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

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minds of men alike that he would bless the Church with this Unity Oh how greatly would godliness flourish errours be discouraged if it could be said of all believers which is spoken of the primitive Christians often That they met together with one accord and with one heart Oh how blessed is it to see the whole Church of God rather than one family or City to dwell together in Unity The next thing observable is in that Timothy who is here called a Brother is at other times very often called a Sonne And besides the Reasons insisted on the last day there is another mentioned Phil. 2. 22. that Paul was as a Father to him instructing of him about his Ministerial Office and therefore had two Episties wrote to him for the managing of Ecclesiastical affairs in a godly manner This great help and tuition as it were Timothy had from Paul being made a Church-officer while he was young Observe That it is of great consequence to such who in their young years are set apart for the Ministry to have the guidance of those who are more solid and experienced Thus Christ himself though he could have immediately furnished his Apostles with admirable and sufficient abilities for the great work of Apostleship yet kept them two years as the Harmonists gather under his peculiar charge and information In the Old Testament likewise though the gift of prophesie was by immediate inspiration yet we read that even then there was the Colledge of the Prophets and the sons of the Prophets 2 King 2. 7. So we read 2 Chron. 34. 22. of the Colledge of the Prophets Hence it is also in the New Testament that the Apostle directing of Timothy how to keep up the sound Doctrine of Christ after his departure giveth this notable instruction 2 Tim. 2. 2. That what Doctrine he had heard from Paul he should commit to faithfull men that should teach others That is a very full and pregnant Text. For the usefulness of Universities that there should be Nurseries wherein young ones should be trained up to deliver the sound Doctrine to their Posterity after them Though in those primitive times there was such a plentifull effusion of the Spirit of God in the gifts thereof yet he there commands that faithfull men should be chosen who should commit to posterity one age after another the true Doctrine of Christ and therefore in the primitive times before there were Universities the Bishops house was a Nursery to train up young Disciples And in Origen's time he began to be a Catechist and to set open a School in reference to the Christian Religion If there be in such publick Nurseries and Universities gross abuses men degenerating into laziness and not fulfilling the general intention of the Founders the abusers are to be purged away but not the order or manner of education it self If it be said The the Spirit of God is that which alone inableth a man to such Offices and Imployments We grant that the Spirit of God is the alone Sanctifier of all gifts and abilities but yet now the Spirit of God doth not work in an immediate and miraculous manner else why is there not working of Miracles Why do they not speak in all Tongues Why do they not understand Hebrew and Greek which are the original Languages the Scripture was written in If therefore we must not look for the Spirit of God in such an immediate way it must be in a mediate and acquired way And this ordinary way doth not exclude Gods Spirit but supposeth it For if in those days when miraculous gifts were ordinary yet see what charge Paul layeth upon Timothy to give himself to reading and studying of the Scriptures especially that is observed by Calvin 1 Tim. 4. 13. Till I come give thy self to reading he would not have him so much as neglect that little time No wonder if in these later days such duties are more vehemently to be pressed Use of Exhortation to you that are people to be of more publick spirits in your prayers not only regarding your present age but that the truths of God may be handed from age to age that the Universities may be pure fountains and hopefull Nurseries from whence may come such who shall be able to propagate the pure Doctrins of Christ Peter was carefull that after his decease the pure Doctrins of Christ might be preserved And so for your children and childrens sake that they may not live in times of ignorance and darkness importune God earnestly that he would keep up such faithfull men and good wayes that may propagate the Gospel to the worlds end SERM. XII Of the Name and Nature of a Church 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church of God which is at Corinth c. FRom the Persons inscribing we come to the Persons inscribed or to those to whom this salutatory Preface and so the whole Epistle is directed and that is set down 1. More particularly and then more generally More particularly and they are described by the relative condition and estate they are in viz. a Church To the Church which is further described topically from the place where it is At Corinth Let us consider this particular first And for the opening the word Church we might spend much time therein but I shall briefly explicate it The word is used and that only in Act. 19. for a Civil Assembly Yea it 's said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Assembly was confused The Athenians called their publick meetings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word is used in Thucidides as the learned observe The Hebrew hath two words Cohel which is for the most part translated Ecclesia by the Septuagint and Gnedeth which is translated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Church doth rather answer Cohel than Gnedeth because under the New Testament it is not fixed As for such who would understand that place Mat. 18. Tell the Church of a Senate or Civil Power it 's so improbable that it 's not worth time to confute it The word therefore is most frequently used in the New Testament for an holy Society gathered together in an holy manner for holy ends And thus it is used either for the Catholick invisible Church which is the whole body of Christ that shall be saved as when he is said Ephes 5. To give himself for his Church and the Church is made the wife of Christ And Col. 1. 24. it 's called the body of Christ This Church is meant in the Creed when we believe there is an holy Catholick Church and so a Communion of Saints though some would have it a communion in holy things To this Church belonged all the godly that lived in the Old Testament For that is a dangerous errour of the Socinians that make the Church in the Old Testament specifically distinct from that in the New as if they were not saved by the same Christ and the same faith as we are under the Gospel Now it
's very necessary to distinguish this Catholick invisible Church from a visible particular one The Papists confounding these and making their Roman particular Church a Catholick one and applying such Texts of Scripture as are spoken of the Universal invisible Church to their particular do thereby grosly mistake in pleading for the infallibility and perpetuity of their Church But Secondly The Scripture doth use the word Church for a visible company of persons professing faith in Christ and then it hath several acceptions For sometimes it is used for the general Company of believers Act. 8. 3. Thus Paul is said to persecute the Church Or else more particularly and for a Church at such a place as the Church at Jerusalem the Church at Corinth Again the word Church is sometimes used more strictly for the People onely as distinct from Pastors Thus the Epistles of John are directed To the Angels of the seven Churches Thus the Elders are exhorted Act. 20. 28. To feed the Church of God over which they were set And in this sense the Remonstrants speak confidently That the word Church is most commonly used and that never or very seldom it comprehends the Officers also But this is not so for Mat. 18. Tell the Church by the Church must needs be meant Officers at least with the Church for they are said to bind and lose which power is given to Officers only It 's true they and so Grotius by Church understand a multitude or more in opposition to those two or three witnesses that were required before But the Context may easily be improved to overthrow that 1 Cor. 12. 28. God is there said to set in his Church some Pastors and Teachers that is as part but the chief part of the Church Even as the Starres are set in the firmament but as parts of the Heavens though the more noble and fulgent parts Again when the Apostle here writeth to the Church of Corinth he must needs comprehend the Officers as well as the People because he writeth about such duties wherein the Officers were interested as the censuring of the incestuous person he speaks also of Prophets which were extraordinary Officers in that Church and they are blamed for male-administration about the Sacrament of the Lords-Supper So that although Grotius thinketh that abuse was because they had no constituted Officers yet it 's plain they had some because they had the administration of the Sacraments Lastly The word Church is applied sometimes to an essential Church as it is called for a company of believers simply as such believing in Christ of which often in Scripture sometimes for an organized Church that is formed and stated in that godly order by a Ministry Government and Discipline conjoyned together So that they make a particular flock being bound to submit to their Pastors as their peculiar Pastors and Pastors bound to watch over them as their peculiar flock Whether indeed this Church of Corinth was one Congregational Church or one Church aggregated of several Congregations is disputed But of this in its time This Church of Corinth was formed and stated in some order though there were great abuses in it As for our common use of the word Church taking it for a place or the material building that is an improper speech but allowable by a Synecdoche as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth both the place and persons therein convened And although one or two learned men from 1 Cor. 11. would have the word used there for a place yet the arguments are not cogent for the people are properly the Church it 's they that Christ hath redeemed they are to be built up by Pastors and Teachers whereas the material Church is built by manual Artificers not needing an Apostle but a Carpenter This may suffice for Explication only let this be added that the Greek word relates to Gods calling it signifieth a Society called by God So that the Apostle directs his Epistle to that Society or company of persons that did come our from the Heathenish Idolatries and abominations that the other Corinthians lived in and did profess their faith in Christ with obedience to him From whence observe That a Church is a company called of God by the preaching of the Word to the profession of faith in Christ and an observation of all that solemn worship and Ordinances which Christ hath appointed with a life in external conformity thereunto This is a Church When you read of a Church at Jerusalem a Church at Corinth the seven Churches of Asia you are to understand such a company And this Doctrine about a Church is much to be insisted on People are generally carnal ignorant and prophane And although they would think it an high reproach to have the name of a Church denied them or to be cast out of the Church as so many Heathens yet they do not attend to the nature of a Church nor to the properties of those who are to be members thereof It is true there are vast and infinite Disputes about a Church and every sect or party is ready to monopolize and appropriate that name to them That they are only the Church But these great Disputes about it argue we should be more carefull to distinguish lest we take Babylon for Jerusalem lest we take that for Gods Temple which is indeed a den of thieves Doth not the Popish party glory in the name of a Church Do they not make it necessary to salvation to come into communion with it and yet it is the place that Gods people are called to come out of lest they partake both of her sins and punishments But let us examine the chief particulars in the Doctrine which is a popular deseription of a Church And First We say It is a Society or Company So that one man cannot be called a Church It 's absurd in the Papists that when they have lifted up the name of a Church like a Gorgons head to turn all men into stones that they must not mutter a word against it when you come to examine what this Church is at last it is but one man and that is the Pope What number goeth to make a Church is not defined To a formed organized Church there must be so many at least that Church duties which are essential may be performed and a distinction between Governours and governed maintained otherwise where two or three are there is a Church said Tertullian Again In that it is a Company we see That it is not lawfull for a man to think of serving God alone by himself when there is an opportunity of joyning to a Church You read Act. 3. and 4. as any persons were converted presently they joyned themselves to the Church It is true there may be such persecutions or other impediments that Christians have wandered up and down and could not enjoy publick or private meetings but this absence from Church-communion was an heavy burden on their spirits And
as it is said Davids heart smote him that is his conscience did witnesse against him and condemn him And because of that remorsus that regreting and displicency which conscience putteth forth Durand is singular in his opinion holding that the practical understanding is not the conscience only but the will likewise is included in it The Hebrew word Leb signifying the Heart doth also originally denote the sprinkling of the meal with leaven Thus the heart hath naturally some principles in it which are like leaven to it as speculative and practical axiomes concerning God and just and unjust In the New Testament likewise it is called the heart 1 John 3. 20. If our heart condemne us that is our conscience God is greater than our heart But no more of this here This conscience is here described by one special act it hath and that is To bear witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word in the Scripture is commonly used for that publick testimony and witness which either God did give unto the Gospel by miracles and signes or men by their publick profession and attestation Hence 1 Cor. 2. 1. the Gospel is called the testimony of God because so wonderfully confirmed by him So to men it is applied Act. 4. 3. The Apostles with great power gave witnesse of the Resurrection of Christ and because believers by their deaths did give the greatest testimony to the truths of God hence they are called Martyrs and their death is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Martyrdome in a principal sense Hence some have expounded that place Heb. 11. 4 39. where we render it The Elders obtained a good report of their Martyrdome They were made Martyrs because it is the passive sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sometimes the word is used metaphorically as James 5. 3. the rust of covetous and wicked rich mens gold and silver is said to be a witnesse against them But here it is used concerning the work of conscience within a man and is in other places compounded denoting some joynt-witnesse with another Romans 2. 15. Their conscience bearing witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Rom. 9. 1. My conscience also bearing me witnesse The Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though some think is not to be regarded yet it doth denote as most say a respect to God who is our Superiour and to whom our conscience doth attend and therefore called not Science but Conscience So that Gods witness and the witness of conscience are both conjoyned together yea seem to be but one testimony as it were Hence the very Heathens could say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Conscience is a God to every man Therefore Paul useth an equivalent expression in other places Rom. 1. 9. Phil. 1. 8. God is my witnesse Salmeron out of Bernard speaks of a two-fold testimony of the conscience Testimonium conscientiae perhibentis that which the conscience doth actively exhibit and Conscientiae percipientis that which it doth receive from the Spirit of God of which we read Rom. 8. 16. and in this later sense he understands it But we take both in viz. that witness which the conscience did actually give of Paul's sincerity But because this could not be done without the Spirit of God inabling thereunto therefore it is a witnesse received from Gods Spirit first and from that conscience is enabled to deliver it to us Now when so much rejoycing is attributed to the testimony of conscience you must take along with you who it is that speaketh thus The testimony of our conscience of Paul who was sanctified enlightned and guided by the Word otherwise there is a testimony of a deluded conscience of a secure conscience that speaketh peace when there is no peace and this doth not afford any true or solid ground of rejoycing it must be therefore the testimony of such a conscience which Paul had And so observe That the witnesse of our conscience rightly guided in acquitting of us is a ground of unspeakable comfort He that hath his conscience rightly clearing of him he need not care for all the accusations of the Devils in hell and wicked men upon the earth It breedeth confidence both towards God and towards men Towards God 1 Iohn 3. 21. If our hearts condemn us not we have confidence towards God and whatsoever we aske we receive of him This encourageth and imboldeneth in prayer And towards men As you see Paul justified himself by this when called before the Council and made to plead for himself Act. 23. 1. Yea the Heathens though they could never attain to a true spiritually sanctified conscience yet not to live according to the natural dictates thereof they accounted the only happinesse Nil conscire sibi was the onely thing that made happy And Hic murus aheneus esto Pindar called it The good nurse in our old age So great a matter is it to have the testimony of a good conscience void of offence for that is Mille testes more than all the testimonies in the world Seeing therefore men have such constant recourse to this witnesse within and their comfort is true or false according as that is guided Let us enquire first into the constituent or ingredient qualities of a rightly guided conscience And First There is necessarily required to a good and true testimony of our conscience That it take the word of God as a Rule to judge by to witnesse by to accuse by and to acquit by The conscience of a man is not the supream rule but an inferiour and therefore is Regula regulata as well as Regula regulans a rule to be ruled by an higher rule which is the Scripture To the Law to the testimony if they speak not according to this it is because there is no light in them Isa 8. 20. If a man pretend to never so much light within if he rejoyceth never so much in the light that he hath yet if it be not from the light of the Word if it be not examined tried and judged to be according to that it is but a false light a light that will end in darkness So then though conscience be a testimony yet you see that bath another testimony to be guided by though it be a Law in a man yet there is a superiour Law to that which is the word of God By this you may see what a rotten foundation they have to build their comforts upon who take up other rules for their conscience besides the Scripture These joyes are all but like the morning-dew Some make their rule in Religion to be the tradition of their Fathers The Papist doth so extoll tradition that they think that alone without Scripture is starre bright enough to guide us Paul's zeal while a persecutor seemed to be grounded much upon this because they were the traditions of his fathers And truly tradition is the greatest reason of most mens faith whether it be in a right way or a true But this
go rather than peace and quietness of a good conscience A Second Principle of the flesh which maketh men inconstant is An inordinate desire of Greatness and Honour above others They that walk by this must be black and white now say and than deny according as those are affected from whom they exspect Advancement This secret Ambition is accompanyed with a vehement heat and drought of the soul making a man restless till their desires be accomplished Neither may we think the Heathens onely to be blamed for these proud affectations We see even the Apostles twice contending about Primacy and Superiority which is the greater wonder if we consider the meanness of their own condition they were in as also of Christ their Master and yet more wonder it is if we remember how frequently our Saviour did inform them of Persecutions and saddest Calamities for his sake We read likewise of Diotrephes 3 John 9. who loved to have the preheminence and would not own no not the Apostle John himself Now those that walk by such Principles of pride and ambition they must needs be like a materia prima ready to receive any form They flatter they dissemble they commend they dispraise and thus debased they are that afterwards they may be exalted Now nothing is more odious and abominable to a sincere man than such mutability and uncertainty Hence Christians of old were called the just and holdfast men It was not thus with John Baptist of whom saith our Saviour What went ye out to see a read shaken with the winde No he did faithfully and constantly discharge his duty without any fear of men But how many may we go out to see as reeds shaken with every winde And as the reed must grow in some mire so must such mutable persons have some carnal respect to encourage them Those that climbe up to high places are apt to have their heads grow giddy and to be unsteadfast so that when men lay this as a foundation I will have Preferment I will have Honor and greatness though it damn me this man walketh upon slippery ice and no wonder if he often fall 3. Another carnal Principle which maketh Inconstancy in all our wayes is Pleasing of men When a man maketh this his Rule he must change often and be as a shadow which moveth whoily according to the motion of the body stoopeth when that stoopeth and is upright when that is upright The Apostle doth notably disclaim such a sinfull distemper saying Galat. 1. 10. If I should please men I could not be the servant of Christ Man is a mutable creature subject to different apprehensions to different affections loving one thing one day and hating it at another Then must they also who would please men be prepared for all formes and postures insomuch that a man cannot live in greater bondage and slavery tan to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a peoples ape or to study the humouring of those we have to deal with If thou art guilty of this man-pleasing thou art never able to do thy duty thou canst not reprove and punish sin thou canst not be just and righteous in thy place Our Saviour said to his Disciples How can you belive which receive glory of one another John 5. 44. and do not seek the glory of God only Certainly till we study to please God alone in our lives and aim at his glory who is alwayes the same we must be unstable as water and be a lyar to every man We read of some who did believe in Christ yet dared not to make Profession thereof for fear of the Jews Here was a desire to please men rather than God But can the good word and favour of men deliver thee from the wrath of God in thy conscience and eternal torments hereafter When Judas pleased the Chief Priests in betraying of Christ could they comfort him in the Agonies of his conscience yea when he bewailed his sin They say What is that to us look thou to that Mat. 17. 4. Such miserable tormentors instead of comforters will all those men be whom thou hast pleased to displease God 5. Time-serving is a Principle which whosoever walketh by must be as a weather-Cock that is turned with every winde The people of Israel are remarkeable for this Inconstancy under wicked and Idolatrous Kings then they erected Altars they adorned Images and then immediately under Religious and Reforming Kings they would destroy the Idolls and deface the Images they had set up It is true all change and alteration in Religion is not to be blamed yea sometimes it is to be encouraged When Luther and Melancton gave over their former corrupt Doctrines and superstitious Practices the Papists condemned them for Turn-coats and Apostate persons when yet this change was necessary So that as they say in Philosophy there is alteratio corruptiva and perfectiva a destructive change and a perfective change thus it is also in Divinity and the Latter is absolutely commanded by God when Errors or Prophaneness have like a gangrene spread over the whole Church but of that in its time We are now speaking of that sinfull change whereby people accommodate themselves to the times they live in and therefore judg of truth judg of the holy things of God as Jeroboam did with subordination to State-Interests This is the great carnal Policy that the Wise-men of the world admire as if the true Doctrines of Christ were not alwayes the same as if a thing might be the worship of God one time and Idolatry at another as if the same thing might be the Doctrine of Christ at one time and Heresie at another as if that of Cusanus were true though otherwise not a very bad man That the Scripture is to be understood according to the present state and Affairs of the Church and therefore saith he We are not to wonder if at one time some Customes and Usages be exacted in a Church which at another time are to be decryed and refused But certainly the Scripture is a Rule of Faith and Manners in all Ages in all Changes and Revolutions Though Kingdomes and States may alter yet the Scriptures are the same still and what was once the Doctrine Worship and Order of Christ is still the same Lastly That all Particulars may be comprehended in one To live according to the Principles of the Flesh is To set up our selves as the Alpha and Omega to enjoy our selves and to use all things yea God himself in subordination thereunto Thus this love of a mans self even to the hatred of God is that which maketh us put on multiform shapes it is that which maketh us bend and bow and comply in all things For if we did love the Honour and glory of God more than our own selves as we ought to do then we should not attend to self-advantages but Gods glory and honor So that we may say This Self-love is the Beelzebub sin it
did all was new their service new their Doctrine new but the iniquity and the corruption of the times made it appear to be so And indeed Popery is properly the great Novellisme for the Popish Doctrines the Popish Worship began to creep in when the Churches of Christ began to degenerate from their Primitive Institution The change then that is many times in the face of Religion which doth so offend many is not indeed so but in appearance Those truths of God were formerly professed in the Church only an Eclipse did arise which obscured the light of the Sun As then the Sun is not changed after an Eclipse we do not see a new Sun thus it is also with the truths of Christ the Reformers do not bring new truths only the darkness is dispelled and we see them which were long before It is with us as with men whose heads are distempered we think such and such things run round whereas indeed it is a distemper upon us and it is a signe that we have been corrupted when old truths seem new to us 4. We may therefore truly conclude that antiquity and consent are inseparable properties of a true Church That Church which retaineth Doctrines of the greatest Antiquity and which doth agree with the Primitive Apostolical Churches that must needs be a true Church for truth is alwayes alike That cannot be true Doctrine in one age which is not in another though men are apt to be changed by the times they live in yet Gods truth cannot be When therefore the Papists bring antiquity and consent as notes of a true Church we deny they can or are to be called notes because it is not Antiquity barely but antiqvity in the true Doctrine nor Consent meerly so but consent with the Primitive Churches Doctrine So that True Doctrine is properly the note of the Church only we add that Antiquity and Consent with the Primitive times do inseparably follow the true Doctrine Now the ground of this certainty and equality of the truths of Christ is because they are Gods truths Christs truths if they were the truths of mens making then they might alter and change as they please then it might be formed reformed and transformed into all the shapes that mens Interests could put them upon then truth might alter according to the climates customes and advantages of men then truth might be one thing at Rome and another thing at Constantinople then we might say such things were truth in one age and ye the contrary truth in another Popery was truth in Queen Maries dayes and Protestantisme in Queen Elizabeths And truly some men are so Atheistical or self-seeking that they account truth as the Apostle said some did godliness even outward gain and therefore when such an opinion is gainfull then it is truth but when not so then it is Heresie Use of Instruction How odious Instability and Inconstancy is in matter of Religion whether it be in private Christians or publick Officers It plainly discovereth that not the truth of Christ but some other uncertain motive prevaileth with thee either thy profit or thy applause or the times or customes or the Lawes of the Land or some other mutable respect doth work upon thee and if so then thou canst not but be a reed shaken with every winde of Doctrine Thou art then but as an Instrument of musick making no other sound nor no longer then thou art breathed into Profit will make thee a Papist profit will make thee a protestant profit will make thee an Heretick How contrary is such a fickle temper to the nature of Faith which is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Use 2d of Instruction How false that position is of some Papists That the Church may make Articles of Faith and that the Authority of the Church maketh the Authority of the Scripture at least towards us So that the Scriptures would have no more authority then Titus Livius or Aesops fables in respect of our duty to believe were it not for the Churches Authority No less blasphemous is that other comparison of another Papist resembling the Scripture to a nose of wax If so then no wonder if they make what truths and what religions they please then we may call it the Popes truth the Churches truth and not the truth of God It is a ridiculous passage of a Papist Ford against Taylor saying that it is probable the Church will make that Opinion about the immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary to be an Article of Faith As if the Church could make that necessary to be believed if we would be saved that was not alwayes so Why may she not as well make a new Bible set up a new Christ as they establish a new Article of Faith SERM. CXXIV Of Gods Promises to man 2 COR. 1. 20. For all the Promises of God in him are yea and in him amen unto the glory of God by us THis Verse is a further confirmation of the constancy and immutability of the Lord Christ and so by consequence of Pauls doctrine For that Christ is unchangeable he proveth in that all the promises which God hath made they receive their fullnesse and complement in him and so are therefore true because fullfilled both in him and by him This is the Apostles sence in this assertion which Calvin doth well call memorabilis sententia c. a memorable sentence and one of the chiefest Articles of our Religion for herein is all our faith and confidence seated that in Christ God maketh his gracious promises to us by whose efficacy and impetration they be accomplished so that a promise is fullfilled not because of any worth or dignity in us but because of of the fulnesse and worth that is in Christ 1. The words may be taken as an entire Proposition wherein we have the subject and predicate with the amplification of it from the finall cause The subject is described from the nature of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 promises 2. From the universality and extent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all promises as many as are made 3. From the efficient cause the promises of God 4. The predicate are yea and are amen in him Of which in their order Let us begin with the Subject 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the promises many times in the plurall number at other times in the singular for indeed the covenant of grace is but one large promise or an ocean emptying it self into many streams yet sometimes called promises because of the many things both spirituall and temporall that are particularly promised by God the summe whereof is contained in that great promise or Magna Charta of the Church I will be their God and they shall be my people or else it may be promises in the plurall number because of the frequent repetition and reiteration of the grand promise of Christ to the Church Now the word promise is sometimes used for the
