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A89915 An exposition vpon the Epistle to the Colossians Wherein, not onely the text is methodically analysed, and the sence of the words, by the help of writers, both ancient and moderne is explayned: but also, by doctrine and vse, the intent of the holy Ghost is in euery place more fully vnfolded and vrged. ... Being, the substance of neare seuen yeeres weeke-dayes sermons, of N. Byfield, late one of the preachers for the citie of Chester. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. 1617 (1617) STC 4217; ESTC S107140 703,811 512

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owne selues publike priuate secret open inward outward in prosperitie and aduersitie in the Church or familie or abroad in mens conuersation Alas we can discerne but a glimpse of that sinne and guiltinesse that is in vs by nature and this is the increase of their misery in all their sinnes they are dead in them Dead There is a fourefold death A fourefold death temporall corporall spirituall eternall The state of man being in misery he is dead temporally a Esay 26.19 The body of man being in the graue he is dead corporally The soule of man lying in sinne is dead spiritually And both soule and body being cast into hell are dead eternally Death to sin for sinne and in sinne The Colossians were dead spiritually there is a death to sinne and a death for sinne and a death in sinne a death to sinne and so the godly die by mortification a death for sinne and so malefactors die by execution and a death in sinne and so euery naturall man kills himselfe by enliuing his sinne What spiritual death in sin is The spirituall death in sinne is an vnutterable losse of the life of God by which the sinner is senselesse and carelesse in extremitie of misery vnto his owne euerlasting ruine if the Lord preuent it not by regeneration Now that men are in this case by nature these Scriptures proue Eph. 2.1 2. Math. 8.22 Ioh. 8.25 Rom. 8.10 Luk. 15.32 Reuel 3.2 Iud. 12. 1 Tim. 5.6 Neither let any deceiue themselues about their estate for a man may be dead in sinne and yet be aliue in the flesh yea thou maiest be a wise man in the flesh b Rom. 8.7 or a prince of this world c 1 Cor. 2 9.14 yea thou maiest haue a name that thou liuest spiritually d Reuel 3.2 and yet be starke dead Now this spirituall senselesnes is called a death because it is a priuation of spirituall life from the soule as the naturall death is from the body 2. because it tends to eternall death The vse may be fourefold 1. For information No wonder wicked men can come and goe from the word of God and not be touched alas they are dead men and so is it with them in respect of the iudgements of God alas if thou couldest rowle a mountaine vpon a dead man he would not feele so is it with a man dead in sinne and further we may heere obserue that to liue yea to die quietly is no signe of a man in a happy case for if this death in sin be not cured thousands of people may die quietly because they die senselesly they feele no more of the feare of hell or iudgement or Gods anger then if they were already dead in their bodies they would feele outward extremities I know that God many times can lay terror vpon the flesh of wicked men and make their spirits drinke in of the bitter anguish arising from the feruencie of Gods burning displeasure but I say if God let them alone vsually the most would die in a wretched senselesnes and inconsideration being neither able nor willing to entertaine the thoughts of what must presently and necessarily befall them 2. This may serue for confutation and so 1. of the Papists about their freewill How can there be this free will in a dead soule we are dead in sinne and therefore of our selues mooue not vnto life till God quicken vs by his word and spirit 2. Of the carnall Protestant that beares himselfe so strongly vpon his supposed couenant with death and hell his agreement must be disanulled nay his very securitie imports his vnauoidable destruction if it be not remooued by the power of Christ 3. For instruction art thou a man that hearest this that hast liued all thy time without remorse for thy sinnes and neuer yet entertained the care of reformation of thy life be heere warned of thy miserie let it bee enough thou hast been dead in sinne doe not lie still rotting in the graues of iniquitie but rise so soone as thou hearest the trumpet of the Gospell the voice of Christ sounding in thine eares and piercing thy heart 4. Lastly here is consolation implied vnto weake Christians If thou canst feele thy miserie and struggle in any measure of true constancie against the corruption of nature and the transgressions of thy heart and life thou art not dead there is some breath of life in thee there is motion and therefore life Thus of their actuall sinnes Their miserie in respect of originall sinne is exprest in these words And in the vncircumcision of the flesh These words be diuersly interpreted some thus In the vncircumcision of the flesh that is in the flesh which is vncircumcision that is a thing hatefull vnto God Some make these words to bee the signe of their death in sinne as if hee would say your very vncircumcision that is in your flesh which are Gentiles is a token that you are strangers from the life of God Some thus And you hath hee quickned which were dead in respect of your sinnes and carnall life which ye liue in the vncircumcision that is in your estate of Gentilisme Some make these words expresse the cause of their death in sinne Thus in the vncircumcision of the flesh that is for your fleshly vices which caused that death in sinne But I thinke with those that vnderstand by the flesh originall sinne and by the vncircumcision their miserie in respect of it implied in the allusion to the circumcision literally taken Originall sinne is called flesh Why original sinne is called flesh because the flesh is the instrument by which it is propagated 2. Because it is the subiect in which it is 3. Because it is the end it driues vs to viz. to satisfie the flesh and to seeke fleshly things This originall sinne heere called flesh is a spirituall kinde of disease gall What originall sinne is leauen and poyson which daily diffuseth it selfe throughout the whole man and still infecteth it though this bee not the whole nature of the sinne for to speake distinctly in originall sinne there are three things 1. 3. Things in originall sin The guiltinesse of Adams fact deriued vnto vs by iust imputation 2. The want of that originall iustice was in vs in the creation 3. The deprauation and corrupt disposition of our natures Our misery in respect of originall sin Here the word vncircumcision imports our miserie in respect of our very corruption of nature for it imports 1. That we are hatefull to God children of wrath 2. That we haue no portion in the heauenly Canaan 3. That wee haue no fellowship in the communion of Saints 4. That wee haue no part in the promised Messias for all these were shadowed out by the want of circumcision in the time of the Law Vses The vses follow First from hence wee may enforme our selues in diuers things as first we may see why the faire works
not doubt to pronounce that this person thus prising remission of sinnes at this rate that hee would sell all to buy this Pearle did vndoubtedly beleeue not onely because it is a truth though a Paradoxe that the Desire to beleeue is Faith but also because our Sauiour Christ doth not doubt to affirme that they are blessed that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse because they shall be satisfied And to him that is a thirst Math. 5.6 Reuel 21.6 Psal 10.17 I will giue to drinke of the water of life freely And Dauid doubteth not to say The Lord heareth the desires of his poore Fiduce or Confidence in the heart is a part of Faith and shewes it selfe in this when the Soule resteth vpon Christ and the Promises of God as the only ground of all that happinesse which he must euer get vnto himselfe Perswasion or an apprehending application is the last thing in Faith and that in the beginnings of Faith is more in the power of the Spirit then in the sense and feeling of the conscience yet herein it appeares that though the Soule be tost with many temptations and feares and terrors yet more or lesse one time or other they are much refreshed with a sweet ioy arising they know not how from the very perswasion that they belong to God in and for Christ So that if wee would try our Faith we must examine what knowledge we haue gotten what Iudgement of the way of life what Desires wee haue of remission of sinnes how our hearts are setled and what it is that supports vs. There are two Degrees of Faith a weake Faith and a strong Faith The Degrees 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a weake Faith is described before for all the former parts of faith are found in the weakest Faith that is a strong Faith hath in it a certaine and full assurance of Gods fauour in remission of sinnes so as doubts and feares are stilled and ouer-come and such was the Faith of Abraham commended Rom. 4.18.19.20.21 and this faith may be attained vnto by all sorts of the seruants of God if they liue and may vse the benefit of the ordinances of God yet a grosse fault in the definition of Faith as it is made by many must be carefully shunned and that is that they make the Genus to be a full assurance which is onely proper to a strong Faith and is not vsually found in the weake Faith and yet that Faith is such as doth iustifie for the present and will saue for euer The Benefits come by faith And that we may be affected with an holy desire after this necessary grace two things are further to be considered 1 The Benefits men might haue by Faith 2 The wofull estate of those that want it The Benefits may be ordered into fiue rankes 1 What Faith deliuereth vs from 2 What it preserues vs against 3 What the weakest Faith getteth 4 What we might get if we laboured for a greater growth in Faith 5 How it fits vs for heauen For the first Faith doth deliuer vs First from the darkenesse and blindnesse wee liued in before Whosoeuer beleeueth in mee shall not abide in darkenesse What Faith deliuereth vs from John 12.46 Isay 25.8 Wee no sooner by Faith taste of the Bread of life but the vaile of ignorance which naturally couereth all flesh is torne and rent as the Prophet Isay sheweth notably Isay 25.8 Secondly it deliuers vs from those wofull euills which as so many abhominations doe defile both the Vnderstanding and Affections Faith purifieth the heart Acts 15.9 No wonder though men bee continually surcharged with euill thoughts and most vile affections and strange euills within seeing wee are so hardly gotten to set about the earnest labour after spirituall application of the merits and righteousnesse of Christ which righteousnesse neuer can be imputed by Faith but grace is infused by the Spirit of Sanctification at the same time Neither is there any more clearer testimonie of the want of iustifying Faith then the continuall preuailing of euill thoughts and affections Thirdly it deliuers vs from the Law not onely from the Ceremoniall Law and other biggerly Rudiments but also from the Morall Law in two things onely first from the Curse of it which is wholy taken away by the imputation of Christs Passion secondly from the Rigour of it so that as it is commanded in the Gospell it may not exact of Beleeuers an impossible perfection but onely an Euangelicall and accepted vprightnes wee are not now vnder the Law Rom. 6. but vnder Grace as the Apostle shewes in the Epistle to the Romanes and Galathians at large And hence it is that the same Apostle saith that the Law is not giuen vnto a righteous man 1 Tim. 1.9 but vnto the lawlesse and disobedient meaning that so long as we continue in our naturall estate so long we haue this as one part of our miseries that wee are liable to the curses and impossible exactions of the most righteous Law but from the time that we are effectually called and gathered vnto CHRIST wee are not vnder the Law in these two respects which is an admirable mercy Fourthly Faith deliuers vs from the power of the first death being by Nature dead in sinnes and trespasses Iohn 5.29 hauing no more sense of the things that belong vnto the Kingdome of Chtist Ephes 2.2 then a dead man in nature hath of the benefits of life By the power of Faith eternall life is begunne here which is called while we liue here the life of Grace and after death is stiled by the name of the life of Glory Iohn 3.16 Lastly it deliuers men from eternall destruction for Whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not perish Thus of the first sort of benefits Secondly Faith hath a power to preserue vs and that in three things First it preserues from many fearefull spirituall diseases in the soule hence commeth that Metaphoricall speech of being sound or whole Tit. 1.13 Heb. 10.39 or healthfull in the faith Hence that he saith Wee follow Faith vnto the conseruation of the Soule Heb. 10.39 Secondly it preserues vs against the vse of ill meanes for He that beleeueth maketh not hast Herein is a speciall triall of Faith Isay 28.16 and is a worthy testimonie of vprightnesse when men can so rest vpon God that they will not be entangled with those profits that either the time makes vnseasonable as the Sabbath or the meanes make sinfull as deceipt lying c. but can chearfully beleeue that the same God that now tries him with the occasions of profit in such time and manner can giue him as much profit at a lawfull time and by lawfull meanes It is most difficult for an vnsanctified minde to forbeare either time or meanes when profit and pleasure intise Lastly how miserable is our life here many times in respect of the temptations with which Sathan doth fire vs Ephes 6.16
and that wee may know by the want that it is his gift when they are bestowed and that wee may bee more carefull of the good vse of his grace● gifts and benefits when we haue them Thus of the Coherence For you Doct. We are bound to pray for others as well as our selues Doctr. In this place I consider in this point only two things First the kinds of prayers for others secondly the sorts of persons for whom wee must pray The kindes of Prayers for others For the first I obserue heere in the originall two words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the translation Prayers and Desires as I take it all the sorts of prayers for others may be referred to these two heads and these two differ not so much in the matter as in the motiues to prayer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prayers are such suits vnto God as wee are vehemently mooued to by the contemplation of God and his Attributes The difference betweene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is somewhat shadowed out by Oration and Adoration 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heere rendered Desires are all suites vnto God arising from the deepe sence of mans estate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 either in dangers wants or blessings and vnder this kinde may bee placed the three sorts of prayers in 1 Tim. 2.1 for our desires for others are either Deprecations in which wee desire God to turne away or keepe from them some great euill or Intercessions which are either complaints of wrongs or most importunate supplications vnto God for their conuersion and the pardon of their sins or lastly Thankesgiuings for Gods mercies and blessings The persons for whom we must pray Secondly to the Question for whom wee must pray It is shortly answered 1 Tim. 2.1 for all men excepting dead men or such as sinne vnto death or such concerning whom the will of God is reuealed for their perdition as the man of sinne so as also by all men wee vnderstand all sorts of men 2 Thess 2. not all the particular men of euery sort for wee may not desire saluation for all the men that God hath made vniuersally considered seeing the counsell of God is vnchangeably past concerning reprobates But that which in this Text is principall is that Ministers and People must pray one for another Ministers must pray for their People thus doe the Apostles in euery Epistle yea Samuel saith God forbid I should cease praying for you as if hee knew it to be a detestable thing for a Minister to bee so retchlesse or carelesse as either not to pray or not to continue to pray for his people The people must also pray for their Ministers and that especially for these things that God may deliuer them from the rage of the disobedient and the practises of their enemies u Rom. 15.30 that God would open their mouthes and giue them vtterance x Ephes 6.19 with a fitnesse to discouer the secrets and mysteries of Christ y Col. 4.3 and that their Gospell may runne and grow both in efficacie and credit z 2 Thes 3 1 2 yea in as much as they labour about sauing other mens soules the people should by prayers labour to further the saluation of their Ministers Wee cease not Note First hee that loues the people of God truely loues them constantly Secondly that a heart truely sanctified is much in prayer cannot giue it ouer It is a wofull thing to neglect prayer but how cursedly miserable is their case whose hearts rise against prayer and cannot abide it but persecute it in others Not ceasing what it implies Thirdly the not ceasing in prayer hath in it constancie and perseuerance in prayer and teacheth that as wee are bound to pray so are wee bound to perseuer in prayer yea if wee must not cease to pray it implies first that wee must pray in all places secondly that wee must watch to pray thirdly that wee must beleeue and hope wee shall obtaine what wee pray for fourthly wee must not appoynt God either time or meanes fiftly that wee must pray with all manner of prayers for all these fiue things are requisite * Iohn 4 21. 1 Tim. 2.8 Mat. 26.41 Col 4 2. Ephes 6.18 1 Pet 4 8. Iames 1 6 7. Heb. 10 36 c Heb 2.3 or if any of them bee wanting there will not bee constant and faithfull prayer Yea not ceasing notes that there is singular comfort in prayer else men would neuer hold out Solut. Obiect Obiect But not ceasing implyes multiloquie vaine babbling Sol. Not so a man may pray earnestly and often and yet not vse many words a Eccles 5 1. Mat. 6. Obiect Obiect But to pray without ceasing is to bee tyed to vse idle repetitions for how can men bee furnished and finde matter to pray so often and so much Solut. Sol. A Christian is furnished many wayes with needefull occasions of continuall prayer First hee is tyed to a dayly Sacrifice both morning and euening by Prayer and Prayses Secondly hee findes continually new Mercies and those require new songs of praise and prayer b Psal 40.4 Thirdly as his knowledge encreaseth by the vse of the meanes hee findes an increase of matter to driue him to prayer and make him pray better Fourthly new infirmities breaking out in himselfe and others and that dayly giues an occasion to renue his suites to God Fiftly the Creatures and his callings must bee sanctified by the Word and Prayer Sixtly varietie of crosses breaking in vpon him giues him cause to runne to God for the sanctifying or remoouing of them Let such pray seldome as thinke they owe God no Sacrifice or receiue no blessings from God or care not for knowledge or finde no infirmities in themselues or haue no crosses or neede no blessing vpon their callings and labours but let all that feare God stirre vp themselues to pray without ceasing because God ●equires it and hath made gracious promises because they finde daily necessities and may heereby exercise their faith and shew their loue to God and to others after the example of the Saints and by the motion of the Spirit of Adoption which will not be idle in them Thus of the Affirmation The Declaration followes That yee might be fulfilled with the knowledge of his will in all Wisdome and spirituall vnderstanding that yee might walke c. In this Declaration hee describeth the knowledge hee prayes for by fiue things 1 By the Obiect of it The will of God 2 By the Parts Wisdome and vnderstanding 3 By the End That yee might walke c. Vers 10. 4 By the Cause His glorious power Vers 11. 5 By the Effects Patience Long-suffering Ioyfulnesse The Obiect is described in these words fulfilled with knowledge of his Will And here is 1. the Obiect it selfe Will of God 2. the Meanes of apprehension viz.
