though the soule doe enjoy an estate free from sinne or paine or misery yet two of the faculties of the soule are without exercise till it be united againe to the body viz. the faculties of vegetation and sense which cannot be exercised but in the body The manner how the soule is united to the body is full of difficulty to expresse The question is whether the soule worke upon the body from without and so is by that meanes joyned to it or whether it be placed in the body and worke there and from thence This latter is the truth for the soule doth not worke from without which I shew by a comparison The light and the eye are joyned together in seeing But how The light from without extends it selfe to the eye and so is joyned to it so is not the soule joyned to the body but is seated within the body which appeares so partly by experience for we may all perceive that our thoughts
one way to come in And further we can find no meanes that hath sufficient power to make a man live God hath so reserved the power of life in his owne hands that none of the means we use to preserve life can doe it to make it hold out for a moment if God doe not from above give speciall assistance Man liveth not by bread Mat. 4. and if a man had abundance of all worldly things yet a mans life consisteth not in that Luke 12.15 c. The fourth reason may be taken from the profession of a Christian or his state or relative calling or condition in this life First we are Christs spirituall souldiers Now men that goe to warre intangle not themselves with the things of this life that they may please them that have chosen them to bee souldiers 2 Tim. 2.4 Secondly we are pilgrimes and strangers in this life and therefore nothing should be more easie to us than to be wearie of the present condition and to long to be at home Thus did the Patriarches Heb. 11.13 Thirdly in this life we are but poore cottagers that dwell in poore houses of clay and shall we love to bee here rather than in those eternall mansions 2 Cor. 5.1 Ioh. 14.2 The fift reason may be taken from the sinnes of life Even sinne is a disease and a loathsome contagious one Now then see what life is thou thy selfe hast innumerable sinnes and there is no man alive that sinneth not in the whole world Now if every man have innumerable contagious diseases what a loathsome pest-house is this world to live in The thoughts of a man can reach to the depth and length of this argument but inconsideration buries all wholsome counsell and motives But besides this respect of sinne a Christian finds from his owne sinnes if there were none else in the world great cause to be wearie of life first because sinne argues the imperfection of his nature both in soule and body and so long as he is in this sinfull life he can never have a perfect nature now a man that loves himselfe for this reason would never love life Rom. 7.23 Secondly because sin is an offence to God now a child of God should therefore loath life because by sinning be doth injury to God his mercifull Father and in the most holy Christians this argument hath extraordinary force The sixth reason may be taken from the crosses of life Hath not every day his griefe Is there any estate or degree of men free from them Are not those whom God loves corrected yea and perhaps more than other men Seriously thinke of what thou dost suffer in thy particular What diseases or infirmities are in thy bodie What unquietnesse and vexation dost thou suffer in the house where thou livest What crosses doe follow or feare thee in thy calling Yea doth not thy religion breed thee trouble If the reproaches and oppositions be considered of which godly men sometimes suffer we might say with the Apostle Of all men they are most miserable 1 Cor. 15.19 Paul saith he was a man crucified while he lived Gal. 2.20 and did alwayes in his body carry about the dying of the Lord Jesus 2 Cor. 4.10 Besides consider of the danger of what may come upon thee in life What if war come or the pestilence or sudden poverty that cannot be cured or with fearefull diseases that will fill thee with horrible pain Nay what if thou shouldest fall into some shamefull fault Oh what were the misery would follow upon it The seventh reason may be taken from the extreme vanity of those things that seeme to be felicities in life all the things in life that with any colour of reason can be made objects of thy love are either the people of the world or the commodities of the world Now for the first of these thou hast no reason to be in love with life for the people of the world with whom thou livest for 1. Amongst all the thousands of men and women thou seest in the world it may be there is scarce one that loveth thee entirely scarce one from whom thou maist enjoy delight or comfort They are poore things thou canst have from the rest whether they be neighbours or strangers More than thou givest thou shalt not receive unlesse it be in poore complements of salutations and ceremonies of life 2. If thou didst excell in the priviledge of being loved by friends kindred wife or children yet reckon how small a portion of thy life is refreshed from them there is sometimes more delight in one poore dreame than will be had this way in a long time 3. Thinke of it what changes and losses thou dost or maist suffer if there were any thing worthy thy love in friendship or acquaintance thy friends may be daily lost either by the change of their minde from thee or by distance in habitation or by death and the pleasure is had by thy acquaintance is made not worth the having either by interruption or by discord and taking of offence or want of power or will to help when thou hast most need 4. Who would not hate life for this very reason which I now give Let a man consider by experience in all others how little the world cares for him If thou wert to die what would the world care or almost any in the world Let it be thy wife children neighbours hearers dearest friends yea thy religious friends what would any of these care for thy death Looke not at their words but note it in their deeds How few will be sorry for thee or for how short a time and how soone wilt thou be cleane forgotten or how poore a thing is the greatest memory any man hath when he is dead Dost thou live to heare this and yet wilt be so mad as to love life for the love thou bearest to any other 5. The evill thou sufferest from the world is greater than the good thou canst get by it thinke of the reproaches injuries oppositions contempts persecutions infections thou maist finde from unreasonable men How many thousand would triumph over thy poore fame if thy feet doe but slip Lastly the company thou shalt have of Angels and spirits of just men in another world should make thee loathe all these things in this life whether thou respect number or power or dearenesse in friends even in such as must be companions of thy life and therefore for the company that is in the world thou hast no reason to love life The commodities of the world are lands houses money honour credit beauty pleasure and the like now m●n have no cause to be so in love with these if they consider 1. How small a portion they have of these If a man had won the whole world and the glorie of it yet it were not worth the having if he must lose his own soule May if it were all had upon the best conditions yet it would not
doctrine may serve for three uses First It may confute that cavill of carnall men that Religion will make men dumpish and melancholy whereas the cleane contrary we see here is true 2. It greatly reproves the uncheerfulnesse of many professors who doe thereby greatly darken the glory of Religion and cause the way of God to be evill spoken of besides the hurt they doe themselves through unthankfulnesse and unbeleefe exposing themselves to the tentations either of sinne or apostasie together with a continuall unfitnesse to all duties of piety and this ariseth out of aptnesse either to passion of anger or worldly griefe 3. It may teach us to seek the ioyes of God and having found them to be carefull by all meanes to preserve them But what shall I doe to preserve the ioyes of God in my heart First keep thy self free from the allowance of the least sin violate not the peace of thy conscience Secondly digest the promises concerning infirmities after calling Thirdly take heed of omission or carelesse use of Gods ordinances Lastly care not for the world but retire thy selfe else from thence will flow unavoidable unrest Before I passe from these words yet two things more may be briefly touched First in that he ●aith yee rejoyce he seemeth to import that true ioy is onely in converted Christians For as for the ioyes that the men of this world have they are not true For besides there is much vanitie and madnesse in them there is also much danger in them for they breed security and men shall be called to account for them yea men may lose their soules for them Secondly where he saith wherein hee meanes in which benefits of regeneration glorification preservation c. whence may be briefly noted that the chiefest ioyes of Christians are in spirituall things it ill beseemes Christians to set their hearts on earthly things But is it not lawfull to delight our selves in earthly pleasures It is with these rules First thou must be sure thou hast repented of thy sins before thou allow thy selfe liberty for pleasures 2. Thou must not make a vocation of recreation 3. Thou must spend onely thy owne time upon them not the Lords 4. Thou must avoid scandalous delights and such games as are of evill report 5. Thou must watch over thine owne heart that thy recreations steale not away thine heart from the delight of better things but be used rather as an helpe unto them Lastly note from hence that they onely are fit to give testimony of the ioyes of a converted estate that have had experience of it themselves trust not the iudgements of carnall persons for the dignity utility and durablenesse of the graces of godlinesse And thus of the first reason Though now for a season you are in heavinesse There are divers sorts of heavinesse 1. There is the heavinesse of the desperate such was that in Cain and Iudas 2. and the heavinesse of the disappointed such was the heavinesse of Haman Ahab and Ammon when they could not compasse their ambitious covetous and voluptuous ends 3. And there is the heavinesse of the melancholy and of the scandalized 4. There is the heavinesse of the penitent for sinnes 5. and of the afflicted for crosses 6. There is a heavinesse in Gods children after calling for spirituall respects as for corruption of nature for absence of Christ for want of the meanes for the dishonour of God in publike abominations for the miseries of the Church for Gods threatnings and anger for the desire of death for hardnesse of heart and for speciall sins after calling Quest. But may not Gods children be heavy for crosses Answ. They may and I think that may be meant here but then these rules must be noted First that their heavinesse be rather for some sinne in themselves which might cause the crosse then for the crosse it selfe Secondly that their heavinesse be moderate Quest. But when is sorrow for afflictions moderate Answ. First when it exceeds not the measure of sorrow for sin 2. Secondly when it withdrawes not the heart from God and holy duties through passionate and incredulous perturbations but it is to be noted in the generall that the Apostle is very loth to grant them liberty for heavinesse but it is with many limitations as 1. it must be but a little season 2. they must be sure need doth require it 3. it may not be allowed for many crosses that will not be allowed for lesser or fewer tentations For a season The troubles and griefs of Gods children are but for a season for a moment God hides his face but a little while and the reason is because afflictions are used of God but as plaisters or medicines or as a ●urnace Now in as much as the godly will quickly judge themselves and make their peace therefo●e the Lord will soone draw off the crosse the plaister shall lie no longer than till the sore be whole and the goldsmith will let his metall lye in the fire no longer than till the drosse be● melted off or it be fit to be wrought upon Now if crosses should continue long in our reckoning say it were the whole life of a man what is mans life even a vapour that appeareth a little time Besides what can thy longest crosses be in comparison of the paines of the damned from which thou art delivered or of the joyes and glory of heaven which thou shalt possesse Yea what is that thou dost suffer in comparison of what thou deservest but yet I say it is but a season as wee account seasons even a small part of the life of the godly For either the Lord removes the crosse or takes away the sting of it or sweetens it with his mercies The Use may be to teach us to check the unquietnesse and failings of our hearts and to be ever ashamed of our selves that we should make so much of our crosses and so little of Gods mercies we should learne seeing they are but for a season to hold fast the confidence of our hope and live by faith and if the Lord be angry to hide our selves for a little season till his indignation be past If need require Here three things may be observed First that Christians man● times make crosses to themselves and draw heavinesse upon their hearts through feares and suspitions and unquietnesse where there is no need this is a great fault and usually is a great scourge For by such distempers they many times lessen the comforts of God and their credit with Gods children Secondly crosses and griefes are sometimes needfull needfull I say to hide our pride to weane us from the world to put us in minde of death to make us desire heaven to drive us to seeke more grace and holinesse to prevent sinne to come to humble us for sinnes
