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A09443 A godly and learned exposition or commentarie vpon the three first chapters of the Reuelation. Preached in Cambridge by that reuerend and judicious diuine, maister William Perkins, Ann. Dom. 1595. First published for the benefit of Gods Church, by Robert Hill, Bachelor of Diuinitie; Lectures upon the three first chapters of the Revelation Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1606 (1606) STC 19732; ESTC S114701 362,972 238

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had his grace came by creation ours is by redemption and regeneration Adam had the first grace to bee able to obey but he wanted the second to be sure to perseuere because God would permit his fall to make a way both to manifest his iustice and mercie in our redemption by Christ. But the child of God after his conuersion wherein hee hath the first grace to repent and beleeue hath also an infallible promise That he shall receiue the second grace to abide in that faith And therefore Paule sayth I am persuaded that hee which hath begun this good worke in you will performe it vntill the day of the Lord Iesus Christ. And againe The Lord is faithfull who will stablish you and keepe you from euill Secondly Dauid say they by his two grieuous sinnes fell wholly from grace Answ He fell indeed grieuously but not wholly for after his fall hee contemned not Gods word he hated not God nor despaired of mercie which hee must haue done if he had fallen wholly And therefore he had remorse for his sinne so soone as the Prophet Nathan come vnto him But say they hee prayeth God to create a new heart in him therefore hee had then no grace For creation is a making of that which hath no being Answ. Dauid then speeketh not as he was before God but as hee was in his owne sence and feeling for by his sinnes Gods graces were sore decayed But say they hee repented not for the space of one whole yeare Now where there is no repentance there is no faith and consequently no grace nor pardon Answ. In repentance there be two things the gift of repentance and the act and practise thereof The gift of repentance was in the heart of Dauid when he yet lay in his sinnes but the act thereof lay hid and he wanted the renewing thereof all that time Againe Dauid had the pardon of his sinnes past though hee had not the pardon of those two sinnes till hee repented of them Neither was his repentance lost but decayed onely hee wanted not the power of it simply but the practise of it onely in that act Their third kind of arguments are drawne from equitie and reason I. Hee that is a member of an harlot and of the deuill ceaseth wholly to bee a member of Christ but a child of God truly beleeuing may become the member of an harlot and of Sathan as Dauid did Answ. There be three kinds of members dead decaied and liuing members a dead member is that which is onely in shew a member as a legge of wood or of brasse in a mans bodie A decayed member is a true member though weak as is a legge or arme that is taken with a palsie or sore wounded But a liuely member is that which doth moue and do all it functions perfectly So in the church there be some members dead and onely in shew others feeble and weake that by reason of some grieuous sinnes are not able to doe their duties And there bee liuely members which serue God with an vpright and perfect heart Now though a member of an harlot cannot be a liuely member of Christ because by his sinnes hee weakeneth and woundeth the graces of God for euery adulterer and fornicator doth as much as in him lieth cut himselfe off from Christ yet hee may bee a decayed member of Christ. And this may the rather stand because a man is made the member of Christ one way namely spiritually and the member of an harlot another way namely bodily II. Reason If a man cannot fall from grace then preaching prayer the sacraments and all means of perseuerance are needlesse Answ. Nothing lesse for they haue all their good and necessarie vse vnto them which haue grace euen to make them constant in grace For where the Scripture teacheth the certaintie of saluation it implieth the vse of the meanes of perseuerance Paul in his iourney to Rome was certaine they should come all safe to land by the promise of God yet when the marines would haue gone out of the ship Hee telleth the Captaine vnlesse these stay in we cannot be saued because they were the meanes to bring them to land So when Isay had told Ezekias from the Lord that he should liue fifteene yeares longer he was thereby assured of recouerie and yet hee vsed a bunch of figges as a meanes thereof as also food and rayment to preserue his life afterward III. Reason This doctrine of certaine perseuerance maintaineth men in securitie Answ. Securitie is twofold carnall and spirituall carnall when a man regardeth not at all the means of his saluation but giueth himselfe wholly to the profits and pleasures of this world Spirituall when a man relieth on God for his saluation by beleeuing his promises and this securitie it maintaineth but not the carnall securitie For it teacheth the vse of the meanes of perseuerance as prayer hearing and reading of the word and receiuing the Sacraments And thus I conclude this question That the true child of God who truly beleeueth when he sinneth doth neither wholly nor finally fall away neither can doe Lastly if this were true of this famous Church of Ephesus which was founded and preserued by the Apostles that shee suffered her first loue to decay then how can it bee otherwise with vs but that wee should suffer our first loue as well towards God as man to lessen and diminish and that this is so our consciences will tell vs if wee looke to that loue and zeale we had at our first calling and though wee haue not felt this decay yet we must know wee bee in danger of it continually And therefore we must take heed that we suffer not our good affections in religion to diminish Water that hath beene once hot will afterward be most cold and freese the hardest euen so when our hearts haue beene once heated with the fire of the Lords altar as true loue and other graces of the spirit if we suffer them to decay we shall become more frozen in iniquitie than any others The hawke while shee is quicke to take her prey is set vpon the hand of kings and nobles but if shee wax weake and die she is cast off to the dunghill Euen so while we are hote and cheerefull in loue towards God and his church wee are carried as it were on Gods owne hand but if wee faint and decay in loue we shall be cast lower than if wee had neuer beene so exalted This loue of God in vs is like a little flame of fire for the maintaining whereof wee must doe three things First take heed of all manner of sinne which quencheth loue and other graces of the spirit as water quencheth fire In the old Testament the priests kept fire burning vpon the altar day and night to be alwayes readie to sacrifice vnto the Lord and so must we keep the flame of loue other graces continually burning in our hearts
and some reformed actions Hereby appeareth that their description of repentance is not so fit proper which say it standeth in these three contrition faith and new obedience For contrition is not a part of repentance but a cause thereof and so is faith as Christ teacheth in his well-knowne Sermon Repent and beleeue the Gospel where they are plainly distinct And indeed a man must first beleeue in Christ and then followeth repentance and for new obedience it is not a part of repentance but a fruit thereof Others make regeneration and repentance all one but that cannot so well stand for regeneration goeth before and repentance followeth after as a fruit thereof for godly sorrow which is a part of regeneration causeth repentance The minde therefore must first be renewed then it turneth it selfe vnto God and withall turneth the whole man And thus wee see what true repentance is II. Point How must repentance be practised The practise of it standeth in two things in true humiliation and true reformation In humiliation a man humbleth himselfe vnder the hand of God making true confession of al his sinnes from a sorrowfull heart condemning himselfe for the same and earnestly crauing pardon for them at the hands of God in Christ. Reformation is a change of all bad actions into good and if case require a making of satisfaction vnto others for iniuries done vnto them example hereof wee haue in Dauid who hauing committed those two great sinnes of whoredome and murder when he was reproued by Nathan repented confessing his sins and made the one and fiftie Psalme and as it is thought the 32 Psalme therein notably shewing both his humiliation in heart and reformation of life So Manasses when he was conuerted he repented humbling himselfe before God and praying for the pardon of his sinnes God heard him And thus came the prodigall child vnto his father saying Father I haue sinned against heauen and before thee I am not worthie to be called thy sonne make me one of thine hired seruants And so in all the Psalmes of repentance wee shall see these duties of humiliation and reformation ioyntlie practised as Psal. 6. and 38. and 77. and 130.143 Here then consider the fearefull practise of the church of Rome in their doctrine of repentance receiued generally for many hundred yeares Repentance with them standeth in three things In contrition in confession of all his sinnes to the Priests and in satisfaction to God by good works But all these things may a wicked man doe For Iudas was greeued for betraying his maister he confessed his sinnes and also gaue againe the money wherwith he was hired A second abuse is that they make contrition a part of the practise of repentance by contrition we must vnderstand remorse of conscience for sinne which is no grace of it selfe though it may bee an occasion thereto in Gods elect A third abuse is that they prescribe a confession of all a mans sinnes vnto men which i● a gibbet for any mans conscience wherein they require more than God doth A fourth abuse is that they require satisfaction to Gods iustice by mans good workes whereby they ouerthrow satisfaction by Christ and exact that of men which none is able to performe We therefore must reiect their wicked doctrine brought by the diuell into Gods church and embrace that sauing repentance which standeth in true humiliation and reformation III. point Who is it that commandeth repentance vnto this church namely Iesus Christ. Many not onely Papists but Protestants gather vpon this such like commandements That God giueth to euerie man sufficient grace to repent if he will For else say they hee should but mocke them in bidding them repent considering that without his grace it is as impossible for any man to repent as for a man to rise and walke that is fast bound hand and foote Ans. This collection is vnsound For the manifestation whereof I wil first lay down the grounds of the true answere and then apply the same First this commaundement to Repent is not giuen to euerie man but only to the church of God or to that people which is to be a church and God giueth it to them for this end that hee may gather among them his elect In Gods church there be two sorts of men Elect and Reprobat both which are mingled in this life Now when the commaundement to beleeue and repent is giuen out in Gods church it is directed properly to the elect and to the other whom God hath refused only by consequent because they are mingled with the elect Againe these commandements bee giuen to the elect for two causes I. To teach them not what they