primogeniture of Christ Hee is the first begotten First in respect of eternall generation as he is the Sonne of God Of this before Secondly as hee is borne of the virgin Mary for shee is said to bring forth her first begotten Sonne d Math. 1. Thirdly when God raised Christ out of the Graue hee is said to beget his Sonne for so the words of the second Psalme Thou art my Sonne this day haue I begotten thee are applyed to the Resurrection of CHRIST e Act. 13.33 In that Christ is said to be the first begotten of the dead three things may bee noted as implied heere concerning the members of Christ and three things concerning Christ himselfe as Head First concerning the Members these things may be gathered 1 That not onely wicked men but the true members of Christ die Heb. 9. Psal 89. 2. Sam. 14. The consideration of this that the godly must dye may serue for many Vses first Why doth vaine man dye then without wisedome f Iob. 4.21 secondly how shall wicked men escape g Job 21.32 Esay 28. their Couenant with death must needes be disanulled thirdly it should cause vs deepely to digest the vanities of this life h Eccl. 2.16.17 fourthly it should cause vs to take heede of E●es Least yee die for it is out of all question die wee must and therefore meere it were we should prouide for it without mincing or procrastinating lastly wee should incourage our selues and die like the members of Christ with all willingnesse Faith and Patience 2 The gouernment of Christ reacheth as well to the dead as to the liuing Members This the faithfull were wont of old to note when they would say a man were dead they would say he was ioyn'd to his people This should bee a great encouragement vnto godly men to die 3 From Coherence that if wee would haue Christ to bee the first begotten to vs when wee are dead wee must subiect our selues to his Ordinances that hee may be the beginning of true Grace to vs while we liue Secondly concerning the Head these three things may be noted 1 That hee was among the dead and this was good for vs for thereby hee dissolued the power the Diuell had to inflict death or the feare of it vpon his Members i Heb 2.17 Heb. 9.15 and thereby hee finished the expiation of all our sinnes thereby hee ratified Gods Couenant thereby he kils the power of sinne in vs and thereby he takes away the curse of our naturall death 2 That hee was not onely among the dead but he was begotten among the dead that is raised from death to life and this also was profitable for vs for he rose to our Iustification Rom. 4 23.24 to our viuification Rom. 6.4 to our deliuerance from wrath to come 1 Thes 1.10 3 That hee is not onely begotten but the first begotten among the dead and that in three respects First as hee was more excellently raised then any of the dead are for hee carried no corruption to the graue and hee saw no corruption in the graue and hee was but a short time vnder the power of the graue Secondly in respect of time hee was the first that rose from the dead k Acts 26.23 Thirdly in respect of efficacie it is hee by whose power all the rest rise l 1 Cor. 15.20.22 This must needes be a great comfort to vs while wee liue Iohn 5.21 11.28 against the time our bodies must go into the house of darkenesse the darkesome lodging in the graue onely let vs seeke the vertue of the Resurrection of Christ in this world and the experiment of the vigor of it first vpon our soules in plucking vs vp out of the graue of sinne to walke before God in newnesse of life m Phil. 3 9. That in all things hee might haue the preheminence These words are added for further amplification or Explanation of the former They giue vnto Christ a primacie and preheminence in all things First ouer both liuing and dead as hee is the beginning to the liuing and the first begotten to the dead Christ then hath the preheminence he is first in all things Mat. 28.18 Rom. 4.9 Phil. 2.9 Ephes 1.23 Hee is first many waies first in Time He is first in diuers respects as before all things first in Order hee hath a primacie of order hee is the first to be reckoned and admired in the Church first in the dignitie of Person hee excells in both Natures all that is in the Church or euer was first in Degree n Iohn 1.5 first in Gouernment o Mat. 20 27. Luke 19.4 Esay 9. first in Acceptation with God p Mat. 17.5 lastly hee is first Effectiuely as the cause of all the respect order and excellencie in others hee i● the Roote out of which springs all the glory in the Church The vse is first for Terrour to all those that sinne against Christs preheminence as they doe in a high degree that hauing begunne in the Spirit Vses will end in the flesh such as hauing knowne the way of righteousnesse afterwards turne from the holy course with the Dogge to the vomit and with the Swine to the wallowing in the mire q 2 Pet. 20.21 Reuel 2 4.19 Secondly the consideration of Christs primacie and preheminence should learne vs to take heede of climbing in the Church it is dangerous to desire to be chiefe it is almost the sole power of the Head of the Church r Math 20.27 Marke 9.35 10.44 3 Iohn 9.10 Lastly let it bee our care both in heart and life to yeelde Christ the preheminence which we shall doe if we labour to know nothing more then Christ crucified if wee minde the things of Christs Kingdome more then the things of this life if wee make him our chiefe refuge by Faith for all happinesse and reconciliation How we may in life yeelde Christ the preheminence if wee make him our ioy reioycing more in Christ then carnall men can doe in the World for a discontented life denies Christ the preheminence if the zeale of Gods house can eate vs vp if in all our actions wee performe the worship of God first if we stick not to confesse and professe Christ if wee honour the faithfull and contemne the vile and ioyne our selues to such as feare God though they bee despised in this world and lastly when wee can in all things rather chuse to please God then men Verse 19. For it pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell THere is great reason Christ should bee acknowledged head as in the former Verse by reason of his primacie and preheminence so in this Verse by reason of the plenitude that dwells in him No naturall head so full of senses as hee is full of Grace It is to be noted in the generall that the head should excell the members in gifts and therefore it is
thinges are to be noted 1. the persons yee 2. the time are 3. the manner set downe negatiuely without hands 4. the form of it affirmitiuely putting off the bodie of the sins of the flesh 5. the efficient cause the circumcision of Christ Ob. But it followes not we are circumcised without hands therefore need not circumcision with hands Sol. It followes to vs now in the new Testament because we haue baptisme in steed of circumcision with hands we are buried with Christ by baptisme Ob. But was not Circumsion a more liuely signe Sol. It was not which he shewes to be true both in respect of mortification buried with him and in respect of viuification raised vp together with him by baptisme which is amplified by setting downe what is required in them to whom baptisme is thus effectuall viz. the faith of the operation of God 5. Because none of these can helpe vs in miserie nor further to happinesse when we want it v. 13. The words in themselues expres a two fold estate of Christians First what they are by nature and so 1. they were dead in actuall sinnes 2. they were in the vncircumcision of the flesh in respect of originall sinne Secondly what they were in the state of grace 1. they were quickned 2. they were forgiuen all their sinnes 6. Because Christ hath cancelled the Chyrographie that was against vs which were these ceremonies v. 14. 15. concerning these two things may be noted 1. what the ceremonies were in themselues 2. how the Church was discharged of them For the first they were for honor ordinances of God for vse hand-writings for effect they were against vs. For the second Christ on the crosse cancelled them fastned them and tooke them out of the way yea he spoyled the Diuels and triumphed ouer them openly who had the power to serue execution for forfeitures v. 15. Thus of the reasons the conclusion followes from v. 16 to the end The conclusion hath three branches For first hee concludes against ceremonies v. 16. 17. Secondly against philosophie v. 18. 19. Thirdly against traditions v. 20. to the end In the conclusion against ceremonies note 1. the thinges which are named to be abrogated viz. the respect of meats and drinks 2. of times which are threefold 1. daies 2. moneths 3. Sabbaths these are the things v. 16. The reason is v. 17. because these are but shadowes of things to come and the body is Christ In the conclusion against philosophie note first the thing which in speciall hee reasons against viz. Angell-worship Secondly the reasons by which he condemnes them that brought it in 1. they did it hypocritically vnder pretence of humblenes of mindes 2. they did it ignorantly aduancing themselues in things they neuer saw 3. they did it proudly rashly puft vp in there fleshly minde 4. they did it dangerously their danger is laid downe and amplified Laid downe in these words not holding the head amplified by a digression into the praises of the mysticall body of Christ 1. for ornament furnished 2. for vnion knit together by ioynts and bands 3. for growth increasing with increase of God In the conclusion against traditions obserue first the matter condemned why are yee burthened with traditions amplified by the kinds touch not taste not handle not v. 21. Secondly the reasons 1. yee are dead with Christ v. 20. 2. Yee are dead from the rudiments of the world therefore much more from traditions 3. They are burthens 4. The matter of them is light and vaine and idle v. 21. 5. They all perish with the vsing 6. They are after the commandements and doctrines of men v. 21. Ob. But there seemeth to bee a depth in them Sol. Hee confesseth that they haue a shew of wisdome and that in three things 1. In voluntarie religion 2. In humblenesse of minde 3 In not sparing the bodie But yet he censures them two wayes 1. It is but a shew all this 2. It with-holdeth the honour due vnto the bodie neither haue they it in any estimation to satisfie the flesh v. 23. THE METAPHRASE vpon the second Chapter VERSE I FOr I would yee knew what great fighting I haue for your sakes and for them of L●odicea for as many as haue not seene my person in the flesh FOr I would ye were throughly informed of it what greate care conflict strife and fighting I haue for your sakes and for them of Laodicea and for such as I neuer knew but onely heare of to be such as embrace the Gospell which we preach and to this end I tell you of my care and fighting so to moue you to be much the more resolute in perseuering in the faith and hope of the doctrin you haue receiued Verse 2. That their hearts might bee comforted and they knit together in loue and in all riches of the full assurance of vnderstanding to know the mysterie of GOD euen the Father and of CHRIST Greate are the benifits which you and all those that belieue in your parts receiue from our paines in the Gospell for heereby both your hearts are comforted with true refreshings and besides you are hereby knit one to another and established in brotherly loue and as the benifits of the adiuncts of the Gospell should much moue you to sticke still to it if you consider how rich GOD hath made you in the infallible and full perswasion of vnderstanding which you haue felt and withall what admirable desires there are in the doctrine of the Gospell concerning GOD the Father and CHRIST Verse 3. In whom are hid all the treasures of wisedome and knowledge Vers● 4. And this I say least any should begu●le you with inticing words V●rse 5 For though I bee absent in the flesh yet am I with you in the spirit reio●cing and beholding your order and the steef●stnesse o● your faith in Christ Verse 6. As yee haue therefore receiued CHRIST IESVS the LORD so walk ye in him Or lastly if you consider the perfection of the doctrine of the Gospell either as it conteines the treasures of wisedome and knowledge or as it shewes vs CHRIST in whome are all admirable perfections of all sorts of rich knowledge Now if you aske me why I am so tedious in vrging these things I answere it is only for feare least any should by plausible and probable inticements of speech beguile you from the simplicitie that is in CHRIST And if you say I know not your estate I answere though I be absent from you in the flesh yet I am present with you in the spirit and if you thinke that this discourse implies that I dislike you know that I do truly reioyce to heare of your good order of life both publike and priuate and how stedfast your faith in CHRIST is Now if you aske me at once what is the summe of all I would haue you to doe I answere that as concerning holy life I would haue you walke on in the same manner
as yee haue receiued CHRIST hitherto And for matter of faith Verse 7. Rooted and built vp in him and stablished in the faith as ye haue been taught abounding therein with thanksgiuing Verse 8. Beware lest there bee any man that spoyle you through Philosophy and vaine deceit through the traditions of men according to the rudiments of the world and not after Christ I would haue you by all meanes to seeke to to be further rooted and built vp and stablished in the assurance of faith accordingly as you haue beene taught but by any meanes remember to abound in all thankfulnesse to GOD for the happie estate you are in And thus for what I haue to exhort you to in matters of doctrine Now I must enter vpon matter of dehortation take heede lest anie man of what gifts or profession soeuer make a prey of your soules and carrie them away as a spoile And in particular looke to it in three things first in Philosophie not simply in the doctrines of Philosophie but in such deuises and vaine fancies as vnder colour of such speculation or from the authoritie of Philosophers are brought in by any Secondly take heede of traditions of men And thirdly of the ceremonies of Moses which were things at first brought in to bee as the A. B. C. or alphabet to traine vp the people of GOD in the principles But now this and the other are not to bee regarded for many reasons wherof the first is they are not after CHRIST Besides there is such an infinite fulnesse in CHRIST Verse 9. For in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the godhead bodily Verse 10. And ye are compleat in him who is the head of all principality and power by reason of the diuine nature that dwels by an vnexpressible vnion in the humane nature that we need not seeke to any thing else but only vnto CHRIST And you your selues in CHRIST haue all compleatnesse and fufficiency by reason of your mysticall vnion with him and such is the fulnes of CHRIST that the verie Angels those excellent potent creatures are subordinate to him and acknowledge him as their head which by the waie shewes that they are not to be worshipped And to speake yet more expresly what should you do with circumcision or any part of the law ceremoniall Verse 11. In whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of CHRIST Verse 12. In that yee are buried with him through baptisme in whom yee are also raysed vp together through the faith of the operation of GOD which raised him from the dead Verse 13. And you being dead in your sinnes and the vncircumcision of the flesh hath hee quickned together with him forgiuing you all your trespasses Verse 14. Blotting out the hand-writing of ordinances that was against vs which was contrary to vs and tooke it out of the way nayling it to his crosse seeing in CHRIST yee haue receiued that which was signified by circumcision for in him you are circumcised not with the hands of men as they were vnder the law but by the finger of the spirit of GOD which stands in the mortification of that bodie of sinnes which yee were guiltie of while yee were in the flesh and this ye haue by the vertue of CHRISTS circumcision And if you say that Abraham had the circumcision without hands and yet was circumcised in the flesh I answer that we haue baptisme instead of that circumcision and therefore need it not and the rather because baptisme doth so liuely set out our spirituall buriall and resurrection with CHRIST which all they attaine vnto that haue the faith of GODS operation that is that can beleeue that which GOD by his power will do what he promiseth in baptisme grounding their faith vpon the resurrection of CHRIST from the dead And further this should moue you to disregard those things because they neither could help you when you were miserable nor conferre the benefits vpon you which you enioy without them for in your estate of nature you were dead in actuall sinnes and in respect of originall sinne you liued in the vncircumcision of the flesh and since you were quickned by true regeneration you haue obtained the forgiuenesse of all your sins and therefore what would you haue more from these things Lastly the ceremonies though they were ordinances of GOD at the first yet they were hand-writings against vs and now CHRIST hath cancelled them and fastned the obligation vpon the crosse and so taken them out of the way and therefore you should neuer more haue minde to them Verse 15. And hath spoiled the principal●ties and powers and hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed ouer them in the same crosse Verse 16. Let no man therefore condemne you in meat and drinke or in respect of an holy day or of the new moone or of the sabbath daies Verse 17. Which are but a shadow of things to come but the body is in Christ Verse 18. Let no man at his pleasure beare rule ouer you by humblenes of mind and worshipping of Angels aduancing himselfe in c. Verse 19. And holdeth not the head wherof all the body is furnished and knit together by ioynts and bands c. Verse 20. Wherefore if yee bee dead with Christ from the ordinances of the world c. Verse 21. As touch not taste not handle not Verse 22. Which all perish with the vsing and are after the commandements doctrines of men Verse 23. Which things haue indeede a shew of wisdome in voluntary religion and humblenesse of minde and in not sparing the bodie neither haue they it in any estimation to satisfie the flesh And the rather because our Sauiour hath not only cancelled them but he hath spoyled the Diuels which had power to execute the forfeitures of these bonds I say both in himselfe on the crosse and in vs daily he hath and doth spoyle them and triumph ouer them and make an open shew of them so as we are freed from the danger of their arrests Now therfore I come to the conclusion which I direct distinctly first against the ceremonies then against philosophy and lastly against traditions First I say let no man condemne you or if they doe care not for it condemne you I say for any of the ceremonies whether it be about meates or drinkes or about the ceremoniall dayes or moneths or sabbaths that were required in that law For these and all the rest were but shadowes of things to come and now in CHRIST we haue the substance and body of them The like I say against philosophie and in speciall against Angell worship let no man beare rule ouer your consciences for they that bring in this doctrine do it hypocritically vpon pretence that it tends to make men humble and they do it very ignorantly for they neuer saw the kingdome