be applyed to you how can ye have comfort if ye live in the waies of sinne doe not any thing that may chase away this comfort if we preach never such comfortable truths if thou by thy negligence and unmortified walking dost deprive thy self of consolation then know the blame lieth in thy self and not in the Ministery Thou criest give me a word of comfort how can we comfort him whom God would not have comforted SERM. CXLVII God only the Lord of our Christian Faith 2 COR. 1. 24. For by faith ye stand THis last clause saith Calvin other Interpreters either take no notice of or else do not clearly instruct about it for whereas it is plain by the causall particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is brought in as an argument of something preceding it is very difficult to finde out the reason Those Interpreters that take notice of it are divided Some do make it a reason of the words immediatly foregoing Paul was a helper of their joy because they stood firmly in the faith for although there were some who denied the resurrection yet that was not the doctrine of the Chuch in general nor was it puhlikely professed by them It is true many abuses there were in practice both civill and religious yet because they did firmly retain the true faith therefore it was that he would not wholly cast them off as no Church Their true doctrine which they professed made him the more hopeful of them and certainly the pure sound faith professed by a Church though otherwise greatly corrupted maketh it to have the essence and life of a Church and withall suggesteth hope that God in time will make them an holy practical Church as well as a sound Orthodox one Hence Paul in his first Epistle to the Thessalonians c. 3. v. 5 6 7. doth much rejoyce in their faith that they stood stedfast therein When I could no longer forbear I sent to know your faith As also Timotheus brought him glad tidings of their faith And again we were comforted in our affliction by your faith and this interpretation is very probable and not to be wholly rejected But then a second is more probable and that maketh it a reason of the former part of the verse We have not dominion over your faith for by faith ye stand stedfast Insomuch that if I Paul or an Angel from heaven should preach unto you another doctrine yet you beleeve in the truth as Gods truth and not mans truth So that God alone hath the dominion over your hearts in beleeving Thus it is a very fit and proper reason Hence Heinsius thinketh there is a transposition of the words which is usuall with Paul and that they should be inserted before the later clause thus Not that we have dominion over your faith for by faith you stand Whether we reade it objectively you stand in the faith or instrumentally by faith you stand it is not much materiall Neither are we to render it in the past signification you have stood because it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek as if the Apostle did imply they formerly had indeed stood in the faith though lately they grew wavering for it is usuall to use the preterperfect for the present especially when a continuance or perseverance is intended as Matth. 20 Why stand ye here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idle all the day long Both these interpretations may be conjoyned but because the latter is the most considerable Therefore I shall insist on that and observe That the Christian faith is of that nature that it doth respect and relate unto God only We believe not in men but in God Whether we speak of dogmatical or fiducial faith they cannot have any other bottome to stand upon but the authority of God himself Thus saith the Lord Thus it is written is the ground of all true Christian faith which truth deserve●h explication in some particular Propositions As First There is an humane and there is a divine faith which onely deserveth the name of Christian faith and to which onely the promises of God doe belong An humane faith I call that when men doe beleeve principles of Religion meerly upon humane motives that is the ultimate reason and motive into which their faith is resolved These humane motives are manifold as the Authority of the Church the Authority of Ministers and Pastors our education by parents custome and universality as also the Laws and Edicts of a Magistrate commanding such a Religion to be received and no other Now whosoever maketh this the chief reason of the profession of his faith is upon no better ground than the Turkes is for their Mahumetan the Papists for their Popish faith Insomuch that many Protestants Turkes and Papists though they exceedingly differ in the materials of Religion yet agree in the formali motivo they believe so and so because brought up in it because commanded by their Civil Magistrates It is that which the Papists upbraid us with that our Religion is but a Parliament-Religion or a Queen Elizabeths-Religion because when they established it the Land generally received it Now to this we say That no doubt the generality of people except such as are enlightned by Gods Spirit doe receive even the Christian or true Religion but upon civil and humane respects and therefore when Emperours have been Arrians the people have been Arrians when the Kings of Israel were Idolaters the inhabitants became Idolaters And thus when the Kings of the Earth have been Papists the people have been Papists also So that they cannot object any thing more against the Protestant Religion than we may against the Papist Onely we adde a further position which introduceth a divir●e faith which they overthrow and so by consequence teach no more than an Lumane faith For we hold That every private believer is bound to have an explicite faith of the things necessary to salvation and this faith we say is knowledge the ground whereof is the Authority and Testimony of God in the Scripture So that we doe not believe in Magistrates nor in Ministers nor in the Church trusting our faith and salvation upon them but the word of God onely whereas the Papists do expresly affirm That a private Christians faith is enough to salvation if he content himself with this That he believeth as the Church believeth never troubling himself in reading of books or searching of the Scripture As Valentia's known instance of a Merchant brought in by him disputing What Religion he should be of doth evidently declare So then a Papist as a Papist cannot reach any higher than to an humane faith For though they will not yeeld the Authority of the Church to be an humane Authority yet both reason and experience doth fully convince that But let us come to our own people and sadly bewail the ignorance and stupidity of Protestants in general who are not moved by any divine motives or Scripture-respects to imbrace
their Religion but onely are perswaded herein by external motives very few being able to give a reason of the faith or hope that is in them which yet the Apostle Peter requireth of every man and woman 1 Pet. 3. 15. What reason have they but their fathers example and the Lawes of the Land So that it is meerly accidental that they do receive a true Religion for it had been Heretical and Idololatrical it had been all one to them they would have entertained it however But to this particular you must observe one Caution It 's one thing to speak of the Introductory and Preparatory means of faith and another thing of the ultimate and formal motive or reason why I do believe We do readily grant That the true Churches Ministery may prepare for a divine faith What is Paul and what is Apollo but Ministers by whom ye believe saith the Scripture 1 Corinth 3. Thus Timothy had his faith by the godly education of his Mother and Grandmother Yea John 4. we reade of the woman of Samaria instrumental to bring many people to believe on Christ onely yet observe that expression vers 42. Now we believe not because of thy saying for we have heard him our selves Godly Ministers then and godly parents may be greatly helpfull to us in true believing but then the reason and chief motive is from the Divine Authority of the Scripture declaring this truth We doe not believe in Ministers nor in the Church And thus you must understand that passage of Jehoshaphats Chron. 20. 20. Believe in the Lord your God so shall ye be established believe the Prophets so shall ye prosper Believe in God ultimately but believe the Prophets ministerially So that it would be a fanatick presumption out of a perswasion that onely worketh faith thereby to cast off those usefull helps and means which he hath appointed for the producing of faith In the next general place we are to know That two things are necessarily required to the working of a divine faith The one Effectively The other Objectively The principle that worketh faith in us and the reason or motive thereof The principle that worketh faith in us is God alone None can make the heart of man to believe Scripture-truths but God onely Hence Faith is the gift of God so some are said To believe through grace Act. 18. 27. Is it not plain in the Pharisees notwithstanding they heard our Saviour preach and also saw his wonderfull miracles yet to them it was not given to believe or to know the mysteries of God but to others more unlearned and contemptible it was Hence it falleth out that the most learned men are many times most Atheistical or at least Sceptical and doubting in Religion Insomuch that we are to be importunate with God in prayer that he would both work and increase faith in us Hence Christ is said to be both the authour and finisher of our faith Hebr. 12. 2. It 's the mighty power of God so enlightning and enabling thee that thou doest adhere to the truth For how many specious arguments may be produced against the faith How mutable are many in forsaking the faith they once professed and turn Heretical So that it is a special work of Gods grace to make thee stand firme in the faith especially in times of temptation To be a pillar in the Temple of the Lord and not a reed shaken with every winde is a glorious preservation For it 's plain that it's fancy errour or humour that lead many in Religion and not this holy precious faith Again The second thing necessarily concurring to a divine faith is a Divine testimony it must be Gods word We must have the Doctrine from Christ else our faith is but an humane faith and so our Religion but an humane Religion The Thessalonians are commended by Paul That they received the Word not as the word of men but as it is indeed the word of God and when so received it effectually worketh in those that believe Alas what is the reason there is so little holinesse so little godlinesse It is because there is so little divine faith The truths we preach are not received as the word of God we look no further or higher than to a man in these things we doe not hear and tremble we doe not beleeve and tremble we rise not up with heart-reverence as Eglon though an Heathen did to Ehud when he said He had a message from the Lord. In the third place In that the true Christian faith floweth from such a divine principle and ariseth from such a divine motive Hence it is that no kinde of persons have an absolute Sovereignty over the faith of a believer and whosoever doe arrogate it to themselves they assume the property of the Almighty and most infinite God They arrogate to themselves the peculiar and incommunicable property of Christ which is to be the Head of the Church and a Law-giver in respect of any Doctrine Worship or Ordinances It is true there have been such especially the Pope of Rome who hath thus arrogated to himself setting himself in the Temple of God as God but the blasphemies of such have been written as it were in their fore-heads and hereby they are justly deemed to be a Political or Church-Antichrist as there is a Doctrinal Antichrist But we affirme That no kinde of persons can have dominion over a mans faith seeing it hath such a peculiar reference to God First Not spiritual and Church Rulers or Ecclesiastical Governours If the Apostles would not assume it who then may It is true there are several Texts in Scripture which command us to hear our Pastours to obey them to submit unto them to have them highly in esteeme for their workes sake Such as doe not hear them are to be accounted as Heathens and Publicans They are endowed with power to Admonish and rebuke sharply Yea where obstinacy is in sinners To cast them out of the Church But all this doth not arise to a Magisterial Domination over mens consciences And although they have power to binde and loose which God himself promiseth to confirme in Heaven yet all this is declaratively and ministerially onely How farre there is a decisive power in Councils to extinguish all errours and heresies is not here to be debated This is enough that as no particular person so no Councils though never so oecomenical can say we have dominion over your faith And Secondly No civil power hath dominion over any mans faith No Magistrate can make Articles of Faith can appoint another worship of God or other Sacraments than Christ hath appointed Faith is not Caesar's gift neither can any man believe Praecisè quia vult as Mirandula declareth meerly because he will How farre Magistrates have power in matters of Religion is greatly disputed and determined by the excesse in some and by the defect in others But however no Kings or Emperours can say
of them confess that Paul was peremptorily elected and that we are not to judge of mens ordinary conversion by that which was extraordinary Indeed we grant that many things were wonderfull and extraordinary in Paul's conversion It is not for men now to expect such a Vision and voice from Heaven immediately speaking to them but this we urge That if God could do thus on Paul's heart insuperably and irresistibly working on it making it of unwilling willing and yet not the natural liberty of Paul's will destroyed then God may still demonstrate the same efficacy of grace and yet man in conversion not be turned into a stock or stone as they charge the Orthodox As Paul then had been a sinner above measure so he had also grace exceeding gracious in an overflowing manner to him Therefore how frequently and joyfully doth Paul speak of the riches of grace and Gods unspeakable grace to him alwayes debasing himself as the greatest of sinners and the least of all Saints not worthy to be called an Apostle and magnifying grace alwayes running out like the Sea when he comes to speak of Christ and grace In the third place His serviceableness that was as wonderfull I laboured more than they The Heathens Hercules is not comparable to him To read how much he did and how much he suffered for Christ may make us stand amazed yet still he saith Not I but the grace of God 1 Cor. 15. 10. Chrysostome doth infinitely expatiate upon all occasions in the praise of Paul but Paul himself was like Moses whose face shined gloriously but he did not know it And thus Paul though above all others in doing and suffering for Christ yet accounts of himself as nothing and gives all to the grace of God as none preached more than he did so none wrote more Epistles than he did he took care of all the Churches Thus he who formerly did his utmost to root out the Church of God is now as zealous and active to establish and propagate it So that you see three wonderfull things in Paul his sinne his conversion and his godly life afterwards In the next place let us consider what Reasons there may be why God will choose such great sinners out of their high impieties especially to be Apostles and Officers in the Church of God seeing that the Scripture in those qualifications for an Elder requireth That he be without blame and one of a good report 1 Tim. 3. 5. Therefore in the Apostles who were the chief Officers called by the Ancient Otuli Dei Sedes Christi and Oculi Ecclesiae this was much more to be expected But there are these Reasons may be given First Hereby the power and strength of God is made evident If men of civility only and of ingenuous principles were brought home to Christ it might be thought something of men did promote our salvation but when there is a direct and violent opposition in a mans wayes yet to become converted and obedient this may make us acknowledge with Paul The exceeding greatness of his power to us who believe Ephes 1. 19. And if setting aside some extraordinary circumstances there is the same kind of power seen in every mans conversion that was in Pauls then it 's plain that God doth not onely use moral suasions as Arminians would have it but also efficacious operations So that we may bless God for this president of Paul's conversion we may all by that see what is done in the heart of every man when turned to God We do justly admire the power of God in Creation and in all the wonderfull deliverances the Church hath but the power of God upon mens hearts making them to love and delight in those things which formerly they hated This may make us to sing Psalms in the admiration of Gods great power about the new creation as well as the old creation of the world Secondly As Gods Power is hereby evidenced so also his Wisdom and that in a two-fold respect 1. Converting Paul at that very time when he was in the height of his spirit acting with the greatest violence against Christ. This season was most admirable for hereby it did plainly appear That it was not of Paul that willed or runned but of Gods good pleasure Hence Ephes 1. Paul speaking of Gods predestination doth over and over again resolve all into his good pleasure and that he doth all things according to the goodnesse of his will What then will become of that vocatio congrua so much boasted of by some as if men were converted because God did fore-see that if they were put into such a condition with such circumstances then they would readily consent to Gods Call But was Paul's conversion accompanied with a vocatio congrua Did God stay till he had a fit bait or snare to catch Paul in Now all was here the clean contrary Paul was never in higher opposition against God never were the doors of his heart more fastened up with iron-barres than at this time and then and never till then doth God convert him That as it is with Gods Church he never helps till all things be desperate therefore he is called The God that raiseth the dead 2 Cor. 1. and he that calleth things that are not as if they were Thus many times it falleth out when men are more treasuring up their sin and adding higher degree of opposition even then God takes off their hearts and thereby the Wisdome of God is the more seen of such crooked timber to make so excellent a building To raise up Lazarus when he is not only dead but buried and rot●ing in the grave this makes us astonished at Gods Wisdome And then in a second respect Gods Wisdome is seen Because such fire-brands pluckt out of the fire are fittest to kindle a fire in the hearts of others When we shall be able to say Lo here is a man as prophane as bitter and cruel a scoffer and enemy of all godliness as ever you were He was one of your company you took wicked counsel together you were often drunk or unclean together and now behold what a change is made upon him He prayeth he humbleth himself he cryeth out of his former conversation if he had the whole world given him he would not be such an one as once Certainly when God doth thus it doth wonderfully shame and confound all wicked men What a conviction was this to all other Pharisees when it could be said Behold here Paul a Pharisee one of your own Sect as desperately cruel and malicious as any of you Oh but behold how he is changed he builds up that way he once destroyed Now he counts all those things you dote on so much but dung and dross in comparison of the knowledge of Jesus Christ. 3. In converting of such above all God sheweth the freeness and meer riches of his grace For what can Paul say to justifie himself with Where were
God as the elder brother did the Prodigals conversion It is disputed by Casuists Whether a prophane ungodly Minister formerly though now truly converted is to be continued in his Ministry at least in that place where he hath lived so scandalously Some are rigid for the negative Yea the Novatians of old would not admit any Christian that had grossely sinned though repenting to Church-communion Others are more mollified and hold such Ministers truly manifesting their conversion and repentance ought to be received and that as Ministers again But the determination of this Case concerning a particular person would be difficult because circumstances may much alter the matter But in the general we see Christ appointing Peter to feed his sheep though he had apostatized in so dreadfull a manner Neither may we runne to that absurd and impious Position of some who said the Apostles delivered a more perfect way of Discipline than Christ did because say they Christ received Peter again and gave him Commission for his Apostleship through the whole world In the Old Testament David and Solomon are used as Pen-men of the holy Scripture though polluted once with sinne in a scandalous manner And here we see Paul though formerly a notorious sinner and adversary to the Gospel yet is appointed by God to be a chosen vessel to carry his name And certainly the receiving of such after their serious and publick satisfaction to the Church of God or to ministerial imploiment may be of great use For hereby he will be the more industrious and diligent to reduce other sinners especially such as he hath been an occasion to lead into sinne Thus David promiseth Psal 51. Then will I teach transgressors thy Law And Christ bids Peter When he is converted to confirm his Brethren Oh what zeal and holy revenge will seize upon such a mans heart to make all the world see that he would now set up the way of Christ as he did once the Devils way especially such as he hath been a means to seduce and harden in sin over those he will weep and mourn How greatly will this lie upon his heart such it may be will lie damned in Hell and I have been the cause of it It may be some are now in Hell cursing the day that ever I was a Minister or Pastor to them because I encouraged and made their hearts bold and glad in wickedness Oh then if such agonies and estuations be in their souls in what pain and travail will they be to snatch such out of the fire whom they have been a cause to thrust in Doth God sometimes call even great sinners and that to eminent honour in his Church Then here we see a notable encouragement even for the most prophane to hearken to these offers of grace Might not you justly have expected that God should have made your condition as hopeless as the Devil Though God would out of pity have converted some of mankind yet he might have barred out all such notorious and prophane sinners as thou art But oh the goodness of God that will not have thee to say My sins are greater than can be forgiven I am a viler person than grace ever can or will convert What May the Prodigal sonne not onely be received into favour but the Father will runne and meet him weep over him put honour upon him Why then doth not this kindle a fire in your bowels Why do you not cry even me even me Lord the chiefest sinner of many thousands do thou draw to thy own self From the second consideration of Paul be exhorted to pray to God that he would raise up many Pauls in his Church godly and learned Ministers that by godliness may subdue sinne and by learning may conquer heresies such as these are both burning and shining lights such as these are Stars indeed both for the light they give and the purity of their conversation Happy is the Church of God when such Stars shine in her If we have godly Ministers and not learned then the subtil Papist and Heretick will be ready to prevail If we have learned but not godly then all holy order will beneglected then prophaneness and impiety will lift up its head but both together make a blessed Church SERM. III. Paul's Name being prefixed to his Epistle shews it to be of Divine Authority though of it self not a sufficient Argument to prove it The Pen-men were only Instruments God the principal Author of the Scriptures and therefore we should rest satisfied with their style and method and not question their Authority How to arm our selves against the Devil and all Hereticks opposing the Divinity of the Scriptures 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ c. HItherto we have considered Paul under a two-sold respect there remaineth one more observable thing from the mentioning of himself which is not to be omitted For it may be demanded Why he prefixeth his name in this Preface And the Answer is That as he expresseth his calling of Apostleship to bring Authority to his person so he also mentioneth his name to obtain credit to what he doth write that they may be assured this is his Epistle and not sent to them by any other For if the Corinthians were ignorant of the Authour of it or that he was not one who was guided by the Holy Ghost they would not have much regarded it So that from hence observe Inasmuch that Paul ' s name is set to this Epistle it is thereby of Canonical and Divine Authority and so ought to be received with all faith and obedience Paul's Epistles were never doubted of except that to the Hebrews which is attributed to him as the Epistle of James the 2d of Peter the two last Epistles of John and the Revelation have been but were alwayes received into the Canon Indeed there were the Elioniti called so say some from the Hebrew word because they were poor and simple in understanding These with such succeeding them in many opinions did reject all Paul's Epistles not but that they thought they were made by him only they rejected his Doctrine because they thought he was an adversary to the Law and contrary to Moses This truth about the Canonical Authority of this Book and the rest in the Bible is of very great concernment not only because of the weighty controversies and disputes both of old and alate herein but also because of a practical consideration For though men do generally profess themselves to be Christians and say They acknowledge the holy Bible as of Divine Authority yet where is the man almost that liveth as if he did believe it to be a true Book For doth any wicked man that goeth on in his impenitent wayes believe the Word of God to be true that condemneth him that forbids and threatens his wayes that tels him assuredly that if it be true and the Word of God without reformation he will be as assuredly damned
as if he were in Hell already Can a man then believe this to be Gods Word and yet be so desperately mad as to live in a full contrariety to it If therefore this very Epistle be received as the Word of God that it 's no Apocryphal or humane Invention but Paul wrote it as inspired and directed by the Holy Ghost How can ye how dare ye reject the counsel and admonitions contained therein both as you are a Church and as you are particular persons But to enlarge this Doctrine consider these things First That the meer prefixing of a name though of some holy Authour is not enough barely of it self to confirm the Divine Authority of the Scripture For although indeed most of the Books both in the Old and New Testament have their names prefixed yet some of them have not as of Judges So in the New Testament the Epistle to the Hebrews hath not the name of its Authour But these are few only in respect of those whose Authours are known All the Prophets begin their Prophecies with their Names and the Authority they have by God that greater faith may be given to what they deliver If then the Authour of some Books be not known yet if these Books have all those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and marks which other Books have for their Canonical Authority then they are to be received as the Word of God Therefore I say a meer Inscription of the Name without other signs is not enough for there are false Gospels that go under the name of Thomas and Barnabas yea there is a third Epistle said to be of Paul to the Corinthians and Paul's Epistles to Seneca are mentioned by Austin and Hierom with some respect though both Papists and Protestants reject them as Apocryphal We must therefore besides the Name consider those other Arguments which prove the Divine Authority of the Scripture and see whether they be in it or not It doth appear that even in Paul's time there were some deceivers who would counterfeit Letters as if written by Paul and set his Name thereunto to get the more Authority This he informeth the Thessalonians of 2 Thess 2. 2. That they should not be shaken in mind by word or letter as from him c. You see there were some that preached the instant approach of Christs coming and they alledged Paul for it Paul said so and Paul wrote so Hence it is that to prevent such mistakes he doth so often mention his own hand in writing The salutation of me Paul with mine own hand 1 Cor. 16. 21. Gal. 6. 11. Col. 4. 18. 2 Thes 3. 17. Phil. 1. 9. he put his own hand as well as his own name to his Epistles Secondly Consider that Paul and so all other Pen-men of the holy Scripture they were not the principal Authours but instruments used by God and that not in a general or common way As when godly men make Sermons or write Books but in a peculiar and extraordinary manner So that there could not be any mistake or errour This is witnessed by Paul 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 given by inspiration All Scripture And although the Books of the Old Testament were it may be then only written yet it holds by proportion of all that shall afterwards be written Peter also confirmeth this 2 Pet. 1. 21. For the Prophese came not of old time by the will of man but holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost The whole Word of God then came not by mens inventions neither was it any designe in them to make such a Canon or Rule for men to walk by but they were inspired by God both in the speaking and writing of it so that both for matter and words they were infallibly guided And therefore though Chrysostome and others do admit of some repugnancy in the holy Writers of the Bible in matters of lesse moment and say That this makes more to prove the Divine Authority of the Bible because hereby it doth appear that they did not all conspire and agree together yet this is dangerous to hold so For if they might erre in matters of Less moment why not in greater Besides the Text saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All Scripture that is the whole Scripture in all the parts of it So that the Bible it 's Gods Book it comes from him he hath commanded it as a Rule in which we must search and by which we are to order our lives Oh then with what reverence and respect should we receive it There we see the mind of God the will of God who would not think that there should be nothing done in the Church of God but what is according to the Bible the Doctrine of the Bible the Worship of the Bible the good Order of the Bible Yea that there should be nothing done in Nations in Cities in Towns in Villages in Families but what the Bible commands For that being the Word of God all Laws all humane Authority and Power are to submit to that And certainly this is an infinite mercy That in all things necessary to salvation we may know the will of God what he would have us to do It 's not then Paul or Peter but God himself whose Authority you despise when you will not obey the commands in their writings for they are but the Pen-men or rather those that did dictate it for Paul had some others sometimes to write his Epistles as it 's thought Tertius wrote that to the Romans Therefore because he wrote that to the Galatians with his own hand he takes notice of it Gal. 6. 11. that thereby they might be the more earnest against those false teachers that would bring in the Ceremonial Rites for Justification yet though the Holy Ghost did thus inspire and direct the holy Writers thereof both for matter and words that doth not hinder but that it was in a sutable way to their Gifts and Parts Therefore there is a great difference between the Prophet Isaiah's and Amos's Prophesies in respect of the style and so of Luke and John Hence thirdly Seeing the Scripture is thus inspired by God and the Pen-men were moved by him in the composing of it this should teach us to rest satisfied in the style and method of it For the style because it hath not the florid and Rhetorical Ornaments that humane Authours have therefore some have disdained it Yea how many had rather read some quaint English Books or Poets or Oratours rather than that Oh be ashamed of that curiosicy and vanity of thine if thou art not ashamed to believe in a crucified God in Christ though born in a manger Why of such a Scripture that doth in a plain but majesticall manner relate these things They say where mines of Gold are there groweth little Grass and few Flowers Thus where divine and holy matter is affectation of words and humane eloquence would be a
largely for one that is sent and so in an eminent manner is applied to Christ himself Heb. 3. 1. Yea some say it 's used generally for any Messenger and they instance in Phil. 2. 25. where Epaphreditus is said to be the Philippians messenger 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so it seemeth by the Translation our Translators understood it but Salmasius doth vehemently contend pleading also the consent of the Ancients that it 's to be understood of an Apostle and that Paul never useth the word but of eminent and chief Officers in the Church so that he is called the Philippians Apostle because he was a special fellow-labourer with Paul in planting of that Church Therefore he distinguisheth of Apostles making two kinds of them and indeed the Scripture plainly insinuateth it The primary-Apostles those who were immediately called by Christ being twelve in number Or secondary and these were sent by the Apostles They were the Apostles Apostles For seeing that many came in at the Apostles preaching insomuch that they were not able to manage all things themselves they therefore assumed as assistants others whom they called Apostles Therefore 2 Cor. 11. 5. and Chap. 13. 11. we read of some that are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the chiefest Apostles So that the name was given to others besides the eminent twelve And of these Salmasius and Illyricus understand that place Ephes 4. 11. where the Apostle saith God had set in his Church some Apostles c. that is say they some choice and eminent Teachers But Salmasius by these secondary Apostles seemeth to mean the Evangelists whereas those are distinguished in that enumeration It 's enough that others were called Apostles besides the twelve and that they were Coadjutors with them in the planting and propagating of the Gospel Now the Apostle Paul though he was none of the twelve immediately called by Christ yet because he had such an extraordinary Call afterwards by Christ while glorified in Heaven which none else had but he therefore is justly reckoned with the other and so accounted as the thirteenth Apostle Thus that which was of such exceeding rich grace and so extraordinary a priviledge to Paul yet he was not pussed up with it but 1 Cor. 15. 9. makes a new Greek word He was less than the least and looks upon himself as an abortive and one born out of due time Observe That Christ in the first planting of the Christian Church did appoint extraordinary Officers which he called Apostles That as God in the first plantation of the people of Israel when he brought them out of Aegypt and imbodied them together did guide them and provide for them in an extraordinary way which did wholly cease when they came to be setled in Canaan Thus did the Lord Christ in the beginning of his Church use many extraordinary things as Officers and Miracles which now have no more continuance though the advantage of these doth still belong to us For those very miracles though wrought long since and those extraordinary Officers are yet of spiritual influence That Christ did appoint Apostles and how appeareth in their first Institution of them Luke 6. 13. and Matth. 10. 2. and this he did of large bowels and compassions to those whom he would save They were sent as so many Embassadours to woe and beseech people in Christs stead to be reconciled with the Father He did not take a way by immediate inspiration and efficacy upon mens hearts as he might have done For he that could cure the dead though he were distant from them could also have poured his Spirit upon all flesh though bodily absent from him yet he was pleased to use this mediation of man as being more suitable and fit instruments for to work upon us To improve this Doctrine consider First That it is observed by learned men That our Saviour in the edification and building of the Christian Church did not follow the Jewish Church Government which was formerly appointed by God viz. by an high Priest and chief Priests with the Levites under them Therefore the Officers of Christs Church are not to be called Priests or Levites though sometimes the Ancients call the Elders and Deacons so but that is by allusion onely For as was said our Saviour did not propound that form in the Old Testament to follow So that all those endeavours which have been used to conforme the Church of Christ to the Jewish in Government and Ceremonial Worship as to have a Pope because an high Priest to have glorious vestments in the Worship of God because the Priests had this is to go contrary to Christ For indeed if our Saviour did follow any thing it was the Synagogues and their Orders Hence learned men shew That the chief Ruler of the Synogogue he had his Messengers to go up and down to the several Synagogues upon special imployment and these were called Thelichin Apostles So they had two sorts of Elders which were made by imposition of hands and they had Excommunication in their Synagogues Yea some say both Baptisme and the Lords Supper were taken as Rites from the Jews then in use for they had such an initiation of all Proselytes and when they took such in they took in their children also And so for eating of bread and drinking of wine Onely they adde That when Christ took up these he changed the nature of them They were Rites and Ceremonies before but Christ made them Sacraments But let the learned debate these things This is enough to us That Christ he did as the chief Head of his Church choose some whom he called Apostles for to beginne and propagate his Church Therefore in the second place consider That these Properties go to make an Apostle so that he could not be an Apostle who had not these qualifications As First It was necessary that he should have an immediate Call from Christ So ye read they all had Therefore when Judas was fallen from that Office the other Apostles did not presume to choose one in his room by themselves but they did solemnly call upon God who by lot gave direction who should be the man and then Paul as you heard he was immediately called by Christ from Heaven and therefore often saith He was not an Apostle of men or by men but wholly and solely by the will of God Thus as there were Prophets in the Old Testament and so also some in the New who were immediately inspired by God so there were such who also had an immediate Call from God and it was the consideration of this Call that did so imbolden them especially against all traducers and false accusers as appeareth by Paul himself in this Epistle But now you must know That though the Pastors and Teachers which in after ages have ruled in the Church had not such an immediate Call from God but mediate by man yet even they also are truly appointed of God Even
