Selected quad for the lemma: scripture_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
scripture_n apostle_n doctrine_n tradition_n 4,188 5 9.0800 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 26 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

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
meant carnall Christians that had turned from Gentilisme and received the profession of Christian religion but yet followed their carnall courses we may then note that the bare change from a false religion to the profession of the true is not sufficient to salvation A man that hath professed a false religion had need of two conversions the one is from his false religion to the true and the other from profanenesse to sincerity in that religion The corne must be fetched from the field into the barne but that is not enough for so is the chaffe but it must then be taken from the barne into the garner To leave Popery and turne Protestant is not in it selfe sufficient unlesse a man turne from the profanenesse that is in the multitude in true Churches to embrace the sincere profession of the Gospel And there is reason for it for in changing from a false religion to a true a man doth but change his profession or his mind at best but he that will be changed effectually must change his heart and whole conversation and become a new creature So that then these words describe a carnall man viz. that he is such a one as doth not obey the word of God By the Word he meanes here the doctrine published by the Prophets and Apostles and now contained in the Scriptures Many Doctrines may be hence observed 1 The Scripture is Gods Word because God thereby doth expresse the sense of his mind as men doe by their words The Scripture is not the word which God the Father begate but is the word which God the Father uttered and is the word which God uttered to us bodily creatures God though he be a Spirit yet doth speake both to spirits and bodies to spirits by a way unknowne to us to bodies he hath spoken many wayes as by signes dreames visions and the like so by printing the sense of his mind in the minds of creatures that could speake and by them uttered in word or writing what he would have knowne Thus he spake by the Patriarks Prophets Christ and the Apostles They that deny that God hath any words either deny that God is as Psal. 14.11 or else that conceive him to be like stockes or stones or beasts as Rom. 1.23 or else thinke he can speake but will not because hee takes no care of humane things as Iob 22.23 These are Atheists 2. The Scripture is called the Word by an excellency because it is the only word we should delight in God since the fall did never speake unto man more exactly than by the Scriptures and we were better heare God talke to us out of the Scriptures than ●eare any man on earth yea or Angell in heaven yea it imports that we should be so devoted to the study of the Scriptures as if we desired to heare no other sound in our eares but that as if all the use of our eares were to heare this Word Let him that hath eares to heare heare 3. This Word of God now in the time of the New Testament belongs to all men in the right application of the true meaning of it Once it was the portionof Iacob and God did not deale so with other Nations to give them his Word but now that the partition wall is broken downe the Gospel is sent to every creature That is here imported in that unbeleeving husbands are blamed for not obeying the Word which should teach all sorts of men to search the Scriptures and ●o heare the Word devoutly and withall know that the comforts terrours and precepts co●●ained in it will take hold upon all sorts of men respectively 4. The Word of God ought to rule all sorts of men That is implied here in that fault is found with these unbeleevers that they obeyed it not It was given of God to that end to instruct reprove and direct men in all their waies 2 Tim. 3.16 17. It is the Canon or rule of mens actions Gal. 6. 16. It is the light and lanthorne God hath given to men it hath divine authority If we will shew any respect to God we must be ruled by the Scripture which is his Word 5. Unregenerate men have no mind to obey the Word and the reason is because they are guided by other rules which a●e false as their owne reason the customes of the world the suggestions of the divell and the like and because too the Word is contrary to their carnall desires and therefore they yeeld themselves to be guided by such rules as are most pleasing to their corrupt natures and besides too the light of the Word is too glorious for his eyes he cannot see into the mysteries contained in it because they are spiritually to be discerned and the naturall man therefore cannot perceive the things of God 6. It is a dangerous thing not to obey the Word of God they are accounted for lost and forlorne men here that doe not obey the Word Men be deceived if they thinke it is a course may be safe for to disobey Gods Word for Gods Word will take hold of them and destroy them and it will judge them at the last day Zech. 1.4 5. 2 Thes. 1.8 They are but lost men cast-awaies that care not for Gods Word 7. Nothing is to be reckoned a sin which is not disobedience to the Word That which is not contrary to some Scripture is no transgression and therefore men should take heed of burthening themselves with the vaine feare of sinning when they breake no commandement of God but only unwarranted traditions either on the left hand or the right 8. The constant omission of religious duties and good workes proves a man to be a carnall person as well as the committing of manifest injuries or grosse offences Here the Periphrasis of a carnall person is That he did not doe what the Word required 9. Men that obey not the Word may be won which should be a great comfort to penitent sinners It is true that disobedience clothed with some circumstances or adjuncts is very dangerous as when men have the means and love darknesse rather than light Iohn 3.20 and when men are smitten with remorse and have blessing and cursing set before them and see their sins and feele the axe of Gods Word and yet will on in transgression Deut. 11. 28. Mat. 3 10. or when men are called at the third or sixth or ninth houre and will put off and delay upon pretence of repenting at the eleventh houre Ma. 20. or when men are powerfully convinced and will raile and blaspheme and contradict the Word Acts 13.45 46. 18.6 and when God pursues men with his judgements and they refuse to returne Ier. 5.2 3 or lastly when men despight the spirit of God and sin of malice against the truth Heb. 10. 26 27 28 29 30. 10. The chiefe doctrine is That sound obedience to the Word of God is the Character of a true Christian a marke to distinguish the true
of Christ. Oh might some Minister think I shall never rule such a people or perswade with them yet you see God will put his Spirit in their mouth and men shall not be able to withstand the Spirit by which they speak he will give a doore of utterance and secretly bow mens hearts unto the obedience of the truth Secondly the consideration of this second doctrine may instruct us how to order our selves towards the meanes of salvation and so it may teach us 1. not to rest in the act done we m●y heare the best Sermons and receive the Sacraments c. yet if wee beg not the assistance of the Spirit all may be in vaine if we heard Christ himselfe yet it may not profit us 2. To beleeve in God when wee carefully use the meanes how unlikely soever the successe seeme to be God can work by the meanes as pleaseth him notwithstanding infi●mit●e● either of the teacher or hearer 3. To render all the praise to God and his h●ly Spirit in the mediation of his Son seeing thence flowes all blessing and good successe as being the onely originall fountaine of all holinesse and knowledge Thirdly in that the holy Ghost in the primitive times did so visibly fall upon the Apostles and the Disciples it may serve for divers uses 1. To confirme u● in the truth of the Gospell since the prophesies were therein so accomplished and the doctrine of Christ crucified so miraculously sealed 2. It may ●u●ble us that wee cannot see the glory of the Scriptures seeing they proceed from such a fountaine 3. It may make us in love with the Scriptu●es since they were penned by men so miraculously qualified by the holy Spirit of God 4. It may assure us of incredible successe if wee could stir up the holy Ghost in us we might get wonderfull knowledge and grace if we did strive in these times of the Gospell For though that manner of presence be cea●ed yet God is no respecter of persons but the Spirit of God now by lesser means is able to produce the same effects in the hearts of men in what is necessary to salvation For of these times it is that was spoken Ier. 31.33 to spare i●stances in other things 5. Lastly it may confirme us against the scornes and disgraces of the world by which men every where dishonor the knowledge and practice of the holy things brought to us with the Gospell These things that so many deride came to us from the holy Ghost who came downe from heaven to propound and conferre them up●n the Church Sent downe It is to be noted further that he saith that the holy Ghost was sent For from thence 1. I observe an evident proofe that the holy Ghost is a person distin●t from the Father and the Son 2. Hence ariseth the consideration of the nature of this mission Mission is a● att●●bute given here to the holy Ghost Now divine att●●bute are either essentiall or personall Essentiall are such proprieties as equally belong to all the persons in respect of the essence as to be wise just mercifull holy c. Personall attributes are such proprieties as are given onely to the persons apart the one from the other do note a difference of the persons as to beget to be begotten to send forth to be sent forth to proceed to conceive c. Now these personall attributes may be distinguished also thus Some are proper to each person alone so in one as not in any other as to beget in the Father to be begotten in the Sonne to proceed in the holy Ghost some of these attributes are common to two of the persons but not to the third as proceeding in the holy Ghost is both from the Father and the Sonne so to send forth is the attribute both of the Father and Son so likewise to receive is common to the Son and to the holy Ghost so that we see whither mission must be referred Yet to make it more cleere we must understand that there is a double sending forth the one internall the other externall Internall when the Father and the Son cause the holy Ghost to proceed Externall when the Father and Son send forth the holy Ghost for outward operations amongst the Creatures especially in the Church and thus the holy Ghost is sent forth by the Father Ioh. 14.16 and by the Son Ioh. 15.16 of this mission is that speech Gal 4.7 3. Here may be a doubt might some one say Doth not this mission of the holy Ghost expresse an inequality with the Father and the Son It doth not For 1. it is not alwaies true that he that is sent forth is inferiour to him that sent him For Ionathan may send David and David send Ionathan and yet be both equall Commission may import inferiority not mission or if it did hold amongst men yet it is not true in the Trinity 2. This word is used for want of words metaphorically to shadow out something above our reach For it doth not note either a servile subjection or a locall motion but it is used to expresse either some effect of his working or some signe of his presence so that the meaning is the holy Ghost was sent that is he wrought some notable effect on earth or shewed that he was present by some signe Now for some use of this sending of the holy Ghost we may in this doctrine observe 1. That to be sent of God is no disparagement unto us hee sent his owne Spirit 2. We may here note some things wherein wee may resemble and expresse the image of the holinesse of the Trinity in us Would we live together as the three persons in the Trinity doe Then 1. we must live without envie one at another 2. Wee must not think much to be imployed one by another or to be advised and appointed in well doing 3. The salvation of the elect should be dearer to us then any respect of our selves or our owne estate we must not seek our owne things The holy Ghost repines not at his mission and the Father thinks not his Son and Spirit too good to be sent unto us As we grow in these things so we more expresse a likenesse to the Trinity Downe from heaven Something may be noted in that the holy Apostle addeth that hee was sent from heaven 1. It imports what this world is it is but a place of misery and to come into it is to come downe 2. It expresseth what heaven is it is the place of Gods residence the place where God dwels the Palace of the great King as Princes have their Palaces so hath God and as a Princes palace differs from a cottage so doth heaven from earth The Use should be to inflame our affections towards this holy place oh how should wee lo●g to see where God dwels what natures have wee to long to see the courts of Princes and yet cannot long after the courts of our
ordered and guided The testimony of God is either immediate or mediate God hath given an immediate testimony either by vision or by voice By vision either in in sleep or in a certaine extasie when men were awake thus did he reveale his will often in the Old Testament sometimes in the New a● to Paul By voice God testified either to particular persons as when he gave answers to the Priest as some think wearing his Ephod or else by publike voice as when from heaven he said Mat. 3. This is my welbeloved Son heare him The testimony God hath given by meanes is threefold 1. By his Sonne 2. By his servants the Prophets and Apostles by word of mouth 3. By the Scriptures and of this here Now concerning the proofe of doctrine in Scripture we must observe 1. That the testimony of God onely is authenticall 2. That a divine testimony now adaies is no where to be had but in the Scripture 3. The testimony of Scripture is sufficient for all things needfull to salvation 2 Tim. 3. 4. That we both Ministers and people should have recourse to the Scriptures for warrant for what we teach beleeve or doe For if Christ and the Apostles men priviledged from error doe yet for honors sake alledge the testimony of Scripture then much more ought we to have recourse to what is written seeing we can have no assurance that we erre not but as wee are warranted by the Word Thus of the first point Now for the second point Inasmuch as the proofes are taken out of the Old Testament it shewes the wonderfull harmony and agreement between the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament and that the Old Testament is to be acknowledged of equall authority with the New Hence it i● that the quotations of authorities out of the Old Testament are so frequent for there are above 260. places of the Old Testament cited in the New so as there is almost no point of doctrine needfull to salvation but the harmony of the Old Testament and the New is exprest yea hence it is that there are very few bookes of the Old Testament but they are cited in the New amongst the historicall bookes I except Iudges Ruth Ezra Nehemiah and Hester amongst the Prophets I except Obadiah and Nahum amongst the dogmaticall books I except Ecclesiastes and Canticles else proofes are taken out of all the rest and very frequent out of many of them as the Psalmes are cited 53 times Genesis 42 times Esay 46 times and so I might note of the rest Lastly from the manner of propounding this authority or testimony out of the Word we may note two things 1. The great mercy of God afforded to us in these times that have so many helps for knowledge wee see here in those daies they quoted neither Chapter●or ●or v●rse and many times not the booke and therefore we should praise God that have the Scriptures digested so easily and our doctrine confirmed with such expresse quotations 2. This shews what labour knowledg the godly then had they were so conversant in the Scriptures that they could discern of a quotation though the place were not cited And thus of the fountain from whence this proofe i● fetched The matter alledged followeth Be ye holy for I am holy The drift is to shew that it hath beene anciently taught unto the people of God that if they profeste themselves to be his children they must imitate his holinesse and shew themselves like unto God their heavenly Father This sentence is chiefly found in the book of Leviticus and is there often used as Lev. 11.44 19.2 20.26 21.8 From hence divers things may be observed 1. That exact holinesse hath beene anciently required This is a doctrine hath ever ●ounded in the Church that we must be holy yea so holy as wee might in some mea●ure be like unto God and expresse his image Exod. 19.6 D●ut 26 19. 2. That holinesse of life is indispensibly required of every child of God for so this speech is used Lev. 19.2 3. That true holinesse stretcheth it selfe to the care of lesser offences as these places shew Lev. 11.44 20.26 therefore God will accept our service in lesser duties 4. That we cannot have true holinesse without some competent knowledge of the nature of God Verse 17. And if you call him Father which without respect of person judgeth according to every mans worke passe the time of your dwelling here in feare HItherto of the first reason The second reason to inforce the exhortation in the 13. verse is here taken from the consideration of Gods judgement The time must certainly come that we must appeare before the Tribunall of God receive reward or punishment according to our works and therefore it stands us upon with all care and feare to carry our selves so reservedly and holily as in that day we may have comfort and reward In the words two things may be noted 1. The proposition of the reason 2. The inference or the conclusion of it or here is the doctrine and the use of it The proposition of the doctrine is He whom we call Father or call upon as a Father shall without respect of persons judge every man according to his works The inference or use is therefore wee should passe the time of our dwelling here in feare In the proposition concerning the last judgment observe 1. who shall be the Judge viz. God the Father whom we call upon 2. How will he judge viz. without respect of persons 3. Whom hee will judge viz. every man 4. For what they shall be judged viz. according to their works In the setting downe of the first point both matter and manner are to be observed The matter is that the same God and Father who is called upon by us is the judge of the world The manner o● expressing it is conditionally if you call him Father The words in the originall be both waies read Some reade if you call him Father and the meaning is not of prayer but of profession if you professe God to be your Father Some reade it if you call on the Father that is if in prayer you goe unto God the Father with your requests so the Kings Translators reade it and so I think it is most agreeable to the intent of the Apostle in this place If you call on the Father Many things may be noted from these words with their coherence 1. That the heart of man is not able to beare the contemp●ation of the last judgement nor can we with comfort any way be fitted for it ●ill we know and by practice and experience doe find that God is our Father The Use is 1. for information The reason why many are so troubled with the thought of the judgement to come is the defect of assurance of Gods love as a Father these fears shew weaknesse of faith and if they raign constantly shew there is no assurance at all 2