or to the poore or to the Church or to the service of my country or to the conversion of soules c. have I ministred the wit or learning or wealth or power the Lord hath given me Contrariwise it cannot but be wofull to some to remember on their death beds that they have spent their meanes and gifts to promote wicked courses and to procure sinne or to maintaine the riotous or gamesters or whores or dogs or any way their own lusts oh what wil they say when they are asked whom have you clothed fed comforted counselled admonished c. But unto us But why are we honoured thus and not the Prophets The Lord sheweth mercy on whom he will shew mercy I meane it for the manner and time and measure and meanes we must not herein dispute with God yet even this tends wonderfully to the praise of Gods constant love to his Church we see he doth not grow weary of his affection he did not spend all his grace and favour upon Kings Patriarchs and Prophets but he is ready to entertaine even the prodigall sonne of the Gentiles with as hearty or rather more hearty entertainment then ever he did the Jewish children that had not departed out of their fathers houshold Secondly this also shews that extraordinary gifts are not the best for us wee want the gifts of prophesie but to have the glorious grace of Christ is better then all for we see the Prophets desired it more and great reason for one may be a Prophet and yet not be saved Math. 7. but so one cannot have the true grace of Christ but they shall be saved hee is in better case that can pray with the Spirit then he that can prophesie For God is rich to all that call upon him and whosoever calleth on the name of the Lord shall be saved Rom. 10.10 Ioel 2. Besides we may note here that God will not be bound to shew his tenderest kindnesse to his best servants no doubt the Prophets were better servants to God then we are yet you see they must not envie it to know that others shall be more made on then they Finally here is implyed that Gods promises and provisions of grace can never be in vaine If it be not for the Prophets yet it must be for us For so in the originall it is as if it were rendered but yet unto us to note that no word of God shall be in vaine Esay 55.11 They did minister This phrase imports divers things 1. Wee are here againe occasioned to think of a strange depth of respect God beares to the meanest of his children none are too good in his account to doe them service the Prophets must not think scorne to minister to them yea so doth God reckon of them that Kings and Queenes must not be too good to nurse them yea we see here the Angels are desirous to know or doe any thing that concerns them yea the holy Ghost will leave heaven to doe them good Oh the bottomlesse depth of Gods love and oh the barrennesse and shallownesse and unthankfulnesse of mans heart that cannot be more inflamed towards God to render love for love yea wee should be afraid ever to challenge God for want of love we should account it a great offence to call his affection in question the Lord takes it wonderfull ill Esay 49.15 16. 40.26 oh that God should love us so beyond all president all desert yea above all we could desire and yet we be still so slow hearted 2. From this phrase we may note that the greatest in the Church ought to account it their honour to doe service to their brethren It it charged upon all without exception to serve one another by love Gal. 5. and Christ saith of the greatest let him be your servant Mat. 20. The Use is for all of us to search our hearts to see whether we can finde such a noisome pride in our selves as that at any time we should think our selves too good to doe Gods work or to doe service to any of Gods people if we doe find it let us purge it out as vile leaven and be humbled for it before God else the Lord may perhaps finde out waies to shame us and scourge us that we dreame not of 3. This word Minister as it is in the originall excellently imports how we should serve one another For it is to serve as the Deacons did 1. out of conscience of a calling and commandement from God 2. with all diligence 3. constantly 4. cheerfully Rom. 12.5 with all humility making our selves equall with them of the lower sort All this the Deacons did 4. This word imports that spirituall things are from God onely in respect of beginning and as the primary cause For the Prophets doe but minister them They have nothing but that they have received for every good and perfect gift commeth downe from God the Father of lights which should teach us in the use of all meanes to direct our hearts to God The things which were reported unto you These words evidently shew First that the primitive Church was first taught by tradition that is by lively voice not by written Scriptures onely so was Adam so were the Patriarks for the first 2000. yeares 1 Thes. 2.15 But might some one say Doth not this wonderfully make for the Papists in their opinion about traditions No whit at all and that this point may be more fully understood I will shew out of Scripture that the word Tradition hath been taken three waies and then declare particularly that this doctrine can make nothing for the Papists 1. Sometimes by traditions are meant the inventions or precepts of men imposed with opinion of holinesse and necessity upon the consciences of men and so it is taken and taxed Mat. 15.2 3 6. Col. 2.8 2. Sometimes by traditions are meant certaine rules prescribed by the Apostles concerning things indifferent and their use Thus the Corinthians are praised because they kept the traditions as the Apostle delivered them unto them 1 Cor. 11.2 3. Sometimes by traditions are meant certaine orders appointed by the Apostles for the prevention of disorder in manners in the Churches of Christians and thus I take it to be understood 2 Thes. 3.6 when condemning such as would not work he saith they walk disorderly and not after the traditions which ye received of us It seemes the Apostle had prescribed some courses for preventing of idlenesse and such inconveniences 4 Sometimes it is taken for the very word of God delivered by lively voice so the word was delivered 2000. years before the law 5. Sometimes it is taken for the word of God as it was first delivered by the Apostles while the Scriptures was yet unfinished whether it were delivered by report or writings and so 2 Thes. 2.15 1 Cor. 11.23 15.3 According to the fourth sense or this last it is taken here Now this can make nothing for
assoone as he gives grace and favour I answer 1. That God thereby doth give way unto the kingdome of Christ for the exercise of it on earth in gathering the Elect and subduing his enemies which when it is done he will deliver the Kingdome into his Fathers hands and th●n God shall be all in all 2. It is deferred that so God might make evident proofe of the faith and patience of his servants and to shew that they stand by a better grace then they had in their creation But what should I wade into this point It is enough for us that it is the pleasure of Gods will it should be so and it is equall we should doe our work before we receive our wages 3. It shewes that the Maker and Builder of that happinesse is God and that our glory is made ready to our hands 4. It imports that as in the state of nature we cared not for grace so in the state of grace wee are not so carefull as wee should be of going to heaven wh●n we are justified and sanctified we forget heaven it must be brought unto us we will scarce goe seeke it 5. It shews ●u● security and forgetfulnesse shall not make the faith of God of none ●ffect it shall c●rtainly be brought unto us 6. Lastly wee may here gather one way of comforting our selves against the infirmitie● that accompany our natures that when we feele our weaknesses yet we sh●uld be comforted in the hope of the strength wee shall have Art th●u humbled for thy ignorance why rejoyce in the knowledge thou shalt have And so I say of the untowardnesse of thy nature to good thinke of the time when Christ shall be perfectly formed in thee think of the grace shall be brought unto thee if thou be discouraged and never of 〈…〉 ●t the revelation of Iesus Christ. That i● at the day of judgement The day of judgement shall be a time of wonderfull revelation For then 1. 〈◊〉 glory of his person which he hath received of the Father in heaven sh●ll ●e r●vealed 2. The terror of Christ as a Judge shall then be fully exprest The world little know● the terror of that day Hee came not at the first comming to judg● the world that is yet to be revealed 3. The g●●ry of the body of Christ the Church shall then be revealed when we shall ●ee all the societies of all ages together in one armie 2. All the good they have all done shall be fully opened 3. All the glory of heaven shall then ●e e●●ated upon them 4. The everlasti●g counsels of God shall then be broken open and explained to the eternall clearing of Gods justice and the exalting of the praise of his mercy The Use may be 1. For information we may see one reason why Christs Kingdome and the righteousnesse thereof is so securely contemned of the world It is because a vaile is as it were drawne over Christ that they cannot behold him and so we may see one reason why we are not more inflamed to the personall love of Christ it doth not yet appear what we shall be by his merits nor have we seen the exceeding glory of the onely begotten Son of God 2. For instruction we should long after that day if Christ be so good unto us now oh what will he be at that day If in this life holy men could say of him as Paul did Phil. 3.9 what shall we say or think of him but as worth ten thousand worlds in comparison In the meane while let us be content that our life be bid with Christ in God knowing that when he shall appeare we shall also appeare with him in glory Verse 14. c. As obedient children not fashioning your selves unto the former lusts of your ignorance HItherto of the three things to which the Apostle exhorts The reasons follow whereof the first is contained in these verses and it is taken from the image of God in which Gods children ought to resemble him they should strive against all inward evils and refraine all the excesses of life and addresse themselves with all care and confidence to the provision of a better life because they are begotten again unto God and it is required of them that they should be holy as he is holy This reason is both propounded and expounded propounded in these words as obedient children It is expounded two waies 1. By description 2. By proofe or testimony It is described negatively and affirmatively by negation he shewes what we should shun viz. fashioning your selves according to the lusts of your former ignorance Affirmatively he sets it out by shewing 1. the patterne to be imitated 2. and the manner of our imitation The patterne is the holinesse of him that called us The manner is to be holy in all manner of conversation Thus of the description For the proofe 2. things are to be considered 1. Whence the proofe is fetched ●n these word As it is written 2. What is alledged in these words Be ye holy as I am holy As obedient children These two words import a twofold consideration 1. they are the children of God 2. you must obey as children The first point gives an occasion to consider of three things 1. That God hath children not onely Christ his naturall Son and the Angels his sons by creation but the Saints also by adoption and regeneration 2. That it behoves Christians to seeke and know their adoption to be the sons of God It is wonderfull to think of the almost infinite carelesnesse of men that can heare of so great felicity as the adoption of sinfull men to be the sons of God and yet there is no heart in man to seeke after it 3. In that the Apostle applies the consideration hereof to perswade to holinesse of life it shews that the assurance of Gods favour as our Father doth kindle obedience and make us more fit for all well-doing as these places prove 1 Thes. 1.5 6 7. 