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A40515 Select sermons preached upon Sundry occasions by John Frost ... ; now newly published together with two positions for explication and confirmation of these questions, I. Tota Christi justitia credentibus imputatur, 2, Fides justificat sub ratione instrumenti. Frost, John, 1626?-1656. 1657 (1657) Wing F2246; ESTC R31718 315,416 365

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contempt and disorder but the imposition of traditional observances in so needless a number as may seem to reduce us under the Jewish yoke which neither we nor our fathers were able to bear Acts 15. 10. or as equally obligatorie to conscience as divine commands or as the immediate worship of God or as duties essentially necessarie in order to salvation we justly abhor as the Tyrannie of Rome as the infringement of Christian libertie as a violation and voiding the commandment of God as our Saviour told the Pharisees that they made the commandment of God of none effect that is sleighted Mat. 15. 6. disregarded by their traditions All our holiness all our worship must be regulated by Gods will not our own Non ex arbitrio Deo serviendum sed ex imperio not according to our own fancie but Gods command and prescription It may seem somewhat a strange expression at first Israel hath forgotten his maker and builded Temples Hosea 8. 14. one would rather think this was a reverencing of God this is the account of it God had appointed one Temple and they multiply and build many contrarie to Gods direction and institution I say of all humane invented will-worship of God as Tertullian of the Heathen-worship Ex religione superstitio compingitur eo irreligiosior quantò Ethnicus paratior Men in this are no better then laboriously superstitious taking pains to be irreligious And the judicious Hooker determines that in Gods service to do that which we are not is a greater fault then not to do that which we are commanded Amongst other reasons he gives this to our purpose in that we seem to charge the law of God with hardness onely in that with foolishness and insufficiencie which God gave us as a perfect rule of his worship and service I shall conclude this point with that of S. Paul As many as walk according to this rule peace shall be Gal. 6. 16. on them and mercie and upon the Israel of God 2. The perspicuitie and plainness of this revelation It is the design and plot of Rome to fasten an imputation of obscuritie upon the written Word that hereby she may with more plausible shew exalt Peters pretended successour into the infallible chair as an unerring interpreter and also discourage and dishearten the people from reading them As the spies reported the land of Canaan to be impregnable and so disheartned the Israelites Hence the Papists crie out of Scripture that it is unintelligible and obscure to vulgar and common capacities and thus they defame and raise a false report of the written Word and make the difficultie of it a pretence for their neglect and cloak for their ignorance The Scripture was made to be a Christians guide and rule of life as I said before a blinde guide a dark and obscure rule is a contradiction Thy word is a light to my feet and a lanthorn to my Ps 119. 105. paths saith David and the Apostle Peter bids us look to the Scripture as a light which shineth in a dark place the same Apostle 2 Pet. 1. 19. indeed observed in S. Pauls Epistles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some things hard to 2 Pet. 3. 16. be understood this relates to the sublimitie and mysteriousness of things revealed not to the obscuritie of the revelation There is a depth of mysterie in Scripture cloathed with a plain and familiar expression Thy testimonies are wonderfull saith David There is the mysterie of Scripture yet follows The entrance Psal 119. 129. Ibid. v. ●30 of thy words giveth light it giveth understanding to the simple Here are mysteries to exercise the acutest wits depths for the profoundest judgements to fathom and yet so plain and obvious that the meanest and plainest using the means as prayer diligent search and the rest may profit by Here is meat for strong and grown Christians and here is milk for babes too In a word God hath so intermingled and interwoven Scripture-Revelations with some difficulties some facilities that plainness breeds not contempt nor difficultie neglect and disheartnings that by the plainness of them he might teach us knowledge and by the difficulties learn us humilitie 3. The certaintie and infallibilitie of Scripture-Revelation as being written by the guidance and dictate of an infallible Spirit All Scripture is given by divine inspiration no Scripture is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 3. 16. 2 Pet. 1. 20. of private interpretation so our translation or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of any private spirit which reading I finde pleaseth Beza best as agreeing with what is said in the next verse that the pen-men of Scripture were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For the prophecie came not of old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake Ibid. vers 21. as they were moved by the holy Ghost and therefore Scripture is a certain and infallible rule of faith and holiness This was one end of Scripture That we might have an infallible rule of life and judge of saving truth which had it been brought unto us onely by the acry conveyance of Tradition uncertain revelation might soon have been either forgotten or corrupted If we leave the Scripture once we are left at miserable uncertainties and lie open to all deceits and delusions If we rest upon Enthusiasticall revelations Satan can transform himself into an Angel of light and delude us our faith and obedience will 2 Cor. 11. 13 be alwaies at uncertainties The revelations of those who pretend to them be alwaies various sometimes contrarie and commonly pretended to to serve new interests and designs The Spirit is every mans pretence and therefore we must have some way to examine and judge of the truth or falseness and error of every mans spirit and this can be no other way but by the infallible Canon of the Scripture We never finde S. Paul alleadging any of those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those revelations which he had when he was caught up into the third heaven but he hath recourse to the Scripture for 2 Cor. 12. 4. the vindication of the Doctrine he delivered as you may see in his Apologie before Agrippa I continue saith he to this day saying Acts 26. 22. no other things then what Moses and the Prophets did say should come And the Apostle Peter speaking of the voice from heaven though 2 Pet. 1. 18 19. that was a ture one yet adds we have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a surer word of prophesie to wit the Scriptures the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verse 20. whereunto ye do well that ye take heed A voice from heaven may sooner deceive us then the written Word of God if we rest upon Traditions these are oft erronious as Rome can witness at best fallible and uncertain A man can scarce ever know when he hath believed and practised rightly or enough Traditions being variable and
