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A57537 A godly & fruitful exposition upon all the First epistle of Peter by that pious and eminent preacher of the word of God, John Rogers. Rogers, John, 1572?-1636.; Simpson, Sidrach, 1600?-1655. 1650 (1650) Wing R1808; ESTC R32411 886,665 744

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As verily as we be unfeignedly humbled with desire of forgiveness and not to sin so verily may we believe our selves pardoned for which accordingly we are enjoyned daily to pray yea if we have been overtaken more foully for want of watchfulness yet let us not despair as Cain or run from God as Judas which is worst of all but address our selves to come with a heavy and bleeding heart to God with whom there is mercy David having confessed his sin Nathan said unto him The Lord also hath put away thy sin thou shalt not dye Unto every penitent soul his Son will be a propitiation for their sins As the prodigal was embraced of his father so will our heavenly father receive us if we return unto him 3. May be a most effectual means to humble such as have run on in their sins without humiliation that at the length they may take this course Return ye backsliding Children saith the Lord and I will heal your backslidings See to this purpose Hos. 14. 1 2. Oh but I have been thus and thus bad will some say No matter what thou hast been so now thou with thy whole heart turnest to God and neither art now nor hereafter intendest to be as heretofore Time past shall not be remembred Oh but I have committed many great sins It 's not that shall stand between God and thee if thou be truly humbled Gods mercy and the merit of Christ is as well able to take away and heal great as small offences Though our Iniquities be encreased over our heads and our Trespass grown up unto the Heavens yet if with Ezra we be truly humbled there 's assured hope of pardon To the Strangers c. Though haply there might be some Gentiles amongst these yet it is more probable that they were most Jews which were principally his charge as the Gentiles the Apostle Pauls They are called Strangers not as all Christians be while they be here on Earth absent from their heavenly Countrey and Inheritance for so are we Strangers in our own Countrey Towns and Houses but Strangers as being in a strange Countery forced by persecution to leave their own and fly into another which might be either through the Wars and Troubles which were raised in their own Countrey or by the persecution raised in Jerusalem about the death of Steven Here see 1. That sundry of the Jews received our Saviour Christ and believed in him and were soundly converted though the body of them did not for he came unto his own and his own received him not those made a good progress in the course of Christianity who were contented even with the loss of their liberties to undergo such dangers as might befall them in a strange Land onely that they might keep faith and a good conscience 2. The estate of the Church of God here on Earth namely to be under persecution In the world saith our Saviour ye shall have tribulation Always there hath been enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the Serpent Thus was it when the Church was but in one Family in one Countrey one Nation The world having Power Authority Wealth is full of malice against the poor Church so that were it not that God Almighty defends it it could not endure It 's as a Sheep amongst wolves or a Ship among the waves Though God will exercise it to keep it from errors and corruptions which it is subject unto through much prosperity and peace though it have need of some peace to gather it self yet if 't be long in peace it gathers mud as standing waters rust as the ploughshare in the hedge yea settles it self on the lees therefore God pours it out from Vessel to Vessel Ever mark after long prosperity grew pride and thereupon errors and corruptions which like a canker brought destruction Contrarily the Church never shines so gloriously as either in or presently after persecution Then life zeal sincerity heavenly-mindedness and such like graces appear in their true lustre It followeth 1. That as we are not to conclude for a company because they have so much peace that therefore they are beloved of God so must not we against any because they be few in number and outwardly despised and slighted Four hundred false Prophets were maintained by Jezabel whereas Micaiah the onely true Prophet of the Lord was put in Prison Jeremiah and Baruch were the true servants of the Lord whom whole multitudes of proud men and false Prophets resisted 2. That we are to prepare our selves for persecution especially having had so long a time of peace To this end we must resolve to part with all for Christs sake and for his Cause and Religion Thus did these Jews thus the holy Martyrs and great reason For what would it advantage us if we should gain the whole world in the mean time losing our souls by denying Christ. On the contrary If we forsake any thing for Christ here we shall have a Crown of everlasting glory Great is our reward in Heaven But how far are most of us from any such matter many are destitute of knowledge and how can they suffer Many have no love to the truth but are carnal and prophane persons which never could yet be wrought upon by the word to embrace it or be ruled by it that will not leave their vile lusts for it and how shall these leave their goods and liberties Nay that which is most to be lamented how few professors be like to stand to it many are more likely a great deal to flinch Alas what poor faith is in most especially how are most given over to the world being too eager and earnest for these things neglecting good duties and slubbering them over for the worlds sake How wil these forsake it altogether and leave Houses and Lands when they will not lay aside their businesses for an hour or two to hear the word or a quarter of an hour for prayer in their Families O let 's therefore labor as for good store of Faith so to come to a contempt of this world In the mean time use we it moderately and in his place denying our selves by little and little else we shall never come to it all at once but for our livings sake shall be subject to fall from God and renounce our Religion a fearful state 3. The lawfulness of flying in time of persecution The Jews here did it to save themselves from danger It 's lawful for a Minister or any other tyed by calling either when persecution is onely or chiefly intended against him or having consent for a time to go aside seeing it to be best for the rest It 's lawful for any either when God makes a way for them that seems to call them thereto whereunto if they should not yield we are to think they
Gods love is no want of any thing needful worldlings indeed do greatly seek after wealth for their children and rejoyce to see them wealthy and healthy though in the mean time they see in them no true tokens of Gods favor but alas what are these It should more glad us to see an humble godly heart turned from sin and embracing righteousness though sickly and poor then to flow in all the wealth of the world and be ungracious and to come home in a Gold chain or to hear that our childe were like Joseph the second man in the Kingdom without grace But men do for their children as for themselves labor more for goods then grace But what shall we say to those Ministers that check their people for forwardness and seek to discourage them what also to those Parents that are so far from desiring grace for their children as they check and discourage them for their forwardness thereunto such would like them rather if they saw them jolly as the world Oh a hard part of Parents Be multiplied He desires not that they be once taken into Gods favor and his other graces begun in them but that they be continued and daily encreased more and more He was covetous to have his spritual children thrive apace and grow very rich in grace Such covetousness even a desire to joyn grace to grace is both for our selves and others commendable So should a Minister desire that his people may not be a little better then the worst but to exceed others by far that they may answer the time and means and to this end as to pray so to call upon them continually and they not to think amiss of this but to rejoyce in it as a special fruit of his Love so must Parents to their Children God gives us leave to be covetous in these things and to joyn grace unto grace as men do house unto house so shall we honor him much for a little grace will go but a little way Thus shall we benefit our Neighbors much when our branches spread far and our lips feed many Thus shall we have a large Testimony to our selves of our Salvation while we live and make a wide entrance for our selves into the glorious Kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Verse 3. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead NOw followeth the substance of the Epistle consisting of Doctrine and Exhortation Doctrine to the thirteenth Verse Exhortations in the Verses following The Exhortations are to continue constant in the profession of the Gospel of Christ and to stick close to that Salvation purchased by Christ and revealed therein and that they would lead an holy and and godly life answerable to this profession and Gospel both in their general and particular callings yea now in their present troubles and notwithstanding any other they might meer with hereafter Now this being a very weighty building therefore he had need lay a foundation fitting for the same and so he doth which is this namely The singular benefits that we receive by Jesus Christ his Death and Resurrection viz. Assurance of Salvation Hope Joy Peace c. and at last everlasting life in the Kingdom of Heaven all which are revealed and wrought in us by the Gospel which is no new Doctrine but that which of old was revealed to all the Prophets though now more clearly and fully manifested Therefore seeing God hath done so great things for us by Christ Jesus and these things are revealed in the Gospel which is very ancient good reason they should cleave to Christ and be carried after no other way of Salvation accordingly walking worthy of the benefits they have both already reaped hereby and may further hereafter The Doctrine setteth forth the great benefit that we reap by Jesus Christ namely That we are begot to a lively hope of Salvation and of being partakers of such an inheritance as is without comparison which is every way set forth according to its excellency where we have 1. The benefit That we are begotten to a lively hope 2. The moving cause The abundant mercy of God 3. The means whereby namely The Resurrection of Jesus Christ 5. The end That we may partake of Salvation which he calls an Inheritance and describes it by several properties Blessed be God For the maner of speech we read of three kindes of blessing in Scripture 1. God blesseth man when he bestoweth upon him his favors and good things earthly and heavenly 2. Man blesseth man and that either ordinarily