2 Pet. 1.8 9 10. 1 Cor. 2.12 14. 2 Tim. 1.12 Heb. 10.22 The Use is First for confutation of their fancies that thinke assurance would breed security and that it is better to be a little doubtfull then fully resolved whereas both Scripture and experience is against it yea there is a secret corruption in the hearts of the very godly herein nourished perhaps by the devill But let us be fully perswaded to pray with all importunity that God would give us this knowledge But I have felt more hardnesse of heart and corruption of nature since assurance then I had before First examine thy heart whether thou call not peace of conscience by the name of hardnesse of heart 2. Know that hardnesse of heart and unfitnesse to holy duties is in us by nature and is not taken away by assurance neither is thy case the worse that thou feelest it more now then before For that may import more softnesse of heart 3. Consider
of the former Chapter In these words and those that follow to the thirteenth verse is contained an exhortation to the right use of the meanes by which we might grow up in all holinesse and acceptation with God In the exhortation two things must be distinguished first the substance of the exhortation secondly the conclusion of it The substance is contained from verse the first to the eleventh the conclusion in the eleventh and twelfth verses For the first there are two things in which if we bee rightly ordered it cannot be but we must grow wonderfully in grace and holinesse first The one is the word secondly The other is Christ. To a right order of our selves in respect of the word he exhorts verses 1 2 3. To a right order of our selves in respect of Christ he exhorts ver 4. to 11. The part of the exhortation that concernes the word hath three things First what we must avoid we must lay aside Malice Guile Hypocrasie c. Secondly what we must doe we must desire the word as the childe doth the breast thirdly Why so where divers reasons are imported First we are babes Secondly we are but as new born babes Thirdly the word is sincere milke Fourthly it will make us grow fiftly have we not already tasted of the sweetnesse of it verse the third That part of the exhortation that concernes Christ hath likewise three things in it which I will here but touch First what we must doe ver 4. Secondly how we must doe it ver 5. Thirdly why so vi● for two reasons First the one taken from the testimony of Scripture which is alleadged ver the sixt and expounded ver 7 8. Secondly the other taken from the consideration of our prerogatives we injoy in Christ which are set downe first positively ver 9. Secondly and comparatively ver 10. And this is the briefeorder of the whole first part of this Chapter The first thing then in the exhortation is about the word and therein the first thing is about the things which must be avoided if we would profit by the word of which in the first verse THere are five things we should lay aside and be sure we be free from when we come into Gods presence to heare his word or to be exercised in it viz. Malice Guile Hypocrisie Envy and Evill speaking Two things distinctly must be considered in verse first the sinnes to be avoided viz. those five before named Secondly the maner of avoiding them imported in the metaphoricall tear me laying aside In generall divers things may be noted First that it is exceeding profitable to gather speciall catalogues of our sinnes which we should avoid to single out such sinnes as we would specially strive against and doe more specially hurt us and hinder good things from us I meane not of all sins so much as of speciall certaine choice evills that yet remaine in greatest force in us We may observe a great wisdome of the holy Ghost in many places of Scripture drawing such catalogues according to the state of the people to whom they are given and so it were of excellent use if we did gather catalogues of the duties which especially concerne us or of the graces we would strive most to excell in to the intent to keep them daily in our mindes and memories striving to force in us the speciall holinesse required in them It were exceeding usefull to observe in severall Scriptures how the holy Ghost singles out choice directions according to the divers states of the people whom they concerne Secondly the Minister ought to informe his flock concerning the particular and speciall faults that hinder the worke of his Ministery where hee lives and accordingly to set himselfe against those sinnes It is not enough to reprove sin but there is a great deale of discretion and judgement to bee expressed in applying himselfe to the diseases of that people Thirdly the Apostle doth not name here all the sinnes that hinder the word but he imports that in the most places these five sinnes here named doe much raigne and usually doe marvellously let the course of the word they are the five most usuall sinnes in the auditories of Christians Fourthly it would be considered how these sinnes doe hinder the word These sinnes doe hinder the word many wayes 1. These sinnes make wicked men many times to set themselves against the word and to strive to suppresse the liberty of the word 2. These sinnes hinder the word in that they hinder many times other men from the love of the word The word is not glorified yea it is evill spoken of and why Doe not many men and women say they like not this going to Sermons c for they see that such persons can live in malice and deceit and envy ●●e another c. 3. These si●●es hinder the Ministers from discerning the worke of their Ministery in their hearers Paul cannot see or judge that the Corinthians are any more then carnall or at the best but babes in Christ because there was so much envy and strife and division among them 1 Cor. 3. verse 1 2 3. 4. These sinnes cause God many times to take the word from men When the Jews grew so untoward and envious at the Gentiles and to have such ill tongues in their heads toward their Teachers what followes but that the Lord should turne the labor of his servants from them and imploy it among the Gentiles Acts 13. c. 5. These sinnes hinder the word because they hinder the persons in whom they are from a right disposition to or use of the word Any of these sinnes are like poyson lying at the stomach that infects all the food which comes there And therefore for these reasons and many moe which might be alleged we should bring a generall resolution to make conscience of our wayes and to avoide these and all and each of these sinnes The first then of these sins is Malice The originall word is diversly accepted For sometimes it signifies misery or griefe for affliction and so it is used to signifie the evill of the day Mat. 6. ult Sometimes it is rendred naughtinesse or wickednesse in generall and so it importeth vile crimes or notorious offences and so it is taken Iames 1.21 Acts 2.22 In this sense it may be tak●n here For it is certaine that if men be guilty of wickednesse and come in the love of any sin the word is poysoned in them especially whoredome and wine take away mens hearts from the word Hos. 4. Lastly it is rendred in divers places malice as 1 Cor. 5.8 Col. 3.8 and so it is here Malice then is the first sinne we should be carefull to avoide Malice in short is anger inveterate It is an inward hatred or grudge harboured in the heart against others and it may be knowne by divers signes As 1. When a man beares a constant base estimation of another and inwardly loathes him
Christians thrive not and who also is it whose case some one of these seaven is not Let us every one examine our selves for a thousand to one we are kept back by some one of these It were singular wisdome to note which it is and to strive to amend that we may not be such starvelings in godlinesse still The point then is cleare that most Christians are but as new borne babes Now what use should we make of it First It may serve to humble many of us that have had time enough and abundance of meane● and helps to have beene like teachers and yet have even now need to be taught the principles again To us belongs justly that reproofe in the fift to the Hebrewes 13. Secondly many d●ties must be vrged upon us if we grant our selves to be but as new borne babes For 1. We must therefore be teachable and tractable obeying them that have the oversight of us bearing their words of admonition and loving them with a singular love 2. We must therefore be the more willing to beare the chastizements of God that father of our spirits For if we have had the fathers of our flesh which in our young yeares have corrected and that often for our profit to subdue the faults in us which that age did breed and sometimes when they corrected for their owne pleasures more than for our profit How much more should we subject our selves to the corrections of God that finde in us being but babes so much perversenesse so much negligence such head strong passions such frequent disohebience and the rather because he never corrects us for his pleasure only but for our profit that he might make us more holy and more fruitfull and more meeke as the Apostle shewes Hebrewes 12. 3. We must therefore sticke more affectionately and constantly to the word and suffer our soules to be daily fedde with this sincere milk of the word without which it is no more possible for us to grow in grace then a weake child can doe in nature without milk and food 4. Yea the consideration of our estate that we are but children should beget in us a desire to expresse those praises spiritually which that infant estate in nature doth resemble For 1. Children in nature are without malice they may fall out one with another but they carry no malice they are quickly friends againe so should we much more 1. Cor. 14.20 2. Children live without care they are never troubled for what they shall eate or what they shall put on for the time to come so should wee doe as our Saviour Christ shewes Matth. 6. 3. Children are not lifted up with pride for the great things they are borne unto nor doth the childe of a Prince scorne the fellowship of the childe of a begger but can play with him and make himselfe equall to him so should it be with us we should bee void of great thoughts of heart and not be lifted up in our selves or despise others but make our selves equall to them of the lower sort especially seeing there is no difference in our birth They are borne againe by the same immortall seed that we are which our Saviour Christ is peremptory in Matth. 18.3 Thus much of the third point 4. A fourth thing may be here noted and that concernes the priviledge of weake Christians viz. that they are esteemed of God and not deprived of his favour and care for them because they are weake 1. Parents love their little children as well as their elder children so doth God 2. Parents provide meanes to bring up their little children so doth God they shall have sincere milk to make them grow 3. Parents provide such as shall tend their children and litt●e ones so doth God he hath committed them to the charge of Christ so as the least grace in them shall be preserved though it were but like a bruised reede or the smoaking weeke of a candle Matth. 11. 