are able to doe of themselues but what they ought to doe II. To ●e an outward meanes to bring them to repent and beleeue For with the commandement Christ is present by his spirit to worke in the elect grace to repent and beleeue Phil. 2.12 Worke out your saluation in feare and trembling rendring this reason in the next words For God worketh in you both the wil and the deed In the church there be some reprobates who haue the same commandement giuen vnto them but for other vses as I. to keepe them in outward order II. to teach them their owne impotencie III. and principally that God in his iustice may make them void of all excuse at the last day From hence I answer thus This proposition is not true to wit If God command men to repent then he giueth them grace to repent vnlesse it be thus qualified That God command them to repent for this end that they may practise repentance For God giueth out his commandements for diuerse ends Some that they may be practised others to take from men al excuse in their disobediēce Thus he commaunded Pharaoh to let the people go that by his disobedience his heart might be more hardned and God more iustly manifest his glorie in his destruction So hee commaunded Isay to go preach vnto the people not for their conuersion but to blind their eyes and to harden their harts And so he commands the reprobate to repent but neither directly as hee doth his children in whom he intends the practise of repentance but by consequent because they liue among his children nor yet with intent they should obey but rather to harden them and to make them inexcusable because of their sinnes And therefore in them his commandement cannot import anie abilitie to obey IV. point Who bee commanded to repent namely The Church of Ephesus that is the minister with the whole body of the church This may seeme strange that he should command them to repent seeing they had alreadie repented at their conuersion Here therefore wee must learne that there bee two degree● in the practise of repentance First the beginning of repentance Secondly the renewing of the same And in those two consisteth the whole state of a christian mans life
hearts As if he should say to Iesabell and her companie you may persuade your selues that because your sinnes are secret therefore my iudgements shall not befall you But know that I will discouer your secret sinnes and practises in such sort as all Churches shall know by experience in your persons that I do see and discerne the most hidden thoughts of mans heart First here obserue to whome Christ will discouer their sinnes not to all the world but to the Church of God All Churches shall know This Christ doth to terrifie Iesabell her companie For as it is an excellent honour to bee well esteemed of with the Churches of God so it is a most shamefull dishonour to bee in disgrace with the Churches of God For whatsoeuer is bound or loosed by the Churches on earth the same is bound or loosed in heauen And therefore by due proportion it followeth that they which are in disgrace with God● Churches on earth are also in disgrace with God himselfe in heauen Hence wee are taught that howsoeuer we must so much as in vs lieth endeuour to approoue our selues to the whole world yet especially wee must labour to bee in good account with the Churches of God and the members thereof And on the contrarie we must continually auoide the doing of all such things as may iustly bring vs into disgrace with the Church of God Rom. 16.16 The Churches of Christ salute you And 1. Cor. 16.19 All the Churches of Asia salute you Where the Apostle meaneth not that they did by word of mouth send greetings vnto them But hereby hee would signifie that all Churches did approue of them which hee saith for their great comfort Paule receiued Timothie into the companie because the Churches gaue him a good report Act. 16.2.3 But what is the thing that all churches should know by experience in the persons of Iezabell and her company namely that Christ is he which doth indeed search the reynes and the hearts where by Reynes and hearts wee must vnderstand the same things namely the thoughts and affections of men for in that sence those words are often vsed in the old Testament Quest. How can reynes signifie the thoughts and affections seeing the thoughts are seated in the braine and the affections in the heart Answ. The reynes are put for the thoughts and affections not because they are seated therein but for that resemblance and analogie that is betweene them for as the reynes are seated in the most secret part of the bodie so the thoughts and affections are seated in the most secret place of the soule and the heart is p●rt for the thoughts and affections first because the affections are there seated secondly because the thoughts though they bee seated in the braine yet they haue their operation in the heart for ioyfull thoughts make a merry heart and fearefull thoughts an heauie heart Againe the word Search signifieth a most narrow search and such a one as goeth with finding thereby shewing that nothing is so secret in man but the Lord both can and doth see and discerne the same Hence wee learne first that Christ our Sauiour is not onely man but very God one person standing of two natures That Christ is man heretickes denie not but whether he be God or not there is the question Which yet is here euidently prooued for hee that hath in him the peculiar properties of God must needs be God But Christ hath in him the true properties of God he can search and discerne all the thoughts and all the affections of the hearts of all men which none can doe but God onely Ierem 17.9 10 The heart is deceitfull and wicked aboue all things who can know it I the Lord search the he●●t and trie the reynes And therefore Christ is the true and very God Secondly hereby wee are taught to beware and take heed of hypocrisie in all things but especially in the matters of religion Hypocrisie is when a man seemes outwardly to be that which hee is not inwardly But wee must haue care to bee truly in heart that which we appeare to bee in life and profession wee must come as neere Christ in thought and affection as in our outward action for Christ knowes as well the whole estate of euerie mans reynes and heart as he doth their speeches and their deeds Thirdly hereby wee must learne to suspect our selues of our vnknowne sinnes as of our vnbeleefe and presumption not contenting our selues with an acknowledgement of our known sinnes for wee can neuer discerne the depth of our corrupt heart and yet God knoweth them This was Dauids practise after due examination of himselfe hee yet crieth Lord cleanse mee from my secret sinnes As if he should say I haue O Lord searched my heart but I cannot sufficiently know mine owne corruptions therefore doe thou O Lord helpe to cleanse mee from them If this were practised true religion would flourish for many iustifie themselues when as they know not what is in their hearts little considering what Christ sayth vnto the Pharisees You are they which iustifie your selues before men but Christ knoweth your hearts And I will giue to euery one of you according to your workes Here Christ proceedeth to remooue a second wicked conceit whereby they might seeme to illude Gods iudgements threatened For they might say Let the Lord send iudgments and plagues vpon vs yet wee shall escape them as Isay sayd of the wicked in his time That they made a league with death and hell and sayd the iudgements of God shall passe ouer them Isay. 28. verse 15. But to cut off this vaine conceit Christ threateneth a iust reward to euery one according to his workes As if hee should say You may sooth vp your selues and falsely thinke that you shall escape my iudgements but know it that I will reward euery one of you partly in this life and principally at the day of iudgement according to your workes bee they good or bad For these words must especially ●ee vnderstood of the day of iudgement as they are vsed 〈◊〉 2. ● and Reuel 2● 12 Hence the Papists gather that men are saued not onely by faith in Christ but also by workes for thus they reason ●y that whereby wee must bee iudged must wee bee iustified and ●a●ed but by workes wee must bee iudged and therefore saued Answ The Proposition is false There is great difference betweene iustifying and iudging for iudging is onely the declaration of a man to bee iust but iustification is the making of a man iust And because the declaration of a man to bee iust is by workes therefore is iudgement by workes Againe it is not sayd I will giue to you for your works but according to your workes If he had sayd I will giue to euery one of you for your workes then it might haue seemed they had bin iustified by them But here Christ doth only make works an outward
And so accordingly is misery to be considered Now of the punishments in this life some concerne the whole man some the parts of man some his estate Punishmēts concerning the whole man bee of two sorts The first is subiection to the wrath of GOD whereby a man since Adams fall is made the child of wrath a misery of all miseries yet the more greeuous because without some grace a man cannot discern see the same The second is a Bondage vnder the Diuell wherby a man in his mind will affections is subiect euery way to the will of the Diuell which though we cannot describe yet wee may thus conceiue of it The regenerate man saith I sin but I would not sin The naturall man saith I sin and I will sin It is my nature to sin and my delight and this was the state of this Church Punishments concerning the parts of man bee either miseries of his soule or of his body the miseries of his soule be these First in the vnderstanding Ignorance of Gods will And in sundry madnesse and foolishnesse and in all men pain and difficulty both to learn remember whatsoeuer is good which was not in man by creation In the conscience also be accusations secret feares and terrours In the will is rebellion to Gods will In all affections peruersnesse All which are miseries of the soule The body also hath these miseries First it is subiect to all infirmities sicknesses diseases and aches which are so many as all the bookes of Phisitians neither doe nor can record the same Secondly mans body is mortal subiect to tēporal deth which no man can possibly auoid or preuent by all the art and skill in the world Punishments of mans estate concerne either his goods or calling In goods there bee these miseries want of things necessary for by reason of sin it is a punishment in it owne nature a curse and all the hurts that come by the creatures for their enmity towards man towards one another as also their subiection to vanitie all these be miseries and the punishments of mans sinne In mans calling there is miserie for therein man is subiect to trouble to losses and sorow which come as a punishment of mans first sinne And all these be the miseries of man in this life At the end of this life comes bodily death the separation of soule and bodie asunder which in it selfe is a most fearfull curse for so it is the verie gate of Hell But after this life is the accomplishmēt of all miseries that is eternal destruction and condemnation in hell fire which to be the end of all misery appeares by this because it is a separation of mans person from the societie presence of God and an enduring of Gods wrath in the whole person euen in the place of the Diuell and damned soules that not for a time but for euer and euer eternally And thus we see what punishment is and answerably what misery is wherby we may see what it is to be wretched