when he prayeth to God to bless him Thus Moses is appointed to bid Aaron bless the people and the form of prayer is set down Thus Parents bless their children and we are to bless them that curse us or extraordinarily when by the Spirit of Prophecie the Prophets of God have not onely prayed to God for a blessing on their posterity but have pronounced a blessing upon them foretelling what their state should be in time to come As Isaac blessed Iacob and Esau Iacob also his Sons and Moses the twelve Tribes at his death 3. Man blesseth God when he ascribeth that honor praise and thanksgiving which is due to him for his Mercy Wisdom Justice Truth not when we give him any thing he hath not that cannot be but when we ascribe and give that to him which is most justly due to him already Thus understand we the phrase here as elswhere often For the matter Being to repeat the great benefits that come to us by Jesus Christ he doth it not barely but begins with praise and thanksgiving for the same Blessed be God c. saith he as if he should have said For these unspeakable and great benefits bestowed on us unworthy ones Oh my soul Spirit and all that is in me come forth to render thanks to God Teaching us That When we speak or have any occasion to think as we ought often to speak and think of Gods mercies especially his special mercies that concern our Salvation we should do it with admiration and setting forth his praise Thus both David and Paul Even his outward benefits ought to stir us up unto thankfulness how much more ought we to be stirred up for spiritual favors and deliverances from the bondage and thraldom of Sin Satan and Hell how can we do any less All creatures Sun Moon Fouls praise God in their kinde and yet they have onely been created what we then that have been redeemed when we were lost They that have felt their bondage and finde themselves delivered cannot but break out into his praise Indeed the common sort that have those things but in their brain onely and never had the feeling of the one or of the other they can speak
be dismaid and dead as it were on the nest Through this they can even in Prison with Paul and Silas sing Psalms as through this the Martyrs endured the fire Daniel and the Three Children went cheerfully to suffer This also makes a Christian lively to serve God and in every duty to praise him as David Open thou my lips saith he namely with assurance of thy love and my mouth shall shew forth thy praise So to do good to others as being fitted to teach them as well the way of Gods justice against sin as the way of his mercy to them that repent yea hereby we shall be fit to every good duty I will run the way of thy commandments when thou shalt enlarge mine heart namely by the perswasion of thy love and by thy Spirit and the hope of Salvation It s a fault in Christians that they be no more cheerful in this hope but lumpish and soon daunted in afflictions a fault I say that we are no more active and lightsom in Gods business Let every one then labor for it till this we are not alive our soul never prospers nor sees good day This even this is the beginning of life and the first step to eternal life Would any man live and be cheerful and see good days and have that which might keep him from being daunted in adversity persecution death at the day of Judgement let him by all means get this Without this mens hopes are vain their stout courage will fail them in those times when God shall frown It s Faith onely which will carry a man through all things Hereby he shall have a heart to serve God yea both do and suffer the greatest things for him and his sake According to his abundant mercy The moving cause of this benefit of our calling to Faith and hope is Gods mercy nay hit abundant mercy The cause of all the good that ever came to us or ever shall come is no other but onely free favor Why did he elect us before the world but onely of his undeserved love According to the good pleasure of his own will not for works we had done it was before the world not for any we were like to do as who do none till he work them in us So also Why redeemed he us when we were all fallen into condemnation even for his meer mercy was there any thing in us could deserve it when we were utterly unable to do any good nay when his utter enemies why also hath he called us Did we or could we do any thing before our calling to deserve it We were not onely unable to think a good thought but serving the Devil with all our power walking in our lusts after the Prince that ruleth in the children of disobedience See our case in Ezek. 16. both in respect of our Parents sinners and our selves or any thing we can do Nay to cut the throat of all conceit of any merit less or more before or alter he saith His abundant mercy So that a little mercy such as is in man or some reasonable store as in Angels would not serve the turn nor was sufficient to save us or move the Lord to call us to this hope but an abundant deal of the mercy of God which is infinite Was it a small matter that moved God to chuse thee to Salvation rather then thousands of others or was it a small mercy to give us his onely Son to save and deliver us by suffering all the wrath due to us What Not his Servant nor his Friend but his Son his only begotten Son the wisdom of the Father the Image of the invisible God the engraven form of his Person to stoop so low as to become man nay in that base estate to be despised of men to be hated spitted upon mockt shamefully Crucified and he that knew no sin to stand in the stead of most vile sinners and so to be dealt with and that for us no friends but enemies no good persons but vile and wretched ones Was a little love enough to bring this to pass Oh no but a love without measure without example never such another even that any Father gave his only begotten Son to save traitors and enemies It was wonder that the Father did not rather suffer all mankinde to perish then to give his only most blessed Son to suffer the least of these indignites And it was no small love of Iesus Christ that moved him to leave the glory of the Father and stoop to the estate of a man and all his infirmities save sin and to endure all these tortures of men and his Fathers wrath especially It was no small love that made him give us his heart-blood when he shed a few tears for Lazarus the Jews said Behold how he loved him but having shed his blood for us what may we say So also is it a small measure of mercy to call us to the hope of Salvation from our wretched estate when we went on in sin and minded no good nay all evil It must needs be a great deal of mercy to move God to think well to us when we went on madly in our sins and did fight against him so also to forgive so many and horrible offences as we had committed no marvel though David craved the multitude of Gods mercies If they were not infinite our sins could not be forgiven for our sins come as neer infinite as number can make them then to cloath such wretches with the righteousness of his Son then to forget and forgive all that is past and take us into favor and make us here heirs of all his promises and priviledges and of life eternal hereafter who will not admire it Is not this abundant mercy to work this hope in us whom he might have justly condemned and when he might also have been glorified in our condemnation as he was in Pharoahs Plagues So also to adopt us for his children men adopt that have none of their own God had a natural beloved Son men adopt their kinsmen God us nothing of his kin yea his enemies men adopt for some good quality we had no such thing to move God was it not a great deal of mercy that moved God to call Paul that ran a persecuting of him in his members to forgive Mary Magdalen Manasses c. So every one of us What were we when God called us Must not we say that it was abundant mercy that ever we were called forgiven and saved They that have had their part in this abundant mercy must be stirred up to abundant thanksgiving saying with the Psalmist What shall I render to the Lord for all his benefits towards me We must testifie our love in ●ealous obedience all the days of our life shewing forth the vertues of him that hath called us out of darkness into his marvellous
need not doubt of glorification Verse 5. Who are kept by the power of God through Faith unto Salvation ready to be revealed in the last time THey might say its a goodly Inheritance indeed and reserved for us but how shall we come at it that are lost on the sea of this world how should a Mariner come to the Haven in a great tempest through the midst of rocks and sands and many Pirats in his way This doubt the Apostle removes by shewing That they are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation God doth as if a King should lay up an infinite treasure in a most safe place and bid his subjects fetch and take it but in the way are many Theeves and also Lyons Wolves and Bears against whom he promises them safe conduct and protection with his gards to go along with them Here then is a further benefit that God bestoweth upon his that he sets them not onely in hope of Salvation and in a good way but so confirms them therein that they continue to the end and that by upholding them through his mighty power against all oppositions whatsoever Kept Therefore we have many enemies and hinderances of our Salvation 1. The Devil whose subtilty malice power and vigilancy is extraordinary his names in Scripture Serpent Dragon Lyon and such like with his continued practises there recorded to hinder our Salvation evidence the same Accordingly doth he daily endeavor to have us in one extreme or another as either to be of no religion or a false religion if of a true then that either we may be carnal and secure or run on to an erroneous and preposterous zeal so as he drives some to presumption he drives others to desperation 2. The world whereof 1. The evil examples therein like a common stream carry us away as sheep or cattel seeing a few go in at a gap will in too whatever come of it 2. Ill counsel and that both to yong men What will you in the prime of your youth give your self to this precise course never merry more no body will care for you Old men What will you now be an hearer of Sermons and of another minde then heretofore what is this but to disgrace all your former life you have ever been counted an honest man do not now discredit your self and to rich men will you go among them a company of poor despised people it will be no small disgrace unto you 3. The profits and pleasures thereof whereby most men are beguiled and enchanted By profits some are kept from professing religion altogether their Oxen and Farms keep them off they have no leasure yea some that have heard with joy and with Demas gone further have been choaked by these thorny cares as others besorted with pleasures to the ruine of their whole man 4. Adversities Persecutions Troubles every where to be found therein All forsook Christ when he was first taken and the Apostle Paul saith That at his first answer all for sook him And 3. which is