Jews pricked at the heart and a John Baptist convince a Herod of his unlawfull and wicked enjoyment of his beloved Herodias How doth the word of God oft drive men from those forts and succours and delusions which they had framed to deceive themselves and encourage themselves in the ways of sin as others sin as well as I what saith Scripture to this Follow not a multitude to commit iniquity and Though hand Exod. 23. 2. Prov. 11. 21. joyn in hand the wicked shall not be unpunished I may deferre my repentance from youth to old age saith another See what Scripture saith to this Remember thy Creatour in the daies of thy youth c. and Eccles ' 12. 1. Hebr. 3. 15. Rom. 6. 23. To day if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts This is but a peccadillo saith another Scripture saith The ways of sin is death Such flatteries and deceits the deceitfull heart of man is apt to gull it self with The power of the word is to such as the voice of God was to Adam Where art thou and then he could lie hid no longer it convinceth and discovers them This is the effect of preaching the word as the Apostie saith If all prophesie to wit of the nature of sin Gods wrath against it and the like as Pareus glosses if there come in one that believeth not he is convinced of all he is judged of all and the secrets of his heart are Mr. Dod. made manifest When a reverend Divine amongst our selves had by a powerfull Sermon convinced a licentious wretch who heard him he fretting and very angry as wicked men cōmonly are at a convincing Minister came to him and charged him with preaching that Sermon against him out of malice and envy he returned him this answer If this Sermon had been preached in the dark when I could not have seen my Auditors this very word of God would have found thee out and convinced thee of thy sins In a word Rectum verum est mensura sui obliqui therefore Scripture containing all fundamental doctrines of faith and essential duties of holiness necessary to salvation must consequently be sufficient to confute and reprove all contrary sin and errour 4. That he may instruct the people and inform them of their whole duty Here they must expect and require their knowledge for The Mal. 2. 7. Priests lips shall preserve knowledge and the people shall require it at his mouth Unless their doctrine distill as the dew the field of the Lord the Church must needs be barren in holiness and fruitless in knowledge This is the last vse the Apostle saith the Scripture is profitable for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for instruction in righteousness 2 Tim. 3. 18. True indeed may the people say it is fit and necessary that Objection Apollos's Ministers should be mighty in the Scriptures but we hope we may be excused from searching the Scriptures it is not our duty we are to expect it from our teachers Indeed this is Rome's language If you were at Rome you might Answer be exempted that Church will gratifie you in this and thank you too they account it no better to suffer lay-men to read the Bible then sanctum canibus margaritas ante porcos projicere it is the expression of Hosius to cast pearles before swine or that which is holy to dogs you are little beholding to them for this But believe it though Antichrist will exempt you from reading the Scripture Christ will not who enjoynes it as a duty upon all to search the Joh. 5. 39. Scriptures and observe the argument he useth to enforce this duty for in them ye think to have eternal life If then you expect any interest in that happiness you are concerned and engaged in this duty of Scripture-search which is both commanded and cōmended in Scripture Let the word of God dwell in you richly in all wisdome Coloss 3. 16. Acts. 17. 11 saith S. Paul and it was the commendation of the Bereans that they searched the Scriptures daily whether the things that Paul and Silas preached were true or no. The Church of Rome accuse and charge this promiscuous searching of the Scripture as the cause of Heresy pride and faction I deny not Scripture misunderstood is sometimes abused to promote these ends but this is not the natural and proper effect of reading the Scripture the ignorance of which if we believe our Saviour is the cause of Heresy and error Ye erre saith Christ to Matt. 22. 29. the Sadduces not knowing the Scriptures and indeed if wee be robbed of the Compass of Scripture we must needs split upon the rock of errour In a word then it is the Tyrannie of Rome to withhold it and it will be your sin to neglect it Application 1. This condemns and corrects that general neglect and undervaluing of Scripture which now Atheisme is justly feared to be growing upon us prevailes in the world men preferring every thing else before this The Papist exalts his unwritten Tradition above the written Word Pari pietatis affectu suscipimus veneramur may seem a modest determination of the Tridentine convention and much less then their practise speaks The Enthusiast magnifies his pretended revelation and Scripture to him is but a dead letter and the searcher of it but literalis and vocalis too But let us return home and see whither we can plead not guilty where are our Nepotians who by diligent perusal of the Scripture make their souls Bibliothecam Christi as Hierom saith of him Where shall we finde an Alphonsus who is reported to have read the Bible ten times over with a comment or like that Transylvanian Prince whom Maccovius reports to have read the Bible over twentie seven times Where shall we finde a David who meditates in the Law of God day and night preferring it before the honey and the honey-combe Psal 19. 10. Psal 119. 72. Job 23. 12. before thoughts of gold and silver or a Job who esteemeth the words of Gods mouth more then his necessarie food Nay have we not many proud cursed Politians who think it a disparagement to their parts and learning to condiscend to the studie of Scripture and as he said think they never spend their time worse then in reading it Do not idle Romances and lascivious Poems and the like take up the most of our youth-studies nay amongst us who look towards the Ministrie doth not a nice and intricate School-man an uncertain Father an antiquated Rabby justle out the Scripture I speak not against those in their due order and measure but I would not have Hagar drive Sarah out of doors I would not have the Hand-maids courted and the Mistress neglected If they be our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let Scripture be our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Preposterous studying these before we be well grounded and setled in Scripture-knowledge doth oft fill the soule with such
to make him throughly perfect 2 Tim. 3. 17. Nay it is so perfect a rule that the most specious observances and most glorious performances and most exact works are no way acceptable unto God if not commanded in and regulated by this word They may have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a shew of wisdome in will-worship as the Apostle speaks Coloss 2. 23. to the pleasing of men but not to the glory of God God gave Moses a pattern for making the Tabermacle and David of the Temple God hath set us a perfect rule of worship and holiness in his word and nothing pleaseth him but what is according to that rule When our Saviour told the woman of Samaria John 4. 22. We know what we worship We that is the Jews the ground sure was because the Jews had a particular appointment of God for their worship which the Samaritanes had not Therefore nothing must be imposed upon Christians as obligatory to conscience though something for order and decencie 1 Cor. 14. 