them they should not be saved without their teachers 2. That not all preaching hath this effect but it must be good preaching or preaching of the gospell or publishing of the glad tidings in and through Jesus Christ the word may signifie to preach happily or to preach well or to preach glad tidings or the gospell It is certaine it is a great happinesse to a people when they get faithfull teachers and it is true that not all preaching but preaching well is that which must make us abide for ever but I take it in the usuall sense It is the preaching of the gospell that is thus glorious in effect For the law is the ministration of death 2 Cor. 3. and this should both teach Ministers to studie to preach the gospell which to do requires exceeding great labour and judgement and besides the people should set their hearts upon the comforts propounded to them in the ministry of the word and open their hearts wide to receive them with all joy and much assurance yea when they feele the sweetnesse of the gospell they should glorifie God and receive their teachers as the Angells of God as the allusion of the word imports 3. That the word must be considered as it is propounded to them to you saith the Apostle and this may be restrained either to the scriptures as they were first preached by the Apostles themselves men inspired of God or in generall it may be extended to the faithfull Ministers that are over the godly in any place It is true that there is great difference betweene the preaching of the Apostles and our preaching and the people are not bound to respect our preaching now as theirs then because the Apostles could not erre and were immediately inspired with the Holy Ghost but yet when that we preach we demonstrate to the consciences of our hearers to be the very word of God and doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles we ought to be received Sure it is that though wee give the scriptures never so faire t●●rmes if we love not the preaching of the word we cannot live for ever and there is a secret deceit in mens hearts they thinke they must honor Gods word but they are not bound to thinke any thing highly of their Ministers preaching especially if they have any quarrell or grudge against their Minister But let all men well consider when the Apostle here saith this is the word which is preached unto you if the word which is preached to you be not regarded you cannot stand in the day of Christ. Againe others thinke if wee had such preaching as was in the daies of Christ and the Apostles or as others have in other places we could then do that is required of us still marke the words it is the word preached to you you must rely upon If therefore the Preacher prove what he saith in the word of God this text will rise up in judgement against thee if thou obey no● Or if for want of life and power in application in thy teacher thy soule do not prosper then why livest thou in places where thou canst not stoope ●● this to say this is the word which is preached to me Why are not men 〈◊〉 ●●●●full to provide a place where their soules may live well as where 〈◊〉 ●●●ies may live well I meane this of such as live in a free estate 4. Lastly this to you notes that the word is never powerfull but when we ●●ply it to our selves and receive it as spoken to us in particular in all things 〈…〉 when we can say this word was preached to me then will th● 〈◊〉 worke FINIS A COMMENTARY OR SERMONS VPON THE SECOND CHAPTER OF the first Epistle of Saint PETER VVHEREIN METHOD SENSE DOCTRINE AND USE IS WITH great variety of matter profitably handled and sundry heads of Divinity largely discussed BY NICHOLAS BYFIELD late Preacher of God's Word at ISLEVVORTH in MIDDLESEX London Printed for George Latham MDCXXXVI TO THE HONOVRABLE KNIGHT SIR HORATIO VERE Generall of the English Forces in the Low-Countries and to his most worthy Lady the Lady MARY VERE all happinesse that a poore widow may in their behalfe pray for at the Throne of Grace My much honoured Lord and Lady AS that speciall duty which I my selfe owe to you both so that purpose which my dear husband had while he lived of dedicating to you this Commentary of his upon S. Peters Epistle bindeth mee who am left his sole Executrix to see his VVill every way performed to set out this first of his workes published since his death under your Honourable Names It pleased you to take into your Family a childe of his body be further pleased I pray you to take into your Patronage this childe of his soule which as an Orphane yea as a Posthumus in all humility is presented unto you You manifested more then ordinary kindnesse to my husband while he lived wee and ours have oft tasted of the sweetnesse of your bounty so that I should deserve to be accounted most ingratefull if I should burie so many favours in oblivion or neglect to provoke others to love and good workes by proposall of your example Accept I beseech you this poore acknowledgement of thanks which is most due first to that primary Fountain of all goodnesse Almighty God for keeping your Lordship safe in your late imployment in the Palatinate and for freeing your Ladiship from those fears whereunto you could not but be subject by reason of his long absence and for giving you both a mutuall and comfortable fruition one of another And next to your selves for all those kindnesses which while my husband lived you did to him and his and since his death you continue to doe to such as he hath left behinde him Now the good God continue his blessed protection over you both and take all that belong unto you under the wings of his fatherly Providence And so I rest with the renewall of my sute that you would cast your eyes upon this VVork of him who much honoured you in his life time and is after his decease offred to you by Your humble Oratrix ELIZABETH BYFIELD To the Christian Reader MAny and great are the meanes which the Lord hath been pleased since this latter Spring of the Gospell begun above an hundred yeares agoe to afford unto his Church for opening of the mysteries of the Gospell Never since the Apostles times were the Scriptures more truly interpreted more fully expounded more distinctly divided or more powerfully pressed then in our Times The number of those who have taken good pain in this kinde is not small Wee may well put into the Catalogue of them the Author of this Commentary upon the second Chapter of the first Epistle of S. Peter Master Nicholas Byfield by name who continued for the space of twenty yeeres to take more then ordinary paines in the work of the Lord. He had a singular gift in diving into the depth
without testimony of his favour For by his word of promise and by his Spirit bearing witnesse to our spirits hath hee manifested even from heaven his acceptation and in particular when the beleever stands before the Lord with his sacrifice duly offered when the Lord doth suddenly fill his heart with the cloud of his presence or warme his soule with the joyes of the holy Ghost what is this but the signe of his acceptation Quest. VVhat if we be accepted in our service of God what great thing is that to us Answ. VVhen God accepts thine offerings thou maist be assured of three things First Tha● all thy sinnes be forgiven thee God hath purged away thine iniquity he hath received an atonement in Iesus Christ Psal 65.2 3. Secondly God is exceedingly delighted in them Thy sacrifice is a sweet smell unto God he rejoyceth over thee with joy Phil. 4.18 Thirdly It is a pledge unto thee that God will supply all thy necessities out of the riches of his glory in Iesus Christ our Saviour Phil. 4.19 Verse 6. Wherefore also it is contained in the Scripture Behold I put in Sion a chiefe corner-stone elect and precious and he that bele●veth therein shall not be ashamed HItherto of the proposition of the exhortation The conformation followes where the Apostle gives reasons why we should make our recourse to Christ to seek holinesse of life from him and the reasons are two The first is taken from the testimony of God verses 6 7 8. The other is taken from the consideration of the excellent priviledges of Christians unto which they are brought by Christ verses 9 10. The testimony of God is both cited verse 6. and expounded verses 7.8 In the testimony of God observe first where it is to be found viz. In Scripture secondly how it is there It is contained there thirdly what is testified Now the matter testified concernes either the giving of Christ for the good of the Church or the safety of the Christian that by faith receiveth Christ. The giving of Christ is exprest in these words Behold I lay in Sion a chiefe corner sto●e elect precious the safety and happinesse of the Christian that receiveth Christ in these words And bee that beleeves in him shall not be confounded First of the place where this testimony is found viz. In the Scripture By the Scripture is usually meant all the Books of the old and new Testament written after an extraordinary manner by inspiration of the holy ghost But here he meanes it of the Books of the old Testament but yet so as the word doth agree to all the Books of both Testaments Now this very word gives us occasion to consider of the nature of these Books and of their use and of their excellency and of their harmony These Books are called Scripture because they containe in writing the whole will of God necessary to be known of us they are the Treasures of all truth The doctrine which was before delivered by tradition for 2000. yeares was afterwards written downe and explained in these Books so as nothing needfull was left out or omitted Secondly this word imports the excellency of the Bible above all other bookes because it is called Scripture as if no other writings were worthy to be mentioned in comparison of these The Scripture exceeds all others in divers respects First because these vvritings vvere inspired all of the holy ghost 2 Tim. 3.17 2 P●t 1.21 so vvere no other vvritings Secondly those vvritings containe a vvisdome far above all that that can be had by the Princes and men of this vvorld the platform of the wisdome that is in God himselfe 1 Cor. 6.7 Thirdly they vvere penned by more excellent men then any other vvritings the greatest vvisest holiest men Moses David Salomon the Prophets Euangelists Apostles c. Fourthly they have such properties as no other vvritings have they are more perfect pure deep and immutable then any mans vvritings These containe all things necessary unto faith and a good life 2 Tim. 3.17 18. These vvritings onely are pure vvithout fault or error or any corruption in them and for depth ●nd majestie never any vvritings came neare them and for unchangeab●nes Heaven and earth must passe away but a jot of Gods word shall not passe away Matth. 5.24 1 Pet. 1.23 Fiftly if we consider the effects that must be acknowledged to the praise of the Scriptures vvhich can be true of no writings besides no writings can describe God so fully to us no writings do so bring glory to God no Scripture but this can convert a soule to God Heb. 4.12 13. Other writings may shew us some faults to be avoided but give no power to subdue them Ps●l 19.8 These writings onely can minister solid comfort to us in adversity and these onely can make us wise to salvation and perfect to every good word and work The consideration whereof should work in us a singular love to this booke above all other books in the world yea above all the treasures in the world we should account them with David more sweet then hony and more precious then gold Psal. 19.11 Psal. 119.14 15 27. Thirdly the third thing may be noted from hence is the harmony of all these books they all agree as if they were but one writing yea but one sentence yea one word though the books were written by divers men yet they agree so perfectly that they all sound one thing for they were all inspired by the same Spirit of God which should teach us when wee meete with doubts or objections or scorning contradictions to condemne our owne ignorance and to be fully resolved that there is a sweet harmouy though we doe not see it And secondly and especially it should knit our hearts to the Scriptures wee should be affected as with the most delightfull musick of the world or in the world Fourthly The fourth thing concernes the use of Scripture and so we may note two things First That wee must receive no opinions but what can be proved by Scripture To the law and to the testimony if they speake not according to these it is because there is no truth in them Isaiah 8. Secondly we may note hence that the best men must prove what they teach by Scripture If the Apostles did it who were men priviledged from error then much more must other men we must beleeve no man above what is written 1 Cor. 4.6 and hee is accursed that teacheth other things then what is written Gal. 1.7 though he were an Angell from heaven Which should teach us to get proofes into our heads for all that we beleeve and to take heed of receiving traditions even from good men For there be traditions on the right hand as well as on the left Ioh 5.30 Acts 17.1 Thes. 5.21 Secondly Thus of the place where this testimony is The manner how it is there is in the word Contained It is contained in Scripture Contained 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
So with God there is neither circumcision nor uncircumcision Jew nor Gentile bond nor free but all are one in Christ Col. ● 11 Which should be a marvellous comfort to Christians that are meaner than others in the world to think on it that God requireth as hard worke of the richest as he doth of them and makes as great account of a poore Christian as of the mightiest Monarch And it should teach Christians humility and not to strive so much for precedency but rather if men will excell others it should be in service and sufferings Fourthly all men are not called he saith here Yee are called as importing that it was a speciall honour done to them Many have not the meanes of Calling and many refuse their Calling when they have the meanes Which shewes the wofull estates of worlds of men unto whom the voice of God by his Word in the Spirit comes not Fiftly the Calling of God doth propound conditions upon which his election in time doth depend for many are called but few chosen upon their Calling and the reason is because they yeelded not to the conditions of their Calling God calls men to a new Covenant and requires first the beleefe of all things promised on his part secondly sanctity and holinesse of life thus they are said to be Saints by Calling 1 Cor. 1.1 thirdly to suffer for well-doing if there be occasion so here Now upon the Conscience and consent of the heart unto these conditions doth God make his choice or acknowledge men and therefore hereby mens hearts must bee tried or men must try their hearts and estates whether they be effectually called or no. Sixtly men are bound to take notice of and to learne and obey the will of God revealed in his Word though it be hard to finde out as here the Apostle faith They were called to suffer which is a thing that is not easie to prove by expresse Scripture but must be found out as it lies enwrapped in consequences in divers places of Scripture For if the lawes of men binde and oblige us to punishment though we know them not because we ought to take notice of them much more must we study the Lawes of God though they be many in number and hard to finde out without much labour and many helps Seventhly our generall Calling doth binde us to a carefull observation of our particular Calling as here their Calling in Religion to be Gods servants did binde them to looke to their duty as mens servants yea and to be subject to their corrections though unjust And therefore those Christians are farre out of the way that neglect their particular Calling and the charge God hath delivered them upon sentence of Religion and their generall Calling Eightly the maine doctrine in them or in the scope of them is that God calls his servants all of them to suffer for the truth Hee shewes them heaven and the salvation of their soules and bestowes rich treasure upon their hearts but withall tells them he lookes they should arme themselves with a resolution to suffer what may befall them for well-doing Our Saviour Christ told his Disciples plainely that they must thinke of taking up the Crosse daily before they come to wearing of the Crowne And therefore they do foolishly that undertake the profession of Religion before they have set downe to know what it will cost them Thus of the second reason The third reason is taken from the example of Christ who suffered greater wrongs than can be befall servants or any other sort of men and this doctrine of Christs suffering he handles at large from verse 21. to the end of the chapter Which doctrine of Christs suffering is fitted partly to the case of servants and partly to the use of all Christians Concerning the Passion five things are in all these verses noted First who suffered Christ suffered ver 21. Secondly the end of his suffering viz. to leave us an example c. verse 21. Thirdly the manner how he suffered set out 1. Negatively and so he suffered first without sin verse 22. secondly without reviling ver 23. 2. Affirmatively and so hee commits himselfe to him that judgeth righteously Fourthly the matter what he suffered viz. our sins in his owne body on the tree ver 24. Fiftly the effect of his sufferings 1. In respect of us and so his sufferings serve To kill our sins Verse 24. To make us alive to righteousnesse Verse 24. To heale our natures Verse 24. 2. In respect of himselfe and so they procured his exaltation to be Shepheard and Bishop of our soules ver 25. Thus of the order Even Christ suffered The first thing to be considered in the Apostles description of the Passion of the person who suffered is that it is named here with speciall Emphasis Even Christ or Christ also Christ is the sir-name of our Saviour as Jesus was his proper name Jesus is a name onely given him in the New Testament but Christ was his name in both Testaments and signifies Anointed being a Greek word as Messiah doth in the Hebrew And so it is a name importing his office of Mediator as being thereby proclaimed to bee the substance of the ceremoniall types even the supreme Doctor or Prophet Priest and King of the Church for these three sorts of men were anoynted in the Old Testament and were types of Christs anointing It is true that we doe not reade that our Saviour was himselfe anointed with oyle because his anointing consisted in the substance of that shadow For the shadow signifieth two things first ordination to the office secondly the pouring out of gifts by the holy Ghost for the exornation of the office Now whereas Christ is Mediatour in both natures his anointing must be distinguished according to his natures The whole person was anointed but yet differently in respect of his natures for gifts could not be poured out upon his divine nature yet as the Sonne of God the second person in Trinity he was anointed in respect of ordination to the office of Mediatour and as the Sonne of man he was anointed in respect of the pouring out of the gifts of the holy Ghost upon that nature in measure as the Psalmist saith above his fellowes Psal. 45. The first doctrine about the Passion is here briefly contained in these three words of the Apostle Even Christ suffered which is a doctrine full of excellent Uses for thence First we may see how vile the errour was of those Hereticks they called Patri-passianus who taught that God the Father suffered whereas in this and other Scriptures we are taught that it was onely Christ the second Person in Trinity that suffered The ground of their errour was that there was but one Person in the Deity which in heaven was called the Father in earth the Sonne in the powers of the creatures the holy Ghost and thence they affirme the same things of the Father they did of the Sonne that he was