the worst our own corrupt nature the wisedom whereof is enmity against God and all the thoughts of our hearts are onely evill continually Our fleshly lusts fighting against our souls Oh the abominable corruption that lurketh in us we drink in iniquity like water we hale it to us as with cart ropes naturally we can do nothing else as a traytor its ready to deliver us up to every Enemy therefore Christ had cause to commend us to his Fathers custody These be so mighty as that few can be saved for them These not onely carry down the common sort but even such as have made great profession and have received great gifts many of these with Demas are eaten up of the world as others scared by persecution yea hereby even Gods sanctified ones with David and Peter are shrewdly shaken We should therefore Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might Putting on the whole armor of God that we may be able to stand against the wiles of the Devil and his adherents No marvel then though our Savior still stirs us up to watch and pray By the power of God We cannot keep our selves No alas not for an hour look on David and Peter nay Adam in the state of innocency yea as being left for a while we fall into some one or other sin as into security or the like so we could not but fall quite away if there were no other help but our own This should make us hang down our heads and humble our selves and cling to God If we trust to our selves we shall speed like Peter therefore crave new grace and continual supply And if we be kept we may know to whom to ascribe the glory and praise thereof Though we have many opposites against our Salvation and we cannot keep our selves there is one notwithstanding that both can and will keep us so that we cannot fall from our happy state of grace in despite of all the enemies of our Salvation whatsoever He opposeth to the mighty adversaries of our Salvation mighty defence even the Almighty power of God that is His Almightiness whereby he rules all things in Heaven Earth Sea and all deeps whom neither Angels Men Devils nor Hell can resist Whatsoever disguise we see any Christians to come to we that escape them are so kept by the power of God the Father having elected us the Son hath redeemed us and so committed us over to his Father to be kept so that our Salvation is not in our own keeping as it was in Adams for then woe unto us we should soon lose it but it is in a sure hand which makes our state by Christ much better then our state in Adam This is most comfortable Doctrine against all fear of our own weakness or any other enemies Though they be strong yet the Father is stronger and none can pluck them out of his hands Our adversary is as a roaring Lyon but we have the Lyon of the Tribe of Judah on our side and being made members of Christ will be suffer any to pluck and rend us from him no assuredly we are not now enemies as in time past but Gods sons and daughters therefore not like unnaturally to be forsaken of him in our need For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life being delivered from our greatest fear everlasting condemnation it s most certain that our combats that remain shall not be deadly but onely to exercise our Faith let us believe this firmly God who hath bestowed grace on us will uphold us to the end so that we may say Though we can do nothing of our selves we are able notwithstanding to do all things through Christ that strengtheneth us
Faith may be tryed and so found to their honor at the last day as in the ensuing Verse Manifold Temptations They were driven from their Native country forced to fly for their lives so questiōless met with variety of troubles Whence may be noted that Even such as are highly in Gods favor and shall be heirs of Heaven must undergo not one or two but many troubles As the Israelites went to Cannan through the Wilderness where sometimes they wanted water sometimes it was bitter sometimes they met with Enemies as at other times were encountred with other difficulties so shall we in our journey to Heaven Behold it in Noah though he was saved from the flood yet was it as it were by an Hundred deaths what toil had he in making the Ark whilest the world sported Was he not also shut up in a close place amongst Beasts for a long time where questionless there could not be but a noysom savour 〈◊〉 when he came out of the Ark was he not mockt by his own Son so that his own mouth was feign to curse him The same might also be instanced in Abraham Jacob Job David Paul and others one might marvel where they should have a breathing time as one flood calleth another one wave followeth another one Cloud after another comes over the face of the Sun so did their troubles and crosses as it were strive for place and crowd to prevent one another the end of one being the beginning of another Reasons hereof may be these 1. To drive them to repentance as the death of Davids childe begotten in adultery Josephs brethrens hard usage in Aegypt They are as the Shepherds dog to fetch us out of the corn to bring us into compass again which David acknowledged again and again As they prepare some which have never repented so do they ●waken others to the renewing of their repentance 2. To keep them from sin being therefore compa●ed to an hedge of thorns 3. To humble them we have a proud nature and while we be in health we think our heads half touch the clouds therefore God pulls us down by troubles no rule in a house where children be without rods so the Lord should have no rule with us were it not that sometimes by himself sometimes by others he chastiseth us 4. To make them more holy to scourge off the rust purge out some of the rem●ant of this old man and renew the inner man Afflictions are like the furnace like the fan like physick they are Gods pruning knife to cut off our superfluous branches and make us more fruitful as the Gardiner prunes the Vine yearly that it may fructifie 5. To wean them from the world to which even the best are too much addicted and to make them willing to die and to be gone hence so setting them on work to look after and make sure of a better inheritance how loath was L●t to come out of Sod●m though it were then even ready to be burnt what would have drawn him out if it had not been that How loath were the Israelites to leave the fleshy pots of Aegypt and go to Canaan being there notwithstanding in bondage what would they have done if they had lived there in honor as Joseph God was feign to raise up a persecuting Phara●h whereby they were made to cry 〈◊〉 him and he thereupon sent them Moses and 〈◊〉 yet even then were they scant willing 6. To prove the Devil a li●● who gives out That Gods servants do serve him for wages Doth Job saith he fear God for nought that so they may triumph in their obedience 7. To keep them from hell and condemnation 8. To bring them to Heaven no marvel then if that man be blessed whom the Lord chasteneth his chastisements being indeed sight of his love Therefore 1. We should not dream all of peace and prosperity here but of trouble also accordingly looking for it one after another if God spare us it is because of our weakness but look we not long to be spared but in the mean time gather strength if we expect troubles they prove the weaker if they come on us unlooked for they daunt us the more In our prosperity we must think often hereof thus reasoning with our selves Well now I am in health how shall I do when long and strong sickness shall lie upon me now I have wealth what shall I do if all be taken away and I be put to a poor condition now I am in mine own Countrey House and Land what should I do if I were imprisoned or banished among them I know not This will partly make us use our present prosperity more soberly and also we shall be fitter to meet with adversity when it comes if it come not its labor well lost if it come well bestowed 2. We should bear them patiently seeing not onely we must needs undergo them but they are so many ways for our good We must not then be dismaid at them seeing even Gods dearest children have undergone them they have been their lot But how loath are we to think of troubles till they come They will come time enough we say but never the sooner for thinking on them it may be the longer and to be sure the lighter 3. We must be thankful for them as we would be to one that tames our wilde Horses or Steers or to a Physician for purging our superfluous humors It s no matter so as our souls gain though outwardly we smart Shall we thank and reward the Physician for very untoothsom Phisick and which makes us sick at the heart and shall we be unthankful unto God for healing our souls what means soever he useth 4. We must neither think them the better that are without affliction nor them the worse that are afflicted the latter may be happy as the former miserable 5. We must make a right use of afflictions whensoever they come upon us Temptations That is troubles or tryals But it s said God tempts none There be two kindes of Temptations one Tryals by leaving us to our selves as Hezekiah or by afflictions as here to bring to light what is in us The other Suggestions to perswade us to evil of the first God is the author of the latter the Devil and man Afflictions as Poverty Sickness Banishment Imprisonment are Temptations they serve to try what is in us not but that God knoweth what is in us already he knoweth both the heart and reins but that our selves and others may attain this knowledge Sometimes we overprize sometimes we underprize our selves But they sometimes bewray hidden grace as who would have thought of so much Faith in Abraham Patience in Job Meekness in David and Moses if they had not been tryed Sometimes also hidden corruptions for who could have thought of so much weakness in Peter and