acknowledge God and his truth and glory against reason profit or pleasure to make a man walke with God setting the Lord alwaies before him to bring the will of man to a holy subiection to Gods will in crosses temptations wants c but especially to create in man that sinceritie of worshipping God in spirit and truth without hypocrisie And as for righteousnesse in that part of it that concernes either mens owne soules or the soules of others how is all the vnregenerate mankinde dead It is the worke of a godly man only to serue the brethren by loue onely the members of Christ can in their calling denie profit and pleasure and make the particular calling serue the generall but especially in the combat against concupiscence onely the godly doe make conscience of it And howsoeuer in the matter of holy duties there are strange imperfections in the very godly yet their desire prayer purpose and indeuour is to approue themselues to God herein and they do attaine to it in some comfortable beginnings and they go on with a holy increase both of strength and desire Whereas it is euident by diuers Scriptures that wicked men are dead men in the former respects as would appeare if we should examine particularly for they seeke not God * Psal 14.1 They respect not the word of God aright x Ier. 6.10 nor can they loue the brethren y Joh. 15.19 Though they be smitten yet they will not sorrow after God z Ier. 5.2 And for the most part they are lukewarme without true zeale a Reuel 3. Their mindes are couered with a vaile b Esay 25.8 They are without hope c Ephes 2.12 Neither haue all these men faith d 2 Thess 3.2 And for the want of holy duties it vsually seems euill vnto them to serue the Lord. They are strangers from the life of God e Ephes 4.17 They call not vpon the name of God f Psal 14.4 with a pure heart neither take they heede of Gods sabbaths But it were too long to runne to particulars in matters of dutie seeing the scripture euery where paints out the ill liues of all wicked men In whom Doctr. The vertue by which Christians are raised is from Christ Quest But what is therein Christ which distinctly causeth this resurrection in the Christian or plucketh vp his heart to the care of holy graces or duties Answ 1. The vertue of Christ 2. The spirit of Christ 3. The example of Christ 4. The intercession of Christ 5. The louing inuitations and allurements of Christ And 6. The resurrection of Christ And lastly the second comming of Christ is like a loadstone to plucke vp the desires and affections of Christians vnto the studie of heauenly things Thus of the doctrine of the Christians resurrection Vse For terror 1. Hence may presumptuous secure wilfull sinners gather secret terror and anguish where is thy spirituall buriall in this life where is the first resurrection It is most certaine if this worke this strange worke be not wrought in thee thou art in the power of the second death without God without Christ without hope And here thou maiest see the vanitie of all thy shifts for dost thou say thou seest no such wretchednesse in thy sinnefull course why this doctrine tels thou art dead whiles thou liuest and how canst thou discerne thine owne wretchednesse dost thou thinke that this will serue thy turne that thou intendest to mend hereafter consider what is here implied the worke of true amendment is a true but spirituall resurrection T is then like that resurrection that shall be of our bodies and thou knowest when God shall raise our bodies at the last day when the trump shall blow it will be a silly pretence to say Oh let me alone now I will rise hereafter So is it with thee the trumpet of grace now bloweth Christ is now comming in the spirit the dead in sinne must now be raised Christs voice still reacheth vnto thee now if thou confirme thy selfe in that spirituall graue of sinne dost thou thinke thou hast reason to beleeue that Christ will tarry thy leisure and to put off till ●hou appoint the time For comfort to afflicted consciences 2. Here is singular comfort for such of Gods children as are afflicted in spirit especially about the greatnesse of the power of sinne and the difficulties of well-doing they should here consider not onely that it is Christs worke to make them holy but that he is pleased to resemble it to the resurrection of the bodie and can it be a harder thing to put downe thy sinne or to quicken thee in all well-doing then to raise thy body out of the dust of the earth Neither ought their terrors to amaze them for it is Christs manner to bring vs downe to the graue that he may raise vs vp the feare of hell now afflicteth thee that thou maist not be hurt hereafter Besides sinne doth so cleaue to vs that it will almost kill vs before we kill it Obiect But I doe not see either the graces or duties mentioned to be wrought in this resurrection Answ 1. There may be grace though thou see it not 2. If one sauing grace be in a mans heart it is a signe the rest be there though not so easily discerned 3. The spirituall age of a Christian must be distinguished thou must not think that the graces of Gods spirit or the power of holy duties will appeare so freshly or so strongly in thee whiles thou art but an infant in grace as they will doe when thou commest to be of riper yeares Lastly thy indeuour in Christ and desire is accepted and taken for the deede what graces thou vnfeinedly desirest and constantly vsest the meanes to attaine thou hast so the sinne thou striuest against thou hast not Thus of these effects as they are in themselues now as they are in their signe which is here called baptisme By baptisme Baptisme is a holy memoriall of Christ baptised in the seas of Gods wrath for vs. It is a badge of distinction from vnbeleeuers The ends of baptisme It is a certaine initiating rite by which we enter into the visible Church It is a seale of the righteousnes of faith It is a signe to teach vs by representation both our deliuerance and sanctification Quest But what hath baptisme to doe here with our mortification Three vvaies baptisme respecteth mortification and viuification and viuification or spirituall buriall and resurrection Answ Baptisme stands in a threefold relation or respect vnto them 1. In signification baptisme doth represent them vnto vs setting out our dying to sinne and rising to newnesse of life 2. By seale for baptisme is a seale of Gods couenant assuring vs that in Christ we shall be buried to our sinnes and raised vp with him 3. It is a band it ties vs to the desires and indeuours after the beginning and finishing of these
Lord vseth his power 1. In making his seruants able to walke in his waies both by giuing them power and strength k Eze 36.28 Esay 26.12 and by relieuing and reuiuing their strength daily and renewing it l Esay 40.29 vlt. c. Esay 57.15 2. In keeping them from euill m 2 Tim. 4.18 3. In establishing them that they may perseuere and hold out n Phil. 1.6 Iude 24. 1 Pet. 1.5 1 Sam. 2 9. Lastly Gods operation is wonderfull in the vse of his ordinances and this is that is meant in this place In respect of this the Psalmist saith God is greatly to be reuerenced in the assembly by all them that are round about him O Lord God of hostes who is a strong God like vnto thee o Psal 89.7 8. Thus the Lord is mighty through the ministerie of his seruants p Galat. 2.8 Col. 1. vlt. Thus the Lord performeth the counsell of his messengers q Esay 44.26 his word returneth not to him in vaine r Esay 55.11 yea his ordinances are his power vnto saluation Å¿ Rom. 1.16 1 Cor. 1.18 they are all mighty through God t 2 Cor. 10.4 Thus it is in particular in the sacraments though for their outward shew they doe not promise much yet by the maruellous operation of God they are auaileable in effect for all that is promised in them onely if we could get this faith in this operation of God here mentioned The vse of all is First for information Vses we may here take notice of the difference betweene hypocrites and the godly in matter of godlinesse they can know nothing but the forme of it the other haue experience of the singular power of God in all the passages of holy life both in the vse of the meanes and in his preseruation Secondly for instruction we should obserue and seeke out the working of the Lord u Psal 111.2 and daily ascribe power vnto God and pray for the experience of it and that he would establish that which he hath wrought in vs * Psal 68.28.33.45 Againe it may teach vs not to despise the weake Christian for the Lord is able through his operation to make him stand And it should incourage vs all to the works of righteousnes x Heb. 11.35 seeing Gods operation is so ready to be found and for hereafter in the vse of all the meanes our faith should be in the power of God y 1 Cor. 2.5 Thus of the operation of God Through the resurrection of Iesus Christ Many are the benefits which we reape from the resurrection of Iesus Christ As first the resurrection of our bodies z 1 Cor. 15.16.20 Secondly the accomplishment of the promises made vnto the Fathers a Act. 13.33 Thirdly iustification and forgiuenesse of sinnes b Rom. 4. vlt. Fourthly a secret vertue vnto the ordinances of God c 1 Pet. 3.21 Fifthly regeneration Sixtly liuely hope of an immortall inheritance d 1 Cor. 15.14 1 Pet. 1.34 Seuenthly the power of viuification and raising of vs vp to new obedience And this last is acknowledged in this place VERS 13. And you being dead in your sinnes and the vncircumcision of the flesh hath he quickned together with him forgiuing you all your trespasses THe sixt reason of the dehortation is conteined in this verse and it stands thus That which cannot helpe vs when we are in miserie nor further vs to happines when we want it is not to be followed nor rested vpon but such things are philosophy traditions and ceremonies they cannot heale the corruption of our natures nor raise vs out of the graues of sinne nor any way procure vs the pardon of our transgressions or thus If in Christ we be deliuered from the power of our sinnes by his quickning grace and from the guilt of them by the free pardon which is to be had by his meanes then we need not goe any whither else neither to philosophie nor traditions c. but so it is and so the very Colossians found it in their case as the words of the text expresse Ergo. The words in themselues expresse the twofold estate of Christians in this world what they are by nature in their vnregenerate estate and what they are by grace in the state of grace In the state of corruption two things are true of them and are true of all men 1. They were dead in actuall sinnes 2. They were then in the vncircumcision of the flesh and likewise dead in it In their estate of grace he puts them in minde of two benefits 1. Regeneration 2. Remission of sinnes Thus of the coherence and order of the words Diuers things may be noted in the generall 1. We may from hence be informed of the fruitlesnes of philosophie traditions or ceremonies of Moses they cannot make a miserable man happy they cannot infuse the least sparke of spirituall life into any 2. We see the Apostle thinks it meet to put men often in minde of their miserie by nature and great reason for it exalts the praise of the riches of Gods grace in Christ And it may serue to humble men for their falls after calling and to keep them still suspitious and watchfull ouer a nature that hath been so prone to sinne and securitie in sinning it may serue to eat down the pronenesse of our nature to vaine boasting confidence in the flesh and it should much excite men to the loue and care of godlinesse and pietie with all life and power seeing they haue been so long slaues to sinne And lastly the Apostle rips vp this matter of purpose to withdraw their mindes from traditions and philosophicall dreames Dead in sinnes They were dead in sinnes both if you respected their publike estate or each particular person If you looke vpon publike states before they are framed and reformed by the word what are they but heaps of men dead in the graues of sinne and senselesse in their sinfull courses and thus it is with euery particular person the words import that he is guilty of many sinnes The svvarmes of sinnes in vnregenerate men and he is dead in them also Naturally euery man is guilty of secret atheisticall conceits of vnbeleefe of ignorance of hardnes of heart of swarms of euill thoughts and affections of hurtfull passions and lusts besides his defects of the knowledge of God and that warmth of the holy affections of loue feare trust and ioy in God Who can sufficiently rip open the vnthankfulnes lukewarmenes hypocrisie inconstancie and presumptuous profanenesse that is in our hearts by nature in matters of Gods seruice how do men daily offend either by not calling vpon the name of God or by taking it vp in vaine who can number the othes lyes reproches curses flatteries and filthy communication hath and did daily infect the mouths of men Oh the world of sinnes we are actually guilty of against God or men or our
Christian doctrine The Coherence now followeth Christian life The Apostle hath before discoursed of matters of faith now hee intends to entreat of matters of life The diuision of the Chapter and to prescribe rules of conuersation And these rules belong either to our generall calling as wee are Christians or to our patticular callings as wee are people of such or such condition or state of life The generall rules are set downe from the first verse of this Chapter to the eighteenth and the particular rules begin at the eighteenth verse and continue to the second verse of the next Chapter The rules of the first kinde may be referred to three heads for either they concerne first the meditation of heauenly things or secondly The subdiuisions the mortification of vice or thirdly the renouation of life The meditation of heauenly things ir vrged from v. 1. to the fift the mortification of vice is vrged from v. 5. to the tenth Renouation of life is generally layd down v. 10.11 and more specially opened v. 12. to the eighteenth The exhortation to the care and study of heauenly things is thus digested First it is expounded v. 1. Secondly it is illustrated v. 2. Thirdly it is confirmed by motiues and reason v. 3.4 And thus for the order of the whole Chapter and the generall frame of this first part Before I open the words more particularly there are diuerse things may be noted from the coherence and dependance of these words 4 Doctrine from coherence vvith former chapters with the Chapter before and the matter following in this Chapter From the coherence with the former Chapter I obserue these things First that there can bee no holinesse of life without faith and therefore the Apostle first instructeth them in matters of faith It is a true rule whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne and may be extended further then things indifferent while we are out of Gods fauour a Rom. 14.23 and know not our reconciliation and iustification in Christ our best actions are but faire sinnes For without faith it is vnpossible to please God b Heb. 11.6 Secondly that the terrestriall blessednesse of man is in respect of sinne two wayes principally assaulted First with errors in opinion Secondly with corruptions in manners And against both wee should learne from the Apostle in the latter part of the former Chapter and the first part of this to bee armed and furnished with holy directions and meditations Thirdly that these men that are so superstitiously earnest and so zealously forward for ceremonies and the traditions and obseruations of men whatsoeuer they protest or pretend or seeme to be are indeed voyd of true deuotion and feruent affection to heauenly thingsc. Doct. 1 Fourthly that hee that is by faith made a new creature must resolue to be at Gods appoyntment for his whole carriage in his generall and particular calling d Ephes 2.10 Doctrines frō the coherence in this Chapter Thus of the coherence with the former Chapters From the order of doctrine in this Chapter two things may be noted First that before a man can be good in his particular calling hee must first be good in his generall thou mayst bee painefull and diligent but thou canst not be euery way a faithfull and sound hearted husband wife seruant childe c. till thou bee a good man or good woman in respect of grace and godlinesse And therefore wee should first seeke the righteousnesse of Gods Kingdome and it may serue for direction vnto such as chuse wiues or seruants or the like if they bee not faithfull to God how canst thou bee assured they will prooue faithfull to thee moreouer wouldst thou haue thy seruants or children to bee amended then bring them to the powerfull preaching of the word and call vpon them to get into the fellowship of the godly that they may learne to bee good abroad in matters of religion and then thou mayst hope to finde them by proofe and daily experience trusty and faithfull in thy Doct. 2 businesse Finally this reproues both the sinfulnesse and folly of many carnall parents and masters they neuer care so their seruants doe their worke though they altogether neglect Gods worke And many times they restraine their seruants and children and will not let them heare sermons or come into godly companie as if that were the way to make them idle and carelesse whereas we see the cleane contrary to be true Secondly that men are neuer likely to hold out and prooue sound in the reformation and new obedience of their liues till they fall in loue with heauenly things and grow in some measure weary of the world and the things thereof 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thus of the generall obseruations from the twofold coherence Now followeth the particular opening of the words In the proposition of the exhortation to the studie of heauenly things layed downe in this verse two things are to bee considered first what or the dutie required viz. seeke those things which are aboue secondly why or the reasons to enforce the dutie and they are foure First ye are risen with Christ in the first resurrection Secondly these things are aboue and not attained without seeking or studie Thirdly Christ is aboue in his bodily presence Fourthly Christ sits at the right hand of God exalted in the glory of his father each of these strongly conclude the exhortation as will further appeare in the particular handling of them If yee be risen with Christ A threefold resurrection There may bee conceiued to bee a threefold resurrection of a Christian The first is sacramentall And thus we rise againe in baptisme The second is corporall c R●uel 2.9 What the first resurrection is and so wee shall rise againe in the day of Iesus Christ in our bodies out of the dust of the earth The third is spirituall and so wee must rise in this life in soule from the death of sinne or else we shall neuer bee deliuered from the second death of this spirituall resurrection called elsewhere the first resurrection he heere entreats And it is a worke of the spirit of grace deliuering vs from the power of sinne by which wee are quickned to the heauenly desires and endeauours of holy life by the vertue of the resurrection of Iesus Christ applyed vnto vs by faith in the effectuall vse of Gods ordinances It is a worke by which wee grow conformable to Christ being risen againe f Rom. 6.4.5 by which also wee taste of the powers of the life to come and are borne againe to a liuely hope of an eternall and incorruptible inheritance g 1 Pet. 1.3.4 the earnest of which wee haue receiued and shall shortly receiue the whole possession purchased h Eph. 1.14 though for a time we be absent from the Lord. This first resurrection carieth with it a similitude or resemblance of Christ rising againe so as euery Christian
5. and the reasons v. 6.7 Diuision of the verse In the fifth verse there are 2. things First the proposition of mortification in these words mortifie therefore your members that are on earth Secondly a catalogue of vices to be mortified or the enumeration of certaine speciall sinnes a Christian should be carefull to keepe himselfe from viz. fornication vncleanesse c. The necessity of mortification The generall consideration of the whole exhortation to mortification should imprint this deeply in our hearts that vnlesse we doe repent of those sinnes haue been in our natures and liues and be carefull to flee from the corruptions that are in the world we shall neuer haue comfort that we are accepted with God We should bring to the particular opening of all the verses a mind resolued of the generall And to quicken vs a little the more to the respect of this doctrine and to enforce the care of parting with our sins I will briefly touch by the way some few reasons why we should bee willing to entertaine all counsell that might shew vs any course to get rid of sin First our vices are the fruits of our corrupted nature They arise not from any noble or diuine instinct but are the effects of base flesh in vs. And we should carry the thoughts of it in our minds Gal. 5.19 when wee are inclined or tempted to vice wee should say within our selues this euill proceedes not from any thing that might declare greatnesse or true spirit in a man what is passion or lust or couetousnesse but the base worke of the filthy degenerated flesh Secondly our vices are the onely things that defile vs and make vs loathsome before God and men T is not meane clothes nor a deformed body or a poore house or homely fare or any such thing that makes a man truely contemptible no no it is only sin can defile ſ Mat. 15.19 and bring that which is true contempt Thirdly the bond and forfeiture of the law or couenant of workes lieth vpon the backe of euery man that liues in sinne without repentance For the law is giuen to the lawlesse and disobedient as the Apostle shewes to vngodly and sinners to whoremongers and liers to all that liue in any sinne contrary to wholesome doctrine t 1 Tim. 1.9.10 Fourthly are not strange punishments to the workers of iniquitie is not destruction to the wicked u Ioh. 31.2.3 what portion can they haue of God from aboue and what inheritance from the almighty from an high the hearts of holy men that haue considered the fearefull terrors of God denounced in scripture against the vices of men haue euen broke within them and their bones haue shaken for the presence of the Lord and for his holy word x Ier. 23.9 Fiftly Christ will be a swift witnesse y Mal. 3.7 against all fearelesse and carelesse men that being guilty of these vices or the like z 1 Cor. 6.9 Eph. 5.6 make not speed to breake them off by repentance Lastly know yee not that the vnrighteous shall not enter into the kingdome of heauen be not deceiued for these things the wrath of God commeth vpon the children of disobedience Now I come to the words particularly Therefore This word caries this exhortation to something before If it be referred to our rising with Christ v. 1. then it notes that we can neuer haue our part in Christs resurrection till we feele the vertue of his death killing sinne in vs. If it be referred to the meditation of heauenly things then it notes that we can neuer set our affections on things that are aboue till we haue mortified our members that are on earth The corruption of our natures and liues are the cause of such disability to contemplate of or affect heauenly things And as any are more sinfull they are more vnable thereunto If the word be referred to the appearance of Christ in the former verse then it imports that mortification is of great necessity vnto our preparation to the last iudgement and will be of great request in the day of Christ Mortifie To mortifie is to kill or to apply that which will make deade The Lord workes in matters of grace God vvorkes by contraries in the iudgement of flesh and bloud by contraries Men must be poore if they would haue a kingdom a Mat. 5.3.4 men must sorrow if they would be comforted Men must serue if they would be free b Ioh. 8. And here men must die if they would liue Gods thoughts are not as mans but his waies are higher then mans waies as the heauens are higher then the earth c Esay 55.10 Which may teach vs as to liue by faith so not to trust the iudgement the world or the flesh in the things of God But the manifest doctrine from this word is this that true repentance hath in it the mortification of sinne And so it implies diuers things First that we must not let sinne alone till it die it selfe Note but we must kill sinne while it might yet liue It is no repentance to leaue sinne when it leaueth vs or to giue it ouer when we can commit it no longer Secondly that true repentance makes a great alteration in a man Thirdly that it hath in it paine and sorrow men vse not to die ordinarily without much paine and sure it is sinne hath a strong heart it is not soone killed it is one thing to sleep another thing to die Note many men with lesse a doe get sinne asleepe that it doth not so stirre in them but alas there must be more ado to get it dead by true mortification Fourthly true repentance extinguisheth the power of sinne and the vigour of it It makes it like a dead corps that neither it stirs it selfe nor will be stirred by occasions perswa●ions commandements or stroaks It is a wonderfull testimony of sound mortification when we haue gotten our old corruption to this passe and constancy in prayer and hearing and daily confession and sorrow for sin will bring it to be thus with vs especially if we striue with God and be earnest with spirituall importunity watching the way of our owne hearts to wound sinne so soone as we see it begin to stirre Yet I would not bee mistaken as if I meant that a Christian could attaine such a victory ouer sinne that it should not be in him at all nor that hee should neuer be stirred with the temptations or enticements or occasions of euill But my meaning is that in some measure and in the most sinnes a Christian doth finde it so and in euery sinne his desire and endeuour is daily to haue it so And his desire is not without some happy successe so as sinne dyeth or lyeth a dying euerie day But heere a question may arise Quest Did not the Apostle grant they were dead before and if they were dead to the world they