take oft our affections from all things that may offend as resolved if our right eye offend us to plucke it out and if our right hand offend us to cut it off that is to deny all sinfull things though they were as deare to us as our right hand or right eye Mat. 9.45 Secondly we must be such as yeeld our selves to obey the voice of Christ and to bee ruled by him Hee gives eternall life to his sheep we must bee sheepe then for hearing his voice and tractablenesse Iohn 10.29 Thirdly wee must give glory to God and rely upon his promise of grace in Jesus Christ wee must be beleevers Iohn 3.16 Fourthly wee must by patient continuing in well-doing still seeke immortality Rom. 2.7 Thus of the first use Use 2. Secondly seeing the portion of the godly lies in incorruptible things wee should not be much troubled for the wants or losses in corruptible things Wee have so large an inheritance in things that will last for ever that it should be no grievance to us though we should want those transitory things 〈…〉 world Use 3. Thirdly for this reason such as abound in earthly things should bee 〈◊〉 more willing to distribute them and give them for good uses seeing those things are not th●ir portion and therefore they need not be overcarefull for the keeping of such things Use● Fourthly hence wee may gather infallibly That the godly can never fall from grace for Gods mercies cannot corrupt or fall away and his gi●ts are without repentance If they could be lost then they were corruptible as well as earthly things But this is a comfort that must not bee taken away that God will establish Sion for ever Psal. 48.8 and though the 〈◊〉 passe away and the lusts thereof yet he that doth the will of God abideth for ever 1 Iohn 2.17 and though the servant may be cast out of the house yet the sonne abideth for ever Iohn 8.35 Lastly we should the lesse feare de●th seeing hence we learne that we have many things that will last with us even after our bodies be rotten in the grave Thus of the third doctrine Doct. 4. Now a fourth point is also cleare and that is That incorruptible things doe wonderfully adorne and make men comely This is the maine scope a●d drift of the Text and therefore we should the more seeke after th●se things for if wee could see the beauty of the inward man as it is adorned with grace wee would bee wonderfully enamoured and in love with it No comelinesse of the body can so allure as would this inward beauty of the man of the hear and therefore againe we should hence learne to make the more account of poore Christians There are no persons in the world so comely as they if wee knew the worth and ornament of true grace And so in generall we should love the godly above all people because they are the fairest and best adorned of all the men and women in earth and in particular those husbands that have gracious wives should learne so much religion as to love them entirely even for the beauty of the man of the Heart though they wanted the outward ornaments of riches or extraordinary comelinesse of the outward man Women also should especially hence learne to get grace and knowledge and holinesse into their hearts for their best handsomnesse is in their qualities and gifts 'T is not their cloathes but their manners and disposition that becomes them or disgraces them A faire body doth commend little if the heart bee fowle it is a small praise to have a good face and an ill nature Some women are like Helen without and like Hecuba within Thus of the adorning of the man of the Heart in generall Now followes the particular ornament which the Apostle commends by name and that is a meeke and quiet spirit Of a meeke and quiet spirit Quietnesse is added to meeknesse lest by mistaking the definition of meeknesse they should not understand the Apostles meaning Now the doctrine hence to bee gathered is That amongst all the particular vertues required in Christians meeknesse and quietnesse of nature and spirit is a speciall vertue and carefully to bee sought and in particular by Christian wives as this and other Scriptures shew Eph. 4.2 Mat. 11.28 Zeph. 2.3 Col. 3.12 Before I make use of this point I must consider what is comprehended in those termes of a meeke and quiet spirit and first we must know before hand what it doth not comprehend It doth not require that women or men should be so quiet as not to be troubled for their sinnes or not to humble their soules for sinne or that they should bee carelesse of their callings either generall or particular or that they should not admonish or reprove sinne in others when they have a calling and fitnesse But unto the constituting of true meeknesse and quietnesse of spirit is requisite 1. Freedome from the evils that disquiet and molest the spirits of men such as are first anger frowardnesse fretting and peevishnesse secondly worldly sorrow crying and aptnesse to take unkindnesse and fullennesse thirdly distrustfull cares of life arising from covetousnesse 1 Tim. 6 10 11. fourthly rash zeale and fiercenesse or inordinate striving and wilfulnesse as may bee gathered in the case of a Minister 2 Tim. 2.24 25 26. fifthly contention and evill speaking or ill language as may bee gathered from Tit. 3.2 and stirring up contention or brawles sixtly all inordinate desires and raigning heart-sinnes whether sinnes of ambition lust malice or the like Iam. 1.21 seventhly unconstancy and levity of minde Especially it crosseth those evils which are noted to be most usuall in women such as are fretting crying taking unkindnesses unconstancie wilfulnesse complaining of their husbands or the like 2. A kind of peacefull contentment when Christians are habitually well pleased with their condition 3. A gentle behaviour in case of wrongs or faults from or in others so as to be first able to beare them secondly not to render evill for evill but rather to overcome evill with goodnesse thirdly ready to forgive fourthly not provoked to anger 4. A harmelesse and innocent behaviour Zeph. 2.3 5. The fixing of the heart by trusting upon God and living without care like a little child that beleeves his father will provide for him Mat. 18. 6. Lowlinesse of mind thinking no great thoughts of our selves and esteeming the gifts of God in others and accounting others better than our selves and therefore is lowlinesse so often added to the word meeknesse to explaine it 7. Silence from many words from vaine and rash speeches especially provoking termes 8. Retirednesse when a Christian is no busie-body in other mens matters and his feet will be kept out of his neighbours house and refuseth to have to doe with the strife that belongs not to him 9. Tractablenesse and easinesse to be directed or appointed and governed as in relation to God it is meeknesse to take
in their consciences or in their estates It may be observed that all the while a man is in contention about his divers or strange opinions in which he dissents he is not quiet in himselfe nor enjoyes firme rest and peace in his owne heart and conscience And experience shewes that many both Ministers and private Christians have brought a great deale of trouble upon their estates by dissenting Now out of other Scriptures we may observe divers other ill effects of diversities in opinions as first it breeds confusion in the Church as the Apostle shewes 1 Cor. 14.32 33. Secondly it breeds division and schisme 1 Cor. 1.10 When men begin to broach new opinions schismes begin in the root of it though it may be a long time before it come to the full growth Thirdly it much disquieteth the hearts and heads of many weak Christians in which respect S. Paul wished they were cut off that troubled the Galathians chap. 5. Fourthly it not onely troubles Christians but many times workes still in them as it proves the subverting of their soules as the Apostles shew in the case of difference about the Ceremoniall Law Act. 15.24 Eph. 4.14 2 Tim. 2.14 16 17. Fifthly it drives men many times into divers acts of hypocrisie or passion or pride or such vices as are contrarie to singlenesse of heart Act. 2. 46. Sixtly it breeds many times strange censuring the authors of new opinions censuring of others as if because they received not their doctrine they were not spirituall enough but too carnally minded and that they were f●rre behinde them in knowledge as we may gather 1 Cor. 14.36 37. Thus the false Teachers vilified Saint Paul and the Apostles Thus of the motives to unitie in judgement Before I come to the Use I must put you in minde of a limitation that concernes this doctrine We must be of one minde but then it must be according to Christ Jesus Rom. 15.5 that is this consent in ju●gement must bee in the truth and in such truth especially as may further the edification of the mysticall bodie of Christ else agreement in judgement is a conspiracie rather than unitie The Use may be both for instruction and reproofe for instruction and so we should all be affected with a great estimation of unitie in judgement and strive by all meanes to attaine to it and keepe our selves so all of us that we doe live in unity with the Church of God Now that we may doe thus 1. Wee should beseech the God of patience and consolation to give us to be like minded even to worke in us the unity he requires of us Rom 15.5 2. We must take heed of private interpretations Men should with much feare and jealousie here or reade of such opinions or interpretations of Scripture as have no authors but some one or few men Of such authors of doctrines we should say with the Apostle What came the Word of God out from you or came it unto you only 1 Cor. 14.36 Especially men must take heed of receiving opinions from meere private persons that are not Ministers of the Gospel for I suppose it cannot be shewed from any place of Scripture that ever any truth was revealed to or by a private man that was unknowne to all the Teachers of the Church yea if the Authors of divers and strange doctrines be Ministers yet that rule of the Apostle should hold that the spirits of the Prophets should be subject to the Prophets Such doctrines as may not be approved by the grave and godly learned that are eminent in the Church must not be broached 1 Cor. 14.32 And this rule hath one thing more in it viz. that men should not expresse difference of opinion without open and manifest Scripture Avoid doubtfull disputations Rom. 14.1 Esay 8. 3. A great respect must be had to the Churches peace so as such doctrines as are likely to breed either scandall or division in the Church are either not to be received or not uttered except in some speciall case Yea moderate Christians that make conscience of unity should hold themselves in conscience bound to be affraid to depart from the judgement of the Church in which they live unlesse it be when doctrine is brought in with great demonstration to the conscience To preserve the unity of the spirit we must have great respect to the bond of peace Rom. 14.19 1 Cor. 14.33 Eph. 4.3 We must greatly reverence the forme of doctrine in the Church where wee live Rom. 6.17 4. That we may be of one mind every Christian must be sure to know the truth which is given to the Churches and to make himselfe fully perswaded in his mind about such truths as are fundamentally necessarie to salvation ● Tim. 1.1 3. 5. Private Christians in receiving opinions should have great respect unto such Teachers as have beene their fathers in Christ God hath bound them to a speciall reverence towards them which they should shew by reverencing their judgements more than any other men in meet comparison 1 Cor. 4. 15 16. 11.1 2 4 5. Phil. 3.15 17. 6. To preserve a further unity it should be the care of such as have gifts of knowledge and utterance to helpe forwards such as are weake in judge●●nt and to comfort the feeble minded lest they being neglected become a p●●y to deceivers of mindes 1 Thes. 5.14 and to warne such as are not of the same minde Phil. 4. Lastly we should marke such as cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which we have l●●rned and avoid them Rom. 16.17 18. The second 〈◊〉 may be for the reproofe of multitudes of Christians in all places that 〈◊〉 greatly against this doctrine by their dissenting in opinions without due respect of the former rules There is almost no Congregation in the kingdome but is disquieted with this sin yea many times the glory of such as professe religion is greatly obscured by this sin and the sincerity of religion much exposed to contempt and the profane reproach of the wicked And this sin is the greater 1. When men not only bring in new opinions but also bring them in with an opinion that they are more holy and more spirituall than such as receive them not or resist them 1 Cor. 14.37 2. When the opinions are meerely new and unheard of before in the Christian world 3. When they are brought in by private persons that goe from house to house to inferre upon others the singularity of their conceits 4. When themselves are doubtfull inwardly of the truth of what they affirme and are not fully perswaded but doubt both waies and yet take to that side that differs from the generall judgement of the Churches Rom. 14.5 1 Tim. 1.6 7. 5. When men urge their dissenting so violently that a Schisme is made in the Church or Christians are divided from the exercise of brotherly love and mutuall fellowship 1 Cor. 1.10 11. 6. When men are
redeeming the holy Ghost by calling The word of God is the sampler or patterne of our obedience for if ever wee would bring our lives into order we must resolve not to follow mens examples wills lusts or our owne reasons inclinations or conjectures but only to have recourse to the Law of God this must be the light to our feete and the lanthorne to our pathes Psal. 119. 19.2 Tim. 3.15 to the end we must obey them that have the over-sight of us and doe instructs out of the word and observe the forme of doctrine into which wee are delivered Rom. 6.17 Heb. 7.18 and receive such teachers as the Corinthians received Titus 2 Cor. 7.15 we should get an eare of obedience Prov. 25.12 2. The causes within us are either 1. generall the sanctification of our spirit or 2. speciall and so it is Faith For the first the coherence shewes that unlesse our hearts be sanctified our lives can never bee framed to true holinesse and obedience and for faith it is certaine before ever we can practise true obedience to the Law we must have the obedience of Faith that is we must be perswaded of Gods love to us and receive his promises in Christ and repenting of our sinnes beleeve the Gospell Rom. 1.5 10.16 2 Thess. 1.8 The faith of the Truth is generally the chiefe guide of all our actions whether they be workes of reformation or of our generall calling or particular cariage 2 Thess. 3.16 For we must beleeve Gods threatnings power promises assistance and reward or else our worke will goe slowly forward 2. Now for the second there are sixe things to be observed in the maner of our obedience without which our life will never be brought into order 1. The first is care The Apostle saith we must yeeld our selves as servants to obey Rom. 6.16 which notes that wee must doe the workes of God and s●ew our obedience to him as the servant doth his worke that is with great heed forecast and care God doth not only require we should obey but obey as servants obey 2. The second thing required in our obedience is Wisdome It is not enough to doe good but we must be wise to that which is good and simple concerning evill This the Apostle shewes Rom. 16.19 3. The third is Constancy our obedience must bee fulfilled 2 Cor. 10.16 We must not be weary of well-doing 1 Thess. 3.13 4. The fourth is abnegation In obeying Gods will we must throughout the course of our lives be contented to deny our selves so as we would doe Gods will with patience though crosses follow Luke 8. A signe of the seed sowne in good ground it bringeth forth fruit with patience and besides it imports that if we meane to reforme our lives aright we must live soberly shewing our moderation in diet apparell recreations and the like yea we must not thinke it much to be crossed in our reason desires ease profits or preferments but be contented to be that we may be with a good Conscience Heb. 11.8 Gen. 22.18 5. The fifth is sincerity and the sincerity of our obedience appeares both when we shew respect to all Gods Commandements as well as one obeying in all things as also when we obey without corrupt and carnall ends and respects Gen. 26.5 Phil. 2.12 6. The sixth thing is peace wee must lay our projects so for holinesse as we follow after peace as much as is possible and that with all men much more with the Church and people of God Rom. 12.19 Heb. 12.14 so as our conversation be without division or offence Rom. 16.18 19. 3. For the third point we may remember that it was long since noted by Samuel that obedience is better than sacrifice 1 Sam. 15. This obedience is the end of the writings of the Apostles and Prophets If we be not trained up by the Scriptures to good workes we doe nothing with generall profession of the name of Christ. Rom. 1.5 2 Tim. 3.15 c. If we obey not we are the servants of sinne and it will be our ruine we shall dye in our sinnes The Ministery had never been broken open but that the Nations might bee brought to obedience Rom. 16.26 If you obey not you breake the hearts of your teachers it is not good words and liberall pensions will serve the turne you must yeeld obedience to our Ministery in your lives or else you doe nothing Phil. 1.15.16 2 Cor. 7.15 Vengeance is ready against all disobedience every whit as ready in Gods hand as in the Ministers mouth 2 Cor. 10.4 5. In this text we may see God delights to receive the obedience of his people from all eternity and all the benefits purchased by Christs blood shall be given to them that obey he is author of eternall saluation to them that obey Heb. 5.9 Thus of obedience in generall Externall obedience which is here entreated of is distinguished by the Apostle Rom. 15.18 into two kindes For either it is obedience in word or obedience in deed Quest. Here might some one say what need the obedience of the tongue our tongues are free Answ. It seemes some men thinke so Those hypocriticall flattering and wicked men mentioned Psal. 12.3 say their tongues are their owne and yet it is certaine the Lord will have the tongue bound to the good behaviour Iam. 3.3 Quest. What great hurt can there be in the tongue if men live honestly otherwise It seemes there can be no great offence in the tongue Answ. Men are extreamely deceived that think they cannot commit dishonesty impiety by their words There is a world of wickednes in the tongue Jam. 3.6 There are many sins which are most vile and hatefull which have their principall seat in the tongue or are practised in words as blasphemy murmuring desperation lip-service swearing cursing perjury charming reproaching persecution by the mocking of the godly bitter words silthy speaking lying backbiting slandering flattery and false witnesse bearing together with divers sinnes of deceit hypocrisie heresie c. And on the other side excellent graces and duties depend much upon the service of the tongue Gods glory our owne Callings and other mens good are much furthered by the tongue By the tongue men preach pray confesse their sins give thankes comfort exhort rebuke sweare vow c. and therefore great reason wee should shew our obedience even in the tongue Under the obedience of conversation are comprehended duties of piety to God of mercy to the distressed of justice to all men of temperance to our selves The catalogues of the sinnes we should avoid in our conversation or of duties we should doe I omit here having some purpose if God will to handle them more largely in Treatises by themselves And thus of obedience And sprinkling of the blood of Iesus Christ. Before I come to the more particular and full opening of these words these things may be touched in the generall 1. There was blood