4. Parents beare with the naturall weaknesse of their children without lessning their fondnesse to them so doth God with infinite indulgence Psalme 103. 5. Parents will not endure it to let them be wronged or hurt and much more wo shall be unto them that offend one of Gods little ones Mat. 18. 6. Parents provide portions and inheritances for their little children so doth God acknowledge them for his heires yea heires with Christ his eldest sonne Rom. 8. 17. A fift point that may be noted from hence is that only converted christians can desire the sincere milke of the word with true affection wicked men can no more affectionately desire the word than a dead childe or no child can doe the breast Quest. But have wicked men no desire after the word Answ. They may have but onely it is for the most part in two cases First when they desire to hear the word onely for mens wits or eloquence or the like carnall ends and so they desire not the sincere milk of the word Secondly in the case of a temporary faith where the delight and desire after the word is not constant like the appetite of a child to the breast for they will fall away in the time of temptation and all their desires prove but as the morning dew Desire the sincere milke of the word Hitherto of the first reason taken from the consideration of their present estate and neede of the word The second reason is taken from the consideration of the nature of the word which they should desire It is sincere pure there is no deceit no mixture in it And it is milk it is wonderfull apt for nourishment There are two things then here said of the word in praise of it First that it is milk secondly that it is sincere Milk This is a metaphor Sometimes by milk is meant a man that is godly cast into affliction by which God straines all the moats of corruption from him while his heart is poured out like milk with griefe and feare Thus Iob saith of himselfe God had strained him out like milk Iob 10. ve● 10. Sometimes by milk is meant the rudiments of religion the principles and grounds of Catechisme and so it differeth from strong meat so it is taken Heb. 5.12 1. Cor. 3.2 Sometimes it signifieth the word of God in generall which is given to the Church for nourishment of their soules to eternall life and so it is taken here as in Esay 55.1 the word is called both milk and wine and water and in other places hony It is hony for the sweetnesse of it It is wine for the power it hath to revive and refresh the spirit of man and make his heart glad It is water for cooling and quenching of his spirituall thirst and it is milk for nourishment It doth more for nursing up mans soule than the milke of the breast can for the bodies of infants The consideration whereof should work in us the desire to which the
Law and the Gospell and inwardly the Spirit of Christ. The instrument of receiving it in respect of the generall will of God is the understanding or in respect of the promise of grace it is faith The Law is a light Prov. 6.23 of the light of the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 2 Cor. 4.6 Knowledge is light Act. 26.18 and of the light of faith Ioh. 8.12 Eternall light is the light of heaven where the inheritance of the Saints lieth Col. 1.12 Revel 18.19 It is the spirituall light upon the soules of men the light of knowledge and faith is here specially meant which is conveyed and increased by the Gospell Doct. The point then hence is cleare That Gods servants in comparison of their former condition are brought into great light The spirituall light shineth upon every one that is to be converted Act. 26.18 God hath promised light to every penitent sinner Iob 33.28 30. Esa. 42.16 and Christ was given to be the light both of Jewes and Gentiles Esa. 42.7 and 49.6 Hence it is that Christians are said to bee the children of light Luk. 16.18 Io● 12.36 yea light it selfe Eph. 5.6 the lights of the world Phil. 2.15 And thus they are so by reason of the light of Jesus Christ shining in their hearts through the knowledge and beliefe of the Gospel All the world is like unto Egypt 〈◊〉 with darknesse and the godly are like the children of Israel in Goshen Use. The use may be first for instruction to the godly since they are called to such light by Christ they should First beleeve in the light since they see now what they doe they should establish their hearts in the first place in the assurance of Gods love since his shining favour sheweth it selfe in the Gospel Secondly they should doe the workes that belong to the light they may now see what to doe and therefore ought not to bee idle but to worke while they have the light 1 Ioh. 2.8 And to that end they should daily come to the light that it may be manifest that their workes are wrought in God Ioh. 3.21 And they should now abound in all goodnesse and justice or righteousnesse and truth Eph. 5.8 9. proving what that acceptable will of God is vers 10. Thirdly they should therefore cast away the workes of darknesse and have no fellowship with the children of the night but rather reprove them Eph. 5.7 to 14. For what fellowship betweene light and darknesse 2 Cor. 6.17 Fourthly they should in all difficulties and ignorances pray to God to shew forth his light and truth seeing they are called to light Psal. 43.3 Use 2. Secondly godly men should hence bee comforted and that in divers respects First though they may have many distresses in their estates yet light is risen to their soules though they may for a season suffer some eclipse of their comfort yet light is sowne for the righteous and joy for the upright in heart Psalm 97.11 and the more they should be glad of their portion in light when they bebold the daily ruines of ungodly men The light of the righteous rejoyceth when the lampe of the wicked is put out Prov. 13.9 In 2 Corin. 4.4 6. there are three reasons of consolations assigned First the light wee have should comfort us if wee consider how many men have their mindes blinded by the god of this world and of those many of them great wise and learned men Secondly if we consider what darknesse we have lived in God hath done as great a worke upon our hearts as hee did when he commanded the light to shine out of darknesse in the beginning of the world Thirdly if we consider what glorious things are revealed unto us for by the Gospel he hath caused to shine in our hearts the knowledge of the glory of God c. Finally it is the more comfortable in that the Apostle calls this light marvellous light which is now in the next place to be opened Marvellous light The spirituall light which shines in the hearts of the godly by the Gospel is a marvellous light either because it is such as the godly doe marvell at or because it is such as they ought to marvell and wonder at When men first enter into the truth that is when they are first converted Christians being for the most part full of affections as they that have scaped lately singular danger and as they that never before saw the Kings Court they are frequently stirred up with admiration at the glory of the Gospel they wonder at and are vehemently affected with the new discovery of the riches of Christ shewed them in the preaching of the Gospel and thus it is a marvellous light in this sense Esa. 30.26 But I rather consider of it in the other sense It is a marvellous light though wee should not have the heart to bee so affected towards it it is marvellous I say First because it is a light that needed the Mediator to procure it none but Christ can give us this light Other light is free wee pay nothing for it but this is carried in the hand of the Mediatour to us and for us Esa. 42. 4● Secondly because it commeth after so long a night of ignorance and sinne they must needs account the light precious that have not seene it a long time as blind men when they receive fight Esa. 9.2 Matt. 4.16 Thirdly and more because it is a light commanded to shine out of darkenesse 2 Cor. 4.6 That God should call light out of such darknesse as wa● in our hearts is marvellous Fourthly in comparison with the times of the Law and the shadows of the Old Testament Fifthly because it is a light comes not from any creature but from God the Creator God is our light Esa. 6.19 And in this respect this light is like the light that shone about Paul Act. 22.6 Sixthly because it is a light that shines at the time of the evening of this world That the Sunne should shine in the day time is no wonder but that it should shine in the night or at evening were a dreadfull wonder even so it is in this last age of the vorld Zech. 14.7 Seventhly because it is a knowledge above the reach of reason it is the light of faith Eighthly because it shines onely to the godly It is light in Goshen when there is no light in Egypt that was marvellous and so is it when we see the light shining all abroad and many men sit in darknesse even in the same place in the same congregation city or family When the godly see clearly the wicked discerne nothing light is with-held from the wicked Ninthly because it hath more force than any other light for it is the light of life it quickens the soule and enlives it Ioh. 8.12 Lastly because it is an everlasting light it is such a day as no night followeth it The consideration of all this should worke divers things in us
for ever because it is the forme of the body Though God for the time doe by his power and race provide for the soule in glory yet it is not at full happinesse till it bee joyned to the body againe For without the body it hath no use of vegetation or senses but onely of reason But for the Argument of the Apostle it holds good of that part of man which is in question which is the body of man for the bodies of godly men are more miserable than other men kept under and exposed to many restraints and paines either by mortification or persecution which the bodies of wicked men are not exposed unto Ob. 3. It is said of the spirit of Princes that it returneth to his earth and in the day of death his thoughts perish So the soule thinkes of nothing after death till the day of judgement Sol. The place is corruptly alledged two wayes One in the words the other in the sense for the text doth not say That his spirit returneth to his earth but thus His spirit returneth viz. out of his body to God and he not it returneth to the earth viz. in respect of his body for the other these words His thoughts perish must not be understood of his understanding after death but of his projects while he lived For men are exhorted not to trust in Princes for they may die and then all their promises and projects will bee of no use and come to nothing Ob. 4. It is said that the dead cannot praise God Psal. 87. and 113. and 30. Sol. That the soules of the godly in heaven do praise God is manifest Rev. 5.11 13 14. and 19.1 Now the Scriptures cannot be contrary one to another and therefore the places in the Psalmes must not bee taken simply but only in some respect The dead do praise God but not as the living did in their lives their praises cannot provoke other men to beleeve in God or serve him as in this life they might Thus of the immortality of the soule The next thing to be inquired after is about the originall of the soule and about this point in severall ages divers men have breathed divers and strange conceits erring because they knew not or regarded not the Scriptures First some conceived so highly of the soule as to thinke it was no creature but uncreated and eternall without beginning but this must needs be false 1 Because then the soule should bee God and infinite too for God onely is uncreated 2 Because then the soule had understanding and thoughts and willed from eternity whereas till it was in our bodies it did not worke and to imagine it should be as a dead lumpe all that while is monstrously absurd Secondly others have conceived that when men die their soules goe into the bodies of other men that be borne and so our soules heretofore were the soules of some men that be dead This was the opinion of divers of the Philosophers And it is apparent that divers of the Jewes were infected with it for about Christ they said Some that he was Elias some that he was Ieremias and some one of the Prophets and some Iohn Baptist. Now they saw that his body was not theirs and therefore they thought that his soule was the soule of some of them Now this