the ordinary Officers are in Christs stead and are to be received as from God for they have as true a Call though not as immediate As Adam's sonne was as truly a man though in an ordinary way as Adam who was immediately made by God Hence Eph. 4. 11. Christ is said to set in his Church Pastors as well as Apostles This is necessarily to be observed because that we are apt to despise that Office which hath not an immediate Call Secondly It was required to the Apostles to be the first builders and planters of Churches Therefore they were called the salt of the earth because by them God did wonderfully season the world They were the light because the world was in darkness before they were raised up So that although Christ himself be properly the foundation and all Churches are built on him as a Rock yet the Scripture saith We are built upon the Apostles Likewise Ephes 2. 20. Jesus Christ being the corner stone So Revel 21. 14. The twelve Apostles are the iwelve foundations Hence Divines usually distinguish between Fundamentum fundans and fundatum The Apostles they are a foundation but yet need another foundation which is the Lord Christ Besides it 's the Doctrine of the Apostles and not their persons which the Church is built upon onely they were next to Christ the first founders and builders of the Christian Church Hence we read that Paul had the Apostleship for the Gentiles and Peter for the Jews Gal. 2. 8. And in this sense Cameron hath a singular opinion of that place so much vexed by Interpreters viz. Thou art Peter and upon this Rock will I build my Church he understands it of Peter and that he was the secondary Rock Christ being the chiefest upon which the Jewish Church was built for by his Ministry they were converted But this is capable of several Objections Thirdly It was requisite to the Apostles that they should be eye-witnesses of what Christ did and suffered that so their testimony might be the more undoubted And therefore even the Apostle Paul though converted after Christs death and resurrection yet acknowledgeth that Christ was seen of him also but for the other Apostles they were present with Christ And therefore the Apostle John 1 Epist 1. 1. begins his Epistle thus That which we have seen and felt This eye-witness and familiar conversation also with Christ is mentioned Acts 10. 41. God shewed Christ not to all the people but unto witnesses chosen before of God even to us who did both eat and drink with him And this is that which confirmeth the History some of them relate for they were present in the acting of those things they record and their faithfulness and honesty is abundantly testified otherwise So that although we did not see and behold what Christ did and his miracles with our own eyes yet those Apostles did who are without all suspicion Fourthly The Apostles were universal Officers they were not limitted or fixed to particular Churches as the Pastors were but the whole Church of God was their flock Therefore they are called the light of the world and the salt of the earth not Judea only And thus the Apostle professed He had care over all the Churches Therefore you see to how many Churches he directs his Epistles and although Paul makes his Apostleship for the Gentiles and Peter for the Jews yet that was either by consent or else though they did principally attend to these yet they did also declare the Gospel to others as it is plain in Cornelius his case that Peter did preach to the Gentiles Fifthly They were indowed with the Spirit of God in an infallible manner so that while they were on earth they were a kind of visible infallible Judges Whatsoever person or Churches did resort to them for the determining of any case of Conscience they could decide infallibly Therefore the Apostle 1 Cor. 7. though he saith in the point of marriage that it was he and not the Lord yet that is he had not express command from the Lord otherwise he was infallibly directed in that resolution by the Spirit of God And howsoever it be disputed When this Spirit of infallibity was bestowed on them As also Whether they could grow in knowledge or no For it is plain at their first mission they were not freed from Doctrinal Errours as about Christs temporal Kingdom their doubt of the Resurrection and ignorance about preaching to the Jews Yet it 's most probable the Apostles had this bestowed on them in a more large manner at the Pentecost and Paul at his conversion As for that fault charged on Peter Gal. 1. that he did not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was not an errour in judgement but in fact For although the Apostles were preserved from errours this priviledge being for the gathering of Churches at first yet in respect of practice they might and did erre thereby needing alwayes forgiveness of sins Only for Doctrine they could not because on them that is their Doctrine the Church is said tobe built Sixthly They were likewise endowed with miraculous gifts so that they abounded in all wisdome and knowledge as also in all tongues For God calling them to such an Universal Office he would not fail in bestowing of them those necessary means that did conduce thereunto Not that it was necessary they should be endowed with the knowledge of the Mathematicks or such other Arts but with what was conducible to that end Now miracles they were necessary because they preached that Doctrine which was wholly new to the world and could not be demonstrated by Reason therefore miracles were required to confirm it Seventhly They were the chiefest and highest Officers in the Church They were the Starres of the first magnitude these were next to Christ himself and yet though in so exalted and glorious an Office there was one Devil amongst them Judas the Apostate So that none have cause to boast in any Church-priviledges Those that are called here beatissimi and sanctissimi by their Office may be misrrrimi in hell Eighthly They were all equal in respect of Power and Authority Our Saviour said equally to them all Whose sins ye remit they shall be remitted Peter hath no supremacy over the rest They might differ in gifts graces and labour or work for God and love from Christ as John was beloved above all but in respect of Authority none was superiour to others Ninthly They were temporary Officers and therefore did cease with the persons Even as Miracles so Apostles were onely for the first planting of the Church so that they have no successours in their Office Hence it 's high arrogancy for the Pope to call his the Apostolical Sea Tenthly Though extraordinary Officers yet they did contain what was inferiour Hence Peter cals himself a fellow elder and John in his two last Epistles styles himself the elder not the Apostle so that the
sought not himself neither did he mind his own will or his own glory And certainly the higher the Office is the greater will thy account be and thy condemnation the heavier Oh the dreadfull account that is to be made at that day concerning this talent 2. Of laziness and idleness For the work is of great consequence The bloud of souls will speak more terribly than the blood of Abels body How severe was the master in that Parable of our 〈◊〉 to him who hid his talent in a napkin Luke 19. 20. he is called an unprofitable servant and must be cast into utter darkness Use 2. To you that are the people If we have our Commission from Christ then take heed how you reject the Word we speak from him The Apostle makes a comparison between him that refused Moses speaking and Christ speaking and saith How much forer punishment shall he be thought worthy of Heb. 10. 29. Every Sermon your condemnation will rise higher upon you Think not that our words will passe away No God saith by the Prophet They shall not return in vain for if it be not a saving and converting word it will be an hardning and condemning one No wonder if our Saviour spake one Parable to this very purpose and concludeth Take heed how you hear Mark 4. 24. The second thing observable from this relative consideration is That the Apostle intending to beget awe and esteem in the hearts of those he wrote unto he mentioneth his Office and from whom he had it An Apostle of Jesus Christ This was a greater glory saith Chrysostome then if he had styled himself any temporal Officer in the Civil State For he doth saith the same Father as if one next to the Emperour should write to a certain people giving himself that title of honour which was next to the Emperour Thus doth Paul The Apostle of Jesus Christ. This could not but astonish and startle all his opposers and enemies yet if you do consider with a worldly respect what Christ himself was and so any Officer under him you must judge it the most contemptible and despicable thing that can be that which a carnal man would have been ashamed to own for Christ himself was called The Carpenters sonne and bred up at Nazareth a most despicable place and his outward condition was so low that he saith He had not where to lay his head And as for his Apostles what repute they had in the world Paul himself telleth us when he saith They were accounted the off-scouring of all things 1 Cor. 4. 13. Yet see how the Apostle glorieth in this title as that which might justly awe the consciences of those to whom he wrote From this observe That those things are of high account and respect in the Church of God which in the world are very despicable and despised As That which is highly esteemed amongst men is abominable before God Luk. 18. So that which is abominable and loathsom before men is highly esteemed with God We might instance in many things First Christ who is the Head of the Church and the chief corner-stone yet he was rejected by those who by their Office was builders Yea Christ crucified was accounted foolishness to the Gentiles Insomuch that had not God promised Christ To give him the Nations of the Earth and had actually lifted him up above all principalities and powers We should have thought there would not have been one City much lesse one Nation especially not so many Nations adoring him as God We may truly say This is the Lords doing and it is marvellous in our eyes Christ is called by the Apostle The King of Kings and Lord of Lords which 2 Tim. 5. 16. Drusius saith was the Title and Style of the great Kings of Persia but who except the Christian would admire Christ more than the Persian King Therefore it was a wonderfull work upon those Wisemen of the East that they should come and bring such presents and worship Christ though an Infant whom they found in a mean place at Bethlehem and in the meanest place there but where God giveth spiritual eyes there is a spiritual excellency discovered where the world seeth nothing but contemptibleness Secondly For the Officers of Christ In worldly considerations how low and despised are they But to those who are spiritual and acknowledge the Order and Institutions of Christ they esteem them as the Stewards of God and the Ministers of Christ insomuch that it 's the cause of contemning Religion when their Office is despised Paul was so received by the Galatians as if he had been an Angel from Heaven Yea Christ himself They would have pulled out their eyes to have pleasured him And we see in the after ages of the Church how much the Ministers of Christ were had in esteem insomuch that it greew unto an excesse Now though the carnal worldly man beareth no such respect to them yet those who are led by Scripture doe highly esteeme them and that for their workes sake Thirdly The Duties prescribed by Christ they are such as the world condemneth either for folly or pusillanimity as Faith in Christ alone for salvation self-denial readiness to take up our Crosse To love our enemies to do good to those that hate us Are not these such things that the magnanimous and gallant spirits of the world do disdain Fourthly The priviledges and encouragements which Christ also inviteth with they are not such baits as will take in the world Psal 4. Who will shew us any good that is the vote of the world As for the light of Gods countenance justification and assurance of Gods grace these things they do no more esteem than the Swine doth Pearl Lastly The due execution of the Censure of the Church upon just grounds to cast out the impenitent sinner This the world contemneth but yet you see how powerfully it wrought upon the Incestuous person And Matth. 18. when our Saviour had said He that would not heare the Church must be like a Publican and Heathen lest they should despise this he saith Whatsoever ye bind on Earth shall be bound in Heaven Use of Exhortation To admire the power and wisdom of God who hath kept up Church-officers Church-ordinances in the world when there are no outward pompous motives to perswade thereunto SERM. VIII In what sense Paul saith of himself He was an Apostle by the will of God Shewing likewise how all Church-Offices and Priviledges come meerly from the will and good pleasure of God 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God c. VVE are now to consider the last particular in this Inscription as it is divided to us and that is the impulsive Cause or rather the Manner how Paul obtaineth this Apostleship which is said to be by the will of God Here is much comprehended in this expression for hereby is declared That it was
are said not to be all Israel who are of Israel In the Old Testament we read of many who outwardly submitted to the profession of Gods commands who yet were not found at heart and therefore our Saviour in the course of his Ministry did not direct his preaching more to any subject almost then this viz. to have the internals of grace as well as externals so that we may say There is a called and elected Church and a called Church only not elected and this is to take off all Churches from idolizing and doting upon the Ordinances and external administrations which are in a Church as the Jews did and as most Christians do We are to go further and to see whether we be indeed and really Christs body as well as seemingly For if we do compare a Church called only with the Church called and elected and to the spiritual priviledges that are promised so our Divines use to say That it is but equivocally a Church they have no true acceptance with God If there should be a Society professing faith in Christ and have pure administrations but not one in the Society having true real sanctifying grace this Society in respect of God and Christ hath no true communion with them They have but the name not the nature and so are equivocally not univocally a true Church For why should it be otherwise with a Society then every member of it taken singly Now it 's certain in such a supposed Society where all are professors but not one member truly godly there every individual person notwithstanding all Church enjoyments yet hath no lively interest in Christ he is but as a glass eye or wooden leg in the body that hath no vivifical nourishment or is animated by the soul and therefore such are said to be De corpore Ecclesiae but not de animâ if then this be true of every member of that Church it must be also true of the Church taken collectively Only this is true if we consider such a company relatively to God But then if we consider them quoad nos in respect of men who cannot judge the hearts nor know when true grace is in any mans soul then such a Church or a Society may be called truly a Church For it is the external profession and outward submission to Christs order that doth make a Church visible to us and therefore in such a Church there are true Ordinances true Administrations And this is the rule we must go by in joyning our selves to a Church and keeping external communion with it if it be a called Church though not elected and be so farre orthodox and pure that we may have communion with them without sinne This is a Church to us howsoever God may look upon them as having a name to live but were dead as God said of Sardis Rev. 3. 1. which yet was a Church This distinction is of a two-fold use to prevent two mistakes First Of such who confound an external Church with an elected making Gods call and his election in an equal latitude thinking that because none but predestinated and truly sanctified men are of the invisible Church therefore none but such are also of the visible And then Secondly Of those who if they be of a Church especially cleansed from superstitions and prophaneness if the Church be a Reformed Church they rest in those external administrations and never attend to the work of grace indeed For if among Papists though so greatly polluted yet the Church is made an Idol to them no wonder if the Reformed Churches are prone to put confidence in Church-reformations without attending to internal sanctification But the Apostle tells us Gal. 6. 15. That in Christ Jesus neither circumcision or uncircumcision availeth any thing but a new creature that is no externals in the Church of God though of his own institution avail any thing without regeneration Therefore rest not in this that you are called of God that ye are his Church for many taken out of his Church shall be damned as well as out of the world yea more in the Church that is the visible Society professing of Christ will be damned then saved as appeareth by that expression twice repeated by our Saviour as being of so great concernment being worthy to be heard again and again Many are called but few are saved Mat. 22. 14. and 20. 16. And thus much of the Efficient Cause with the manner Called of God In the next place There is the Instrumental Cause and that is by the preaching of the Word For so we read upon Christs giving his Apostles commission to teach and preach to all Nations there were Churches gathered in every place And this is to be understood of the ordinary way For whether the Word even as read may not in some extraordinary cases be a means to bring some one person or more to the Church of God is not here to be disputed for we speak of the solemn ordinary instituted means of God and so there is no other way but the preaching of the Word Hence Rom. 10. 14 15. you see there a concatenation and chaining of calling upon God and believing together of beliving and hearing together and of hearing and the Ministry together But it 's objected by the Socinians That if the preaching of the Word be an instrument to gather a Church then it cannot be a note of the Church For that which is antecedent to a Church and is before the Church is cannot be a note of it To this we may answer That it is both an instrument to gather a Church and then a note of it when gathered neither is there any absurdity therein It 's true that very numerical preaching which at first made the Church cannot be a mark or note of it but the same specifical preaching or that which is like it that doth truly declare where the true Church is So that by this we may see the dignity and usefulness of the Ministry for by that God is pleased to raise up all the Churches that are in the world God who did immediatly create the world and used no instruments yet in planting of his Church doth and therefore they are workers with him 2 Cor. 6. 1. Neither is the Ministry only necessary to constitute a Church and then afterwards useless as Episcopius saith Where people have the Scriptures there the Ministry is of no necessity Yea the Socinians make it only a matter of order and conveniency For Ministers are not only appointed to gather Churches at first but when they are planted continually to water them Therefore Ephes 4. their usefulness is shewed even to constituted Churches For the further building them up even till they come to a full stature in Christ. And therefore the Apostles thought it not enough to make Churches to erect new spiritual Societies that should profess Christ but Elders were to be ordained in every Church that were to have constant residence amongst
as go astray and the turning from those that walk disorderly 2 Thess 3. These several acts of Church Discipline commanded in the Scripture are very evident And although there are a generation of men who would with scorn and pride cry it down as lordly and Popish and I know not what yet at last it will be found that that it was only their lusts and love to sinne their hatred of sinne their hatred of powerfull godliness which provoketh them hereunto What would they have said if they had lived in Tertullians Cyprians Chrysostomes and Austin's dayes when there was such zeal in Church Discipline against all prophaneness that in some things they were immoderately severe If then this be the external form of Church-communion if in these things Church Assemblies are to be exercised let us mourn for our general Apostasie that in some sense our Church Assemblies have been like the world at first a meer chaos and confusion Not that ever any Church will be so reformed as that it will not need further Reformation But only let us endeavour to attain what degree of purity may be had SERM. XIV Of the Notes and Signes of a true Church 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church at Corinth c. YOu have heard what is to be vnderstood by this expression of a Church The true Doctrine about this being so necessary I shall further inlarge my self not entring into the whole Common-place of a Church for that would be too prolix and ere this Epistle be ended we may happily meet with more Texts that may afford further knowledge in this point Only I shall after the popular definition of a Church give you the Notes or Marks whereby we may come to know what is or where is the true Church For this hath been a great controversie between Papists and us There are indeed some of late as the Remonstrants Episcopius c. who say This dispute and enquiry about the marks of a Church is wholly uselesse and needlesse For say they either we have to do with an Infidel or a Believer if with an Infidel it is absurd to tell him of the Notes of a Church who doth not believe there is any such thing as a Church at all And for a Believer he is in the Church already and so they are uselesse to him But this is meerly frivolous For 1. When we have to do with an unbeliever we must not in the first place deal with him about a Church to prove that we are the true Church but that there is a God who is to be worshipped as natural light will convince of this Then that this God hath made known how he will be worshipped Next that the Scriptures do contain this revealed will of God And when this foundation is ●aid then out of Gods Word we are to inform him of a Church So that in order there is first The Word of God to be discovered 2. What is the true sense and meaning of it Lastly That what society hath this there is a true Church And Secondly Even Heathens by hearing of the Word preached have by the Grace of God been converted and so the Word preached which was at first instrumental to convert them doth afterwards by way of a sign or mark confirm them therein The Apostle tells us of an unbeliever coming into Church-meetings who is so wrought upon that he crieth out Verily God is here 1 Cor. 14. 25. And as to the Believer the notes of a Church are necessary for the further confirming and establishing of him For seeing that every Party or Sect saith They are the true Church and with them onely is Communion to be had condemning other meetings as false as the Synagogue of Satan and as necessarily damning all those that continue in that Communion different from them It is thereby of great use that we should have such Notes or Marks to conclude that where such are certainly there is a Church for we are not to be Scepticks or Seekers When the Scripture commands us To tell the Church Mat. 18. To conjoyn our selves to the Church of God it plainly intimateth that such a Society may be known Even as there was a Star to guide the Wisemen unto Christ In the second place There are three things necessary to make a Note or a Mark of a Church 1. It must be more known than the thing it self 2. It must be proper and peculiar to that thing alone of which it is a Note For if it be common to others it cannot be a Note Sense is not a Note of a man because it 's common to a beast And Lastly It must be inseparable For if it doth not alwayes agree to it then we cannot tell how to discern that we look for Now for such Notes of the Church the Protestants say there are these three only 1. The pure preaching of the Word with the publick receiving and professing of it 2. The right and orderly administration of the Sacraments 3. The due use of holy Order and Discipline Where these things are there we may conclude that certainly Gods true Church is and with such a Society we may lawfully joyn Thirdly Only when we give these three Notes we do not make all of the same equal necessity Discipline and holy Order is for the well-being of a Church This Church of Corinth was a Church though that was neglected It is true this is greatly to be pressed for and the introducing of Christs order into a Church is like the bringing of the Ark into Obed-Edoms family So that without this manifest impiety being suffered God will be so highly provoked as to give a Bill of Divorce to it and take away his Gospel from such an unworthy people yet this is not made essential to the being of a Church So also the administration of Sacraments There was a time when the Church had none viz. before Circumcision was appointed but since Christs appointment of them there they ought to be used where the way and manner he hath appointed can be attained For the dispensers of those holy Mysteries must take heed That they give not pearl to swine nor encourage prophane men in their impieties by giving them the testimonies of Gods love whom yet he abhorreth Therefore that which is infallibly necessary and alwayes accompanying a true Church is the preaching of the Word in a right manner with the publick receiving and profession of this I adde the publick profession because the Word may be purely taught to a people who yet are not the Church because they do refuse and reject the Gospel tendred to them as the Jews did and many Heathens so that there must be a manifest and publick profession of it And besides the true preaching of the Word is only a sign of a true Minister not of a true Church unless they give their consent thereunto So that when our Divines say The pure preaching of the Word is a Note
of the Church They include and suppose the publick receiving of it by the people yea some do clearly expresse it By this pure and true preaching of the Word we may discern the true Church from Jewes and Pagans as also from Heretical and Idololatrical Societies yet pretending to a Church Fourthly When these Notes especially the former are said to be proper and inseparable to the Church of God You must alwayes remember here is a latitude in the application of these Notes For some Churches may have the Word more soundly preached and the Sacraments more dispensed than another and yet for all that not to be denied to be Churches This Church of Corinth was foully out of order And so most of those Churches in Asia were sharply reproved yet they did not cease to be a Church Yea the Church of Israel had many corruptions both in worship and life yet it was a long while ere God did cast her off So that we must not for some defilements either in the Doctrine Worship or Manners of a Church presently deny her to be a Church and separate from her for this is against Scripture information Yea there is no Church so perfect but needeth some Reformation They may build hay and stubble though they keep the foundation So that he must go out of the world that would live in a Church where nothing is amiss Even that Church of Smyrna the Apostle mentioneth Revel 2. 8. that was as her Name signifying sweet smelling and fragrant like a Garden or bed of Spices yet she was troubled with some who said They were Jews but were not but were of the Synagogue of Satan But of this more when we come to the next Doctrine Fifthly These then being the visible Marks of a visible Church we must not confound them with the properties of the Church invisible The Church of God hath as it were a two-fold Form one Internal and Essential which consists in their Union with Christ and communion with his benefits Now none but those that are truly godly are of the Church in this invisible manner he must be regenerated and graffed into Christ that can have any saving benefit by Christ But then 2. The Church of God hath an External and outward Form which consists in the external profession of faith and observance of Christs Ordinances Now a man may be of the Church in respect of this outward standing though he be not truly godly Therefore Dr Ames said well That it was a false thing which Bellarmine objected to us about the constitution of a Church as if we required internal graces to the making of a man a member of the Church in respect of the visible state of it We read in the New Testament that upon the outward profession of their faith they were baptized and received into the Church though it 's plain all of them had not true internal grace So then when the Question is put Whether may a man that is not truly godly be of the Church or no You must distinguish between the inward form of the Church which is union with Christ the Head and so he is not no more than a wooden leg is a member of the body that is not animated by the soul and the External visible state of it and so he is of the Church till by his obstinacy in wickedness he be cast out as unworthy We must not therefore give those Notes of the Church as visible which belong to it only as invisible viz. Election Vocation and Justification c. Sixthly The Papist to avoid this extream he giveth such Marks of a Church as savour rather of worldly ambition and pride Yea the true Church of God many times is known by the contrary Marks they give amplitude and universality as also temporal felicity Now this is rather a Description of some worldly Monarchy than Gods Church For as for the Churches amplitude though absolutely in it self it may be sometimes numerous yet at other times it hath been brought into a narrow compasse Elijah thought none was left and God speaks of but seven thousand that did not how the knee to Baal which was a very inconsiderable number to the Idolaters Therefore respectively to the wicked of the world even when they are most ample they are but a little flock And as for any glorious felicity though the Church of God hath sometimes had her respite and halcyon dayes yet for the most part a crown of thorns hath been on her head and therefore she is justly called the Militant Church while in this world because of her spiritual conflict with all sorts of enemies So that the Church of Christ may sometimes say as Christ once did The Foxes have their holes and the Birds of the air their nests but the Sonne of man hath not where to lay his head Thus the Foxes of the world the crafty subtil men have great abundance many times when the Church hath hid her self in the wildernesse And Fowls of the air men of proud and lofty minds have their nests when the Church like Noah's Dove hath not where to set her foot Seventhly I shall not enlarge my self to prove these only to be the proper Notes of the Church only consider that place Act. 2. 41 42. where you have all of them conjoyned together 1. They received the Word gladly There is a solemn profession of it 2. There is the administration of the Sacraments They were baptized and continued in breaking of bread with prayers There is the solemn calling upon God And as an epitomizing of all this it 's said Then were added unto the Church about three thousand souls Thus 1 Tim. 3. 15. the Church is called The pillar and foundation of the truth that is by the Ministeries preservation of it and the peoples submitting unto it Lastly If to this it be objected as Socinians do who hold this way of Notes to find out a Church to be useless and vain That true Doctrine cannot be a sign of the Church because it 's the Form and Essence of it Now that which notifieth the essence of a thing must be distinct from it To this it is answered That the form as it giveth being to a thing so it giveth to distinguish from others Forma dat esse distingui Although we do not say True Doctrine is the Note of a Church but the external preaching and receiving of it that is a Note incurring into our senses Even as Reason though it give a man his rational being yet speaking is the proper and true sign that manifests this So let true Doctrine or a true faith be the soul and life of a Church yet the external profession is the outward Note and Sign of it And if further it be said That every Sect doth claim to it self the pure preaching of the Word and the right administration of Ordinances Therefore these cannot be a sign It 's answered The consequence is denied for true preaching and