the Papists for 1. This word of God was afterwards written and so written as nothing must be added Rev. 21.18 2. The doctrine here reported was delivered by the holy Ghost sent downe from heaven as the coherence shews Therefore unlesse they can shew the like authority for their traditions they say nothing 3. Their traditions were of the first sort and so condemned in Scriptures Secondly we may note that Christians when their hearts are turned unto God doe see a wonderfull glory in spirituall things They see that which the Prophets desired to see and could not Mat. 13 16,17 2 Cor. 3.16 17 18. which is one difference betweene the knowledge of the godly and the knowledge of the wicked For wicked men have but a dark glimmering knowledge that tends to basenesse and bondage and this should teach us to pray for the spirit of wisdome and revelation to know the riches tha● is in Christ Jesus being daily carefull that the god of this world doe not hide the glorious Gospell of Christ from us But have we the will of God onely by report This word report belongs principally to the first times before the Scriptures of the New Testament were written and so the word was sure enough being delivered by Apostolicall men who confirmed it by miracles And if the word doe also belong to our times then God● Ministers are said to report Gods will unto us as Embassadors doe the wills of Princes by the instructions given in their commissions or as Lawyers report the law out of their great Charter or Statute-books or as Physitians report their remedies out of the books of practice and tryed experiments It is true that the doctrine of holy things is like unto a report 1. In respect of wicked men who passe all over as a tale that is told or respect it at best but as a nine dayes wonder 2. In respect of godly men who receive it but by peeces and degrees not as one continued story but as a report 3. In respect of the matter of happinesse it is so removed from our natures and we have so little right unto it that it comes to us as a report not a● any thing we knew before or could expect or looke for 4. In respect of the opportunity of it if wee take not hold of it in the very season it will be gone The Lord doth not every day set before us life and death but onely at some times and then how soone is the voice gone if our hearts open not to receive it Thus of the things contained in Gods answer as they are barely propounded Now in the words that follow they are further commended to us First by the efficient causes of them By them which preached the Gospell unto you The Gospell is diversly accepted in Scripture Sometimes it signifies the history of the life and death of Christ so in the title of every Evangelist his booke and so 2 Tim. 2.8 Mat. 26.13 Sometimes it signifies the glorious tidings of Christ come in the flesh and of salvation in him so it was promised by the Prophets Rom. 1.2 Act. 13.32 but most usually it signifies in generall the joyfull newes of happinesse eternall through the favour of God in Christ Jesus notwithstanding our misery in our selves and this was called the promise in the Old Testament and the Gospell in the new The Greek word properly signifieth good newes and in the New Testament the word is used to expresse that most happy newes of God reconciled in Christ and of perfect happinesse in him Now because this newes contains the more excellent part of Gods word therefore I will consider of it more exactly This heavenly newes is the more admirable if we consider 1. What it is that the Gospell doth signifie 2. How we are assured of the newes in the Gospell 3. What are the effects of it 4. What is required in the persons that have any part in this newes Then I would resolve certaine questions and lastly make some use of all For the first the Gospell brings newes unto forlorne men 1. Of peace and reconciliation with God The Gospell of peace 2. Of remission and forgivenesse of our sins Act 10.43 3. Of freedome from death and condemnation 4. Of a divine and most sufficient righteousnesse to be revealed from heaven Rom. 1.16 17. 5. Of eternall life The Gospell of the Kingdome Mat. 9.35 and all for Christ Jesus sake the son of David Rom. 1.23 But how can we be certaine of this newes 1. By the testimony of the Spirit 2. By the vaticinies of the Prophets 3. By the miracles that first confirmed it 4. By the testimony of Christ himselfe that in our nature preached it Mat. 4.13 5. By the word of God or of the Apostles The effects of the Gospell are 1. It brings life and immortality to light 2 Tim. 1.10 2. It melts the hearts of Gods elect more then any thing with voluntary griefe for sin it makes men condemne themselves in the flesh 1 Pet. 4.6 3. It revives and refresheth with wonderfull encouragements 1 Pet. 4.6 4. It makes a man sacrifice himselfe to God Rom. 15.16 5. It is the ministery of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3. 6. It fenceth the affections against the love care after worldly things Hence we are said to be shod with the preparation of the Gospell of peace 7. It establisheth hope Col. 1.23 8. It is the power of God to salvation Rom. 1.16 Fourthly there are eight things required in every one that would have part in the Gospell 1. Reformation of life 2. Faith and trust in it Mat. 16.15 16. Eph. 1.13 Heb. 4.2 and to this end get evidence and seale to it Eph. 1.13 3. A singular estimation of it so great as 1. Our chiefest praise should be in the Gospell 2. We should be content to suffer any thing for it and not be ashamed of the afflictions or bonds of the Gospell Marke 8.35 10.29 1 Thes. 1.5 2 Tim. 1.8 Philem. 13. 4. Poverty of spirit Esay 61.1 5. A diligent strife and constant endevour to attend upon it wee should presse to it Luke 16.16 6. Professed subjection to it 2 Cor. 9.12 7. We should endevour to live so as might become the Gospell Phil. 1.27 8. We should continue in it and not be moved away from the hope of it Col. 1.23 a vile offence to be turned from it Gal. 1.6 But was the Gospell never preached till now that hee saith it is now reported Distinguish If the Gospell be taken for the newes of Christ come in the flesh then it was not preached till the times of Christ and the Apostles But if it be taken for the promise of grace and pardon in Christ it was given in Paradise to Adam and continued by the Patriarks and Prophets Act. 10. 43. Heb. 13.8 Moses wrote of Christ Ioh. 5.46 Moses wrote of Christ two waies 1. By writing the promise concerning
Apostle expounds or applies the former testimony of Scripture which he urgeth both for the beleever and against the unbele●ver The beleevers he cals upon to take notice of their felicity assuring them that that Scripture doth avouch that Christ is an incomparable treasure to them Concerning the unbeleevers he speaks terrible things whom he describes both by their sin and by their judgement The sinne is disobedience their judgement is to be considered as it is denounced first against their Leaders whom he cals Builders and then against the whole body of unbeleevers The plague upon the Builders is that the Kingdome of Christ shall be advanced in spight of their hearts they shall perish and be confounded but Christ shall raigne and flourish The plague upon the body of unbeleevers is that Christ shall be to them a stone of stumbling a rock of offence which is amplified by the consideration of the causes partly in themselves which is their stumbling at the Word and disobedience and partly in God who in his justice hath appointed them thereunto Thus of the order of the words Now before I come to the ful opening of each particular in these two verses I may observe divers things from the coherence and generall consideration of all these words First in that the Apostle doth not rest satisfied to alledge the Text but doth withall apply it it shewes the necessity of application We cannot profit by the Word if it be not laid particularly to our hearts as food doth not nourish if it be not eaten nor a medicine cure the disease if it be not taken nor a plaister heale the sore if it be not laid to it nor are our wants supplyed by comming to the market if we do not buy and carry home Which should work in us a sound care of application of the Word we heare or reade and withall it should waken us to a care of observing all the rules that may further us in applying which are these and such like First we must be carefull to understand rightly the Scriptures wee would apply this is the very foundation of all application that is profitable 2 Pet. 3. else we may grow perverse and wrong both the Word and our own selves Ob. But some private man might say This is hard how can we learne to know the cleer meaning of the Scripture and the sense of the Text Sol. For answer hereunto thou must know that there be divers rules that may help thee to understand or at least keep thee from wrong and dangerous mis-application First thou must be wise to sobriety not presume to know above what is meet nor to meddle with such secrets as should lead thee into knowledges that belong not to thy calling or are not evidently revealed in Scripture Secondly thou must have respect unto other Scriptures to take no sense that is contrary to other apparant Scriptures Thirdly thou must haue respect to the Analogie of faith to avoid all senses which oppose any article of faith or thy faith Rom. 12.3 Fourthly thou must avoid all doubtful disputations and unprofitable questions and vain ●anglings that tend not to edification and the salvation of thy soule and account it as a happinesse to be able to keep thy selfe free from intanglements therein And therefore stand at the doore of every opinion and before thou let it in ask this question What shall my soule be advantaged by this opinion at the day of Jesus Christ and if it cannot answer to it directly reject it Psal 119.66 David praies God to teach him good judgement and knowledge Fiftly let the publike Ministery of Gods servants be the ordinary rule of thy interpretation so long as no sense is taught there contrary to the former rules 1 Cor. 14.36 and where thou doubtest thou must seek the law at the Priests mouth and be very fearfull in any thing to be wiser than thy Teacher I meane to nourish private opinions which are not justified by publick doctrine Sixtly pray to God to teach thee and to give thee his Spirit to leade thee into all truth understanding is Gods gift 2 Tim. 2.7 and he will teach thee humbly his way Psal. 25. Thus of the first rule wee must first soundly understand the sense of the Scripture we would apply Secondly thou must bring a mind apt to be taught willing to be formed and to be all that which God would have thee to be thou canst never profit by application without a penitent mind a mind that will part with any sin God shall discover in thee and a mind carefull to observe the conditions required as well as the promise tendred Iames 1.21 This is indeed to glorifie the Word Thirdly it is an excellent help in application to follow the guiding of the holy Ghost in thy heart thou shalt finde in all doctrines a difference Some things read or heard have a speciall taste put upon them by Gods Spirit or a speciall assurance of them wrought at the time of reading or hearing Now thou must be carefull to take to thee these truths which the Spirit of God doth cause to shine before thee Eate that which is good Esay 55.2 Try all things and keep that which is good 1 Thes. 5.20 Fourthly know that serious and secret meditation upon the matter thou hearest is the principall nurse of fruitfull application it is but a flash can be had without an after and deliberate meditation and about meditation remember these rules 1. Let it be secret 2. Hee must let it be full Give not over till thou hast laid the truth up in thy heart take heed of that common deceit Psal. 119.45 of resting in the praise or liking of the doctrine be not a Judge against thine owne soule For if the doctrine be worthy of such praise why darest thou let it slip and run out Let not the devill steal it out of thy heart Mat. 13.20 or the cares of life choke it Luke 11.28 3. Let it be constant Be at the same point still from day to day till it be soundly formed and seated in thy heart How rich might many Christians have been if they had observed this rule Psal. 1.2 Psal. 119.3 5. Esay●6 ●6 9 Fiftly be wise for thy self take heed of that error of transposing thy applications say not This is a good point for such and such till thou have tried thine owne heart whether it belong not to thee Psal. 119.59 Pro. 9.7 Sixtly by any means be carefull of the seasons of doctrine be wise to understand the season There be many truths which if thou let passe the opportunity of informing of thy selfe thou maist perhaps never have it so againe and therefore take heed of losing precious things when thou hast the time and meanes to attaine them c. Thus of the first point The second thing is the speciall duty of Ministers to apply the Scriptures to the hearers that belong to their charge we see the Apostles
doctrines as this In the words of this verse then two things are to bee noted first the kinds of punishments inflicted upon the body of unbeleevers secondly the causes of it The kindes are two first God will deliver them up to scandall and then to despaire to scandall as Christ is a stone of stumbling to despaire as Christ is a rocke of offence These words are taken out of the Prophet Esay chap. 8. where the Lord intends by them to denounce the reprobation of the Jewes as some thinke or rather foretels the spirituall judgements which shall be inflicted upon them The Apostle in this place applies the words to the unbeleevers of his time among whom the obstinate Jewes were chiefe to shew that as the other Scripture was comfortable to the godly so were there places that did threaten the wicked and that as the former place did prove Christ a stone of foundation for the godly so this did shew that Christ was a stone in another sense to the wicked Christ is a stone of triall to all men in the Church because the doctrine of Christ tries men whether they bee elected or rejected good or bad so Esay 28.16 Againe Christ is a precious stone to the beleever and thirdly here a stone of stumbling to the unbeleevers Now that we may know what offence or scandall is we may be helped by the Etymologie of the originall words For scandall in the originall is either derived of a word that signifies to halt or else it noteth any thing that lieth in a mans way a stone or a piece of wood against which hee that runneth stumbleth so hurteth or hindreth himselfe It most properly signifieth rest or a certain crooked piece with a baite upon it in instruments by which mice or wolves or foxes are taken and thence the Church translated the name of scandall to note the snares by which men are catched as beasts are in grins and baites so the word it seemes is used So then a scandall is any thing which causeth or occasioneth offences by which a man is made to halt or is brought into a snare or made to stand still or fall in matter of religion or salvation And so the sorcerers were a stumbling blocke to Pharaoh and the false prophets to Ahab and the lying signes of Antichrist to such as love not the truth Now all scandall may be thus divided Scandall is either active or passive that is given or taken Scandall given is when the authour of the action is likewise the cause of the hurt that comes by it Thus Elias sonnes were scandalous thus David by his grievous sinnes gave offence 1 Sam. 2.17 2 Sam. 18.22 c. and thus Scandall is given either by evill doctrine first whether hereticall secondly or supersti●ious or else by wickednesse of life or by wilfull abuse of Christian liberty Offence taken is either from our selves or from others A man may be an offence a stumbling blocke to himselfe by dallying with some speciall beloved corruption of which our Saviour Christ saith If thine eye offend thee pull it out or thy hand or thy foot c. Matth. 3.29 Scandall taken from others is either that they call humane or that they call diabolicall Scandall taken which they call humane may either bee found in godly men or wicked men godly Christians that are weake may be offended or hindred in religion divers wayes as either by reason of the persecution and oppression of the godly or by the heresies or dissentions of men in the Church or by the flourishing estate and prosperity of the wicked as also by the liberty some of the godly take in things indifferent for the advancing of the Gospel in case of necessity As when Paul for the gaining of the Gentiles neglected Moses Law This was an offence to many beleeving Jewes contra c. Wicked men also take offence as here in this text is manifest Now the offence which they call diabolicall is that when men wilfully and perversly will provoke themselves to sinne freely because of the examples of the vices of godly men as when the drunkennesse of Noah the incest of Lot the adultery and murther of David the perjury of Peter or the like is alledged to maintaine themselves in a liberty of sinning It is the scandall of wicked men which is here meant Now wicked men make themselves miserable in this case of scandall both wayes By giving offence and by taking offence By giving offence and so Christ curseth them for offending his little ones Mat. 18. Wicked men offend them either by the subtilty of false and corrupt doctrine or by provocation and inticement or by evill example or by discouraging them with reproaches threats or oppositions or the like but this kind of offence is not meant here It is offence taken which is noted here as a grievous curse upon them and amongst offences taken this is their misery that they gather offence from what should have been the cause of their holinesse and happinesse even from Christ. Might some one say What should men be offended at in Christ The Jewes were offended First at the vilenesse of his person or his meane condition Secondly at the poverty and simplicity of his Disciples Thirdly at the obscurity of his Kingdome being without wordly pompe and glory Fourthly at his conversation because he kept company with sinners Fifthly at his doctrine partly because he reproved their superstition and hypocrisie and the traditions of their fathers and partly because he taught that justification could not bee had by Moses Law but must bee sought by beleeving in him as also by other particular directions as that man must eate of his flesh that he was the Sonne of God that he was older than Abram c. lastly at his miracles for they thought he did it by some Divell Thus in our times the Papists they take offence at the newnesse of our Religion as they pretend at the freenesse of the people that professe it at the doctrine of justification by faith alone c. Thus also wicked men in the Church are offended at the small number of such as are sincere at the plainnesse of the preaching of the Gospell or such like Quest. 2. Might some one say What if wicked men be offended is that such a great misery Answ. Yes for it is many times the occasion of their ruine For wee see many men keepe these objections in their hearts till their death by which they are hardned from all care of salvation by Christ at the best it is a notable hindrance for the time it frustrates them of the Gospel and of the communion of Saints c. ●se The use may bee first for information Wee may hence see what an infectious sorceresse unbeleefe is It can make things exceeding good to prove exceeding evill to them it can make God the Word the Sacraments and Christ himselfe all good to be occasions of extreme evill to
one truth will not sinke yet into our heads Wee are told that this is a point unsearchable Rom. 11.32 33. and the rather because weake Christians are not tied to eate strong meat they may safely let this doctrine alone Thirdly that no man can know his owne reprobation nor ought to beleeve so of himselfe but is called upon to use the meanes by which he may be saved Fourthly we have this oath of God for it That he desires not the death of the sinner but would have all men to repent and be saved Fifthly that whereas Divines make two parts of the decree of reprobation Preterition and Predamnation all Divines are agreed for the latter that God did never determine to damne any man for his owne pleasure but the cause of his perdition was his owne sinne And here is reason for it for God may to shew his soveraignty annihilate his creature but to appoint a reasonable creature to an estate of endlesse paine without respect of his desert cannot agree to the unspotted justice of God And for the other part of passing over and forsaking a great part of men for the glory of his justice the exactest Divines doe not attribute that to the mere will of God but hold that God did first looke upon those men as sinners at least in the generall corruption brought in by the fall For all men have sinned in Adam and are guilty of high treason against God Sixthly that sinne is no effect of reprobation but onely a consequent Gods decree doth not force any man to sinne c. Seventhly that whatsoever God hath decreed yet all grant that God is no way any authour of sinne hee doth not cause sinne in any but onely permits it and endureth it and whereas the most that can be objected is that God hardneth whom he will Rom. 9. it is agreed upon in the answer of all sound Divines that God doth not infuse any wickednesse from without in mens hearts but whereas their hearts are in themselves by custome in sinne hardned as a just Judge he gives them over to Sathan and his power who is as it were the Jayler but doth never restraine them from good and the meanes of it Eighthly now may men say that sinne came upon men by reason of the rigour of Gods Law for it was impossible to be kept For this there is a cleere answer When God gave his Law at first man was able to keepe it and it came by his owne default that hee was not able to keepe it afterwards A man that sends his servant to the market and gives him charge to doe such and such businesse for him if that servant make himselfe drunken and so bee unfit to doe his masters businesse he is worthy to be punished because hee was fit to doe it when hee was first sent about it Ninthly it is plaine in this verse that those men of whom he here speakes are indited of grievous sinne against Christ and the Gospell Tenthly that things may be just though the reasons of them do not appear unto us if it bee true of some cases of justice among men much more in this case of God's justice Lastly it should much satisfie us that in the day of Jesus Christ those mysteries of Religion shall be broken open and all then shall bee made cleer unto us as cleer as the shining of the Sun at noon-day Thus of the punishment of unbeleevers and so also of the first argument taken from testimony of Scripture Verses 9 and 10. But yee are a chosen generation a royall Priesthood an holy Nation a peculiar people that ye should shew forth the vertues of him that hath called you out of darknesse into his marvellous light Which in times past were not a people yet are now the people of God which had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy THese words containe the second argument to perswade Christians to make their constant recourse unto Christ and from him to procure vertue to enable them for holinesse of conversation and it is taken from the consideration of the excellency of that estate unto which they were brought by Christ. For the description whereof the Apostle singles out two places of Scripture with which he makes up a compleat narration of their great prerogatives above all other people and above that they themselves were in former times The places of Scripture he makes use of are Exod. 9. and Hos. 1. But before I open the words two things may be here noted First the Apostles care to prove what he saith from the Scripture whether it bee against wicked men or for godly men which shewes that wee should much more take heed to Gods Word being lesse than Apostles especially such an Apostle Secondly wee may hence note that the promises or prayses given to the godly in the old Testament are not envied to Christians in the new Testament God is no respecter of persons but wee have free liberty to search the bookes of God and to chuse out of all the examples of the suites of godly men or the preferments what we will and if we make a suite of it to God he will not deny it but shew us their mercy Now for the particular opening of these words we must observe that it is the purpose of the Apostle to shew briefly the priviledges of the godly above all others or what themselves were before their conversion And the priviledge of their estate may be considered either positively in it self or comparatively It is described positively vers 9. comparatively vers 10. In the ninth verse there he reckons up a number of prerogatives belonging to the godly and withall shewes the use they should make of them or the end why they were conferred upon them The godly excell in divers respects if we consider First their election they are chosen of God Secondly their alliance or kinred they are a chosen kinred Thirdly their dignity above other men they are royall Kings Fourthly their function or private imployment before God Priests Fifthly their behaviour or outward conversation they are holy Sixthly their number they are a Nation Seventhly their acceptation with God they are a peculiar people First for Election The Apostle looking upon the words in Exodus 19.5 6 and seeing that they described the happinesse of Christians in this life doth in the Fore-front put to this priviledge of their election as the foundation of all the rest and would have Christians much affected with the consideration of this prerogative It is one of the chiefe and prime comforts of a Christian to consider that he is elect of God Psal. 106.4 5. 