namely in a word to be subiect to al miseries whether we consider thē in the r●ot thereof originall sin or vnder the forme of punishment in this life in the whole person and in soule body seuerally in goods and calling at the end of this life and in the world to come The proper end that moues Christ to say to this Church She knew not that shee was wretched is this to teach this Church and in them vs and all Churches to learne to knowe their owne miseries to feele the same and to be touched in conscience for them We therfore must learne not to ●●atter our selus with hope of our good state but labor to see our miserie both in sin the punishment thereof And seeing it striue to be touched with it that we may crie with the Iewes What shal we do to be saued for till such time as this in some measure be wrought in vs we shal be but luke-warme professors hauing a shew of godlines but wanting the power thereof The true sight of our miserie is the gift and grace of God but yet we must vse all good means that we may come to see the same to be touched with it that so we may haue hearts hereby fit to receiue the Gospell which containes the remedie of this our miserie And miserable that is worthy to be pitied this is added not to set downe another thing but to expres the greatnes of their misery as if he should say Thy misery is not small but so great and so greeuous as indeed thou art in that regard to be pitied of all men Hence we learne that we must not despise parties miserable by reason of their sins or scorne and contemne them But contrariwise lament pity them When Dauid saw men sin and so pull heapes of miseries vpon them he shed riuers of tears The Lord makes it a good mans property to mourne for the abhominations of the people Ieremie for the sins of the people wished his head were full of water And iust Lot greeued his righteous hart for the abhominations of Sodome It was the fault of the Corinthians which Paul reprooueth that when the incestuous man had sinned that greeuous sinne They were not humbled but puffed with contempt against the partie And it is a fault in sundry men at this daye that they are not humbled in themselues when they see other men sin We must not do so but shew the grace we haue aboue others in being greeued for the miseries which men without grace by their sins pull dayly vpon them Thus much of their miserie in generall The partes of their miserie are three which Christ noteth particularly that if it were possible he might cause this church to lay aside this damnable pride for these in all men are maine miseries The First is pouertie And poore that is properly one that hath not a rag to his back nor bread to his mouth vnlesse hee begge the same of others But here it is taken for one that is spiritually poore which pouerty wee shall better conceiue if we do vnderstand what be true spirituall riches True riches be Gods grace and sauor in Christ as the pardon of sinne and life euerlasting The poore man therefore is hee that wanteth Gods fauour for the remission of his sins and the gift of eternall life hath in him no good thing that is acceptable to God but in regard of his soule is as silly and poore as any beggar in regard of his bodie The end why Christ calleth this church poore is to beat downe the proud conceit of her owne good estate and to cause her to feele her spirituall pouertie and so become poore in spirit And we in them are likewise taught to labour to feele our owne pouertie how by nature there is no goodnesse in vs but wee are vtterly destitute of the grace and
shew mercie exercise iudgement keepe courts assises begin end and continue warre according to his commaundements And so in euery thing the direction of Christ should be their guide as it was to Dauid Thy lawes O Lord haue beene my counsellours Psal. 119.24 Fourthly if Christ bee soueraigne king then all earthly princes are bound to plant and establish in their kingdomes the religion of Christ else how can they shew themselues his loyall subiects Many imagine That earthly princes may admit vnto their subiects any religion for the peace of the ciuile state but this is against the equitie of Gods word in this place for wherein can earthly princes doe homage vnto Christ if they maintaine not his religion And their dutie in this behalfe is signified plainely in the parable of the mariage For when they that were bidden did not come the king sent forth his seruants which may be vnderstood of Christian magistrats to compell men to come to the mariage for that is the magistrates dutie in respect of the outward profession of true religion Fiftly seeing Christ alone is prince of the kings of the earth hence we learne that kings on earth in their dominions are soueraigne gouernours ouer all persons and in all causes next vnder Christ he is king of kings absolutely and they are vnder him alone and haue no other head but him Whereby wee see the presumption and arrogancie of the Pope and Sea of Rome in claiming supremacie aboue all kings and princes in the whole church vpō earth This is a deuice of the diuell and high treason against Christ for hereby hee is robbed of this royall prerogatiue to be the only prince of the kings of the earth Lastly seeing Christ is king of all kings we must not be discouraged when we be called to suffer any affliction for his truth let the tyrants of the earth rage and bend their force to hurt vs yet wee haue a king aboue them al for whom we suffer he is their king hee can stay and bridle them and if hee please confound and bruise them in peeces They cannot do any thing but that which he permits for hee rules in the middest of all his enemies Psal. 110.2 he can breake them in pieces like a potters vessell Thus much of the offices of Christ. The second part of Christs description is by the execution of his offices which consists in foure works The first contained in these words Vnto him which loued vs the second in these Which washed vs in his bloud the other two in the two verses which follow viz. 6 and 7. For the first which loued vs that is Iohn and the churches of Asia by proportion all other churches being parts of the true church The loue of Christ hath three degrees the first is a generall loue wherby he loues all his creatures approuing the same to be good as they be his by creation The second is the loue of mankind in that he was content to become a redeemer for mankind after their fall and not ●or any other creature no not for the Angels which fell as well as man who therefore remaine without all hope of saluation The third and principall is that wherby he loues his elect and chosen children which is that speciall sauour whereby he accepts of them to life euerlasting This third degree hath two parts First it is taken for his purpose to loue as when he saith I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau Rom. 9.13 Secondly for the act of louing which is the declaration of his purpose by spirituall benefits 1. Iohn 3.1 Behold what singular loue God hath shewed vnto vs that wee should be called the sonnes of God noting the declaration of his loue in the gift of adoption So in this verse by the loue of Christ vnto his church is meant the actuall declaration of his speciall fauour in accepting them for his children and bestowing many singular blessings vpon them Whereas S. Iohn placeth this in the first place of all the benefites of Christ That he loued vs hee would teach vs That this speciall loue is the very ground of mans redemption which excludeth all foreseene faith and workes from being motiues of mans election in Gods eternall councell and so proportionally all foreseene sinnes from being motiues in God of mans reprobation It may be obiected The loue of God as also of man respects a thing as it is good First the thing must be good and then it is loued and so in mans redemption God first foresees their goodnesse and therefore chuseth them Ans. There is great difference betweene the loue of the creature and of the creator The loue of the creature followes the goodnesse of a thing because he seeth it is good therefore he loues it But God the creator first loues the creature before it bee good and hence it comes that it is good because he loues it Secondly whereas Saint Iohn and all the churches of Asia as other true churches do beleeue and are assured that Christ loues them for that Saint Iohn taketh for granted this should moue all men to haue this care to labour aboue all things to be rooted and grounded in the loue of God seeing hee placeth that in the first place This is the principall thing wherein the Apostle would haue the Ephesians rooted and grounded and therefore prayeth That with all Saints they may be able to comprehend what is the breadth and length deapth and height th●●of Ephes. 2. vers 17 18 19. This we doe when we are assured in heart and conscience by the working of Gods spirit that he loues vs in Christ. So that he which denies vnto vs the assurance of Gods loue in Christ takes away the very ground of our saluation Now that we may haue this assurance of Gods loue wee must in all good duties to God and man draw neere to God with our hearts keeping a good conscience in all things and then will God draw neere to vs. If any man loue me saith Christ he will keepe my word and then my father will loue him and we will come in vnto him and dwell with him Iohn 14.23 meaning by the holy ghost which shall shed this loue into our hearts Rom. 5. vers 5. causing vs to increase in the feeling thereof as wee grow in faith and obedience towards him And hath washed vs from our sinnes in his bloud Here is the second benefit and action of Christ to his church Where first of all the very phrase hath washed vs doth import that the sinnes of men are as filthie spots in their soules and that himselfe and this church of God were touched with a serious consideration of their vilenesse by reason of their sinnes for washing presupposeth former filthinesse and pollution Thus did Dauid most sensibly feele his owne filthinesse and see his miserable estate when he desired the Lord to wash him throughly confessing thereby that his soule and body were so foulely stained and