40. as Divine commands or as the immediate worship of God or as duties essentially necessary in order to salvation This is justly abhorred as the Tyranny of the Church of Rome and as an infringement of Christian libertie and as a detracting from the perfection of the word of God Non ex arbitrio Deo serviendum est sed ex imperio What Tertullian saith of the Heathen worship I shall say of all will-worship which is besides the word of God Ex religione superstitio compingitur eò irreligiosior quantò Ethnicus paratior Men in this case are laboriously superstitious and take a great deal of pains to be irreligious It seems to be a strange expression Hos 8. 14. Israel hath forgotten his maker and buildeth temples but sure the reason is because God had appointed but one Temple To be righteous without or beyond the word of God is to be righteous overmuch and to make our selves over-wise indeed wiser then God himself which is forbidden Eccles 7. 16. Be not righteous overmuch neither make thy self over-wise why shouldest thou destroy thy self To offer to God observances not prescribed in his word is but with Nadab and Abihu to offer strange fire unto the Lord Levit 10. 1. strange because God had not commanded it The use whereof before we pass further shall be First An encouragement to search What encouragement must it be to men to dig in a mine when they may finde a fulness of what may supply all their necessities there is such a fulness in Scripture-mines Doest thou want information in matters of faith Here is a fulness of Saving truth Or doest thou want direction for thy life and walking with God here is a perfect rule of holiness Secondly When you have searched it walk according to this rule Take the word of God to regulate your lives by this is an evidence and note of a true upright sincere Christian to take the word of God as his rule So David describes them Psal 119. 1. Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk in the law of the Lord that is a note that they are undefiled upright and sincere This evidenced Jobs uprightness Job 23. 10 11 12. And yet how few walk by this rule some by the fashions of the world custome and example of others education the invention of men and the like but David had another rule Psal 119. 113. I hate vain thoughts but thy law I love And there is a new lately unheard of generation now start up who neglecting the Scriptures pretend to be wholly led and guided by a light within them Let us if you think it worth the while examine this opinion and I think it may be confuted sufficiently by Mat. 6. 23. If the light that is in thee be darkness how great is that darkness Whence these things are obvious to be collected 1. That it is possible the light within a man may be darkness as the light which the Heathens had within them was who had their understanding darkned Ephes 4. 18. and as the light of every natural man is I Cor. 2. 14. 2. That if it be so it is a miserable darkness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How great is that darkness that is he that followeth such a light is in a lamentable deplorable condition as he that followeth the light of some Meteor in the night which leads him into ditches 3. This light within as being every mans pretence and in most men a false light and in one contrary to another must be tryed and then presently it supposeth some certain rule by which it must be tryed otherwise we shall never be secured from delusion and errour and this rule can be no other then the infallible word of God All that light is darkness which is not lighted at the Lamp of Scripture so the Prophet Isaiah tells us expresly Isai 8. 20. If they speak not according to this word it is because there is no light in them Therefore as David so all Christians should walk by that light Psal 119. 105. 4. If this opinion supposeth a light naturally set up in every mans soul which by following its direction may bring them to heaven then this is plain down right Pelagianisme and speaks the grace of God needless and tells God that he was at an unnecessary expence of wisdome and mercy when he gave us Scripture which the Apostle tells us is onely able to make us wise unto salvation in 2 Tim. 3. 15. 5. God hath no where commanded us to walk by any such rule as a light within By the Prophet David he sends us to his word Psal 119. 9. Wherewith shall a young man cleanse his way by taking heed according to thy word and S. Paul would have all walk by the same rule Phil. 3. 16. 6. Suppose it a true law and light an effect of regeneration yet not a rule because imperfect for still the Prophet remits us to that law written in the volume of the book of God Psal 40. 7 8. and by it it does evidently appear that there is no law or light within the heart to be accounted of but what is agreeable with and consonant to the law written in the volume of the book But however be it what light it will be which these pretend to walk by I shall demonstrate to you that those are not in the light but in darkness from 1 John 2. 8 9 10. And certainly into the number of those whom the Apostle there mentions it is no uncharitableness to put these whose constant practise is to spit hell and damnation in every mans face though such as walk holily and umblameably But you will say Is not every man concerned to follow the light and inward guidance of his own conscience I answer No unless his conscience be rightly informed and regulated by the word of God For conscience is but Regularegulata and though he cannot disobey a false light of conscience without sin
and effectuall propagating of the Gospel poured out plentifully of the extraordinary Gifts of his Spirit and it would be rashness in any one to assert that Apollos was not extraordinarily Gifted and if so this instance will nothing at all advantage those pretenders who want ordinary Gifts 4. Consider that this Apollos was one of Johns disciples ver 25. it is said He knew only the baptisme of John that is to say the doctrine of John concerning Christ to come and it may probably be thought the contrary cannot be proved that he was authorized and commissionated by John to preach the Gospel 5. Observe what this Apollos was afterwards an eminent publick and authorized preacher in the Church of Corinth S. Pauls helper and successor 1 Cor. 3. 6. I have planted saith Paul and Apollo watered and therefore S. Paul calls him his brother 1 Cor. 16. 12. and he is totidem verbis in express terms called a minister 1 Cor. 3. 5. Who is Paul or who is Apollos but ministers by whom ye believed and so famous he was that he hath the churches approbation of his Gifts verse 27. and when he came to Corinth he was so eminent that he proved the head of a sect and faction which is the highest ambition of their pretenders 1 Cor. 1. 12. One saith I am of Paul and I of Apollos and I of Cephas and I of Christ and though this was after his preaching here at Ephesus yet I reading of no ordination he received afterwards have good reason to believe that he was now ordained 6. Negative testimonies from Scripture in things circumstantiall are but illogicall and inartificiall arguments God indeed hath in things fundamentall to faith and holiness made a plentifull provision in scripture which is able to make a man wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15 17. and perfect to every goodwork To assume any thing as a rule of life or foundation of faith more then that the scripture affords is to impose upon our selves and defame the scriptures but silence of scripture in things circumstantiall especially in particular instances is not rationally argumentative Argumentum ab autoritate negante sed non ab autoritate negativè valet in Theologicis saith a reverend man of our own if scripture had said plainly that Apollos was not ordained the instance had been of some force but to argue he was not ordained becaused the scripture doth not say totidem verbis he was so is to me a very irrationall and unsatisfactory argument Nay if we consider the peremptory strictness of scripture-commands none should take this office upon him but he that is called as was Aaron and that was done by the outward appointment Heb. 5. 