2 Pet. 1.9 elect I say both before time and in time Before time in Gods decree and in time when the godly are singled and called out of the word and picked out one of a city and two of a tribe in all the ages of the world and distinguished from other men by beleeving in Jesus
5 That he doth not afflict willingly Lament 3.33 6 That all shall worke together for the best Rom. 8.28 Deut. 8.16 7 God will give a good end Iam. 5.11 Hee will lift up from the gates of death Psal. 9.13 God will give thee rest from thy sorrows and feares and hard usage Isaiah 14.1 3. Psalm 57.3 Hee will send from heaven to save thee 8 He will afflict but for a moment Esa. 54.7 But in both these cases we must remember First to seeke mercy of God Ezek. 36.32 Secondly if we be not presently answered our eyes must looke up to God and we must wait for his mercies Psal. 123.3 4. Thirdly we must checke our selves for the doubtfulnesse of our hearts as David doth Psal. 4.7 8. and 77.10 Fourthly because we live too much be sense wee must beseech God not onely to be mercifull but to let his mercy be shewed and come to us Psal. 85.8 and 116.77 Fifthly we should also beseech God not onely to let us feele his mercies but to satisfie us also early with his mercies Psal. 90 14. Sixthly we must looke to it that we walke in our integrity Psal. 26.11 and live by rule Gal. 6.16 Lastly howsoever we must trust in God and looke to it that we rest upon the Lord Psal. 32.10 and 33.18 22. For God takes pleasure in those which hope in his mercy Psal. 147.11 Quest. But how may a man that is not yet comforted with Gods mercy take a sound course to obtaine mercy Answ. That men may obtaine mercy First they must take unto themselves words and confesse their s●nnes to God and heartily bewaile their offences Ioel 2.13 Hos. 14.3 Secondly they must turne from and forsake their evill wayes and their unrighteousnesse inward and outward Isaiah 55.7 Thirdly they must be carefull to seeke the Lord while he may be sound Isaiah 55.6 Fourthly they must be mercifull and love mercy for then they shall obtaine mercy Matt. 5.6 Fifthly they must learne the waies of Gods people and learne them diligently Ier. 12.15 16. They must have pure hands and a cleane heart and not lift up their soules to vanity Psal. 4.5 Sixthly they must hate the evill and love the good Amos 5.5 Seventhly they must cry unto God daily Psal. 86.3 Eighthly there must nought of the cursed thing cleave unto their hands Deut. 13.17 Ninthly when the Lord saith Seeke yee my face their hearts must say Thy face O Lord will we seeke Psal. 27.7 8. Vers. 11 12. Dearly beloved I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims abstaine from fleshly lusts which fight against the soule And have your conversation honest among the Gentiles that they which speake evill of you as of evill doers may by your good workes which they shall see glorifie God in the day of their visitation THese words contain the epilogue or conclusion of the whole exhortation as it concernes Christians in generall from verse 13 of the former chapter hitherto and it hath in it matter both of dehortation and of exhortation as answering in the substance to all that he hath hitherto intreated of by way of use The dehortation is in verse 11 the exhortation in verse 12 in the one shewing what they should avoid in the other what they should doe They should avoid fleshly lusts and that they should doe is to live honestly In generall wee may note That it is the proper effect of all sorts of doctrine in Scripture to make an impression of care in our hearts about the reformation of our lives that it is in vaine heard which doth not some way breed in us a hatred of vice and a love of honesty This is the use of all Scripture 1 Tim. 3.16 17. Which may serve for triall of such as come to the Word They may know whether they bee good or evill hearers by the impression made upon their hearts by the Word And it may serve for information to shew us the excellency of the Word above all other Writings because there is no line in Scripture but some way it tends to the redresse of our natures from sinne and to plant holinesse in us which can bee true of no humane Writings And withall it shewes the happy estate of the godly who though they have many diseases in their natures yet they have wonderfull store and variety of medicines in Gods Word to heale their natures If for the diseases of our bodies there be but one herbe in the whole field that is good for cure we have reason to thinke that God hath provided well in nature for us but how is his mercy glorious who in the spirituall field of his Word hath made to grow as many herbes for cure of all our diseases as there be sentences in Scripture And lastly it should teach us to use the Scriptures to this end to redresse our waies by them And thus in generall The first part of the epilogue hath in it matter of dehortation where observe First the parties dehorted who are described by an epithet importing their priviledge above other men viz. Dearly beloved Secondly the manner of propounding the dehortation viz. by way of beseeching I beseech you Thirdly the matter from which he dehorts viz. fleshly lusts Fourthly the manner how they are to be avoided viz. abstaine from them Fifthly the motives first Yee are strangers and pilgrims secondly these lusts are fleshly thirdly they fight against the soule Dearly beloved This terme is not used complementally or carelesly but with great affection in the Apostle and with speciall choice and fitnesse for the matter intreated of which we may observe in the most places where this lovely epithet is given to the godly in other Scriptures God is exceeding choice of his words hee never mentioneth the tearmes of love but hee brings to his children the affections of love as I may so say Men through custome use faire complement of words when their hearts be not moved but let our love be without dissimulation But let that goe The point here to be plainly observed is That Christians are beloved of all other people they are most loved I will but briefly explicate this First God loves them and that with infinite and everlasting love and hath manifested it by sending his owne Sonne to be a propitiation for their sinnes 1 Iob. 4.9 10. Secondly Christ loveth them which hee sheweth by giving his life for them Thirdly the Angels of heaven love them which they shew by joying in their conversion and by their carefull attendance about them Fourthly the godly in generall love them There is no godly man that knowes them but loves them for every one that loves God that begot them loves every one that is begotten of God every one I say that hee knowes 1 Iob. 5.1 Lastly the godly Teachers love them which they shew in that they are not onely willing to impart to them the Gospel but even their owne soules because their people are deare unto them 1 Thess.
in particular concerning the sinne of speaking evill of the godly and the point is That Gods gracious visitation doth cure that disease exactly Hee will never raile any more that is truly gathered unto God in his day of visitation It is possible Christians may speake evill one of another in particular and it is lamentable when they doe so but that is upon supposall of particular faults in those of whom they speake evill But that a man should speake evill of godly men in generall because they are godly with desire hee might finde them evill doers is a vice not found in such as are truly called And therefore let such as are guilty of that sin of speaking evill of good Christians because they follow goodnesse know That their day of visitation is not yet come Verse 13. Submit your selves to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether to the King as superior FRom the thirteenth Verse of the first Chapter to the ninth Verse of the third Chapter is contained matter of exhortation and the exhortation is either generall or speciall The generall exhortation concernes all Christians and hath beene set downe from the thirteenth Verse of the first Chapter to the end of the eleventh Verse of this second Chapter Now those words and those that follow to the ninth Verse of the next Chapter containe speciall exhortations which concerne some Christians onely namely subjects servants wives and husbands Of the duty of subjects hee entreats from Verse 13. to Verse 18. Of the duty of servants from Verse 18. to the end of this Chapter of the duty of wives in the seven first Verses of the third Chapter and of the duty of husbands in the eighth Verse of that Chapter So that the Apostle having taught all Christians before how to behave themselves in their generall calling hee now undertakes to teach some sorts of Christians in particular how to order themselves in their particular callings and so hee teacheth them in some things that concerne the Politickes and in some things that concerne the Oeconomickes Unto order in a Common wealth belongs the duty of Subjects and unto houshold government belongs the duty of Servants Wives and Husbands From the coherence and the generall consideration of the whole exhortation divers things may bee noted before I breake open the particulars of the Text. 1 The Word of God must bee the warrant of all the actions of our life it not onely gives order about the businesses of Religion but it prescribes matter of obedience in all our conversation it tells us what to doe in our houses and in the Common wealth as well as what to doe at Church which shewes us the perfection of the Scripture Theologie is the Mistresse of all Sciences it perfects the sound knowledge of the Ethicks Politickes or Oeconomickes and it should teach therefore in our callings whether generall or particular to seeke warrant from the Word which warrant wee may finde either expressed particularly or else implyed in generall directions and withall wee should take heed that wee make not more sinnes in any estate of life than are made in Scripture and so not affright or disquiet our selves with vaine fears that way 2 The Apostle would have Christians in a speciall manner carefull that they offend not the lawes of the Princes of this world this appeares in that hee enjoines them the duties of subjects first and in that they doe teach them the duty of submission both in this and other Scriptures with great force and violence as it were of arguments which shewes that they were wonderfull desirous to charge and instruct the Christians so that if it were possible they might not offend that way and the reasons are divers and many why Christians should bee above all men carefull to keepe the lawes of Princes first because by breaking the lawes of men they sinne against God Secondly because evill minded men have in all ages watched godly Christians to see whether they could finde any fault by them in the matters of the kingdome Thirdly because if earthly Princes be provoked it may cause a generall trouble of the Churches the offendors many times suffer not alone but many others upon displeasure raised by them Fourthly because if earthly Princes bee good the carefull obedience of their Subjects may incourage them to be great helpes to Religion even to be Nursing-fathers and Nursing-mothers to the Churches 1 Tim. 2.2 Fiftly because perversnesse and contempt and carelesse neglect of the lawes of Princes many times proves scandalous and Wee must not offend them that are without 1 Cor. 10.2 Col. 4.5 Many that were somewhat enclined to embrace the sincerity of the Gospell have beene cast backe and professe that therefore they abhorre such people because they observe their disobedience against humane government either through indiscretion or nice scruples or perverse wilfulnesse The use may be to reprove the carelesnesse of many Christians this way and that for divers offences as first for sluggishnesse in not studying the Lawes of the Countries where they live Some Christians have a secret jealousie against the Lawes of men and doe in heart thinke meanly of them and unlesse the equity of the Law stare them in the face they doe without any further consideration securely cast aside the care of it and rush into the breach of it Secondly divers Christians doe much sin against the holy desire and direction of the Apostles in the intemperancy of their words when in ordinary discourse they speake with much scorne of the observation of the Lawes of men which they understand not A Christian that will not study to be quiet in respect of the Lawes of men is a singular plague to the Church where he lives Doct. 3. We may hence note that it is necessary for Ministers often to teach their hearers their duty to Magistrates to shew the power that Princes have to make Lawes to governe them by And this is fit to be noted because of the strange weakenesse and perversnesse of some Christians that are much offended with their Teachers if they fall upon doctrine of this nature with any application to the times they mistrust them or censure them to be temporizers and to speake out of flattery or wilfulnesse or the like corruption of conscience I speake not now of such Ministers as pleade the rights of Princes onely for their owne ends or in such a manner as they discover an apparent hatred of godlinesse it selfe for these are worthy to bee blamed but even of such Ministers as prove the rights of Christian Princes with compassion and love and meeknesse without provoking or reviling tearmes even these I say are mistrusted and censured though we heare and see in other Scriptures that they are bound to prove and defend the authority of the Magistrate in any thing wherein it is unjustly questioned Doct. 4. It is necessary wee should first bee taught our duty to God and those
things that concerne a religious life and then our duty to man and in particular to Magistrates This the Apostle intimates in that he first instructs them as Christians and then as Subjects and there is apparent reason first in respect of God secondly in respect of themselves and thirdly in respect of the Magistrate First in respect of God for we are first and chiefly bound to God our first covenant is made with God and we are more beholding to God than to all the world besides and therefore againe to respect his glory and obedience to him in the first and chiefe place Secondly in respect of our selves and our owne profit we must study God's Lawes as well as the Lawes of men yea with our first and chiefe cares and accordingly yeild obedience because though by keeping the Lawes of men wee may live quietly and safely and with much reputation yet all this will not protect us against the breach of Gods Law but the hand of God may pursue us while we live and we may be damned in hell when we die for want of a religious life Thirdly in respect of the Magistrate he shall have the better Subjects by it Good Christians are the best Subjects and the knowledge of Religion and Gods Word makes men obey not for feare or custome but for conscience sake and for feare of God's displeasure And besides it makes men humble and charitable humble not to thinke themselves too good to obey and charitable in not suspecting the meaning of Princes further than they must needs And it restraines the excessive pronesse of mens natures that are without Religion apt to speake evill of those that are in authority and chiefly because true Religion will make men pray heartily to God for their Governours and God himselfe doth spare or blesse them the rather for the prayers of the righteous The use should be to informe and teach all sorts of men to take heed of separating what God hath joyned together It is an extreme folly to give unto Caesar what is due to Caesar not to give unto God what is due to God and so it were to give unto God what is due to God if men could doe it not to give to Caesar what is due to Caesar. The respect of God's Lawes should make us more carefull to observe mans Lawes And contrariwise it is a fearfull case that many live in that thinke they have done enough if they live in obedience in respect of the authority that rules them in the places they live in they would bee much troubled if the Magistrate should bee offended with them but are never troubled though they provoke God to his face and they are maliciously foolish that would have the Laws of men obeyed when they are against the Lawes of God or would have men so rest in observing the just Lawes of men as not to be so forward and busie about the duties of Religion Further a question may bee here asked Why the duty of Magistrates is not here set downe as well as the duties of Subjects I answer that in those times of the Apostles the Magistrates were without so farre from being Christians that they did for the most part persecute that way and therefore they doe avoid medling or undertaking to teach them that would not learne but rather be incensed against such Teachers Besides if this and other Scriptures of the New Testament be marked we shall finde that the duty of Inferiours is both more often and more fully taught than the duty of Superiours for in that new and tender world great care was to bee had that under pretence of Religion civill obedience either in the family or Common-wealth were not neglected And it is a truth to be knowne at all times that God would not have Inferiours too skilfull in the duty of Superiours that they might first learne to shew duty before they called for duty from their Superiours That may be one reason why the duty of Masters is not here handled and in other places of the Epistles but briefly for many times the description of the duty of Superiours is used but as a glasse by the Inferiours to pry into the faults of those that rule them and so grow carelesse and wilfully stubborne under pretence of the faults of their Superiours But some one might say that by this means if the Magistrates did turne Christians they were left without rules of direction and so they should not know what to doe Answ. That inconvenience was long before prevented because the duty of Magistrates is fully taught in the Old Testament which unto a godly minde is of as great authority as the New Thus of the coherence and generall consideration of all the words The duty of Subjects followes to bee particularly considered of Submit Concerning Subjects here are five things to be considered of First the proposition of Doctrine in these words Submit your selves to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake Secondly the exposition of it in one case and that is the persons to whom they were to bee subject to all sorts of Governours to Kings or any other Governours Thirdly the confirmation by reason Ver. 14 15. Fourthly the answer of an Objection Ver. 16. Fiftly the conclusion Vers. 17. In the Proposition consider 1 The duty to be done Submit 2 The persons must doe it your selves 3 The things to which they must bee subject Ordinances where is a double extent viz to every ordinance though they be ordinances of men 4 The manner or motive For the Lords sake Submit The duty is to submit unto Magistrates Rom. 13.1 2. For Explication two things are to be considered Why we must submit and How we must submit For the first we must submit 1 Because God is the Author of Magistracy Gen. 9.6 Deut. 16.18 Pro. 8.15 Dan. 2.21 Ioh. 19.11 Rom. 13.1 4 6. Object The Divell is said to bee the Prince of this world and hee claimeth all the kingdomes of the earth Ioh. 12.31 Mat. 4.8 9. Sol. He is the Prince of this world by malicious usurpation not by any right 2 He is so in relation to wicked men he is their king but not of others 3 He speakes like himselfe that is like the father of lyes when hee claimes all the kingdomes of the earth for no part of the world is his because The earth is the Lords and all that therein is Object But God was angry with the Israelites for their asking of a King and therefore it seemes it was not his ordinance that there should be Kings Sol. He was not angry with them for desiring Governours for they had Governours before sent of God and the very King they had afterward God gave them him Hos. 13.8 but hee was angry for the cause of their request Their faith and hope was in a manner spent and they conceived more hope in a King than in God that had beene such a King to them so many yeares 2