confession is a sign although Hereticks pretend thereunto As true Miracles were a sure Argument to prove the truth although others have done and Antichrist will pretend to true Miracles And indeed though all Sects as the Socinians especially pretend much to the Scripture yet it is not the words only but the sense of it that is by the Context and Scope to be discovered that is the word of God Therefore Irenaeus of old said elegantly That Hereticks making the Scripture to speak what sense they pleased did as if a man should take the Statue or Image of a King and so transpose the parts of it as to make it the image of a Dog or some other vile thing These things concluded on let us draw some Uses by way of Corollaries As 1. In that the holy Ghost is pleased to appropriate this Word in the New Testament to his people which among the Heathens signifieth the meaner sort of people for that they called Ecclesia and it was opposite to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Senate which consisted of more noble men Hence we may see who they are that are most commonly called to be of his Church even the meaner sort Not many rich not many noble hath God called 1 Corinth 1. We should not despise the Church of God if it be not so externally pompous and glorious as Kingdoms and States For Christ is more peculiarly present with his Church and shed his bloud for that 2. That if we speak properly the Church is not a material place not this building of stones and wood but the people of God meeting there Indeed it may tropically be well enough called a Church as Synagogue is applied to the place He built us a Synagogue whereas properly it signifieth the people meeting together as you heard Thus Concio amongst the Latines signifieth both the place and the company met together Bellarmine would have the word to signifie a place 1 Cor. 11. as also where it is said Let the woman keep silence in the Churches And those learned men Fuller and Mede expound it so in 1 Cor. 11. But there is no necessity of such Interpretation But though the Scripture doth not call it so we may by a Trope give it that name and use must authorize in these things Though Ifidore Pelusiota in one of his Epistles sharply reproving a Bishop that adorned the material place with Images and Ornaments but neglected the Church of God the true professours he persecuted doth call the people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lastly Is it a Church a company called by God Then this sheweth of what consequence Unity and Concord is amongst all the Members thereof How can a body be kept together without ligaments and nerves How can the building stand if the wood and straw be not aptly fastned and cemented together How can the Church subsist if there be not Love Union and Concord It 's observable Phil. 4. 2. that the Apostle thought it not too low a thing even in canonical Scripture to intreat two women that were at difference to be of the same mind I beseech Euodias I beseech Syntyche that they be of one mind Two godly women differing the Apostle doth passionately intreat reconciliation and agreement how much more then would he have intreated the Pastors and Officers in the Church to take heed of discord SERM. XV. Why Paul writeth to the Church not the Churches of Corinth What is implyed in the Churches being called the Church of God 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church of God which is at Corinth c. THe Nature of a Church hath been considered with the Marks thereof from the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 given here to the society of believers at Corinth So that we might dispatch this only in that the word Church is used in the singular number The Church at Corinth not Churches It 's disputed What one Church it was whether one single Congregation exereising all Church-government within it self or a combined and collective Church united into one but consisting of particular Congregations and it may seen● probable that this Church of Corinth was a combined or associated Church partly because Act. 18. we may read of much people that God had in that place and therefore Paul staid above a year there which argued a multitude of converts The plenty also of their Teachers and Officers with the diversitie of tongues And lastly in that 1 Cor. 16. 19. Aquila and Priscilla are mentioned with the Church in their house It is true what is meant by the Church in an house is controverted we find the expression four times in Scripture Rom. 16 15. where Aquila and Priscilla are saluted with the Church in their house So 1 Cor. 16. 19. these persons are mentioned again with the Church in their house Col. 4. 15. There one Nymphas is saluted with the Church in his house Phil. 2. There likewise Philemon is mentioned with the Church in his house Mr. Mede doth from hence inferre That even in the Apostles dayes and so in the primitive times that the Christians had publick places fixed and setled being set apart for the publick Assemblies to worship God in answering those places of Arnobius and others who told the Heathens they had no Templa nor Aras he saith these mentioned in the Texts named did set apart some piece of their house for that end But it should seem by other passages that in the Apostles dayes there were no fixed places for to meet in Therefore sometimes they meet in one house and sometimes in another yea They went from house to house Others they think by the Church in their house is meant many believers For they say Whereas when other families are saluted only some are named sometimes the Master of the house is omitted as Salute the houshold of Narcissus because he was thought to be an infidel Yea Calvin thinketh it is that infamous and wicked Nar●issus so notorious wicked and great with Nero of whom Historians speak Now when the Apostle salutes the men and the Church in their house it was because there were no unbelievers but all were of the Church Howsoever it be it 's plain there were many believers in that family more than ordinary and therefore called a Church which should argue That the Church of Corinth was a combined Church That passage also makes it likely 1 Cor. 14. 34. Let your women be silent in the Churches Your women therefore he speaks of the Corinthians there who are said to have Churches and yet here it is called a Church This will still appear the more likely if we consider that here were believing Jews as well as Gentiles in this Church of Corinth as Estius observeth in the Preface to the first Epistle Therefore when the Apostle speaketh of some who said they were of Cephas that relateth to the believing Jews yet because they were few comparatively to the Gentiles therefore the Apostle
freed from it Thus you see many of them were rather beasts than a Church Lastly For Godlinesse or Religion there were also sad disorders about that There were some that denied the Resurrection that said Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall die these were Atheists And certainly had this been the Assertion of the whole Church and not some few only amongst them if it had been their Catholick and Universal Doctrine maintained by all they had ceased to be a Church they had degenerated into meer Atheism but it was some only that were thus infected Again Another offence in Religion was their great Church-divisions some exalting Paul some Apollo insomuch that in stead of edifying and building up one another they were divided into as many Sects almost as they had Teachers And then lastly There was horrible confusion and ungodliness in respect of Church-order All godly Discipline was laid aside the administration of the Sacraments was promiscuous come who would come though in their unworthiness they might receive it And although Gods judgment was upon them either the Plague or some general disease and that because no better order was about the Sacrament yet for all that they did not judge or condemn themselves Thus this Church was like a very Chaos and yet a Church still SERM. XVII A further Discovery of the truth of this Assertion that a Church may be a true Church though much defiled both in Doctrine and Manners 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church of God which is at Corinth c. THis Church of Corinth is dignified as you heard with this glorious Title of the Church of God notwithstanding those manifest and notorious depravations that were amongst them and that of all sorts This truth we entred upon and before we give you some demonstrations to evidence it it is good to take notice of some observable particulars which tend to the clearing of it Only this must be premised that whereas a Church may be denied to be so either from its constitution or from its conversation We are speaking of the later way and so consider First That the soundness and purity of Churches doth admit of degrees That as one Starre doth excell another in glory yet both Starres So one Church may greatly transcend another in orthodoxy and purity and yet both be Churches In those seven Churches of Asia there were some reproved more than others We cannot expect that all Churches should be of the same measure in knowledge and grace no mor than particular Christians and therefore we are not to conclude such a Church is no Church because not so pure as another Church no more than such a man is not a godly man because he hath not such a measure of Illumination and Sanctification as another And to say in the general That it is a Christians duty to find out the purest Church in the world and there to associate himself with it must needs fill a Christian with infinite perplexities of conscience as also to expose him to insupportable outward inconveniencies Let us not therefore do with a Church as a godly tender heart is apt to do with himself because he finds many failings and great imperfections therefore he is ready to judge that he hath no grace at all Thus because there are several disorders and distempers in such a Church which are deservedly daily matter of groan and sorrow to thee therefore thou beginnest to sentence such a Church as no longer Gods Church Again seeing that there are gradual differences of soundness and purity in Churches this should also make every Church take heed of appropriating the glorious name of a Church or Saints or Christians to themselves only as if none were Saints or Christians but what are members of their Society This is and hath been a most uncharitable proud disposition of some Churches The Popish Church saith There is no sanctity or holiness but with them Inter Catholicos saith Bellarmine multi quidem sunt mali sed inter haereticos ne uniu quidem est bonus What a censorious condemnation is this Not one good Protestant whom they call Hereticks not in all our Churches Thus they only appropriate the name of Church and sanctity to themselves So the Donatists did of old they inclosed the Church only amongst themselves they called none Christians but themselves To become a Donatist was to become a Christian with them So that we see it 's very hard for Churches not to admire their own wayes and constitutions thinking that none are Churches but themselves there may be pharisaical Churches that may condemn other Churches as Publicans as well as it is so in persons whereas it is good to observe that the Scripture doth describe Christians by such names as do not at all relate or distinguish by any Government or external constitution to be a believer to be a Saint to be a Christian These titles denote either some inward qualification or external profession but do not at all insinuate what kinds of order or way they are in yet this is not so to be understood as if Christs order and way his Government and Discipline were an indifferent or arbitrary thing only it is to shew that we are not to monopolize godliness amongst our selves meerly because of a Church-constitution although we are not to receive any form or spiritual order in our Churches but of Christs appointment There is a great difference and latitude in the soundness and purity of Churches Secondly When we speak of a Church being Gods true Church though greatly corrupted we must take heed of two extreams the first of those who therefore would have no Reformation though there be never so many disorders but say It 's wisdome and prudence to let all things be as they have been for it may be Gods Church though there be divers abuses Take heed of such carnal indulgence as this because it 's the Church of God therefore make no more stirre let errours and prophaneness alone let disorders continue and this many times is palliated with fair specious pretences that such indeavours to reform will breed great discontents and divisions in stead of having a pure Church it may be made no Church at all especially this is the more difficulty obtained if it be a Reformation in worship and manners for we are more willing to sit down under an Orthodox Church then a pure Church We can more easily endure to have sound Doctrine established then pure and holy Order because this doth so directly contradict our lusts and pleasures Hence Malachy prophesieth of Christs repurgation of his Church as a very dreadfull time even like the day of judgement Mal. 3. 2 4. Christ is there said to sit as a refiner and as a purger to take away dro● but who shall abide the day of his coming Christs coming being thus like the Refiners fire and the Fullers sope was as terrible as the day of judgment to them Who may abide
it saith he You see then orthodoxy is sooner received than godly and holy order but we are to know that though we have many things to glory in that we are a true Church that we have excellent preaching and many learned Officers in it yet if there be not an endeavour to take away all offences and scandals there is great matter of humiliation The Apostle speaketh notably in this matter to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 5. 6. Your glorying is not good c. The Corinthians they gloried and boasted in many things but as long as they did not cast out the old leaven or the wicked man but this leaven was in danger to leaven the whole lump therefore he telleth them Their glorying was not good there was greater cause to be deeply humbled because of such disorders amongst them Let us not then though we can and may prove our Church to be the Church of God therefore sit down and take our rest as if therefore reformation of corruptions were needless No the Apostle doth farre otherwise to this Church of Corinth though he call it the Church of God yet his Epistle is full of sharp reproof to them he is very zealous and lively in putting of them upon this that they became a new lump that they be made as it were a new Church and a new Congregation Farre be it therefore from us to excuse or connive at our publick impieties because Corinth though so polluted is a Church No we are to tremble and humble our selves under such disorders they are great provocations of Gods anger You see God did begin to judge and chasten this Church of Corinth God takes notice and is very angry with all these disorders and great neglect Therefore if you observe those Epistles of Christ from Heaven to the seven Churches of Asia where their works were not perfect where there were any decayes yea if Christ had any thing against them though there were other things commendable yet he will take notice and rebuke them therein yea to some he threatens to take away their Candlesticks that is their Ordinances and to unchurch them Oh then let us humble our selves under Gods hand for all our Church-sins all our Assembly-iniquities lest the wrath of God break out upon us The second extream we are to take heed of is That because of the corruptions that are in a Church we are not so farre transported with misguided zeal as to take no notice of the truth of a Church Some are apt so to attend to a true Church that they never matter the corruptions of it Others again they do so eye the corruptions that they never regard the truth of it but it is good to avoid both these extreams Whence cometh that impatiency in us to bear any evil in a Church Whence is it that we uncharitably rend from it Is it not because we do not consider it may be a true Church and salvation is there to be had yea conversion and regeneration though there be many things to be reformed There is no Church so pure but that there are some imperfections in it no Church so reformed but in some things it needeth a reformation Thou mayest go from Church to Church and be like Noah's Dove not know where to set thy feet if thou look for absolute perfection in any Church whether thou goest As there is no constitution of the body which hath an exact temperament ad pondus but some humour or other doth predominate so there is no Church that is of such a perfect frame but it hath its several grievances and though it may be freed from those evils they separated from yet they may be assaulted with others that are as destructive of a Church in a contrary way though freed from tyranny yet not from divisions and daily subdivisions amongst themselves So that in these things we are diligently to make the Scripture our Rule Thirdly Though that Church be a true Church where we live yet if many corruptions do abound therein we must take heed That we do not pollute our selves thereby or become partakers of any sinne indulged amongst them As we may not sinfully separate upon this ground because they are no Church so neither may we continue so as to pollute and defile our selves with any known sin The Apostles exhortation to the Corinthians under these manifold pollutions is that every one in their proper place should endeavour their new moulding So that under Church-pollutions thou art to consider what God cals thee to do to rebuke exhort admonish and if this will not do to complain to Church-Officers who are to guide and watch over the flock and if yet this will not do then to be the more earnest with God in prayer to bring about Reformation notwithstanding all the gainsayings of wicked men To mourn and sigh unto God as a Lot in Sodom vexing thy righteous soul continually as a lamenting Jeremiah among the apostatizing Israelites And certainly God doth in a special manner take notice of such who do mourn for those abominations that they cannot remove or take away Ezek. 9. 4. when thou canst appeal to God saying O Lord these corruptions these disorders they grieve me to the very heart I cry out daily Wo be unto me because I dwell with men of polluted lips This will much ingage God to thee Likewise we read Revel 3. 4. in what a special manner God takes notice of a few names in Sardis which had not defiled their garments To be therefore in the midst of a defiled Church and yet to keep thy self unspotted this is admirable as they record of the river Alpheus which though it runne into the Sea yet it keeps its own natural sweetness though we have communion with the Church in those things that are commanded by God yet we are not to partake with them in any evil way as those seven thousand in Eli●ah's time though they did not depart from the Church of Israel yet they would not bow their knee to Baul In the next place Let us demonstrate this that a Church may be Gods Church though it be greatly corrupted And First It may be seen from the induction of several Churches as for example the Church of the Jews they were Gods people and God did own them as his yet as appeareth by the Prophets complaints and daily reproofs they were full of Idolatries and all moral impieties and for all this there were many repentings and turnings in Gods bowels to speak after the manner of men before he would call them Lo-ammi a people no more to him But you may say That was in the Old Testament when the Spirit of God was not poured out so effectually Consider then besides this Church of Corinth the Churches of Galatia were not they farre infected with doctrinal pollutions and vicious lusts of the flesh That the Apostle mentioneth not any where such zeal and sharpness as he doth to them threatning them with Apostasie
from Christ and that having begun in the Spirit they would end in the flesh We might instance also in several other Churches But as the Father said elegantly We need not drink up the whole Sea to know whether the water be saltish a drop or two will suffice Secondly This may be demonstrated from the relation and comparison the Church is adorned with in reference to Christ It 's often compared to Christs wife now the wife continueth a true wife and is not to be deserted unless for Adultery which breaketh the conjugal knot otherwise though she have many sad infirmities which may make the relation bitter and uncomfortable yet it doth not unwise her The Church is also Christs body now a body is not forsaken by the soul though it be a sore body a leprous body a leper is a man though a leper It 's Christs ●arden now this may have many weeds in it and many things defile it yet it is not presently made a waste wilderness Thus it is with the Church of God she may have many failings in Doctrine and manners yet not be quite unchurched Thirdly From a godly man A true child of God may have sad falls as we see in Peter and David yet for all this not be quite excluded out of the Covenant of grace they did not lose their sonship even in those sad transgressions and will God be more severe to a whole Church than to one person Use of Instruction what a deal of prudence and wisdome is required in every godly man under Church-pollutions To know what to do to understand how to deport himself for this he must be guided by the Word and the advise of those that are faithfull on the one hand not to be stupid or careless much less complying and communicating with the Church defilements and on the other side not to be so transported with misguided zeal and impatiency against evil as there by to rend the Church causlesly and to sin our selves because others sin SERM XVIII The Preheminence of the Church of God above all Civil Societies As likewise concerning Paul's writing this second Epistle to the Corinthians how hard a thing it is for Churches to keep within their proper bounds and what great care Ministers ought to have to use all means lawfull to promote the Churches which they have relation to 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church of God which is at Corinth THis clause hath been fruitfull for much spiritual and edifying matter I shall conclude it at this time There are three things more which are to be deduced from this subject And First Whereas you see that the Epistle is not directed to the Magi●●● or Civil Governours of the City neither is the least notice taken of their wealth o● external pomp We may observe That the Church of God as it is a Church doth farre surpass all Civil Societies and temporal Dignities The Apostle owneth nothing in this famous City but their faith their profession of Christ and subjection to him A Church is a supernatural Society for supernatural and spiritual ends where God is in a more special manner present and therefore though the civil Magistrate be also of God and civil Societies they are of him yet not in that peculiar relation as a Church is Thus the Psalmist saith Psal 87. 2. The Lord loveth the 〈◊〉 of Sion more than all the dwellings of Jerusalem that is the Assemblies of his people met together in holy Ordinances above all other their civil meetings though never so pompou● and magnificent Therefore it 's good to consider that in all the inscriptions which the Apostle 〈◊〉 to any Churches he doth not at all speak of any civil or temporal Dignities that the places where the Churches were had but only ●…on of their spiritual titles as a Church Saints Believers Beloved of God And certainly if we do truly consider things these Titles do as farre trans●●nd all civil glory as the Heavens do the Earth The Apostle writing to the 〈◊〉 in all that Epistle takes no notice of the glory of that City which was the Orbis Domina and which they usually called aeterna Urbs he mentioneth their faith which was known to the whole world Rom. 1. 8. not the Roman and warlike power whereby they were so terrible to all Nations It is good to consider this for how few Churches do esteem of or judge themselves by their Church consideration but by their civil respects As they are such a City such a Corporation glorying in their Liberties and Charters whereas the consideration of themselves as a Church should far more possess their hearts Briefly to understand this consider First That the Church and Commonwealth or any civil Society are two distinct things the Church is one thing and the State another thing In the times of Heathen Magistrates and while there was outward persecution by the civil Powers which then ruled it 's plain for the City of Rome and the Church of Rome in Paul's time were wholly different So at Corinth the civil Magistracy of the Town did not seem to be Christians the Corporation of the Town was not as I may say made a Church The Christian Religion was not at this time established in Corinth by the City-Laws and Government only many in Corinth were become believers So that it 's plain The same Corinthians as they were a Church lived by other Laws and by different principles then as members of the City of Corinth As he was a Citizen so he met in their civil Judicatories so he acted according to the Laws of the City provided nothing was against Gods command but as a member of the Church there so they meet with others in spiritual communion for holy and spiritual ends Thus it is in a State while they are generally Heathenish But some have doubted Whether if a Commonwealth become Christian then there is any difference there between the Church and such a Christian State Whether then they are not all one But certainly by the first Institution and plantation of Churches by Christ and the Apostles Churches were founded and imbodied their Officers imploiment and the end of their Society appointed without any relation to the civil State and Government where they lived And therefore a Christian State doth not civilly govern nor bear the Sword punishing with death neither are there supream Governours Lords or Noblemen in it as a Church for then these should be Church-officers and instituted by Christ a Justice of Peace is not of Christ as a Pastor in the Church Neither on the other side are the preaching of the Word the administration of Sacraments the exercising of Church-censures the effects of a Christian State but as a Church So that it 's necessary by Scripture to acknowledge these two a Church and the State as two distinct Societies though the same men may be members of the same Secondly It 's a most blessed thing when the civil State and Church are
from the Apostles writing a second time to the Church of Corinth which he seldom did to any Church but to that of the Thessalonians and to Timothy a single person One reason whereof amongst others was because that his former Epistle had taken some good effect and whereas they had been too remiss before about their indulgence to that incestuous person it seemeth this Epistle had now so awakened them that they began to be too severe to him though repenting and humbling himself as appeareth Chap. 2. 6 7. whereupon he exhorteth them To comfort him lest he be swallowed up with too much sorrow It 's true there were other reasons why he wrote this second Epistle but this is one amongst the rest From whence we might observe That it 's very hard for the Churches of God to keep within their proper bounds about Church-administrations Nothing is more ordinary than to fall from one extream to another These Corinthians that were so negligent in good order that many pollutions were suffered amongst them insomuch that Gods judgements had surprized them for their default herein Now when awakened to do their duty they are ready to overdo and from too much remisness to fall into too much severity Thus in many other things we might instance how the Churches of God have fallen from one extremity to another but this subject especially as it relateth to Church-Discipline will be more sutably treated of in Chap. 2. I therefore briefly raise a third Observation and that is from the Apostles care and zeal to build up the Church of God For whereas he could not come to the Corinthians as yet lest any Church-corruption or disorders should arise thereby he endeavours by writing to do that in his absence which he would not do by his presence From whence we may gather That it 's the Ministers duty not only by personal preaching but by all other lawfull wayes to promote that Church he hath any relation unto When Paul cannot preach he will write This zeal in Paul drew out those many Epistles that now we have recorded in Scripture Our Apostle speaketh notably to this 1 Thess 2. 17 18. and Chap. 3. 1. where he sheweth his cordial affections towards that people with what violence he was kept from them and because Satan hindered him he saith He could no longer forbear but would be left at Athens alone without any comfort or solace rather than not to send to them that so they might not be moved from the Gospel Thus at other times we see this glorious Apostle when present yet not contented with his publick preaching did from house to house as occasion served with tears beseech and testifie every one to cleave unto the Lord. From this example of Paul who though an Apostle and so not bound to attend on particular Churches yet did by letters confirm and quicken those Churches he had planted We see how great and grievous a sinne a voluntary and unnecessary non-residence is in those Pastours who by their Office are bound to a particular Flock and to watch over them For though in some weighty cases for the good of the whole Church they may be detained from their Flock yet voluntarily and slothfully to do this will at last be found a grievous soul-murdering sin Use 2. To reprove that people who complain of too much preaching and too much ministerial imploiment thinking it needless SERM. XIX Of the Name and Nature of a Church-Saint 2 COR. 1. 1. With all the Saints which are in all Achaia WE are now arrived at the last clause in this verse which containeth a more general Description of those to whom he directs this Epistle Some Epistles are called Catholick because not inscribed to any particular Churches or persons but to the whole Church of God Others are more particular and local as this to the Corinthians yet we see it 's not so inscribed to them but that also all the adjacent Saints are comprehended in it Yea though Paul and others wrote their Epistles to certain Churches and persons yet they are in some sense Catholick for they all were written as a perpetual Rule to the whole Church of God in all ages So that this Epistle doth concern even the Churches of God in other Nations as well as that of Corinth when guilty of such disorder So that in the Inscription which is more general than the former clause we may take notice 1. Of the Persons to whom Paul writeth and they are described by their qualifications Saints 2. By a Note of Universality All the Saints There is none so mean or inconsiderable but the Apostle writeth as well to such a poor contemptible Saint as well as to the greatest and most eminent 3. There is the place where Which are in all Achaia I shall first consider the Qualification Saints He giveth this title to all that were of this Church even as in the former Epistle he saith They were sanctified in Jesus Christ Now the Question is How the Apostle could give the title of Saints to to all the Corinthians with those in Achaia for they both seem guilty of the same sins and therefore from this Epistle directed to them when yet they were so foully polluted Was the incestuous person before he repented Were those unclean persons that had not humbled themselves for their sins and Paul was afraid he should find them such when he came Were those Saints Were such who denied the Resurrection yea that had no knowledge of God as Paul said of some to whose shame he spake it were these Saints To this Austin of old answered and so some of late That the Apostle speaks this generally of the whole body because some amongst them were Saints The denomination being from the most worthy part So that they conclude of this as a Rule to interpret Scripture by To understand that of some parts which yet is attributed to to the whole And for this reason they say it is That the Apostle writing to some Churches as to this of Corinth doth sometimes speak of them as if they were all godly and at another time he reproveth them so as if they were all blame-worthy Thus because some were Saints indeed therefore he writeth to the whole Church as if Saints as we call a field of corn by that name though there may be many weeds and bryars amongst it This hath some truth but yet this is not all Secondly It may be thought that the Apostle calls them Saints in the judgment of charity because they did outwardly profess their faith and obedience in Christ even as Paul saith of Sylvanus 1 Pet. 5. 12. A faithfull brother as I suppose but a judgement of charity must be according to truth and he knew that all in Corinth were not truly Saints And as for that expression of Pauls concerning Sylvanus Calvin Estius and others do not relate the phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to a faithfull brother but to
the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the few things or briefly as added for Modesty sake and indeed if it were related to Sylvanus it would not commend his fidelity but rather give occasion to doubt of it But if we attribute it to Sylvanus the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it signifieth a firm and undoubted judgment upon good consideration therefore our English word suppose doth not so well answer it Therefore in the third place That distinction of a Saint by external profession or dedication to God thereby and by internal and spiritual renovation is the most genuine to answer this doubt Some were Saints by inward regeneration Others were Saints by external profession and outward submission so that they had not as yet renounced their Christianity and this sense the Apostle plainly makes when he gives that opposition between Heathens and Saints as 1 Cor. 6. 1. Dare any of you go to law before the unjust that is the Heathens and not before Saints where Saint is opposed to an Heathen So vers 6. a brother which is all one with a Saint is opposed to an unbeliever All that came out of the world to profess Christ are called Saints and believers though even amongst them all were not godly Now you must know that there are degrees of godliness 1. There is that which is supream and infinite and thus God is holy holy holy 2. There is created boliness and that either perfect such as the humane Nature of Christ the Angels and glorified Saints in Heaven have or else imperfect subject to many imperfections and weaknesses Hence saith Salmeron We dare not call any man a Saint while be liveth on this earth till he be consummated but that is absurd for to be a Saint is no more than to be holy so that if we may call any holy we may also call them Saints as our Translators do for the most part render the word The Papists indeed they call only those that are canonized Saints who are already in Heaven therefore those that lived in the Old Testament because of their opinion of their being in Limbo Patrum they are never in the Roman Church called Saints they never say Saint David or Saint Isaiah Salmeron also observeth from this title of Saints given to all believers That in the Infancy of the Church saith he all were called Saints in the Adolescentiâ only the Bishops and Officers in the Church but in Senectute only those that are translated into Heaven But we must conform to Scripture not humane speculations The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 answering the Hebrew Kodesh for the Septuagint seldom translate it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but generally by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is by some said to be as much as sine terrâ without earth or any worldly pollution But the best Grammarians derive it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to reverence and respect as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to desire because all holy things are with much reverence to be regarded Whereas then to be holy hath a two-fold principal signification 1. To be dedicate and set apart to God 2. To be inherently sanctified and both these applicable in the Text. We may observe That all those who are of Gods Church are Saints by profession and dedication and ought to be Saints by their lives and conversations Hence Rom. 1. 7. we have that expression called Saints that is either called to be Saints holiness being the term to which of their vocation or Saints by calling as Paul was by his calling an Apostle Both these tend to the same thing and all oblige to holiness First Let us consider how much this Church-Saintship doth comprehend what degrees and steps it hath And 1. It doth imply Their being under the external dispensation of Gods Covenant of Grace All that are under the Covenant administration are thereby Saints and holy though all are not regenerated Upon this account it is that the children of one or more believing Parents are called holy 1 Cor. 7. 14. where to be under the Covenant is enough to give this denomination of holy And hence it is that all the people of the Jews among whom there were many prophane and unholy persons in respect of inward Sanctity are yet called all of them Saints because the Covenant-dispensation was towards them Psal 77. 2. The Psalmist complaineth That the enemies had given the flesh of his Saints to the beasts of the earth where the Nation of the Jews destroyed by their enemies are all called Saints So Psal 89. 5 7. the assembly of the Israelites wherein also David did meet to praise God is called the Assembly of the Saints Now we cannot think that every Israelite who came to sacrifice and serve God was truly holy Yea Psal 50. God complaineth of such Who came and took his name into their mouth and yet hated to be reformed Therefore they are called Saints because they are all under the Covenant of Grace 2. Church-Saintship consists in a dedication and consecrating our selves unto God For our Baptism is the initial Sacrament and by it we are externally sanctified and set apart to God from the Devil sinne and the world For as in the Old Testament there were by certain ceremonial Rites dedicating of persons and things to God which thereby had a relative holiness and so were called holy because dedicated Thus though with some dissimilitude by the Sacrament of Baptism we are baptized into the Name of the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost which amongst other things signifieth this also that we are given up to God from the world and the Devil to be no more theirs not to live according to their course and way And for this reason it is that those who are not of the Church are said to be without 1 Cor. 5. and the world is distinct to the Church when therefore of the Church we are not of the world we are not without under the kingdom of Satan but we are of the body of Christ of his house and our Baptism doth sacramentally denote our communion with Christ Now although all that are baptized do not in deed and in truth put on Jesus Christ yet as long as they do not renounce their Baptism so long by that there is an outward dedication of them to God And thus that Apostate spoken of Heb. 10. 29. who never had true grace yet is said to be sanctified by the bloud of the Covenant whereof the Sacraments are seals So that our sacramental relation doth give an outward denomination of a Saint or an holy person though if there be no inward holiness the condemnation of such will be farre more dreadfull and intollerable than of the vilest and worst of Heathens 3. This Church-Saintship goeth a further step and that is An external profession of our faith