4. of Moses and withall considering the Apostles care to leave Titus to ordain in every citie and his strict charge to Timothy to lay hands suddenly on no man to wit without examination of his 1 Tim. 5. 22. Gifts and abilities and all this to prevent disorderly promiscuous daring intrusion into the ministeriall office considering withall the solemn separating of Barnabas and Paul by prayer and laying Acts 13. 12. on of hands which calling and appointment S. Paul frequently asserts to uphold his authority amongst them to whom he wrote as to the Romans he tels them he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 separated Rom. 1. 1. unto the Gospel of Christ laying these things and many more which might be alleadged together we I think finding Apollos here preaching which may equally satisfie other instances brought out of scripture have good ground to believe he was ordained though the scripture be silent in it when it doth not assert the contrary 7. If all this will not satisfie the objectors let me adde this last by way of concession let those who lay this instance as a foundation for a Babel of confusion in the church for there can be no order in a rude and promiscuous parity I say let those pretenders demonstrate themselves to be Apollo's men eloquent and mighty in the scriptures and for my part though I think those most fit to sit in Pauls chair who have been educated and instructed at the feet of Gamaliel I profess I see no great reason or evidence of scripture why they may not be admitted to the ministeriall office But when either out of weakness they dare not or out of pride and faction they will not submit themselves to the judgement and appointment of those whom scripture precept Apostolical practise and uninterrupted custom of the church hath impowred to set apart and authorise men for this office and so enter in at the right door but will audaciously climbe up some other way excuse the expression from uncharitableness 't is our Saviours concerning the Pharisees who were like intruders in these daies they are but thieves and robbers stealing away the hearts and affection of the people yea and the maintenance too from the right and duly-constituted ministrie These considerations of the person I humbly and willingly submit to your judgements and shall come now to those qualifications which were the intended subject of my discourse when I first laid out my thoughts upon these words First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which may have a four-fold reference 1. To his skill in Historie and Antiquitie thus Lorinus understands the word a fit qualification for an Apollos a minister of the Gospel to be versed especially in Ecclesiastical and Church-history where he may observe the various and severall providences of God protecting his church the originall and growth of errors arguments for the truth and acquaint himself with those supports and comforts which Christians have had in suffering for it all which are very usefull for an Apollos 2. To his knowledge in scripture as if herein his eloquence consisted not in a vain pomp and proud ostentation of words but in a powerfull and quaint discoverie of that majesticall elegancie and heavenly eloquence which is in scripture no greater eloquence any where then in scripture he that will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is a Metaphor you know taken from diggers in mines search and dive into them shall finde rich and precious mines of eloquence golden Allegories height of Metaphors and all other tropes and figures of Rhetorick more fully and elegantly exemplified then in any the most eloquent poet or exactest orator which the learned Glassius in his Philologia sacra hath admirably discovered True indeed a cursorie and non-observant negligent reader cannot discover it as a man who onely looks upon but never digges into a mine will never finde the treasure S. Austin confesseth Lib. 3. Confess cap. 5. that whiles he was a Manichee he had low and mean thoughts of scripture visa est mihi indigna quam Tullianae dignitati compararem saith he he thought it not comparable to Tullies eloquence but when he search't farther into them then he discovered that elegancie which became the majestie of Scripture-mysteries and men acted by
the seeming plausible pretences of reason should contradict it As the mysterie of the Trinity Incarnation Resurrection and the like are to reason seeming contradictions yet to be believed upon the account of Scripture testimony in which the ultimate resolution of our faith ought to be made not into the fallible evidences of reason or the erring dictates of men If you finde a scriptum est Let God be true though all men be liars Rom. 3. 4. 2. Because of that consent and harmony that is in Scripture testimony no jarring or contradiction in it but what the Prophets foretold the Evangelists speak of is fulfilled In humane writings how frequently may we observe one contradicting another and this reason clashing with that Nay the same authour through ignorance or forgetfulness inconsistent to himself but in Scripture there is a full and perfect consent as all proceeding from the dictate of the same infallible spirit as in 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God c. and 2 Pet. 1. 21. For the prophesie came not in old times by the will of man but Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost And though there may seem sometimes to be some contradictions and inconsistences yet these arise not from the Scripture it self but from our shortness weakness or ignorance and the like therefore we say what our Saviour saith at vers 46. of this chapter Had ye believed Moses ye would have believed me and as Paul speaks in his Apologie for himself Act. 26. 22. Saying none other things then those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come A sweet consent there is between Christ Moses and Paul 3. Because Scripture was given to this very end to be a certain and infallible ground of truth for though God during the infancy of the Church while it was inclosed in some few families revealed himself by visions and communicated his will from hand to hand by tradition from Adam to Moses and by extraordinary revelation yet when the Church increased and the people grew more corrupt and inclining to the heathen Idolatry God gave the law by Moses and so successively by the Prophets and Apostles by whom it pleased God to reveal his minde and will to all in writing both that it might be the better conveyed unto posterity as we finde it in Psal 102. 18. This shall be written for the generation to come and the more easily secured from corruption Had God still conveyed it unto us by the way of tradition either through the unfaithfulness of mans memory or his being subject to errour or affectation of novelty it had been laid open to a multitude of corruptions which if as experience shewes us scarce prevented by the penning of it how much less if it never had been written And also that the Church might have an exact standard of faith a perfect rule and an infallible judge of truth and therefore Ephes 2. 