with his presence Thirdly under the Gospell Our Saviour Christ approved the gesture of sitting and the Cup at the Passeover the Jewish Synagogues and the feast of Tabernacles The Apostle Paul used the Jewish ceremonies when they were no more the ordinances of God as Circumcision shaving the head purifying vowing contributing yea sacrificing Acts 21. Abstaining from meat sacrificed to Idols The observation of the Jewish Sabbath The womens coverings 1 Cor. 11. The Love-feasts The holy kisse Quest. But here might some one say Things indifferent in their owne nature in the uses of them not inconvenient may be commanded by the Magistrate and subjects must obey but what if the Magistrate command some things to be observed as are very inconvenient and burthensome though they be not unlawfull Ans. Things inconvenient even in matters of Religion may bee commanded in some cases as when it is to redeeme a far worse inconvenience For of two evils of punishments the Magistrate may take the lesse as well as any other private man And if that subjects to prevent worse inconveniences may use inconvenient ceremonies then may the Magistrate to prevent worse inconveniences command inconvenient ceremonies If the Apostles may use the inconvenient Jewish ceremonies then the Apostles may injoyne for a time the use of inconvenient ceremonies as they did make ordinances about things which yet they called burthens Acts 16. And Moses may make an ordinance about the use of a bill of divorcement which yet was a grievous inconvenience to redeeme a worse inconvenience But if Magistrates doe appoint inconvenient things and burthen the Church with them when there would be no great inconvenience to the Church if such things were not then such Magistrates must give their account to Christ for so doing but yet the people are bound to obey still because wee cannot bee freed from our subjection laid upon us by God except it appeare to us that they command not onely an inconvenience but a sinne as all sound Divines confesse But that this point may be distinctly understood let us survey the inconveniences amongst us usually pretended and then enquire whether such things may be viz. There be five things are thought each of them to make the inventions of men very inconvenient and burthensome and so not to be used as First if there be no necessary use of them Secondly if they swarve from some patterne may bee had of such things in Scripture Thirdly if they be things have beene or are abused to superstition Fourthly if they have signification put upon them by men Fifthly if they be scandalous in the use of them For the first It is manifest that there was no necessary use of the Jewish ceremonies For now the substance and body was come there was no need of those shadowes and yet they were used by the Apostles For the second in ceremoniall and circumstantiall things it is not alwayes a sinne to swarve from examples in Scripture It doth not follow that Christ did sit at the Lords Supper and therefore it is unlawfull to kneele For I can shew that godly men have swarved from the shew of patternes that did serve to binde stronglier than that example or such like can doe As for example The godly Jewes did sit at the Sacrament when yet the gesture imported in the Law was standing And this sitting at the Passeover was manifestly an invention of man For it was no where commanded Yea and the Christians that now object the example of Christ in the gesture yet doe not hold themselves tied to follow the example of Christ neither in divers circumstances about the Sa●rament as that it was received at night in a chamber after supper in unleavened bread onely by Ministers not by women c. nor in the matter of gesture in other things as that he sate prayed and yet none of them pleads that it is necessary for our imitation And further it may cleerely bee shewed that the commandement of God about circumstantiall and ceremoniall things might in some cases bee transgressed without sinne which shewes that those precepts did never in Gods intendment binde the conscience absolutely as morall precepts in things substantiall did As that every man should bee circumcised the eighth day was Gods commandement yet the children of Israel were not circumcised for forty yeeres in the wildernesse Iosuah 5.5 6 7 9. The law was that None should eat of the shew-bread but the Priests yet David did eat and was blamelesse Mat. 12. ● The Priests in the Temple did worke or profane the Sabbath as it is translated Mat. 12.5 and yet were innocent It was the law that None must sacrifice any where but on the one and only Altar of the Lord yet Salomon sacrificed on another altar for the reason mentioned in that Text 2 Chron. 7.7 1 Kings 8.64 In Hezechias his time they kept the Passeover neither at the time nor in the ceremoniall manner as was required in the Law and yet they sinned not 2 Chron. 30.2 3 17 18 19 20 23 27. To abstaine from meats sacrificed to idols was enjoyned by the Apostles Acts 15. and yet that did restraine Christian libertie being a thing indifferent and afterward to eat meat sacrificed to idols swerved from the patterne of that ordinance For the third It is also manifest that things that were abused to superstition and idolatrie had notwithstanding a lawfull use when their abuse was removed from them As for instance The Jewish ceremonies especially Circumcision were notoriously abused by the perverse Jewes who held very corrupt opinions about them and yet the Apostle Paul did not make any doubt to use them Againe the meat sacrificed to idols when it comes out of the idols temple is pronounced to be cleane and not polluted by the Apostle Paul Besides it is manifest our Temples Bells Chalices and such like have beene abused by idolaters and yet there is not any question made of the lawfull use of them by Divines on either side That this point may be a little more understood we must confesse that in the time of Moses Law whatsoever thing had beene upon or about the idoll was infected and made uncleane by the idoll but withall wee must understand that the idoll even in those times did never pollute all things that were of that sort which were before it it did pollute that very thing in individuo not all in specie of the same sort And further wee must now know that the idoll is nothing and can infect nothing of it selfe out of the idolaters use and so that those lawes about pollution of idols are ceased for the Apostle Paul shewes that the very meat that was sacrificed to idols or divels out of the idols temple was not polluted but was lawfull to be used It was not neere an execrable thing as was the Babylonish garment in the time of the Law in Achan's possession Iacob erected a Pillar as a monument that concerned the
looke so precisely to the manner as well as to the matter of Gods will Ephes. 5.15 Secondly we must therefore increase in the knowledge of his will Col. 1.10 for the more things are to be done or the more exactly God wills us to doe the more care wee must have to increase our knowledge and study his will since all must be just so as he wils to have it Thirdly wee should bee stirred up to pray for our selves and one for another seeing it is such a hard thing to live a Christian life and to please God Marke with what force of words the Apostle prayed about this point Heb. 13.20 21. Now the God of peace that brought againe from the dead our Lord Iesus that great shepherd of the sheepe through the bloud of the everlasting Covenant Make you perfect in every good worke to doe his will working in you that which is well-pleasing in his sight through Iesus Christ to whom bee glory for ever and ever Amen Quest. But can a Christian be so exact as to answer the patterne to doe just so as God wils him Ans. 1. He may for the substance of the obedience though not for all the degrees or circumstances 2. He may doe it in desire he must set his patterne before him as that he desires to follow and strives as well as he can and is vexed because hee cannot doe it and with God if we have alwayes done as much as well as we did desire to doe he accepts the desire for the deed but it is certaine of the most of us in the most things that wee have neither done the things right nor brought the desiring to doe them and therefore it is just with God if wee lose what we have wrought Doct. 7. That in some cases God would have us take notice of his will in more especiall manner he hath certaine speciall wils there are some things that he doth as it were more stand upon than other things and these speciall wils of God we must heedfully take notice of as for instance 1 Thess. 4. a●out avoyding fornication this is the will of God hee meaneth his speciall chiefe will so about thanksgiving 1 Thess. 5.18 where the Apostle urgeth the will of God as a thing that God would above many other things have done Above all things give thanks for this is the will of God c. So our Saviour Christ notes in his owne occasions an especiall will of God Ioh. 6. 39 41. So here God doth in a speciall manner will us to obey Magistrates and to silence wicked men by well-doing Use. The use should be to teach us to marke what things God doth specially require of us and to apply our selves to his will that the Lord may take pleasure in us say of each of us as he did of Cyrus He is the man of my will which is here explained Hee is the man that executeth my counsell Esay 46.11 It was Davids singular glory that he would doe all Gods will whatsoever speciall service God had to doe David was ready to execute it Acts 13. For herein lyeth the triall of a sound Christian he doth the will of his heavenly Father and ●ests not in talking of Religion onely and professing it Mat. 7.21 Rom. 2.11 1 Ioh. 2.17 And in particular in this text we see there be two things that God would faine have us doe to silence wicked men and stop their mouthes First he would have us so to behave our selves that we keepe out of their danger in respect of the lawes of Magistrates Secondly and then to live such a discreet and profitable life that they may see that we differ from all other sorts of men in the goodnesse of our conversation If we would doe what might be specially pleasing to God wee must bee carefull of these two things Doct. 8. Lastly we may here note that the will of God may bee knowne effectually though it be not knowne distinctly The Apostle is sure this is the will of God and yet there is no booke chapter nor verse quoted nor can any particular place be alledged that these precise words doe expresse God's will but in as much as the meaning is to be found in the scope of many places of Scripture therefore it may be well so called The will of God Thus of the authority of this rule The matter of it followes which is well-doing With well-doing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word is not the same with that in the former verse for here it is a participle of the present time and notes the continuall custome of well-doing and gives us to understand that if ever wee would effectually silence wicked men wee must bee continually exercised in well-doing Our good works though of great excellency yet worke but a sudden blaze the effect of them will be quickly ended or soone put out and then will wicked men returne to their old course of reproaching if they be not daily confuted by the still fresh and new fruits of a Christian wee must bee full of new and good fruits Iam. 3.17 and never weary of well-doing The sense of the word then is this as if it were rendred thus This is the will of God that they are daily exercised in doing good should put to silence foolish men for the originall word doth note the person as well as the good done which affords another doctrine Doct. 2. God would have good men that are full of good fruits to enter into the lists against wicked men to vanquish and silence them which implyes that God would not have formall Christians or hypocrites to meddle with the quarrell of Religion for they will spoile all in the end when their hollownesse and hypocrisie is discovered they will make foolish men raise and blaspheme worse than before Such are fit to plead for and defend Religion as be manfull and full of good works And therefore the weaks Christians should not be over-busie and fiery in meddling with wicked men or putting themselves forward to defend sincerity till their works could plead for them before we set on to be great talkers for Religion we should provide good store of good works by which wee might demonstrate the truth and power of godlinesse in us Of well-doing in it selfe I have intreated before onely before I passe from it me thinkes it is lamentable that our hearts can bee no more fired to the care of it Oh that we were once brought but to consent from the heart with confirmed purpose to set up a course by our lives to win glory to our Religion We see how faine God would have us doe so and it would plague wicked men that would faine raile at us nothing would more confute them And besides other Scriptures shew no life aboundeth more with stedfastnesse and contentment than a life fruitfully spent especially how can wee be still thus carelesse if wee remember the great recompence of reward in another world Oh
breed a dangerous habite of hypocrisie 3. Their naturall corruptions f●ll hang upon them and then this shew of liberty is but a cloake to hide them Fourthly when men take liberty to sinne under pretence of their Christian liberty God hath freed us in Christianity from the ceremoniall Law not from the morall for though hee hath delivered us from the malediction and raigne of the morall Law yet hee never freed us from the obedience of the same Rom. 6.15 Iude 3. And it is manifest that Christian liberty can give no toleration to sinne for Christ died to free us from sinne and not to let us loose to sinne more freely wee were freed from sinne that we might be servants to righteousnesse Rom. 6.18 Besides God hares sinne by nature and not by precept onely and therefore God himselfe can give no liberty to sinne God himselfe cannot dispensewith the breach of the Lawes that bee morall in themselves and such Lawes as bee morall in themselves I account to bee all the ten Commandements but the fourth The fourth Commandement is morall by precept not by nature and so the Lord of the Sabbath may dispense with the literall breach of the Sabbath but the other nine are simply indispensable That Abraham was commanded to kill his sonne was but a Commandement of triall And when God willed the Israelites to take the jewels of the Egyptians he did not will them to 〈◊〉 for God himselfe was chiefe Lord of all the earth and all things therein the Aegyptians were but his stewards Fifthly when men use Religion and their liberty in Christ of purpose to hide and cloake themselves in the practice of knowne sinnes as when Simeon and Levi pretended the necessity of circumcision to hide their murdrous intents and Herod pretends his comming to Christ to worship him and yet intends to kill him and the Pharisees use and make long prayers for a pretence to cover their devouring of widowes houses Luke 20.47 And so under pretence of giving to the Priest they free children from releeving their parents Matth. 35. And so when men preach Christ onely to get living 1 Thess. 2.5 And so when men enter into profession of Religion onely to advantage themselves in wicked purposes as to satisfie their lusts or further their owne carnall desires Thus liberty is abused as a cloake of wickednesse Now more particularly liberty is abused many times as a cloake of malici●usnesse when Christian liberty especially in things indifferent is pretended and made a cloake to cover vile malice or ill affections toward their brethren Now Christian liberty may be made a cloak of malice in things indifferent which lye under the commandement of the Magistrate and that two wayes First when the authority of the Magistrate is pretended urged and used as a meanes to empty mens malice upon their brethren when they hate them not because they breake mens lawes but because they keepe Gods Lawes Secondly and so also on the other hand Christian liberty is abused as a cloake of maliciousnesse when under pretence of liberty by Christ men refuse to obey the Christian Magistrate in things indifferent and this is the maine thing intended by the Apostle in the words of this verse For having exhorted them to submit themselves to the Ordinances of men he brings in these words as was shewed before to answer their objection that might pretend that they were freed by Christ from all ceremonies or ordinances in things indifferent The Apostle answers that that were to make their liberty in Christ to be a cloake for their maliciousnesse that is for their ill-affectednesse toward the Magistrate Where note by the way that upon all pretences to withdraw obedience from the lawes of Magistrates in things indifferent is in Gods account a sinne of malice partly because God reckons it as hatefull as malice and partly because it slowes usually from a heart that is not well-affected unto the Magistrate but some way is wanting in that hearty respect ought to be borne to the Magistrate Secondly in things indifferent that are left free to use or not to use and so Christian liberty is abused when it is urged to defend such things as are scandalous or offend such as are weake and this is that which the Apostles in other Scripture so much urge when they write of offending the weake brother Thirdly in things indifferent whether free or under the Ordinances of men There be cases wherein Christian liberty may be vilely abused As 1. When things indifferent are urged as matters of necessity and with opinion of holinesse and merit Gal 5.1 2. 2. When Christians doe bite and devoure one another by quarrelling censuring back-biting one another and make divisions about these things this is a reciprocall abuse about these things of Christian liberty and zeale ill spent seeing brotherly love is the fulfilling of the Law c. Gal. 5.13 14 15. and the Kingdome of God stands not in garments gestures meat and drink but in righteousnesse power and joy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 As the servants of God These words are the reason why Christians must not neglect their obedience unto the Magistrate nor abuse their liberty to licentiousnesse or maliciousnesse For though they be free by Jesus Christ yet they are entertained by God still in the nature of servants and so are bound to doe what hee commands and he doth command them to submit themselves to the ordinances of the Magistrate For matter of Doctrine two things may be here noted Doct. 1. God entertaines none by Jesus Christ but he takes them bound to be his servants All Gods people are Gods servants And thus it is with men not onely in the New Testament but was so alwayes before Thus Abraham Iob Moses and David are called Gods servants Use. The use should be for instruction diversly First seeing we are Gods servants wee should make conscience of it to doe his worke hee hath by the Gospell hired us to that end to employ our selves in the works of righteousnesse mercy and piety Tit. 2.12 Secondly since we belong to God who is so great a Master we should not onely doe his worke but doe it in such a manner as becomes the servants of the King of all kings Gods servants should serve him 1. Reverently and with feare and trembling wee must humble our selves to walke with God Psal. 2.11 Mic. 6.7 2. Zealously wee should bee zealous about this worke and so wee should doe it readily It is a shame for us to be dull and carelesse and prone to shifts and excuses the Centurions servants goe when hee bids them and come when he cals for them and doe this when he requires it and our zeale should be shewne by our cheerefulnesse willingnesse Gods people should be a willing people and our hearts should bee full of desires above all things to approve our selves to God wee should make it appeare that we not only are his servants but