always keep a good Conscience Wood is not more necessary and apt to nourish fire then good works and well doing to nourish Faith Also observe the dealings of God and grow by your own experience Many that have believed and were very earnest in their beginning till they got it after growing secure and worldly and withal neglecting the means have with David fallen into some one sin or other thereby losing the peace and comfort they formerly enjoyed A great loss indeed more then if a man were stript of all to his shirt O le ts take heed of this loss as we are to be wise as Serpents so let us shew our Serpentine wisdom in this one thing especially The Serpent will be sure so much as in her lies to save her head so must we our Faith for on this hangs all and if by any means we have fallen therefrom recover we our selves by all means possible 3. That which they are to hope for or trust on is Grace that is Salvation Every benefit is grace but to be delivered out of our lost and undone state and brought again into the favor of God and saved is a most special grace Our Election is of grace so our Redemption so our effectual Calling 1. This condemns the Papists that teach partly Grace partly Works No these cannot be mingled either all or none they be as contrary as light and darkness honey and gall else were grace no more grace To joyn any thing with Christ is to pervert the Gospel They now begin to be ashamed and mince this Opinion saying We be saved most by Grace yet partly by Works and that these Works be died in the Blood of Christ and that it is most safe to rest on his merits alone Well God make them so ashamed as altogether to renounce it and so let us in the mean time 2. Let us serve the Lord with a chearful and constant love and service for his free favor to us all the days of our life 3. Shew we grace and favor to others not to such as have deserved well of us but even to such as have not nay ill as we had of God Grace That is Salvation See he calls their mindes from looking for earthly preferment by Christ whereunto they had a lingring minde and calls them to look for Spiritual riches even Salvation by him What are we then to expect by Christ and by professing the Gospel zealously not Wealth Honor Peace Credit in the world but pardon of our sins freedom from Hell and Gods wrath peace of Conscience joy in the holy Ghost that our persons and works shall please God Angels to be our guard our Prayers to be heard our Souls at death to be carried into heaven both our Bodies Souls to be glorified at the great day Will this satisfie us Hereof we may be assured if we believe in Christ and zealously embrace the Gospel As for other things his Kingdom is not of this world he promiseth not plenty peace ease c. He had them not himself but contrarily troubles as all shall have that live godly in him This teacheth us to lay our hand upon our heart when we go about to profess we know what we shall finde but it may be sorrow withal if we can be content so then may we go forward else not Many having gone on in profession not so advisedly and after having found the wind and tide against profession and reproach trouble and danger for the same have shrunk away and with Demas have forsaken Paul and embraced the present world Others seeing how hardly such be dealt with though in their conscience they think best of such yet keep in their heads thinking that its best sleeping in a whole skin But alas they make but a weak choyce were they not better have these heavenly comforts and priviledges here and be acknowledged of Christ and saved at the great day though with some sorrows here then to make the world their friend and God their enemy and to have him ashamed of them at that day as he will for we cannot have it go on our side now and then too That is to be brought unto you God tarried not till they sought Salvation but he of his goodness brought it them which he useth here as an Argument to perswade them to trust stedfastly to this Salvation and look accordingly for it because God would bring them to the Faith of it when they thought not thereof Note here That Salvation is not of our own procuring or seeking Alas what could Adam and we in him do we could fall but what then towards our Salvation we could run and hide our selves and excuse our sin and encrease our danger but God was fain to bring him the seed of the woman he could not make himself an help a wife for God made and brought her to him much less a Savior So what 's the reason he hath given us the Gospel in this Land and not to our Forefathers not to many other Lands we sought it not but when Idolaters in darkness God brought it So have we not been brought by marriage or by Service into Towns where we have had the Word when we purposed no such thing So to our hearts what were any of us when God called us Did we seek him Alas no we ran from him rather long ere we yielded but he followed us and overcame us See it in Saul did he seek Salvation he was going to Damascus to persecute God brought it him so to Zacheus the Goaler c. so we This teacheth us 1. To be humble 2. To be exceeding thankful all the days of our life 3. To rest confidently on him for the time to come in the experience of that we have had as thus That he that brought us Salvation the Word to us or us to it and gave us to see our misery long after Christ have some taste of his love and some desire to please him that were far from these he will continue this and will never leave us Thus the Apostle reasons But God commendeth his love towards us c. So Jacob in danger of Esau He came over Jordan with his staff and God had given him two bands therefore he was perswaded to relie on God for present deliverance for why might he say I am perswaded thou hast not done all this for me to be lost in an instant as an ox should lick up a flower or a candle be put out at once We use not Gods mercies well when we grow not stronger by them for time to come 4. Comfort to a fearful heart that fears he shall not hold out or that God will cast him away O its impossible did he bring thee Salvation that regarded it not and now hath given thee an heart to prize it above the world and to walk
taunt blow for blow c. He is no body that will not revenge himself to the uttermost from the least to the greatest Much is spent this way in Law onely for mens wicked wills upon stomack and to revenge Some profess and are not ashamed to say I 'le be revenged on him I 'le not leave him worth a groat I 'le fit in his skirts once in the year I 'le be even with him who that they may have their will of a man care not what they spend though they have the curse of God withal If they be told thereof what 's their defence Had he not begun with me he should have gone long enough before I would have wronged him but seeing he hath thus done I 'le serve him as well He is counted an honest man that doth not begin to wrong another but he that doth but requite wrong with the like O that 's very reasonable and it were no reason to require the contrary Thus most have no ears to hear any perswasions to put up wrongs a certain sign that they are fleshly and that the Devil bears sway in their hearts What Shall I put up abuses then I shall be counted a fool Not of God who bids thee so do nor of Angels nor of good men who count them wise that so do He that is slow to wrath is of great wisdom For the contrary none but fools and bad men will count you wise neither are they fit Judges yea their dispraise is a praise He is not strongest that can revenge but that can up most and overcome himself It s beastly power to subdue others but Christians must subdue their own rebellious affections and lusts But alas even Gods Servants and they that have good things in them are yet greatly taken herein as appears in their writings about matters in controversie they break out into personal disgraces and bitter invectives one against another a very unseemly thing me thinks not savoring of the Spirit but of the Fesh yea the way to exasperate and so to encrease sin The truth may be sufficiently maintained and error gainsaid and confuted without such things That Christians should be stirred one against another that they should not bear one with another that they should rip up one anothers faults that they should disgrace one another that they should either fall flat out one with another into bitter terms or biting them into worse purposes not forget wrongs true or seeming for a great while O this is wonderful yea monstrous pride where is love that suffereth long and where is the example of our Savior all this while And where 's our forgiving one another as we would God should forgive us This hinders not but that Magistrates may execute justice upon ill doers so it be upon no private grudge and that Parents and Masters may correct the faults of their Children and servants so it be chiefly in regard of the sin against God and for the good of the party And a man may take the benefit of the Magistrate if the matter be of weight and cannot be well ended otherwise yea if he be set upon and violence offered to him he may be a Magistrate for himself if he cannot shift off his enemies and by defending himself he may be freed of the danger and if he must needs wound or be wounded kill or be killed then no doubt its lawful rather to kill then be killed and yet to be as free from revenge as full of pity But committed himself c. Our Savior would not revenge himself on his adversaries as knowing that his Father was wise enough and knew what to do to them and being just would also do right judgement Whence note That They that revenge think that God either is not wise enough or just enough to requite the wrongs done them or to determine of their cases for if they so thought they would leave it to him whose office it is and who will do it to the purpose He that revengeth puts God out of his place and sits down therein Should any having no Authority Calling or fitness intrude himself into the place or seat of a Temporal Judge would he not be accounted a Fool or a Madman Let us therefore beware of revenge seeing it concludes so wickedly on our parts against God and know we that we do always provide best for our selves when we commend our cause to God for he knows how when and which way to defend his and revenge them on their Enemies When Moses bare quietly the abuse of Corah and his company how did God right his cause The like may be said of Davids in respect of the wrongs done by Saul and Shimei If we revenge our selves we turn Gods revenge against our selves and as we become partners with them that have wronged us in sin so shall we in punishment To him that judgeth righteously God is the Judge of the world he daily judgeth and hath especially prepared one day wherein he will judge the world and give every one according to that they have done His judgements are always righteous as between Moses and Corah yea Moses and Miriam David and Saul Ahab and Naboth c. they committed their cause unto God who accordingly righted them so did he right Hezekiah on Senacherib Peter on Herod the Holy Martyrs on their bloody persecuters Thus doth God revenge himself of the wicked enemies of Gods faithful Ministers and thus for our weakness he keeps as it were petty Sessions but this is nothing to that he will do He reacheth out his hand as it were from behinde a Curtain and gives now one now another of his Enemies a rap thereby to relieve our weakness and strengthen us and to curb the wicked that they be not too outragious but here 's a day coming wherein he will throughly judge between his servants and their enemies Things seem to go crooked now when the wicked tread under foot the poor Saints like clay in the streets and insult over them but as a Turner or Joyner with crooked tools will make straight and even work so hereby in Gods wise providence is set forth as well the constancy of his Saints as the malice of their Enemies the one being thus prepared to glory the other to Destruction both which shall evidently appear on the great day O how notably may this comfort Gods servants and make them patient in their sufferings And how may this terrifie the wicked that dare meddle with any that belong unto God He that defendeth them is mighty and he will spoil the soul of them that spoil them Verse 24. Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree that we being dead to sin should live unto righteonsness by whose stripes ye were healed OUr Apostle having had occasion to speak of the passion of our Savior Christ thought it too bare to have spoken