Sunne how fearefull then is the case of many of vs Rom. 11.20 that can haue no other standing then by Faith Fiftly Nothing is pure to the vnbeleeuing Sixtly If we beleeue not we cannot be established Titus 1.15 Seuenthly if men refuse to beleeue when they haue the meanes of Faith their sentence is already gone out He that beleeueth not is condemned already Isay 7 9. Eightly It is a matter of ease and profit and pleasure to liue in sinne John 3.18 especially some sinnes but what is it to die in them Except that yee beleeue that I am hee yee shall die in your sinnes Iohn 8 24. Ninthly consider the contrary to the benefits before if we get not faith we abide in darkenesse we are vnder the rigour and curse of the Law subiect to the dominion of heart pollutions dead in sinne full of spirituall diseases hasting to euill meanes pierced through with fierce temptations wicked in Gods account not iustified neither the Seede of Abraham nor of GOD without Christ without hope of immortall blisse without peace with God comfort in afflictions without Grace without communion with God The Scriptures while we are in this estate are but as a dead Letter wee are easily ouercome of the World vnconstant in friendship without the Couenant of Promise entangled with euery pleasure and baite and as Bondslaues abiding in the guilt and power of sinnes past Lastly how fearefull are those threatnings Marke 16.16 Reuel 21.8 Heb. 3.12 There remaine yet foure things to be considered The incouragements to beleeue 1 The Incouragements to beleeue 2 The Lets of Faith 3 How Faith may be knowne 4 How farre short the Faith of the common Protestant is For the first we haue many incouragements to beleeue First because wee haue a Sauiour in respect of merit both in suffering and dying able to deliuer vs his Redemption being both precious and plentifull Secondly hee is ready to make Intercession for vs at the right hand of God when we set our selues in any measure to seeke Gods fauour Thirdly wee haue certaine and sure ordinances vnto which if wee seeke we may finde Fourthly what greater ioy to Angells or Saints then the comming home of the lost Sheepe none greater in the house of the Father then the Prodigall Sonne returned Fiftly there is no difficulty so great either in respect of sinne or the meanes c. but it hath beene ouercome by euery one of the Saints to shew that we may be cured and get Faith Sixtly Esay 55.1 Iohn 3.16 God maketh a generall Proclamation without exception of any in particular that will beleeue but he may be saued Seauenthly Christ himselfe most graciously inuites men Obiect Oh but he doth not call mee Answ He cals all Mat 11.28.29.30 Reuel 3.18 Iohn 7.37 Obiect Solut. Obiect Solut. Obiect therefore he excepteth not thee but least men should encourage themselues in sinfulnes he addeth a limitation All that are weary and heauy laden If we can once finde that sinne is the greatest burthen that euer our soules bare and that once wee could come to be weary of them we might haue comfort in Christ Obiect Oh but if I should take that course I should lead a dumpish and Melancholy life Ans It is a false imputation cast vpon Religion and Christ for the promise is I will ease you Obiect Oh but to exercise such a communion with God and Christ requires so many graces that I can neuer get them Solut. Ans Learne of mee that I am lowly and meeke as if he should say Get this one grace which I my selfe haue laboured in and thou maist continue in the case and comfort once had from Christ without interruption If men still thinke this improbable he wils them to put it to triall and they should certainely finde rest to their Soules Obiect 3. Solut. Obiect Oh but to be thus yoaked is a most irkesome and impossible seruitude Ans This he reiects as most false and saith My yoake is easie and my burthen light both in respect of the power of the meanes and the secret comforts of God able to support the Soule Eightly we are commanded to beleeue and therefore it is a heauy sinne to disobey 1 Iohn 3.23 Ninthly God doth beseech men to be reconciled Wonder at this admirable Clemencie in our God 2. Cor. 5.20 Nay then perish and that iustly if so great and infinite goodnesse cannot perswade These things should the rather affect if we consider who it is that proclaimeth inuiteth commandeth beseecheth namely GOD who is able to doe it and speakes out of his Nature If a couetous man should offer vs any great kindnesse wee might doubt of performance because it is contrarie to his nature but it is not so with our God his name is gracious and his nature is to be faithfull in performance where he hath beene true in offer or promising Thus much of incouragements The lets of Faith Le ts in the Minister Rom. 10. The hinderances of Faith follow to be considered of The lets of Faith are sometimes in the Minister sometimes in the People Ministers are guilty of the want of Faith in their Hearers First when they teach not at all because Faith cannot be had without hearing Secondly if wee teach not Faith and that plainely if they intend not the chiefest part of their labours to informe men in the doctrine of Faith vnder which is contained the whole doctrine of the Sinners conuersion with his God though they informe manners both for Pietie and Righteousnesse and busie themselues in other contemplatiue Diuinitie yet haue they not answered their Calling but are wofull hinderances of Faith in the hearers Le ts in the People Secondly in the People Faith is letted three wayes 1 By errors in their Iudgements 2 By corrupt affections in the Heart 3 By certaine things that befall their Conuersation There are fiue especiall Errors with any of which whosoeuer is infected Faith is letted First when men thinke they are bound to follow their Callings and to mind their worldly imployments and therfore cannot spend the time about thinking of Sermons Luke 14.16 c. Our Sauiour Luke 14.16 in the Parable showes that though men giue Heauen faire words yet they take not a course to get it but what lets them Is it Whoredome Drunkennes Idolatry Murther breach of Sabbath c. No such matter but onely the abuse of lawfull profit and pleasures What more lawfull then a Farme what more honourable of all pleasures then Marriage onely obserue that the voluptuous person saith flatly He cannot come and the worldly man I pray you haue me excused Obiect Obiect Oh but I confesse it were a great fault to leaue minding heauenly things to get superfluity and more then needes as Farme vpon Farme But I want necessaries if I had but sufficient my minde should not bee so taken vp Solut. c. Ans
idlenesse yet seeing our hope is not in the world therefore Gods children doe well first and chiefely to seeke the kingdome of God and the righteousnesse thereof and so to minde an earthly calling as it hinder not an heauenly and prouide meanes for a temporall life as not to hinder the hope of an eternall life Thirdly this Doctrine may much settle and comfort Gods Children against the scornes and hates of the World and all sorts of carnall people Vse 3 the World will loue his owne Obiect Obiect Oh but why should they hate vs Ans Because you are not of the world and Christ hath chosen you out of the world therefore the world hateth you Solut. And therefore both prouide for it and beare it when you finde it John 15.19 Obiect Obiect But wee will not be so rash and indiscreete to prouoke men to hate and reproach Sol. Vers 20. Solution They haue persecuted Christ who was the fountaine of all wisedome and therefore it is a vaine perswasion for any childe of God to thinke by any discretion wholy to still the clamours and hates of wicked men And those men are grossely deceiued and preiudiced that thinke the true cause of the troubles of Gods children is their owne indiscretion Obiect Obiect It is strange they should hate vs so wee neuer did them wrong Sol. Vers 21. Solut. All these things will they doe vnto you for my names sake it is not your euill doing but your holy profession of the Name of Christ which is named vpon you that they hate Obiect Quest But how comes it they should dare to be so presumptuous and so palpably malicious Solution Ans It is because they haue not knowne my Father ver 21. their ignorance of the Maiestie and Iustice of God is the cause of it Obiect Obiect If it be of ignorance it may be easily pardoned them Sol. Ver. 22. If I had not come and spoken vnto them Solut. they should haue had no sinne but now there is no cloake for their sinne that is if Christ by the preaching of the Word had not discouered their sinnes and set before them the way of godlinesse then it had beene no such grieuous and monstrous sinne but in as much as many men doe lie in wilfull ignorance and will not be informed of the vilenesse of their course therefore before God of all sinners they are without colour or excuse Obiect Obiect But may they not haue good hearts to God though they do thus intemperately and vniustly maligne and abuse the Preachers and Children of God Solut. Sol. Vers 23. He that hateth Christ in his Ministers and members hateth the Father also and cannot haue a good heart to God Obiect Obiect But it may be that Christ and Christians are hated the more securely by wicked worldlings because they see nothing but their basenesse and humiliation Solut. Sol. Vers 24. If I had not done workes among them which none other did c. By which words our Sauiour shewes that no workes of God for by or amongst Gods Seruants can be so great testimonies of the vndoubted certaintie of the goodnesse and holinesse of their cause but wicked men will still against all right hate them And therefore wee should so informe our selues by this and other Scriptures vers 25. as to set downe our rest that in the world we must haue troubles and in Christ and heauen peace and therefore lay vp hope in our hearts as God hath locked vp our treasures in Heauen Thus of Hope Thus also of the Grace for which he giues thankes Whereof yee haue heard before by the Word of truth which is the Gospell Vers 6. Which is come vnto you euen as it is vnto all the world and is fruitfull as i● is also among you from the day that yee heard and truly knew the grace of God IN these words with those that follow to the ninth Verse is contained the second part of the Thankesgiuing viz. his praise to God for their meanes of Grace The meanes is either Principall Vers 5.6 Or Instrumentall Vers 7.8 The principall meanes is the Word and this is described by six things First by the ordinance in which it was most effectuall viz. Hearing Secondly by the property which was most eminent in the working of it viz. Truth Thirdly by the kinde of Word viz. the Gospell Fourthly by the prouidence of God in planting it amongst them is come vnto you Fiftly by the subiect persons vpon whom it wrought You the Colossians and the whole world Sixtly by the efficacie It is fruitfull from the day Thus for the order of the words From the generall I obserue out of all the words two things First that Nature directs nor to the apprehension either of Grace or Glory Doctr. 1 The naturall man cannot perceiue the things of God 1 Cor 2.4 these Colossians had neuer knowne the face of God nor gained the grace of Christ had not God sent them the meanes Briefely this may informe vs of the lamentable condition of such as liue in their naturall estate onely pleased with the desire or possession of the riches or gifts of Nature and withall shewes vs the Fountaine of the want of Sense or care of Grace and holinesse In the most Sense comes not from Nature but from the Word Who is a naturall man and he is a Naturall man that is still lapped and couered with the vaile of Ignorance whose wisedome is crosse to Gods Wisedome that lyeth in grosse sinnes like a dead man without sense that serues some particular gainefull or pleasing sinne Esa 25 8. Rom. 8.6 Ephes 2 1. Rom 6. without vsing aright any ordinance of God against it and is without the spirit of Adoption his heart neuer broken for sinne and without desire of righteousnesse Secondly it is a worthy blessing of God to any people to haue the Word Doctr. 2 of God amongst them This is that men should be exceeding thankefull for to God Psal 147 19.20 Esa 2.3 And by the contrary the want of the Word is a terrible famine Vse 1. Vses For reproofe both of mens prophanenesse in neglecting and contemning of the Word as also of our great vnthankefulnesse for such a mercie 2. For comfort to Gods children that enioy the Word and esteeme it The Word should satisfie vs whatsoeuer else wee want both because it doth abundantly make amends for all other wants and besides it fits vs with strength patience and comfort to make vse of other wants 3. For instruction not onely to such people as want the Word to seeke for it and to plant themselues where they may haue it but also to such Landlords and great men and rulers of the people as would bee thought louers of their Countrey to vse all meanes to see the Countrey and the Parishes vnder their power prouided of this holy treasure Thus of the generall
their heads but shooes also for their feete against the filth of the times and thorny cares of the world and all the difficulties of a daily diligence in their standings k Ephes 6.15 Thus of the third part of the description The fourth followeth The manner of prouidence in planting it amongst them in these words God sends the Word before we seeke it And is come vnto you Where wee may obserue that if the meanes of happinesse finde vs not out to worke vpon vs wee would neuer looke after it if God were not more carefull to send it then we to seeke it it would neuer be had Wee see this by common experience that whole multitudes of people liue without any sense of the want of the Word and did not God by some great prouidence send it them and perswade them to the vse of it it would neuer be had and this comes to passe because men are dead in sinne and sicke of a Lethargie in the very vse of the light of Nature in matters of godlinesse and besides there is an incredible inclination in our Natures to seeke for contentment in things below and to bee pleased with any condition rather then soundly to digest a sense of the necessitie of vsing the meanes for happinesse in better things And lastly this neglect of seeking the Word comes from errours about mens estate while they thinke that they may be in Gods fauour and like enough to be saued without any such adoe Thus of the fourth part The fift thing in the description is the subiect persons to whom the Gospell came viz. the Colossians and all the World Vnto you as it is euen vnto all the World Hence wee may note First the Truth of God in his promises hee promised flourishing Churches of the Gentiles and loe it is effected the Word is gone out into all the World Secondly That the true triall of all Doctrine is by enquiring whether it bee agreeable to that Doctrine wherein the world was ouercome to GOD. Though an Angell from Heauen should preach otherwise A triall of Doctrine yet his Doctrine were to bee detested as accursed l Gal. 1.8 And therefore wee may iustly complaine of the Papists and all popish men that chaine men downe to a necessitie of looking vpon the hundreds of yeeres neere vnto vs and will not beare it that men should seeke ground for their Conscience by ouer-looking all the hundreds of yeeres since Christ and minding onely conformitie to the Doctrine that first founded the Churches of the Gentiles all Doctrines since then though in the purest times are to bee receiued no further then they agree with the Doctrine of Christ and his Apostles Thirdly that men are bound to seeke the word wheresoeuer it may bee heard for if this had not beene so Men must seeke the word whensoeuer it may be had how could all the world receiue the light of the Gospell and further wee may see that the want of Teachers was no warrant to commit the Churches to the care of such as could not teach a necessity lieth in the people to seeke the word where it may be had And therfore those Church-gouernours sinne greeuously that in this light create so many insufficient men and set them ouer the flocks of CHRIST For if want of able men had beene a reason the Apostles should haue seene into this necessity to ease the labour and care of the Churches but it is a more greeuous sinne to admit ordaine and place them and yet see many worthy and able men wholly want places Fourthly All the world cannot signifie euery particular man in the world wee might heere note the vanity of their argument that would proue vniuersall grace because Christ died for all men for in this place here is not onely the world but all the world and yet here cannot in any reasonable sence be meant all the singular men and women in the world for there were many thousands of particular persons to whom the Gospell came not and therefore by all the world as heere so in that question may bee vnderstood all the Elect world or if the world vniuersally then it is true in respect of offer or not excepting out of any of any Nation or by all the world is ment men of all sorts and conditions in the world Fitftly The swiftnes and power of the Gospell Wee might heere note the incredible power and swiftnesse of the Gospell that could ouercome and that in so short a time and the rather if that wee consider that the Magistrates generally drew the sword against it and there were not wanting Ministers to oppugne it euen false teachers of all sorts and besides the people had beene so long time settled in their false Religion and lastly if wee looke vpon the meanenesse or the fewnesse of those that were Gods Embassadours to the Gentiles Thus of the fift part of the description The last thing by which the word of GOD is described 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the efficacy of it and here the Apostle sheweth first what it doth It bringeth fruit and It encreaseth for so it is added in some Copies secondly vpon whom as euen in you thirdly when it began to bee so viz. from the day that you heard c. fourthly what made it worke so viz. the hearing and true knowledge of the grace of God And is fruitfull Concerning fruitfulnesse required as an effect of the word I consider foure things First the Reasons to mooue vs to fruitfulnesse Secondly the sort of Fruits wee should beare Thirdly the meanes to make vs fruitfull Lastly the Vses For the first there are many things might mooue vs to make conscience of glorifying God in our places by bearing the fruit of the Gospell euen expressing the power of it in our liues First it is a speciall glory to GOD and to our adoption and calling l Iohn 15.8 Secondly it is a testimony that we are indeede Christs Disciples m John 15.8 Thirdly the practizing of those things which are within the compasse of Gods promises such as are all the fruits of righteousnesse is the very ground-worke of true prosperity n Psal 1.3 Fourthly To this end did God by election before time and speciall vocation in the Gospell choose vs and call and single vs out of the world o Ioh. 15.16 Fiftly It procures vnto vs an vnstained and inoffensiue glory euen vntill the day of Christ p Phil. 1.11 Sixtly If a man endeauour to bring foorth fruit and to walke as becomes the Gospell hee is sure to speede when hee hath any suit to God q Joh. 15.16 Seuenthly against such there is no law r Gal. 5.23 Eigthly it shall bee to vs according to our fruit ſ Ier. 17.8 Ninthly The fruits of righteousnesse are better treasures for a Christian then all riches t Ier. 17.10 Tenthly If wee bee not fruitfull wee shall bee