other side The use may be for complaint of the generall and grievous neglect of these things in the most men and women Where may a man observe in any family almost that amiable carriage betweene man and wife that ought to be Quest. What are the causes of this generall disorder and unquietnesse betweene men and their wives Ans. 1. It may be God revengeth some sin in the manner of the marriage or going about it of which the parties have not soundly repented as precontracts or marriage for carnall ends without respect of Religion or Gods glory as for wealth or the like or some secret wickednesse betweene the parties before marriage 2. In the most it is the want of the true feare of God they are carnall and so their natures being not regenerate are full of all evill fruits Two carnall persons can no more agree together than two wilde beasts and what will not men and women allow themselves in when they doe not from their hearts feare Gods displeasure 3. In many it is ignorance of their mutuall duties men and women doe not studie with care and conscience the particular duties which in this estate God requires of them 4. In such as know their duties it is either unskilfulnesse to beare with infirmities or neglect of daily prayer to God to fashion their hearts to obey his will in those things as well as in other points of his service and worship 5. In some it is strange and strong lusts and inordinate desires which being not resisted and subdued the inward cause of all that absurd and perverse carriage shewes it selfe openly Quest. 2. But what should men and women doe that they might attaine to this orderly and amiable conversation Answ. 1. They should heartily in secret bewaile their former disorders and seeke pardon of God and then reconcile themselves one to another by confessing their faults and follies These things will never be mended till they be repented of 2. They should seriously attend to the doctrine of their duties and heare it with all conscience and desire to obey and take notice of Gods preceptorie commandement in requiring these things and by all meanes take heed of prejudice in hearing but make conscience to heare this part of the word of God as the word of God as well as any other Thinke not this doctrine too base or meane to be heard or studied nor imagine that it is but the severitie of the Teacher to tell of so many things to be done by men and women especially take heed of that profane jesting to put off the sound practice of this doctrine with jesting one at another Remember one thing by the way that it is a great testimonie of true uprightnesse of heart when men and women make conscience of it to be good at home as well as abroad Thus of the first generall doctrine Doct. 2. Secondly we may hence in generall note That the Word of God and the instructions of the ministry of the Word belong to women as well as men and therefore the Apostles call to the women to heare the Word of the Lord. This point is to be noted the rather because many give out that the knowledge of religion and hearing of Sermons and studying the Scriptures is not fit for women God doth not require it of them Now that this dotage may be the more evidently confuted consider that which is here intimated There are a multitude of arguments may be brought as First the image of God by creation was stamped upon the female as well as the male Gen. 1.27 2. The profession of godlinesse good workes faith charity and holinesse is required of women as well as men 1 Tim. 2.10 15. and therefore all means of grace is necessary for them as well as men 3. It is required of them to be teachers of good things though they are not allowed to teach publikely 1 Cor. 14. yet they must teach their children and the elder women must teach the younger women Tit. 2.3 4. They are commanded expres●ly to learne the doctrine is publikely taught 1 Tim. 2.11 5. The Scripture is full of instances Of the good woman in the Proverbs it is said that she was not only a good house-wife but the law of grace was in her lips Pro. 31.26 King Lemuel was taught prophecies by his mother Pro. 31.1 and women followed our Saviour to heare his Sermons some followed him I say from place to place Luke 8.3 and Mary was commended by our Saviour for choosing the best part when she set her heart about religious duties ●itting at the feet of Christ to hear his word Luk. 11. Our Saviour instructs a woman of Samaria in the great mysteries of conversion and salvation Iob. 4. At Philippi Pauls hearers at the first were onely women Acts 16.13 and an honourable narration is made of many Christian women converted Acts 17.4.12 ult and we reade of Priscilla that she was a meanes to instruct Apollos an eloqent and learned man and to make him more perfectly to understand the way of God Acts 18.26 and so we reade of women that laboured with Paul in the Gospel Phil. 4.3 6. If women must suffer for their Religion it is reason they have all the knowledge and helps in Religion but women are in danger to suffer for Religion as well as men Acts 8.3 9.2 22.4 7. Finally the way to be saved is the same for women as well as men and therefore all meanes of salvation belong to them and are to be used by them as well as men Which as it may incourage all women that are religious to study the things that belong to the kingdome of God so it should teach them to make conscience of what they heare and learne of the Virgin Mary to lay up the good word of God in their hearts and keepe it and to looke to their waies in all things that they may please God for as God is no respecter of persons but loves godlinesse in women as well as in men so he doth require sound obedience and reformation and holinesse of life of women as well as men ●or with God there is neither Jew nor Greeke bond nor free male nor female but all are one in Christ Jesus Gal. 3.27 28. Thirdly before I yet come to open the particular parts of the text it may be asked why the Apostle is so large in speaking to wives as spending so many verses upon them I answer it is not simply because wives are more faulty than husbands though many times it proves to bee so in many wives but 1. Because it is more against nature to obey than to rule 2. Because women have many hinderances or lets both in receiving the doctrine and in practising it sometimes they rest in the generall that they must obey and so never study particulars and therefore had need to have it beaten out in particulars for them Besides they are in danger to be
Christian from the false and from him that is no Christian at all God makes his count by righteousnesse Rom. 10. To professe the true religion to understand the Word to beleeve it with historicall or temporall faith to talke of the Word to receive Baptisme and the signes of the Covenants or the like makes not an essentiall difference It is obeying the Word proves us to be true Christians Not the hearers but the doers of the Word are acknowledged for just persons Mat. 7.26 27. Iames 1.22 23 24. But that we be not deceived in our obedience we must know that unto sound obedience divers things are required as 1. That his obedience be from the heart Rom. 6.17 2. That his obedience ariseth from the love of God and the hatred of sin as it is sin and not from carnall and corrupt ends Deut. 30.20 Iosh. 22.5 Mat. 4.19 3. That his obedience be in all things with respect to all Gods Commandements though it be against his profit ease credit or the like Heb. 11.8 Gen. 22.12 Psal. 119.6 Exod. 15.26 4. That he doth righteousnesse at all times that he continue in his obedience and obey at all times that is constantly and not for a fit Psal. 106.2 Hos. 6.5 Gal. 5.7 2 Kings 18.6 I●m 1.23 5. That he make conscience of obeying the least commandement as well as the greatest Mat. 5.19 6. That obeyes the commandements of the Gospel about beleeving in God and Jesus Christ as well as of the Law that practiseth obedience of faith and lives by faith 2 Thes. 1.8 Rom. 1.5 Mat. 16.16 11. It is to bee noted that the Apostle useth faire language when hee speaketh even of carnall men He gives not these carnall husbands reproachfull words but onely saith they obey not the Word and the reason may be because the conscience of a man is not won by the terror of words but by the evidence of the matter And besides the Apostle did not thinke it fit that wives should bee humoured in the violent dispraises of their husbands It is not profitable for inferiours to conceive much of the hatefulnesse of the sins of superiours 12. Religion doth not binde wives to account carnall husbands to bee religious They may know that they are carnall and yet not sin against their husbands in such judgement so as they judge by infallible grounds for though the wife must love her husband with matrimoniall love above all other men yet shee is not bound to beleeve that he is the best man in the world Lastly it is a great affliction to a Christian wife to have a carnall husband Till she have won him shee is but in a distressed estate for other wicked men she might shun and so avoide the discomfort ariseth from seeing and hearing their wickednesse but an evill husband shee cannot nor ought not to depart from him though shee must avoide his sinne 1 Cor. 7. and from such a husband shee cannot have the helps shee should have from a husband that could dwell with her as a man of knowledge Besides the many waies in which such a husband may or will hinder her in the course of godlinesse besides it cannot but bee a great griefe to her to thinke of their parting out of this world that the one of them must goe to hell and that the companion of her life when he dies if he repent not must be an eternall companion of devils 13. Good wives may have ill husbands such wives as are truly religious and obedient may have husbands that will not obey the Word of God and that ariseth sometimes from the improvidence or ill providing of parents Many parents that have children that obey them and will bee ruled by them doe dispose of them for carnall ends to carnall or ill disposed husbands Sometimes from the hypocrisie of such men as feare God but prove not so when their wives enjoy them Sometimes from an unruly affection in good women who though they know the men they choose to bee carnall yet they will have them though it prove to their owne continuall woe and affliction Sometimes from a speciall corruption of nature in some husbands who either are loving husbands and yet but carnall men or are good men but bad husbands Sometimes it ariseth from the speciall grace of God to the wife who though she was carnall when shee married the carnall husband yet afterwards is converted and effectually called and this was the case of such women ●as the Apostle seemes here to write to Sometimes it falls out by a speciall and unavoideable providence of God though all meanes have beene used to trie or prevent this evill in the husband for marriage being to be reckoned amongst outward things God for reasons knowne to himselfe and alwaies just will give ill husbands to good wives And contrariwise it may be God knowes that if some good wives had better husbands they would prove worse wives or both husband and wife would be more unapt for the kingdome of God 14. Unequall matches ought to be avoided as much as may be and that may be gathered from the maner of the Apostles speaking in that he saith If any obey not the Word If any as if he would import that it is a case he desired might be very rarely found amongst Christians They also may be won We reade in Scripture of divers kinds of winnings there is a spirituall winning or gaining and there is a worldly winning About the spirituall winning we reade of the winning of Christ Phil. 3.8 which is the worke of a particular beleever labouring and wrestling with God in the use of his ordinances to obtaine by the gift of his free grace Jesus Christ for his justification and sanctification and finall salvation Likewise we reade of the winning of grace and spirituall gifts and so godlinesse is called gaine and the good servants are said to win or gaine more Talents to the Talents they had And this gaine is gotten by a spirituall trading in the diligent emploiment of the gifts the godly have to get them encreased We reade likewise of the winning of other mens soules in many places and that is done either by the Preachers of the Gospel conquering the hearts of their hearers to the obedience of the Word of Christ and unto sound conversion or else it is done by private persons that by their examples and good carriage or by their admonitions or counsels doe perswade and incline others to a liking of a new life or to humiliation and reformation of some particular faults We reade likewise of worldly gaine and winning when men by their sports strive for prizes or in their trades labour for lucre and gaine Now this latter kinde of gaine differs greatly from the former both in the matter of the gaine and in the manner of seeking it for there is no comparison betweene the gaine of grace and godlinesse and the gaine of riches and honour the one is transitorie the
iniquity is found worthy to be hated Ps. 36.1 Ier. 44.10 Mal. 3.5 4. Such as goe on in vicious courses in the abuse of their liberty in things indifferent notwithstanding the frequent admonitions of godly and grave Divines and seeme rather willing to forsake their owne mercies than leave their foolish vanities Exod. 14.31 Iob 28.28 Pro. 13.13 14. 16. 1 29 30. 5. Such as take no notice of Gods great judgements which are in the world and will not declare his workes Psal. 64.9 6. Such as are carelesse of prayer and see not need to seeke unto God but restraine prayer Iob 15.4 And so it is of the constant and wilfull omission of all the service of God 7. By not pitying the a●flicted Iob 6.14 I omit to reckon up more particulars because by the contrary conversation to that which is required in the former rules men may see that they are farre out of the way Yet it is the more lamentable that this conversation with feare is not so usually found even amongst the godly themselves neither in their awefull reverence of behaviour and continuance in Gods service nor by their humble and carefull and mortified behaviour towards men Againe by the serious consideration of the former explication we may gather that there are divers feares ought not to be found in our conversations as the feare of crosses in our callings or of the reproaches and oppositions of men for well-doing or a superstitious feare of transgressing where there is no Law but meerely the wills of men and such as that feare which through unbeliefe is conceived in the hearts of many weake Christians and doth much oppresse them and that is the feare of Gods acceptation of their best workes so judging themselves as they withall judge of God unrighteously while they remember not his promises made to his servants concerning his acceptation of their desires and endeavours Lastly such as have attained to this conversation with feare should much rejoice and labour to preserve it with all care because it is a thing which is not only lovely in the sight of God but is very amiable and of a winning quality amongst men as this Text imports And thus of this conversation with feare as it concernes those women as they were Christians Now there is another kinde of feare which is required of them as they are wives for so it is expressely charged upon all wives that they should feare their husbands Eph. 5. ult And this feare they must shew 1. By giving reverent terms and titles as Sarah did to Abraham 2. By avoiding all things by wisedome she can ghesse or by experience she can find to be crosse to the nature or desire of her husband even striving to avoid what might provoke his very infirmities giving soft answers when he is angry and forbearing passion and unquietnesse even with others if he be present 3. By a care to shew all faithfulnesse diligence care and tender respect of him and his good in all things in their power and charge And so it appeareth in the negative what wives doe not feare their husbands viz. such as care not to be daily guilty of such faults as crosse or grieve or vexe their husbands such as give them unseemely titles out of the rudenesse of their familiarity or the distemper of their passions such whose feet will not keep their owne house to attend their callings such as blaze abroad their husbands infirmities whereas they should have beene the glory of the man such as are apt to make the worst constructions of the doubtfull actions of their husbands and such as are inquisitive and still desirous to have accounts given them of all their husbands doe Verse 3. Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the haire and of wearing of gold or of putting on of apparell Verse 4. But let it be the hidden man of the heart that which is not corruptible even the ornament of a meeke and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price THese words containe the third thing charged upon wives by the Apostle in his exposition and that is their comely dressing of themselves which he sets downe negatively shewing how they must not be dressed ver 3. and affirmatively shewing what doth most adorne them ver 4. In the negative observe what is expressely prohibited and then what is impliedly allowed That which he expressely forbids he referres to three heads The first concernes the naturall abuse of the ornaments that by nature are upon the body and instanceth in the haire which God hath given to women for a covering And the abuse lieth in the plaiting of the haire by which he meanes not the tying up of the haire after a decent maner but the artificiall laying of it out in plaits or curles or lockes or the like Their devices about their haire are so many as we cannot reckon them by the names they give them The second concernes the excesse of cost about their dressing synecdochically exprest by the putting about of gold and pearles and such like rich jewels The third concernes the vanity of fashions in attire in the last words of putting on of apparell Now for the meaning of the Apostle in this negative prohibition I finde three opinions The one is of such as thinke the Apostle did absolutely forbid the things named but yet that it was a temporary prohibition intended to binde them of that time not to binde us that live now The other is of such as thinke that hee doth not simply forbid these things but onely comparatively meaning that in comparison of the inward d●essing wee should not have so much care of these outward ornaments or about dressing our care should not bee so much for the outward dressing as for the inward The third is of such as conceive that the Apostle doth simply and for ever forbid these things named and all of like sort and that for ever The opinion of the first sort of men is rejec●●● by all sorts of Divines as very foolish and erroneous The second opinion hath Cajetan a Papist for the author of it but is rejected by Divines of his owne sect for this reason because if that were the Apostles meaning his prohibition would teach the most sober and modest women in their apparell as well as the most licentious for ever the most modest are tied to respect the inward dressing above the outward which cannot bee the Apostles meaning The third opinion is the opinion almost of all the Ancient and modern Writers But because I will not take power to binde your consciences onely by the opinions of men therefore afterwards I will shew you by expresse Scripture when apparell or dressing becomes vicious but first I would consider of the doctrine in generall Doct. It seemes to be a cleare truth that Christian women should in the dressing of themselves take heed of ostentation costlinesse and vaine fashions and that