20. The Church is said to be built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone Faith builds surer here then upon the testimony of the Prophets and Apostles And this S. Luke tells us expresly was his reason of writing the Gospel Luke 1. 3 4. That thou mightest know the certainty of those things c. And thus more certain then Humane testimony II. More certain then miracles for though it pleased God at first to confirm the truth of the Gospel by miracles to the conviction of the Adversaries as Nicodemus speaks to our Saviour in John 3. 2. Yet now God having compleated the Canon of Scripture and warned us not to receive any other doctrine though an Angel from Heaven should bring it Galat. 1. 8. and pronounced a wo upon all those who should add or detract from it Revelat. 22. 18. if any should bring any doctrine contrary to Scripture with pretence of confirming it by wonders and miracles we ought to reject it as erroneous and Antichristian and so we see the Apostle makes this one of the badges of Antichrist 2 Thessal 2. 9. III. More certain then Revelations There is a place that I have oft thought of it is in 2 Pet. 1. 18. A true voice of God from heaven of his son Christ yet the Apostle tells us that we may more infalliblely finde Christ in in the word of Prophesie what that is he tells us ver 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then by extraordinary revelations Revelations we acknowledge viz. of the spirit revealing and clearing up Gospel-truth and this is that the Apostle pray'd for in behalf of the Ephesians in Ephes 1. 16 17 18. I cease not to give thanks for you making mention of you in my prayers that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledge of him c. and thus Christ revealed the Scriptures to the disciples Luke 24. 45 46. that they might understand them but not that under that pretence of Revelation they should reject and lay them aside It is fond and ungodly to pretend to Revelations besides or contrary to the Scripture S Paul would have an Angel from heaven if he brings it to be accursed Galat. 1. 8. and what are they then who receive them Again he tells the Church of Ephesus that he had declared unto them the whole councel of God Acts 20. 27. and yet at Acts 26. 22. he professes that he said nothing but what Moses and the Prophets had said should come yet this S. Paul was rapt up into the third heaven and there heard 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unspeakable words in 2 Cor. 12. 4. There can be no security for our faith from Revelations unless they be such as bring evidences and assurances that they are from God for Satan can transform himself into an angel of light 2 Cor. 11. 14. Now how shall we distinguish Satans delusions from Revelations but by the Testimony of the Scriptures by which we are commanded to try the Spirits 1 John 4. 1. For these Revelations and Enthusiasmes men pretend unto are oft as contrary and inconsistent to themselves as they are all contrary to the truth and therefore must be tryed by some infallible rule otherwise we shall constantly lie exposed to delusion unsetled in judgement and irresolved as to practise as not knowing what the next revelation may be perhaps quite contrary to the former Wherefore believe it they who will not rest upon the Scripture as the foundation of faith can rest no where When the Rich man in the Gospel would have had one extraordinary to have been sent from the dead to his brethren observe what answer Abraham gives him Luke 16. 29 30 31. They have Moses and the Prophets and if they hear not them neither will they hear though one come from the dead If one comes with Revelation and tells me It comes from God he must
convince me of the truth of it or else I may with the same easiness say It is from Satan and this conviction can be made no otherwise but by Scripture which is the most infallible ground of truth What the Pharisees said of Christ we may truly say of our late pretenders to Enthusiasmes and Revelations We know not whence he is John 9. 29. They may be from Rome as it is more then probable some of them are or whence soever they come certainly not from God if they disown the voice of God in the Scriptures Wherefore my counsel to you shall be that of S. Paul to the Thessalonians 2 Thessal 2. 2. Be not soon shaken in minde nor be troubled and in 2 Tim. 1. 18. Hold fast the form of sound words And this will be usefull thus First Then make your last appeal to Scriptures in matters of faith The Papists appeal to uncertain traditions the Enthusiast to deluding Revelation let us to the Scriptures for this is both the precept of God and the constant practise of the Scriptures To the Law and to the Testimonie Esay 8. 20. So our Blessed Saviour always appeals to the Scriptures as in the business of the Resurrection Matth. 22. 29. And to prove himself the Messiah he appeals to Moses and the Prophets Luke 24. 26 27. Thus the Apostles though acted by the same infallible Spirit yet always appealed to Moses and the Prophets so did S. Peter Acts 2. 25 31. and from thence did Apollos confute the Jews Acts 18. 29. and so Paul to prove the resurrection of Christ in Acts 13. 23. So then my brethren appeal not to the judgement and testimony of man what he saith as S. Cyprian was much delighted with Tertullian that he was wont to say Da magistrum nor to the dictates of dark reason but to the infallible Testimonie of the Scriptures and attend to Gods voice in them Secondly See here the ingenuous boldness and confidence of truth that dares appeal to Scripture Christ was confident of his cause and therefore declines not the test of Scriptures Search them saith he as if he had said If they do not testifie of me then do not acknowledge me It argues a timorous diffidence and consciousness of men when they like not to be tried by the word of God as in the Papist who appeals from the Scripture to traditions and it speaks the errours of those Revelations which will not subscribe to be tried here you may safely reject that doctrine as erroneous which will not be weighed in the ballance of the Scriptures or if it be weighed there proves light and wanting Tertullian of old notes that Hereticks were lucifugae Scripturarum As blear eyes decline looking upon the sun so corrupt doctrines the light of the Scriptures Thirdly Embrace and entertain nothing as saving truth which will not bear the test of Scripture It is one use of Scripture to be profitable 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 3. 16. to confute and silence heresie and errour and what-ever the Scripture reproves is such Be not imposed upon by the proud imperious dictates of men nor deluded by the pretences and delusions of Satan and his instruments but let this be your rule to try by Fourthly In all your doubts consult the Scriptures So did David in Psal 119. 24. He made the Testimonies of God his delight and his counsellours to enform and resolve him and that 1. In doubts of the head for reformation this is one excellency of the Scriptures to make wise the simple as in Psal 19. 7. Scripture sayes the Apostle 2 Tim. 3. 16. is profitable to inform the judgement and by this did David become wiser then his teachers 2. In doubts of the heart for consolation That was one end of Gospel-revelation that we through patience and comfort of the Scripture might have hope Rom. 15. 4. And so David found the statutes of God to be the rejoycing of his heart Psal 19. 