for our enemies speaking kindely to them giving them kinde answers and doing them all the good we can Observ. It s not onely our duty to be free from revenge of evil but we must requite evil with good If our enemies speak ill of us or to us we must speak well of and to them if they do ill to us we must do well to them Obj. But did not David and Jeremiah pray against their enemies and Elisha cursed the children that m●ckt him Ans. Enemies be either private to us or publike to God and his Church and these either curable or incurable For publique incurable enemies if we knew them we might hate their sins directly and their persons indirectly as the Devil which these holy men of God did know by an extraordinary measure of the Spirit wherewith they were led and not otherwise and so they were rather prophesies of the destruction of bad men delivered in the form of Prayer But we have no such warrant therefore may not we do so but for private enemies or for publike that be curable as who are not for ought we know we must love their persons and wish well to them and do them good though we hate their sins Obj. God commanded to kill the Amalekites and Canaanites and how stands that with this Precept of loving our Enemies and doing them good Ans. We must love our enemies in God and for God and not against God therefore he having commanded to kill them they were bound so to do who yet in the mean time might wish well to their souls Thus if we war against Gods enemies and be enforced to kill them we must yet pitying their souls do the same with a kinde of pity hating the bad cause they maintain and wishing there were no such occasion against them we must must I say in an holy revenge as of Gods enemies and set on work by the Magistrate oppose our selves against them Quest. Why are we to requite evil with good Answ. 1. God requires it Christ also who hath done so much for us doth enjoyn it But I say saith he love your enemies c. 2. We have Gods example as our patern his Sun shines as well on the unjust as the just 3. This is to do some thing worthy of a Christian even the Heathens and Publicans can love those which love them 4. We must not be still in the lowest forms in easie lessons but labor for perfection 5. God every day requites our sins and naughtiness with his loving mercies as when we sinned in Adam he found a way to save us 6. This is the way to stop contentions and strife and to melt the heart of our adversary if he belong to God or leave him without excuse yea cause them to speak well of us as Saul did of David 7. This is a good argument of our love to God in truth for even many other duties which God requires of us are of men also commanded but what law enjoyneth this 8. We have for this the examples of Joseph toward his brethren Moses and Aaron praying for the people David mourning for Saul and provoking others so to do so of Steven but above all of our Savior himself who even on the cross prayed for his enemies 1. This may humble us in respect of the vile corruption of our hearts that count this an hard saying and have in our practice been so far from it Most are scarce free from revenge much less can be brought to requite good good evil Oh it s an hard thing but doth it not become Christians of such standing as we are to do hard things and have we not been told that the way to Heaven is straight O but he hath deserved nothing of me but all ill will some say but so have we of God who yet doth not thus requite us and though he have deserved nothing yet God hath deserved all love of us for his infinite love to us Well then he sets us to pay over some of that love we owe to him to our enemies and is it not reason that we should pay the same He may assign over his debt or part of it to whom he will If our Creditor bid us pay some part of that we owe him to another will we refuse and say He is a stranger to me I owe him nothing I 'le pay him nothing c. much less should we herein yea when we are bid to do good to our enemies it s but as we make our children do even to kiss the rod and this is but to pull down our stomacks and we have more blows sometimes with the rod then we need would we yield sooner and kiss the rod This to a natural man is impossible but to him that is truly assured of Gods love and seeth his daily goodness contrary to his ill deserts and is endued with some measure of Faith it s easie And if we are to requite good for evil how much more ought we to render good to them that do us good David was notable in this kinde he required Jonathans kindeness and Barzillai's on their sons for the contrary Pharaoh's Butler is branded for ever 2. This condemneth those that requite not good to them that have done them good as Children that relieve not their Parents in their age much more those that requite evil for good Thus do many ungracious Children Servants and people to their Parents Masters and Magistrates as the Israelites to Moses and Aaron the People to Jeremiah Ahab to Elijah and Micaiah Joaesh to Zechariah Herod to John the Baptist Hereof also our Savior had experience So in these days even of those that have some shew of goodness in them yet not a few being faithfully dealt withal by their Ministers and told of their faults they think the worse of them and cannot well away with them Knowing that ye are there unto called Here is a reason to enforce the forementioned duty It s one thing that God requires of all his when he takes them to his favor even to take up his yoke whereof this is one part then which nothing more yokes our flesh and corrupt nature He that will be Christs Disciple must deny himself If we perform this we have hereby an argument of our effectual calling and who would not desire to know indeed that he is in the way to Heaven An unregenerate man cannot possibly do this at least not aright but he that hath tasted and felt abundantly of Gods love to him he will so love God that for his sake he will do this or any thing which he commands God chooseth whom he pleaseth and refuseth others He calleth by the voyce of Christ in the Gospel He calleth from darkness sin this evil world He calleth to the state of grace and all the priviledges thereof here and to eternal glory in
prosperity and welfare inward and outward in body and soul. Quest. In Heaven indeed there shall be days without night good without the least mixture of evil but can good days be enjoyed in this world R. In comparison we may but not absolutely good without evil for as the best man is not without sin so he cannot but have inward sorrow of heart and likewise be subject to afflictions every day bringing grief enough with it yet in comparison of worse days of horror of conscience of troubles outward in the Land of miseries and vexations that may befal us we may see good days that is to say Inward peace of Conscience in the assurance of Gods love and our care to walk faithfully before God also we may enjoy Peace in the Land Plenty the Gospel Health Wealth Friends Wife Children c. and when these are there are good days days freed from calamities and sorrows and wherein we may plentifully enjoy comforts and blessings The day also of a Christians conversion is a special good day so the days wherein we do enjoy the purity of Gods Worship in the Word and Sacraments so the days wherein we see Gods Church flourish so when the Sabbath is duly sanctified it s a good day so when a Christian after sin comes to repentance so the days wherein a Christian walks with God and hath recourse unto him And as thus days may be termed good so may they in other respects evil evil to the ungodly without exception to whom even in their greatest prosperity their days be evil evil also to the godly when they cannot enjoy the means of salvation in the life and power of it when God seems to hide his face from them when they have conflicts with spiritual wickednesses when the wicked prevail over them such I say and are there not such now are evil days yet withal there 's great difference between the ill days of the wicked and the godly for the godly are even in the worst times blessed even then blessed when they are chastened God also will deliver them in due time yea will make them glad according to the days they have been afflicted Here note 1. That mens days be usually evil and that both in regard of sin and the effects thereof 2. That our life is short set out here not by years but by days which is elswhere compared to a post grass a vapor a Weavers shuttle c. Thus is it to the godly in mercy God will not have them to be long here in this wicked world Thus is it to the wicked in justice as spending the time here allotted them to Gods dishonor That good days are a blessing of God to be delighted in and desired of Gods Servants God hath promised it as an encouragement to obedience they have also prayed for it Psalm 118. 25. and 122. 7. and it s made a sign of Gods favor and presence with his servants Obj. But the wicked often enjoy the same 1. Sol. Outward prosperity they have not the inward assurance of Gods favor 2. Though they abound in the outward blessing yet wanting the right hold and the right use of it nay abusing it to contrary ends it will prove in the end through their own sin a curse to them Their table will be a snare to them and their prosperity their ruine the more outward blessings they enjoy the more have they to answer for Obj. Why is it often denyed even to Gods children who go through many sorrows Sol. Though prosperity be in it self a blessing yet through the corruption of our nature it often turns to our hurt for whereas hereby we should be made more mindeful of God to love praise and serve him and walk more obediently and carefully through our poysonful nature we are usually made forgetful of God proud secure worldly contentious and not onely untoward to goodness but apt to any ill The fattest ground is most slippery fed Horses fling their riders full bodies are subject to the Plurifie Adversity hath slain some but prosperity many thousands more In great Houses there 's swaggering swearing drinking gaming c. whereas in mean places there 's Reading Praying c. nay in adversity you shal have the same persons humble which in prosperity forgot themselves as David and Hezekiah So that adversity is of singular profit to drive us to a sight of our sins with Josephs Brethren to keep us from sin as an hedge of thorns keeps Cattel out from spoiling the Garden to abate our pride and mortifie our corruptions to wean us from the world to shew us that we are not to look for our portion here but set our affections on Heaven where our inheritance is indeed reserved for us Hereupon the Scripture pronounceth them happy that be afflicted yet doth not this prove that adversity in it self is better then prosperity To us indeed it may be better through occasion of our corruption as blood-letting or the taking of loathsom Physick may be to diseased bodies 1. Be we greatly thankful to God that hath given us to see so many good days in the enjoyment of peace plenty the Gospel particular favors c. Our sins have deserved all ill days and assuredly such we shall see if we be not thankful for good days 2. Crave we of God to continue his goodness towards us as also grace to use it well else it will be no blessing will not abide with us we are at all times to walk warily but more heed is to be taken in time of prosperity then adversity then are we to suspect our selves lest abusing the same we prove unthankful Q Whether may we pray for riches and great prosperity or not A. We have no such Warrant in Gods Word neither commandment promise nor example of moderation we have as in Jacob and Agur And for great wealth without admirable grace it s exceeding dangerous It s hard for a rich man to enter into Heaven not many such are called to be thus is no mark of a childe of God If God send it we are not to refuse it but to be thankful and crave great grace to govern it and our hearts therewithal but we have more cause to fear it then desire it but for competent prosperity we may pray yet conditionally because being an outward thing we know not but it may prove hurtful we are to leave it to God that knoweth what 's best for us therewith we must also crave the right use thereof and to be bettered thereby 3. When God shall be pleased to lay his hand upon us any maner of way let us bear the same with patience God sees the same to be needful for us as lanching for a sore blood-letting or purging to a full body If God take away our prosperity be content it s but one of Gods common