be dissolued and soule and body separated then must the child of God remember that he is a king in Christ and this will stay his heart against the feare of death for herein shall hee see that by death as through a straight passage he shall enter into the full possession of his kingdome And thus much in that wee are kings From the second dignitie of beleeuers which is to be priests vnto God we are likewise taught sundry duties First to teach and instruct one another It was the office of the priest vnder the law to teach the people the will of God The priests lips should preserue knowledge Malach. 2. vers 7. And now vnder the Gospell not onely the minister but euery true beleeuer is a spirituall priest and therefore ought to teach and admonish one another Coloss 3.16 When the Lord sayth Touch no● mine annoynted and doe my prophets no harme Psa. 105.15 He calleth all his faithfull by the name of Prophets because they ought to haue the knowledge of his wil and bee able also in due time and vpon iust occasion to teach the same to others that so the Gospell of Christ may flourish And as this dutie belongs to all men so especially to gouernours as parents and masters they must shew themselues priests to their charges Abraham did it Genes 18. Dauid did it Prou. 4. And Bathshebath did it Prou. 31. And all must doe it that desire an holy generation to succeed after them We teach them other things why not religion Secondly seeing wee bee priests wee must pray vnfainedly not onely for our selues But for all men especially the members of Christ. The priest in the old Testament must pray and make request not onely for himselfe but for the people also And herein stands the praise of a Christian to pray for his brethren Hence it is that Paule sayth Pray for all the Saints and for me Ephes. 6.18 Moyses is highly commended for this dutie especially when he prayed for the Israelites and stood before the Lord in the gap to turne away his wrath Exod. 32. Elias for his power in prayer and prophesie is called the chariot and horsem●n of Israell 2. King ● 12 And this is recorded for the praise of Hezechi● That when the people were vnprepared at the eating of the Passeouer He prayed to the Lord for mercy and was h●ard 2. Chron. 30.18 And so when we find any commended in scripture for his gift in prayer it is not so much for that hee prayed diligently for himselfe as for the whole church of God Thirdly being priests we must offer spirituall sacrifice vnto God that is dedicate our selues our soules and bodies and all that is in vs our wit learning knowledge and euery gift of bodie or mind to Gods seruice That we may doe all this to his glory we must looke that euery thing we take in hand haue his beginning from a pure heart a good conscience and faith vnfained and be directed to a good end to Gods glory principally and the good of others whom it may concerne Fourthly we must be full of blessings The priests in the old Testament Numbers 6● vsed to blesse the people so must we if we be Christians because wee are spirituall priests We must take heede of all cursed speaking of slaundering and backbiting of swearing and forswearing and giue our selues to blessed and gratious speeches to all men and of all men friends or foes Rom. 12.14 Fiftly wee must seeke to haue God for our portion The Leuits had no portion in the land of Canaan but the tenth● onely The Lord was their portion So we being priests to God must bee content with any estate in this world for God is our portion We must not seek too much after any inheri●●nce on earth for then we carry not our selues like priests vnto God The fauour of God in Christ must be the thing we long for and therin must we reioyce To him be glory and dominion for euermore Amen These words are a thanks-giuing to God for the former benefits of Christ bestowed on his church Which S. Iohn putteth in before hee haue ended his record of the gracious workes of Christ for his church as it were interrupting himselfe for the great desire hee had to the glory of God Whereby wee are taught that the consideration of Gods benefites towards vs specially such as concerne the kingdom of heauen should stirre vp our hearts to giue continuall prayse and glory to God This was Dauids affection when he felt in his soule the pardon of his sinnes and therefore hee breakes out into this thanksgiuing My soule prayse thou the Lord and forget not all his benefits Psalme 103. ● And so did Paule after the blessed memory of Gods mercy in his vocation 1. Tim. 1.17 Secondly in this example of Iohn wee may learne what is the true forme of giuing thankes to God namely to ascribe vnto him all power glory and absolute dominion for euermore But alas it is too too manifest that our corrupt nature will not do this but taking from God his due bestoweth it on creatures yea on our owne selues It is a matter of grace to know what is due to God and to ascribe the same vnto him and therefore we are charged to giue vnto the Lord glory and power which in the next words he cals the glory of his name Psal. 96.7 8. So Christ he teacheth vs to ascribe all power glory might and dominion to God when wee say in the Lords prayer For thine is the kingdome the power and glory that is The kingdome of heauen is thine all power in heauen and earth is thine and therefore all glory is thine and from our hearts wee doe ascribe the same vnto thee Lastly S. Iohn addeth Amen that is So be it Let all glory and dominion bee giuen to Christ which is the same he said before Whereby he doth testifie his feruent affection and strength of desire after the glory of Christ else he would not haue doubled his thanksgiuing And so should it be with vs we should not freese in our thankesgiuing for Gods benefits but labour to haue our hearts tongues to double the same that thereby we may testifie our feruent and earnest desire after his praise and glory Verse 7. Behold hee commeth with clouds and euery eye shall see him yea euen they which pierced him through and all kinreds of the earth shall wayle before him Euen so Amen These words are a declaration of the fourth action of our Sauiour Christ towards his church and that is his second comming to iudgement to iudge both quicke and dead Wherein wee are to consider sundry points first this note of attention Behold secondly the action of Christs comming it selfe Hee commeth Thirdly the manner how with clouds amplified by the manifestation therof Euery eye shall see him euen they that pierced him fourthly the effect of his comming All tribes of the earth shall
For the first I know thy workes many doe expound this of workes of mercie and liberalitie but that wil not so well stand for he saith to euerie church I know thy workes and yet some of them are blamed for want of these good workes By works then is meant the wayes that is the practises and dealings of the whole church as well of ministers as people in all their affaires Also by knowledge here we must vnderstand a knowledge that goeth with application as may appeare by comparing this with the fourth verse whither it hath relation for thus they must go I know thy workes and approue of them and yet I haue somthing against thee So that his meaning is I know thy workes that is all thy wayes and dealings in thy life and conuersation are manifest vnto me and I do generally approue of them Here first in this testimonie of his knowledge Christ ministreth a remedie against secret sinnes and offences The theefe the murtherer and adulterer wait for the night wherein to attempt their shamefull practises The tradesman in secret falsifyeth his weights and mingleth his wares among most men fraud oppression and iniustice do abound and all because they thinke that if men see not all is well as Dauid saith the wicked man saith God shall not see he will not regard But if men could thinke and bee persuaded of this that Christ seeth and knoweth all their wayes it would cause them to make conscience not onely of grosse sinnes but euen of their hidden and secret offences Secondly whereas this knowledge is ioyned with approbation it may be demanded how this can stand with the iustice of God to approue of that which is not answerable to the tenour of his law as the best workes of the most righteous man are not beeing stained with some corruption Isay. 64 6. Answ. The Gospell which is another part of Gods wil reuealeth more vnto vs than euer the law could do namely that if a man bee in Christ to him there is no condemnation and that God will accept his true desire and endeuour to please him for the deed it selfe 2. Cor. 8.12 And thus according to the tenour of the Gospell Christ approueth of their workes in this place though they were not able to abide the ●igor of his law But a Papist will here reason thus If a righteous mans workes bee approued of God then they are no sinnes for God will not approue of any thing that is sinfull and if his workes be no sinnes then he may fulfill the law and so bee iustified by his workes Answ. That which Christ approueth simply hath no sinne in it but here he onely approueth of their workes in part namely so farre foorth as they came from the work of his spirit in them but as they proceed from the will of the worker which is in part corrupt they are not free from the staine of sinne and so he approueth them not Againe workes of grace are approued of Christ with the pardon of sinne for accepting of the person he remitteth the faults that be in his good workes and so onely approueth his own worke in him And so here we must conceiue of his approbation of their workes to wit as proceeding from his spirit and hauing the faults thereof remitted in his owne merit The speciall commendation of this church is for particular actions The first whereof is diligent labour which is an excellent worke especally in a minister of Gods word to be painefull in his particular calling for the faithfull instruction and godly regiment of his particular charge Hence Paule saith 1. Tim. 5.17 He that laboureth in the word and doctrine is principally worthy double honor And herein Paul matcheth yea preferreth himselfe before other Apostles That hee laboured more abundantly in the ministery of the Gospell than they all 1. Cor. 15.10 Hence we learne that the worke of the ministerie if it be done as it ought is a worke full of great paines and labour contrary to the common opinion of men who thinke that the life of the minister is full of ease and his calling a matter of nothing such as may be done with the turning of the hand but here the iudgement of Christ is other wayes who vseth not thus to approue a light or idle worke Secondly this commendation of diligence in the minister must admonish all christians that desire to be approoued of Christ to giue all diligence to learne and know the will of God that they may do the same And here a common fault is to be reproued many will heare but where is their labour to grow in knowledge in grace that is wanting which i● the cause of such fruitlesse hearing as is common in the world For earthly things men refuse no paines but Gods heauenly knowledge and graces are not regarded What a shame is this that men should bestow their strength and wit about base and transitorie things and yet neglect the main good which concernes their soules for euer Thirdly the ministers diligence in teaching must prouoke conscience of obedience in the hearers that is the end of his worke without this hee spends his strength in vaine and therefore with the Apostle they must indeuour in all things to keepe a good conscience before God and all men Act. 24.16 The second thing which Christ here commends is patien●e in bearing the crosse which doth vsually accompanie the Gospell of Christ. And this indeed is praise worthy in the angel of this church for herin he goeth before sundry worthy prophets Ieremie was maruellous impatient for the mockings of the people And though Ionas had beene schooled in the whales belly yet when all things went not according to his mind in the destruction of Niniuie he became exceeding discontent Herein must all the ministers of the Gospell become followers of the Angell of this church While they labour in the Gospell of God they must possesse their soules with patience and make knowne to all men their meeke and mild spirit Yea euerie christian in the profession of religion must learne to practise this duty Luk. 8.16 The good ground receiueth the seed and bringeth forth fruit but how with patience Neither can wee possibly attaine to eternall life vnlesse we arme our selues with patience to beare the crosse for whosoeuer will liue godly must suffer affliction 2. Tim. 3.12 Through many tribulations we must enter into heauen Act. 14.22 II. Againe here obserue how Christ ioyneth labour and patience together this he doth for two causes First to let vs see the fruit of sinne which God hath set on the labour of man Before the fall the labour of mans calling was practised without all trouble or paines but since mans fall the best callings haue their crosses and vexations which are the punishments of mans transgression Socondly to shew vs the malice of Sathan against the good progresse of the Gospell Paul saith to the Thessalonians
