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A17385 A commentary upon the three first chapters of the first Epistle generall of St. Peter VVherin are most judiciously and profitably handled such points of doctrine as naturally flow from the text. Together with a very usefull application thereof: and many good rules for a godly life. By Nicholas Byfield preacher of Gods Word at Isleworth in Middlesex. To which is now newly added an alphabeticall table, not formerly published. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653.; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Commentary: or, sermons upon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the ten first verses of the third chapter of the first Epistle of S. Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the first chapter of the first Epistle generall of Peter. aut 1637 (1637) STC 4212; ESTC S107139 978,571 754

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looke upon the Elect but as they are in Christ. Fourthly seeing it is certainly decreed concerning the gathering of mens soules by the 〈◊〉 of Christ it should teach Ministers with all readinesse and patience to preach the Gospell in the places where they come as knowing that such as are ordained of God shall be gathered even so many in these places as belong to the election of God Act. 13 48. Verily This doctrine of 〈…〉 is ●●tered with a kinde of mild asseveration the reasons of which asseveration are these 1. Because the most men will hardly beleeve any such thing men by nature are wonderfull apt to object against the doctrine of Gods decrees and therefore he urgeth it with an asseveration 2. Because of the excellency of this decree above all the rest this was a golden statu●e the most amiable ordinance that ever was that God should from everlasting resolve to send his owne Son to redeeme us 3. This asseveration is to worke the greater assurance of faith in the Elect they should never doubt Gods love to them in Christ for ver●ly Christ was pre-ordained c. Before the foundation of the world This phrase is used in divers senses in Scripture 1. Sometimes the foundation of the earth is taken for the peopling of the earth since the foundation of the world that is since the peopling of it Exod. 9.18 2. Sometimes for justice and judgement in the earth the foundations of the earth were moved that is all went to wrack in matters of justice Psal. 82.5 But usually it is taken for the creation of the world especially in respect of the support of this great frame of heaven and earth The foundation of the world is that admirable work of God erecting this huge frame of heaven and earth and supporting it by his almighty power so that before the foundation of the world is before the world was set up But why doth he rather say before the foundation of the world then before the world was It may be for two reasons First to raise up our thoughts to the contemplation of the wonderfulnesse of the founding of heaven and earth for the rarenesse of the wisdome of God and the cunning he shewed in this admirable frame Prov. 3.39 for the unsearchablenesse Ier. 31.37 for the surenesse and durablenesse of it Psal. 78.69 for the absolu●enesse and independance of Gods power in framing all this Iob. 38.4 5 for the suddennesse of it it being all done with a word and for that all this was made of nothing and that this great earth the foundation of all the rest should it selfe lie in the waters Psal. 24.2 and indeed the whole borne up onely by the power of Christ without meanes Heb. 1.3 Secondly this phrase may be of purpose used for the likenesse of the state of the Church to the world and the promise of God for the upholding of it Hee that made the world of nothing raised a Church to himselfe of that which was worse then nothing yea all that is said before of the world may assure us of so much and much more in the execution of Gods counsels in Christ for the Church Psa. 78.79 The doctrines are 1. That the world had a beginning it had a foundation it was not eternall 2. That we ought to be deepely affected with the admi●ablenesse of the making and upholding of the world But who can tell that there was s●●h a wonderfulnesse in the creation of the world 1. Scripture doth tel● it Heb. 11.3 2. Christ was by when it was done Prov. 8.29 3. The Angels of heaven saw the whole when it was done and were by at the doing of a great deale and were rapt with admiration at the wisdome and power of God Iob 38.4 5 6. 4. Lastly the frame it selfe as it 〈◊〉 ●●ands speaks evidently for the wonder of the workmanship But what use may be made of the wonderfulnesse of Gods workmanship herein 1. We should disce●● and marke and acknowledge the power and wisdome of God herein and by our often thoughts raise up our hearts to the often meditation of it Psal. 104 1. to 9. Shall the Angels shout with joy and shall we be so dull Iob 38.6 2. It shews the eternity of God and his soveraignty and power to dispose and alter all things at his will Psal. 102.26 89.11 3. It intimates to us many consolations 1. That God can easily prolong the life of his servants that could give and uphold the being of so huge a frame Psal. 102.26 2. That God himselfe is wonderfull firme and unchangeable to all generations and faithfull in his word that can give such a stable being to heaven and earth Psal. 119.90 89. Esay 40.21 48.13 51.13 16. 3. That if the world have such a sure foundation then much more the Church Esay 14.32 For if the foundation of the world be so glorious oh how glorious is the foundation of Sion If he have made such an excellent house for his people to dwell in it shewes he loves them much and meanes to provide for them for continuance Prov. 20.26 but especially how precious are the foundations of the new Jerusalem Rev. 21. 4. This intimates the fearefull power of God in the execution of his judgements upon wicked men Amos 9.5 Zach. 12.1 2. Deut. 32.22 2 Sam. 22.8 The project concerning our eternall salvation by Christ was before the world conceived in God Eph. 1.4 Psal. 90.1 Ier. 31.3 The Uses are divers 1. Therefore let us admire the matchlesse love of God that not onely loved us first but loved us before the world was 2. Let our love to God taste of the knowledge of this doctrine since wee began not so soone as he let our waies and purposes and desires be to extend our affections towards God to the end yea and beyond all end also 3. Let it comfort us in all adversity to think of this everlasting love of God Esay 40. 4. Lastly doth not thi● evidently confute merit of workes It was for no desert in us for we were loved before we had done either good or evill Rom. 9. And thus of the fourth point But was manifest in the last times for you The fift thing is the manifestation of this great work of our redemption amplified by the time of it viz. in these last daies and comprehended in the manifestation of Christ. Christ is manifested five waies 1. For the faithfull 2. To the faithfull 3. In the faithfull 4. By the faithfull 5. With the faithfull ● He was manifested for them in that he did undertake for the merit of their redemption 2. He is manifested to them in the preaching of the Gospell revealing Christ and him crucified before them 3. Hee is manifested in them when in respect of true grace his image is formed in them thus God 〈◊〉 his Sonne in Paul Gal. 1. 16. 4. Hee is manifested by them when with their obedience