8. In inward doubts of conscience have recourse to the Scriptures there thou mayst finde those cordial promises which will put joy and gladness into thy heart In thy duty consult the Scripture which will direct thee In thy troubles to comfort thee In thy fears to support thee In all thy doubts to comfort and resolve thee So much for the words considered Relatively Secondly Absolutely in themselves And so they will fall under a double consideration too First As taken by way of Concession Indicatively and so Beza Camero Paraeus and others understand them and so also they speak I. Our Saviours commendation of these Jews as diligent searchers into Scripture Or else II. His discommendation of them and reproof and that 1. either of their ignorance that notwithstanding they did search into Scripture yet they attained not to the knowledge of him as the true Messiah that though they had frequently Bibles in their hands yet they had not the word of God dwelling in their hearts Or 2. of their malice that notwithstanding they searched the Scriptures which did so evidently testifie of Christ yet they maliciously rejected him and would not come unto him that they might have life as in vers 40. Secondly As taken by way of exhortation Imperatively speaking a command to all to search the Scriptures And I shall take it in this second acception it being the drift of a great part of this chapter to exhort these Jewes to hear the word of Christ and Paraus himself acknowledges that uterque sensus est pius commodus And thus taken there are three things considerable in the words First The nature of the duty expressed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Secondly The universality of the dutie and that is double I. Of the Persons engaged in it expressed indefinitely II. Of the Object 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is all Scripture Thirdly The motive and arguments of the duty and they are two I. The benefit of Scripture-search Ye think ye have eternal life in them II. The object of Scripture-discoverie that is Christ they testifie of me All which particulars may be reduced to this one general Observation That Scripture-search is a duty every Christian ought to be engaged in Or thus It is the duty of every Christian to search the Scriptures In the handling of which observation this method shall be observed First To shew the importance of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Secondly What searchers of Scripture Christ here points at Thirdly The universality of the duty Fourthly The grounds of this search Fifthly The Application First To shew the importance of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word signifies such a search as diggers in mines make for gold and silver in the earth and implies five things I. A valuation and esteem of the Scriptures He that digs in a mine for gold evidences his valuation of it otherwise he would never dig for it so searching of Scripture speaks an high estimate and prizing of Scripture Such
into the Scriptures and that bespeaks reverence III. The orderly searcher Order and method is great in the acquiring of all knowledge method facilitates the understanding and strengthens the memorie it makes things more perspicuous and so more easie to be understood and more strongly and certainly retained That knowledge must needs be confused which is gotten by amethodical studie Method demonstrates the dependance of one thing upon another and so makes all easie and facile So that in search of Scripture we should not pick here and there a chapter or verse but read in order first the easiest and then the more difficult for pascimur apertis exercemur obscuris Milk is easiest for nourishment and strong meat to exercise our sence with First therefore those that may build us up in the faith as the Gospels and Epistles then what may exercise our parts and learning I take it a preposterous way of Scripture-search which many take to search first into the Prophesies Revelations and the darker places of Scripture and neglect the Epistles of the Apostles and other easier places It is in Scripture-search as in all other sciences there are some more easie and obvious principles and these first to be learned before we go to deductions and the like First let us go where the lamb may wade and then where the Elephant may swim IV. The judicious searcher that reads with judgement and understanding As Philip said to the Eunuch when he was reading the Prophet Isaiah Acts 8. 30. So say I to every searcher of Scripture understandest thou what thou readest No profit by searching without understanding therefore children and mad-men are no competent searchers of Scripture there is required an act of judgement and discretion Or if as the Eunuch thou understandest not then consult with those that do Read still in obedience to God's command nay let this double thy endevaours but remember to consult with the Philips that is the Ministers of the word V. The thankfull searcher who when he reads the Scriptures meditates of and thankfully acknowledges the goodness of God in giving and revealing to him the Scriptures Christ himself esteemed this thank-worthy in Matth. 11. 25. I thank thee O Father of heaven c. and how much more should we do it in regard of our selves if we shall but consider 1. What a great priviledge it is to a person or nation to have the Scriptures the word of God entrusted with them This was the great priviledge of the Jews which the Apostle takes notice of as their greatest advantage above the Gentiles Rom. 3. 1 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He made them Trustees of his word and promises And the same would the Psalmist have observed with thankfulness Psalm 147. 19. 2 How this is the onley light which can lead us to heaven This is the cloud which will lead you through the wilderness unto Canaan the light of nature is but a groping after God Acts 17. For though the invisible things of God are clearly seen by the things that are made as we have it Rom. 1. 20. yet cannot the knowledge by nature at all discover Christ without which knowledge no salvation if you credit our Saviour himself John 17. 3. The Scripture is our onely star to lead us unto Christ The light of nature may lead men to hell and leave them there inexcusable but the light of Scripture can onely light us to heaven In them you think you have eternal life as our Saviour speaks here 3 If you consider seriously How many thousands in the world sit in darkness left to the natural blindness of their corrupt hearts How many are in Egypt while we are in Goshen a land of light Looke abroad into the world and see what palpable darkness is the greatest part of it overclouded with and what fond guides do the most follow The Mahumetan regulated and guided by a ridiculous Alcoran the Papists enslaved to fond and uncertain Traditions the Jew being left to his own hardness refusing the Gospel following a few Curious Rabbines and many thousands who never heard of the sound of the Gospel but are even without God in the world having their understandings darkened as it is Ephes 4. 18. while we enjoy the clear light of the glorious Gospel to guide our feet into the waies of peace Observe we what God says to the Israelites Deut. 4. 8. What nation is there so great that hath statutes and judgements sorighteous c. These make a nation great so may we say and so oft as we read or hear the word of God should thankfully acknowledge it VI. The Practical searcher who searcheth the Scripture that he may thereby regulate his life and order his conversation aright It is one end why God hath given the Scriptures unto us Psal 119. 9. It is as a rule to walk by Galat. 6. 