that thence we may offer vp acceptable sacrifices of praise and thanksgiuing vnto the Lord. Secondly we must stir vp the gifts of grace that are in vs as Paule sayth to Timothie 2. Tim. 1.6 vsing a comparison from the fire which burneth more bright and cleare when it is stirred vp Lastly wee must exercise our selues in the duties of pietie as faith repentance loue and such like so shall they not decay And thus much for the sinne of this church Verse 5. Remember therefore whence thou art fallen and repent and doe thy first workes or els I will come against thee shortly and will remooue thy candlesticke out of his place except thou amend Our Sauiour Christ the faithfull physition of our soules hauing sharpely rebuked this church doth here prescribe vnto them a soueraigne remedie against their sinne of decay in loue Frō whence we may learne that the law whereby sin is reproued is to be taught but yet with this qualification that withall the doctrine of the Gospell be ioyned thereunto that the sinnes which are ripped vp by the law may be cured by the Gospel This is Christs manner of preaching in this place whose practise is a most worthie platforme for all his ministers for we haue no warrant at this day to preach the law barely which onely maketh the wound without the Gospell which alone sheweth the remedie This remedie here prescribed is of speciall vse and worthie our consideration generally by it we haue direction to answer to two necessarie questions of practise which often fall out in the life of man First a man is effectually called to professe the gospell and yet after his conuersion either through the corruption of his nature or by the temptation of the diuell and the world falleth into sinne againe what must this man do for his recouerie Ans. He must remember whence he is fallen and repent of those his sinnes and do his first workes The second question is this A man that hath all his life long liued in ignorance and sin is now touched in conscience for his loose life how shall this man escape the wrath of God become reconciled vnto him Ans. He must first remember whence hee is fallen by Adams sinne and by his owne transgressions Secondly hee must repent of his sinnes Thirdly endeuor to do the first workes whereto he is bound by the law of creation so shal he escape the wrath of God and be receiued into his loue and fauour In particular this remedie hath three parts The first Remember whence thou art fallen The second And repent The third And do thy first workes The words following Or else I will come against thee c. Are a reason of this remedie to persuade them to do the duties prescribed For the first Remember whence thou art fallen The words beare this sence Examine thy selfe throughly see in thy selfe the decay of thy former loue and then ponder the same in thy heart seriously and throughly Here Christ inioyneth to this church two duties I. Examination whereby shee must descend into her owne heart and search out her owne wants especially the want of her loue to God to his word and to her brethren II. Consideration whereby she must often thinke of these her wants and lay the same to her heart vnfainedly This course which Christ taketh with this church teacheth vs first that it is a dangerous thing for any person in Gods church not to bee acquainted throughly with his owne estate that so hee may search out his owne wants and deeply consider of the same For this very thing Ieremie blamed the people in his time that no man sayd with himselfe what haue I done And Christ layeth this sinne to the charge of the people of the old world that they were ignorant of their estate They knew nothing till the floud came and ●●oke them all away And this is the common sin of this age no man almost doth examine himselfe consider in his hart his owne estate by reason of his sinnes and wants Nay men are growne to this that they count it a meanes to breed melancholie and therefore do ●lie the practise of this dutie and so nuzzell themselues in their fearefull securitie Secondly here wee learne that it is a speciall dutie for them that liue in Gods church to be throughly acquainted with their owne estate to examine and search out their owne sinnes and often to consider seriously of their particular wants Zephanie preaching the doctrine of repentance vnto the people beginneth thus Search ye search your selues oh nation not worthie to be beloued Where the word translated search signifieth such a search as a man would make for some small thing in a great heape of chaffe This is the Lords counsell Hag. 1.7 Consider your owne wayes in your hearts and it must be our practise if we would be saued This duty is the beginning and ground of true repentance and therefore Christ here giueth it the first place for no man can truly repent before hee bee acquainted with his owne infirmities and with his owne fearefull and damnable estate by reason of his sinnes And therefore Dauid saith I first considered my wayes and then I turned my feete into thy testimonies The cause why so few in the world doe truly repent is want of consideration from whence they are fallen and what bee their sinnes and the dreadful iudgements thereby deserued For till the mind doe truly conceiue her owne miserie the hart can neuer rightly hunger after mercie Sinne must bee our greatest woe before Christ become our chiefest ioy The second part of this remedie is Repentance i● selfe for after a man is well acquainted with his wants and hath throughly considered of his owne misery then he commeth to repent In the handling hereof fiue points are to be obserued I. What repentanceis II. How it is to be practised III. Who commandeth it IV. To whom it is commaunded V. For what they must repent For the first Repentance properly is in the mind as the word in this place doth import for it signifieth thus much After some follie or ouerslip to be better aduised Repentance then in the mind is a change from euil to good or a turning from sinne vnto God Act. 26.20 Repent and turne to God Which latter words expound the former plainly shew what repentance is And this change in the mind standeth in this resolution whereby a man by Gods grace purposeth to leaue all his former sinnes and to cleaue vnto God in holy obedience vnto all his commandements And when this resolution is in the mind therwithall followeth a turning of the whole man in will in affections and in all the actions of his life This appeareth by that description of the practise of repentance which Paul reduceth to seuen heads viz. Care clearing of themselues indignation feare great desire zeale and reuenge 2. Cor. 7.11 wherof some are renewed affections
receiued her doctrine committed fornication with her They must bee cast into great affliction First this must teach all persons that it is a diuell●sh speech to thinke and say that fornication i● but a tricke and shippe of 〈◊〉 for great affliction is the punishment of this sinne which notably argueth the haynousnesse thereof Secondly hence we may gather some of the causes why townes and kingdomes are afflicted with grieuous wars famine and pestilence among the rest these are two fornication ●nd embracing of errours and superstition Sodome for fornication and other 〈◊〉 was burnt with fire brimstone from heauen The Israelits for this sin suffered most grieuous affliction● And among the Corinthians for comming to the Lords table in this sin among others many were sicke many 〈◊〉 and many sle●● And this land of ours hath bene afflicted with famine and pestilence as for other sinnes so for fornication which in time of peace is multiplied and so will continue till it draw vpon vs bloudshed also and great afflictions For that which is sayd of the followers of Iesabel must be verified of all that liue in the like sinnes The second part of the reason is the exception of these communications except they repent them of their workes Where we may see First that all the threatnings of Gods iudgements and of eternall destruction must bee vnderstood with the exception of repentance Whence also this followeth that men of yeares liuing in the church are not so much condemned for other particular sins as for liuing in their sins without repent ●ee euery sin makes a man subiect to damnation but it is this impenitencie that brings vpon thē actuall dānation Want of repentance for sin is more dangerous than the sin it selfe the consideration whereof must teach vs not to lie in sinne though wee haue committed it but turne to God by speedie repentance for it is the continuance in sinne without repentance that casteth the soule to hell When thou shalt turne from thy sinne by true repentance thou art free from the threatning and the curse of sinne For they admitting the exception of true repentance 〈◊〉 18.8 Further obserue how this exception of repentance is placed betweene two threatnings of iudgements which sheweth how God mingleth his iudgements with mercie hee sheweth not wholly either iustice or mercie but tempereth them together in all the workes that concerne mans saluation Thirdly here note that repentance preuents not onely eternall damnation but also temporall iudgements as grieuous sicknesses and other plagues and afflictions This point may haue speciall vse among vs Wee haue by Gods mercie enioyed his gospell with long peace but for our abuse thereof we may iustly feare it shall be taken from vs and if we would escape that iudgement wee must repent both high and low Of their work●s That is of their idolatrie and fornication where hee sheweth of what things true repentance must be namely of bad workes in particular whereto men giue themselues euerie man that would truly repent must consider of his particular faults The drunkerd in particular of his drunkennesse and the couetous man of his couetousnesse and insteed of iniuries and hard dealing shew mercy vnto the poore The common repentance of the world that is done in generall is nothing but a visard of repentance and yet it is all that is vsed of the greatest part of our people for they will come to heare the word and to receiue the Sacraments and in generall confesse themselues to bee sinners and then they thinke they haue done enough But true repentance is of particular sinnes As Dauid Psalm 51. cried out of bloud guiltinesse Vers. 23. And I will kill her children with death and all the Churches shall know that I am ●ee which searcheth the reines and hearts and I will giue vnto euerie one of you according to his workes Here is the third part of Christs threatning against Iesabels children by children wee are to vnderstand properly those which are borne of her and were of her husband and not her followers for they were threatned with grieuous afflictions in the former verse It had bene sufficient to haue sayd I will 〈◊〉 her children But to note the certainty and greeuousnesse of this punishment he saith I will kill them with death Quest. How can this stand with the iustice of God to punish the offences of the parents in the person of the children Ans. God deareth so for temporall punishments not for eternall And though we could not perceiue the iustice of God in so doing yet wee must reuerence the ●ame blaming our owne ignorance Albeit euen in reason wee may conceiue of the equitie of this course for societies as church common-wealth and families are Gods ordinance and the parties in them must bee considered as members of those societies for God conceiueth