And thus the soule may be considered either as it workes upon or by the body onely or as it workes in and by it selfe chiefly Upon the body and by certaine instruments in the body it workes vegetation and sense and by it selfe without the necessity of using the body it workes reason The first power then is vegetation by which the soule workes foure things distinctly upon the body 1 Life 2 Nourishment 3 Growth 4 Procreation The first thing then by the vegetative power of the soule wrought upon the body is life which is in respect of the body nothing else but the kindling the radicall and vitall heat in the body through the conjunction of the soule with the body and the continuation of that hea● untill the time appointed of God for the dissolution of it So that life is two waies to bee considered first either in the breeding of it secondly or in the continuance of it The breeding of it is in the very first moment of the union of the forme with the matter and by that instrument of the vitall or radicall heat The continuance of it is nothing else but the preservation of the motion and duration of the working of these vitall spirits The second thing wrought upon the body by the vegetative power of the soule is nourishment and this power of nourishing is a faculty by which food taken into the body by the force of naturall heat is turned into the substance of the body for the repairing of that which is consumed in the body And this is a worke to bee admired For the soule by the use of naturall heat is faine to subdue the nature of the food received and having melted it as it were in a furnace it casts out what is contrary to the body and extracts for the use of the body so much as is now made like unto it The third thing which the soule workes upon the body by the vegetative power is growth And this it doth by imploying that part of the food which is now made like to the body unto the extension of the body unto the dimensions thereof even to the increase of bignesse and force which increase for the convenient actions of the body and this worke is done upon the body but unto a certaine time of mans age or till about thirty yeares and then because nature tends not into infinitenesse she gives over this worke Lastly procreation is the fourth worke of the vegetative faculty of the soule by which it raiseth up seed in the body and formeth in it a meere substance like unto the body from whence it comes unto the perpetuall preservation of the sort of the creature And this is an admirable power For hereby living creatures do approach unto eternity and are made as it were immortall For though the body die yet by procreation it is as it were kept alive and so the kind of creature is perpetuated for the other two workes of nourishment and growth onely serve for that body in individuo but this power of procreating reserves the sort or species from ceasing to be Thus of Vegetation Sense followes The second thing the Soule workes either upon or by the body is Sense and by this faculty a man in his body is enabled to discerne things without himselfe and accordingly to desire and move to them which the former faculties did not reach unto Now as the soule workes sense upon or by the body it must be considered two wayes First as it workes either apprehension secondly or motion The apprehendnig senses wrought upon the body by the Soule are of two sorts first either outward secondly or inward Outwardly the soule workes upon the body five senses or five wayes of apprehending things by sense The body of a man is enabled by the soule to discerne of things without it selfe by outward helpes five wayes viz. By 1 Seeing viz. By 2 Hearing viz. By 3 Smelling viz. By 4 Tasting viz. By 5 Feeling And these waies of discerning are not to be contemned For admirably ought it to bee conceived of Gods wisedome in and towards man even in these For first by the sight through the benefit of light which God hath caused to shine upon his whole creation man may see what God hath wrought whereas else if the light be taken out of the aire or sight from man the workes of God are buried as it were in the darke yea the body of a man is as it were but a dungeon without sight and what the Sunne and Moone are in heaven that are the eyes in man shining in his head as these Starres in the firmament The fight is a chiefe helpe for all the great imployments of life in all callings The eyes are as watchmen set on high in their watch-Tower to discover the comming of enemies The eyes are also as the true windowes of the soule by which the Species or formes of things are taken into the soule For God hath caused all substance in the World to cast out beames as it were which have the pictures of the things themselves carried about and these comming to the sight are by it above all other senses taken in and delivered to the Soules within the eyes being a looking glasse that resemble the things seene And this noble sense may put us in minde of Gods knowledge if wee marke the degrees of seeing The eye of man discernes at once a great share or quantity of things together The minde of man will take-in a farre greater quantity and number and yet is finite for it cannot reach to all things that God hath made at once Now Gods understanding is infinite and beholds all at once For the second the sense of hearing is worthy to be thought on if wee consider either the benefits come by it or the manner how it is performed for by hearing is let into the soule and body not onely sounds of delight or wonder but also sounds of necessity both for naturall life by letting in speech and discourse and for eternall life by letting in the Word of God First the manner of hearing is admirable Sound is the breaking of the aire stirred up by the dashing or collision of sollid bodies and is spread in the aire as a stone cast into the water makes and drawes from it circles Thus the sound being brought to the eare the hollow turnings in the eare gather and hold the sounds as it were canes The sound at length rusheth upon a little bone or gristle like a hammer which moved smites upon another bone like an Anvill by which stroake the spirits in the hearing move and are stirred up and so they take in the sound and carry it to the braine the feat of inward senses These two are the most noble outward senses yet there is great use of the other three Thirdly for by tasting we discerne of meates profitable or hurtfull for the body Fourthly by smelling we receive in those delightfull
savours God hath caused to arise from divers of his creatures and to avoid things by savour noysome to the body Fifthly and touching though it be the most stupid sense yet is it of great use for the safety of the body All these senses are as a guard for the body and as Intelligencers for the Soule Thus of the outward senses The soule worketh likewise inward senses upon and by the body and the generall use of these inward senses is to receive and lay up what is brought unto them by the outward senses for the outward senses are like servants that trade abroad and get together the images of divers things which they carry with them home to the inward senses Now there are three inward senses 1 The common Sense 2 The Phantasie 3 The Memory And these are lodged in three severall roomes or little cells in the braine First the common sense lieth in the former part of the head and containes all that store by which all the outward senses are furnished For spirits fetch the vigour of each sense from this the common sense As the lines that goe to the circumference meet all in the Center so doe all the outward senses meet in the common sense And hither likewise are all the formes of things taken by the outward senses brought and distinguished Secondly the phantasie is lodged in the middle part of the braine where as in a shop it takes in the Images of things brought to the common sense and there formes them more exactly and oftentimes makes new after an admirable manner by thinking and then after it hath separated what it likes not it delivers the rest over to the memory which is lodged in the hinder part of the braine which is as it were the treasurie to keepe what the Phantasie as a Judge hath sentenced to her keeping the common sense being but as the doore-keeper unto the Phantasie And these three senses differ in the ability to receive and keepe the impression of the images of things brought to them For the common sense is seated in the more soft part of the braine and so not able to keepe them long as waxe over-soft doth not long keepe the impression of the seale The pantasie is placed in a harder part of the braine and therefore keepes the impression longer But the memory is placed in the hardest part of all and behind in the head further off from the concourse and trouble of the outward senses and by reason of the stifnesse of the braine it keepes the impression longest Now that naturall heat with the animall spirits is like a fire to keepe the braine soft in the degrees thereof that it may receive the impression as hot water the waxe fit to be