16. As many as walk according to this rule peace be on them such should all searchers of Scripture be for 1. Otherwise Scripture-search will be in vain it will be no otherwise profitable to us to know Scripture if we do not live by it then to aggravate our sin Jam. 4. and to encrease our condemnation that we shall have double stripes Luk. 12. 47. It is better to be mere Ideots and Dunces in Scripture then not to live according to them better had we never search for these heavenly treasures and spiritual pearls then when we have found them to trample them under our feet We should search Scripture for that end for which God gave it and that the Apostle tells us 2 Tim. 3. 17 is that we might be throughly furnished unto every good work He truely searches the Scripture who resolves what ever command he meets with though never so contrary to his lust that he will obey it therefore did the Prophet David meditate in the law of God that he might make it a light unto his feet Psal 119. 105. 2. No other searchers are like to finde the hidden treasures of Scripture God hath engaged to reveale himself to such as these Joh 7. 16 17. If any one will do his will he shall know c. and David gives this as an account of his great knowledge Psal 119. 98. Nothing improves knowledge more then a suitable practise the true reason why men finde no more in the searching of Scripture is because they read it more out of curiosity then of Conscience It is grace in the heart and obedience in the life that makes men fruitfull in Scripture-knowledge Consider that Emphatical place in 2 Pet. 1. 5 6. where the Apostle exhorts to a diligent acquiring and practising of several graces and gives the reason of it at ver 8. For if these things be in you you shall not be barren nor unfruitfull in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ The Turke writes upon his Alc●ran Let none read this book but he that is holy None are fit to be searchers of Scripture but who either
new Testament to which both Christ and the Apostles oft send Christians and blame them for their ignorance in them Luke 24. 25. Then he said unto them O fools and slow of heart to believe all that the Prophets have spoken c. Therefore it was the constant practise of Christ and his Apostles to assert their authoritie and confirm their doctrines by the old Testament as in the Text here and he grounds these Jews unbelief upon their not believing Moses verse 46 47 For had ye believed Moses ye would have believed me for he wrote of me But if ye believe not his writings how shall ye believe my words Where Christ confirms his doctrine by Moses who wrote of him This was the Apologie S. Paul made for himself and his doctrine in Acts 26. 22. So our Saviour proves the doctrine of the resurrection by Moses Matth. 22. 31. and the doctrine of his sufferings and resurrection Luke 24. 44 45. And the truth is much of Gospel-doctrine can neither be understood nor proved without the old Testament as that of the Israelites in 1 Cor. 10. 1 2 3 4. whence should Christians understand that but out of the historie of Moses of the Manna the cloud the sea and the rock and especially the epistle to the Hebrews without an exact knowledge of the legal sacrifices priesthood and the like and the lives of the Patriachs mentioned Heb. 11. VI. And lastly To convince the Jews of the truth of Christ our Messiah and satisfie Christians in their temptations concerning it as the fulfilling of the Prophesies the realizing of the Types concerning Christ This Apollos found to be the most convincing way to confute the Jews Acts 18. 28. And there is no other possible way to effect this for the New Testament they reject Reason is no competent judge and cannot fathom the depths and mysteries concerning Christ nor judge of the true Messiah nor can you convince them by the miracles of Christ for they deny them or else impute them to Beelzebub If we would convince them then we must build upon some Principles which they grant otherwise they deny the whole therefore the only way to convince them is to shew the conformitie and agreement of all Christs doings and sufferings to what the Prophets of old foretold of the true Messiah Which course our Saviour himself took to prove himself the true Messiah Luke 24. 44. and therefore the search of the old Testament is much conducible to the strengthning of our faith in Christ against the Jews For when we consider the exact Prophesies of the time of Christs coming Gen. 49. 10. and while the temple stood Hag. 2. 7. the place of his birth by Micah chap. 5. verse 2. born of a virgin Isai 7. 14. the miracles to be wrought by him Isai 35. 5 6. his passion and sufferings Isai 53. these are sufficient when we finde them so punctually fulfilled in Christ to strengthen our faith in him and to convince the Jews of their desperate unbelief therefore those who deny Christians the use of the old Testament rob them of their weapons whereby they should contend for the faith and fight against the enemies of Christ the Jews Fourthly The grounds of this search And these I shall reduce to these four heads I. The Scripture-fulness and sufficiencie and this is clear in the words of the Text In them you may have the knowledge of Christ and eternal life Where we may consider 1. It is a full and perfect foundation of faith as containing all things necessarie to be believed either expresly or by convincing and undeniable consequence So full and perfect it is that it needeth not to be eeked out with unwritten traditions or pretended enthusiasmes and revelations That tradition which brings down and conveys Scripture-truth to us through the successive ages of the Church we cannot cast out but acknowledge as an eminent instance and testimony of Gods Providence and in this sense the Church is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 3. 15. the pillar and ground of truth In sensu forensi c. Not that it contributes authority to them And in this sence S. Augustines Non credidissem may go for good and currant Divinitie because we could not have had them else So for revelation we acknowledge a spiritual revelation to understand which the Apostle prays for Ephes 1. 17. but any thing additional to Scripture-truth we reject as detracting from the wisdome of God and his revealed truth Observe we what the Apostle saith Gal. 1. 18. If we or an angel from heaven preach any other doctrine He does not say Contra against but praeter beside saies Paraeus Here is enough to bring you to salvation else S. John was out who tells us These things are written that you might believe and believing might have life John 20. 31. and if not sufficient we may say as the disciples Matth. 26. 8. To what purpose all this but when God himself sends us To the Law and to the Testimony Isai 8. 20. and Abraham sends the rich man's brethren to Moses and the Prophets Luke 16. 29. it intimates that here is enough which if known and practised is able to keep them out of hell 2. A full and perfect rule of righteousness No duty which can concern any man in any relations either to God or man but you may have full direction for it in the Scripture Those three words of the Apostle speak the whole duty of a Christian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 soberly righteously and godly Tit. 2. 11 12. When the Lawyer came to tempt our Saviour with that question What shall I do to inherit eternal life our Saviour sends him to the Scripture What is written in the law How readest thou Observe we what Wisdome saith Prov. 1. 9. My son if thou wilt receive my words and hide my commandments with thee shalt thou understand righteousness and judgement and equitie yea every good path Art thou a Magistrate Scripture tells thee how thou must rule in 2 Sam. 23. 3. He that ruleth over men must be just ruling in the fear of God Art thou a Father Scripture directs thee in that relation to thy children To bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord Ephes 6. 4. Art thou a childe Scripture tells thee how to carrie thy self in that relation Ephes 6. 1 2. Children obey your parents in the Lord for this is right c. Art thou a servent Scripture tells thee how to behave thy self in that condition Ephes 6. 5 6. Servants be obedient to them that are your masters according to the flesh c. Art thou a Master of a family Scripture shews thee how to behave thy self in that relation Ephes 6. 9. And ye Masters do ye the same things unto them forbearing threatning c. In a word here is direction for every Christian in every condition and relation in which the Scripture is able