that God accepts holinesse in them as well as in men 2. That all holy women did make conscience of subjection to their husbands and therefore the Apostle speakes indefinitely of all holy women And this is the more evident because amongst all the infirmities noted in any godly woman in the Scriptures yet there is no example of a godly woman that did customarily live in the sinne of frowardnesse or rebellion against her husband the instance of Zipporah is but of one onely fact and the errour seemes to be as much in her judgement as in her affections And this doctrine should light verie heavie upon many wives that professe Religion in these times and compell them to reforme their hearts and behaviours in their carriage towards their husbands for this Text doth import that they want holinesse that are not subject to their husbands and live in customarie frowardnesse and unquietnesse 3. That Christian women ought to studie the example of holy women in old times and therefore they should do well to get a catalogue of the praises of godly women in Scripture to lay before them for their imitation and so they should learne of Sarah reverence to their husbands and of Rahab and the Midwives of Egypt to shew mercy to Gods servants in distresse and of Ruth obedience to their parents and constant love to religion and of the Shunamitish woman 2 Reg. 4.8 c. and of Lydia Acts 16.14 and of Ph●be Rom. 16.2 to be entertainers of Gods servants and to succour them and of Hanna to be humble and patient and devout in prayer and of the good woman in the Proverbs chap. 31. and of Priscilla and Sal●mons mother P●● 30.1 2. and Timothies mother and grand-mother 2 Tim. 1.4 to get the law of grace into their lips to instruct others and of that woman in the Proverbs to bee painfull in labour and to be wise in oversight of the labours of their servants and children and of Hester to keepe religious Fas●● to God with their maides and children Hess 4.16 and of the Virgin Mary to lay up the words of Christ in their hearts and with Mary Magdalen to love Christ with all tendernesse and to bewaile their sinswith sorrow and to sit as Christs feet to heare his words and of Elizabeth to live without offence L●●e 1. and of Dorcas to be merciful to the poore and of the holy women mentioned Heb. 11.3 to be constant professors of the truth in the times of persecution That trusted in God The fourth thing is the cause of their subjection and that is their trust in God about which foure things are to be observed 1. That trust in God is such a grace as is found in all the godly even wom●n that were holy had attained to trust in God All holy women trusted in God therefore if women that are the weaker sexe cannot get holinesse but withall they trust in God it is impliedly cleere That all the godly doe trust in God The house of Israel and the house of Aaron Priests and people even all that feare the Lord must trust in the Lord Psal. 115.9 10 11. and all the Gentiles must trust in the Lord. Rom. 15.12 It is the Periphrasis of God to be the confidence of all the ends of the earth Psal. 65.5 And the reasons why the godly must and doe all of them trust in God are first Gods Commandement that requires it of all which the former places shew secondly Gods promise that he will be the hope of his people even of all his people Ioel 3.16 and they have a sure word of the Prophets to warrant their trust 2 Pet. 1.19 thirdly without faith and trust it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. fourthly because they have nothing else to trust in Of all people the godly are most miserable if their trust were to be placed in other things than God for as all earthly things are vain and transitorie so can they make least shift for themselves and are most opposed in these things And therefore the Use should be to teach us to trie our hearts soundly whether we be such as trust in God seeing in this thing lyeth one great part of our evidence about true grace If all the godly trust in God then we are not godly nor holy men and women if we doe not trust in God The question then is By what signes doe godly men prove that they doe trust in God and the answer is 1. By making God their refuge in all their distresses and by pouring out their hearts before him in prayer and supplication 2 Sam. 22.3 4. Psal. 62.8 2. By their feare in any thing to displease God and their care to keepe his Commandements and to cleave to God 2 Reg. 18.4 5 6. doing his worke whatsoever come of it 3. By relying upon God in times of distresse without using any ill means or courses that they know or feare to be unlawfull Esay 28.16 with 1 Chron. 10.13 14. but still wait upon God till he help them Psal. 33.20 4. By accounting God to be their portion and sufficient heritage Psal. 16.1 5 6. 5. By setting the Lord alwaies before them Psal. 16.1 18. for if we put all our trust in God then our hearts doe continually thinke of God and are lifted up to God 6. By committing all their wayes to God and leaving the successe of things to his disposing Psal. 37.5 7. By their patience in the case of wrongs and indignities having their hearts free from desires of revenge and their tongues from words or reproach or reproofe they are as deafe or dumb men Ps. 38.13 14 15 1 Tim. 4.10 8. By contemning the glory of the world and not regarding or seeking dependancies upon proud and sinfull persons Psal. 40.4 9. By the joy and contentment they take in the house of God their hearts flourishing like a greene Olive tree when they heare of the doctrine of Gods goodnesse and feele the refreshing of his name Psal. 52.8 9. 10. By their thankfulnesse and great desires to praise God when they find the experiences of Gods providence in grace and bounty towards them Psal. 13.5 6. 52.8 9. Yet by the way we m●●t know that godly persons that do truly trust in God may be burdened with cares but yet they cast their burthens upon God when they feele them Psal. 55.22 They may be affraid and yet trust in God Psal. 56.3 They may cry and make great moane and that a long time Psal. 69.3 They may seeme to want strength and yet renew their strength Esay 40 ult 2. From ●●nce we ●●y gather That it is a great praise and an excellent gift in any to trust in God to have and exercise this trust in God and therefore of all parts of holines f●nctification in this place trust in God i● mentioned And therefore in divers Scriptures they are pronounced to be very blessed that can doe it Psal. 84.12 34.8 and it
called 272 Wherein it exceeds all other writings ibid. Servants Service How we are to serve God 473 Who are rejected from the number of Gods Servants 474 It is an excellent freedome to be a Servant of God 475 Their prerogatives ibid. Servants are of divers sorts 486 For what cause Servitude came in ibid. How a godly Servant may comfort himselfe in his estate 488 They must be subject three wayes 490 Helps in their subjection ibid. They are to shew their feare of God in their callings 492 Their feare towards their Masters shewed divers wayes 493 Sheep Signes of a lost Sheep 557 Hopes of returning 558 Motives to returne 559 The time when the number and meanes 560 The maner and signes of returning 561 The lets 562 Shepherd What attributes are given to Christ as a Shepherd 563 564 He is the one true great and good Shepherd 564 The happinesse of such as live under this Shepherd appeares in ten things 565 Shew Seven wayes whereby we may offend by outward Shewes 333 Motives to the Shew of vertue 334 Sicknesse Vide Healing How it comes into the soule 548 The Sicknesse of the soule grievous many wayes 549 Why many feele not the Sicknesse of the soule ibid. Silence To put to Silence is diversly accepted 455 Sin Sixe wayes by which one mans Sin is derived on another 141 How many wayes Sin hinders the growth of the word 200 A man may be said to make Sin many wayes 522 523 How Christ had no Sin 524 Inwhat respect Christ bare our Sins 531 His sufferings fitted to our Sins 532 Men are said to be alive in Sin many wayes 535 Their miserie great that so doe ibid. Sinner To be a worker of Iniquitie what and three wayes manifested 397 Sion The Church is like Mount Sion in many respects 276 How the Citizens of this City may be knowne 277 Their speciall priviledges 279 Sober Sobrietie A fixefold Sobrietie 104 Sojourners Vide Saints and Strangers 4 5 132 Soule What it is 76 Soule taken many wayes 367 Its description ibid. Seven things considerable in it ibid. c. It is a substance but not bodily 368 It is immortall 369 Its originall 371 Anima non est ex traduce 372 God creates the Soule 373 374 Objections against it answered 374 375 Of the union of the Soule with the body 376 Shewed by many similies 377 By what band the Soule is bound to the body ibid. The faculties of the Soule 378 Its five senses 379 The inward senses three 380 The Soule gives to the body a threefold motion 311 The facultie of reason in the Soule and wherein it excells 382 The end of its creation 383 Foure kinds of warre against the Soule 384 The Flesh wars against the Soule five wayes ibid. How the Soule comes to be diseased 548 The sicknesse of the Soule grievous many wayes 149 Many feele it not ibid. The Soule synechdochically signifieth the whole man 17● Speaking Vide Evill-speaking and Report Spirit What need our Spirit● have to be sanctified ●5 In what its sanctification consisteth ibid. Eight things belong thereto 16 Why the Spirit is called the Holy Ghost 93 Why the Holy Spirit ibid. Sprinkling The meaning of that ceremonie of Sprinkling Christs bloud 22 A fourefold legall Sprinkling 22 23 c. The manifold passages of Sprinkling the Passeover opened 25 26 Statutes God hath foure Statute books 149 Foure praises of those Statutes ibid. Stone How Christ is said to be first a Stone secondly a living Stone 249 250 This Stone disallowed how and by whom 251 252 Wicked men compared to Stones in many respects 258 So the godly also ibid. Reasons why we ought to be lively Stones 259 That Christ is laid as a foundation Stone imports many things 276 A corner Stone 282 Elect and precious ibid. Strangers Who and why man is a Stranger even in five respects 3 4 The Elect are Strangers 4 And in foureteene things they should be like Strangers 4 5 The word Stranger literally and mystically taken 132 Prettie allusions from Israels being in Egypt 132 c. We should carry our selves as Strangers 364 Submission The Submission which belongs to Princes and Magistrates hath sixe things in it 425 Objections against this Submission answered 427 Suffer The markes of such as truely suffer with Christ 315 Divers wayes of Suffering 514 Christ Suffered for us in divers respects 517 518 His Sufferings were for our examples 519 Ten things to be followed by the examples of Christs Sufferings 521 Christs Sufferings 〈…〉 532 He suffered in his body and soule 533 Why he suffered on a tree 534 T TAbernacle Christ hath a fivefold Tabernacle 261 A godly man like a Tabernacle in many respects 262 Excellent uses hereof 263 Taste What will bring us unto a good Taste of Gods goodnesse 239 240 Our true Taste is seene both by the causes and effects 241 Wherein the Taste of the godly and wicked differ 242 How far the Taste of the wicked may goe 243 The uses of it 243 244 We can have but a Taste of Gods sweetnesse in this life 244 The uses of it ibid. The true causes of the want of Taste to the Word 245 When we have tasted of it we must not lose our Appetite 246 Temptation Foure sorts of it 57 Sathan tempts five wayes 58 Thirteene degrees of it ibid. c. How Sathans Temptations differ from our owne concupiscence 59 60 Comforts against Temptation 60 Twelve rules in Temptation 61 God tempts man sixe wayes 62 Seven wayes in affliction 62 63 Testimonie The Scripture is our sure Testimonie and thence how our Testaments are to be fetcht 124 125 Time Times Foure sorts of men have enquired about Times 1. The curious 2. The weake 3. The superstitious 4. The wise 83 Tradition The word is taken five waies 89 90 How many wayes children are infected by the Tradition of their fathers 142 Why those Traditions should be so infectious ibid. c. Trust. Five things pertaining to a perfect Trust 105 Nine wayes to shew our Trust 108 Truth What it is 175 What it is to obey the Truth how 176 V VAine-glory Wherein it is seene 512 Verily The word oft used in Scripture and that for three speciall causes 150 151 How many wayes we shew forth the Verilies of Christ 332 333 Why the Verilies that are in us are called Christs Verilies 334 Vertue How the word is taken in the Originall 327 Nine Vertues in Christ which we should shew forth 329 Vertue and Grace are a Christians best riches 618 Vessell The word Vessell diversly taken 642 Visit Visitation Men are said to visit diversly 412 So God also ibid. c. First in judgement 413 Secondly in mercy 414 Signes of such as he visits in mercy 415 What glorious things the day of Visitation brings forth 419 Uncleannesse Two waies contracted 25 Unitie Of Unitie in mind or judgement 674 675 Helpes thereto 676 Aggravations against discord in opinion 677 Many ill causes of
doe it and for this purpose hath God set apart the ministery of the Word that by them it might be applied God inspired the Scriptures and the Ministers are to urge them and whet them upon the hearts of their hearers for their Instruction Reproofe or Consolation 2 Tim. 3.17 They are like the Priests for cutting up or dividing of the Sacrifices 2 Tim. 2.15 And this may serve to justifie the course of godly and painfull Ministers that most study the sound application of their doctrine and secretly staineth the pride of those men that avoid with scorne application vainly affecting the praise of wit and learning Thirdly we may hence note that all men in the visible Church have not a right to the comforts of the Scripture and it is the Ministers duty to drive wicked men off from claiming any part in the promises which are the onely treasure of the Saints as here wee see in these two verses the Apostle carefully doth Men must doe the works of Iacob if they would have the comforts of Iacob Micah 2.7 A Minister must separate between the clean and uncleane His word must be like a Fanne that will drive the cha●fe one way and the wheat another and though wicked men brook not thi● yet God requireth this discretion at the hands of his people Gods Ministers must not dawbe with untempered morter or give the childrens bread to dogs or cast holy things to swine Fourthly they may hence cleerly also see that no other difference may be put between many then what faith and unbeliefe obedience and disobedience make Men must not be known after the flesh Fiftly it is hence also apparant that all the godly have a common right to the promises made in Christ. The godly in the Apostle Peters time had right to the former consolation as well as the godly in the Prophet Esaies time God is no respecter of persons Col. 3.11 Thus in generall Two things are to be observed in particular The one concerns the godly who are comforted The other concernes the wicked who are terrified The godly are comforted in these words To you therefore which beleeve he is precious In which words it is the drift of the Apostle to raise an use for consolation out of the former Text whence consider First the persons comforted viz you that beleeve Secondly the happinesse applyed unto them He is precious For the first It is manifest that the Apostle directs them to look for faith in their hearts if they would have cōfort in Gods promises It is not enough to know that beleevers shall be saved but we must be sure that men in particular are beleevers we must examine our selves whether we be in the faith or no 2 Cor. 13.5 Which should both reprove and direct It reproves the great shamefull slothfulnesse of Christians that suffer the tempter to keepe them without the assurance of faith some have no faith at all and the better sort live in too much doubtfulnesse in the point of the assurance of faith And therefore wee should be warned and directed to try our faith and to make it sure that we are beleevers Quest. What is it to be a true beleever Ans. It is to imbrace with our hearts the reconciliation salvation which by Christ is purchased for us and by the Gospell is offred to us Now that this point being of such singular waight may be cleerly understood I will break it open into particulars or into particular parts or steps of judgement and practice in the beleever First he must acknowledge that by nature he stands bound to observe all the morall Law Secondly he must see that he hath broken all those holy lawes of God and is therefore guilty before God of the curses of the Law and so of eternall condemnation Thirdly he must know that God sent his own Son in the flesh to obey the Law and satisfie the justice of God by making an expiation for mans sins Fourthly he must learne that God hath bound himselfe by promise that whosoever imbraceth the agreements in this new covenant in Christ shall be saved Fiftly that when a man doth in his own particular discerne this gracious offer of God in the Gospell and goeth to God and with his heart relieth upon it then he doth truely beleeve and is justified and shall be saved Quest. But many men are perswaded that God hath given Christ for them and yet it is evident that they doe not beleeve because there is no appearance of any repentance or reformation in them many say they have a strong faith and yet have none How shall the perswasion of the godly man be distinguished from this vaine presumption in wicked men Ans. That perswasion of Gods grace in Christ which is true and of the nature of true faith doth prove it selfe to be ●ight by many infallible signes First by the renovation of the heart The knowledg of Gods love in Christ doth make the heart of man new it clenseth out the old drosse and makes a man hate his sweet and most secret sins Faith purifies the heart Acts 15. Secondly by the joy and comfort of the holy Ghost with which the beleevers heart is refreshed from the presence of God 1 Pet. 1.9 Thirdly by the victory of the world For the true beleever is so satisfied with Gods goodnesse in Christ that he can deny his profits pleasures credit friends and the like for Christs sake and the Gospell yea faith marres the tast of earthly things and makes a man able to forsake the love of worldly things 1 Iohn 5.5 It will endure the tryall of troubles of afflictions and temptations and persecutions for the Gospels sake 1 Pet. 1.7 without ●aking haste to use ill meanes in the evill day Quest. But how may faith be discerned in such as say they are not perswaded that they have faith which sometimes proves to be the case of divers deare children of God Answ. Their faith may be discerned First by repentance which cannot be separated from it the sight hatred confession and sorrow for their sins is an argument of true faith because without faith no man can have true repentance Secondly by their complaining of their unbeliefe and desire of faith I beleeve Lord help my unbelief was the voice of him that had true faith Thirdly by their daily renouncing of their owne merits begging favour of God onely for the merits of Christ. Fourthly by the love of the godly for faith worketh by love Gal. 5. Fiftly by other marks signs of Gods children which can never be had but faith is had also such as are love of God and his Word and of their enemies and uprightnesse of heart and the spirit of prayer and the like Precious Christ is precious to them that beleeve not onely in their acco●nt but by effect and so both because he is great riches unto them as also because he is an honour unto them He is great riches