marked Thus of the senses But before I passe from them it is profitable to note certaine things which befall the senses for the good of the body and soule and that is the binding and loosing of the senses For God hath so tempered the state of the senses in man that they should neither alwaies rest nor alwaies worke Hence from their resting comes sleepe and from their working comes waking or watching We make when the senses are loose sleep when the soule binds them up both are thus wrought when the vegetative power wants helpe for concoction of the meate the naturall heate is sent from the senses to dispatch that worke and then we sleepe and when that is done the heat returnes to the senses and tickles them and so they awake But it is to be observed that though in sleepe the common sense and so the outward senses are all bound yet the phantasie and memory doe not cease but being now freed from the attendance upon the intelligences of them or the outward senses as if they were at more liberty they are exercised more freely and often fall to new forming and compounding of the images brought in before by the common sense and so erect a new frame of things which are vented and expressed by dreaming In which a secret and admirable working of God by the soule may appeare if wee consider the strange things are fashioned in our imagination in our sleepe yea the reasonable soule in sleepe comes into this shop of the phantasie and there doth strange workes which as I said are vented in our dreames in which we finde as effectuall use of reason as we had waking Thus of the soule as it worketh apprehension Now followeth it to consider how the soule workes motion upon the body It is out of all doubt that motion in the body is from the soule For of it selfe it is but a dead lump as it shewes it selfe to be when the soule is gone out of it Now the soule gives unto the body a threefold motion First the vitall motion Secondly the motion of appetite Thirdly the motion from place to place The vitall motion given to the body by the soule is wrought two wayes both by the pulse and by breathing both of absolute necessity to preserve life in the body The motion of pulse is begunne at the heart which is made continually to beat by the soule which beating of the heart begets those sparkles which wee call vitall spirits arising out of the finest of the blood which spirits are carried by the pulse thorow the arteries and they shine in the whole body according as their passages are more or lesse open Breathing is another strange motion of the soule in the body by which both aire is fetcht in continually for the cooling of naturall heat in the heart and other members and the spirits refreshed and also the grosse and more smoakie spirits are exhaled out of the breast Thus of the vitall motion The motion of appetite is a contrary commanding motion in the creature by which hee is inclined to take to him such things from without as hee conceives good and needfull for him and so likewise to avoid things hurtfull and so the soule begets divers appetites and desires as the desire after food which we call hunger and thirst and the desire after procreation and the appetites we call affections or passions so farre forth as they are seated upon the body and exercised by instruments in the body such as in generall breed sorrow or pleasure or passivenesse in us such as are joy griefe anger and the rest c. It were too difficult and too tedious for popular reaching to shew in particular and distinctly how the soule admirably worketh about each of these The motion from place to place is the last and this is a strong worke of the soule driving on the body to the motion of the whole or of some part of the body The body cannot remove it selfe but it is of the soule that it is stirred up and downe for when the soule is gone it can move no longer And in vain were appetites or desires given to the creatures if this motion from place to place were not given because
to be considered of 1. What need our spirits have to be sanctified 2. Wherein lyeth the sanctification of the spirit of man Our spirits have great need to be sanctified 1 By reason of the first sin they want originall righteousnesse and they are corrupt and infected with a generall leprosie 2. By reason of the steine and uncleanenesse all our actuall sins have added to the former corruption 3. By reason of the inhabitation of uncleane spirits our spirits have in them trenches cages forts and strong holds of Sathan 2 Cor. 10.4 and therefore had neede to bee cleansed after such soule spirits have been there 4. The naturall spirit of man frames nothing but evill and that continually this makes God so weary Gen. 6. In particular all the faculties of the spirit of man need sanctification 1. The minde is covered with a vaile wrapped in an ugly mantle of darknesse distracted with errour coupled with a thousand formes of evill thoughts 2. The memory performes no service to God it should be Gods Treasurer and Register but no body is in the office to keep record 3. The Will is grievously diseased and with sicknesse so distempered that it will not be ruled by any not by God not by men not by reason not by religion nor doth it agree with it selfe For man wills not alwayes the same thing 4. The affections out of the first poyson of naturall corruption have such monstrous births of evill that the spirit by them is set out of all order They are compared to beasts Esay 11. To fighting soldiers 1 Pet. 2.12 To tyrants making cruell lawes and leading into bondage Rom. 7. 5. The wretched Conscience then which there was once no diviner thing on earth is now in miserable case For either it is sick of a Lethargy and sleepes or if it waken it is like a mad Dog or Lion or a Iudge transported with rage It is ignorant without light it is soiled or ●tein●d with a thousand sinnes It is impure and exceeding base and without all properties of a divine Iudge For it is blinde and will be corrupted and will deferre the Affise c. Insteed of a throne of judgement it is thrust into a hole and horrible dungeon of darknesse where the Sunne of righteousnesse shineth not and there for the most part as if it were still night it lieth obscure and sleepeth And thus of the need we have of sanctification in our spirits The sanctification of the spirit lyeth in two things 1. In cleansing the spirit from sinne 2. In adorning the spirit with graces In the cleansing of the spirit consider both from what and how For the first if any aske what there is in our spirits needes cleansing away I answer That besides what hath been shewed many more particulars may be set out thus There are vile both impieties and unrighteousnesse in our spirits must be done away For impieties There is ignorance errour atheisticall thoughts pride hypocrisie inconstancy hardnesse of heart and division of heart conceitednesse vanity selfe-love hatred of goodnesse false feares carnall confidence forgetfulnesse doubts unsetlednesse unbeliefes of all sorts and love of the world For unrighteousnesse There are evill cares covetousnesse lusts of all sorts hatred malice desire of revenge anger fretting worldly gri●fe bitternesse discontentment vaine-glory emulation inordinate affection and evill concupiscence as good as men thinke their hearts and meanings are they may by this taste see how foule their spirits are Now for the second The spirit is cleansed from these sins by degrees and to that purpose the spirit of God worketh and useth 8. distinct new qualities which have not place in the soule but upon occasion of this service against sin And these are 1. Spirituall poverty or sense of sin and misery 2. Base estimation viz of the world with the pleasures profits and lusts of it Phil. ● 8 Esay 30.22 3. Hatred of sinne 4. Shame for sin Rom. 6.21 5. Godly sorow 6. Feare 7. Indignation 8. A purpose and inclination to forsake sin Thus of the cleansing of the spirit The adorning of the spirit followes The spirit of man in sanctification is adorned with holy graces and here I consider of the adorning 1. of the minde 2. of the heart 3. of the conscience The minde is adorned with three things which come new into it 1. The first is a heavenly light 2. The second is humblenesse of minde 