opinion cannot be true 1 Because no Scripture gives any notice of it for in that place the conceit of the Jewes is told with dislike 2 Because the soules that were delivered out of the miseries of this life should be brought from their blessednesse into miserie againe which is most absurd Thirdly others have imagined that the Angels should beget our soules as our parents beget our bodies but this is extreamly absurd 1 Because then our soules should be in the Image of Angels whereas they were made in the Image of God 2 Because this was an heresie long since condemned and with hatred cast out of the Church Fourthly many Divines both of ancient and moderne Writers have declared themselves to be of the mind that the soule comes from the parents by generation per traducem and that the parents doe beget the whole man which consists of soule as well as body Now though it be true that this opinion hath had and still hath great patrons and that it may not be denied but that it is defended with marvellous great appearance of reason and truth yet it is rejected and hath beene by the greater part of sound Divines and by reasons unanswerable for if the soule come from the parents then it must come either from the body of the parents or from their soules Now it is apparent it cannot come from their bodies 1 Because a bodily substance cannot beget a spirituall substance because it cannot derive from it selfe that which it hath not 2 Because the soule must consist of the foure elements of which the body is compounded but it is apparent there are no bodily humours in the soule for it is not hot nor cold nor moist nor drie 3 Because nothing that is mortall can beget a thing that is immortall such as the soule hath been proved to bee Nor can the soule come from the soule of the parents First because if it did either the whole soule was derived of the parents or but a part of it If the whole soule was derived then the parents should die nor can a part of the soule be derived because the soule is indivisible there can be no partition in an essence which is simple and uncompounded Secondly we know that Angels produce not Angels nor can the soules of men produce soules because they are spirits as the Angels are Nor can the soule come from the whole man First because it is evident by experience that after the parents have done the worke of generation the first matter lies divers daies in the wombe in which the parts of the body are secretly formed before it have life or a living and quickning soule which is an evident demonstration that from the parents comes nothing but the bodily substance which is fashioned by degrees to be a mee●e Tabernacle for the soule afterwards to be infused into Secondly because if the parents did propagate the soule they must propagate such a soule as at that time they had which cannot be for then godly parents should derive a soule to their children which at the least in part was regenerate But this is evidently against all Scripture all confessing that the child is borne infected with originall sinne Thirdly because it is contrary to the Scriptures which acknowledge that the soule was formed by God himselfe which was true both of our first parent Adam Gen. 2.7 and of the soules of all his posterity which are expresly said to be made by God Esa. 57.16 Lastly it remaines then that the soules come from God Now if the soules come from God then it must needs be as God is the materiall cause or
as he is the efficient cause It is true that some have imagined that the soule of man was made of the substance of God because it is said God breathed into man the breath of life Gen. 2.7 as if he infused into him somewhat from himselfe as a part of his divine substance And the Apostle Paul saith Act. 17.18 We are the Progeny of God and Saint Peter saith We partake of the divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Now this opinion cannot be true and was worthily condemned by the Fathers as hereticall for Then man should be God For whatsoever God begets from himselfe is God and therefore we say Christ is God Then some part of Gods nature should be infected with sin and ignorance and be damned in hell too which is wonderfull blasphemous to beleeve Now for the places alledged That in Gen. 2. must be understood figuratively for God hath not properly breath but he meaneth that God after a wonderfull manner did infuse the soule into the body And for the place in the Acts we are said to be the progenie of God● not in regard of substance but in respect of resemblance in gifts with which mans nature is adorned And for the place in Peter we are said to partake of the divine nature in the same sense namely as we are qualified with gifts as wisdome goodnesse holinesse in some kinde of likenesse of God It remaines then that we are of God effectually because God hath created our soules and formed them in us This then is the truth that God doth create the particular soule of every man and inhere it to the body when it is formed and distinguished in the parts thereof This may be proved diversly First it is cleare it was so done with the soule of Adam for his body was already framed and then his soule breathed into him Now if the soule of Eve and of all others had another manner of beginning than the creation of God it would have beene mentioned in the Scriptures but that is no where mentioned Secondly Moses calls God the God of the spirits of all flesh Num. 16.22 and 27 16. Thirdly David saith the Lord fashioneth the hearts of all men alike Psal. 33.15 It is Gods worke then to create the heart Fourthly Solomon saith Eccles. 12.7 The body returnes to the dust and the soule to God that gave it in the dissolution of all things they returne to the first causes and matter As the body may be proved originally to be of the earth because it returnes to dust so must the soule be of God because it returnes to God which is said to have given it Fifthly the Prophet Esay useth this phrase concerning God and in his name The soules which I have made Esa. 57.16 Do you aske how the soule comes into the body The Lord answers I made it Sixthly the Prophet Ezekiel shewing how man becomes a living creature speakes thus Thus saith the Lord to these bones I will cause a spirit to enter into them and they shall live Ezek. 37.5 Seventhly the words of the Prophet Zecharie are yet more cleere Thus saith the Lord the Lord which spreads out the heavens and foundeth the earth and formeth the spirit of man in him Out of these words it may be proved that God created the soule of every man and that it is his onely worke For first he saith expresly God formed the spirit in man Secondly this worke of God is compared to two other workes viz. the spreading out of the heaven and the laying of the foundation of the earth Now it is evident that those two things he did of himselfe of nothing without any meanes Lastly that place in Heb. 12.9 is most cleere The words are these Wee have had the fathers of our flesh which chastised us and we reverenced them how much more should we bee subject to the Father of our spirits and live Where is a manifest antithesis betweene the flesh and the spirit and the fathers of our flesh and God the Father of our spirit we had our flesh from our parents and our spirit from God I might adde the reason taken from the manner of giving of the soule of Christ for he was made in all things like to us sinne onely excepted Now it is evident that Christs soule was not begot by carnall propagation and therefore it was created of God Ob. 1. Now against this is strongly objected that if the soule be created immediately of God then it is created either pure or sinfull if pure then how is it that the soule is guilty of originall sinne if impure then how can it be avoided but that God must be the author of sinne Answ. This reason drave divers of the Fathers in the time of Hierom●● especially the Westerne Fathers to beleeve that the soule was propagated from the Parents and Saint Augustine is doubtfull which opinion to take to the inconveniences of each opinion seemed so great But other Divines answer this objection in this manner First that the soule is created of God pure but joyned to a body conceived in sinne which is no injustice in God because he delivers the soule but into such an estate as man had cast himselfe into by his owne wilfull sinne bringing this corruption not onely upon himselfe but upon all his posterity who fell in him Hee by agreement with God being as the common sort of mankind was with him to stand or fall in that generall respect Nor may it be doubted but that the body may worke upon the soule as we see by experience when the body is full of cholericke humours it inclines the soule to anger and so when the body is burdened with melancholy humours it evidently makes sadnesse even in the very minde c. Another answer may be this God creates the soule pure but yet that soule is guilty of owing though not of doing debendi though not agend● it is charged with the debt of Adam as children may be charged with their fathers debts Now this is one part of originall sinne As for the other of corrupt inclination it is to answer modestly if we say we understand not being assured of two things the one that God is the Father of spirits and the other that all men are infected with sinne from the wombe Both are to be beleeved though in this life we cannot explicate it And what hurt is it if wee be ignorant how sinne entred into our natures seeing it concernes us to know it is there and to learne how to get our natures recovered Ob. 2. Other living creatures beget the like to themselves both in body and in soule too and therefore by this doctrine men should be more unable and unperfect than any living creature For if he do beget but onely the body he doth not beget one in specie like to himselfe Answ. Though God create the soule yet it followes not but that it may be truly laid that man begets a man and that
speed better than the Apostles who in all places left thousands of people that would not regard them nor their Ministeries 2. Tim. 2.25 26. Lastly we should learne even of wicked men how wee should entertaine the truth for if it bee so hard a matter to get men to change their minds when they hold grosse errors and falshood how ought we to stick to the truth when wee have received it and not receive any other doctrine though an Angell from heaven should teach us otherwise than is written in the Word of God Gal. 1.7 Doct. 2. Wee may hence also note that God is pleased to suffer his children in this life to live amongst wicked men A godly man can live no where but there are some wicked living there the Tares will grow up with the Wheate There may be divers reasons assigned of this why God doth not gather his people altogether from the places where wicked men dwell as first God doth hereby try his people whether they will forsake the inticements of the wicked and cleave to him and his truth the more by-waies there are the more prayse to him that keepes the right way Secondly God doth by the wicked many times refine and purifie his servants by reason of the wicked he both keeps them cleane and if they gather any filth by them he washeth them Wicked men are many times God's Laundresses to godly men for if God appoint them to chasten his servants they will doe it throughly both by reproaches and other waies Thirdly the Kingdome of Christ must bee set up among wicked men because amongst them are many of God's Elect which are in due time to bee converted from their wickednesse Fourthly hereby the power of Christ is magnified that can set up and maintaine his Scepter in the middest of his enemies Fiftly by this course God's patience is prolonged for God is pleased for the godlie's sakes to forbeare those destroying judgements which else would fall upon the wicked The use should be to teach us to beare with patience the inconveniences which befall us in our places and callings by reason of the neighbourhood of wicked men as knowing that it is the condition of all the godly and hath alwaies beene so and is so in all places and therefore to resolve with our selves rather to learne how to carry our selves fairely and honestly among them than through impatience without calling to shift our places or without charity to make any schisme or rent in the Church Secondly since on