The Image of God because he truly resembles God Imago and ad Jmaginem and after the Image of God because hee resembles him but vnperfectly But Christ is the perfect Image of God and not after his Image Some expresse the difference thus Christ is the Image of the inuisible God but Man is the Image of the visible God that is of Christ Christ is the Image of God three wayes 1. in Operation because it is he that worketh Gods Image in vs 2. in Apparition because hee appeared for God to the Fathers in the old Law 3. in Person and that in both natures both as God and Man for the most perfect Image of God is Christ God the perfect image of God is Christ Man the vnperfect Image of God is Man That Christ is the Image of God as he is God is apparant by that place Phil. 2.6 and Heb. 1.4 And here two things are admirable first that this Image is an infinite Image like the thing resembled secondly that the Image is the same in Number not in Specie onely with the thing resembled Christ as man is the Image of God 1 Tim. 3.16 And that three waies First as the God-head dwels in Christ bodily in respect of the vnutterable presence of the diuine Nature Secondly as by his Miracles and great works he manifested the Diuine Nature and shewed God in the world Thirldly as his Humane Nature is qualified with Knowledge Righteousnesse Purity and other gifts for if man be Gods Image in respect of this Christ is so much more To conclude Christ as he is God is not onely the Image of the inuisible God but the inuisible Image of God but as man he is the visible Image of the inuisible God The Considerations of this Doctrine Vse that Christ is the Image of the inuisible God may serue for sixe Vses First to teach vs the admiration of that God whose Image is of so admirable praises Secondly to shew the fearefulnesse of their estate that turne the glory of the incorruptible GOD into the Image of corruptible Creatures Rom 1.23 And this is the sinne not onely of the Gentiles but of the Papists also Thirdly it should wonderfully quicken vs to all the duties of humblenesse of minde and meekenesse and make vs readie in all things to serue one another without wrangling or contention in loue seeing hee that was in forme of God equall with GOD Phil 2.1.2.3.6 put vpon him the forme and Image of a Seruant Fourthly wee may hence learne that if wee would know God wee must get into Christ for in him onely is the Father knowne hee that hath seene Christ hath seene the Father a Iohn 14.9 2 Cor 4.4 Labour then in the businesse of Mortification and Iustification and then that knowledge of God which is impossible to Nature will bee possible to Grace They haue the firmest apprehension of God not that haue the most Wit or Learning but that haue the most grace in Iesus Christ One may bee a great Scholler and yet a great Atheist The surest way is to know the Creator in the Redeemer Fiftly seeing it is Christs honour to bee Gods Image let it bee our honour to bee Christs Image which wee can neuer bee vnlesse wee put off the olde man and his workes b Col 39.10 And see to it that the light of the Gospell be not hid from vs by the God of this world for the Gospell is the Gospell of glory c 2 Cor 4.4 3.18 Gal 4.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 4.4 and 3.18.9 c. Gal. 4.19 Now wee may bee framed like to the Image of Christ in three things 1. In Knowledge d Col 3.10 2. in Sufferings e Rom 8.29 3. in holinesse and righteousnesse of heart and life f Ephes 4.21.24 Lastly shall the Diuell make men worshippe the Image of the beast g Reuel 13. and shall not we for euer honour this euerlasting Image of our God Inuisible God God is inuisible h Iohn 1.18 1 Tim 6.16 Iohn 9.11 c. 23.9.10 Vse God cannot bee seene because hee is a Spirit not a body and because of the exceeding thinnesse and puritie of his nature and because of the transplendency of his glory and lastly because of the infinitenesse of his Essence The Vse is first to teach vs to walke alwaie in feare and trembling seeing we serue such a God as sees vs when we see not him i Psa 65.5 c. secondly this should checke the secret and beastly discontentment of our hearts which are many times moued to vexation because our God is not visible whereas we should therefore the more admire him that is so absolutely perfect It were imperfection to be visible And yet notwithstanding though God be not visible to sense hee is visible to vnderstanding and though Nature cannot see him yet Grace can Now if any aske what hee might doe that hee might see God I answere that he that would see God first hee must looke for him in the Land of the liuing k seeke for him amongst true Christians hee must first know and loue his brother and then hee shall know and see God l 1 Iohn 4.12 Hee that would know the Father must bee acquainted with the Childe Secondly he must with feare and reuerence and constancie waite vpon the manifestation of God in his house in that light we shall see light Wee must eate at Gods Table and it must be our contentment to taste of the fatnesse of his house and to drinke out of the riuer of those pleasures if we would with cleare light see God m Psa 36.8.9 God is to be seene in Sion n Psalm 84.5.7.8 Gods goings are seene in the Sanctuary o Psal 68.24 Thirdly he must learne Gods Name for he that knowes his Name sees his Nature When God would shew his glory to Moses hee proclaimes his name to him p Exod. 33.19 34.6 c. Fourthly hee must be sure to get into Christ by Faith being borne of God by regeneration q Ioh 6.46 14.7 Lastly hee must bee pure in heartr hee must especially striue against the corruptions inward in his thoughts and affections Thus of the second vse t Math 6.7 Thirdly the consideration of this that Gods is inuisible should incourage vs to well doing euen in secret seeing wee serue such a God as can see in secret ſ Math. 6.4 Hitherto our Redeemer is described as he stands in relation to God now in the second place he is described as he stands in relation to the Creatures And Christ is in relation to the Creatures fiue waies 1. as the first begotten among them 2. as their Creator 3. as the end of them all for him 4. in respect of Eternitie as he is before all things 5. as all things in him consist All things depend vpon Christ as their preseruer as their auncient
as their end as their Creator and as the first borne The first begotten of euery Creature Two things are here to be considered of Christ 1. that he is Gods Son by generation 2. that he is the first begotten For the first God hath Sonnes by Nature and by Grace Christ is borne as Man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and begotten as God Things are begotten three waies 1. Metaphorically onely by comparison or in some respects 2. Corporally 3. Spiritually some things doe beget without themselues as bodies doe but this is more ignobly and basely some things beget within themselues as doth the Spirit or soule more perfectly But the most perfect and vnutterable glorious generation is the begetting of the Son of God by God The way of God in eternity who can finde out and his generation who can tell His waies are not as our waies yet a glimpse of this great work we may reach to two waies 1 By way of Negation as they say in Schooles 2 By way of Comparison First by denying that vnto God which hath imperfection in it In the generation of the Creatures we may see something into the generation of the Sonne of God There are eight things in the generation of the Creatures which are not in this begetting of the naturall Sonne of God 1. The Creatures beget in time because themselues are first begotten but this is not in God Christ is of the Father but not after the Father there is here a prioritie in order but not in time 2. The Creatures beget by affection this is imperfection but God begetteth by Nature 3. The Creature begets without himselfe so as Sons are diuers and diuided from the Father because they are finite 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are of like nature to our Fathers but not the same nature but it is not so in God for Christ is not diuided from the Father as he is the naturall Sonne of God 4. The generation in the Creature is not without corruption or diminution of the nature of the Begetter but here God the Father begetteth without corruption or diminution by a way diuine inenarrable and incomprehensible 5. Our Children are lesse then their Parents but Christ is as well Coequall as Coeternall 6. The Creature communicates but a part of his substance but God communicates the whole 7. The father and sonne among the creatures are two in number one in Specie onely but in God it is not so for the Son of God is another but not another thing he is another viz. in Person but not another thing in Essence Lastly Alius but not aliud the creature begets mortal creatures propagates but a being for a time but God begets a Sonne immortall by nature such a one as can neuer die in the nature so begotten Secondly this generation is shadowed out by some comparison with creatures the riuer and the spring are two yet not diuided so is the Sun and the Beames of it the Sauor the Oyntment are together and yet the Oyntment is not corrupted but the principall comparison is in the minde the word the Minde begets the Word naturally without passion or corruption within it selfe so as the Word begotten remaines in the Minde the Word afterwards clothed with a voyce goeth into the eares of men and yet ceaseth not to be still in the Minde This in many things as you may see is like to the generation of Christ by the Father But all these are but shadowes the glory of the thing it selfe cannot be expressed by any words of man or angels The consideration of this Doctrine should inflame vs to the loue of such a Sonne who being as hee was coequall and coeternall with the Father yet was pleased to delight himselfe in Gods earth which is man Prou. 8.22.31.32 And wee should for euer hearken and attend to the words of this wisedome of God who teacheth vs the secrets of the very bosome of his Father And seeing this is the Sonne of whom GOD hath spoken to the dreadfull astonishment and wonder of Heauen and Earth woe vnto them that sinne against the Sonne and prouoke him to anger How shall they bee broken to pieces like an earthen Vessell But blessed are all they that with all feare and trembling Psal 2.5.7.9.11.12 and with all reuerence and affection subiect themselues to the Scepter of his Kingdome and trust in the loue of the Father through the merits of the Sonne Thus of the consideration of Christ as he is begotten of God it is here added that he is first begotten First begotten Christ is the Sonne of God t Iohn 1.14 Hee is the onely begotten Son of God u Iohn 1.18 hee is the naturall Sonne of God x Rom 3.8 Primogenitus and here is tearmed the first begotten Sonne of God Hee is first begotten as God two waies 1. in Time hee was before all other things Of this afterwards 2. in Dignitie he is the foundation of all that respect by which others are made Sonnes hee is first begotten as Man not in time but in dignitie and operation first in respect of the miraculousnesse and wonderfulnesse of his birth and conception so are none other borne secondly in respect of his Resurrection in which God did as it were beget him againe thus he is afterwards said to be the first borne of the dead thirdly in respect of preheminence as hee hath the right of the first borne being made heyre of all things The Vse is diuers First let all the Angells of God worship him Secondly Heb 1.6 it should kindle in our hearts godly sorrow for our sinnes If we can mourne for the death of our first borne how should we be pierced to remember Zach 12.12 that our sinnes haue pierced Gods first borne Thirdly we should neuer thinke it strange to suffer in this world Rom 8.29 seeing God spared not his owne first borne Lastly it may be a great comfort to Christians and that two wayes first because they shall be accepted with God in and for Christ who is the first borne and hath receiued a blessing for all the rest secondly because in Christ they themselues are accounted as Gods first borne in comparison of other men God will vse them as his first borne Exod. 4.22 Heb. 12.23 Psal 89. ●7 By this Gods Children are made higher then the Kings of the earth Psalm 89.27 and therefore woe shall bee to them that wrong Gods first borne Exod. 4.22 And therefore also euery Christian should so esteeme his birth-right as by no meanes with prophane Esau for any lust profit or pleasure to sell it Heb. 12.16 Verse 16. For in him were all things created that are in Heauen and that are in Earth visible or inuisible whether they be Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers All things were created for him and by him IN this Verse foure things are to be
and Binder and in respect of one Faith and Constancie in doctrine Shee is Holy by segregation from the sinnefull world by the inchoation of the grace of Christ and by imputation of his righteousnesse She is Catholique especially in the New Testament in respect of place the Elect may bee in any place in respect of men for it is gathered of all sorts of men and in respect of Time for it shall continue vnto all times euen till time b●● no more Thus of the Doctrine concerning Christ and the Church The Vses follow The first Vse is for Confutation and that three waies Vses First in vaine doe the wicked enemies of the Church pride themselues in the greatnesse of Learning Power Meanes c. thinking to suppresse the being or glory of Christs Church on Earth for the stone that the Builders refused will proue the Head of the corner Secondly in vaine doe the Papists goe about to maintaine their ministeriall Head for the Church is neither without a Head nor many-Headed And it is absurd to excuse it that the Pope is but a Head vnder Christ for the body were monstrous that had two Heads one aboue and another vnder Thirdly in vaine doe carnall men pleade their hopes in Christ when they can yeeld no sound reason to prooue they are Christs Members They are not members of this body vnder this Head that want Faith that haue not the spirit of Christ that are not quickened with the life of Grace that are not wrought vpon by the word of Christ nor built vpon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles that feele no influence of graces from CHRIST that want the knowledge of Prophets or mortification of Priests or victory ouer the World as Kings that eyther pride themselues in their owne ciuill righteousnesse or can fall away wholy and for euer The second Vse is for Instruction and first as Christ is considered to be our Head wee should 1 Pray that God would open the eyes of our vnderstanding that wee might with sense and affection see what the hope of cur calling is m Ephes 1.19.22 c. to become members of such a Body vnder such a Head 2 Take heede of all pollutions that might any way tend to the dishonour of our Head whether it be of Flesh or Spirit n 2 Cor. 6. 3 Consider our place in this Body and vnder this Head and not presume to know about what is meete o Rom. 12.4.5 4 Vse all meanes to grow in this Body and not pull it backe or shame our Head by spirituall securitie or vnprofitablenesse and to this end wee should sticke fast to the words of the Prophets and not suffer our selues to bee carried about by euery winde of doctrine and follow the truth in Loue p Ephes 4.14 to 16. without pride or discord 5 Obey as the Members doe in Vnion with the Head by faith in Communion with the fellow-Members by Loue and with a naturall voluntarie and not extorted obedience Secondly if the Church be the body of Christ and wee Members of this Body wee should learne to carry our selues one towardes another in all humblenesse of minde and long-suffering supporting one another and keepe the bond of peace in the vnitie of the spirit q Ephes 4.2.3.4.5 And wee should labour to profit one another with the gifts God hath bestowed vpon vs that our graces as holy oyntment may runne downe from member to member and all our Loue should be without dissimulation r Rom. 12.6.9 in giuing honour going one before another in as much as what honour one member receiueth is done in some respect to all And wee should willingly distribute to the necessities of the Saints and reioyce with them that reioyce and weepe with them that weepe ſ Rom. 12.10.13.15.16 out of the Sympathy of Members by all meanes shunning to giue offence in the least thing especially not censorious or contentious in matters of indifferencie t 1 Cor. 10.24.14 Lastly all discontentments with our place or calling or estimation in the body and all contempt or enuie at the gifts or place of other Christians should be banished out of our hearts u 1 Cor. 12.15.22.23.26 Thus of the excellencie of Christ in relation to the Church as it is briefly propounded the explication followes The head hath three Priuiledges or excels all the Members in Order Perfection or Vertue and Efficacie The preheminence of Christ is three wayes considered First in respect of the dignitie of Order verse 18. of order I say toward the Members Secondly in respect of perfection in himselfe in the fulnesse of grace verse 15. Thirdly in respect of Vertue Efficacie and influence toward the whole body verse 20. The primacie of CHRIST in order or relation to the Members is twofold First in the estate of Grace Hee is the beginning Secondly in the respect of the state of Glory He is the first begotten of the dead Christ is said to be the beginning in three respects He is the beginning Christ may be said to bee the beginning in three respects First as he is the first fruits for whose sake the rest are accepted and blessed Secondly as hee is the repayrer of the world decayed by mans sinne Thirdly as hee is the beginning of the good things that are in the Church hee is both the obiect and efficient cause of Faith Mortification flowes from his death and new Obedience from his Resurrection Iustification is wrought from his obedience Vses And this shewes the miserie of all carnall men that are not members of Christ in respect of the life of Grace they are dead in respect of Faith they are Infidels in respect of Iustification they are without God in respect of Repentance they walke in trespasses and sinnes in respect of Communion of Saints they are strangers from the Common-wealth of Israell There can bee a beginning of no true felicitie without CHRIST Christ is said to be the beginning of the creation of God a Reuel 3.14 and from thence is inferred a most seuere reproofe of mans lukewarmenesse in matters of Pietie Repentance and Grace Reuel 3. vers 15.16.17 And if Christ be the Authour and beginning of Faith and grace it should teach vs to perseuere in the Faith and contend for the truth and keepe that is committed to vs with all Patience Wisedome and Constancie b Heb. 12.2 And in as much as he is Alpha hee will be Omega as he is the beginning so he will be the end and therefore blessed are they that doe his Commandements And let him that is righteous bee righteous still and let prophane men that will not by Faith and Repentance seeke vnto Christ be filthy still c Reuel 22.11.13.14 The first begotten of the dead Christ as head of the Church holds his relation both to the liuing as their beginning and to the dead as their first begotten There is a threefold
1.14 Thirdly with the seede of Abraham the Iewes the partition wall is broken downe r Esay 2.15 Fourthly with Gods Ordinances God creating peace or els the Word would alwayes bee goring and smiting with the stroakes of warre and words of vengeance ſ Esay 11.4 57.19 Fiftly with the godly t Esay 11.6.7 Sixtly with all Creatures u Iob 5. Heb. 2.18 Psal 91.13 Onely there can be no peace first with the Powers and Principalities for after the two strong men haue fought there is no more peace x Ephes 6.12 secondly with the World the World hath hated the Master and therefore the seruants may not looke for better entertainment y Iohn 15.8 3 The effects of this peace 3. The effects of this peace which are principally two first the restitution of soueraignty and dominion ouer the Creatures secondly the safety of the Christian in all estates for from this peace flowes great securitie and protection euen to the poorest Christian either from or in dangers z Iob 5.15 c. 4. What we must do to attaine the sense of this peace 4. That wee may attaine the sense of this peace wee must bee reconciled to God a Hos 2.18 we must be sincere worshippers b Hos 2.17 we must keepe vs in our wayes c Psal 91.13 wee must get a meeke and quiet spirit d Psal 37.12 wee must in nothing bee carefull but in all things shew our requests vnto God e Phil. 4.7 wee must loue God and shew it by the loue of the knowledge of his Name f Psal 91.14 Vses Vses First Gods Children should know this priuiledge for themselues it will be a preseruation against sinne 2. Hence wee may gather the miserie of all carnall persons that are not reconciled to God They want the potection of Angels they are vnder the gouernment of the God of this world the Creatures are armed against them they are stript of the royall priuiledges arising from the communion with Saints yea God fights against them in and by themselues as by terrours of conscience and by vnquiet affections and passions giuing them ouer to an vnruely heart What are Enuy Malice Lust and Rage but so many weapons to fight against the soule Yea God fights against the sinner by the deadnesse of his heart which both affamisheth the soule in spirituall things and takes away the contentment of outward things By the bloud Heere he notes how wee are reconcililed viz. by the bloud of Christ this is that bloud of sprinckling g Heb. 1● 24 the bloud of the immaculate Lamb h 1 Pet. 1 19. the bloud of the euerlasting Couenant i Heb. 13 20. Christs owne bloud k Heb 13 12. The fruits effects of Christs blood Many are the fruits and effects of the bloud of Christ 1 We are elected through it l 1 Pet 1 2. 2. It ratifies the Couenant of God m Luke 22 20. Heb 9 18. 3. It is that Reconciliation iustifying vs from our former sinnes n Rom 3 25. 5 9. Ephes 1 7. 1 Ioh 1 7. Reuel 7 14. 4. It ioynes Iew and Gentile together in one Citie yea in one house o Eph 2 13 c 5. It purgeth the Conscience from dead workes p Heb 9 14. 10 4. 6. It turnes away wrath and saues vs from the destroying Angell q Heb. 11 18. 7. It makes Intercession for sinnes after Calling r Heb 12 24. 8. It makes perfect in all good workes ſ Heb 13 20. 9. By it the Faithfull ouercome the Dragon t Reuel 12 11. and Antichrist u Reuel 19.23 Lastly it opens the Holy of Holies and giues vs an entrance into heauen x Heb 9 7. 10 19. The Vse is first to teach vs to take heede of sinning against the bloud of Christ for if it be thus precious it must needes diffuse a horrible sinne-guiltinesse vpon such as transgresse against it If Abels bloud wronged cryed so fearefully and the bloud of Zacharias what shall the bloud of Christs doe y Mat 23 30 35. Luke 11 50. How many wayes men sinne against Christs bloud And men sinne against Christs bloud 1. By resisting the meanes of application of Christ crucified 2. By prophane Swearing and Cursing 3. By ascribing remission of sinnes to the workes of the Law z Rom 3 20 24 25. 4. By committing the sinne against the holy Ghost * Heb 10 26.29 5. By returning to the lusts of our former ignorance a 1 Pet 1 14. 6. By prophane and vnworthy receiuing of the Sacraments b 1 Cor 11. And in the Sacraments men offend against the bloud of Christ Vses First when they come to it with an opinion of reall presence either by Transubstantiation or Consubstantiation for thereby they deny the truth of the bloud of Christ by consequent and open a gap to the adoration of Christ in or before Bread or Wine Secondly when men vse the Sacraments but as bare signes not discerning spiritually the presence of the Bloud and Body of the Lord. Thirdly when men come thither vnbidden being not called nor within the compasse of the Couenant by conuersion Fourthly when men come to eate this Lambe but without the sowre hearbes of godly Sorrow for their sinnes and Repentance Fiftly such as come without Faith by which they lay holde on Christ and Loue by which they are ioyned to Christians Thus of the first Vse Secondly the consideration of the dignitie of Christs bloud should teach Christians to esteeme their new birth It is better to bee borne of the bloud of Christ then of all the blouds of men c Ioh 1 13. seeing by his bloud wee haue the attonement wee should reioyce in God d Rom 5 11. and comfort our selues in this great prerogatiue that our many sinnes and infirmities are done away in the Intercession of Christ his Blood speaking better things then the Bloud of Abel e Heb 12 24. Thirdly wee should neuer bee much perplexed for the ordinary troubles befall vs for if wee looke vpon the Authour and finisher of our Faith hee endured the shame and contradiction of sinners yea and shed his bloud too whereas we haue not yet resisted vnto bloud f Heb 12.2 4. Fourthly it should enflame vs to a desire of all possible both Thankefulnesse giuing glory to him that shed his bloud for vs g Reu 1 5. and Obedience striuing to walk worthy of the effusion and application of such precious bloud h Heb 13 20. striuing after perfection in all well-doing Of his Crosse It was needfull our Sauiour should be vpon the Crosse that so hee might bee the accomplishment of what was signified by the Heaue Offering and the Brazen Serpent and that so hee might beare the speciall curse of the Law for vs of all deathes the death on the tree beeing by