counsel of Daniel to Nebuchadnezzar even that they would break off their sins by repentance O turn ye why will ye dye acknowledge I beseech you all your rebellions and treacheries against God and that you have deserved hereby to be cut off entreating yet for pardon and mercy through Jesus Christ Turn to God with your whole hearts and learn to know that sin is odious bringing dishonor to God and destruction upon your selves O shun all evil little and great shun it at all times in all places how gainful or pleasing so ever and whosoever commands it or whomsoever you see practice it together with all the appurtenances and occasions of the same Means to evil may be these 1. Labor to understand the ten Commandments and so what is good and what is evil 2. Labor for faith which purifieth the heart from evil even the assurance of Gods love to us which may work in us love to his Majesty and so an hatred of all evil 3. A sanctified heart the inseperable companion of true faith 4. Attend on Gods ordinances publikely the Word and Sacraments and in private use meditation conference prayer c. 5. Watch and pray that we enter not neither be led into temptation 6. Make we a Covenant against evil as Job and David 7. Call to minde the fearful wrath of God and the wages of sin and the examples thereof on many both in Scripture and our own experience as also the hour of death when it will trouble us and lie heavy on our conscience and the day of Judgement when and where we would be loath to meet with it 2. This also rebukes them that eschew some evil but not all nor at all times or in all places Being commanded what will they not do What not for profit pleasure preferment The sins of their complexion and trade they will in no wise leave they run upon things because lawful though they cannot use them lawfully If they can sin secretly they make no conscience thereof 3. This may serve for instruction with rebuke to most Christians and to us that be most ancient professors that though we have a general purpose against evil yet we neither hate it so deeply nor shun it so carefully as we ought nor are so much humbled when we have been overtaken and have fallen thereinto as we ought we complain of our crosses but grieve not so much that we have fallen into sin If one should threaten to run at us with a naked sword or shoot at us whensoever he could finde an opportunity we would be wary and watchful upon our going abroad having an eye in every corner c. O do we thus against sin which watcheth but an opportunity to do us mischief If we would thus do we should not be so often overtaken as we are we should see better days scape numbers of crosses have more peace to our consciences more joy in our death and a freer passage to Heaven But alas we judge even that which is a great evil to be but a little one it pleaseth us if we have any colour for the same as that we have but once committed it that others do so and so c. Thus do we prophane the Lords-day despise his Ministers and run upon all sorts of evils 4. This affords consolation to all such as do indeed eschew evil and that out of an unfained hatred thereof rejoycing in nothing more then when they prevail against it grieving at nothing more then when they are overcome thereby such do indeed love God such fear him in truth and so are beloved of God and shall be everlastingly blessed these shall live happily here in joy and bliss hereafter O go on in this Christian course though the world hate you because ye do not as they do though they call you precise fools because ye dare not swallow such goblets as they do yea though hereupon ye pull danger upon your selves yet must ye eschew evil and so let us It s no matter though we have the worlds frown as long as we have Gods favor and what if we shall miss many a sweet morsel of profit pleasure and promotion if we be free from the gripes and vexations of conscience and the wrath of Almighty God they that now have their sweet meat would one day vomit up their morsels if they could as Judas did who though he rid himself of the money yet could not be rid of his wound of Conscience nor of the Judgement of God upon him were they ever the worse or had they any cause to grieve that they had not a share with him in the thirty pieces And do good This necessarily followeth on the other No man can have his heart truly nor aright set to do good whose heart is not first purged of the love of all evil for they cannot stand in one heart and at once and that man that lives and bears himself in the practice one sin never did good aright in his life neither ever pleased he God Who can serve God in one thing that serves the Devil in another This may serve to rouse up some that fain would do well and many good things they do but some one old accustomed sin which they know is a sin they cannot leave Well there 's no hating sin it will not do well the end will not be good it s but to be almost Christians Some will say Such a Preacher hath prevailed much with me and done me much good but as long as one known sin is lived in all is nothing worth to Salvation It s true a childe of God through strong temptations may be overcome of the same evil which he hates but he both covenants against it is careful that he may not fall into it having fallen he is much grieved He that is not grieved but doth again upon the next occasion fall to it is indeed in a grievous condition Thus from the order To do good is sometimes taken in a strict sence for the performance of the works of mercy whether for body or soul or both Here more largely for that good we are to do to our neighbor enemies that do us hurt or yet more largely for whatsoever God hath commanded in his Word Whose will is a perfect rule of Righteousness and makes that good which he requireth Whosoever would see good days here and hereafter must set himself in body and soul to the obedience of Gods will in doing good No other shall be saved good is the way leading to this end To come to this end we must walk in this way Reasons 1. It s good and amiable of it self as the Lord is 2. God commands it who is our Soveraign Lord and King Thou shalt do thus and thus saith he often throughout the Scriptures for I am the Lord thy God 3. All promises in Scripture of good things here or
that the other is better as having more comfort in themselves and being more fit to do good unto others and yet they may scape some checks the others may meet with as Peter yea God seems more to tender these then those as a Father having two Children both beloved of him the one sick the other in health is most careful of him that is sick that he may recover To have a tender conscience checking us for the least sin idle words vain thoughts and the like as Davids for curting off the lap of Sauls Garment is a singular blessing and therefore to obtain it we must both see the odiousness of sin judging aright thereof and must bring our hearts to mourn even for the smallest sins 1. Let every man examine himself whether he hath a good conscience or not whether art thou assured of the pardon of thy sins whether doth thine heart bear witness that thou hatest all sin and art truly desirous to please God in all things as well great as small secretly as openly at least in the deep sence of thy misery art thou wearied under it as an intollerable weight hearing of the onely remedy dost thou long after it above all the world art thou as willing to turn from sin as to have sin forgiven to take up his yoke as to be refreshed by him If not thy case is fearful What have we if we have not this It s our duty then to labor for it and not rest till we obtain it What may not incite us hereto It procures Joy Peace Comfort Boldness before God and men such are bold to pray unto God bold to crave others to pray for them It s comfortable in prosperity a sweet companion at home and abroad night and day it s a sweet companion in adversity like a good wife by her kindeness chearing her husband when he comes home who hath been much turmoild abroad another Simon to bear a piece of our cross yea in the greatest crosses this assureth us that yet God is our Father he visits us in love he will assist us and at last deliver us It s a Castle of comfort an armor of proof a continual feast an Heaven upon earth It makes a man embrace the flames kiss the stake and being in the fire accounts as if he were on a bed of Roses In death its comfortable when all things else forsake us then when our eyes are shut up yet through this we shall with Steven see Christ Jesus ready to receive us and shall say Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace In the day of judgement it will make us lift up our heads with joy when we shall see our Savior Christ come to receive us into his heavenly kingdom O they that have a good conscience should make much of it as of their jewel and labor to keep it It may be easily lost and is hardly recovered as may be seen in David and Peter The first part of it namely The assurance of our Salvation is kept by daily renewing our Confessions Supplications and Thanksgivings To this end we must labor to know the will of God and daily to grow in knowledge by our diligent perusal of the Scriptures The 2 part of it namely our care to please God is kept maintained by a daily and constant resolution not to offend God and so we must both strive and watch against our frowardness worldly-mindedness c. and covenant and vow to do the will of God to the uttermost of our power Hereupon we must