earth it will be no better with us in respect of our habitation we should therefore learne the more to desire to be in heaven where all the people shall be righteous since there is so much unrighteousnesse in this Wourld we should long for these new heavens and new earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse We should be the more thankfull if God ease us in any degree of the molestations of wicked men either ridding out manifest Idolaters Pagans or Papists or restrayning those that are with us from unquietnesse and tumult and daily slander or comforting us with a large fellowship of the godly Fourthly it should teach us circumspection seeing the dayes are evill both to hold forth our owne light in the midst of their darkenes to take heed that we trust not every man nor beleeve every thing a holy reservednesse will become this Doctrine Fiftly the zeal of Gods house should the more overcome us to strive to winne men to God and provoke them as wee have occasion and ability to the love of God and the true Religion Sixtly we should cleave the faster to the society of the godly and strive together and contend for the faith seeing that we are alwaies in the midst of our enemies Lastly it may bee a great comfort to such as can quiet themselves well towards wicked men that can keepe their way and be still upright and undefiled that can also keepe peace and winne love from their very enemies that can doe valiantly in the winning men to the liking of Religion for their sakes To bee good among the good is not singular but to bee evill among the good is abominable and so is it an admirable prayse to be good among the evill Doct. 3. That in some cases the conversation of a Christian may extend it selfe even to wicked men Someone will say We are forbidden conversation with them how then can wee converse with them Ans. First our conversation may reach unto them by fame or report so the Christians conversed among the Gentiles in that what they did was discoursed of among the Gentiles But this is not all for in some cases we may goe among them lawfully even into their presence and company as first in case of negotiation in things of necessitie as trade publike service or the like Secondly in case of naturall or civill obligation to them as children wives servants subjects may not withdraw their attendance or service from them but may and must converse with them Thirdly in case of Religion men that intend to admonish confute perswade or winne them to the love of Religion may for that end converse with them But then two cautions must be observed first that the party that would so converse with them must be able to admonish or confute c. Secondly such an end must not bee made a pretence onely to cover needelesse society with them Lastly a difference must be put betweene the open enemies of God and such as give some hope of inclination to Religion though yet they be not manifestly religious There are some persons that are inoffensive so as they are not guily of any grosse and open crime and seeme to favour Religion and the exercises thereof and doe desire the society of the godly and take no pleasure in evill company now we must beware that we judge not rashly of these to account them as Gentiles and such as are without and with these wee may hold more sure society Doct. 4. It may be lastly hence observed That to convince or winne the Gentiles honesty of conversation is chiefly to be respected honesty I say not Religion To shew the practice of religious duties before them is a way to irritate them they must bee beaten with their owne weapons and overcome in the things they professe to bee good The way to amaze them that are without is to shew that religion formes in us such things as they confesse to be good yet cannot come to or not in such a manner or degree such as are faithfulnes chastity meekenes wisedome taciturnity mercy or the like The use should bee therefore to teach godly Christians in the places where they live to looke to this point not onely to live without offence but to strive to excell in the vertues that concerne outward honesty of life And to this end it were excellent if Christians would marke in what things the men of the world where they live doe strive to excell
all that are borne of God though in respect of outward fruits and the power or joy of inward gifts they may bee said to lose Ioh. 3.9 Without the word God hath divers meanes to further the salvation of men and he is pleased sometimes to worke by one meanes and sometimes by another sometimes by the Word preached sometimes by the Word read sometimes by Prayer sometimes by the Sacraments sometimes by the example of his Servants So that God doth worke our good sometime by one ordinance and not by another in the same thing and at the same time sometimes he will cure a man of a particular trespasse by the admonition of some private Christian Mat. 18.15 Iam. 5. ult sometimes he will bring a man to feele legall terrors by the doctrine of the Law and sometime hee will worke it by afflictions sometimes he will prepare a man to receive the grace of Christ by praier as he did Cornelius sometimes hee winnes him to it by the example of his servants as here And the reason is partly because God would shew the vertue that is in each ordinance and partly to teach us not to despise or neglect any of the meanes and partly to shew his owne power that workes freely by what meanes hee will as being not tyed to any And therefore they deale very corruptly and perversly that under pretence of commending one ordinance of God labour to abase the respect of another as they doe that say the house of God is a house of prayer and therefore there needs not so much preaching not considering that our Saviour Christ himselfe that alledged that place out of the Prophet to condemne buying and selling in the Temple yet did spend his greatest paines in preaching in the Temple and out of it thereby shewing the prime ordinance of God for the conversion of the soules of men was the preaching of the Gospel to them By the conversation of the Wives Great heed ought to be taken by such as professe Religion in looking carefully to their conversation especially towards such as are without Col. 4.5 Ephes. 5.15 1 Pet. 2.12 It is not enough to doe good duties but we must doe them as becommeth godlinesse T it 2. and so as may allure and win the very ungodly and therefore it is required that our works should shine Mat. 5.16 for by our practise wee resemble God himselfe and by our workes professe to shew not only what Gods Word is but what Gods nature is Our life must have the image of God printed upon it and therefore they doe fearefully that professe Religion amongst wicked men and by their workes order themselves so foolishly deceitfully conceitedly wickedly that they cause the name of God to be blasphemed Quest. But what should wee doe to our practise that by our conversation wee might allure and win wicked men to a love of the truth Answ. 1. First wee must avoide such things in our conversation as may irritate them as scandalous behaviour in any particular offence as deceit lying filthinesse drunkennesse pride covetousnesse passion or the like and withall take heed of mis-spending our zeale about such things wherof demonstration cannot be made to the conscience And besides in the good things we doe we must take heed of conceitednesse and ostentation but in meeknesse of wisedome have our conversations amongst men Iames 3.13 and further we must take heed of judging and censuring of others even of those that be without Iames 3.17 2. Mortification doth shine effectually into the conscience of wicked men it doth move them much if they see we be such as doe heartily judge our selves for the faults that hang upon us and doe not allow our selves in any sin Esay 61.3 3. A sound contempt of this world and the things thereof doth much affect the very naturall conscience of men if they see that not in words but in deed the love of this world and the glorie thereof be not in us and contrariwise it much vexeth them that we should professe the hope of heaven and contempt of the world and yet be as full of cares feares covetousnesse and such like ill affections as the very men of the world 4. Meeknesse and softnesse of nature exprest in our behaviour is very amiable as the coherence in this Text shewes and Tit. 3.1 2. 5. Mercie to the poore especially if we doe abound in it and be ready and cheerefull to it doth justifie us much before men Iames 1.26 Doct. 2. A good example even in inferiours may win men to Religion True Religion expressed in practise is amiable in all sorts of Christians women as well as men inferiours as well as superiours servants as well as masters children as well as parents Tit. 2.3.9.10 Luke 1. and the reason is because the true grace that is expressed by any Christian hath the likenesse of God printed upon it and so is amiable for his sake whom they by their works resemble And this may be a great encouragement to inferiours and should breed in them a great care of well-doing But the main thing intended in this Text is That religious wives ought to strive to win their husbands if they have such as are not religious or not in such soundnesse as they ought Quest. But what should a wife doe to win her husband Answ. She must in generall resolve to doe it not by her words but by her conversation as this Text shewes It is not her talking to her husband will doe it no nor her talking of religion to him that in it selfe is like to prevaile It concernes women very much to remember this point of the Apostle to seeke the reformation of their husbands by their conversation not by their words Ob. But Abraham was willed to heare his wife Gen. 16. Sol. What then hath every wife such an husband as will heare her as Abraham did his wife Besides the question is not what the husbands should doe but what the wives should doe when the husbands as not such as they should be Ob. But how shall a woman know when to speake to her husband and when not Sol. She must not speake to him no not of religion 1. when in the matter she would speake of she is not furnished to speake as becomes the Oracles of God 2. when by experience she hath found that her husband is irritated and provoked by her words 3. when she is not her selfe free from some fault as apparent in other things as that is she mislikes in her husband Qu. But what things must she looke to in her ●●nversation that she may by her workes win her husband Answ. The first thing is that she be in all found subjection obedient to her husband in all things or else God may win him but she must have no part of the praise of it And this is strongly imported in the very scope of this place In generall she must strive to be to him even for conscience