and turne themselues into all formes requesting beseeching reproouing c. with all diligence and sinceritie The People also must know that their profiting lies in application and to this end they should attend meditate repeate pray striue against Securitie and Obiections keeping aliue the sparkes that are kindled in their soules When a man can conscionably apply the Word it shewes hee truely hates sinne and is a true hearer 1 Cor. 2.11 Fiftly men may know particularly they are reconciled which both checkes Securitie in not labouring for this knowledge and confutes Papists and drowsie Protestants that say it is presumption to thinke so Sixtly Experience giues sure testimonie to the Doctrine of the Gospell then wee know profitably when wee know the doctrine in our owne case as the Colossians here their Reconciliation Wee neede not wonder then if wee see that the most powerfull parts of practicall Diuinitie haue little or no testimonie or if it bee it is darke and seldome from the most men yea from many Church-men The cause is they neuer had experience themselues And we should learne to esteeme their iudgement most that doe draw Religion most into practise for God will shew the humble his way And you In the gathering of Soules God workes beyond desert and many times beyond probabilities If we respect the men they were Gentiles hardened by hundreds of yeeres in custome of sinnes if wee respect the meanes it is Epaphras none of the greatest of the Apostles Which should teach vs to liue by Faith and vse Gods ordinance with confidence As in the businesse of conuersion so in matter of preseruation knowing that God is not tyed to desert or meanes Also Doct. The Church and Kingdome of Christ is in this world still in progresse Christ hath not done when hee hath conquered Rome spiritually that had conquered the world before corporally but here is a fresh increase and a new You also And thus it will be still till the end of the world and therefore wee should euery one doe what wee can to helpe forward the Kingdome of God and the adding of such soules as yet belong to the vocation of Christ And this wee may doe both by furthering the Gospell preached and by seeking a holy seede getting within the Couenant our selues and by education labouring to amend what by propagation we haue marred Yea the consideration hereof should much encourage vs in the combate against Sinne and the World for in the warre Souldiers vse to gather spirit and valour vpon the tidings of new supplies Now. Men are not reconciled till redemption bee applied Christ dyed before but they were not reconciled till now It is not safe for men to rest in the Historicall beliefe of Christs death either learne to die to sinne to crucifie thy flesh and to take vp thy Crosse daily or else forbeare to mention CHRIST for it is in vaine thou hast no part as yet in Christ Hath Though Sanctification while wee tarry in this world be vnperfect yet Reconciliation is past so soone as a man is turned to God Gods rich fauour may stand with the many wants and infirmities of man but then we must remember it is free and gracious for if wee be perfectly reconciled and yet not perfectly sanctified then it must needes follow wee are not reconciled from our owne workes Hee That is Christ which being againe mentioned shewes 1. that hee is God seeing Roconciliation is here giuen to him which was before ascribed to the Father 2. It proues that in the one essence of God are more Persons then one 3. It proues that Christ died willingly hee is not onely the meanes but the vndertaker of our Reconciliation b Heb. 9.14 hee is not onely the Sacrifice but the Priest also Reconciled The repetition or application of this word and worke to the Colossians shewes that there is one constant way that God holds vnalterably with all his people No sort of men can be happy vntill they be reconciled if men will not minde their peace and sue out their pardon in Christ their hope will faile them there is no other way to be saued Thus of the words of Coherence There remaines both their miserie in this verse and the remedie of it in the next verse Strangers and Enemies c. In generall wee may first obserue Good to thinke much of our misery that it is profitable for men to know and meditate of their naturall miserie though men be neuer so vnwilling to it yea though they be already deliuered from it For the consideration hereof shewes men the neede of a Sauiour and as a Schoole-master traines them vp to Christ it mollifies the stony hearts of men it breedes watchfulnesse ouer our nature when wee know it is so poysoned and corrupted it makes vs compassionate ouer others in their distresse or infirmities it sets an high price vpon spirituall things and makes vs account Gods fauour our greatest ioy it makes vs cleaue to God in a perpetuall Couenant To omit many other commodities that arise hereof it reproues the seldom teaching and learning of the doctrine of mans naturall miseries wicked men are strangers in fiue respects Strangers Vnregenerate men are strangers in fiue respects 1. In respect of Heauen not onely pilgrimes here but without promise of a better life so continuing 2. In respect of God without God in the world 3. In respect of Gods people not fellow-Citizens but Forrainers c Ephes 12. 4. In respect of the speciall prouidence of God Strangers to the Common-wealth of Israell 5. In respect of the Life of God d Ephes 4.17 And that if wee consider either the rule of life they account the Law a strang thing e Hos 8. or the fountaine of life viz. Regeneration They are dead in sinne f Ephes 2.1 or the Obedience of holy life Their imaginations are onely euill continually g Gen. 8. But if any aske how this strangenesse comes the word in the originall seemes to note it for it is estranged which is more then Strangers for it imports they were not so created but made so They were made so 1. Originally by the transgression of the first man from whence flowed the first strangenesse betweene God and man man running from God and God refusing to delight in the sonnes of men 2. By their owne actuall sinnes which separate betweene God and them h Esay 59.2 Alienation is to the workers of iniquitie i Iob. 31.3 The hurt of liuing thus estranged Quest But what hurt is it to carnall men to be thus estranged Ans There is no saftie against dangers where God is not to protect men there is no comfort in affliction where one can neither looke to God nor the Saints for succour and comfort The God of this world doth rule effectually in all the Children of disobedience they are in bondage to the world they are in bondage to their owne flesh euen to a
from the spirit of God which is in them for the spirit sets the soule at libertie x 2 Cor 3 17. and furnisheth it with graces y Gal 5 22. sealeth vp vnto the day of redemption z Ephes 1.14 strengtheneth the inward man a Ephes 3.16 shewes the things giuen of God b 1 Cor 2.12 is a perpetuall Comforter c John 14.16 Leadeth into all truth d John 15.13 frees from condemnation and the rigour of the Law e Rom 8 1 3 10. Zach 12.12 Rom. 8.1.3 is life for righteousnesse sake vers 10. mortifies the deedes of the flesh verse 13. beares witnesse that they are the children of God verse 16. is a spirit of prayer to cause them to cry Abba Father verse 15. helpes their infirmities and makes request for them verse 26. Fiftly from CHRIST for from Christ they haue protection Iohn 10.18 Influence Iohn 15.1.4.5 Intercession by which hee couers their sinnes and infirmities presents their workes in his merits and mooueth the Father to keepe them from euill c. Iohn 17.9.11.15.17.22 Sixtly they haue helpes from his Ordinances for by Prayer when they aske according to Gods Will they may bee sure to haue any thing 1 Io●n 5.14 And by the Sacraments Faith is confirmed and sealed and Grace nourished How many wayes the word furthers continuance And by the Word they are many wayes furthered I take but onely the 119. Psalme to shew how our continuance is helped by the Word It redresseth our waies verse 9. It keepes from sinne verse 11. It strengthens against shame and contempt vers 22.23.143 It quickens and comforts verse 25.28.50.54.93.111 It makes free verse 45. It makes wise verse 98.100 It is a Lanthorne to our feete verse 105.130 It keepes from declining verse 102.104.118.155.160.165 Lastly they are helped by the promises that concerne perseuerance and preseruation and falling away such as are contained in such Scriptures as these Iohn 13.1 1 Cor. 10.13 Rom. 8.29 Psal 84.12 1. Tim. 4.18 Reuel 2.25.26 Grounded and stablished in the faith It is not enough to get Fa●●h and continue in it but wee must be grounded and stablished and when he 〈◊〉 stablished in the Faith wee must vnderstand the Doctrine profession exercise assurance and effects of Faith And this establishing and grounding of our hearts hath in it particular Knowledge Certainety Resolution and Contentment To be thus established would fortifie vs against all the changes The priuiledges of an established and grounded heart and alterations of estate or Religion in aftertimes and as the Coherence imports it would much further vs in the attainement of an vnstained and vnrebukeable life whereas of doubting can come nothing but the shunning of God the libertie of sinne and desperation and the like Besides this grounded establishment in Faith would free our profession from the dishonours which an vnsetled or discontented Faith or life doth cast vpon vs. Atheists Papists Epicures and Belly-gods if this were in vs would be astonished to see the power of Religion in our resolued contentment and to consider how vnmooueable wee were so as the gates of Hell could not preuaile against vs. Besides the vnsearchable solace that a peaceable and restfull conscience would breed in vs. That wee might be thus grounded and stablished What we must doe that wee might bee grounded and stablished diuers things are carefully to be obserued 1. Wee must be founded on the Prophets and Apostles f Ephes 2.20 we must be daily conuersant in the Scriptures 2. We must be much in praier but in practise of prayer wee must nourish the hatred of euery sinne and daily labour to encrease in the reformation of euill And it is a great helpe to be much with such as feare God and call vpon God with a pure heart It would much establish vs to see the faith affections feruencie and power of Gods spirit in other in prayer g 2 Tim. 2.19.22 3. There is a secret blessing of God in setling a mans heart followes vpon well doing so as to bee abundant in Gods worke is a great meanes of stedfastnesse whereas a fruitlesse and barraine life is both vncomfortable and vnsetled h 1 Cor. 15.58 1 Tim. 6.19 4. Wee must pray God to giue vs a free and ingenuous spirit i Psal 51.12 What a free spirit is wee must pray to God to giue vs a minde cheerefull speedy full of incitations to good glad of all occasions to doe good free from the staine of the sinnes of the Time Nation or calling and from the raigne of former lusts inclineable to serue God and our Brethren by Loue fearing the Gospell more then the Law and Gods goodnesse more then his iustice 5. Wee must set an order in Faith and Life It is exceeding behoouefull in matter of opinions to deliuer vp our soules to some sounde frame of Doctrine in which wee will euer quietly rest and in matters of life to gather out of the Commandements a platforme of liuing that might fit our owne case k Pro 4.26 6. Wee are not vsually setled and soundly stablished till wee haue beene shaken with affliction and haue gotten the experience which the Crosse learnes vs l 1 Pet. 5.10 Lastly wee must consecrate our selues to God endeauouring daily to practise what wee daily heare for hee that commeth to CHRIST and heareth his sayings and doth them is like a man which hath built a House and digged deepe and layed the foundation on a Rocke and when the flood arose and the streame beat vehemently vpon that house it could not shake it because it was founded on a Rocke m Luk 6 48.49 Quaest Quest What should be the reason why many after long profession and much hearing and some comfortable signes of assurance Ans at sundry times conceiued should yet be vnsetled and distracted The causes why many after long profession and some signes of hope are still so vnsetled and shew so much perplexitie and want of firmenesse either in contentment or practise Answ This is occasioned diuersly First sometime for want of a distinct direction or carefull examination about the application of the signes of Gods fauor some Christians haue not the signes cleerly distinctly collected others that haue them know the vse of them grow sloathfull and negligent and are iustly scourged with the want of the glory of this establishment Secondly sometimes it comes to passe for want of vsing priuate meanes more conscionably as Reading Prayer or Conference Thirdly it is so sometimes with Christians because of some sinne they lye in without repentance there may be some sinne which they too much fauour and are loath to forsake whether it be secr●t or more open Fourthly Vnfruitfulnesse and barrennesse in good workes may cause it for if Faith did beare fruit vpwards it would take roote downewards Fiftly many are grieuously pressed vnder legall perfection being not able distinctly to
despise not this riches of the bountifulnesse of God when in the Gospell it is offered vnto vs though wee may goe on with the hardnesse of our not repenting hearts yet if by speedy repentance wee preuent not our ruine we shall heape vp wrath against the day of wrath euen the day of the declaration of the iust vengeance of God vpon such obstinate and secure sinners h Rom 2.4.5.6 3. Let not worldly rich men glory in their riches i Jer 9.24 but rather vse their outward riches as helpes to further them vnto this true treasure else their riches shall not shelter them in the day of Gods wrath against the woes denounced against them k Iob 36.18.19 Luke 6.12 Lastly would any man know some sure way how to thriue with great successe in these spirituall riches let him then amongst other things especially remember to pray hard for the Lord is rich to all them that call vpon him l Rom 10.12 Thirdly CHRIST is in the faithfull m 2 Cor. 13.5 hee liues in them n Gal. 2.20 hee dwels in them o Ephes 3.18 but that this doctrine may be more fully vnderstood I propound fiue things 1. How Christ is conueied into the soule of the faithfull 2. By what effects he discouereth himselfe to be there 3. What they get by his comming 4. What intertainement they ought to giue him 5. Who haue not Christ in them How Christ is conueied into the faithfull For the first there is this order First God secretly giues Christ to the beleeuer and the beleeuer to Christ p Rom 8.32 Esa 9.6 Iohn 17.6 then Christ begins to manifest himselfe riding in the Chariot of the word q 2 Cor 2.14 The word that before was a dead letter receiueth life by the presence of Christ and that both in the Law and the Gospell The law being made aliue attacheth the particular sinner and playeth vpon him the part of a Sergeant accuser Iaylor or Iudge And the sinner putting in baile the Law brings him to Christ and will not let him goe to another r Gal 3.24 then the Gospell gets aliue and crucifies Christ before his eyes Å¿ Gal 3.1 and propounds varietie of sweet promises The sinner being beaten and wounded almost to death before hee would yeelde to the arrest of the Law seeing now whither he is brought laments with vnspeakeable groanes his owne sinnes and the horrible torments hee sees the Sonne of God put to for his sake and at the same time the spirit of the Sonne working saith a wide doore is opened Christ enters in with vnvaluable ioyes wrought in the heart of the sinner How we may know that Christ is in our hearts Now if you aske by what effects Christ discouers himselfe to bee there I answere there is a light when Christ comes in that giues the Knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ t 2 Cor 4.6 And being rauished they behold as in a mirrour the glory of God and are transformed into the same Image the spirit of God making them suddainely new Creatures u 2 Cor 3 18 2. The conuert now findes a sauour of the things of the spirit and his heart is bowed to be subiect to the law of God x Rom 8.5 7. 3. Hee is baptized with the fire of zeale and holy affections and desires y Math 3.11 4. There appeares a battell and combat in the soule and much lusting on either side the spirit resisting with teares and strong cries 5. In this combat Christ vndertaking the battell sends out by his ordinances his arrests and apprehends one by one euery imagination that rebelliouslie puts it selfe forward in the opposition and exalts it selfe and will not leaue till it be brought in subiection so as the obedience of Christ may haue the vpper hand z 2 Cor 10.5 6. The spirit of the Sonne discouers himselfe as a spirit of supplications by which the tender infant beginnes to learne with holy desires and secret incouragements to speake in Gods language and by prayer to make knowne his griefes and wants in the best manner vttering his affiance in God as a Father x Gal 4.6.7 7. The loue of God and of Christ and of Gods Word and Gods people is shed abroad in his heart and it now constraineth him to holy dueties a Rom 5.9 2 Cor 5.14 8. The body growes dead in respect of sinne and the spirit is life for righteousnesse sake b Rom 8.10 resolution more and more increasing both for reformation of sinne and new obedience 9. Hee findes himselfe proclaimed free the prison doore set open his fetters knocked off his wounds made by the law healing apace his depts paid himselfe in a new world inioying a true Iubile c 2 Cor. 3.17 Esa 61.1.2 10. He liues thenceforward by the faith of the Sonne of God for Saluation for Iustification and for preseruation d Gal 2.20 2 Cor 13.14 11. The heauenly dewes of spirituall ioyes often water and refresh his heart in the vse of the meanes with delightfull peace and tranquility in his heart and conscience e Hos 14.6 Rom 14.17 Lastly in a holy couenanting with God his daily purposes and desires are to cleaue vnto God deuoting and consecrating himselfe and his vowed sacrifices vnto God in the mediation of Christ Thirdly the benefites hee hath by the inhabitation of CHRIST The benefits come by Christ dwelling in vs. are such as these 1. GOD is in Christ reconciling him not imputing his sinnes f 2 Cor. 5.19 2. Christ is made vnto him Wisedome Sanctification Righteousnesse and Redemption g 1 Cor 1.30 3. All the promises of Christ are to him Yea and Amen hauing the earnest giuen in the spirit and the same sealed by the same spirit h 2 Cor. 1.20.22 4. Hee is not destitute of any heauenly gifts i 1 Cor 1.6.7 but hath the seeds and beginnings of all sauing graces 5. The grace of Christ shall be sufficient k 2 Cor. 12.9 against all temptations by the power of Christ that dwels in him and as his outward afflictions doe abound so shall the consolations of Christ abound also l 2 Cor 1.5 6. Paul is his and Apollo is his yea all things are his as he is Christs m 1 Cor 3.22.23 he hath his interest in all the means of saluation 7. God hath giuen him Christ how shall hee not with him giue him all other things also n Rom 8.34.35 Finally eternall life is the gift of God in and with Iesus Christ o Rom 6.23 For the fourth if you aske what you must doe when you finde Christ in your hearts I answere if you liue in the spirit walke in the spirit p Gal 5.24 let olde things passe and all things be new for if you be in Christ Iesus you must be new Creatures