3. The third is purity of imaginations 1. This light comes in by the illumination of the spirit setting in the minde a celestiall kinde of knowledge and this stands in two things For first this sanctification breakes open a way and sets at liberty the light of nature which was imprisoned and withheld in unrighteousnesse and then there is besides infused a new light from above and this light hath in it 1 1. A holy discerning of good and evill truth and falshood by which the minde in a measure discerneth a general course of avoiding the waies of death and the 〈◊〉 of hell 2. A holy inquiry by which the minde aspireth after God and truth and tryeth things that differ 3. Wisdome from above by which the minde is caried not only to a foresight and forecast for the things of the soule and a better life above the things of the body and this life but is furnished with certaine feedes of discretion for practise with observation of the circumstances of time place persons maner end occasions c. 4. A sacred frame of piety and patterne of godlinesse and truth and this patterne is so communicated to the understanding that it is indelible no dangers sin or death can ever utterly abolish it This frame of truth is perfected by degrees 5. There is planted in the minde Gods watch by the light whereof all the wayes of the heart and life are over-looked 2 2. The second grace planted in the minde is humblenesse of minde 1 Pet. 5.5 and this hath in it 1. A sense of the wants of the soule and life of man 2. A lowly kinde of forecast in all things to glorifie God and profit man accounting it no abasement to serve and please with all readinesse 3. A thankfull acknowledgement of the mercies of God infinitely above desert by which a man holds himselfe not worthy of the least of Gods mercies 4. A freedome in matters of opinion from selfe-conceit by which a man attaines to that not to be wise in himselfe or to rely upon his owne reason or judgement Thus a man is not high minded 5. An accounting of others of Gods servants better then our selves 6. A pronenesse to humiliation for sin and humility in cariage 3. The third thing brought into the minde is purity of imaginations holy thoughts by which the minde converseth as it were in heaven already and feedeth upon the fairest objects in heaven and earth Prov. 14.22 Phil. 3. 20. Colos. 3.1 Thus much of the
so matchlesse and perfect a rule and canon of holinesse written in the word of God to direct us 3. Having our natures by regeneration in part healed and freedome of will in part restored so as no● if wee be not holy it is because wee will not be holy 4. Having such mighty helps as are 1. The assistance and supply of the spirit of grace within us 2. Prayer with a promise of granting whatsoever we aske 3. Guides and spirituall Pastors to oversee and direct us 4. A cloud of witnesses even the examples of the godly of all sorts 5. Such acceptation with God if we be willing and love to be his servants Act. 10.36 But of this in the next point 4. Here is implyed how infinitely kinde God is in accepting our holy endevours if we desire to be holy in all our conversation he will account it to be holy as he is holy and yet alas it comes ten thousand degrees short of the holinesse of God yea far short of what it should be yea which is more of what it might be in us 5. The image of God is in conversation as well as nature we resemble God not onely in the renovation of our nature but in the renewed actions also so then we beare Gods image 1. In nature 2. In action or obedience Of this later here 6. A Christian should be especially carefull of his outward conversation even to shew forth the light of good works and holy carriage before men Wee should be exceeding carefull to expresse holinesse in conversing one with another There are many motives 1. We are Gods witnesses 2 Tim. 2.2 2. T is a good profession 2 Tim. 2.2 3. There are many witnesses to observe us 2 Tim. 2.2 4. Carnall men are crooked and perverse Phil. 2.16 5. A holy conversation will silence foolish men 1 Pet. 2.15 6. It will bring much glory to our heavenly Father Mat. 5. 7. It proves our justification and foretels our salvation 8. To walk upright is to walk safely Prov. 9. T is as it were to live in heaven Phil. 3.20 10. It will support us in wrongs adversity Act. 23.1.2 Cor. 1.12 11. It will shew our knowledge is not idle 2 Pet. 1.8 12. It furthers our reckoning and provides us acceptation in the day of death and judgement 2 Pet. 3.11 Rev. 14.13 7. If we would be holy as God is holy we must be holy in all conversation that is we must shew respect to all the commandements of God wee must shew a care of religion as well as vertue of godlinesse as well as honesty of mercy as well as just dealing to enemies as well as friends at home as well as abroad toward inferiors as well as superiors in prosperity as well as adversity in all companies as well as one c. Mark it in the tryall of our selves by this doctrine we may know infallibly whether wee be called or beare the image of God or no for if there be any one sinne that we will not forsake or any one commandment we are not desirous to obey it will prove all is n●ught in us Heb. 13.18 8. Lastly we must here further observe that if we would have comfort that we beare the image of Gods holinesse we must be carefull of the manner of our conversation as well as the matter For though these words ● all manner may note the extent unto the matter of all holinesse yet there is no evident reason why a great part of the meaning of the holy Ghost should not be restrained to the manner as the word sounds Now there are divers things in the manner of our conversation to be observed for the resembling of Gods holinesse 1. The first is godly purenesse we must in our conversation shew respect of God and godlinesse and keep our selves from the impurities of the times and watch against sin in all our waies 2 Cor. 1.12 2. The second is simplicity or holy harmlesnesse as it is opposed to fraud and fleshly wisdome and shews it selfe in a plaine and evident desire to doe what God requires though it be never so much scorned in the world 2 Cor. 11.3 1.12 3. The third is precisenesse or circumspection making conscience of lesser sins as well as greater and avoiding the appearances and occasions of evils as well as the evils themselves Eph. 5.15 4. Conversation in heaven which is so to use the world as to let our hearts still run upon God and his Kingdome directing all our actions some way to further that end Phil. 3.20 5. Meeknesse of wisdome which is shewed by lowlinesse and not being wise in our selves but doing good in a continued sense of our own vilenesse and unworthinesse to doe any service to God or man Iam. 3.13 This is called a conversation with feare 1 Pet. 3.2 ver 16. 6. Constancy Phil. 1.27 7. The affections of godlinesse or well-doing or zeale Tit. 2.14 Verse 16. Because it is written be ye holy as I am holy THE first argument no inforce the exhortation ver 13. is taken from the image of God in us and this reason is propounded in the first words of ver 14. and expounded in the two former verses and this and that two waies 1. By a description of the image of God in us ver 14 15.2 By the proofe in this verse In this proofe two things are to be observed 1. Whence the proofe is taken As it is written 2. What is alledged viz. Be ye holy as I am holy The meaning is that we stand bound to shew regard of our conformity to God in holinesse for this was long since required in the written word of God that wee should be holy as God is holy And first then concerning the Scripture from whence the proofes of doctrine are fetched Here I consider 1. Of the use of the Scriptures in generall for proofe of doctrine 2. Of the Scripture of the Old ●estament from whence this proofe is fetched For the first Proofes of doctrine are of three sorts 1. From men as they are men 2. From the senses 3. From God The first is not infallible the second is infallible in some respects the third is infallible simply for ever The testimonies of men work onely opinion as being but Arguments contengent and probable The testimonies of the senses and of God work knowledg or bring arguments necessary Hence it is that the Prophets and Christ and the Apostles in their teaching amongst the people almost never use any testimonies of men in matters of religion and when they doe it is chiefly for confutation of adversaries by their owne writers Now for the senses they are internall or externall Internall and so there is a double testimony 1. from the law of nature 2. from the conscience The externall are seeing hearing tasting c. and the argument from them is from experience The testimony of the senses is in●allible in some respects viz. as they are rightly