former ages In old time The example is in the second place commended for the antiquitie of it Where we learn that a respect may be had to old time yea respect is due to the times of old Antiquitie is an argument of praise therefore are wee bidden to aske after the old way Ier. 6.16 to aske of the daies that are past Deut. 4.32 to remember the daies of old and to consider the yeeres of many generations Deut. 32.7 And Ministers in publick teaching must be like the good Scribe that brings out of his treasurie things both old and new Mat. 13.52 fathers must talke of the things of old time to their children Ps. 44.1 Now because the argument from a●●●quitie or the old time hath beene much abused and such reasoning is taxed in many Scriptures therefore that the point may be more cleare I will distinctly consider first in what cases the old times and antiquitie may not be pleaded and then in what cases antiquitie may be pleaded and good use may be made of it For the first antiquitie is ill pleaded in the case● follo●●ing as 1. When antiquitie is counterfeit when that is called the old time which in comparison was but yesterday as the Papiste lead us to the ages not long since past and will not permit us to looke higher to the times of the Prophets and the Apostles which is the true antiquitie 2. When antiquitie is pleaded to confirme 〈◊〉 in doctrine And so the doctrin was never a whit the better that caught the law of God 〈◊〉 only bind the outward man not the heart the outward man ●oo but in some higher cases And therefore our Saviour rejects the errours of the Pharisees though they would confirme th●● by the sayings of old●ime●punc Mat. ● Io● ●5 ●0 3. In the case of sinne sinne is not the better for the oldnesse of i● 〈◊〉 the worse therefore the old man must be mortified and all old things must be put away 2 Cor. 5.17 As an old leprosie is worse than a new Lev. 13.11 so their hatred was the worse because it was old Ezek. 25.15 And the godly pray Remember not against us our old iniquities Psal. 79.8 and the wicked are condemned for not purging out their old sins 2 Pet. 1 9. and all men should purge out the old leven 1 Cor. 5. And as in the sins of life betweene man and man so about Gods service old courses are barefull if they be idolatrous and superstitious and therefore they were condemned for doing after the old maner 2 Reg. 17.34 and they are reproved by the Prophet Ieremy that so commended the old times of Idolatry Ier. 44. 4. When God abolisheth the old things and brings in new and so the old Covenant is not better than the new nor the old Testament better than the new Heb. 8.6 7 13. 2 Cor. 5.17 5. In the case of the discoverie of such mysteries as for the time of revealing them depend upon the good pleasure of God only so things hidden for ages and generations are revealed in the Gospel and yet must not be rejected Col. 1.16 6. When old times are pleaded of purpose to lessen the glory or profit of the present workes of Gods power and mercie Esay 43.18 And this way the Pharisees offended that to avoid subjection to Christ and his doctrine would magnifie Moses and the Prophets of old time And so doe those people offend that commend the old Teachers more that are dead or absent and will not profit by those they have Mat. 23. 7. When it is used in defence of publike disorders and offences and grievances in Church or Common-wealth The pretence of Innovation must not hinder the reformation of knowne diseases in publike States Such things as have beene wastes of old must be built though it were not done of long time They shall build the old wastes saith the Prophet Isa. 62.4 8. When particular Christians doe mis-apply it to confirme them in their unbeliefe or doubting as if God did not regard or accept as informer times whereas if we serve him in uprightnesse of heart he will accept our offerings as in the dayes of old Mal. 3.4 And if we get Davids affections to God and goodnesse and will attend upon Gods mercie in the meanes we shall have the s●●e mercies of David Isa 55.1 4. Thus of the wayes how old things and the pleading of them may be misapplied and done in our owne wrong Now followes to shew in what cases respect must be had to Antiquitie and old times And so Antiquitie commends 1. The workes of Gods power and mercie Deut. 32.7 2 Kings 19.25 Psal. 44.2 and God is well pleased to be urged with arguments taken from his old dealing with his people Arise as in the daies of old Isa. 51.9 so in Mich. 7.14 20 and bath left the memory of them upon record that we might thence confirme our weake faith 2. The particular experiences we have had of Gods goodnesse towards us Thus David remembers dayes of old Psal. 77.6 143. ● 3. The profitable determinations of right in judiciall things betweene man and man and so the old bounds are to be greatly respected Pro. 22.28 4. The publike orders of the Church about the circumstances of Gods worship as the orders of the Jewes to have the preaching of Moses in every Citie on the Sabhath day Acts 15.21 This order is the more observeable as few other reasons 〈◊〉 because it was so in oldei●●● 5. Gods Commandements It is an argument of weight to perswade to obedience when it can be shewed that that Commandement is an old Commandement Iohn 2.7 6. In things that one doubtfull or difficult such respect is to be given to Antiquitie as men should not rashly oppose their owne or other mens new conceits so as due respect be had to equally comparison in the nature of the things questioned Ioh. 32.6 7. In the examples and patterns of wel-doing that have had due conformity to Gods will revealed in his precepts and so the examples of holy practises in old time should much move the consciences of the godly now-adaies as the Apostle shews in this verse And thus of the two points in the description Holy women The persons from whom this patterne is taken are holy women where observe 1. That holinesse in the first Table is required of women as well as men and they are bound to the duties of Gods worship and to be religious women as well as to the duties of the second Table to be chaste mercifull faithfull diligent in the affaires of the family or obedient to their husbands Which serves to confute those men that say women need not be studious in matters of Religion it is enough for them to be good house-wives and obey their husbands And withall it may comfort women in the practise of the duties of Religion for by the commendation given of holy women in this Text it appeares
have his brothers wife nor must the Corinthian that married his fathers wife be suffered to dwell with her 1 Cor. 5. 3. Divi●es generally agree that if there be a precontract with another person in verbis de praesenti in the words of the present time made with consent of parents c. then the marriage after with another is a meere nullitie and such dwelling together is wh●redome Zanchius brings reason for this from the law of God and Nature and civill and common lawes 4. If a marriage be made without the free consent of the parties or in cases where they are not able to give a free con●ent as in the marriage with children under age or with mad men or persons that are drunk when they give consent and doe disclaime it when they are sober These are nullities in the common opinion of Divines of all sorts and the reason is because the consent of parties is essentially requisite to such a bond 5. If there be error personae an errour of the person that is if a man mean to contract marriage with one person and another person is given him as when Leah was given in stead of Rachel to Iacob Divines agree that Iacob might have rejected Leah and that his owne consent afterwards did onely bind him to dwell with her But yet errour about the condition or state of the person is no nullitie If a man contract himselfe to a woman he thinkes to be a free woman and she proves a bond woman or he thinkes he marries with a rich woman and she proves a poore woman these errours do not cause a nullitie he must live with her for all this 6. If marriage be contracted with such as are utterly and incurably unapt for marriage this marriage is a nullitie as in the case of Eunuchs some kinds of incurable palsies or the like And about this I finde no difference amongst Divines Zanchius and some other Divines goe further and pronounce nullities in the cases following as If marriage be contracted yea and celebrated without the consent of parents He brings many arguments from the Law befo●e Moses and from the Law of Moses from the testimony of the Apostle Paul and from the lawes of Nations and from the Fathers If marriage be contracted or celebrated with such as have any notorious contagious disease which is knowne to be incurable as the Elephantiasis or worse kind of leprosie or the like because this will prove a mischiefe to the party cleere and to his children and to the Common-wealth and God ordained not marriage to be a mischiefe but a help If marriage be celebrated with a woman that is found to be with child by another man Yea he enclines to those that thinke the marriage of a Christian with an Infidell as a Jew Turke or Pagan as being the knowne and professed enemies of Christ is likewise a nullitie Hee gives many probable reasons and quotes divers authors for the opinion But for my part I dare not venture so farre especially to be peremptorie in it much lesse have I attained to the learning of those Divines that thinke Veneficium versus hanc Witchcraft disabling a man towards that woman onely to be a sufficient cause of a nullitie in the marriage Thus of the case of nullities For the case of divorce I thinke that rule of our Saviour binds peremptorily that no man may put away his wife but only in the case of fornication Mat. 19.9 In that case a man making a lawfull divorce is not bound to cohabitation but freed from it and must not dwell with her any more If it be objected that in the case of disertion when an Infidell forsakes a beleever the Apostle faith the beleever is free I answer that this is not a case of divorce The beleever doth not for the businesse of Religion put away the unbeleever yea the Apostle shewes he ought not 1 Cor. 7. onely if the unbeleever will depart let her depart And so by the wilfull departure of the Infidell the Christian is freed from the bond of marriage as Divines conceive which is a kind of nullity but not a divorce But then a great respect must be had to the kind of unbeleever not every wicked man or woman nor everie person that professeth a false religion but such an unbeleever as is a profest enemie to the Name of Christ is the unbeleever the Apostle speakes of Yet one thing more I must adde about the case of disertion when the disertion is for other causes than Religion if it be wilfull or inevitable then the party diserted is freed from this charge of cohabitation freed I say for a time till the diserted returne and if he never returne the party forsaken is for ever free Thus of the proposition of their duties the exposition of it followes According to knowledge By knowledge I take it here meant that Christian knowledge of Religion and the Word of God which godly husbands had attained by the Gospel for in the end of the verse he speakes of husbands as heires of the grace of life And so before I come to shew what speciall things in the manner of cohabitation this knowledge doth charge upon husbands I would consider of some doctrines in generall implyed by the words as Doct. 1. That the knowledge of Gods Word is a gift of God to bee much accounted of and therefore the Apostle here for honour sake to the man mentions this grace rather than any other And that knowledge is a precious thing or a great treasure may appeare divers waies First by the seat and use of knowledge it is a gift that adornes the mind of man making him by his inward understanding to see excellent things It is a great benefite to have senses to discerne things without us but this divine light that God puts into the understanding of man gives to the understanding power to see admirable things especially when it is spirituall light it shews a man the differences betweene good and evill and reveales such glorious things as no senses can reach to Secondly by the author of it God is the father of light and dwelleth in light Iam. 1.17 and it is the speciall glory of Christs divinity to lighten every man that comes into the world Iohn 1. and the holy Ghost claimes a part in this glory to give illumination to the minde 2 Cor. 3. Thirdly by the testimony God gives of the worth of knowledge e●pecially when it is spirituall and religious knowledge 〈◊〉 is called riches 1 Cor. 1.5 and preferred before all outward things in the world Ier. 9 2● and Christ accounts it a great signe of speciall friendship to communicate knowledge to his Disciples Ioh. 15.15 and God gave Iacob a greater portion when hee gave his word to him than hee did give to all the world besides He did not so with other Nations Psal. 1. Fourthly by the accounts Christ gives unto his Father of the discharge of