of them when hee afflicteth the punishment deserued by one vpon another as of the Prince vpon the people of the parents vpon their children This hee may iustly do by reason of that neere bond which is betweene the members of the same societie like as in the naturall bodie when the stomacke is distempered the head aketh and when the head is wounded the stomacke is sicke and the bodie may bee smitten for the errours of the tongue Thus when Dauid sinned the child died and when hee numbred the Israelites the people were plagued And thus is the child stained in bloud for the fathers treason against earthly Princes and so God punished this woman in her children that shee might knowe the greatnesse of her sinnes hee smote her children with death Hence parents are taught to make conscience of euerie sinne For thereby they may bring iudgements vpon their children and familie euen to death Now what bloudie hearted parents are those that will make no conscience of doing that whereby they bring vengeance vppon their owne children And by the same reason must euery man that liues in any societie be admonished to take heed of sinne because thereby a man especially if hee bee a principall member of a societie may bring destruction vpon many As Dauid did by numbring the people And Achan by his couetous stealth Iosua 7 And Ahab vpon his posteritie So that impenitent persons which will not be reformed but go on in sinne ought to bee banished both from church and commonwealth as hurtfull members yea enemies to all good societies That these threatnings might take place in the hearts of Iesabell and her followers Christ remooueth two carnall conceits whereby they might thinke to delude or escape these iudgements threatned The first is this Iesabell and her company might thinke that their practises were secret not knowne to the world and therefore they were not in danger of Gods iudgements This is a wicked imagination that comes into the mind of all sinners but this Christ cuts off saying And all the Churches shall know that I am hee which search the reines and the
Dauid himselfe a type of Christ as it is most excellently dysciphered in the Prophets Ier. 23.5.6 Hosea 3.5 where Christ is plainly called Dauid by the name of him that was his type signe figure Quest. Why were not as well the Kingdomes of Nebuchadnezzar and Pharaoh types of Christs kingdome as Dauids Answ. Because Dauids kingdome was a kingdom of light and pietie but theirs were kingdomes of sinne and iniquitie And he is said to haue the key of Dauids kingdom because his kingdome and the righteousnesse thereof was figured by the pietie in Dauids kingdome And this kinde of speaking is iustifiable by Gods word So Mat. 2.23 Christ is called a Nazarite which place hath relation to that which is said properly of Sāpson who was a most excellent figure of Christ and did most notably represent him in his death wherein hee killed more than in his life Now Christ is called an Nazarite not because he obserued their rites and orders for that he did not he dranke wine so did not the Nazarites but because he was the truth and substance of that order for in him was fully accomplished that holinesse which was figured by that order for he was perfectly seuered from all sinne and pollution And so here he is said to haue the key of Dauid because hee had the soueraigntie which was figured by Dauids Kingdome Which shutteth and no man openeth and openeth and no man shutteth Here Christs kingdome is compared to a house which can bee opened and shut by none but Christ whereby is signified that none hath power aboue Christ in his Kingdome and that his power therein is soueraigne and absolute So that hereby is meant that Christ Iesus sitting in heauen hath soueraigne power and authoritie ouer the whole Church of God to gouerne the same That we may the better vnderstand this soueraigne power of Christ we must know it hath three parts I. To prescribe II. To iudge III. To saue or destroy In Prescribing Christ hath absolute power and that in sundry things as first in prescribing doctrines of Faith and Religion vnto his Church to bee beleeued and obeyed and that on paine of damnation This power he puts in execution when in the bookes of the old and new Testament hee prescribeth the doctrine of the Law the Gospel to be obeyed and beleeued And none but he can make an Article of Faith or a law to binde the conscience and therefore Paul saith Whosoeuer shal teach any other Doctrine then that which ye haue receiued of vs let him be accursed Gal. 1.8 Secondly for regiment he hath absolute power to prescribe how he will haue his Church gouerned and by whom and therefore Moses when he was to make the Tabernacle did all things according to the patterne that the Lord gaue vnto him So Dauid gaue to Salomon patternes of all things that were in him by the spirit touching the building of the house of God 1. Chron. 28.12 Thirdly hee hath absolute power to appoint the time of keeping his Sabbath for as the ordaining of a Sabbath belongs to Christ so doeth the changing thereof hee that prescribeth worship must prescribe the ordinary set time thereunto which is to continue to the end And therfore it is but an opinion of men to hold that the church may make two or moe Sabbath dayes in a week if they wil. Fourthly In prescribing the Sacramēts and therefore Paul saith What I haue receiued of the Lord that deliuer I vnto you speaking of the Lords Supper For hee that giues grace must also appoint the signes and seales of grace The second part of Christs soueraigne power is power of Iudgement which is a soueraigne power to determine on his owne wil without the consent of others or submission to men or Angels And in determining Christ hath two priuiledges First to expound scripture the absolute power of expounding the Law belongeth to the Law-giuer and his exposition is Authenticall Secondly to determine of all Questions and Controuersies in Scripture And therefore it is a wicked opinion of the church of Rome which hold that the principall Iudge of interpreting Scripture and decyding controuersies is the Church The third part of Christs soueraigne power is to saue and destroy This is expressed in these words Hee openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth and for this cause he is sayd to haue the keyes of hell and of death Whereby is signified first that hee hath power to forgiue sins for that hee procureth at his Fathers hands Secondly that hee hath power to condemne for when men beleeue not his word hee hath power to hold them in their sins for which he can cast them into hell The ground of this three-fold power of Christ i● this because hee is soueraigne Lorde ouer his Church and the members thereof The Church of Rome saith that this key of Dauid hath more in it then soueraigntie ouer his church to wit a power to make and depose Kings that bee in his Church This they teach that they might proue the Pope to haue title in ordayning and deposing of kings by vertue of the keyes But they erre grosly for though Christ as he is Mediatour bee aboue all kings yet in that regard hee neither maketh nor deposeth any kings and therefore he saith plainly My kingdō is not of this world This caused him to refuse to take vpon him the office of an earthly Iudge or prince to deuide an inheritance betweene two brethren Hence it was that he refused to giue sentence of the adulterous woman And yet as Christ is God hee maketh or deposeth earthly kings so the wise mail speaketh of him in the person of wisdō by me kings raign For the further cleering of this we must handle another point which is deriued hence concerning the power of the keyes which is a power whereby the power of the keyes of Dauid is put in execution This power of the Keyes is mentioned Mat. 16.19 when Christ saith vnto Peter I will giue vnto thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen and whatsoeuer thou shalt bind vpon earth shall be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heauen This power of the keyes is a ministery granted to Gods church to open and shut the kingdome of heauen First I call it a Ministerie that is a seruice because whatsoeuer the church doth in Christs name is nothing but the duetie of seruantes vnto their Lord from whence it is that the most worthy members and officers that euer were in the Church as the Prophets and Apostles were but the Ministers of Christ. That this is a seruice I shew more plainely thus When Adam fell in his sinne all mankinde fell with him and thereby were all barred from the kingdome of heauen Now since that fall Christ became man and in his manhood satisfied the iustice of God for mans sinnes And this
horrible abuses of this power which ought to bee knowen and considered being a sufficient warrant vnto vs that the Church of Rome is no true church of God for though the Pope cary in his armes the keys yet they are not the keyes of heauen but of hell For he hath made moe places of rest and woe than euer God did as Limbus p●t●ū and Purgatorie therefore must needs make moe doores thither and so moe locks keies By this doctrine touching the keyes of Dauid giuen to Christ and the power of the keyes in the church deriued thence we may learne sundry things First that Christ who hath the keyes of Dauid to open and shut doth not open to all but to some onely The reason hereof is this Adam beeing created in integritie was in the fauour of God but by his sinne he lost the fauour of God so barred himselfe both out of the earthly and heauenly paradise and all his posteritie by the same sin and by their owne actuall sins are likewise debarred for sinne is a partition wall betweene vs and God and a cloud between our praiers and God himselfe as Ieremie speaketh so that sinne is the cause of this exclusion and so many sins as a man committeth so many bolts and barres hee maketh to exclude himselfe from the kingdome of heauen The consideration whereof should moue euery one to take a narrow view of his miserable state in himself through Adā for by originall sin wherin we were born and by our actual transgressions wherin we liue we barre our selfe from the kingdome of heauen It is lamentable to see how the whole world lyeth in sinne and how the deuill bewitcheth men to conceale or diminish their sins making great sins small and little sinnes none at all when as the least sinne which they commit without repentance is sufficient to barre them for euer out of the kingdome of Heauen Againe seeing euery sinne doth barre vs out of Heauen this must be a motiue to induce euery one of vs to repent of all our sinnes to bewayle the same to pray earnestly for the pardon of them in the death of Christ and continually to labor to turne vnto God from all sinne because if wee liue but in one sinne it will bee a mightie bar●e sufficient to exclude vs the Kingdome of heauen eternally Thirdly seeing Christ keep● the keyes of heauen heereby wee are taught to come vnto Christ to seek by him to enter into the kingdom of heauē For Christ by his death hath opened heauen as hee sayd vnto Nathaniell and Philip Verily verily I say vnto you hereafter shall yee see heauen open meaning by the ministrie of the Gospell and seeing it is open we must striue to enter into it as the men in Iohn Baptists time did Mat. 11.12 This we do by endeuoring to become good members of Gods church on earth for that is the dore and suburbs of the Kingdome of heauen which euerie one must enter into that would come to heauen it selfe euen as a man that would goe into a house must needs come to the dore Now in the Church there is the true dore which