there are sinfull and unjustifiable grounds of some persons who do not joyn themselves to any Church-society and that may be either from a Corrupt Opinions or a Corrupt Heart though they seldom be separated from one another First From a Corrupt Opinion As 1. Of those who call themselves Seekers confessing they cannot yet find a Church to which they may joy●… For they affirm That since the Apostles dayes there are no Churches and therefore till they can see Apostles Apostolical gifts and miracles with the like effusion of the holy Ghost upon persons they cannot own any Church But this is against those Texts of Scripture which speak of a perpetuity of the Ministry and the duty of receiving Sacraments till the coming of Christ which could not be if there were no Church 2. Another corrupt opinion is of those who call themselves high Attainers These make themselves above the Church-ordinances they need them not yea some Anabaptists in Germany made themselves above the Bible living wholly upon spiritual revelations and called those who would leave to the Scripture as a Rule Creaturistae as depending upon a creature But the Scripture and Ordinances are necessary to quicken grace in the most holy and there are none so spiritual but they need them daily to comfort or instruct them yet such have their publick Assemblies wherein they deliver their opinions to be received But if people ought to be above all Ministry and teaching then also above theirs And certainly if those places of being taught of God and having an unction which teacheth us all things be against our Ministry it is also against theirs 3. There may be a corrupt opinion which though it be not against Church-communion absolutely yet they judge it Arbitrary and not necessary Of this opinion Grotius seemed once to be for he is thought to be the Author of that Book which asserts Quod non semper communicandum per symbola and Rivet in his Dialysis against him chargeth this upon him that he was not a member of any Church acknowledging it a just hand of God upon him that at his death when a Minister was brought to him he was wholly sensless So that he who in his life time cared not for Church-communion could not have any benefit by a Minister of the Gospel at his death 4. The last corrupt opinion by which men may not joyn to a Church may be from a superstitious conceit whereby men thinking it impossible to have salvation in the world have imprisoned themselves as it were in Cells and holes of Rocks thereby to give themselves wholly to divine Contemplation Thus the Monks Eremites and Anchorites of old For though some of the most ancient are excused as being driven thereunto by persecution yet the latter seemed to be transported wholly with superstition and therefore in that they lived solely not coming to the publick Ordinances of God in a Church way it was not justifiable by Scripture Indeed if they took their times to come to publick Societies and receive Sacraments as Rivet affirmeth against Grotius Dialys pag. 106. pleading their example for being of no Church then they are to be excused à tanto though not à toto The second unlawfull ground of keeping from Communion with Church-assemblies is A prophane Atheistical disposition that look upon a Church and a Church-assembly as humane devices to keep men in awe or if they be not so eminently Atheistical yet their love to their lusts and pleasures to the world and contents thereof make them weary of the Sabbaths and publick Ordinances as those in Amos 8. 5. When will the Sabbath be over that we may set forth wheat to sell How many are there that comes as seldome as ever they can to these publick Assemblies and when they do come it 's but for custom and fashion not that they ever found any spiritual good or expect and desire any Therefore let the Use be of Instruction that as ye are not to rest in any Church forms or external Communion to think that the very bodily doing of them will save you So on the other side Take heed of voluntarily and wilfully neglecting the publick Assemblies How have the godly when banished and driven from them bewailed their misery whereas thou dost voluntarily absent thy self Think how it may lie upon thee at thy death when thou shalt remember the many Sabbaths the many Ordinances thou hast neglected and now if God would give thee but one day or one hour to make thy peace with him thou wouldst judge it a great mercy The second Observation is from the Universality All the Saints There are none so mean so inconsiderable but this Epistle is directed to them as well as the most eminent From whence observe That the soul of the poorest and meanest Saint is not to be neglected That as the rain falleth upon the least spire of grass as well as the choisest flowers so ought all ministerial planting and watering to be to the meanest plant in Christs garden as well as the chiefest Though Christian Religion doth not abolish civil Polity nor the distinctions and relations of Magistrate and Subject of Master and Servant but strictly enjoyneth their respective duties yet in respect of religious considerations all are but as one Thus the Apostle notably Gal. 3. 28. There is neither bond or free male or female but all are one mark that in Christ Christ looketh upon all as one man And certainly if Christ in shedding his bloud for his people had an equal respect to the meanest with the greatest he died for the godly servant as well as the godly master the godly poor man as well as the godly rich man Then it behoveth all Christians to imitate him in this Whosoever is a Saint though he be never so contemptible do thou own and imbrace such else we do not love the brotherhood we do not love a godly man because he is godly but because he is great or rich or may advantage thee in the world Paul will not except or leave out one of the Saints in all Acbaia SERM. XXII How Grace and Peace and such like spiritual Mercies and Priviledges are to be desired before any temporal Mercies whatsoever 2 COR. 1. 2. Grace be to you and Peace from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ HItherto we have considered the Inscription we now come to the Salutation which is in these words and it containeth matter of prayer It is not any earthly or temporal mercy he prayeth for but what is heavenly and spiritual The Apostle Paul doth constantly use this Salutation only in both those Epistles to Timothy and Titus which were Church-officers he interposeth Mercy between Grace and Peace Calvin thinketh he putteth it in his Salutation to Timothy because of his dear affection and love to him but why should he do it to Titus also Certainly it ought to be considered that only to Church-officers he useth
zealous was Paul in desiring this for the Jews We read of a notable expression Epist 3. of John ver 2. There he wisheth Gaius as much health to his body as he had in soul How excellent was his soul that was in better condition than his body SERM. XXIII Of the Name Nature and Preheminence of the Grace of God above all other things 2 COR. 1. 2. Grace be to you and Peace c. THe next thing considerable in these words are the particular mercies prayed for in this Salutation The first whereof and that which is the efficient cause of all other things is Grace The Common-place in Divinity De Gratia Dei of the grace of God is of a very vast extent and most of the Popish Arminian and Socinian errours arise from the mistake of the use of this word in the Scripture but it would be impertinent to grasp that whole controversie I shall not treat any more of it then what may relate to this Text. We may therefore briefly take notice of the use of it to our purpose That the first and most principal signification of it is the favour and mercy of God towards us for it answereth the Hebrew word Chen which comes of a root that signifieth to have mercy So that when the Scripture faith We are justified by grace we are called by grace we are saved by grace The Popish party doth grosly erre taking grace there for something in us wrought by the Spirit of God whereas it is indeed without us even the Attribute of mercy and grace in God So that the meaning is We obtain such glorious priviledges not because of any thing in our selves though never so holy but because of the meer grace and favour of God without us Grace then in the most frequent and principal signification of it denoteth the favour and goodness of God But then In the second place It is used sometimes for the Effects of this Grace For as mercy is sometimes taken for the attribute in God and sometimes for the effects of it So likewise is grace Hence it is that Gods grace is sometimes put for the Gospel and the preaching of the Word This being meerly from his grace that he vouchsafeth such a mercy to his people Act. 20. 24. Tit. 2. 11. Sometimes it is taken for the good success and special assistance that God giveth unto the preachers of it Act. 14. 26. 1 Cor. 15. 10. Yet not I but the grace of God viz. assisting and giving success to my ministerial labours Again It 's applied to those common gifts of Gods Spirit which were so wonderfully vouchsafed in those dayes To speak with tongues to work miracles these are called the grace of God though some would distinguish between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 3. 10. 1 Pet. 4. 10. Yea the very function and offices in the Church are called Gods Grace as Paul did his Apostleship Rom. 1. 5. because it's the meer grace of God that hath appointed such Offices in the Church Lastly That which the Roman Church makes the more ordinary sence that indeed is sometimes but seldom to be found in Scripture viz. to signifie those habits and principles of holiness which are with in us There are some indeed who say The Scripture never useth the word Grace in this sense but some places seem to be clear Col. 3. 16. Col. 4. 6. Heb. 13. 9. 2 Pet. 3. 18. And therefore we may truly call that work of God in us Grace so that we do not make it to justifie or save for that is the grace of God without us Observe That the grace of God is to be desired by every one in the chiefest and first place This we should earnestly pray for that whatsoever God would deny us yet that he would give us his grace and favour We are I say to desire it not only above all temporal and earthly comforts above riches honours and long life but even above the sanctification and holiness of our souls which God worketh We are to desire his grace more than grace in our own hearts for this is the effect of that and this alone being imperfect in us could not justifie or save us Let us discover this rich treasure of Gods grace though the Apostle Ephes 2. 5. calls it The exceeding riches of his grace so that we can never speak to the full of it though we had the tongue of men and Angels still there is more in the grace of God than we are able to fathom We must therefore speak and understand as children about it till in Heaven this imperfection be done away And First We must know that God hath several attributes tending to the same thing yet do not ionally differ There is his Goodness whereby he is willing to communicate of his fulness to the creature Thus he was good to Adam making him so glorious a creature There is his Mercy and that is whereby he pitieth his creature being cast into misery There is also his Patience and Long-suffering which is extended to sinners that do for a long time rebell against him when he could if he pleased destroy them every moment in hell And lastly here is this property of Grace whereby he is called a gracious God And this the Scripture doth speak of as the most glorious and comfortable attribute and that doth imply these things 1. That whatsoever good God doth bestow upon us it cometh solely and originally from his meer bounty and good pleasure So that there is nothing in us that may in the least manner either merit with God or move him to be thus gracious So that we can never hear of this word Grace but it should presently humble and debase us it should make us condemn our selves and give all to God For if it be of grace than there was no motive in us God out of his own bowels doth this for us Rom. 1. 5 6. The Apostle speaketh very fully to this If of grace than it is not of works otherwise grace is no more grace So that to acknowledge the grace of God as Pelagians were forced to do and so Papists and Arminians do yet at last to divide between grace and our selves to make us co-workers with it yea to make it effectual this is to take all away really that we had given verbally before So that if it be Gods grace we must not give so much as the least sigh and desire to our selves all cometh meerly from the good pleasure of his own will 2. Grace doth not only thus imply a pure and only original from God himself excluding us but it supposeth also a manifest unworthiness in us and a contrary desert to what God bestoweth upon us Therefore grace in the Scripture language supposeth sinfulness in us that we deserve to be abhorred and cast out of Gods presence Hence justification and pardon of sinne are attributed to the grace of God
dat quod not habet is the old Rule They have no skill or ability to comfort others who have not the experience and feeling of this upon their own souls It is not enough for the Ministers of the Gospel to have devoured many Books of learning to be able to decide Polemical questions in Divinity to convince gainsayers to be Doctors Angelical subtle or profound to be Mallei Hereticorum The hammers of Hereticks unlesse also they have the experimental works of Gods Spirit upon their own souls They are not able to apply themselves to the hearts of others Paul had not been able to comfort others if the Lord had not practically acquainted him with heavenly consolations 2. There is the Subject to whom or the Persons whose wounds Paul like a good Samaritan is desirous to pour oyl into and that is Them which are in any trouble 3. There is the manner how which is by that very comfort Paul himself found And Lastly There is the fontal and original Cause of this Whereby we our selves are comforted of God The final Cause will afford two Observations First That the heavenly and spiritual works which God vouchsafeth to his people are not for themselves only but for the advantage and edification of others Who would not think that the inward comforts and soul-consolations should not be wholly inclosed within our own breasts that these should not be communicated to others Who would not say of these as Solomon in another case Prov. 5. Let these fountains be only thine own and not strangers with thee Yet God giveth us these soul-comforts that we may be able to revive and comfort many sad troubled hearts which lie languishing for want of them The second Observation is That those have the greatest ability and fitnesse to help the souls of others who have had the experience and work of God upon their own souls First Let us consider the former Doctrine viz. That those great and spiriritual works which God vouchsafeth to his children are not for their own god only but for the good of others If he said in a political sense Nemo sibi vivit sed patriae it is much more true of a Christian Non sibi vivit sed Ecclesiae He liveth not to himself but to the Church of God Hence is that frequent comparison in the Scripture of the Church of God and a body together making all Christians so many several Members that if one rejoyce all must rejoyce with it To be throughly possessed of this truth we are first to know That there are two kinds of Gifts of Gods Spirit unto those of the Church The Ancient Schoolmen which distinction is still retained with the Papists is that there are Gratiae gratis datae Favours freely given which are bestowed not so much for the good of them that have them as of the good of others Such were those extraordinary gifts of Gods Spirit in the primitive times to work Miracles to speak with tongues c. And such are also those common gifts of Prayer and Preaching which many may have and yet they be never the more holy But as water-pots that conveighs water to the Garden making it fruitfull while it self beareth no flowers at all so are they And truly this is sadly to be considered by all the Ministers of the Gospel whether the gifts God giveth them be not for the good of others more then their own As the Nurses of young Princes live upon excellent food not for their own sake but to give more excellent nourishment to their young ones The other sort of gifts they call Gratiae gratum facientes such gifts as he that hath them must needs be accepted of with God And these they make faith and love with the like graces Now this distinction is absurd for the Members are confounded The graces making acceptable are graces freely given It is solely and wholly of the grace of God to make thee differ from others in the special work of sanctification as it was in the primitive times to make one who had miraculous gifts to differ from another And then it is false for no grace we have doth of it self make us gratos accepted of to God but it is in and through Christ that their imperfections are pardoned and so received Therefore our Divines do distinguish better That there are Dona Ministrantia and Dona sanctificantia Gifts of service and Gifts of sanctification Gifts of service are such which God giveth for the use of the Church Gifts sanctifying are such as are for the good of those that have them Now though this be true yet in the second place you must not limit this so straightly as that sanctifying gifts may not be serviceable gifts also For it 's plain that in all the people of God their very graces as well as their gifts are to be exercised for the good of others Thy repentance thy faith thy joy may be put forth to quicken and edifie others Therefore we say in the Doctrine All the spiritual works of God upon the souls of his people are not only for themselves but for others All not only gifts but graces Not only their parts and their duties but their holinesse also Hence Prov. 15. 4. an wholesome tongue which is the gift only that a godly man hath is said to be a tree of life because it doth so much spiritual good to others Think then that God hath not given thee grace and comfort for thy self only but for others who may stand in need of thee As it was with Christ the Head so it should be with his Members proportionably Isa 50. 4. To have the tongue of the learned given them from God to be able to speak a word in season to him that is weary As therefore God hath given thee fullnesse temporally to feed the hungry and to cloathe the naked when such due objects of charity are presented to thee Thus also God giveth thee faith to help him that complaineth he cannot believe He giveth thee comfort to succour those that can find no joy This is to be considered that thou beest not a fountain sealed up but opened whereat many may occasionally refresh themselves Thirdly The godly mans improving his gifts and graces doth not at all hinder and diminish his own but thereby increaseth and multiplyeth them It is like the widows giving of oyl to the Prophet which was so farre from impoverishing that it did enrich her We may not then refuse those who shall desire help for their souls as the wise Virgins did the foolish saying It might be there would not be enough for themselves No the more thou art willing to season others with thy own salt to quicken and comfort others by thy own quicknings and comforts herein thou wilt find thy self more edified and the good will rebound upon thy own self For these improvings of thy gifts and graces serviceably to others souls will multiply thy
experimental knowledge which may be accompanied with some kind of sensible affections Mat. 13. the temporary believer received the word with joy You see then that some may have joy and that from the Word yet this not be the true saving knowledge or faith Heb. 6. some are there also said not only to be inlightened but to have tasted the good word of God Here you may observe that some may tast may have joy all which do inferre some affectionate inward experimental workings on the soul and yet not attain to have the true and honest heart And the reason is because these affectionate workings they are but transitory they quickly vanish away There is no setled constancy or permanency in them So that we are not to give credit to all the affections nor to all inlargements that we may find in our selves even about holy things but we are to be sure that there be deep rooting enough Hence Fourthly All experimental workings of the soul are to be judged and tryed by the Scripture Our hearts being full of guile and imposture the devil also transforming himself into an Angel of light hence it may come about that we may have the experience of much joy of many inlargements and yet all the while be in the devils waies Hence it is that all Sectaries almost will tell us of the great support and comfort they have had and that ever since they embraced those new waies yea some make themselves to be the only spiritual men that all other are in the flesh as Tertullian wrote a Book against the Orthodox stiling it Contra Psachicos as those that were meerly natural in the mean time he pretended to private revelations The experiences therefore which we find in our souls we must examine and try lest we make that to be of God which is indeed of the devil No doubt many deluded souls in dangerous and damnable waies comfort others of the same way with them by that comfort wherewith they are comforted not of God but of the devil Therefore let our experiences especially of comfort be judged by the Word in these Particulars First In the manner and way how thou comest by them Are they by the Scriptures truly understood I say truly understood For if thou abusest Scripture putting thy own sense upon it and thereby receiving comfort it is no longer then Verbum Dei but verbum tuum thou wrestest it and makest it thy own or the devils and not Gods If therefore thy experience of comfort be grounded on the Word if thy consolation flow from hence then this will abide That we through comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15. 4. The Spirit of God doth first lead into all truth and then into all comfort Secondly In the original and the efficient cause is it from God from the Spirit of God Or from the devil who may harden thy heart and make thee have such joy as mad men have not feeling their own misery The comfort and the joy that is truly so is still attributed to God and the Holy Ghost as the fountains thereof Thirdly Doth thy experience of Consolation make thee more humble and empty Doth it drive thee out of all thy vain carnal confidences This argueth it cometh from God if with the Centurian when Christ cometh to thy soul thou sayest Lord I am unworthy this joy this consolation should enter into me And therefore the more comfort the more lowly and debased in thy own eyes And never more then when the most joy This is a good experience of comfort as coming from God So also if this comfort be conducing to holinesse if by this thou art more quickned to mortifie sinne to subdue the corruptions that remain if this be like oyl to the wheeles thou art more fervent more zealous in all holy duties then make much of this comfort for it cometh from Heaven If then we have the experience of Gods working upon our souls both in the way of grace and the way of comfort then and never till then are we fitted to deal with the souls of others And there are these Reasons First None can wisely be a Physician to heal a disease in another unlesse he have skill and understanding in the nature of it and the fit remedy for it Now while a man hath no experimental knowledge of Gods workings upon his own soul he hath no skill no heavenly heart about the diseases in others souls Bring a poor wounded soul that is burdned with sinne that would be directed into Evangelical comforts to a Pharisaical self-righteous Doctor and alas he will as Ely thought the poor weeping woman bitter in soul and praying to God to be drunk so will these think such an one mad and foolish Hence you heard Christ would be tempted as we are that he might succour those that are tempted that he might have the tongue of the learned to speak to such who are weary Those that have not been thus humbled thus exercised thus comforted they are no waies able to be any helpfull comforters but like the Priest and the Levite will passe by those who are thus wounded Secondly As such can have no skill or understanding so they cannot have any sutablenesse of pity and compassion to those that are so afflicted in spirit and needed comfort She said Non ignara mali miseris c. The experience she had of miseries made her pity those that were in the like God would have the Jews be kind to strangers because they had once been strangers themselves Thou that hast been in the deep waters of Gods wrath thou that knowest how insupportable it is to feel the frowns and wrath of God for sin with what melting bowels with what pittifull affections wilt thou be like the good Samaritan Hence it is that as the Lord Christ himself did conflict with the wrath of God being in unspeakable agonies so also many of the choicest servants of God especially Ministers have been under the harrow and hammer of these desertions that they may be more polished for Gods building Luther doth manifest in several places what the great works of God were that he felt on himself so that though of a stout and undaunted spirit yet the anger of God did beat him to powder and finding no help for his afflicted soul in any Popish Principles no more then the Dove could place of abode while the waters did overflow at last when it pleased God to comfort him by Evangelical comforts through a right understanding of Christ and righteousnesse what a tree of life did his tongue become to others How many did he comfort by those comforts God had comforted him Calvin also it 's noted of him that he was a man of deep and retired thoughts within yet did retain them much in his own brest and no doubt by this he was the more prepared to be an excellent Instrument in the Church of God We see
comparatively to the cause and glory of Christ And this makes it so difficult to suffer This hath made the Apostates that have many times been in the Church This hath filled the hearts of many with woe and wounds implacably For their childrens sake for their lives sake they deny Christ and a good conscience and how can it be otherwise while Earth is dearer than Heaven when we esteem the favour of men more than the favour of God This hath proved bitter wormwood to many at last Lastly To suffer for Christ there is required pure and holy motives To lose all for Christs sake out of meer conscience that this is the only cause why we are in any trouble We may read both in sacred and prophane Histories how men have suffered even death it self only for vain-glory All Aristotles vertuous men they were ambitious and vain-glorious men The very Heathen could make it Laudum immensa cupido as well as Amorpatriae We would think it a madnesse to lose comforts and life for an airy bubble of windy glory yet many have been thus transported not only Philosophus but Haereticus est animal gloriae vanissimum If then it 's not Scripture-grounds but ambitious vain-glorious principles that make thee to suffer Christ doth not will not provide sugar for thy bitter pils Thus have we seen what is required to suffer for Christ Oh the difficulty of this duty No wonder so much seed hath withered away when the scorching Sunne of persecution did arise No wonder Christ hath many Swallow-friends that endure with him the Summer time onely No wonder few are lovers of Christ for Christs sake As Alexander had more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 These are the Bees that follow for the honey-pot only Now to all these we must adde this Caution A Christian that suffereth for Christ though he have not those qualifications in a perfect degree but find corruption opposing every one of them He must not therefore cast away his confidence for we can no more suffer perfectly for Christ then do perfectly for him and if our gracious works cannot justifie us no more can our gracious sufferings Martyrdom is not meritorious Though we shed our bloud for Christ yet the blood of Christ must cleanse that duty also The Martyrs died only in resting upon Christ for salvation and no wonder the godly heart finds more imperfections in his sufferings more carnal fear and impatience then in other duties because this is the hardest service Christ doth ever put his upon What else is to be said in this point will come in in the next particulars SERM. XLVIII How many wayes and by what means Christ comforteth those who suffer for him 2 COR. 1. 5. So our consolation aboundeth by Christ THe second absolute Proposition in the Text is That our comfort aboundeth by Christ. The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is rendred by some Exhortation but more generally and fitly Consolation Though this be spoken in the singular number and afflictions in the plural yet this is to be understood collectively as a treasure that hath all kind of comforts in it not one or two but all Therefore the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here repeated again aboundeth which is to be understood partly repletively it filleth the hearts of those that do suffer for Christ and partly diffusively it extends also to the comfort of others And then you have the cause of all this By Christ Christ who is the cause of their sufferings is also the cause of their comfort As from the same root proceedeth both the Rose and its pricks Thus from Christ the same Fountain cometh both bitter and sweet Were not this added who would suffer for Christ who would lose all for him but Christ hath so ordained it that these sufferings are advantagious to us and though we lose in the retail yet we gain in the bulk and whole Observe That as our sufferings are for Christ so by the same Christ are our comforts Though he strike with one hand yet he supporteth with the other If David said to the Priest who fled to him many of them being slain at No● by the bloudy cruelty of Saul Stay with me I am the occasion of your deaths thou shalt fare as I fare How much more will Christ own such who suffer for him saying Depend upon me for I am the cause of all the reproaches and cruel usages you meet with in the world But to explain this Let us consider In what respects comforts may be said to abound by Christ And First Efficiently He being the same with God is therefore a God of all consolation Yea Christ as a Mediator he is sensible of our temptations knoweth our need and wants and therefore the more ready to comfort Christ that wanted comfort himself and therefore had an Angel sent to comfort him is thereby the more compassionate and willing to comfort us Thus you may read Christ and God put together in this very act 2 Thess 2. 16 17. Our Lord Jesus Christ himself and God even our Father who hath given us everlasting consolation comfort your hearts Paul here prayeth that both Jesus Christ and God the Father would comfort them Christ therefore not only absolutely as God but relatively as Mediator is qualified with all fitnesse and fulnesse to communicate consolation he is the fountain and head as of grace so of comfort Secondly We are comforted by Christ Meritoriously he hath merited at the hands of God our comfort for without Christs death and atonement we were no more subjects prepared for comfort then the damned Angels Had all mankind with Dives begged but for a drop of comfort such was the gulph between God and us that it could not be obtained So that by Christ a way is made for our consolation Christ did not only obtain the communication of the holy Ghost in the gifts and graces thereof So that as by Christ the Spirit of God is given to the Church as a guide to teach and lead into all truth as the sanctifying Spirit and use of all holinesse So he is also as the Comforter who giveth every drop of consolation that any believer doth enjoy Though therefore joy and comfort be in Scripture attributed to the holy Ghost as the appropriated and applying cause thereof yet this is wholly because of the merits of Christ And therefore we may pray for comfort upon the same grounds as we doe for holinesse They are both the fruits of Christs death Lastly We are comforted by Christ Objectively that is in him and from him we take our comfort As Christ is called Our righteousnesse because in and through his righteousnesse we are accepted of in him we are compleat So Christ is our comfort because in him we find matter of all joy though there be troubles and vexations from the creatures though the Sunne and Moon be turned into bloud all powers
the Gospel is though to some a savour of life yet to others a savour of death Thus afflictions and troubles to some do discover their hypocrisie and guile as winnowing doth the cha●● but to others they are blessed either to conversion or to edification So that in all the sufferings of the Church we are by prayer to importune God that by these means greater glory may come to Christ and that these waters of persecution may be like those to the Ark which could not drown it but exalted it nearer to Heaven Hence Fourthly We may admire the wisdome power and goodnesse of God that wherein the enemies of Gods Church deal craftily and cruelly in that very thing he is above them working the contrary to that which they are intending For how many persecutors hath the Church had who like Haman resolved to root out the very name of Christianity and their persecutions have increased the number of Christians Thus it must needs be madness and torment to the Churches enemies to see that the wayes they take to demolish is indeed to build up the Church of God Even as it was with Pharaoh when he called a counsel to deal craftily with the Israelites to oppress and diminish them then they were the more multiplied Thus Act. 12. 24. when Herod set himself to kill the eminent servants of the Lord and thereby weaken the Church of God for when the shepherds were dissipated what would become of the flock it is said But the word of God grew and multiplied See how the contrary fell out to Herods design These things premised Let us consider What is the general good promoted by the Churches sufferings And 1. Hereby the glory of God and Christ is the more exalted amongst all that fear him For when the Churches of God shall see the wisdome and goodness of God thus to his people turning all the cruelty and craft of their adversaries to their own good that what they could never do their enemies do for them What glory and praise doth this cause in all Congregations How is the Church indeared hereby to God to trust in him to continue faithfull to him in all exercises God hath been good and will be good God hath turned the greatest evil of men to the greatest advantage and he will do it As Christs death is called a glorifying of him Thus also are the sufferings for Christ the believers glory and not only so but the glory of Christ also What saith Paul Phil. 1. 20. Christ shall be magnified in my body whether by life or death But 2. The great good overflowing to the Church by its sufferings are the propagation and enlargement of the Gospel thereby Phil. 1. 13. Paul there sheweth how his troubles fell out to the furtherance of the Gospel for his bonds were made manifest in Caesars palace and in all other places That of Tertullian is known The blood of Martyrs is the seed of the Church When men did behold their faith the r●patience their constancy and courage it made them enquire into the cause of their sufferings what it was that could make them so constantly endure all kind of torments Insomuch that this was in stead of the working of miracles to bring men to faith So that as the shaking of a ripe flower maketh many seeds fall to the ground and in stead of that one flower many come up in the room of it or as when the Vine hath its branches cut off there come farre more in stead thereof Thus it hath also been by all the troubles on the Church of God by afflictions and by patience under them How numerous did the Church of God grow even like the stars in Heaven Let the Use be To consider those examples of all such worthies who have suffered for Christ whether recorded in Scripture or in Ecclesiastical History read them for thy comfort and thy salvation The word of God and the lives of Martyrs bearing witness to it may much prevail over a stony heart It hath been a good blessing of God that the Names and Histories of most Martyrs have been preserved and recorded for the good of the Church of God to come The lives and sufferings of our Martyrs here in England what influence may they not make upon thee What patience what heavenly mindedness what courage should this put into thee As Abel though dead speaketh Thus do all the godly Martyrs the Bradfords the Ridleys the Latimers they all speak still and God suffereth such persecutions to be as perpetual Sermons to teach us SERM. LI. The Afflictions which others suffer for Christ make much for our Comfort and Salvation 2 COR. 1. 6. And whether we be afflicted it is for your consolation and salvation THe second particular in this Text as it stands divided is the Consequent or Effect of this tribulation which is set down in a particular and special manner above any other fruit of it and that is two-fold Consolation and Salvation Of the word Consolation enough hath already been said For the other viz. Salvation we shall remit it to the end of the verse where it is again specified So that our work is immediately to proceed to the Observation which is That sufferings for Christ should be so farre from disheartning and offending others that a true and right consideration of them may much provoke our comfort and salvation This truth is of great use For the afflictions accompanying the wayes of Christ have been an offence and a stumbling block to many Now when a curb shall be made a spur when an hinderance a furtherance and we shall be encouraged from those particulars which should drive back this consideration must be very profitable Before we come to amplifie in what manner in what respects persecutions are made thus serviceable to others Let us take notice First That the sufferings of others do work good only occasionally or by way of example We must not conceive any merit or causality as was declared before in Martyrs They are Examples not Mediators Their light did shine that we might thereby glorifie God So that we must take heed that the sufferings of the godly do not obscure the sufferings of Christ that they should not be accounted the only treasure of Christ But as Luther was afraid lest his books should take men off from meditating on the Bible Or as Paul was afraid men should judge of him as if he by his own power had done that miracle and therefore told them It was onely by the Name of Christ. So also it was with all the true Martyrs of Christ they were humble looking upon themselves as unworthy of the name of a Martyr neither would they have their blood derogate from the blood of Christ Hence Secondly We may greatly deplore and bewail the Apostasie of the Church concerning those that were Martyrs and sufferers for Christ in what superstition and sinfull devotion were they plunged in about