haue their throne the powers of hell preuaile in euery child of disobedience and the ioyes of the holy Ghost are altogether restrained from them neither can there arise any true consolation from outward things for in their owne iudgments most an end they are at a want of contentment they are daily fretted with the interruptions befall them and vanity and vexation of spirit are the inseparable companions of earthly things or if they were not what were the possession of all things if they be set before the thoughts of death or Gods wrath Note or the last iudgment or hell Imagine a man driuen out of the light by diuils where he should see nothing but his tormentors and that he were made to stand vpon snares or grennes with iron teeth ready to strike vp and grind him to peeces and that he had gall powred downe to his bellie and an instrument raking in his bowels and the paines of a trauiling woman vpon him and an hideous noyse of horror in his eares and a great gyant with a speare running vpon his necke and a flame burning vpon him round about do you imagine this man could be solaced in this destresse with bringing him strawes or trifles to play withall Alas alas this is the estate of euery wicked man 's if he had eyes to see what belongs vnto him and what is his danger as these places shew whence these comparisons are taken Iob 18.18.7.8 20.24.15 15.20.21.26.30 certainely heauen and earth shall passe away before one iote of these miseries shall be remoued out of the way so as they should not fall vpon wicked men being impenitent and alas what then can outward things doe vnto them Oh then shall not men be warned and awaken and stand vp from the dead that Christ may giue them light and shall not our bowels turne within vs to thinke of this comfortles distresse of so many thousand soules And will the rebellious world still rise vp against the messengers of God that giue them warning of their miseries shall he still be made to sinne in the word and be taken in a snare that reproueth in the gate Oh the vnexpressible senselesnesse and slumber that possesseth the hearts of some men But I come to the second doctrine This is a maine end of the Gospell to bring men to true consolation and Doct. 2 contentment The Gospell brings ioy because it brings knowledge The Gospell brings a man the true consolation which refresheth the minde as the light doth our senses it comforts as it reviues Gods fauour in Christ how can it be but comfort when it giues the Spirit which is the Comforter and it is a daily refreshing against the guilt of sinne and the afflictions of life it shewes mortalitie and the hope of glory to come it discouers the mines of treasure that are in Gods promises and it shewes vs also our right in earthly things as it is conferred vpon vs in Christ The vse is first for confutation Vses it doth not make men desperate and melancholie but contrariwise it easeth and solaceth the hearts of men 2. All that are in any distresse either inward or outward may here be directed whither to goe for hearts ease and comfort viz. to the word and though any vse of the word in sinceritie hath much life yet is the power of the word most auaileable in the sincere preaching of it In the 19. Psalme this is one euident fruit of the word that it reioyceth the heart Now if wee seriously consider the praises of the word in that place wee shall perceiue not only that this truth is maintained but many obiections are answered too The solace that comes by the word with the answers to diuers obiections Psal 19. only this we must know that where the word hath this effect it must first conuert vs to God for to the vnregenerate minde it doth not so worke but where mens hearts are turned to God it is perfect it is of excellent and exquisite vse it is good for all occasions it will direct in all our wayes and comfort in all distresses Ob. But may a man trust vpon it if he subiect himselfe to the word and waite vpon God in it that he shall be directed and comforted Sol. Yes for the testimonies of God are sure they neuer faile Ob. But might one say it may be great learned men might finde so much good by it but alas I am vnlearned and simple Sol. It makes the simple wise The word can help the vnlearned aswell as the learned Ob. But can it be that the word should fit my turne to serue for my particular occasion of need of direction and comfort Sol. Yes the statutes of the Lord are right and out of the fitnes they haue to our estates they greatly reioyce the heart Ob. But I am much troubled with euill thoughts and continuall infirmities and weaknesses besides many outward faults Sol. The word of the Lord is pure it is so by the effect it will make thee pure it will purge out those euills and greately help thee against these corruptions that molest and trouble and annoy thee Ob. But I cannot tell how to do to order my course for hereafter if I were now comforted Sol. It giues light to the eyes it will teach vs what to doe Ob. But yet there are many euills that I am by nature so addicted to or by custom so intangled in that I feare God will neuer take any delight in me c. Sol. The feare of the Lord is cleane That word of God which tells vs how to feare God is cleane by effect it will pull downe and master any sinne and cleanse our hearts and liues of it Ob. But how may I know it will worke this in me though others haue found it so because I know not how I shall perseuere and hold out Sol. The feare of God endures for euer The word I say which workes in vs the true feare of God will neuer cease to be effectuall and there is as much force in it now as euer was in it No time can euer weare out the efficacie of Gods word in the hearts of such as feare God If it haue wrought the true feare of God in thee thou maiest be assured thou hast right to the directions and comforts conteyned in it and it will still be of force to thee if thou waite vpon God in the true vse of it Ob. But I see many are otherwise minded and some teach otherwise Sol. Yet the iudgments of the Lord are true Gods word must and will stand howsoeuer we are minded Ob. But may a man find help against any sinne from the word and direction in all things Sol Yes for Gods iudgments are righteous altogether They are exactly sufficient to make a man a godly man compleat in all his wayes and to order him in all that iustice he should performe either towards God or man Ob. But might
the operation of God Quest But how may our faith be supported in beleeuing those things shadowed out in baptisme Answ Two waies First if we consider Gods operation Secondly if we consider Christs resurrection This is the briefe order and dependance of this verse so that here he intreats of baptisme both by the effects and by the causes the effects are spirituall buriall and spirituall resurrection the causes are three faith the operation of God and the resurrection of Iesus Christ Buried together with him Three things may be here noted 1. the buriall of Christ 2. the buriall of the Christian 3. the vnion of both For the first that Christ was buried was storied by the Euangelist a Ioh. 19. and fore-signified by Ionas as a type b Mat. 12.39 40 and fore-prophecied of by Esay the Prophet c Esay 53.9 he was buried in Ierusalem the place where the dying sacrifices had giuen warning of his death but it was without the Citie both to answer the type Leuit. 16. and to signifie that his sufferings belonged to Gentiles as well as to Iewes He was buried in Caluarie the place commonly appointed for condemned men and not in Hebron where some thinke Adam was buried to note that his death was to be auaileable for the condemned men of Adam as well as for Adam himselfe He was buried in another mans graue to signifie that he died for other mens sinnes Now for the second viz. the buriall of Christians they may be said to be buried euen whiles they liue for the buriall of the body he cannot meane here in diuers respects 1. In respect of disgrace and reproch the throats of wicked men are often an open sepulchre d Psal 5. into which if the names of the godly fall they are buried for the extremitie of disgrace and reproch with which they couer them 2. In respect of abnegation or the deniall of the loue and care for earthly things and so we are buried to the world when like dead men we care not for it but deuote our selues to the contemplation of heauenly things 3. In respect of mortification of our sinnes the scripture by diuers metaphors expresseth the diuers degrees of mortification For first there is the wounding of sinne when the sinner is pricked with remorse by the law Secondly the condemning of sinne when the sinner keeping a spirituall assise doth examine confesse and iudge himselfe guilty before the Lord. Thirdly the crucifying of sinnes when the sinner racks his owne soule by godly sorrow driuing in the nailes of Gods threatnings with acknowledgment of his owne deserts and restraining his flesh through a spirituall reuenge not caring to expose himselfe to the shame of the world so that in Christ he may finde atonement for his sinnes Fourthly the killing of sinne when the sinner puts off the bodie of sinnes and forsaketh his euill waies Now then after this followeth the last degree and that is here the buriall of sinnes Of the buriall of sinne Certainely there remaines euen after true repentance in the very godly a great deale of hidden corruption of nature inward wandrings distractiōs after the world sudden euill propositions against God or his word or prouidence or presence or promises or people impatience secret pride and somtimes hypocrisie a frequent rebellion within against good duties vnthankfulnes frequent omissions either of holy duties or the care of the power of them hastines or anger impure desires thoughts of reuenge besides a great deale of disorder he may finde in himselfe both at home and abroad Now it is not enough nor may he rest in the former repentance but he must proceed euen to the remouing of these remainders of corruption death commonly ariseth out of the disease of some one part but buriall couers all The worke of reformation and repentance many times begins at the care of some few principall sinnes but we must neuer be quiet till we burie the whole old man with his works so that in one sense the buriall of sinnes is nothing else but the progresfe of mortification Againe after we haue forsaken our sinnes to burie them is to keep a diligent watch ouer our nature and to take downe our flesh yea sometimes with refraining of lawfull delights or pleasures Further the buriall of sinne it may import our care after we haue left our sinnes to remoue them out of sight both out of Gods sight by suing out our pardon and out of the sight of our consciences by quieting them in the application of the bloud of Christ and the promises of grace and out of the sight of others so farre as our sinnes were scandalous also by shewing forth our repentance and care to auoide all appearance and occasions of like sinning Their priuiledges that haue attained to the buriall of sinne Great is the glory and happinesse of Christians that haue attained to this buriall of sinne for these serue God in a neere acquaintance with him these haue ouercome the world these can stand before death and iudgement vnapalled these are mighty in the power of Gods ordinance these know the secrets of the kingdome of God these are without the reach of the Law and feele not the sting of crosses these are had in singular honour with God and the holy Angels of heauen and the prouidence of God is vsually eminent towards these Now for the third might some one say what hath the Christians buriall to doe with Christ How our spirituall buriall depends vpon Christ how is there any relation betweene them Ans Our spirituall buriall in the progresse of mortification depends vpon Christ diuers waies 1. In that he hath required and made gracious promises to it 2. In that the efficacie of the meanes by which it is wrought comes from Christ 3. In that it is accepted of God onely for Christ and through his intercession 4. In respect of example he was buried as well as we But chiefly in respect of vertue our buriall of sinne is wrought by a vertue arising from Christs buriall in the graue The Vses of all this followes First for information here we may see how God stands vpon mortification Vses The state of such as neglect mortification and that men must not thinke alwaies they haue done inough when they haue left their faults and withall we may see how dangerous a course they take that so soone giue ouer the exercises of mortification for by this meanes we cause the old sinnes many times to breake out againe and their consolations are small and seldom crosses daily trouble them and the heart is often grieued and griped with feare and terrible doubts or else they are quickly ouergrowne with a spirit of slumber Secondly for instruction to be carefull to burie our sinnes but here take heede of the dissimilitude Dissimilitude in tvvo things for in some things the comparison cannot hold as here in two things for first when we burie the bodies
of our friends we burie them in hope they shal rise againe And secondly we mourne because we must part with them but both these must be denied here It is the propertie of the wicked to part with their sinnes with sorrow because they must leaue them or else with hope that at length they may returne to them againe Note this rule But let all such as feare God be otherwise minded especially let vs learne from this comparison of buriall to aduantage our selues in what we may in mortification Similitudes if the master be buried we know all his seruants will attend the funerall so is it with vs in the mortification of sinnes if we light vpon the master sins and drag them to the graue we shall be sure of all the attendants they will follow to the funerall The Iewes manner was to burie with odours so should we our odours and sweet smelling prayers offered vp in the mediation of Christ And howsoeuer this worke may seeme difficult yet God many times strangely relieues our infirmities After Iezabel was cast downe and dead they had not been long within but sending out to burie her they found nothing but the skull and her feet and the palmes of her hands so many times would it be with vs if we cast downe the Iezabels our sinnes when we come to finish our mortification we may by the strange helpe of God finde the bodie of the master gone we know not how so as we shall not be troubled vnlesse it be with some skull or feete or palme of sinne But certainely though this kinde of buriall be somewhat difficult yet it is the true buriall place of Kings the most noble funerall that can be Thus of the first effect The second is in the next words How many vvaies Christ raiseth men vp In whom ye are raised vp together Christ is said to raise men vp diuers waies 1. When he awaketh men out of their naturall Lithargie or spirituall sleepinesse and securitie in matters of religion thus Ephes 5.14 2. When hee brings forth the minde of man out of the dungeons of ignorance and shewes them the light Esay 60.1 2. 3. When he cures men of discouragements and discomforts vnder their crosses Psal 41.10.6 4. When he recouers the Church from securitie or relapses either ordinarie or extraordinarie Cant. 2.10.11 c. and 5.3.5 Prou. 24.15 16. 5. When he incourageth men to holy duties A fourefold resurrection Cant. 7.12 but principally there is a fourefold resurrection The first is out of desperate crosses Esay 26.19 The second is the lifting of men vp to some speciall callings in the Church Matth. 11. The third is the resurrection of our bodies at the last day And the last is the resurrection of the soule vnto holy graces and duties this is called the first resurrection and is meant here in this place and Rom. 6.4 but most vsually we say there is a twofold resurrection the one from the corruption of the flesh the other from the corruption of sinne this latter is here meant and this belongeth to viuification Now this first resurrection must be considered either in it selfe or in the vnion or relation of it In it selfe and so there is a double resurrection First the resurrection of graces The resurrection of graces secondly the resurrection of duties For the first there are certaine graces which are not in the heart of man by nature which by the mighty power of Christ are wrought in the hearts of such as are truly conuerted A resurrection of 13 graces in a childe of God and are actually the members of Christ As first a holy inquirie after God Hos 3.5 Ier. 50.4 Secondly a holy wisdome in spirituall things Iam. 3.17 Thirdly a liuely faith in the fauour of God in Christ Fourthly a holy delight and meditation in the word of God Psal 119.10 11.128 and 27.4 Fiftly a liuely hope of an eternall inheritance 1 Pet 1.3 Sixtly a holy loue of Gods children 1 Ioh. 3.14 such as is required Ro. 12.9 10 11. Seuenthly godly sorrow for sinne 2 Cor. 7.10 Eightly vnspeakable and glorious ioy euen in affliction Rom. 5.2 1 Pet. 1.7 8. Ninthly a holy contentempt of the world and sinne and sinnefull persons Psal 15.4 1 Ioh. 2.19 Tenthly a holy reuerence and feare of God and his goodnes Hos 3.5 Eleuenthly a holy zeale and feruencie of affections especially in the seruice and worship of God Twelfthly a holy loue euen of enemies And lastly a holy desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ Now for the effecting of these the spirit of Christ is called in respect of his wonderfull working the spirit of God and of glory g 1 Pet. 4.14 the spirit of power of loue and of a sound minde h 2 Tim. 1.7 The spirit of praier or deprecations i Zach. 12.12 And the spirit of reuelation k Ephes 1.18 The resurrection of duties in a childe of God of diuers sorts in vvhich he differs from the vvicked Thus of resurrection of graces Now concerning resurrection of duties We must know that there are diuers duties which the naturall man will neuer be brought vnto in which lieth the very power of godlinesse and the experience of all sound and sauing consolation Now these duties may be three waies considered 1. As they respect holy life in generall 2. As they respect piety to God 3. As they respect righteousnesse to men For the first there are foure things wherein the liues of Gods children differ from all others 1. In the manner 2. In the matter 3. In the meanes 4. In the ends of holy life For the manner three things are eminent 1. That they are deuoted and consecrated to holines l Reuel 12.1 2. That they delight and loue to be Gods seruants m Esay 56. 3. That they haue their conuersation in simplicitie and godly purenesse n 2 Cor. 1.12 11.3 For the matter they haue respect to all Gods commandements * Psal 119.31 and do indeuour after inward holinesse o Matth. 5.6 as well as outward besides they liue by faith p Rom. 1.16 in some measure which is a way of holinesse altogether vnknowne in the practise of wicked men And for the meanes of holinesse the godly haue a recourse to a threefold fountaine of sanctitie with such a sinceritie and constancie as no wicked man can attaine it viz the word q Psal 1.2 Luc. 8.15 prayer r Gal. 4.6 and the Sabboth Å¿ Esay 56. And for the end of their obedience their praise is of God and not of men hauing a maine respect alwaies to exercise themselues so as they may haue a conscience voide of offence towards God or towards men u Act. 24.16 t Rom. 2.26 Thus of holinesse of life in generall Now in respect of piety to God it is a very resurrection through the power of Christ to bring a man to