so nor follow it without sin neither so that the obligation which an erroneous conscience lays upon a man is not to act contrary to it but he ought to get that false light extinguished and his conscience better informed and a true light set up from the word of God Notwithstanding this therefore and all other pretended lights or rules contrary to or besides this I shall close this argument with that of the Apostle Gal. 6. 16. As many as walk according to this rule Peace be on them and the Israel of God The second argument or ground for Scripture-search is Scripture plaineness and perspicuity It is the desire and plot of the Church of Rome to fasten an imputation of obscurity upon the Scripture that hereby she may with the more plausible pretence exalt Peters pretended successour in the infallible chair as an unerring interpreter and also discourage the people from reading them as perswading them that the treasure lies too deep for them to finde and therefore it is to no purpose for them to search but this is to bring a false report upon the Scripture as the spies did upon the land of Canaan All truths necessarie to salvation are plainly laid down in Scripture whence the Scripture is so oft compared to a light as in Psal 119. and Prov. 6. Indeed here we must distinguish between the mysteriousness and obscurity of the things revealed and the manner of the revelation Scripture-mysteries indeed are obscure and deep in which respect S. Peter observed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some things hard to be understood in S. Pauls epistles 2 Pet. 3. 16. but the revelation of these mysteries are plain to those that use the means as devout prayer serious meditation frequent reading and the like This is that which David saith Psal 119. 129. Thy testimonies are wonderfull there is the mystery but in verse 130. The entrance of thy word giveth light there is the perspicuity Some things are less plain ob futuritionem because they foretell things to come as Prophesies and some ob majestatem for the loftiness of them as to instance The mysterie of the Trinity is incomprehensible yet most plainly revealed in 1 John 5. 7. what greater mystery then for God to take flesh for a childe to be born of a virgin yet these most clearly revealed in Scripture 1 John 1. 14. and the other Luke 2. 6 7. Thus that which is obscurely insi●●ated in one place is clearly revealed in another at least in those things that be absolutely necessary to salvation for to this very end Nihil continetur fidei necessorii quod Scriptura per sensum literatem alicubi non manifest● tradit Aquin p. 1. q. 1. a. 10. it was written John 20. 31. Yet Scriptures are dark and obscure as to us 1. Because of our pride and though God be said to resist the proud yet he teaches the humble Psal 25. 9. 2. Because of mens unbelief 2 Cor. 4. 3. The Gospel is hid to them that are lost So that while men-are in a state of unregeneracy they are amidst all their acquired knowledge in the dark as to any true saving knowledge of Scripture-mysteries they have no relish of these things A carnal eye cannot see those things which eye hath hath not seen they being the things of the Spirit therefore Christ councels us to buy of him eye-salve Revel 3. 18. without which we can see but little The cloud was light to the Israelites but dark to the Egyptians so is the word of God light to the true Israelites that is believers but dark to unbelievers the dark side of the cloud is towards them who are conversant onely in the letter 3. Because of our weakness and infirmity The mysteries of the Gospel are profound our capacities but shallow we may say of them as the woman of Samaria said of Jacobs well John 4. It is deep and we have not to draw with 4. Because of our curiosity as not content to know onely what God hath revealed 5. Because of our idleness and carelessness in searching Difficultas non est ex re ipsa sed ex nostra oscitantia saies Paraeus He that rides post cannot take a map of the countrey he rides through so he that makes too much hast in reading the Scriptures cannot take an exact account of them To the best by reason of the remainders of their natural blindness it is not so plain as it is in it self therefore Scripture is more perspicuous to some then to others some are better scholars then others in this school according to the means of grace God hath bestowed upon them Ephes 4. 7. and according to the diversity of the Spirit working in opening their eyes but they who understand most have reason to say with the Apostle We know but in part 1 Cor. 13. 9. and to pray with David Psal 119. 18. Open thou mine eyes The use of this will be two-fold First Here we learn the unexcusableness of mens ignorance of Scripture Thou can'st not pretend that it doth not concern thee for Christ hath bidden thee search it nor yet make the obscurity of it a plea for all saving truths lies obvious and plain in it There is indeed strong meat for grown Christians but here is milk too for Babes in knowledge here are mysteries to exercise the acutest wits depths for the profoundest judgements but what may make thee wise to salvation is so plain that a man of the meanest capacitie may apprehend it therefore especially amidst so many means of knowing it as publick reading and preaching the ignorance of it in any is inexcusable Secondly Pray to God for the Spirit to be your teacher in these Gospel-mysteries that you may all be taught of God as it is in John 6. 45. Without this you will be in the dark and grope at noon-day The Sun is most perspicuous yet we cannot see it without its own light the things of the Spirit revealed in Scripture are clear and perspicuous in themselves but will not be so to us without the light of the Spirit There is indeed an external perspicuity of Scripture in the words this may be made out to the worst of men by the improvement of natural abilities and by accomplishment of Arts nay the devils may have a clear understanding of this but then there is an internal perspicuity of Scripture evidenced to the soul by the enlightning of the Spirit of God shining into the heart so irradiating the minde with a Divine light that it sees through the veil of the letter and discovers the mystery of the word This light conveys an experimental taste and a sweet relish of the truths of the word of God In a word the Scripture is plain though we want light to see it the Sun may shine though a blinde man cannot perceive it but now the Spirit brings a suitable light into the soul proportioned to these Scripture-truths which were indited and can onely be evidenced by