by himself Whereby the same Authour concludeth That there would be no blame or fault to be found with that man who should say Paul had as much grace here in this life as some shall have in the world to come But although we grant Paul to be among other Christians like Saul among other men higher by the shoulders yet that he did find the rebellion and corruption of the flesh debasing his best duties appeareth by his accounting all things drosse and desiring to be found in the righteousnesse of Christ Phil. 3. 8. So that while these endeavour to exalt the sanctifying grace of God in Paul they eclipse his justifying and while they advance his inherent righteousnesse they obscure his imputed righteousnesse Whether Paul then or any other eminent servant of God They all find a law of sinne within them rebelling against the law of the mind by which they look upon themselves as miserable captives and do groan for a perfect and full redemption by Christ Thirdly These two principles therefore not onely residing in them but acting contrarily it is very necessary in a Christian exactly to observe to what mother as it were the child doth belong To which principle thou art to attribute thy actions For the not duly dividing and separating here doth many times cause great confusion in the godly soul We see it many times in David's Psalmes that there are such different expressions sometimes of faith and joy and then again of diffidence and dejection that we would not think the Psalme was made by the same man we would think there were contradictions and all because sometimes it is the voice of Esau and sometimes the voice of Jacob as I may so say Sometimes grace speaketh and sometimes the filth speaketh In the Disciples also our Saviour taketh notice of this and thereby excuseth them saying The Spirit is willing Matth. 26. 41. Now although it is very necessary in all our practicals to go to the bottome to know what is of the flesh and what is of the Spirit yet in the matter of afflictions and our bearing of them there we are much more to attend to it For afflictions being grievous to flesh and blood draweth out the corruptions thereof very much So that the voice of the flesh is many times farre louder than the voice of the Spirit which maketh the godly ready to conclude that they are nothing but flesh that they have not the Spirit of Christ dwelling in them because they feel so much distrust so much diffidence and disquietness of heart within them More usefull particulars are to be insisted upon only for the present let those who truly fear God make this Use of the Doctrine viz. Not to conclude concerning their estate as if it were wholly carnal because they feel the struglings and motions of sinfull flesh within them let them not despair if they feel that they cannot alwayes keep up spiritual apprehensions about their afflictions if they cannot say I bless God for these chastisements I see the great advantage cometh to me by them Though they appear like anger yet they are indeed the effects of love If this be not alwayes the blessed and serene disposition of thy soul but thy flesh like Job's wife provoketh thee to charge God foolishly to be impatient and diffident remember that you have a two-fold self a carnal self and a spiritual self one saith one thing and another saith another thing It is as impossible to have a mans own heart free f●om divisions as it is for the Church of God That which faith saith is light flesh saith is heavy That which faith rejoyceth at flesh repineth at Thus it hath been and thus it will be with the generation of those that seek God SERM. LXII How the voice of the Spirit and the voice of the Flesh differ in Afflictions And why it is necessary a man should know them asunder 2 COR. 1. 8. That we were pressed above measure FRom the Explication of this passage we have observed That it is one thing what a godly man speaketh according to the principle of flesh and blood within him and another thing what he saith according to faith and the principle of grace And because this truth is of perpetual practical use let us a little more dilate upon it And First Let us instance in some discoveries whereby we may know when flesh speaketh and when the Spirit doth For these though contrary one to another yet are not discerned without spiritual illuminations and senses exercised to know things that differ And First The voice of flesh and blood in such kind of troubles is to make a final conclusion and sentence upon our selves That God hath forsaken us that we are cast out from his love Insomuch that did not the principle of grace in some measure withstand and at some times overcome these temptations the soul would be swallowed up in this whirlpool but let the godly know that this is not the voice of Jacob but of Esau The regenerate principle will not dare not give in such false testimony Isai 49. 14 15. Zion hath said The Lord hath forsaken me and my Lord hath forgotten me But in the next verse we see God expresly denying it and that not only he had not forsaken her but that he could not forsake her for his affections were more to her then any mothers to her sucking child The Church then was too hasty and precipitate she should have considered Gods Word before she passed such a peremptory sentence concerning her self Therefore when God saith one thing and thy heart another when the Scripture speaketh one thing and thy flesh another thing which is more to be regarded See this distemper likewise in Jonah Chap. 2. 6. Then I said I am cast out of thy sight Here the corrupt part in Jonah made quick his desperate work He was cast out of Gods sight but Nubecula fuit cito transivit it was a little storm it was presently over for immediately he doth as it were contradict himself and saith I will look again toward thy holy Temple So that it was with corruption and grace at this time as it was with Rebeccah in her child-bearing the first came out red and hairy but the second came out smooth and holding Esau by the heel Thus the first motion of Jonah's heart cometh forth red and hairy bloody and rough but then faith like Jacob followeth this Esau immediately and supplants it When therefore the godly do at any time find such motions and workings of heart as if their troubles were a demonstration of Gods desertion of them that if he loved them he would never let it be so with them rebuke these immediately and be as much affected as Hezekiah was when he heard Rabshakeh blaspheme God For indeed such thoughts do highly dishonour God and represent him otherwise than he is For the Apostle directed by the Spirit of God which searcheth the deep things of
above other private Christians yet remember thou wantest their prayers They that cannot help thee by counsell and advice they that cannot help thee by direction yet may by prayer Therefore do nothing that may abate their zeale and love in prayer for thee It may also teach thee humility in this respect When thou findest great inlargements good success in thy Ministry be not lifted up as if God did this for any righteousness it may be in thee but because of other mens prayers attribute such things to their prayers rather then thy graces But we proceed to the second Doctrine which is Secondly That people do owe unto their spirituall guide as a debt of service their earnest prayers for them Thus much you heard was implyed in the Greek word Those that sow unto you spirituals are not only to reap of your carnals but also of your spirituals you are not to communicate only with him that teacheth you in your temporall good things but your spirituall also Thus the Church looked upon it as a duty to make supplications for Peter when he was in Prison and certainly the spirituall labourer is not only worthy of his wages but of your heartiest and most fervent prayers and those people who do neglect this duty it is a signe that they never get good by the Ministry nor is it their desire to do so Hence so much labouring and Preaching becometh so ineffectuall to thee Thou art the same ignorant and prophane man as thou wert many years ago Is not this because thou never rightly prayest to God that the ministry may be blessed to thee But to inlarge on this Consider 1. That it is a wild and absurd opinion of the Socinians who hold that prayer is only commanded in the New Testament That Christ made it a new precept to pray so that although the godly in the Old Testament did pray yet they say they had no command for it This they make one of the new Evangelicall precepts Christ brought into the Church but this doth openly contradict Scripture Doth not the Scripture say Call upon me in the time of trouble doth not the Old Testament say Seek ye the Lord while he may be found was not the Temple of God called the house of prayer doth not Solomon in the Dedication of his Temple suppose that its a peoples duty under judgments to pray and humble themselves under Gods hand that so they may be removed from off them It was therefore alwayes a duty both in the Old and New Testament to pray to God 2. Though prayer be the meanes whereby God accomplisheth great things for his people yet we must not put any merit or confidence in our prayers To be proud of thy prayers is a great absurdity for thy prayer to God doth testifie that thou art nothing that thou canst do nothing for if thou canst do things of thy selfe why needest thou pray That is the reason the Socinians give why in the Old Testament there needed no precept of prayer because there was then nothing promised but they were able to fullfill the condition thereof by their own power But the foundation of that is rotten for they had the same spirituall things promised only more obscurely that we have and were no wayes of themselves to performe their conditions otherwise we will grant that what a man can do of his own power independently upon God he needeth not pray for it but there is nothing wherein man doth not need the gift of God whether for temporall or necessary things and seeing the way to have it is only by prayer this exalteth God and debaseth man so that it is a contradiction to the duty in hand when we rest upon our prayers as if the beggar should be proud from his asking of almes 3. The duty of prayer is reciprocall Ministers are to pray for their People and People for their Ministers This Paul who so often desireth the Churches prayers doth as often demonstrate his continuall and fervent prayers for them yea though a people be never so unworthy so wretched and malicious yet they will say with Samuell God forbid I should cease to pray for you so that thy prayers for those who labour in the work of the Lord are not in vain They are recompenced with prayers again and never are people a blessing and comfort to a Minister nor is a Minister a blessing to them till there be this mutuall praying for if the prayer of one man doth prevaile much how much then will the prayers of many righteous persons for each other So that we see why the Devill and his instruments are so busie in sowing of discords and contentions between Pastor and People why instead of praying for one another there are slanderings detractitions and malicious oppositions of one another for by this discord the Devils Kingdome is promoted and their prayers for one another are hindred 4. When we say That its a debt which people owe to pray for their spirituall guides this supposeth that the people whom he watch over should be both a gifted and a gracious people Gifted Such who are able to make their requests known to God and that with others as well as alone for how can it be expected that he who cannot pray for himself will ever pray for the Minister Would it not be very ridiculous to desire the prayers of many who live under our continuall teaching Pray Alas they never prayed in their lives They never pray for themselves or for others But gifts without grace are like a tinckling Cymball God will not hear the prayers of wicked men Therefore our people ought to be gracious as well as gifted They must have pure hearts and pure hands how uncomely are holy prayers in an unholy mouth There must be no dead flye in this precious box of Oyntment Oh then that our Congregations were awakned to be such a people that can discharge spirituall duties to a spirituall overseer Do you by your prayers help on the work of their ministry for our Preaching alone without your effectuall praying will not have its blessed effect 5. There are many particulars in which your soules are to be emptyed in prayer for them for their preservation and safety As here Paul prayeth for their workes sake they are exposed to the hatred and rage of man if the shepheard be scattered the sheep will quickly flye now because their calling is to remove the sinnes of people to set the Kingdome of Christ in the place where they live therefore none meet with more absurd and unreasonable adversaries then they do for this Paul desireth their prayers 2 Thes 3. 2. That he might be delivered from unreasonable men 2. You are to pray for them in this particular also that their Ministery may be successefull That the word they Preach may find roome in the hearts of the people As it is the Ministers duty to give himself to study and to
for they have not returned to glorifie me It is love to our selves it 's a self-seeking that makes us pray but it would argue love to God and an honouring of him when we returne praises to him It is therefore the duties of Ministers to press you upon the duty of praising of God as well as of praying unto him Many are horribly negligent in both some are more often in prayer then they are in thanksgiving Whereas God is said to inhabit the praises of his people Psalm 22. 3. as well as he is the God that heareth prayers Psalm 65. 2. God dwelleth in the praises of Israel that is in or amongst Israel continually praising of him or else it is to shew that as a man dwelleth in his house constantly residing there so God is daily administring matter of praises to his people implying thereby that there is no time no place no condition wherein we ought not to bless and praise God Those many Psalmes which David made declare how necessary a duty it is and how much the people of God are to exercise themselves therein Hence it is that David professeth he will never intermit this duty as we are to pray without ceasing so to praise God without ceasing Psalm 145. 1 2. I will bless thy name for ever and ever I will bless thee every day See what an ardent affection David hath to this For although the Apostle James saith Is any man afflicted let him pray is any man merry let him sing Psalmes James 5. 13. implying thereby that there are speciall times wherein one duty is to be exercised more than another yet there is no time wherein the Lord doth not give his people occasion to give thanks to him That your hearts may be both rightly instructed in the manner of this duty and awed against all slothfullness therein take notice of these ensuing particulars 1. What is required to this Duty And 2. The Motives thereunto And First To praise God there is required an acknowledgement by faith that God and God alone is the Author of all the mercies both temporall and spirituall that we do enjoy Hence an Atheist can never be thankfull because he owneth no God the giver of mercies And the practicall Atheist who liveth as if there were no God he like the Swine eateth indeed upon the fruite that he findeth upon the ground but never looketh up to the tree from whence it falleth Now this practicall Atheisme doth raign every where and that causeth the universall ingratitude that is in the world men take these mercies as so many debts belonging to them They look upon them as the things of a naturall course not as the dispensations of a free and voluntary Agent even the great God who giveth them and denyeth them at his pleasure David therefore in his Psalmes doth so often magnifie God by many glorious Titles thereby professing that From God cometh every good and perfect gift Hence also the Apostle James Cap. 4. 15. maketh it the duty of every one in their daily resolutions to buy and sell or to go to such a place to say if the Lord will declaring hereby that it is from God that we are inabled to performe any naturall or civill action I also add that it must be an acknowledgment of God alone because in spirituall mercies many corrupt Teachers have divided the kingdome between Gods gracious power and mans mans free-will Therefore the Papists the Socinians the Arminians these do either in whole or in part destroy the very foundation of thanksgiving to God in respect of spirituall mercies especially in that whereby one man differs from another That which the Apostle doth so evidently attribute to God only 1 Cor. 4. 7. that they appropriate to themselves the good use of free-will or the improving of grace offered is made mans work and then certainly we are to glory more in our selves then in God But if we are to give God thankes for every morsell of bread we eate shall we not much rather for every spirituall mercy to the soul It was Tullies observation that though their Ancestors praised God for their prosperity and success yet they never did for their vertuous actions thinking that absurd as if unless they were not done by their own power there was no commendation due to them and too much of this Heathenish and Philosophicall leaven doth still soure the minds of many Learned men in the Church Know then so much as thou settest up a free-will beyond Scripture bounds so farre thou takest off from the duty of praising and blessing of God Besides we say God must be acknowledged in every mercy temporall and spirituall Thou that prayest God would give thee thy daily bread wilt thou not praise God when he doth it yet how sottish and brutish are many persons and Families when they go to meales and rise from meales and no thankes or praises are given to God should not the example of Christ move thee when he had but some loaves of Barly and a little Fish yet he blessed God before he did eate thereof How then cometh it about that there should be such unthankfull wretches that take their food and yet never thank God that giveth it Thou wouldst account that poore man a proud or unworthy person to whom thou shouldst give some food in his necessity and he never so much as open his mouth to give one word of thankfullness to thee Thou dealest more frowardly and wickedly with God And if for temporall mercies then much more for spirituall if thy meate thy drink thy rayment be Gods mercy much more is thy regeneration thy justification which do so far transcend the power of nature 2. To this duty of praising God is not only required These generall acts of faith whereby we own him for the Jehova and the Creator of Heaven and Earth but also those particular Acts whereby we do apply and appropriate him as our God in particular For it is this particular applying Act of faith that maketh the heart full of praise and thanksgivihg Therefore you may observe David in his Psalmes not only calling God a buckler a refuge a strong tower but his buckler his strong tower his God Neither can we be thankfull in spirituall mercies about pardon of sinne support in temptations till with Paul Gal. 2 we say Who loved us and gave himself for us and this is one reason why we urge the People to take heed of diffidence not to give way to distrust and doubtfull perplexities of soul because while these are predominant they cannot walk thankfully and give the glory that is due to him 3. Love to God Because he heareth our prayers will raise up the heart exceedingly to thanksgiving Psal 116. 1. I will love the Lord because he hath heard my supplications That God should hear the prayers of one so unworthy and polluted as thou art that God should do thee good who art so evill this freeness
putting on the new man Austin wrote much against this way of lying And certainly seeing that words are appointed to signifie our mind to another if we pervert them to the contrary end to deceive them we doe overthrow the foundation of spiritual and civil societies It is one thing indeed not to reveale all the truth when not required or commanded this may sometimes be done but to deny the truth or equivocate this doth no wayes become those who with sincerity and not with fleshly wisdome are to propagate the Gospel If you say for all the Church of Rome hath used such carnal policy yet she continueth in her externall prosperity she is not blasted and crossed in her designes and therefore Bellarmine would take advantages of the Protestants by this If saith he the Church of Rome be so vile and impure as you say she is if she use all those unlawfull and ungodly wayes to keep up her glory then it 's the greater argument that her constitution is of God that all her craft and wickednesse hath not yet ruined her But to this doubt it is easily answered That by the Scripture we know it is foretold that he must prevaile for a long time in the Church and therefore their successe notwithstanding all their cruelty and craft is not to be any stumbling block to such who believe the Scriptures The third instance of fleshly wisdome to propagate Religion by is To indulge men in their lusts and sinnes that so the party which followeth them may be the more numerous This is fleshly wisdome in an high degree of impiety and yet in this also the Church of Rome hath beene notorious when other Churches have by their good Discipline cast out some offenders for scandalous impieties They have appealed to the Church of Rome in that case and she craftily laying hold on the opportunity hoping thereby to establish her Supremacy would like Absolom say to every one that came that his cause was good and by this policy in indulging and encouraging such licentious offenders whom other Churches would not endure as members At last with other politick devises she arrived to that amplitude of power she now glorieth in We might instance in other subtil forgeries as the corrupting or denying some Canons made in the Council of Nice thereby to translate the chief Patriarchship to her self a famous cheat and discovered most palpably to the shame of the Romane party of which there is much in Ecclesiastical Authours as also the pretence of Constantines donation a forged he like the rest This I shall insist upon as greatly considerable The indulging of people in prophanenesse as also in horrible ignorance that so they may rule without controll And how well were it if this fleshly wisdome were inclosed in the Romane Conclave Are there not too many in the Protestant Churches that out of a desire either to please men or increase their earthly advantages promote a promiscuous admission of all to the Lords Table making no difference betweene the clean and unclean This I confesse is the way to be applauded by the most This is that which will give best content to all This is accounted wisdome and moderation but Wisdome is justified of her children and the holy institution of Christs will be owned by those who worship God in Spirit and truth But this fleshly wisoome whereby we please all and indulge men in their lusts is seldome successefull but fire will come out of the Bramble when it doth not out of the Fig-tree to consume I meane even prophane and wicked spirits are many times stirred up by God to oppose such corrupt Teachers when the godly meddle not at all For God doth many times make use of the wickednesse of one ungodly man to torment another Yea Luther's first stirrings against the abuses of Popery were not so pure and sincere as afterwards when the light and grace of God came more upon him It is therefore a great duty incumbent upon the Ministers of the Gospel to walk sincerely by Christs rule in their pastoral exercises avoiding this fleshly wisdome which though it may seeme sometimes to prevent a mischiefe yet as it did to David doth afterwards plunge in a greater calamity And indeed going to carnal policy in Church-administrations is but like going to witches and wizards forsaking Gods way which never bringeth a perfect cure Fourthly Then is carnal wisdome used to propagate Religion When by it we propound carnal and selfish ends to our selves not the glory of God and advancing the power and purity of his Ordinances This is that which Paul doth principally disclaim I seek not you but yours saith he in this Epistle 2 Cor. 12. 14. And that they might be perswaded hereof he would take no maintenance of them but made use of other Churches that he might spare them yea sometimes working with his own hands How farre this is imitable by the Ministers of the Gospel now as many do upbraid them with this example of Paul will be clearly and fully evidenced God assisting in its time for we shall meet with this part of Paul expresly mentioned and insisted on by him in this Epistle But it is worth the observation that Paul by no way he took could escape the slander of a self-seeker For if in that case he had burdened the Church of Corinth the false Apostles would have calumniated him as using a cloak of covetousness and seeking himself But now because he will not do so see how this is interpreted as a carnal designe also for so he bringeth in their objection vers 16 Be it so I did not burden you but being crafty I tooke you with guile This was suggested against Paul they made this construction of Paul's not burdening them that he did this out of craft that they should think themselves the more ingaged unto him and so by this means he get the more dominion over them Thus what shall Paul do if he doth not take maintenance it is his craft and if he doth it is his craft By this instance we see how much we are to avoid all fleshly wisdome for do what we will it shall be charged upon us Only when we have this sincerity of conscience within to comfort and support us this will be a means to make us bear the slanders of enemies with greater alacrity Now as we said then we may certainly conclude we are guided by fleshly wisdome when our aimes in our ministerial way is either glory and applause which was the poison of the Pharisees duties or earthly wealth and external pomp which motives do easily creep in unlesse grace be the porter to keep the door of the soul We see even the Disciples themselves and that twice contending about superiority and once this was done when our Saviour was fore-telling them of his sad sufferings and how they should be scattered And truly this should much prevail with us to walk by sincere rules because nothing doth
more awe peoples hearts nothing doth more erect a throne of fear and reverence in mens hearts so much as integrity Even Herod did fear John because he was a just man he saw he was not carried by carnal pinciples and that made Herod reverence him Mark 6. 20. And thus it was with Christ himself also this made the people so greatly flock after him because the hypocrise and self-seeking of the Pharisees began to be made clear to them And thus the integrity of our Reformers was precious whereas the luxury pride and ambition of the Roman Clergy began to be apparent Yea before Luther's time the Church generally groaned under them which made Berengarius call them Romanos Pompifices and Pulpifices as regarding their pompe and belly more than their ministerial duty Lastly For the differences I promised to speak to between fleshly wisdome and heavenly wisdome as also civil prudence may be considered in the next particular Fleshly wisdome is seen In glorying and boasting of humane eloquence and philosophical demonstrations This some make to be a great part of if not the only sense of fleshly wisdome And certainly this is that which Paul renounceth 1 Cor. 2. 1 3 4. the end whereof was that their faith might not stand in the wisdome of men but the power of God And therefore the Thessalonians are commended 1 Thess 2. 13. That they received the Gospel not as the word of men but as of God which effectually worketh in those that believe That there may be no use made of humane learning much lesse that it is not lawfull to improve the gifts and abilities of learned men in our Ministry I think is scarcely in an absolute sense denied by any orthodox But then they give this Caution That such things must not be done out of ostentation but edification and conviction neither must we so preach that our auditors should be more affected with the oratory or learning than the matter the gifts and parts of a Minister more than the holy truths which are delivered for information and conversion And therefore as we the Ministers of the Gospel are to take heed of all fleshly wisdome especially this latter which is so subtil a thief ready to steal away our treasure So ought you the hearers to take heed of all fleshly wisdome For it is this only maketh you go away unconverted unhumbled unreformed your conscience your mind condemns you for it but only fleshly wisdome will not let you obey As I say we are to take heed of this universally so especially that you do not regard the parts learning and oratory of a Minister more than holy matter You must hear from a sincere heart you must come to our Ministry with godly simplicity as well as we are to preach so and it is hard to say whether is more difficult to preach without fleshly wisdome or hear without it Do you desire to know nothing but Jesus Christ crucified Are ye not like children that look upon Books more to see the gayes and gaudy flourishes than the matter contained therein Do ye not mind more what may tickle your ear please your fancy then what may wound your heart Aristotle even to his Lecture of moral Philosophy doth require one who is purged from his lusts How much rather is the word of God to be received with a pure and mortified heart Oh this flesnly wisdome will prove cursed folly at last In the flames of hell thou wilt cry out of this Oh wretch that I was I thought to be wise for my self and how unspeakably am I undone thereby SERM. XCV Of the Grace of God which Paul exalteth above Fleshly Wisdome and ascribeth all unto 2 COR. 1. 12. But by the grace of God THe third particular which qualifieth the Apostles conversation in this world cometh in order to be treated on which is set down Oppositely But by the grace of God This is added partly to exclude all pride and presumption in himself For having declared his integrity lest it might be thought that though he did not confide in carnal wisdome yet he might in his own integrity he addeth The grace of God shewing thereby that he trusted in that alone And then partly it is spoken in opposition to fleshly wisdome For seeing it might be demanded If Paul did not use the wisdome of the world How could it come about that he should have such success in his preaching that the Gospel should have such a full and glorious course by his Ministry He resolveth it into the grace of God that did go along with him it was neither his gifts or his graces but the power and grace of God directing and protecting of him in his ministerial imployment Thus Paul and Barnabas Acts 14. 26. are by the brethren recommended to the grace of God for the work which they fulfilled So that whereas the word Grace in the New Testament hath several significations the principal whereof is the favour and meer mercy of God without us The lesse principal is the Effects thereof and the Effects of this Grace are either of sanctification or administration and service We may comprehend all these in the word Grace but especially the latter the effects of grace and of those effects chiefly those ministerial gifts with the successe thereof that Paul was enriched with What is this grace of God saith Chrysostome It is saith he the wisdome and power God bestowed upon him whereby through miracles and other wayes especially that coming without humane learning and oratory of the world he did overcome the greatest Philosophers and Rhetoricians whom the world did admire This was the grace of God upon Paul which he also mentioneth as the original of all the fruit of his labours not attributing any thing to himself 1 Cor. 15. 10. I laboured more abundantly than they all yet not I but the grace of God which was with me Now although by grace is meant principally the grace called Gratiis data common ministerial gifts and favours of God yet because it is opposed to fleshly wisdome and carnal policy There is also necessarily contained heavenly wisdome whereby Paul did avoid all sensual and deceitfull wayes walking closely according to the Word the fountain of all spiritual wisdome For as the Scriptures are a farre surer Rule even to Civil Governours and Magistrates then Tacitus Machiavel or others cryed up by humane worldly wise men even in their civil administrations So much more is it a sure Starre for all the spiritual Officers of the Church to manage their affaires by if they do look for successe From the Scripture both Magistrates and Ministers may learne wisdome for their respective administrations Paul therefore what ever it be that goeth on prosperously in his ministerial worke doth not attribute it either to his sincerity much lesse to any humane policy which he renounceth but wholly to the grace of God assisting of him and going constantly along with him Observe That it is