is Christ himselfe and the key thereof which is his word and the ministerie of the word which doth locke and vnlocke the same Quest. What shall we doe to become true members of the Church Ans. We must doe two things First humble our selues for all our sinnes praying vnto GOD for the pardon of them and beleeuing the same through Christ. Secondly endeauor and purpose by Gods grace euerie day to leaue the same sinnes This doing wee are at the dore of heauen and if wee would haue our soules enter into heauen when wee die this wee must doe while we liue But if we enter not into the dore of grace by the key of knowledge in the ministerie of the word while we liue wee shall neuer come to the gate of glorie after death Vers. 8. I know thy workes behold I haue set before thee an open dore and no man can shut it for thou hast a little strength and hast kept my word and hast not denyed my name In this verse and so forward to the twelft is contayned the matter of this Epistle which may bee reduced to three ●eads a Praise a Promise and a Commaundement The Praise in this eight verse The Promise in the 9. and 10. The Commaundement in the 11. For the first the Praise of this Church is first summarily propounded I know thy works which hath beene expounded and the end thereof with the vses in the former Epistles Then hee addeth the reason of his cōmendation wherin are two things to bee obserued I the signe of Christs approbation in these words I haue set before thee an open dore II. their conuersation or the workes which Christ approoued In the words following Thou hast a litle strēgth and hast kept my word hast not denied my name Both these may be vndetstood either of the Angell and Minister of this Church or of the whole Church also I take it to bee meant of both Being spoken of the Minister of this Church the words beare this sence Behold I haue set before thee an open dore c. That is behold and consider I haue vouchsafed vnto thee oportunitie and libertie to preach the Gospell and thereby to conuert men vnto me So much S. Paul meaneth by the dore of vtterance 1. Cor. 16.9 For thou hast a little strength and hast kept my word and hast not denyed my name That is though thou be indued but with a small measure of gifts pertaining to thy calling yet thou hast maintayned my Gospell and hast not denyed my name These words being thus expounded doe affoord vs these instructions First from the signe of his approbation wee learne that it is a great priuiledge for any Minister to haue libertie to preach the Gospell and thereby to conuert men vnto Christ so much the word of attention behold importeth which may also further appeare by this that the most famous and worthy Prophets of God were not alwayes vouchsafed this fauour as Isay and Ezekiell who were sent sometime to harden thy people And Christ himselfe complaineth of the want of this priuiledg saying I haue spent my strēgth in vaine and in regard of this priuiledge the Ministers of the Gospell are called Sauiors And by reason of this libertie they haue title to the promise of shining as starres in glorie Dan 12.3 This therefore is an vnspeakable mercie and so ought to bee esteemed and all Ministers that haue the same vouchsafed vnto them ought highly to magnifie the name of God for it and to value it more worth than all earthly blessings whatsoeuer Secondly from the workes which Christ approoued in the Angell of this Church we may obserue that Ministers indued with small measure of gifts may bee able to doe great seruice vnto God in his Church This thing
fauor of God that so we may goe out of our selues and in regard of our selues euen despaire of our saluation for till this pouertie of spirit be wrought in vs wee may make a shew in profession heare the word and receiue the Sacraments but we shall neuer ha●e sound grace And blessed were our estate if wee could lay aside that diuelish pride which puffeth vp our hearts and become poore in spirite then were wee in the right way to receiue the Gospell and the graces thereof but till we be beggars in our selues wee neuer begin to be rich in Christ. Howe can Christ truely charge this Church with pouertie for the Laodiceans were a rich people and had great store of wealth Answ. True it is they were rich in wealth as histories shew and yet poore to God For all honour and wealth in the world is nothing without the grace and fauor of God in Christ. Paul saith Wee are compleat in Christ forth of him therfore we haue nothing To the Corinthians hee saith All thinges are yours and you Christs and Christ is Gods But nothing is ours till we haue Christ and Christ vs. As it was with this Church so it is with all other Euerie person and all people are but poore and beggarly if they want Christ and therefore if God haue giuen any man riches and wealth hee must lay this good foundation vse them as helps to further his saluation For by them hee may attaine to the meanes of saluation and also shew forth the fruits of faith But they that haue wealth and vse it otherwise shall finde it turne to their deeper condemnation The second part of their misery is blindnesse Quest. How can they be sayd to be blinde for they had a learned teacher no doubt that both was able and did teach the will of God and the people likewise knew the points of Religion and beleeued the Gospell Answ. They had knowledge indeed but yet they were blinde first because they knew not their owne estate If a man had all skill in all Arts and sciences great knowledge in the word yet if he know not himselfe in some measure he is but a blinde man Secondly because they did not knowe God in Christ They knewe no doubt that there was a God and that Christ was a Sauiour but they could not apply it to themselues to be able to say God is my God Christ my Redeemer and the holy Ghost my Sanctifier Thirdly because they could not discerne of things that did differ as between good and euill between euill and euill and between temporall things and eternall blessings This spirituall discerning is a gift of Gods grace In that Christ saith They were blinde though they had knowledge wee may learne that al knowledge is but meere ignorāce before God to those persons that know not themselus and God to be their God in Christ For want hereof Christ calleth the angell of this church blind thogh otherwise hee were a verie learned man Which must teach vs not to rest content with any humane learning no not with the literall knowledge of the Gospel but we must labor further to know our selues and to know God in Christ Christ our redeemer and be able in some good sort to discern between things that differ Dauid a most worthy Prophet intituleth the 32. Psalme his Learning What learning sheweth he there Answ. Surely nothing but the knowledge of the pardon of his sins And indeede that is it which seasoneth all our learning and therfore aboue all things we must labour for it The third part of their misery is Nakednes Nakednes is two-fold To the eie of man to God Nakednes to the eie of man is bodily that is also two-fold either that which was before the fall in the bodies of our first parents whereby their bodies being vncouered appeared very glorious without shame or that which is after the fall wherby the bodie being naked bare appears full of shame which is so excessiue by reason of mans sin that if necessity would permit the whole body both face hands should all be couered Nakednes before God is when any man lies before God a deformed sinner In this case Moses sawe the Israelites when they had made a golden Calfe For thereby they depriued themselues of Gods Image and were guilty of that most greeuous sin of Idolatry This is a misery of all miseries the greatest nakednes that can be And this is the nakednes of this Church in this place Qu. Why doth Christ call them naked Ans. To mooue them and in their persons all professors to haue care not to flye from God and to hide their sins with Adam but to bring themselues into his presence and there lay open their sinnes that they may obtain a couering for them by Christ. It is the practise of the world to hide their sins frō men but neuer to care how bare naked they be in the sight of God who yet seeth them all as plainly as we see the sores of any poore lazer that shews the same to moue our pity towards him which if we could see we shuld be ashamed not to seeke to couer our sins before God We must therfore labor in our owne consciences to see the nakednesse of our soules before God and seeke to be touched and humbled for the same that so we may earnestly intreate for the righteousnesse of Christ to be a couering to cloath our soules This was Dauids practise for when hee saith Blessed are they whose sinnes are couered Psal. 32.1 he would giue vs to vnderstand that hee vsed to vncouer his sinnes and lay them open before God that at his handes in Christ he might get a couer for them These are the particular partes of a mans miserie which euery man must labour to feele in himselfe if he would bee partaker of the righteousnesse of Christ for thus hath Christ both in generall and in particular set downe the miserie of this Church that he might prepare them to receiue the blessed comfort which followeth in the next Verse Vers. 18. I counsell thee to buy of me gold tryed by the fire that thou mayest bee made rich and white rayment that thou mayst be clothed and that thy filthy nakednesse doe not appeare and annoint thy eye with eye-salue that thou mayest see Heere beginneth the counsell of Christ vnto this Church Wherein first he propoundeth a notable remedie for her miserie before noted In this remedie wee are to consider three things the manner of prescribing it the remedie it selfe and the meanes whereby it is obtained For the first this remedie is propounded not in any sharpe commandement but by a milde and gentle aduise I counsell thee And herein Christ doth take to himselfe the office of the Counseller of his Church For as God hath his Church and people so he hath his counsellers by whom in mercie hee hath reuealed his