for evill Note there three things first that hee gives this as a speciall charge as a thing most hatefull or ill-beseeming a Christian. Secondly what he saith No man must doe it Great men have no more liberty by private quarrels to revenge their dishonour or hurt than meane men Thirdly that he saith To no man wee must not render evill to any man of any religion condition or estate whatsoever the injurie bee So Rom 12.17 the like charge is given and two excellent reasons against private revenge One because vengeance belongs to God onely it is his office And it is best God should revenge because he gives recompence to every transgression and besides he gives a just recompence Heb. 2.2 whereas men that will perform their owne revenge give or seeke many times an unequall revenge as when our Gallants will have blood for a reproach this is not equall that a mans life should be taken for a supposed wrong to their reputation And further God hath never failed to execute vengeance whereas men many times fail and cannot perform the revenge they seeke but rather the contrary Gods vengeance falls upon them for taking his office out of his hands as many of those that seeke the bloud of others in revenge lose their owne Heb. 10.30 Also it is worth the noting that in that place to the Romans the Apostle adds another reason against private revenge which greatly crosseth the proud and passionate spirits of our times and that is couched in these words Be not overcome of evill but overcome evill with goodnesse which words import That he is over com●● and hath lost his honour that will revenge and contrariwise he doth overcome that will render good for evill If this point were seriously considered it would mightily subdue that unruly pride and passion● that discovers it selfe in the most men and it doth directly prove that Duels or single combats are simply unlawfull and intolerable in any well governed Common-wealth and should warne all Christians to take heed of allowing themselves in the desires or projects of revenge Nor is their sin the lesse that seeke revenge but it is closely and much dissembled while they watch for an opportunity to be even with them that have wronged them Nor reviling for reviling Observe 1. That people that are ungodly are very prone to reviling This we may see in the conversation they have among their neighbours what brawling and scoulding from day to day and also in the case of religion how doe they continually reproach and slander the true Christians so in family affaires with what disgracefull and hatefull termes are all the businesses almost of the household dispatch But of this I spake before 2. That reviling and railing is a very hatefull sin It is here accounted a great suffering to suffer reviling Our Saviour reckons it murther in his exposition of the sixt Commandement Mat 5. And if godly men be reviled it is termed blasphemie in divers places of Scripture in the Originall It proceeds from vile and base natures Heb. 12.14 15. Iames 1.21 3.9 Gods spirit is a Spirit of meeknesse and evill words corrupt good manners 1 Cor. 15.16 The Use is therefore for great reproofe and shame to all those that are guilty of this sin especially such as have their mouthes full of cursing and bitternesse Rom. 3.14 and such as revile men for this very reason because they follow goodnesse calling good evill Esay 5.20 21. 1 Pet. 4.5 and such as revile those that are neere unto them in the strong bonds of nature or covenant as when wives revile their husbands or children their parents 3. That though we be reviled yet we must not revile againe because reviling is a sin and God hath flatly forbidden it in this and other Scriptures and besides we have an excellent example of our Saviour himselfe that suffered all sorts of reproaches and yet was so far from reviling that he threatned no● 1 Pet. 2. and all sorts of godly men have endured reviling that were many degrees better than thou And further what knowest thou but God may blesse thee for their cursing as David said And therefore all that are true Christians should be effectually warned from hence to resol●e against bitter words and reviling though they be never so much provoked Thus of the rules the Apostle gives for avoiding of troubles Now followes the arguments for the confirmation of those rules especially of the later and the first is taken from the estate or condition of a Christian in this verse the second from the Prophet David ver 10 11 12. and the third from the probable event or effect of such a course ver 13. In the rest of this verse he infers from their calling to Gods blessing That they should be so far from cursing and reviling that they should use no other language than blessing even to the wicked and their adversaries But contrariwise This very terme imports That the life and discourse of a true Christian should be not onely different from the life and language of wicked men but in many things contrary And it must needs be so because the godly and wicked arise from a contrary fountaine the one borne after the flesh the other after the spirit Gal. ●4 and their words and actions flow from contrary principles for the one is led by the old man the other by the new man● and they have from without contrary leaders the one led by the Divell Eph. ● the other by the Spirit of God Rom. 8. and further they trade about contrary commodities the one for earthly things only i● the ●ther for heavenly the one for things of this world the other for things of another world and lastly they goe contrary waies the one to hell the other to heaven and therefore there can be no agreement betweene them no more than between ligth and darknesse Christ and Belial This point serves for great reproofe of some weake Christians for comming so neere the waies of carnall men as they can hardly be distinguished from them that looke so like them Such were those Corinthians Saint Paul reproves 1. Cor. 3. 1 2 3. Blesse It is required of all true Christians that they should blesse their conversation should expresse blessing continually Now for the understanding of this point wee must know that man is said in Scripture to blesse ●ither God or man He blesseth God when he praiseth his mercy and acknowledgeth his blessings he adds nothing to Gods blessednesse but onely acknowledgeth Gods blessed nature and dealing towards man This exercise of blessing God began betimes in the world as Gen. 14.20 and was constantly continued in all ages among the godly But in this place the Apostle meaneth it of blessing man and to blesse man is either a vice or a vertue There is a vicious blessing of men which must be separated from the doctrine of this Text. Now it is vicious first when a man blesseth himselfe
Why the afflict●●ns of the godly are but for a ●●●●on and how p Esay 54. Psal 30.5 q Iob 36. Ioh. 16 20 21 23. Phil. ● 6. Luk. 18.8 r P● 42.11 s Ps 73.26 c. Vse t Heb. 10. Ps. 73.26 28. u Esa 26.19 20 Why crosses are sometimes needfull There are foure kinds of tentations a Mat 13.21 Luk. 8.13 b Iam. 1.3 12. c Iam. ● 14 Sathan tempts men five waies 1● Degrees of te●●ation 〈…〉 Comforts against tentations Luke 22. 2 Cor. 12. Rom. 16 10. 2 Cor. 12.9 10. Esay 27.1 12 Rules against tentations 1 Pet. 5. Gen. 3. Mat. 4. Iam. 4.8 R●m ● ult Eph. 6.16 G●l 5.24 Ier. 9 7. Esay 31. ●ult God tryes men six wayes 7. waies God tryes men in affliction Vses Comforts in our t●●●ls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the word used Heb. 11.1 Vse M●●k 4.40 1 Thes. 36. Luke 8.25 Luke 17.5 1 〈◊〉 16.13 Heb 2.5 2 Thes. 1.11 Quest. Answ. How we shew our faith in af●l●ction Quest. Answ. 7 things should move us to relie upon God in affliction Mark 11.24 1 Ioh. 5.14 15. Psal. 91.15 Tit. 2.14 1 Pet. 1.19 Deut. 7.6 Mal. 3.17 Ier. 15.19 1 Ioh. 3.1 Deut. 26.15 Afflictions better then gold for divers respects a Heb. 11.26 b Esay 27.9 c Rom. 5.3 1 Thes. 1.5 d 2 Cor. 4 17. e Rom. 8 28 34 Grace better than gold in divers respects Vse Gold perisheth both actively and passively Object Solut. Note Christ hid till his second comming in six respects Quest. Answ. Vses Vses 7. Signes of the love of Christ in the sparkle Cant. 1.1 7. Signes of the l●ve ●f Christ in the flame What we must doe to get the love of Christ. 7. Things to be observed to keep our hearts in the love of Christ. Sixe kinds of joy 3 Kinds of devilish joy Quest. Answ. How the joyes of the holy Ghost may be discerned from all other joyes 8. Signes Quest. Answ. Whether the j●yes ●f the holy Ghost be f●lt of every Christian. The defects in the joy of the temporary faith Quest. Answ. Wh●t we must doe to ge● the joyes of God Quest. Answ. What we must doe to pr●se●●e the joyes of the holy Ghost more constantly 4 Signes of a true perswasion of our salvation Vses What the soule is Vses Such as have t●e assurance of salvation should look to foure things Vses Quest. Answ. 〈…〉 Christ ●n Church Vses That we may not faile of the grac● of G●d w● must 〈◊〉 ●oure things 1 Quest. Answ. The Vse Quest. 2. Answ. Foure sorts of men inquire about times Vses Esay 9.6 Quest. Answ. 〈…〉 The word translated t●stified is by oth●●s translated answered Note Distinctions ab 〈…〉 Quest. Answ. Quest. Answ. Though we want revelations yet we are not in wosse case then they in the Old Testament We have fix sorts of revelations under the Gospell Mysteries of the Kingdome Mat. 13.11 Eph. 3.5 Vse 1. Doct. 1. Vse Doct. 2. Vse Quest. Answ. Vse Object Sol. The question about traditions Object Solut. What newes the Gospell brings us Quest. Answ. How we may he certain of this newes Eight effects of the Gospell Eight things required in every one that would h●ve part in the Gospell Quest. Answ. Object Solut. Quest. Answ. How the Gospell differs from the law Rev. 14.6 Quest. Answ. Quest. Answ. Vses 1 Thes. 2 2. 1 Cor. 9.15 Quest. Answ. Doct. 1. V●es Doct. 2. Vses Quest. Answ. Vses Vse Doct. Of A●g●●● th●ir 〈◊〉 and natures In r●s●●ct of what th●y a●e they are spirits in ●espect of wh●t th●y do they are Ang●ls Quest. Answ. 2 Sam. 16 ●3 Quest. Answ. Luke 10.36 Vses 2 Cor. 11. A 〈…〉 Of the kn●wledge of Ang●ls neg●tiv●ly affirmatively Quest. Answ. 2 Cor. 3. ult M●● 18.10 V●● Vse 14 〈…〉 Why we must be so carefull of our minds 8 rules for girding up of the 〈◊〉 Vse A sixfold sobriety Tit. 2.12 1 Thes. 5.6,8 Rules about recreations Rules about apparell Reasons against the vanity of apparell Reasons against drunkennesse Vse Five things in a perfect trust 2 Reasons to trust perfectly on the grace is to be ●●vealed 〈…〉 hope 4 〈…〉 Vse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What grace signifies in the severall 〈…〉 of it The glory of h●av●n c●ll●d g●a●e in three respects Vses 7 Th●ngs 〈◊〉 sh●uld 〈◊〉 Gods 〈…〉 Quest. Answ. Why God giveth not h●avē as soone as he giveth grace and favour Doct. Why ●h● day of judgment is called the revelation of Iesus Christ. Vse Vse Object Solut. Of those that think they feel more hardnesse of heart after assurance then before Our obedience must be ●he obedience of children in six respects Sorts of lust hatefull after calling Eight reasons why w● should avoid lust after 〈◊〉 Note Foure preservatives against lust Fashioning of our selves to sinne hath 7. things in it Vse How to know whether one sin presumptuousty or no. Quest. Answ. Why ignorance of all the sins of unregenerate men is rather named Quest. Answ. Quest. Answ. 〈…〉 Of the 〈◊〉 of Gods 〈◊〉 Vse ● How many 〈◊〉 God cals men What our effectual calling is Why our ●onversion is t●rmed our call●ng How a true ca●ling may be dis●●●●●● What we are called to Vse Vses Foure sorts of holinesse God holy three waies Doct. Who h●lps to 〈◊〉 12 M●tives to holy conversation 〈…〉 Vse Vse Vse Doct. Quest. Answ. Vse Of the last jud●ement and the certainty of it Vse Doct. What s●rts of wicked men shall s●eed ●ll at the last d●y Ob●ect Solut. Vse Doct. 1 Quest. Answ. 2 Ob●ect Sol. 3 Quest. 〈◊〉 4 Quest. Answ. 5 Quest. Answ. 6 Quest. Answ. 7 Quest. An●sw 8 Quest. Answ. Vses We are sojourners as the Israelites were in 〈◊〉 Many 〈◊〉 from thence Vse Iob 10.5 Gen. 1.14 Psal. 31. Gal. 4.2 Acts 17.26 Iob 24.1 A●●s 1.7 Iob 14.1 1 Cor. 7.29 Doct. Vse Of a conversat●●n with 〈◊〉 Vse Vse Vse Vse Vse Quest. Answ. We are redeemed from sixe things Our conversation is vaine in divers respects as we are unregenerate Divers sins in respect of which mens conversations are said to be vain Five degrees of redemption from a vaine conversation Seven signes of our redemptiō from a vaine conversation Vses Sixe waies by which sin is derived upon man How many wayes children are infected by the tradition of their fathers Quest. Answ. Vse Seven rules for Parents in ordering their children Vses Quest. Answ. Why Christ shed his bloud Quest. Answ. Why the bloud of Christ of all other things in his passion is most urged Vse O● the preciousnesse of the blood of Chr●●t What mak●s the blood of Christ so precious Vse Christ like a lambe in six things The lambes in the ceremonial law what they signified in Christ. Quest. Answ. Vses Gods foure statute books Three sorts of the Elect. Vse Quest. Answ. Doct. Quest. Answ. Doct. 3. Vses Christ manifested five waies Doct. Vse Vse Quest. Answ. Doct. 1. Vses Vse Of five things concerning faith Vse Vse Doct. Vse Vse 7. Rules for