with God So that the Israelites are a perpetual instance to confirme this Doctrine that it is not so much to be regarded how holy and repenting we may appear sometimes but what we are constantly that is to be regarded To clear this take notice First That the Scripture speaketh of a two-fold conversation and the one directly contrary to the other whose ends also are contrary The first of these is A wicked carnal and natural one which all live in till God by his gracious power deliver us from it What is every mans conversation till grace change him but a continual road of evil actions he goeth from one sinne to another he is alwayes like himself as the worm is ever creeping upon the ground you never see it flying like a bird up to the clouds This is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our former conversation Ephes 4. 22. which is corrupt according the deceitfull lusts thereof The first conversation then of every one by nature is that of the old man original and actual sinnes conjoyned together into one body as it were so that he is a masse or lumpe of sinne This is daily corrupted by deceitfull lusts That as worms are continually eating into the Tree till they have destroyed it Thus are lusts constantly breeding in a man even till they have devoured him Now saith the Apostle This must be put off we must leave this former life and take up a new one Oh how few are there that can say They have put off their former conversation As they were prophane proud earthly so they are still They cannot say It was indeed their former drinking their former swearing but it is their present praying their present humiliation of themselves Their latter conversation differeth from the former as much as the day doth from the night that went before it This is also called a vain conversation received by tradition from our fathers 1 Pet. 1. 18. It is a vain one for all the life we live till regenerated is spent in vain we attain not to the true and proper end of living Thy eating thy drinking thy buying and selling is all in vain by none of these things wilt thou please God and so arrive at last at eternal glory Yea it were well if it were only vain missing its end but it 's meritorious of eternal flames in hell This conversation is said to be traditional by our fathers If the Apostle speak of Gentiles then it is true that children follow the evil and ungodly examples of their parents they will not seem to be better and wiser than they are if of the Jewes which is more probable then it relateth to those superstitious exercises of Religion which their fathers added to the command of God And although they rested and gloried in these as thereby highly honouring of God yet all was but a vain worship a vain Religion So then a mans evil conversation is not only to be extended to his vices and sinnes but also to his religious duties when either not instituted or if commanded yet not performed in that spiritual manner which the Law of God doth require So that a mans conversation in his praying in his coming to Church in his religious deportments must be altered as well as prophane wayes Thou must leave off thy former way of praying thy former way of hearing The second kind of conversation mentioned in the Scripture is A godly and an heavenly one So that although we live upon the earth yet our principles aims and ends carry us up to the enjoyment of God This is called a good conversation Jam. 3. 13. where all divine faith and spiritual wisdom is said to be demonstrated by a good conversation It is not Doctrine faith profession or gifts that men look at but the conversation that speaketh a Christian that speaketh a Minister more than ten thousand excellent discourses Plus oculis quam auribus creditur said Seneca So that a good conversation is more demonstrative of godlinesse then good gifts good parts a good faith Thy prayers are good thy conference and discourse is good Is thy conversation also Hence Paul exhorteth Timothy as a Minister to be a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An example 1 Tim. 4. 12. to believers in word in conversation In word that is in his Doctrine and preaching In conversation that is in the exercise of all holy duties So that you see a man is above all things to look to his convesation that it be good For as this is a special means to edifie and build up others so none can take comfort from the choisest abilities the most fervent duties the purest Church-wayes unlesse there be a good conversation to uphold him Hence you see Paul doth not runne to his Apostolical Office to his great miracles to the wonderfull revelations and gifts bestowed upon him but to his conversation in the world as if that were a greater conviction of all adversaries then the most glorious Church-prerogatives or priviledges that can be Hence a godly conversation is a special means to convert others The Apostle speaketh fully to this concerning godly women who have Heathen or wicked and ungodly husbands that they should look to their duty That they may without the Word be wone by the conversation of their wives while they behold your chaste conversation coupled with fear 1 Pet. 3. 1 2. he saith Without the Word not but that the Word is the onely ordinary means of conversion but because their conversation may be an occasion and introductory meanes to bring them to the Word As Austin said He should not have believed the Scriptures but for the Church because that was the introductory motive though the Scriptures themselves were the cause of his faith By this we see how much regard we are to have to our conversation for by it many may be converted or be subverted What a wofull thing will it be if thou by thy life hast given a just occasion to drive men off from godlinesse They were coming on but thy conversation drove them back It is true when wicked men doe wickedly from their owne corrupt hearts take an occasion to be offended at Gods wayes as some did when they heard Christ preach saying It was an hard saying who can bear it And from thence took an occasion never to follow Christ more John 6. 60. then the guilt of such men lieth at their owne doore They are offended where there is no just cause it 's Scandalum acceptum not datum But if thou doest by any sinfull and unwarrantable practises alienate men from Religion make them think the worse of godlinesse for thy doings then remember that dreadfull sentence of our Saviour Woe be to that man by whom offences come Matth. 18. 7. This is likewise called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Your good conversation in Christ A Scripture-conversation is a conversation in Christ that is partly by the rule and guidance of Christ We live not according
because none believe enough none love enough none are heavenly enough Several wayes the best Hearers may grow First In the amplitude of their knowledg They may know more things in Christianity than they did for seing we know but in part 1 Cor. 13. this light in our mind may still encrease more and more not indeed in more necessaries and Fundamentalls for then none could be saved because still ignorant of some Fundamental or other but in the Additionalls and Superstructures which have also a special use and efficacy to carry on the work of Salvation Even a Godly man may live in many Errors in many sinnes and not know them to be so as we see in many Ages when clearer light hath discovered that to be Superstition and a dishonour to God which was accounted once the great onour due unto him When God dispelled the Egyptian darkness of Popery from of the face of the face of the Church their Image-Worship their Indulgences their vowed Obedience and poverty which were admired as such eminent acts of Religion were manifested to be contemptible as having no foundation upon the Scripture and also very injurious to the Offices of Christ and in how many things do the best of men still continue ignorant and therefore with David though he had more understadding than his teachers are to pray that God would open their eyes that they might understand the wonderfull things of Gods law Psal 119. 18 Davids eyes were opened yet they must be opened more all the scales are not fallen from his eyes and therefore the Apostle prayeth for those Ephesians whose understandings were already enlightened Ephes 1. 17. that their eyes might yet be more opened and that God would give unto them the spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledg of him 2. By the Ministry they are to grow in the efficacy and experimental power of their knowledg For these two differ exceedingly men may grow much in speculative knowledg understand controversies in Divinity and dispute much about the Doctrines of the times that are agitated but unless a man grow in the savoury power of it he is but a tinkling cymbal if he do notgrow in the love of the truth if that knowledg doth not make him more pure more sanctified more reformed this will turn to his greater condemnation Therefore Tit. 1. 1. It s called the acknowledging of the truth which is after godliness Savanarola Hom. 3. p. 29. bringeth a distruction of Divinity out of Aquinas to this purpose a man may know a thing saith he either per modum studii or per modum inclinationis men may know many things by way of study in Divinity and yet not have the least knowledg of them by way of inclination to love and delight in them May not a man have obtained much discoursive knowledg about Christ in respect of his Person and Offices as to be able to confute Arrians and Socinians yet be far from that heavenly inclination which Paul found in himself to know nothing but Christ crucified and to judg all things dung and dross in comparison of this knowledg That knowledg then which doth bring a savoury tast and experimental inclination to the good things we know that is to be imbraced that we are to grow in more every day He that knoweth a Country or a City by a Map cannot be so affected as he that hath really seen it 3. We may by the Ministry have a continued benefit in respect of the firmness and strength of our faith It is noted sometimes of the Disciples that upon some miracle that was wrought by our Sauiour that then they believed Not but that they did so before onely their Faith was then more strengthened and confirmed and truly this firmness of Faith this steadfastness of it is a precious Antidote against all fickle and sceptical Opinions Men do not grow in Faith but fancy and that maketh inconstancy in Religion How can a man be a Martyr for Christs truth now can he lose all he hath rather than deny it unless he have this quieting and satisfying work of Faith upon the soul Hence Faith is called Heb. 11. 1. The substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen Those two words substance and evidence do denote the great power that Faith ought to have upon the soul Again this firmness of Faith is not onely seen in dogmatical Assent but in in fiducial Application of the Promises to our selves in which sense it is said twice or thrice The just shall live by his faith Such are the weak actings of our Faith so strong are our temptations so supernatural and mysterious is this way of believing that all have cause to cry out with the Apostles Lord increase our faith Lastly The best hearers need the Ministry for increase in Godliness to grow in grace more Thus the Apostle writeing to those whom he supposeth as converted already yet exhorteth to put off the old man and put on the new To be renewed in the spirit of their minde Epes 4. 23. 24. And our Saviour prayeth for the Apostles even in that Prayer wherein he acknowledgeth that they had believed and received the word of God That they were not of the world John 17. 17 That God would sanctifie them by his word which is to be understood of the progress therein There is no Doctrine so practically opposite to the Scripture as that of Perfection for every where the Godly are commanded to grow to be mortifying the body of sin to be perfecting holiness which were ridiculous Exhortations if we had already attained Perfection Hence we are compared to those who run in a race and therefore till death do not come to our prize Thus where the Minister may have little to do in respect of Conversion it may have very much to do in respect of Edification And the Godly are to Examine whether every Sabbath day the Minister doth not come with a new benefit a new advantage to them look for a new grace and favour in every new Sermon And so we proceed to the Use which is of Instruction What all people should look at under the Ministry Spiritual advantages spiritual light spiritual heat spiritual quickenings As where Christ went up and down he healed their diseased people so where the word of God is preached it should heal soul-diseases Thou art not to have the Pride the passions the worldly cares as thou usest to have but oh how rare are such Hearers who aimeth at this who prayeth for this in every Sermon he heareth Oh fear least some spiritual judgment upon thee deprive thee of this benefit If an Israelite had looked upon the Brazen serpent and yet not be healed If a diseased person had stepped first in order into the Pool of Bethesda and yet not have been recovered they would have been greatly troubled to see their hopes frustrated No less ought it to make thee grieve and tremble
therein that do denominate him and seeing they are either the Spirit or the flesh every one either walketh in the flesh or the Spirit let a man faithfully search into his own bosome and observe what hath the predominant efficacy what he may call his principles he purposeth and liveth by and the rather because In the fourth place These principles though efficacious yet are manytimes latent and hidden It is a Rule Principia sunt maxima virtute minima quantitate Therefore being thus secret and inward it is not easily found out what principles we walk by Do those that walk after the flesh know they do so Do they believe so Do they complain of such a rotten and sandy foundation No they rather applaud themselves even the most carnal men that are do judge their principles good and right they have a good heart and good ends No doubt when Paul persecuted the Church opposed so zealously the way of Christ though in all this he was acted by fleshly principles yet he thought them Religion and service of God It is therefore our duty to examine and search into every corner of our hearts to find out the bottome of thy soul For thou art never able to judge of thy condition whether good or evil till thy principles are made manifest in thee How often mayest thou flatter thy self as doing things for God and his glory when it is thy own corrupt self thy own glory thy own advantage Fifthly These principles of the flesh are not onely in our external dealings with men or in grosse bodily sins but in religious duties and our sacred performances Oh consider this diligently A man may pray after the flesh hear after the flesh preach after the flesh and that is when a fleshly motive putteth us upon spiritual duties The Pharisees when they prayed they did walk according to the flesh and those who adored Angels and introduced voluntary worship these had a fleshly mind Col. 2. 18. Men are in the flesh and walk in the flesh not onely in respect of grosse sinnes and bodily iniquities but even when in spiritual duties they are led by sinfull motives Thus Jehu when he purposed the destruction of Ahab and his family the overthrow of Baal and his worship he did all this after the flesh When Judas resolved to follow Christ to be his Disciple all this was a resolving according to the flesh Now this we should hear with trembling and an holy fear my religion may be flesh my holy duties flesh my profession of godlinesse nothing but flesh For though the duties themselves are good and commanded by God yet the principles from which they flow may be the flesh in thee Do not take therefore all holy performances to come from a principle of sanctification in thee Did hypocrites and temporary believers diligently consider this it would be a special means to prevent their final destruction Lastly The principles of the carnal and the spiritual are directly contrary to one another even as light and darknesse and therefore one can never agree with the other Prov. 29. 27. An unjust man is an abomination to the just and he that is upright in his way is an abomination to the wicked Every godly man cannot but abominate the way of the wicked and then the wicked abominateth the way of the godly so that there can never be any agreement Now both strive for their principles dispute for their principles The godly man urgeth his and would bring men off to them The wicked man is as resolute for his principles and is active to have them take place And from hence is that enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent Now it 's a godly mans duty to keep close to his principles not for a moment to depart from them This is to betray God and his conscience But the wicked man he is bound to leave his to come out of them with all haste for they will be his damnation at last In the next place let us consider What are the principles of a godly man by which he thinketh purposeth and liveth So that if at any time he deviateth from this his heart is smitten his soul melteth saying This is not according to my principles I have not thought said or done like my self Now there are two general principles of a godly man whereby he is kept from purposing or living according to the flesh The one I may call Principium cognoscendi The other Principium essendi or rather efficiendi For the first which is the principle of knowledge by which we are to regulate our selves in faith and manners that is the holy Scriptures which are a perfect sufficient and adequate Rule to live by how contemptuously soever the Papists on the one hand and Enthusiasts on the other do speak of it We see the Apostle Paul 2 Tim. 3. 15 16. directing Timothy though so eminent in the Church of God to the Scriptures not to the immediate inspirations but unto them which he had known from his youth giving admirable commendations of them from the efficient cause they were by the inspiration of God who would not regard what God himself saith That will prove true and every thing contrary to it a lie and then the adjunct property holy they are holy Scriptures By these alone thou wilt be enabled to have an holy nature and to live an holy life As those that keep in Apothecaries shops smell of the ointment thus those who exercise themselves in the holy Scriptures they become holy they are conformed thereunto Such a man is like a tree by the water-side bringing forth his fruit in due season Again they are commended from their end which is to make us wise to salvation This is the desirable and ultimate end of all men to be saved But we are ignorant of the way how to attain it we mistake the paths that lead thereunto and therefore the Scripture only giveth us wisdome herein Furthermore they are commended from a four-fold effect For Doctrine correction reproof and instruction in righteousnesse with the consequent thereof That the man of God even Timothy and such who are in holy Offices of the Church may be throughly furnished for every good work By this we see what is the Rule a godly man walketh by it is the Scriptures he believeth according to them he worshippeth according to them he liveth according to them Oh the holinesse and admirable lovelinesse that is in his life who thus walketh according to Scripture Oh remember that you have no other Rule to walk by in reference to heavenly things Thy Religion must be a Scripture-religion thy faith a Scripture-faith thy repentance a Scripture-repentance thy godlinesse a Scripture-godlinesse else at the day of judgement thou wilt have that sentence upon thee which was an hand-writing in the wall against that great King Thou art numbered and weighed in the balance and art found
our knowledg true when it is conformable to the thing it self but then is the thing true when it is conformeable to the knowledg of God So that herein is the Infiniteness and excellency of Truth as it is in God manifested above that which is in man So that man may well respectively to God be called a lyar There is no truth in him Now because truth as it is in God is invisible and the same with his Essence and we are never able to cown to know Truth but by God Hence we have the Scriptures given to the Church as the rule of truth All truth is from God whether it be natural or supernatural When any of the Heathens have found out Truth it was from God even as all fashood is from the Devil so that when the Godly do lye 't is from the Devils temptation the Father of lyes Thus when wicked and ungodly men have uttered truth it hath been of God Now because Supernatural truth could not be discerned but by Divine Revelation and pacefaction Hence it pleased God to make known in his Word What is that truth which will lead us to Salvation So that seing we are not able to behold truth as it is in God we must look upon it as it is in his Word for God is the hidden Truth as it were the Word is the revealed truth Therefore whatsoever is Scripture we may conclude of it as sure and firm Truth coming from the supream truth If then ye ask as Pilate did another way What is truth I answer thee The Scripture is truth No men are true any further than guided by Scripture and led by the Spirit of God accordingly Oh that therefore you did more aw your hearts with the truth of Gods Word If that say sin will be bitter in the latter end though it may bring profit and pleasure for a while believe it against all the wicked men in the world and say I do more believe this Text this Place of Scripture than all which the wickedness of men may oppose against it 3. In that God is true Herein he differeth from man and is thereby opposite to the Prince of darkness He differeth from man Therefore it is said Numb 23. 19. God is not as man that he should lye or Repent To trust in man is to lean upon reads Yea hence it is that because God only is Truth no pastors or Officers in the Church are to be believed any further than they bring the Word of God It was Christ alone God and man that could say I am truth Neither Austin nor Luther nor Calvin can say I am truth Not that therefore the Ministers of God are therefore to be laid aside because they are not infallible For God hath commanded us to hear them and to submit to them only we are not ultimately to depend on them The Church is called the Pillar of truth because she doth declare and hold out the Truth but she is not the Author of it We are then to conclude of all men that of themselves they have no Truth they need the Spirit of God to guide them therein And then hereby is an Opposition in God to the Devil As God is true so the Devil is the Father of Liés John 8. 44. when he speaketh of his own he speaketh a lye Now then consider how inexcusable every wicked man will be For on the one side Christ who is Truth it self he speaketh to the sinner to repent to reforme promising Everlasting Happiness to him Christ saith Thy sinnes have no pleasure no profit in them thou wilt finde them prove a lye to thee On the other side The Devil he tempteth thee contrary to Christ he telleth thee sin is sweet it is good and profitable to sin he biddeth thee follow the lusts of thy soul thou shalt not be damned for all that and now thou believest this Devil this Father of lies rather than Christ Oh how unsufferable is this how great is the Patience of God towards thee What hearken to the Devil before God But even thus Eve did at first she believed the Serpent more than God and thereby brought ruine upon her self and Posterity Oh that we could convince you enough herein that you may see with what madness and folly your sinnes carry you away while you listen to the Father of Lies who is the Adversary of your soules rather than Christ who mourneth over you saying Oh that such a sinner did know the things that maketh for his peace 4. From this truth of God Hence it is that we are so much commanded in Scripture to believe on him to trust in him and to depend upon him which indeed is a quiet and blessed life For what is that maketh thy heart like a Sea What is it that causeth one wave to rise up after another in thy soul Is it not because thou dost not depend upon this truth of God Were thy soul more assured here in the frame of thy spirit would be more joyfull Two Temptations amongst others there are wherein the soul cryeth out as in a Whales belly not knowing what to do● whereas the confidence of Gods truth would presently satisfie the soul The first is In matters to be believed about the Doctrine that is delivered there For because that is wholly supernatural above our humane reason though not contrary to it hence it is that we have many fluctuations of spirit and our understandings are with difficulty captivated unto the Word of God Though these temptations about the Truths of Christian Religion are not incident to all the Godly and it is a special mercy to be preserved from them yet upon some they have come like a violent storm and therefore there is no way to stand disputing and arguing but to say God is true the Word is true I believe when I cannot dispute as one Martyr said But then a Second temptation which is like a continual thorn in the sides of the Godly is their Diffidence and distrust about the Promises of God They do not live and walk as if they were true So that never did any Heretick more subtilly cavill against the Doctrine of the Scripture than they do argue against the Promises of the Scripture Whether they be such as belong to the Church or to themselves To the Church when they read the Scriptures they finde such glorious and excellent Promises that they exspect she should alwayes have Halcyon dayes that her enemies should alwayes be vanquished but alas they finde experimentally the contrary They cannot see how Gods Words and his Works how his Promises and Providences do concurre together But the reason of this is from themselves They do not take a right way to understand the truth of God in this particular for these three Causes which commonly make the sense to erre about the Object although to speak properly the sense doth not erre but the judgment of a man discerning according to sence for
sense would be more properly said to erre if under such impediments it did not represent as it doth First One impediment in the sense is the two long distance of the Object from the eye to instance in this senfe As we judg the Sun less than the earth because of the vaste distance from us so that till a man take Astronomical Instruments and correct Sense by Art he misjudgeth about the Suns magnitude thus is it here When we go to judg of Gods Promises to us or his Church we finde not the truth of them because the wayes of God are too remote from us his thoughts exceed ours as much as the Heavens do the earth Therefore we must necessarily erre till we go to the Scripture that is as it were the Artificial Instrumennt whereby we are able to behold that truth in Gods proceedings which otherwise we could not A Second Impediment is the medium indispositum when the means of seeing is Indisposed as when we look upon a stick in the waters or the Sun through a dark cloud Thus many times when we judg of Gods proceedings according to his Promises we look through False mediums we think according to the Principles that men would do in the world as Luther said We would think that God should destroy Pope and Turk immediately but all this is because we look through an indisposed glass in this particular Lastly The eye cannot judg right of its Object when the visive faculty is disturbed when that is infested with any evil humors Thus the spiritual eyes even of a Godly man are in some measure vitiated and therefore are not able to behold that glory of God in carrying on the Affairs of his Church and by those very wayes which we would think tend to the destruction of the things promised by them he doth fulfill them for the wayes of the Lord are wonderfull to us in making good his Promises and commonly they are fulfilled by those means which seem contrary to them even as he cured the blinde man by mingling spittle with clay which he laid upon his eyes And thus the Godly soul may finde how God is true in spiritual Promises to his soul for he obtaineth comfort through desertions the way to Heaven he findes through Hell yea in sanctifying Grace he cometh to higher Degrees in Grace even by his Failings So true is that of Suarez Aliquando substractio gratiae est ad finem gratiae The end of Grace is accomplished by the gradual substraction and suspension of Grace for a time But I must not inlarge herein Lastly This truth of God is the foundation of all Religion and Godliness For if there were no truth in the Scriptures which are Gods truth if there were no truth in the Promises or Threatnings into what a Chaos and Confusion of wickedness would all men fall There would be no difference between Hell and this World So that Gods Truth is a Foundation of all Piety in these three wayes First The truth of God in his Doctrine delivered to the Church is the foundation yea the Essence and soul of his Church In this it doth differ from Jews Turks and Pagans yea from all Heretical Societies That she hath the truth of God and others not So that as the soul● keepeth the body from rottenness and Putrefaction Thus also the truth of God keepeth the Church from being only a Carkase or to have the Name and Title of a Church without the thing it self Secondly The truth of God in his Promises is the great supporter of the hopes of all the Godly By them alone they are enabled to walk with Peter upon the water and sink not because they believe Gods Promises to be true they do therefore renounce all unlawfull Pleasures and Profits they will not leave the fatness and sweetness of them to go to those bryars Thirdly The truth of God in his threatnings That is like a fiery sword to keep them from all evil They know those threatnings are true and that the World and the Devil prove lyars to all those that serve them therefore they awe their hearts with a continuall fear of them And certainly if every wicked man would remember this That Gods threatnings are true they will be made good no wisdome no greatness no power can resist him For how can the stubble withstand the consuming fire this would make them utterly forsake their sinnes But whether thou wilt believe or no Gods Curses will fall upon thee For there is this difference between the Promises and Threatnings The Promises many of them are not made good unto them unless thou do believe believe and thy sinnes are forgiven thee but the threatnings will be made good to thee a prophane sinner whether thou wilt or not Gods Word will have its effect though thou dost desire it might be false SERM. CXVI The personal failings of Ministers are oft cast upon the Ministry it self 2 COR. 1. 18. But as God is true our word toward you was not yea and nay THe next particular considerable is the occasion of that Transition which the Apostle maketh from the word of his Promise in particular to come to them and the word of his Preaching in the general The occasion is from that evill and malevolent Disposition which was in his Adversaries who from any either real or but supposed Imperfections in other things would presently burden his Ministry with it and thereby as much as in them lieth make Paul wholly useless in the Church of God Now because this is the continual stratagem which the Devil useth to make the best Ministry ineffectual and because it is the constant inclination of wicked men to do so therefore I shall pursue this Observation That there is a propensity in wicked and evil minded men to cast all the imperfections of the Ministers of the Gospel upon their Ministry and Doctrine To bring the Truths they Preach either into doubt or disesteem because of some failings yea though they be not real but supposed in their own Imaginations Thus the Adversaries of Paul they did captiously lay hold upon his Promise and failing as they think in that thereby they would render all his Doctrine and Ministry odious that thereby their falshoods and corruptions may have the greater success Thus the wickedness of ungodly men doth constantly bend to this that they may be hardened in their hearts against the Word Preached that they may fortifie themselves with some damnable Principles of others that so the message of the Lord may be rejected Now to illustrate this consider these particulars First That when a Minister either preaches false Doctrine or liveth scandalously or is lazy and negligent in his place then it is lawfull for a people to have an holy and wise zeal against such persons that they may be quickened up to their duties Neither is this to be an enemy to the Office of the Ministry or to endeavour the publique Dishonour of it
it is that in Heaven when our understandings shall be fully perfected then we shall not grow in knowledge we shall not imbrace errours and upon further illumination leave them So that whensoever God shall make such a change upon us that we are not to believe as we have done worship as we have done lived as we have done As we are to be thankfull unto God so we are to be humble in our selves because that ever any darknesse did take hold of us The Thomists among the Schoolmen give this for a reason why the good Angels proved constantly good and the evil Angels unchangeably evil Because say they Such is the perfection of the Angelical Nature that what it willeth it willeth immoveably it cannot alter again and therefore an evil Angel cannot repent I shall not justifie this reason but certainly we see it a glorious perfection in God that his understanding is infinite his will immutable so that he cannot know any new thing or will any new thing which he did not from eternity Yea the estate of the glorified Saints in Heaven is admirable in this particular that they are so confirmed by grace they are so perfectly enlightned and sanctified that they receive all truth at first and can never come to know more or better then they did at first admission into that glorious place Fourthly There is no man living though never so learned and so knowing but may still understand more In him there may be there will be Yeas and Nayes He will have cause to confesse he was in this errour once he misunderstood such and such Texts of Scripture formerly Doth not experience confirm this Hence are their retractations their recognitions and reviews of their works which they have put out with much judgement and deliberation So that we are not to wonder if the most excellent and learned men do sometimes say This I thought once and this was my judgement once but now I am better informed It is true the case of the Apostles and such as were divinely inspired of old is different from the most eminent holy and learned men that are in the Church for though after their first call by Christ they did retain some ignorance upon them yea did erre in some doctrinal points of great consequence yet after they received the holy Ghost in a full confirmation of them in their Office then they were made infallible so that in their preaching and writing they could not erre And therefore if there had been any Yea and Nay any contrariety in their Doctrine If any of them should have said Thus I thought once but it was my errour I am now of another mind this would have made us questioned their immediate call from God but all Pastors and Teachers that are to guide the Church they are not to expect such infallibility neither should people look for such assistance upon us but we are limitted to the Scripture as the Rule by which all spirits are to be tried If therefore any eminent Officer of the Church do build hay and stubble upon the foundation of precious stone and pearle wonder not at it Or if you see such afterwards more enlightned and to bewaile the hay and stubble they have built Let not this make you stagger so as to think with your selves what can we believe For they may erre in one thing as well as another and as they confesse they have taught false in one particular so it may be in all the rest and therefore we are not bound to believe them at all For In the fifth place You must distinguish between that which is fundamental in a word and that which is circa or supra fundamental The word of God containeth in it all things that are necessary to salvation but withall it hath many excellent conclusions that are deduceable from them It hath not onely the foundation stones but an excellent and glorious superstructure It hath not onely milk for the babe but strong meat for the adult person And although there be no truth revealed in the Scripture which when sufficiently proposed to us we ought to despise it being the truth of the holy Ghost and wilfully to oppose any known truth of Gods word though it be farre from the fundamentals is a very damnable sinne and rebellion against the Spirit of God yet for all that we must alwayes distinguish between the fundamentals and principles of Religion such as are named Heb. 6. and the conclusions by many mediums deduced from them between the seed and the crop between the essentials and the accessories For there is no godly man much lesse no godly Officer that is so farre left by God as to erre in fundamentals of salvation at least perpetually and therefore they have no Yea and Nay in them For they have the promise of God which is That the Spirit shall lead them into all truth John 16. 13. And they have also the anointing which will teach them all things 1 John 2. 27. where by all things is not meant Omne scibile Every thing that may be known for then they should know all the arts and all the tongues every one would be wiser than Solomon No nor all things in Religion not all things in faith and manners for that would contradict other places which say We know but in part 1 Cor. 3. and also That we are to grow in knowledge 2 Pet. 3. 18. but all things necessary to salvation They shall not want the knowledge of that thing the absence whereof will damn them It may be for a season they may be involved in some fundamental errour even as they may in regard of their lives fall into some grossimpieties that do for the present take away the present claim that they have to the Kingdom of Heaven but at last they shall be delivered because it 's not possible the elect should be deceived viz. totally and finally by the most deceiveable wayes of falshood that are Matth. 24. 24. Now the knowledge of this is necessary to obviate that Objection which you heard mentioned If the Ministers of the Gospel may be Yea and Nay in some things why not in all things If they erre in one thing why not in every thing This is not to be yeelded unto For they cannot erre in necessaries though they may in accessories They cannot lay any other foundation than what is laid yet they may build hay and stubble Therefore it 's sensless and irrational to argue from any errour or mistake the Ministers may have in some points of Religion that are problematical to those that are essential For in these later we are sure we are never deceived we may with Paul confidently say If an Angel from Heaven preach contrary to that Doctrine let him be accursed SERM. CXVIII A further Discovery of the sinfulnesse and reproach of Inconstancy especially in a Minister 2 COR. 1. 18. Our word toward you was not yea and nay WE are pursuing