reason will affections c. do discover themselves within us and it is manifest that God infused the soule not upon the body but into the body seating it within us The soule then is within the body and so joyned to it But how Divines have sought out divers similitudes to expresse their mindes And first to shew how it is not joyned First not as water and the vessell that holds it are joyned by contact or touching one another for the soule is not a bodily substance and therefore cannot be joyned by touching nor doe the water and vessell make one thing as the soule and body do one man nor do they worke together as the soule and body do for the water doth all the worke thereof in watering or clensing without the vessell Secondly not by mixture as water and wine are mingled together For things mingled cea●e to be what they were for there is no longer water nor wine now they are mingled nor is the soule materiall to suffer such a mingling Thirdly not as the heat of the fire is united to the water when the water is heated for though the heat be joyned to the water as the former yet it is but an accidentall forme and they are one by accident not per se. Thirdly not as the voyce is in the aire for though the voice be dispersed abroad the aire and doth likewise carry something to the understanding besides the sound yet doth not this reach to expresse the union of the soule with the body For the voice is not the forme of the aire nor is it conceived in the aire without the breaking of the aire and besides it presently vanisheth whereas the soule is a substance and doth not easily depart out of the body Fifthly nor as the Mariner is in the shippe with the Governer for the dispatch of his journey for though the body bee as a tabernacle wherein the soule dwells yet that similitude doth not expresse this union because the soule and body make one thing whereas the ship and the Mariner do not make one thing but are two distinct sorts of things yea the soule and body are soone that by sympathie what one suffers the other feeles whereas the wounding of the Mariner is not the tearing of the ship or contrariwise There are two similitudes that doe more neerly reach this secret The first is of Christ. For as God and man make one Christ so the soule and body make one man But I will not meddle with the breaking open of that dreadfull mysterie The other is of the light of the Sun in the aire for there are many things in this comparison doe fitly resemble this divine light which is our soules as they are joyned to our bodies 1 This light doth fitly resemble the soule because it is a thing that cannot be corrupted or divided 2 This light doth so pierce into and penetrate the aire that they are both made one and are not separated so doth the soule the body 3 The light and the aire though joyned together are not confounded or mingled together for the light remaineth light and the aire the aire so is it in this union betweene the soule and the body 4 The light is so in the aire that the aire being smitten yet the light is not touched nor divided nor carried about as the are is so doth the soule remaine unpierced though the body bee wounded and fall yea and die too 5 As the light is onely from the Sunne so is the soule onely from God 6 As the aire without the light is as it were dead because it is darke and cold and will putrefie so is the body without the soule 7 As no man can shew by what bands the light is fastned to the aire so is it extreamly difficult to shew how the soule is fastened to the body This similitude we see doth in many things fit this case but yet not fully For the light is not the essentiall forme of the aire onely this comparison doth in many things sati●fie the question in that it shewes that the soule is in the body by penetration or immeation as they call it it pierceth thorow the whole body Onely we must take heed of two things First that wee imagine not the soule to be in the body as in a place or as contained of it For the soule cannot bee circumscribed by the measure of a place wee may not imagine that the soule is just as bigge as the body and no bigger For though it bee true that the soule is in the body and the whole soule too yet it is not contained there as bodies be contained in their places for rather the soule sustaineth the body Secondly God is said to be in us and so is the soule but not alike For God is in us by his vertue and grace and operation but not as our former whereas the soule is the forme of the body and both make one man Quest. But some one will say Can it not be shewed by what band the soule is tied to the body Answ. Some Divines and Philosophers undertake to determine that and say that God hath created in the body of a man a certaine humour which is fitted for this union and so they say the soule is united to the body by the vitall spirits which are of nature mixt partly corporeall and partly spirituall For as those vitall spirits doe consist for the matter of them of the radicall heat and moisture in man so they are corporeall and as they have an unexpressable nimblenesse in working or sparkling in the body so they draw neere to the nature of the soule and by these vitall spirits thus enlived are the soule and body joyned together Quest. There yet remaineth another question and that is Where the soule resides in the body in what place is it centred Answ. The most say that the whole soule is in the whole body and the whole soule in every part of the body Others say it is a vaine question seeing the soule is not in the body as in a place For it cannot be measured by length breadth or depth but it is in the body as the essentiall forme is in the matter which cannot be locally Others say that the soule is seated in one principall place of the body as the chiefe palace and seat of residence and is in all other parts by diffusion of vertues through the instruments thereunto fitted and placed of purpose by God in the framing of the body and thus the soule reasons in the head wills and affects in the heart sees in the eyes c. The chiefest mansion of the soule seemes to be in the heart because it is the last that dies in us Hitherto of the union of the soule with the body The faculties of the soule follow There are three faculties or powers of the soule by which it workes or there are three things which the soule effects viz. 1 Vegetation 2 Sense 3 Reason
say that is he may be insallibly assured of it And this is true in two respects first he may know that he is truely called and converted and elected of God secondly he may know his calling in respect of the warrant of all his particular actions as here he may know what is required of him in his carriage towards his enemies Now that every true Christian may be sure of his calling and election and may know his conversion is most apparent by these Scriptures 2 Cor. 13.5.1 Cor. 3.16 2 Tim. 1.12 Heb. 8.11 1 Iohn 2.3 3.14 4.16 5.13 19. And that every Christian is bound to seeke this assurance and knowledge is apparent by many reasons As first from Gods Commandement he requires it of us that we should with all diligence seeke to make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Secondly many reasons may be gathered from the effects and benefits such knowledge and assurance will bring to us Assurance is profitable for many things In generall it is our best riches on earth Col. 2.2 and in particular 1. It estates us in all the promises of God when we know we are truely called then we know our right to all the promises of Gods Word 2. It purifieth the heart and life of man Acts 15.9 for when we know we are the children of God we are thereby stirred up to the greater care to please God and walke in his waies 3. It greatly staies and supports the heart of man in the evill day when temptation or afflictions befall us yet the comfort of our assurance sustaines us and refresheth us greatly For helpe in the evill day the Apostle saith we should above all things put on the shield of faith which if it remove not the crosse yet it qu●ncheth the fiery temptations of Sathan with which we may be assaulted Eph. 6.16 and it greatly helps us against the feare and terrour of death Heb. 10.19 20 22. In a word it overcomes the world 1 Iohn 5.4 5. 