walk carefully as in the presence of God avoiding all occasions of sinning using all good means to keep us in a good course publiquely and privately being diligent and careful in our particular calling to the glory of God and good of our brethren 2. This reproveth those that having a good conscience fail as much in laboring to keep it as the World doth in not laboring to obtain it How do Christians go on carelesly without renewing their exercises of Faith and Repentance and so their assurance is to seek or else hold it at a venture and coldly our worst day in the week might be better then our Sabbath had we but the grace to use our time aright O how many are careless watch not give way to their lusts therefore fall into many evils and so wound their consciences very often which is dangerous A place often wounded or hurt will not at last be healed We dishonor God much disquiet our consciences give evil example to others by our frowardness impatience worldliness hard dealings c. Hence it cometh that the Word pincheth us evil tidings amaze us we are loath to dye and the day of Judgement is fearful to us 3. This may encourage and comfort those that have good consciences though they be timerous What God shews mercy even to men unworthy and though thy sins be many and great ye● hast thou to deal with him that 's able to pardon them Lose not that thou hast when we lose good consciences all Gods graces diminish and vanish away neither can we thrive any whit as is seen by daily experience But nothing can do us hurt as long as our consciences hold good then are we fit to live and fit to dye fit for the Word and Sacrament fit for death and judgement Thus of the kindes of conscience and so of conscience in general Having a good conscience c. Now of the Words in particular whereof I have laid down their coherence with the former and from whence may be noted That a godly conversation in all things is to be joyned to a bold and zealous profession of our Faith to our knowledge and profession gifts utterance and the like we must adde a good life these two be two Twins St. Paul often joyns them together neither must they be parted saying and doing the tongue and hand must accompany one another Reasons hereof may be these 1. God expecteth of us that where he reveals the knowledge of his will that we adde obedience or else we shall be beaten with more stripes Where God findes this he delights in it as in Abraham who is called The friend of God in David whom he calls A man according to his own heart so in Joh in Zachary and Elizabeth c. we finde the same commended The contrary God loaths as in his own people whom he did again and again advertise hereof 2. This will prove our profession sound and not hypocritical for hypocrites go a great way but its onely Faith that purifieth the heart and that our knowledge is not swimming in our brain but sound and saving knowledge purging both heart and life when we dare compact with any other and say Shew me thy Faith by thy works as I can 3. This not onely Gods children look for when we have got knowledge and come
God to come and yet they feared nothing Note that wicked men fear not Gods judgements Thus was it with the Sodomites with Lots sons in law with the Israelites This is indeed a token of a wicked man as being an argument of unbelief Atheism and hardness of heart and that they are mad on their sins These are sure to fall into destruction This condemns the common unbelief and impenitency of most men for though they hear Gods judgements denounced against sinners and that they hang over the pit of Hell and that he will judge Whoremongers and Adulterers c. and that no such shall inherit the Kingdom of Heaven and that they are thieves for every bit of bread they eat that if they come to the Sacrament without their wedding Garment they shall be bound hand and foot c. yet they fear no colours but go on like blinde Bayard People were of old afraid of Purgatory but these are not whatsoever can be said of Hell or the day of Gods dreadful judgement But they that now fear them least shall one day feel them most whereas Gods Servants which tremble and humble themselves with David Habakkuk and Josiah hiding themselves with God shall escape and they that fear them least before they come and are boldest in sin they are most stricken with horror and most cowardly when they come as Ahaz Saul Belshazzar c. Wherein few that is eight souls were saved by water Here 's the proper use and end of the Ark The preservation of Noah and his Family from drowning By souls we are to understand men and women and by being saved their temporal deliverance 1. In that the Ark preserved them and was not overturned with the raging of the waters and that Noah with his were not choaked being so long there with beasts Note That What God will have a thing to do though it seem never so weak or unlikely yet it shall be sufficient to effect it as Sampsons jaw-bone the compassing of Jericho Daniels pulse which he eat the Whales belly for Jonah Jordan to cleanse Naaman so by the foolishness of Preaching by the Ministery of a few mean men to speak of in comparison to convert the Gentiles c. If God shut up Noah in the Ark he shall be safe enough yea and how many poor live and prosper with a short and bare allowance and many of them in sickness get up with poor help and means O the happy condition of Gods Servants what means soever they have if God bless the same they shall suffice to do them good Hereof how often in time of danger when means have failed or weak means onely were to be had have we had experience 2. In that Noah with six other righteous persons besides himself were preserved Note Both the reward of righteousness though not for merit but Gods mercy and what a dignity and priviledge it is to be righteous one such is more worth then ten thousand others As they are the glory the wicked are the dross so do they finde that godliness hath the promises both of this life and that which is to come O what a provocation and encouragement ought this to be unto us to labor to approve our selves to God to be righteous in Gods sight and to walk with him Such shall be preserved from all evil of body and soul for those that be otherwise they lie open to all judgements here and to eternal destruction hereafter O that men could believe the odds between the one and the other Cham being with his Father in the Ark was preserved from the Flood but after was cursed and condemned for his sin and is in Hell Note both that Its good to be near the godly The place and they that be with them fare the better for their sake as Laban for Jacobs and Potiphar for Josephs wicked Jehoram for Jehoshaphats all in the Ship for Pauls and here Cham for Noahs and none can be saved by any other bodies goodness The soul that sinneth shall dye and every one shall be saved by his own Faith C ham perished though he had Noah to his Father who was such a good man Note further That Though the wicked both may and do often escape bodily dangers as Cham did yea live wax old and grow in wealth c. yet they shall not escape the everlasting judgement of God for their sins While they continue their sins whatsoever their prosperity be their judgement sleepeth not neither doth their damnation slumber 4. In that of those which were saved from drowning being but few yet one was not saved eternally Note That It ever hath been is and will be that a very few have been or shall be saved thus you see it was in the old world So was it under the Law when all the Nations lived without God in the world onely God was known in Jury yea though Israel was as the sand of the sea yet but a remnant of those were saved How few in the wilderness but were disobedient how few under the Prophets but were idolatrous and stiff-necked In the days of Christ where was faith to be found and now not to speak of the Jews Turks and Pagans even among Christians doth not the love of most wax cold Narrow is the way to Heaven and there be few that finde it Many are called but few are chosen Gods people are a little Flock Faith and Repentance without which none can be saved be so difficult things as few attain them An Hypocrite and civil man may go far but come far short If indeed to speak two or three good words at ones death were a sign of repentance as numbers hold or Heaven were so easily come by in vain did Gods Servants humble themselves and labor to cleanse themselves in innocency I would never care for coming into Heaven if it were so easily obtained as the Arrian at Norwich about to be Executed said to one standing by Do you think Christ would forgive me if I did confess and believe in him and acknowledge him O saith the party without all doubt he would To whom the Arrian If your Christ be so easily to be entreated I 'le never believe in him But not every one that saith Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Faith and Repentance with the change of a man is the greatest work in the world Though we cannot judge the precise number of those which shall be saved neither yet who they are yet generally this is true That in the visible Church but a few shall be saved We must not therefore content our selves to do as most do or the rest of our Neighbors do but rather as the fewest do else we can never enter into Heaven or be saved we must crowd and strive hard and labor to be of the number of those few which shall be saved we must give all
cry for mercy and pardon and if it be possible turn from this base vice renounce hate detest vow covenant swear against it pray also to be kept therefrom avoid all company of lewd ones which will either by flattery allure you or if you yield not to them reproach and mock you But what do I speak to them that have lost their wits Is there any hope of repentance for such Well yet nothing is impossible to God The harder it is labor the more and weep and lament for that is past redeem the time to come give your souls and bodies to please God in all good life and sober conversation you have spent your goods and time hereon do so no more If thou wiltst not be perswaded but go on still and hate to be reformed thou mayest look for some one or other dreadful judgement to be here inflicted on thee and at thy death to be cast into utter darkness who hast wallowed in the works of darkness and for thy drunkenness to drink off the full cup of Gods judgement for ever and ever Neither are common drunkards onely to be rebuked but such also as will now and then drink with their friends and sit so long talking and bibbing or gaming and drinking that they be caught and are scarce wise enough to finde the way home they may count themselves wise men but Solomon saith nay to it they shall not be counted innocent Nor are those only to be condemned that be so drunk as they be like beasts but even such as take delight to quaff and to carouse and spend their time in swilling having yet strong brains to bear it and herein they glory that they can drink others under-board and because they be never so drunk but they can carry it away therefore they think themselves no such persons but