with his name as well as his own putting it also before Timotheus He with Barsabas were chosen by the Synodat Jerusalem to distribute the Apostolical letters having this character They were chief among the brethren they were in great eminency and esteem We read also when there was that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sharp contention between Barnabas and Paul we see the frailties of the best in this for I cannot approve of those that take the word in a good sense because it is so used Heb. 10. 24. that Paul chose Sylas to be his companion and no wonder he nameth him here in this text for he was a special coadjutor to Paul in the planting of the Gospel at Corinth for you may read Act. 18. 5. how that when Sylas and Timotheus were come to him thither being afore sent for by him it is said Paul was pressed in spirit and testified unto the Jews that Jesus was Christ Paul then took more courage having these Companions and was the more animated to discharge his office so that it was not for modesty as Chrysostome hinteth that Paul doth assume him to this Colleagueship but also because there was need of his help the harvest being great at Corinth there needed many labourers and withall he conjoyneth these himself to shew the harmony and consent that was between him and the other Ministers in preaching of Christ So that from the conjoyning of these with Paul there are three Observations deduceable which shall be briefly dispatched at this time The first is That whereas the Ministerial labour and work is great there needeth the more assistance and help from others Paul himself alone is not able to do all the work that this Church of Corinth doth require and therefore he calleth in other Labourers to assist him therein Hence our Saviour directs us to pray unto God that where there is work for a Ministry suitable Ministers may be sent thither Matth. 9. 37 38. The harvest truly is plenteous and the labourers are few He compareth a people prepared by grace for the Ministry to the harvest now as it is a high degree of lazinesse to be idle in harvest thus it would be inexcusable in the Ministers of God if they should be loitering and sluggish when the souls of people are ready to receivd the good message of the Lord. Two things the Scripture taketh notice of in harvest the joy of harvest and the labour in harvest and both these are to be seen in a people fitted for Ministerial work for Instruction for Reformation There is infinite matter of joy to the people and to the Minister whereas to meet with a people that are like a field of bryars and thorns as Ezekiel did this is wholly discouraging The people may rejoyce because God gave them such a willing mind How many Congregations are there that cannot be called an harvest-field but a wildernesse an heath a dunghill Now it is the meer goodnesse of God that maketh such a difference between Congregations some are a stiff-necked obdurate and prophane people others a willing attentive and a ready people But God makes Congregations as well as persons to differ one from another Then there is joy to a Minister it is comfortable to be plowing and sowing upon fruitfull ground What joy is there to plow and sow upon a rock The same it is to preach to a senslesse and stupid people As there is joy so there is labour none must be a sluggard at that time and truly the people must labour and the Minister must labour and so both joyn together for the bringing of men to Heaven Now because it is such pitty to see a field of corn perish because there cannot any workmen be had to cut it down how much more is it to have a people damned for want of a faithfull and diligent Minister Therefore saith our Saviour Pray the Lord of the harvest that he would send labourers into his harvest It 's Gods harvest it 's his corn and therefore we may the more effectually prevail with him in prayer for this matter And you see here what the title of the Ministers is they are Labourers and labourers in harvest which is the sorest He saith The labourers are few there were many Priests and Scribes but few Labourers Hence though the people lived under their Ministry who read and expounded the Law every day yet because it was done so corruptly our Saviour had compassion on them as sheep without a shepherd So that such as enter upon this work must not dream of ease and idlenesse All the Names the Scripture giveth them denote hard work and labour It is matter of sollicitude and care more than honour and dignity And truly What Minister is there who reading the labours zeal and diligence of Paul in his Ministry may not cry out Oh me adwarf to such a Gyant If no Minister should be saved unlesse he be a Paul what would become of most of us Again they are called Labourers therefore this confuteth the fancies of common people that think the Ministers doth not labour at all that he hath his Maintenance for his ease and idlenesse As if there were no labour but what is bodily the labour of the mind of the heart is greater than that The Labour of a godly Magistrate and of a godly Minister is transcendent to all other Labours Indeed Who is sufficient for these things saith Paul 2 Cor. 2. 16. Men are sufficient for earthly imployments we cannot say Who is able to be a Tradesman to be an Husbandman but we must Who is able to be a Minister So that is a monstrous inconsideratenesse though coming from pride and covetousnesse that the Pope would have all the Churches in the world to be his charge and Bishops but his Curates yea some Bishops Metropolitans and Diocesans they plead to have all the Diocesses to be their charge only not assuming other Pastors in partem sollicitudinis as Cyprian did Even as Ignatius also in his Epistle ad Trallianos calleth Presbyters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Bishops But alas if a man be not able to be a Pastor to one Congregation how can he be to many If Paul would have Sylvanus and Timotheus to help in this Church of Corinth how much more doth the Pope and such Metropolitans need assistance As for their distinction of inspection per se vel per alium that will not be made good by the Scripture which commandeth Pastors to have a personal residency and government over their own flock Hence God hath appointed several Officers in the Church and given various gifts that all may be imployed for the good of the Church whereas though Paul was supposed only faulty about his breach of promise yet they charge Sylvanus and Timotheus with the same inconstancy thinking all were alike In the second place we observe That where there is any one real or supposed fault in one Minister people are apt
temporal sense 2. He is not a spiritual Saviour only by example 3. He doth not actually save all 4. He is not a Saviour only habitually or upon condition 1. He is a spiritual Saviour 2. He is the sole Saviour 3. He is a full and sufficient Saviour Use Of Instruction Use 2. Exhortation Of the appellative Name of our Saviour Christ In what sense Christ is said to be anointed The Lord Jesus was anointed to be our Saviour What the title Christ implies Use 1. Of encouragement Use 2. Of Exhortation Christ as Head doth appoint all the Officers of the Church A two-sold Kingdom attributed to Christ in Scripture All Church-power radically seated in Christ Church-officers are properly servants to Christ This power of appointing Officers and Laws in the Church belongeth to Christ as King Use Exhortation 1. To Church-officers Church-officers are especially to take heed of 1. That they turn not their Office into matter of pride and earthly interest 2. Of Idleness Use 2. To the people Why Paul styleth himself An Apostle of Jesus Christ Those things are highly esteemed in the Church which are despised by the world As 1. The person of Christ 2. The Officers appointed by him 3. The Duties prescribed by him 4. The Priviledges of the Gospel 5. The due execution of Church-censures Use How many wayes the will of God is taken It is the meer will and good pleasure of God that calls us to any office or priviledge in the Church We have all Church-priviledges from the meer will of God There is a two-fold Call the one general the other particular both which come from God A four-fold distinction concerning the Call of Officers 1. Some are called only by the will of God not at all by the will of man 2. Some have their call of God but by men 3. Some are of men only not at all of God 4. Others have their call neither from God nor men In what sense Paul here saith By the will of God 1. It is more than his permissive will 2. It is not his angry and just will God sometimes doth justly send ungodly Ministers amongst a people 3. It was by the directing will of God not by chance 4. It implieth it was not Pauls merit but Gods will that advanced him to this office Concerning those who enter upon the Ministry only upon carnal and corrupt motives Use The truly godly though eminent in office and grace yet are humble in themselves and condescending to others Wherein the humility of the godly discovers it self to their inferiours Why those who are so exalted above others are yet so humble towards them Use There is a great deal of difference both in the persons that are converted and in the manner of their conversion Why God is pleased to call such different persons and in such a different way None are to rest upon their godly education but all are to search their own hearts to see whether they be wrought upon or no. Use The consent of Church-officers in matters of religion is of great use and moment What are those things that conduce to Unity amongst Church officers It is of great use to young to have the guidance of solid and experienced Ministers What the word Church is used for in Scripture What we are properly to understand by a Church in Scripture Gods call as the efficient cause of the Church is either external only or external and internal also The instrumental cause of the Church is the preaching of the Word The formal cause the solemn observation of Church communion Wherein consisteth the nature of Church communion Object Answ Why needfull to know the Marks of a true Church What things necessary to make a Note or Mark. What are the Notes of a true Church How the form of a thing may be a Note or Mark of it A Church is Gods people in a more special manner than others God amongst the most prophane people sometimes gathers a Church to himself A Church may be a true though defiled one What were the corruptions amongst the Corinthians How 't is lawfull for Christians to go to Law Some observations clearing the truth that a Church though defiled may be the Church of God Reasons shewing the truth of it The Church of God as a Church doth far surpasse all civil Societies and temporal dignities Reasons shewing the truth of it Use 1. Use 2. Use 3. Why Paul writeth this second Epistle to the Corinthians It is very hard for the Church of God to keep within their proper bounds in Church-administrations It is a Ministers duty to use all lawfull means to promote the Church he hath relation to How the Apostle could call the Corinthians Saints when many of them were so foully polluted All that are of the Church are Saints by profession and ought to be so in their conversations What is comprehended under Church Saintship External holiness Saintship is not enough to bring us to Heaven without the inward renovation of the whole man Propositions clearing the assertion 1. There are degrees even in real Saintship 2. Therefore is real Saintship alway growing in this life 3. Church-Saintship though real consisteth with many imperfections 4. Holiness or Saintship is the conformity of the will of man to the will of God 'T is a great shame and reproach to have the name without the nature of a Saint 〈…〉 Saints may sometimes have just reason not to joyn themselves to a Church though it be their duty alwayes to endeavour it Reasons convincing it to be each Christians duty to be of a Church What are the causes that may justly excuse us from joyning our selves to publick meetings 2. Unlawfull grounds upon which some do 〈…〉 themselves to any Church-society 1. From corrupt opinions 2. From corrupt dispositions Use Of Instruction The soul of the poorest Saint is as much to be regarded as of the greatest Spiritual mercies are to be desired before temporal What are those things that peculiarly move the godly to preferre spirituals before temporals The Reasons of it The grace of God is to be desired before all other things Propositions discovering the nature of the grace of God What the grace of God implies How grace is called the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ Who are fit subjects to partake of Gods grace without Rules how we may rightly understand and judge of the grace of God The Scripture characters of the grace of God Peace from God and Christ is earnestly to be prayed for as a very choice mercy Wherein this peace consisteth What are the principal causes of a godly mans fears troubles and disquietnesses What are the effects of this Gospel-peace Directions how to attain this peace Of the names attributed to God in Scripture God alone can give grace and peace to his people Reasons God is a Father in a more peculiar manner to those that believe what it is for God to be our Father God is a Father to the
for the future Considerations clearing the truth 1. Though we have oft had experience of Gods goodness yet every new trouble is ready to startle us 2. Though the promises be sufficient grounds for our trust yet experiences do much promote faith 3. 'T is a good way to keep the heart calme even to exercise trust in God for the future 4. The future good things that we are to trust in the Lord for are both spirituall and temporall Object Answer 1. There are motives to trust in God from both the personal and general priviledges of believers 2. What are the opposites to trusting in God 1. Presumption Signs of presumption 1. When we walk not by Scripture-light 2. When we are confident without a promise 3. When we separate the means from the end 4. When we use false means 5. When we think by our own strength to obtain grace and glory 2. Despair Whence despair arises 1. From low thoughts of God As 1. The power of God 2. The goodness of God 3. Of the merits of Christ 2. From wrong apprehensions about our sins 3. This grace of trusting in God cannot be expected to be perfect here 'T is our duty not to separate Gods power and goodnesse from the means required How God and the creature work together 1. All Gods spiritual mercies have many things concurrent before they be accomplished 2. The opposing of these requisites one against another hath bred much confusion and errour How we should relie wholly upon Christ and yet make use of the means and how we may know whether we do or no. 1. When we acknowledge whatsoever we have to come from Christ 2. When we attribute no merit or causality to the means 3. When we rest upon Christ onely for our justification 4. When we put no trust or confidence in the means 5. We dishonour God in the use of the means when we think we profit him thereby The most eminent in gifts and graces need the prayers of their inferiours Reasons 1. Because there is a more peculiar promise made to the prayers of many then one 2. Because the Church in Scripture is called a body whose parts stand in need one of another Use People ought to pray for their spirituall guides Considerations explaining the truth 1. 'T is an errour of the Socinians to say God commands prayer only in the New Testament 2. No merit or confidence to be put in our prayers 3. Ministers are to pray for their people and people for their Ministers 4. This supposeth the people to be both gifted and gracious 5. Many things there are which people are to desire of God for their Ministor 1. That they may be preserved 2. That their word may be suceesfull 3. That their gifts and graces may be quickned 4. That they may be saved Whensoever we have received mercies from God we are by praise and thankfullness to acknowledge then to him What is required to the praising of God 1. An acknowledgement that God alone is the Authour of all our mercies 2. Both the generall and particular acts of faith 3. Love to God 4. Heavenly mindedness 5. Chearfulnes Motives to praise God 1. 'T is an excellent duty in that we are so backward to it 2. It is called a Sacrifice 3. 'T is a debt due to God 4. The chief motive is thankfulnesse 5. A thankfull heart is the most proper disposition to Gospel dispensations 6. The neglect of this duty is an argument of a rotten heart Our ordinary temporal enjoyments are the gifts of God 1. The effects of natural causes are still the gift of God 2. The comforts that flow from moral causes are still the gifts of God 3. What we receive from men 't is still the gift of God 4. Whatsoever we have by the art and skill of others 5. Such things as come upon us without our care Reasons Why these are all Gods gifts 1. God is not necessitated to give them 2. We have oft forseited them by our sins 3. We are to pray to him for them Not only personal but publick prayers and praises are acceptable to God Reasons 1. Hereby the honour of God is more promoted 2. Hereby our love to one another is much quickened 3. God in a more especial manner present there 4. Herein the lively may prevail for the dull and indisposed Mercies vouch safed to the Ministers are to be accounted as Church mercies An holy rejoycing and glorying in the graces of God is lawfull What is required to our glorying in the gifts and graces we have received from God 1. An high esteem of our graces 2. A certain perswasion that we have them 3. Good grounds and Scripture-demonstrations thereof 4. The Spirit of God In what respect 't is lawfull thus to rejoyce and glory 1. As they are the fruits of Gods favour 2. As they bear up our hearts against all accusations either external or internal Wherein this rejoycing is unlawfull 1. When we rejoyce in our graces as if they were perfect 2. When we so rejoyce in them as so rest upon them 3. When we rejoyce in them as coming from our selves not God The witnesse of a good conscience is great ground of comfort What is required to a good conscience 1. That it witness according to the word of God 2. The help of the Spirit to instruct us in the true meaning of the Word 3. Pure aims and intentions 4. Inward sanctification What else is requisite to a well-regulated conscience 1. The witnessing and sealing power of the Spirit with our consciences How the Spirit of God doth not witness with our consciences How it doth 1. Effectively 2. Objectively What are the effects of the Spirit by which our consciences are rightly guided in witnessing to us 1. A purpose to leave all known sin 2. A zeal for the glory of God 3. An holy confidence in our approachings unto God 4. Love to the Brethren 5. Self-denial 6. Delight in heavenly things Distinctions concerning the testimony of our conscience 1. 'T is either particular or general 2. It witnesseth either perfection or sincerity 3. Conscience is either habitually enabled or actually prepared to testifie 4. The testimony of conscience is either alone or relating to Christ A believer may be assured he performeth duties with an upright heart What is required to a certain knowledg of our being in a state of grace 1. A firm assent to the truth of Gods promises and Word 2. A particular application of the promises to themselves What is required to an experimental discerning of our graces 1. An humble heart 2. A regular disposition in the soul 3. An holy fear 4. The help of Gods Spirit What are the hinderances which keep men from looking after an assurance of their sincerity 1. Self-fulness and presumptuous security 2. A prophane careless spirit 3. Carking carefulness 4. Despairing and discouraging thoughts Of Gods commands to get assurance The effects of our souls 1. A quiet heart 2. Spiritual
AN Expository COMMENT DOCTRINAL CONTROVERSAL AND PRACTICAL Upon the whole First CHAPTER OF THE Second EPISTLE of St Paul TO THE Corinthians By Anthony Burgesse Pastor of Sutton-Coldfield in Warwickshire LONDON Printed by A. M. for Abel Roper at the Signe of the Sunne in Fleetstreet near St Dunstans Church 1661. TO THE READER Reader AMongst the several reasons why there ought to be a special care and holy diligence in writing of Books these two are none of the least First A difficulty of having pure and right intentions therein even the Glory of God and the Edification of others For as in Preaching so in Printing Pride Vain-glory and Self-ends are apt to creep in whereby there is a temptation to accumulate those things which may be for ostentation more than utility And Euge Bernarde benè scribis may importunately presse it self into the heart as well as benèdicis Insomuch that we are to looke upon the time wherein we are preparing any thing for the publick view as the hour of temptation earnestly praying unto God for humility mortification and a publick frame of heart For as Gregory once said Tutius auditur veritas quam praedicatur The Auditor is in more safety while hearing than the Preacher while speaking because of the vain motions which are ready then to arise in the heart so is the Reader in lesse temptation than the Authour of the Book A second cause of such exact watchfulnesse is the difficulty of working those Truths in a savoury experimental power upon our own hearts which we communicate to others whereby we may fear least while we write for others we our selves be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unapproved Quid tibi proderit lingua aurea si cor ferreum VVhat will a Golden Tongue advantage if a man have a senslesse heart at that time This then is a cause of godly trembling Ne illae literae vicariae oris nostri in die judicii adversus nos proferantur as Tertullian said Least our writings witnesse against us as publishing those things the experimental power whereof we never felt upon our hearts Such considerations as these may be apt to deterre from writing For as for those ordinary and customary Apologies against the severe Momusses and sharp Aristarchusses of the world they are comparatively contemptible But yet though there be these Lyons in the way we are not through slothfulness to hide our talent in a napkin but where Opportunity offereth it selfe there to imbrace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for the edification of others And I know no way so conducible to the spiritual advantage of others as the Interpretation and Explication of the holy Scriptures It s a pleasant and profitable work to be digging gold out of this mine to adorne the Temple of God to be cutting down timber out of this wood for Gods house to be plucking off the leaves and fruit of this tree of life which are both medicinal and alimental The Scripture is medicum myropolium an Apothecaries shop whereby all the spiritual diseases of the soul may be cured It 's Bellicum armamentarium a Magazine of warre by which all errours and here●ies are to be destroyed It is augustissimum sacrarium a●most august treasury of all spiritual good things How much better then is it to be gathering honey here than to sting in polemical Controversies To keep the sweetnesse and the fatnesse we may enjoy here than to be torne by these brambles Now among other parts of the Scripture I have taken the second Epistle of the Corinthians to comment upon and practically improve not onely because of the universal concernment of that excellent matter contained therein but also because there are few who have selected that Epistle on purpose to treat upon So that whereas there are many Books of the Scripture particularly expounded and illustrated by several learned Authours yet this hath been past by Yea when the former Epistle hath had its Commentators as Martyr Pareus Morton yet this hath been pretermitted As therefore God shall give life and opportunity I shall endeavour the true and sound Exposition of this Epistle especially so as to reduce all Doctrinals and controversals to practicals and experimentals which is the life and soul of all For to have Books only in our heads and not in our hearts doth bring as Solomon saith much wearinesse to the flesh yea sometimes much detriment as Gerson speaketh of a young man in his Tractate De simplificatione cordis who by an indiscreet laboriousnesse in reading Anselm's Meditations fell into such a bodily distemper that the very beholding of a Booke that was written would afterwards put him into an horrour and vertiginous giddinesse Thus worldly reading as I may so call it causeth death but spiritual and godly improving of the Books we peruse will be like oil to the wheels that the work of grace may succeed more prosperously I shall not trouble thee with an enumeration of what different and yet profitable matter is treated on in this first Chapter presented to thy view that is done to thee by another hand in the Table or Contents only my request is that the Errata which may some times be committed and the rather because of my distance from the Presse may not prejudice the Discourse And if in so long a Worke some things are spoken that required a more distinct Explication and further Illustration as haply upon a Review may appear cast this into the account of humane imbecillity For if even great Pillars of the Church have acknowledged that they did Scribendo proficere and Docere ut discant how much more ought Tantillitas nostra being conscious of my owne imbecillity It 's a true saying of Austins speaking of the imperfections of Readers and Writers in his Epistle to Euodius Epist 150. Laborant homines in discendo brevia non valent intelligere prolixa non amant legere laborant itidem in docendo qui pauca tardis multa pigris frustra ingerunt However let that which the Apostle saith to these Corinthians be also truly applicable to us That these things are not written with ink only but the Spirit of God not in Books only but in the flesbly tables of our heart So prayeth The affectionate well-wisher of thy Souls good Anthony Burgesse THE CONTENTS SERM. I. 2 Cor. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of God and Timothy our brother unto the Church of God which is at Corinth with all the Saints which are in all Achaia WHy our Saviour is called Jesus Christ and Saul Paul who of a cruel Persecutor becomes a faithfull Preacher of the Gospel of Christ Why God of great sinners often maketh most eminent Saints SERM. II. Learning an excellent gift of God though through the corruption of man 't is often made an Engine to promote the Kingdom of the Devil yet by the grace of God 't is very usefull in his Church SERM. III. Paul's Name being prefixed to
his Epistle shews it to be of Divine Authority though of it self not a sufficient argument to prove it The Penmen were only Instruments God the principal Authour of the Scriptures and therefore we should rest satisfied with their style and method and not question their Authority How to arme our selves against the Devil and all Hereticks opposing the Divinity of the Scriptures SERM. IV. What an Apostle was Christ in the building of his Church used extraordinary Officers but did not follow the Model of the Jewish Government What were the Properties and Qualifications of an Apostle SERM. V. The Divine Call of Church-officers is clearly to be known and faithfully to be improved What advantages will follow upon a true Call both to the Officers themselves and the People SERM. VI. Of the proper and appellative Names of our Saviour Jesus and Christ In what sense he is Jesus a Saviour and how Christ the anointed of the Lord. SERM. VII Church-officers are appointed by Christ and all Church-power radically seated in him as King What Duties follow thence to be practised by Church-officers and People Some things are highly esteemed in the Church which are much despised by the world SERM. VIII In what sense Paul saith of himself He was an Apostle by the will of God Shewing likewise how all Church-offices and Priviledges come meerly from the will and good pleasure of God SERM. IX Paul's mentioning of Timothy shews That the godly though exalted above others in Office and Gifts yet are humble towards them SERM. X. There is a great deal of difference betwixt the Persons whom God calls and also in the manner of his calling them Education under godly Parents not to be rested upon but our hearts are to be sought into whether they be really changed or no. SERM. XI How much it concerns Church-officers to agree in matters of Religion What means may conduce to it Universities and Nurseries of Religion of how great use they are to the Church of Christ SERM. XII Of the Name and Nature of a Church SERM. XIII Concerning the efficient instrumental formal and final cause of a Church SERM. XIV Of the Notes and Signes of a true Church SERM. XV. Why Paul writeth to the Church not the Churches of Corinth What is implied in the Churches being called the Church of God SERM. XVI Of the City of Corinth God sometimes gathers a Church amongst the most prophane people A Church though many wayes defiled may be a Church still as it was with the Corinthians SERM. XVII A further Discovery of the truth of this Assertion that a Church may be a true Church though much defiled both in Doctrine and Manners SERM. XVIII The Preheminence of the Church of God above all Civil Societies As likewise concerning Paul's writing this second Epistle to the Corinthians how hard a thing it is for Churches to keep within their proper bounds and what great care Ministers ought to have to use all means lawfull to promote the Churches which they have relation to SERM. XIX Of the Name and Nature of a Church-Saint SERM. XX. External Holiness is not enough to bring us to Heaven without the inward renovation of the Heart SERM. XXI Wherefore 't is a Christians Duty to joyn himself to Church-society and in what cases he may be excused What are the false grounds why some neglect this Duty The soul of the poorest Saint is to be regarded as well as of the richest SERM. XXII 2 Cor. 1. 2. Grace be to you and Peace from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus Christ How Grace and Peace and such like spiritual Mercies and Priviledges are to be desired before any temporal Mercies whatsoever SERM. XXIII Of the Name Nature and Preheminence of the Grace of God above all other things SERM. XXIV Who are fit subjects to partake of the Grace of God As likewise Rules and Scripture-characters of the Grace of God by which we may rightly understand and judge of it SERM. XXV Of the Nature of true Gospel-peace and wherein it chiefly consisteth SERM. XXVI A further Discovery of the Nature of true Gospel-peace with the Effects of it and some Directions how to attain it SERM. XXVII Of the Names of God 't is he alone who can give Grace and Peace to his People He is a Father to all Believers even the weakest as well as the strongest SERM. XXVIII Of the Dominion and Lordship of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ SERM. XXIX 2 Cor. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of mercies and the God of all comfort Of the Duty of Thankfulness Blessing and Praising God for all his Mercies SERM. XXX Of Praising God and that for all but especially for spiritual Mercies SERM. XXXI How Christ is the Sonne of God and how the consideration thereof is the foundation of all a Christians comfort SERM. XXXII How God is a mercifull Father the Father of all mercies to his children SERM. XXXIII Of the mulitude variety properties and objects of Gods mercies SERM. XXXIV How God is the God of comfort yea of all comfort and consolations to all those that are his SERM. XXXV Some Propositions clearing the Doctrine of Gods mercy from both Doctrinal and Practical Objections SERM. XXXVI 2 Cor. 1. 4. Who comforteth us in all our tribulation that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble by the comfort wherewith we our selves are comforted of God That God not only can but doth actually comfort his People and how he doth it SERM. XXXVII That Believers only are the Subjects of the comforts and consolations of God SERM. XXXVIII How God will comfort his People in all both their spiritual and temporal Afflictions which all the Art of Philosophy can never do SERM. XXXIX What are these Apples which Christ refresheth his Spouse with Or what are those Scripture-grounds of comfort which support the hearts of Gods children under all their afflictions SERM. XL. How God may be said to comfort his children in all their tribulations though many of them may live very disconsolate SERM. XLI The works of Gods Spirit upon his People are not only for their good but likewise for the advantage of others SERM. XLII That those only can make fit applications of spiritual things to others who have an Experimental knowledge of them in their own souls SERM. XLIII It is a special Duty incumbent upon every one both Minister and Christian to apply comforts to the Afflicted in a right manner SERM. XLIV That the same grounds of comfort which revive the hearts of one godly man may do the same likewise to another SERM. XLV 2 Cor. 1. 5. For as the sufferings of Christ abound in us so our consolation aboundeth by Christ The true and unfeigned owning of Christ is alwayes accompanied with some sometimes with great Afflictions SERM. XLVI The same Doctrine prosecuted shewing the Object for which Christians are to suffer if they would suffer