4. The faith of a Christian is all his living he lives by faith in all the occasions of life as his faith helps him when all other meanes faile him and makes all other meanes more successfull when he useth them The just man lives by faith The people in captivity that were Gods children raised a living for themselves in a strange land by their faith Hab. 2.5 5. It puts life into all the duties of religion or righteousnesse it worketh by love it ●ets all our affections on worke towards God and his people and creatures Gal. 5.6 6. It opens a spring of grace in the heart of a Christian every good gift from above is excited and made to flow from within him by the benefit of his certaine knowledge and assurance of faith Iohn 7.38 Now if any aske how a Christian comes to know his calling I answer 1. By his sensible feeling of his sins to be a heavie burthen to him of which he is truely wearie so as he desireth more to be rid of them than of any burthensome crosse whatsoever Mat. 11.29 9.13 2. By his manner of receiving the voice of Christ and the preaching of the Gospel not in word but in power The voice of Christ hath a marvellous power over him above all things in the world which appeares by the effects of it for he seeles in hearing the word first such an estimation of it as he acknowledgeth nothing like it for power and wisedome 1 Cor. 1.23 24 Secondly he finds at some times especially such an assurance of the truth of his religion and the doctrine he heareth that he is fully established and freed from his naturall uncertainties about the true religion Thirdly the Word worketh in him spirituall senses and very life from the dead which he feeles in all parts of his conversation making conscience of his waies in all things bewailing his frailties and striving to be such as God would have him to be Fourthly it makes him to separate himselfe from the world avoiding all needlesse societie with the wicked and exciting in him constant desires to use the world as if he used it not Fiftly much spirituall joy before the Lord even then when in respect of outward things he is in much affliction The most of these effects are noted 1 Thes. 1.4 5. 3. By the image of the vertues of Christ in his heart by new gifts in some measure for when God calls a man he reveales his Son in him Gal. 1.15 16. There is begotten in him a likenesse of Christ his very disposition is changed into the similitude of the vertues of Christ God gives him a new heart with the image of Christ stamped upon it and he is like Christ in respect of lowlinesse of minde and meekenesse and contempt of the world and love of God and the godly mercy wisedome patience love of his very enemies and desire to live without offence and praying to God as to his Father Quest. But if Christians may know their calling what should be the reason that so many Christians are so unsettled and are not assured of their calling Answ. Distinguish of Christians some are Christians in name and outward profession but not in deed being not at all converted though they have the meanes of conversion and this is the estate of the most men and women in all places Now some are indeed converted but are weake Christians as it were infants that lie but in the cradle of religion Now for the first sort the answer is easie They know not their calling because they are not called yea they are so far from knowing it that they generally are offended at it that we should teach that any body can know his owne calling certainely Carnall Christians then know it not because they have it not and in particular the causes why these Christians attaine not assurance is because they rest upon common hope of mercy in God which house is but like the house of a Spider and will give up the ghost when the evill day commeth upon them And besides they live in knowne sins which they love and preferre before all things can be offered to them by the Gospel Now it is impossible to have true assurance and to lie at the same time in knowne grosse sins without repentance And further many Christians by their wilfull unteachablenesse and incurablenesse in sinning doe so provoke God that all meanes notwithstanding yet those things that concerne their peace are hidden from their eyes Luke 19.42 Now for the weake Christian the causes of his want of assurance are such as these sometimes ill opinions about assurance either that it may not be had contrary to the charge given 2 Pet. 1.10 or if it be had it will not be profitable contrary to the reasons given before Sometimes it is their ignorance they are so unexpert in the Scriptures that not discerning the frame of godlinesse in generall they can never tell when
make a man truely happy and therefore much lesse these silly parcells of the world we can attaine to Eccles. 1.3 2. These are all common things and that in two respects first there is nothing now new to be had which hath not beene had heretofore ordinarily What is now hath beene before and will be afterwards Thou canst enjoy no felicity of life that can be proper to thy selfe Eccles. 1.9 10. 3.15 And then further all these things a foole may enjoy as well as a wise man and a wicked man as well as a godly man A man shall never know love or hatred by these things for they fall alike to all sorts of men Eccles 2.14 3. All things are full of labour who can utter it If men doe reckon the paines and care and unquietnesse and wearinesse they are put to about the getting or keeping or using of these things they would find little cause to love them especially considering that unto the use of the most of these is required a daily labour with toile that men that possesse these things cannot possesse themselves they are so overburthened with the cares and labours of life Eccles. 1.8 4. If a man had never so much of these things yet they cannot satisfie him his soule will not be filled with good The eye is not satisfied with seeing nor the eare with hearing He that loveth silver shall not be satisfied with silver Man walketh in a vaine shadow and disquieteth himselfe in vaine Eccles. 1.9 5.10 Psal. 39. A shadow is something in appearance but nothing in substance if a man would seeke to claspe it or receive it to himselfe 5. All these things are transitory and uncertaine and mutable which may be considered of three wayes First if thou love these things thou art not sure thou canst keepe them they may be lost suddenly and fearefully for either they may weare out of themselves or they may be taken from thee they are liable to vanitie in themselves or to violence from others Mat. 6.19 20. 1 Pet. 1.24 Secondly if thou be sure to enjoy them yet they will be suddenly lost to thee because thou canst not make thy heart to take delight in the same things still for not onely the world passeth away but the lusts thereof also 1 Iohn 2.15 Eccles. 6.1 7. 9.3 Thirdly if neither of these befall thee yet thou art mortall thou must be taken from them and thy life is short like a dreame and passeth away like the winde and thou art but a stranger and pilgrime here and thou must carry nothing out of the world but in all points as thou earnest in to the world so must thou goe hence Psal. 90. Iob 7.7 Eccles. 