they are as bad drunkards and as guilty as the other they waste as much time as much wine or strong drink as the others they waste also their substance and delight in this course nay haply they drink much more then the others for some are so weak brained that a little t●rns them over There 's a wo denounced against such their brain was not given them for this end but for the service of God they should prove their strength in good things and strive to exceed others in goodness not in dishonoring God by abusing his Creatures There are also that delight to see others drunk that allure or enforce them so to do to delight herein how horrible is it how ill a sign no childe can delight to hear or see his father misused he is else a bastard not a son Gods Children delight in his Commandments in his Sabbaths in his Saints in the publike performance of his worship contrarily they are grieved and vexed as David and Lot at the dishonor which is done unto him so are not the wicked but God will laugh at their destruction and mock when their fear cometh when judgement cometh those mourners for sin shall scape when as these rejoycers therein shall not go unpunished and who indeed could laugh to see a man running on his own sword or casting himself in the fire To make others drunk enticing them hereto and to this end under colour of kindeness to drink to them often as is usual in Gentlemens Butteries and Cellars in Inns and Taverns c. where men will be at great cost to dishonor God this also is fearful these be zealous Servants of the Devil But if one should allure another to go in such a way where he were sure to fall into a pit or be drowned or be robbed c. would not every one cry out of such a treacher no less treacherous are those which make others drunk We are willed indeed to provoke each other to love and good works to call one another to the house of God to exhort and edifie one another but in no sort to destroy one another as those allurers and enticers do To compel others to drink till they be drunk or to drink more then they can bear is usual to refuse is accounted of sundry ruffians in our days a matter of great disgrace which they will not put up and therefore stab or challenge to the field those that will not drink as many and as big carouses as they that have begun them What inhumanity is this what folly hath nature made all alike can one of low stature reach as high as he that is far taller can a weak man bear as heavy a burthen as a strong man Besides what greater wrong then to force a man to do that which will hinder his health shorten his life wound his conscience and destroy his soul But especially what an outragious wickedness is this against God cannot we our selves be content to do wickedly but as ringleaders we must enforce others whosoever scape such traytors shall not What woful wretches are those have they not sins enough of their own to answer for but they must needs desperately pull other mens sins on their heads whereof they themselves are the principal cause For those they shall answer on that dreadful day Against such shall Ahasuerus his injunction though an Heachen rise up for their condemnation It s the duty of all those which as yet are free from this sin to be truly thankful to God for keeping them therefrom They must also endeavor for the time to come to avoid the same with all the occasions inducing thereto God gives us his benefits to provoke us to well-doing we must not use them to sin like the Mastiffs that flies in his face that gives him meat Wiltst thou so foully dishonor God shall thy body and soul appointed for Gods service be for the service of the Devil in this base sin Wiltst thou thus make thy self unfit for any good in danger to run into any evil Wiltst thou so disguise thy self as to make thy self a scorn so abuse Gods creatures to hazard thy health bring diseases and untimely death on thy self Wiltst thou so wound thy conscience and provoke the Lords judgements against thee here and hereafter O God forbid Be earnest always with God to keep thee see the ugly face of sin think of the judgements denounced and lighted upon many that are past help how pleasant soever it be at the first in the end it will bite like a Serpent Flie from Alehouses and Taverns as from infected houses think it an odious disgrace to be seen in any such house except in travel or for necessity flee the company also of such as are addicted to this vice as infectious and dangerous together with their enticements and provocations follow also your calling diligently whereby both this and other sins may be prevented together with the judgements due thereto 4. It s the duty of all those which are in Authority to set themselves against this sin whether Ministers Magistrates
sicknesses grievous pains diseases losses crosses disgrace persecution at the hand of the wicked c. And thus will God have his Church afflicted either by his own hand or by the wicked 1. To humble them for sin past as Josephs brethren 2. To fetch them into the way from wandring and teach them obedience as David and Jonah 3. To humble them 4. To mortifie their lusts wean them from the world and quicken them to duty 5. Hereby also God sheweth that he will not bear with sin in his dearest Servants as he did not in David Moses Miriam 6. To confute the Devil and shew that Gods people serve him not for wages 7. To shew them their happiness is to come and that if God thus school his Servants that then he will deal severely with the wicked so that this may be a looking-glass to them 1. Seeing God will have it thus and that his course is to begin with his Children we must not refuse the chastening of the Almighty neither conclude against our selves that we be none of the Lords because of this as Gideon but if we can prove it by other reasons let not this dismay This is rather an argument we are the Lords though not of it self because the wicked are also thus met with yet to be taught hereby to labor to see the Lords minde and to make use and be patient is a good sign and know seeing we be chastened here we have happiness remaining for us 2. That none bless himself to be in Gods favor because of his great prosperity or for that his eyes stand out with fatness For Ishmael had the fat of the Earth and Esau the dew of Heaven and Judas carryed the bag They might rather conclude seeing they live wickedly and be not punished but prosper here that therefore there remains a fearful answer for them and so there doth as in the next clause appeareth 3. Neither ought Gods children envy or be discouraged at the prosperity of the wicked for they may from thence conclude that judgement is coming on them but for themselves that there 's happiness laid up for them for if God can afford his enemies the blessings of this life which oftentimes even his own have in a scant measure how great happiness will he bestow upon them in the life to come 2. It s of necessity that Gods Servants must here suffer troubles and that 1. In respect of Gods will he hath appointed us thereunto 2. In respect of our necessity Sin is so rivited into us and in our very nature as it must be no small nor easie thing to pluck it out from us O our infidelity pride hypocrisie self-love frowardness c. how near do these cleave to us and how fast do they hang on nay what a while is it ere an affliction works any thing to the purpose which therefore must either be long continued or have another joyned therewith Who hath not need to have his heart more mollified to be weaned from the world to be quickned to his duty c. how soon do we forget an affliction and therefore who hath not need to be remembred Therefore let us not be against the Lords chastning It s better to have a strong purgation then to fall into spiritual diseases and dangers whereunto we shall else be subject there 's no rule in the world among children without rods Neither use we untimely means or make over much haste to get out of them but crave rather to be better renewed and increased in Faith Patience Humility c. our care is comfortable At the house of God that is The Church of God as it s said of Moses That he was faithful in Gods house God walks in the midst of the seven golden Candlesticks He is among his people and in his Church to direct comfort protect and provide for it as a careful housholder for his family He is with us to the end of the world and dwells in every Believer by his holy Spirit 1. This serves for instruction to duty both to God our Housholders and other our fellow-servants Towards God 1. We must behave our selves as such as belong to such a Family Joshua and Cornelius had godly Families God will have none that shall behave themselves unseemly or not be subject to the Orders of his House we must not be away at meals when the Family meet If God finde our place empty when it should be full as at Word and Sacrament he will be much provoked if the second time beware c. 2. We must follow our work hard that our Master sets us about for he hath no idle persons in his Family we must therefore know what is our work in our general calling as that we must walk holily righteously and soberly what in our particular as a Magistrate Minister Housholder Servant Husband Wife c. He will pay well and therefore looks to have his work done well and faithfully neither must we refuse any work he sets us about as some skemish Servants do in our time but do whatsoever he requires knowing that he appoints no work but what 's fit and meet and we must be at his hand always not as retainers God hath no such but houshold Servants up-rising and down-lying 3. We must bear patiently the rebukes of our Master and his corrections when we have done amiss yea learn to amend there by not murmuring nor answering again 4. We must take our Masters part when we see him misused or his goods imbezeled he will else pull our coats over our ears as unfaithful ones Towards each other 1. There must be no contentions between us an honest Housholder will not endure it in his Family much less can the Lord away that there should be in his How shall then the work go forward 2. We must love and joyn together against the Enemies and defend one another in goodness not hinder but further one anothers works and not envy that any of our fellow-servants do more work then we let us do what we can and when we cannot yet be glad that our Masters work go forward 2. It serves for comfort to all that be of the Lords Houshold They shall want no good thing no direction comfort strength against temptation If we use the means and make known our wants to God he that requires us to work will not suffer us to want wherewithal yea for outward things we shall not want what is meet He that bids us provide for our Families and saith he is worse then an Infidel that doth not will not fail us in our lawful endeavors Haply he will not always give all we desire but what is meet and hereafter we shall be taken up to his other house in Heaven when we have been sufficiently purged here 3. It may be for terror to all that misuse Gods Servants or reproach and buffet them when they be at