Here see the proper ●nd of all reprofes and corrections namely the reformation and amendement of mens faults misdemeanors whatsoeuer that so they may bee more carefull of their wayes and more zealous in good duties then euer they were Whensoeuer therefore wee are reprooued by the word of God or when the Lord shall visite vs in body minde or goods by any kind of crosse wee must remember to take occasion thereby to repent and amend knowing that by all these as by so many Sermons the Lorde calles vs to amendement Nowe come to the remedie of their Luke-warmnesse Be zealous That wee may vnderstand this Commandement we are to handle some points touching Zeale First what is zeale Zeale is a burning affection in regard of Christian Religion and the true worship of God This Zeale is compounded of two affections of loue and anger or indignation so that in this Commandement are two duties enioyned vnto this Church First that they should loue Christ and his Religion aboue all things Secondly that they should be greiued especially for this that Christ was dishonoured his worship prophaned and his doctrine not embraced but insteed thereof false worship and false doctrine entertayned when both these concurre then zeale is in the heart A most notable Example hereof wee haue in Christ Psalm 69.9 where the Prophet Dauid in his person saith The zeale of Gods house had eaten him vp Whereby thus much is signified that the heat of his loue for the maintaining of his Fathers glorie had euen consumed him and that his indignation was so great because his Fathers Name was dishonoured and his worship prophaned that it did euen care him vp This wee shall see to bee true in Christ if wee read the Hystorie of his life Iohn 2.17 Yea hee professeth of himselfe that it was meate and drinke vnto him to doe his Fathers will Ioh. 4.34 That thing he preferred before his owne life or safetie nay for the accomplishment thereof hee was content to suffer the pangs of hell The like zeale was in Elias when all Israel was fallen to Idolatrie his heart was zealous for the Lord of Hosts 1. King 19.14 II. point The kinds of zeale Zeale is either good or bad In good zeale are these things required I. True faith as the roote thereof 1. Tim. 1. vers 5. The end of the commandement is loue 〈◊〉 of a pure heart and of a good conscience and of faith vnfained Now one apart of zeale is loue and therefore 〈…〉 proceed● from true faith so must true zeale 〈◊〉 and that which is not grounded on faith is rather rashnesse and fiercenesse of nature than true zeale II. Repentance 2. Cor. 7.11 There are seuen 〈◊〉 of repentance recyted whereof zeale is one that is good zeale Euen a burning loue of true Religion and a godly indignation when false religion is embraced There may bee zeale in a man that hath no repentance as was in Iehu 2. King 10.16 Come with mee sayth hee and see the zeale that I haue for the Lord. Yet he wanted repentance for Vers. 29.31 It is said Iehu regarded not to walke in the Law of the Lord God of Israel with all his heart for hee departed not from the sinnes of Ieroboam which made Israel to sinne and therefore he had not in him the true zeale that is heere commanded III. Zeale must come from knowledge for without knowledge it is but rashnesse and bold-hardinesse such as the Iewes had Rom. 10.2 whose Zeale was without knowledge And such as Paul had before his conuersion Phil. 3. vers 6. In Zeale hee persecuted Gods Church Knowledge therefore in Gods word must bee the guide and conductor of our zeale III. point The fruites of zeale must be considered for the better discerning of true zeale First true zeale constraineth a man in euery thing to seeke to please God Whether we be out of 〈◊〉 wits we are it vnto God or whether we bee in our right mind we are it vnto you For the loue of Christ constrayneth vs. So wheresoeuer this true zeale is in any measure it offereth violence to the heart so as a man cannot but endeuour to doe his dutie for the loue he beareth vnto Christ. Elihu sayd The grace of God was in his heart as new wine in a vessell which must needs vent out Iob. 32.18.19 Secondly true zeale makes a man indeuour to serue and please God with all his heart power and strength So good king Iosiah hearing the words of the Law read hee turned not slackely or negligently but with all his heart and all his soule and with all his might according to all the Law of Moses so as like him was no King before neither after him arose there any like him Psal. 51 Dauid humbling himselfe for his sinnes prayes for the pardon of them with such maruellous zeale as no tongue can vtter desiring God to remember him according to the multitude of his mercies often repeating the same thing in diuers tearmes that in some sort hee might expresse the earnest desire of his heart And in giuing God thankes for his benefits he putteth all the strength of his heart thereto crying out My soule prayse thou the Lord and all that is within mee Psa. 103.1 And thus we see what a thing it is to be zealous whence true zeale ariseth and what it worketh in mans heart Seeing wee as hath beene shewed are tainted with this sinne of Lukewarmnesse and coldnesse in religion let vs here learne how to redresse this vice Wee must become zealous hauing in our heart a feruent loue of true religion and a vehement indignation when the same is disgraced and false worship takes place Let Religion therefore take place in our hearts and let vs bee feruent and shew that same in our liues by zealous obedience Away with all slacknesse and lukewarmnesse it were better to bee Iewes and Turkes and to hold no Religion then to be luke-warme in the true profession And thus much for zeale The second part of this remedie is to Repent or amend This they are also enioyned because zeale without repentāce is nothing but rashnes Iehues zeale was no true zeale because hee wanted repentance euen then when hee was zealous But wherefore was this Church inioyned to repent Namely for Lukewarmnes not for that she had committed any horrible sinne but because she was slacke in good duties Here then we haue a good Lesson for the ignorant sort that challenge Gods mercie vnto themselues because they are no notorious malefactors as murtherers adulterers they hate no man but do good vnto all but heere they are taught to reforme this their blindnesse and ignorance For repentance must be for want of good duties yea for slacknesse therein therefore let no man sooth himselfe in his ignorance with a false perswasion that all is wel if he liue not in grosse sinnes This is the enchantment of the deuill whereby he rocks many asleepe in
polluted with sinne that once washing was not ynough but sayth hee Wash mee againe and againe rince bathe and swill me in the bloud of Christ till I be purged and cleansed from all my sinnes And this same affection should be in euery one of vs wee should labour that our hearts may bee touched with a liuely sence of our vile estate by reason of our sinnes which make both bodie and soule most vgly and filthie in Gods sight and that the staine hereof is so deepely set in our soules that we can neuer be cleansed but by the washing of Christ his own hand and that in his owne hearts bloud yea that one washing will not serue but wee must be rinced and bathed therein For till such time as this consideration doe in some measure take place in our hearts it is not possible that we should loath sinne as we ought or come to this comfortable assurance of Gods loue that he hath washed away our sinnes in his bloud for this humilitie in our soules by reason of our sins is the beginning of all true grace and comfort Now this worke of Christ in washing vs from our sinnes doth comprehend a double benefit First the remission of our sinnes whereby the guilt and punishment due to them is taken away Secondly the mortification of sinne whereby the corruption of sinne is remooued and abolished And we must obserue that S. Iohn propounds this benefit generally without limitation saying Which washed vs from our sinnes That is from all our sinnes to giue vs to vnderstand that if any beleeue truly in Christ hee hath pardon of all his sinnes without any restraint or limitation either of number or qualitie bee they neuer so many or neuer so great By his bloud How can bloud wash away filthinesse nay it rather defiles a man Answ. This washing stands not in the substance of Christs bloud but in the merit thereof for that substance of bloud which was shed is lost and wee know not what is become of it whatsoeuer the Papists say but the merit therof remaineth still And Christs bloud deserues to purge away sinne rather than any other mans bloud as of Peter Iohn c. because his bloud was the bloud of God not of the godhead but of him who was both God and man For the manhood of Christ was receiued into the vnion of the second person And so it may be called the bloud of God as Paule sayth God redeemed his Church by his bloud that is Christ God incarnate And so it being the bloud of him that is God is more meritorious than the bloud of any creature whatsoeuer Besides Christ was appointed by God to be a publicke person in the worke of redemption and in his death and passion he stood in the roome and stead of all his elect so as when his bloud was shed their bloud was sh●● because it was shed for them But the bloud of other priuate men cannot answer for any besides themselues because it is shed onely for themselues Then dam●●ble is the doctrine of the Papists who hold the bloud of Martyrs can merit for others being applied vnto them for seeing they be but priuate men and suffered in their owne persons onely they cannot profit any other thereby By bloud we must vnderstand the passion of Christ a part for the whole and with all his fulfilling of the law vpon the crosse for in his suffering hee fulfilled the law and in fulfilling the law he suffered These two cannot be seuered saue onely in thought And so this word containes the whole obedience of Christ whereby he procured the remission and mortification of our sinnes Here then wee see two notable benefites of Christ vnto his church his loue the washing away of sinnes which S. Iohn sets downe to moue the churches with reuerence diligence to reade and delight in this booke All of vs will say wee are sure God loues vs and hath pardoned our sinnes in Christ why then doe wee not shew our loue againe to him by hearing and reading his word set downe in this or any other booke of Scripture and by yeelding answerable obedience thereto Why then do we not offer vp ourselues soules and bodies to serue him as the Apostle requires Rom. 1● 1 by way of recompence for his mercies and loue shed out vnto vs But alas that is more common which is most shamefull to turne Gods grace into wantonnesse for when men say God loues them and hath washed away their sinnes yet they rebell against him when as these two benefites are here recorded to bee in●ucements of continuall loue and obedience to his holy word Verse 6. And made vs kings and 〈◊〉 to God euen his father to him be glory and dominion for 〈◊〉 Amen In these words is set downe the third worke and benefit of Christ bestowed on his church and on euery true member thereof For the better vnderstanding whereof we must consider in them foure points First the dignitie and excellencie of all true beleeuers and member● of Christ They are kings and priests Secondly when they be made kings and priests in this life noted by the phrase of speech hath ma●● Wherein 〈◊〉 speaketh of the church on earth and vseth a word that signifieth the time past Thirdly the maner how they become kings and priests they are not so borne but Christ hath made them such Fourthly to whom they be made such to God euen the father For the first The dignitie of all true beleeuers hath two heads first They bee kings secondly Priests They are called kings not in regard of an earthly kingdome for vsually the condition of most beleeuers on earth is base and contemptible but in regard of a spirituall kingdome the kingdome of heauen whereto the Lord giues them right title and interest in and by Iesus Christ. So our Sauiour Christ speaketh to his disciples Feare not little flocke it is your fathers will to giue you the kingdome And againe Behold I giue vnto you a kingdome Now the faithfull are kings in these respects first because by Christ they bee lords and conquerours of all these enemies sinne Sathan the world death hell and their owne flesh Secondly because in and by Christ they are partakers of the glorie of Christs kingdome and saluation for they receiue of Christ grace for grace and so answereably glory for glory and felicitie for felicitie Thirdly because they be made lords of all things in heauen and earth except good Angels and the church All things are yours whether it be Paule or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death whether things present or to come euen all are yours and yee Christs Quest. But if Christ bee king and all his members kings how do they differ Answ. In two points First Christ is the sonne of God by nature and so a king by nature hauing the right of the kingdome of heauen by inheritance but the members of Christ