5.13 14 15. All flesh is grasse Esay 40.6 6. That a man may receive much hurt from them they may steale away our hearts from God The amitie of the world is the enmity with God Iames 4. They are like pitch to de●●le there is a snare and temptation in all of them they fill mens hearts with foolish and noisome lusts and a man may damne his soule for too much loving of them 1 Tim. 6.9 Phil. 3.18 and they may serve to witnesse against a man at the day of judgement Iames 5.1 Lastly consider that there is no comparison betweene the commodities of this life and the commodities of the life to come There are rivers of pleasures for evermore Psal. 16. ult There are Crownes of honour and glorie such as will neither be held with envie nor lost with infamie there shall men possesse enduring substance Heb. 11. treasures not liable either to vanity or violence Mat. 6.20 an inhe●it●●●e immortall and und●●●led and that withereth not and lieth in heaven 1 Pet. 1.3 4. Thus of 〈◊〉 second doctrine A third Doctrine may be gathered out of these words and that is That in some cases there is a permission of the love of life In that he gives rules to such as will love life it imports That God is contented to suffer or tolerate that humour in men Now this toleration may be considered of as it is granted to some men or as it extends in some sort to all sorts of men Some men that are high in place and have publike emploiments and are about some speciall service for the glory of God and good of the Church or Common-wealth in these men the desire to live longer in it selfe is not sinfull this was the case of David and Hezekiah Now further unto all sorts of men the Lord doth allow a certaine kind of liking of life so as they observe such cautions and rules as he appoints as namely that the cares of this life hinder not the preparation for death or the provision for a better life and withall that they limit not God for the time of life but be willing to die when God calls for their lives Now for a conclusion to this point I would advise those that have such a minde to live here to looke to certaine rules which will prevaile with God to grant them long life if any thing will prevaile as first they must be exhorted to take heed of overmuch desire of life they must moderate their desires after life If they could once attaine to it to be content to die when God will it may be they should find life prolonged according to that of our Saviour He that will lose his life shall finde it Secondly such as have Parents in nature or religion must be very carefull to give them due honour for to such God hath promised long life in the fift Commandement Thirdly godlinesse hath the promises of this present life as well as of the life to come and therefore ever the more godly we are in all manner of conversation the longer we may be likely to live and contrariwise a profane man hath no assurance to live out halfe his daies Thus of the first forme of speech The second forme of speech by which the persons he adviseth are described are such as will see good dayes And see good dayes Before I come to the observations here is worke of large enquirie and consideration about the sense for these words import That in the life of man there be some good daies and some evill daies Physicians tell us in their profession of some daies in the yeare that be good daies and some that be evill daies for their directions and superstitious and idle people in the world tell us that there are some good daies to begin businesses in and some evill It seemes here the Prophet David in Theologicall contemplation findes that in the life of man some daies be good and some be evill This would be enquired into And that we may finde out which be good daies we must first enquire which be evill daies and that by Scripture account And that we may distinctly understand this we must enquire which be evill daies 1. For wicked men 2. For godly men The daies of
Law and the Gospell and inwardly the Spirit of Christ. The instrument of receiving it in respect of the generall will of God is the understanding or in respect of the promise of grace it is faith The Law is a light Prov. 6.23 of the light of the Gospel 2 Tim. 1.10 2 Cor. 4.6 Knowledge is light Act. 26.18 and of the light of faith Ioh. 8.12 Eternall light is the light of heaven where the inheritance of the Saints lieth Col. 1.12 Revel 18.19 It is the spirituall light upon the soules of men the light of knowledge and faith is here specially meant which is conveyed and increased by the Gospell Doct. The point then hence is cleare That Gods servants in comparison of their former condition are brought into great light The spirituall light shineth upon every one that is to be converted Act. 26.18 God hath promised light to every penitent sinner Iob 33.28 30. Esa. 42.16 and Christ was given to be the light both of Jewes and Gentiles Esa. 42.7 and 49.6 Hence it is that Christians are said to bee the children of light Luk. 16.18 Io● 12.36 yea light it selfe Eph. 5.6 the lights of the world Phil. 2.15 And thus they are so by reason of the light of Jesus Christ shining in their hearts through the knowledge and beliefe of the Gospel All the world is like unto Egypt 〈◊〉 with darknesse and the godly are like the children of Israel in Goshen Use. The use may be first for instruction to the godly since they are called to such light by Christ they should First beleeve in the light since they see now what they doe they should establish their hearts in the first place in the assurance of Gods love since his shining favour sheweth it selfe in the Gospel Secondly they should doe the workes that belong to the light they may now see what to doe and therefore ought not to bee idle but to worke while they have the light 1 Ioh. 2.8 And to that end they should daily come to the light that it may be manifest that their workes are wrought in God Ioh. 3.21 And they should now abound in all goodnesse and justice or righteousnesse and truth Eph. 5.8 9. proving what that acceptable will of God is vers 10. Thirdly they should therefore cast away the workes of darknesse and have no fellowship with the children of the night but rather reprove them Eph. 5.7 to 14. For what fellowship betweene light and darknesse 2 Cor. 6.17 Fourthly they should in all difficulties and ignorances pray to God to shew forth his light and truth seeing they are called to light Psal. 43.3 Use 2. Secondly godly men should hence bee comforted and that in divers respects First though they may have many distresses in their estates yet light is risen to their soules though they may for a season suffer some eclipse of their comfort yet light is sowne for the righteous and joy for the upright in heart Psalm 97.11 and the more they should be glad of their portion in light when they bebold the daily ruines of ungodly men The light of the righteous rejoyceth when the lampe of the wicked is put out Prov. 13.9 In 2 Corin. 4.4 6. there are three reasons of consolations assigned First the light wee have should comfort us if wee consider how many men have their mindes blinded by the god of this world and of those many of them great wise and learned men Secondly if we consider what darknesse we have lived in God hath done as great a worke upon our hearts as hee did when he commanded the light to shine out of darknesse in the beginning of the world Thirdly if we consider what glorious things are revealed unto us for by the Gospel he hath caused to shine in our hearts the knowledge of the glory of God c. Finally it is the more comfortable in that the Apostle calls this light marvellous light which is now in the next place to be opened Marvellous light The spirituall light which shines in the hearts of the godly by the Gospel is a marvellous light either because it is such as the godly doe marvell at or because it is such as they ought to marvell and wonder at When men first enter into the truth that is when they are first converted Christians being for the most part full of affections as they that have scaped lately singular danger and as they that never before saw the Kings Court they are frequently stirred up with admiration at the glory of the Gospel they wonder at and are vehemently affected with the new discovery of the riches of Christ shewed them in the preaching of the Gospel and thus it is a marvellous light in this sense Esa. 30.26 But I rather consider of it in the other sense It is a marvellous light though wee should not have the heart to bee so affected towards it it is marvellous I say First because it is a light that needed the Mediator to procure it none but Christ can give us this light Other light is free wee pay nothing for it but this is carried in the hand of the Mediatour to us and for us Esa. 42. 4● Secondly because it commeth after so long a night of ignorance and sinne they must needs account the light precious that have not seene it a long time as blind men when they receive fight Esa. 9.2 Matt. 4.16 Thirdly and more because it is a light commanded to shine out of darkenesse 2 Cor. 4.6 That God should call light out of such darknesse as wa● in our hearts is marvellous Fourthly in comparison with the times of the Law and the shadows of the Old Testament Fifthly because it is a light comes not from any creature but from God the Creator God is our light Esa. 6.19 And in this respect this light is like the light that shone about Paul Act. 22.6 Sixthly because it is a light that shines at the time of the evening of this world That the Sunne should shine in the day time is no wonder but that it should shine in the night or at evening were a dreadfull wonder even so it is in this last age of the vorld Zech. 14.7 Seventhly because it is a knowledge above the reach of reason it is the light of faith Eighthly because it shines onely to the godly It is light in Goshen when there is no light in Egypt that was marvellous and so is it when we see the light shining all abroad and many men sit in darknesse even in the same place in the same congregation city or family When the godly see clearly the wicked discerne nothing light is with-held from the wicked Ninthly because it hath more force than any other light for it is the light of life it quickens the soule and enlives it Ioh. 8.12 Lastly because it is an everlasting light it is such a day as no night followeth it The consideration of all this should worke divers things in us
For if in all these senses it be a marvellous light then First we should be marvellously affected with it and strive to be exceeding thankfull for it How have wee deserved to be cast againe into darknesse for our extream unthankfulnesse How have we given God cause to take away the Candlesticke from us Let us therefore strive after thankfulnesse and admiration and if the Lord doe worke it in us let us take heed wee lose not our first love Secondly we should arme our selves for the defence of the light we should preserve it as a singular treasure both in our hearts and in our Churches wee should with the more resolution resist the works of darknesse standing alwaies upon our guard Rom. 13.12 Thirdly we should strive after all the degrees of the assurance of faith Fourthly we should strive to make our light shine the more excellently both for the measure of good workes Malac. 5.16 and for the strict and precise respect of the exact doing of good duties Now we have the light so cleerly shining wee may doe every thing more exactly than if it were darke Ephes. 5.15 Our gifts must not be hid The light must not be put under a bushell Matth. 5.15 Phil. 2.15 Wee should now avoid not onely greater faults and falls but lesser stumblings 1 Ioh. 2.10 11. We should do all things to the life and power of them and shew discretion aswell as knowledge This doctrine also doth imply the grievous misery of wicked men for if it bee marvellous light into which the godly are called there is a marvellous darknesse in which wicked men live The whole creation of God had beene but a confused heape if God had not set in it the light of the Sunne such a confused Chaos is the world of men if the Gospel shine not into their hearts Finally this should much comfort the godly they are called into marvellous light in all the senses before named which should much enflame their hearts and they should rebuke their owne hearts for not valuing so rich treasure We may from hence take occasion to note how little wee should trust to the judgement of flesh and blood in valuing spirituall things when the very godly themselves doe not so much esteeme of them as they should Whatsoever we thinke yet in Gods account the light of the Gospel the light of faith and knowledge the light of Gods countenance c. is marvellous light But if the light of the godly be marvellous in this world what shall it be in the world to come when God and the Lambe shall be their immediate light Here God lights us by the meanes there God himselfe will bee our everlasting light Here our light may bee darkened with clouds of affliction and temptation there shall be an eternall light without all darknesse Here wee have no light but what is infused into us there we shall our selves shine as the Sunne in the firmament Hitherto of the description in Tropicall termes Now it followes in plaine words VERS 10. Which in times past were not a people yet are now the people of God which in times past were not under mercy but now have obtained mercy THe Apostle takes the words of this verse out of the Prophet Hosea chap. 1.11 where the Lord promiseth that the number of the children of Israel shall be as the sand of the sea and in the place where was it said unto them Ye are not my people it shall be said unto them Ye are my people Now the Apostle applies that sentence to the people to whom he wrote shewing that it was accomplished in them Quest. The question is of whom the Prophet and Apostle spake Ans. Some say of the Israelites in the letter both because the same chapter shewes that they were cast off and called Loammi not Gods people as also because the Apostle is thought to write onely to the Jewes But the Apostle Paul Ro. 9.24 25 26. apparently expounds it of the Gentiles chiefly and therefore wee must rest in his sense which by the way shewes that this Epistle was written to the Elect amongst the Gentiles as they were strangers and pilgrims in the world and not to the provinciall Jewes onely The Apostle then to the singular comfort of Christians in those times shewes that now were the Prophesies accomplished concerning the calling of the Gentiles which was before a great mystery hidden from ages and generations Col. 1.26 admired by Angels Eph. 3.10 1 Pet. 1.12 Before I open the words of this verse in particular some use would be made of this great worke of calling the Gentiles and so from the consideration of their estate both before and after calling And first for the meditation of the estate of the world or the Nations of the world before Christ preached unto them note First the horrible infectiousnesse of sinne whole worlds of people are poysoned with it Secondly the dreadfull horrour of Gods Justice against sinne which as we may see plainly in the sufferings of Christ so also very lively in the desertion and forsaking of the Gentiles so many millions of men perishing without pardon or pity and therefore it was never safe to follow a multitude in evill nor to pleade the practice of fathers or forefathers with such like And for the meditation of their calling againe in Christ by the Gospel wee may gather matter First of information and so first that God is not tied to any place If Israel after the flesh will not serve him hee will raise up children unto Abraham from among the Gentiles Mat. 21.43 Secondly that the Church of Christ is now Catholicke of all Nations and therefore Christs Kingdome is the largest Kingdome in the world and the glory of it must not be restrained to Rome or any one place Secondly of consolation for here we may observe First the infallibility of Gods promises these promises concerne the calling of the Gentiles as being dead and were most unlikely and yet wee see them fulfilled which should teach us to trust upon God Secondly the wisdome and power of God working light out of darknesse The rebellion of the Jewes is so farre from laying Sion waste or dissolving Religion that it is an occasion of a greater worke of God among the Gentiles yea when profanenesse seemes to over-grow all and the whole world seemes to live in wickednesse yet wee know not what times may come for the glory of Religion among Jewes and Gentiles Thirdly Gods wonderfull love to his Elect hee will gather them from all the foure windes of heaven Though they be few in number in comparison and live dispersed in every Country yet God the great Husbandman will not want meanes to fetch them home into his garner A husbandman that had all his field growne over with weeds save here and there one graine of corne on a land would never be at the paines of gathering and separating yet God will Fourthly the great encouragement that