were against vs or for the better assuring of the keeping of the ordinances it was by ordinances viz euangelicall for they say the decrees of Christ did euacuate the lawes of Moses They that read with ordinances say that the hand-writing was the debt of death which Christ tooke away with the ordinance that is the externall rites and rudiments of Moses But I thinke the sense is cleare as it is here rendred of ordinances And so the point to be obserued is that the ceremonies imposed vpon the Iewes were Gods ordinances which may shew vs that God did take vpon him the right to binde the conscience of men by ceremonies 2. Seeing Christians are freed from them by God himselfe therefore the Apostle would haue them stand to their libertie 3. This should exalt the praise of the morrall law if they were bound to obserue the very ceremonies because they were Gods ordinances then much more should wee bee carefull to keepe the morrall Hand-writings This word notes their vse because men are by nature wonderfull slow to acknowledge their misery therefore the Lord in all ages did driue men vnder their hands as it were openly to make profession of their owne sin guiltinesse and fall that so Gods iustice might be cleared Therfore were the sacrifices required presently after the fall and baptisme now is of like nature to shew vs our naturall vncleannesse that need to be washed Against vs In effect they were against vs. The ceremonies were against vs that is against the Iewes 4. waieas 1. As they were bills of debt 2. As they told the longing wife that her husband was long after to come 3. As they proclaimed God infinitely hating sinne so as he must haue attonement in bloud and that daily 4. As they were transgressed in respect of the right manner of obseruing them Now though these ceremonies belong not to vs Christians yet we are in the same debt by nature that they were though wee haue not that way of expressing our debt Quest But how could that which God commanded them to do be against them Answ Many waies 1. When they failed in the matter as when they offered strange fire or sacrificed their sonnes 2 When they did anger God by omissions or delaies as when Moses trisled out the circumcision of his sonne 3. When they did it for wrong ends as when the whore would sacrifice to colour her whoredomes Pro. 5. or when men did thinke thereby to make amends for their sinnes Ier. 7. or when they vsed them for the hurt of Gods children as Balaam vsed his sacrifice 4. When they mingle their owne inuentions with Gods ordinances and their feare towards God was taught by the precepts of men 5. When they did vse them as a burthen and it was a wearinesse to them Lastly when they that vsed them were wicked men and did vse them without knowledge or faith or repentance for their sinnes or the care of the due manner as many places of Scripture shew And thus may the very law of God be against vs still aswell as against them The vse of all this chiefly may be to shew the misery of euery impenitent sinner his sinnes are vpon record there is the hand-writing against him let him looke vpon sacrificing Iewes there he may behold man daily in effect saying thus Thus must it be done to the man that repenteth not of his sins the obligation lies forfeited and the Lord may call vpon him for his debt of 10000. talents when he hath not a farthing to pay and then he will be cast into prison Againe when he saith vs he shewes that this is the estate of all men by nature there was a hand-writing against the very Apostle himselfe and such as were in the visible Church therefore he saith against vs. Thus of what the ceremonies were in themselues Now of the discharge from them there two things may be noted 1. The manner Christ put them out tooke them away fastned them 2. The meanes viz. the Crosse The summe is that Christ Iesus by his sufferings on the Crosse paid our debt and freed vs from the hand-writing that was against vs the anger of God conceiued against vs for the forfeiture was thereon by the bloud of Christ appeased a Rom. 5.9 and forgiuenesse of sinnes and debts therein merited b 1 Ioh. 2.7 And by the bloud of Iesus the faithfull ouercome the deuill c Reuel 12.11 Heb. 11.28 that had power to destroy by reason of the forfeiture and because none of the former agreements would serue by reason of mans weaknesse therefore God makes a new couenant and seales it by the bloud of Christ vpon the Crosse d Zach. 9.11 Heb. 9.18 and if we would bee assured of our release in particular First for the forfeiture in Paradice we receiue an attonement in the bloud of Christ e Rom. 5.11.12.17 And he that from the curse in Paradice had power ouer death was now by Christ destroyed f Heb. 2.15 And for the law of Moses we are by Christ deliuered both from the rigor of it and from the curse of it his owne sacrifice being the propitiatorie to still the crie of the Law and to hide it from the eyes of Gods iustice h and as for the writing of the conscience the bloud of Christ cleanseth it from dead workes i Heb. 9.14 and quieteth it in the declaration of forgiuenes k Ephes 1.7.8 and it maketh intercession for sinne l Heb. 12.14 after calling to keep it quiet and as for the ceremoniall hand-writings they were both fulfilled m Col. 2.17 and abolished in the sacrifice of Christ on the crosse hee himselfe saying It was finished And the more to assure vs of our safetie from these forfeitures he vseth those diuers phrases of putting out taking out of the way and fastning it to the crosse Vses The vse of all is 1. For information wee may see what a case sinne sets vs in by nature and how hatefull the nature of sinne is if wee haue any thing to doe with God why our sinnes lie like so many blocks in our way and Christ Iesus only can lift them out of the way and can our wretched hearts delight in sinne seeing they nailed Christ to the Crosse It is an easie thing to rent an obligation amongst men but it was not so easie to get ours cancelled it could be rent in no place but on the Crosse Christ Iesus himselfe must be fastned to the tree that he might fasten our cancelled hand-writing therto and if God spared not his owne Sonne when hee came about this businesse of cancelling the hand-writing what thinke we shall be the case of all wicked men that die in their sinnes and must suffer the whole forfeiture to fall on their neckes if what Christ endured on the Crosse were so painefull they must not thinke to escape Hence also we may see what wonderfull cause wee haue
3. T is as easie to reuiue a dead man as perswade a carnall man fol. 4 Eight sorts of things that are aboue fol. 4 A fourefold presence of Christ fol. 6 Of Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father fol. 6 Three benefits come by tender affections fol. 8 Three sorts of things called things on earth fol. 8 Eight reasons in generall to disswade from affecting earthly things fol. 9 Salomons reasons against the loue of earthly things fol. 10. 11 Christs reasons fol. 12 The faithfull are dead three waies fol. 13 The life of Christians is hid in diuers respects fol. 14 Who may say Christ is their life fol. 16 Of the appearing of Christ fol. 16 Six appearings of Christ. fol. 16 Threefold iudgement fol. 16 Who shall iudge who shall be iudged where the iudgement shall be and when fol. 17 The signes of the second comming of Christ fol. 18 The forme of the last iudgement the preparation of the Iudge the citation resurrection collection and separation of the iudged the law and euidence by which men shall be iudged and the sentence and the fiue consequents of the iudgment with the vses fol. 19. to 22 What we must doe that we might be assured of the glory of heauen fol. 26 How long we must continue our sorrowes in mortification fol. 29 Why sinnes are called members fol. 30 Reasons against whoredome fol. 31 Seuen kindes of vncleannesse besides whoredome fol. 33 Remedies against vncleannesse fol. 34 The causes and occasions of lust fol. 35 What couetousnes is and the effects of it 36. 37. the signes of it 38. remedies against it fol. 39 Gods wrath vpon vncleane persons fol. 41 Iustice in God considered foure waies fol. 42 The fearefulnesse of Gods wrath set out fol. 43 The signes of Gods wrath the meanes to pacifie Gods anger and how we may know that God is pacified fol. 44. 45. 46 The markes of a childe of disobedience fol. 47 Difference betweene Gods anger towards the godly and the wicked fol. 48 The profit of remembring our naturall miserie fol. 49 A fourefold life fol. 51 How we may know when sinne is aliue and when it is dead fol. 51 A man neuer truely repents till he indeuour to be rid of all sinne and motiues fol. 53 Anger indifferent laudable vitious 54. Degrees of vicious anger reasons and remedies against it fol. 55. 56 Malice and the degrees and kindes of it 57. Reasons and remedies against it fol. 57. 58 Of blasphemie the kindes of it and reasons against it fol. 59. 60 Against filthy speaking fol. 61 Of lying reasons against it and questions answered fol. 61. 62 What the old man signifieth and why corruption is called the man and why the old man 63. 64. and what the workes of the old man are the old man is put off six waies fol. 64 The necessitie of the new birth fol. 66 Of the renouation of the creature in foure things and of the obedience in three things fol. 66 Rules for attaining of true knowledge fol. 67 Of the image of God in Christ in the Angels and in man 68. with their difference at large fol. 68. 69 How Christ is all in all and the comfort of it fol. 72. 73 The kindes and signes of election fol. 74 How many waies the elect are holy fol. 75 Fiue properties of Gods loue fol. 76 The kindes of mercy fol. 77 Motiues to mercy Rules how to shew mercy fol. 78 True Christian curtesie fol. 79 What humblenesse of minde is negatiuely and affirmatiuely fol. 80 Motiues to humblenesse of minde and of diuers sorts of pride fol. 80. 81 Of Christian meeknesse fol. 81 Of Long-suffering fol. 81. 82 Of forbearance the kindes and motiues and rules for the practise of it fol. 82. 83 Of forgiuing diuers questions fol. 84 To forgiue as Christ forgiues hath fiue things in it fol. 85 How loue is aboue all vertues fol. 85 The sorts and signes of loue fol. 86 Loue is the bond of perfection three waies fol. 87 Of Peace it is threefold fol. 87 How it is of God and when it rules and what we must doe to get it fol. 88 What is required in performing thankefulnes to men and what in receiuing it fol. 90 The Scripture is the word of Christ in foure respects fol. 92 Men sinne against the word six waies fol. 92 Women must seeke knowledge as well as men fol. 94 The vse of Scripture in our houses fol. 94 Of the wise vse of the word fol. 95 What we must doe that the word may dwell plenteously in vs and how we may know it doth fol. 98 Who may admonish or be admonished 99. Rules to be obserued in admonition fol. 100. What meant by Psalmes hymnes and spirituall songs and rules in singing of Psalms fol. 101 Vnto the goodnes of the action the goodnes of the end is required fol. 102 Things are done in the name of Christ foure waies fol. 103 Six reasons why Gods children should be more carefull of their words and deeds then others fol. 104 Of giuing thanks to God fol. 105 Of the gouernment of a familie the authoritie antiquitie and vtilitie of it fol. 107. 108 Foure things in a holy liuing together in a familie fol. 108 Six things in houshold piety fol. 108 Fiue things required in the labours of a familie fol. 109 The dutie of Wiues fol. 110. 111. 112. 113 Why subiection is rather named in the Wiues dutie fol. 111 Fiue things in the Wiues subiection fol. 111 Six waies Wiues must honour their Husbands fol. 111 Foure waies Wiues shame their Husbands fol. 112 Fiue waies Wiues shew faithfulnesse fol. 112 Six waies Wiues shew feare fol. 112 Six rules for Wiues workes fol. 112. 113 What Wiues are not bound to fol. 113 What they must doe that they may performe subiection fol. 113 The Wiues comelinesse in three things fol. 114 Husbands shew their loue foure waies fol. 116 Six waies Husbands honor their Wiues fol. 116 Seauen reasons why men must loue their Wiues fol. 117 Husbands obiections answered fol. 117 Causes why men loue not their Wiues fol. 117 Of bitter Husbands fol. 118 Foure rules for curing this bitternesse fol. 118 The dutie of children fol. 121 Childrens obiections answered fol. 122 Reasons of their obedience fol. 123 The dutie of Parents fol. 124. 125 How Parents prouoke their Children fol. 126 Seruants dutie fol. 128. 129. 130. c. Fiue faults in Seruants fol. 128 Foure things in the manner of Seruants obedience fol. 129 Six waies to know singlenesse of heart fol. 132 Twelue signes of a single hearted man fol. 133 Eight signes of a single hearted Seruant fol. 133 Of the feare of God in Seruants fol. 134 What Masters must doe to get the feare of God into their Seruants fol. 134 Eight obiections of Seruants answered fol. 135 CHAPTER III. VERSE I. If yee then be risen with Christ seeke those things that are aboue where Christ sits at the right hand of God HITHERTO of
in this work beares the Image of Christ and in him Christ riseth before our eyes not onely because the Lord Iesus doth in this gracious worke giue vs a daily and fresh remembrance of his resurrection by renewing such fruits of it but also because he imprinteth a secret kinde of heauenly mindednesse the Christian in some weake measure liuing as Christ did in the interim betweene his resurrection and ascension waiting alwayes for his exaltation into heauen Now the consideration of this worke is heere vsed by the Apostle to perswade vnto the meditation of heauenly things and that fitly for if wee bee risen as Christ was then we must bee minded as hee was now wee know that after hee was risen againe hee was not encumbred with this world nor did he conuerse with the men of this world but liued with the Lord as it were immediately in a heauenly manner waiting for Heauen so should a Christian doe he should euery day bee striuing to get vp his heart by faith and prayer and meditation and voluntary abnegation by all meanes begging and seeking the vertue of Christs resurrection that being enabled to forsake the world and the vnnecessary society with worldly men he might haue his heart and conuersation in heauen euery day waiting when the time of his changing should come Quest How may a man know whether he be risen with Christ Ans Hovv a man may knovv vvhether he be risen vvith Christ Who are not risen vvith Christ This question may bee resolued both negatiuely and affirmatiuely For first they are not risen with Christ that are in bondage to traditions as the coherence with the latter end of the former chapter shewes nor they that are drowned and made sencelesse with the cares of this life or the pleasures of voluptuous liuing i Luk. 21.34 nor they that confirming themselues in a dead presumptuous common hope plead the abounding of Gods grace to auouch their continuance in sinne k Rom. 6.1.4.5 1 Pet. 1.3 For the Apostle in the Epistle to the Romans vseth a reason taken from our conformity to the resurrection of Christ to confute this vicious and prophane plea of carelesse men Further they that worship the Beast the great Antichrist of Rome and receiue his marke vpon their foreheads or their hands are reckoned among the dead men that haue not their part in this first resurrection l Reu. 20.4.5.6 Also the Prophet Esay seemes to say that such men as will not see Gods high hand of Iudgement nor will learne to doe vprightly in the land of vprightnesse nor can bee allured to godlinesse though mercy be shewed them are to bee accounted among the dead men that shall not liue m Esa 26.9.10.14 Lastly they are not risen with Christ that doe not beleeue in Christ n Joh. 11.25 Now for the affirmatiue They may haue comfort in the first resurrection that haue felt a diuine power in the voyce of Christ quickning their hearts with effectuall desire and endeauour to rise out of the graues of sinne o Ioh. 5.25 and to stand vp from the world of the dead p Eph. 5.14 2. That are constantly affected with an holy estimation of the knowledge of Christ crucified and risen againe an effectuall knowledge I meane valuing the meanes and signes of it aboue all earthly things q Phil. 3.9.10 3. That finde their hearts changed from the cares and delights of this life to a constant desire of the second comming of Christ to translate them to the presence of glory in heauen 4. That shew a daily care to walke in newnesse of life yeelding their members as weapons of righteousnesse striuing to crucifie the olde man and destroy the body of sinne as they that are aliue vnto God r Rom. 6.4 5.6.13 2. Againe in that the Apostle saith if yee bee risen againe with Christ seeke those things that are aboue wee may note that it is as hard a thing to get vp the heart of men to the study of heauenly things as to lift vp a massie corps out of the graue and to inspire it with the desire of life As easie to reuiue a dead man as persvvade a carnall man there is neede of the spirit and power of Iesus to doe it And therefore wee should not wonder to see naturall men so heartlesse nor should we attribute it to any inefficacy in the meanes if carnall men bee not perswaded for a man may long perswade a dead man to rise before he will get vp and it should touch vs with all thankfulnesse to acknowledge Gods mercy if he haue giuen vs a minde to heauenly things to desire them and delight in them Thirdly in that he saith if yee bee risen speaking not onely conditionally but doubtfully it imports that one should bee exceeding carefull to search and trie whether they haue their part as yet in this first resurrection and withall implyes that many a man may seeme to himselfe and others to bee deliuered from the kingdome of darknesse and yet lie buried still in the graues of sinne Seeke th●se things which are aboue Heere the Apostle enters vpon the proposition of the first maine exhortation or rule of new life Now before I bring in the Apostle vrging this duty imagine with thy selfe how farre the Christian thus now to bee instructed for order of life hath already proceeded by faith for before a man can bee truely capable of direction of life there bee diuers things requisite in the preparations of faith The preparations of faith before a man can be capable of directions of life And these things are necessarily to be presupposed 1. That faith hath plucked him out of the world of sinners or dead men so that hee is already withdrawen from the society of the wicked 2. It hath shewed him Gods fauour and ioyned him to Christ 3. It hath shewed him in some measure such things in the Kingdome of Christ as his naturall eare neuer heard nor his naturall eye neuer saw nor his naturall heart neuer conceiued ſ 1 Cor. 2.9 4. It hath ioyned him to the liuing Saints so as he now with great desire delight conuerseth with them 5. It hath made him to suffer in the flesh for his sins and withall hath refreshed his spirit and cured him of his distrustfull and solitary sorrowes 6. It hath garnished his soule with new budding graces and opened for him a fountaine and spring of grace within him euen in his bowels t Ioh. 7.38.39 7. It hath raised in him a true and constant desire of new obedience of life with a secret resolution not to depart from any thing the Lord shall command all the dayes of his life Now presupposing the Christian to bee thus farre proceeded the Apostle comes in and to beginne his institutions of manners hee first chargeth him with this rule Doct. Seeke those that are aboue teaching vs that the first maine thing to be
strength or health Fourthly this care is a signe of little faith o v. 30. Fiftly t is for Gentiles that know not God nor the couenant of his grace and mercy in Christ to seeke after these things p v. 32. T is a grosse shame for any Christian to be so heathenish Sixtly doth not your heauenly father know all that you need q v. 32. If he be a father hath he not will and if he be in heauen hath he not power to helpe Seuenthly you haue a flat promise that if you seek the kingdome of heauen and the righteousnesse thereof which should take vp your cheefest care all these things without such carking so farre as is needfull shall be cast vpon you r v. 33. Lastly hath not euerie day his euill and is not the griefe of the day great enough Å¿ v. vlt. why then dost thou distract thy selfe for to morrow assure thy selfe the time to come will afford thee matter of griefe and trouble enough thou needst not disquiet thy selfe before hand Vse The consideration of all this as it may bee a comfort against all wants and crosses about these base earthly things so it may greatly reprooue those that burie their talents in the earth that is spend all their gifts about earthly matters But especially wee may hence learne diuers lessons And first since wee haue heard Salomons opinion after long discourse that all is vanity wee should learne of the same Salomon therefore to feare God and keepe his commandements for this is the whole of man and the end of all t Eccles 12.13 Secondly let the place of the sanctuarie u Ier. 17.11.12 where we may get the best things for our soules be as a glorious throne exalted Thirdly let vs vse this world as if we vsed it not Let them that reioyce bee as if they reioyced not and they that weepe as if they wept not and they that buy as though they possessed not x 1 Cor. 7.30.31 Fourthly if the Lord giue vs but a little portion in these things let vs esteeme his mercy and liue with contentednesse resoluing that better is a handfull with quietnesse then two handfulls with labour and vexation of spirit y Eccles 4.6 And fifthly we may hence be confirmed to take the more liberty to vse these earthly things for our owne ioy and refreshing they are none of the things the Lord would haue vs with such a doe keepe but hee allowes vs to eat and drinke and delight our selues with the profit of our labours z Eccles 2.24 Eccles 3.12 Lastly we should improoue them and vse them as meanes to doe what good wee can with them in this life I know saith the wise man there is nothing good in them but to reioyce and do good in his life And to this end we shold cast our bread euen vpon the waters for after many dayes wee may finde it Eccles 11.1.2 and giue our portion to seauen and also to eight The best vse of these riches is to be rich in doing good with them Thus of the illustration The confirmation followes VERS 3. For ye are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God IN this verse and the next the exhortation is confirmed by two motiues the one taken from the condition of the faithfull in this world the other taken from the confideration of their estate in the reuelation of the glory of Christ in the last day The first is in this verse the latter in the next There are two things in the condition of the faithfull on earth which should make them little to minde earthly things or desire to continue long in the world First that in respect of distresses they are as dead men while they liue Secondly that the happinesse they haue which is the life of their liues doth not appeare but is hid with God in Christ For yee are dead The faithfull are dead three wayes while they liue The faithfull dead three vvayes For first they are dead to sinne in respect of mortification Secondly they are dead to the Law by the body of Christ a Rom. 7.4 Gal. 2.19 in respect of iustification so as now the faithfull doe no longer wait vpon the Law for righteousnesse but vpon a second mariage they haue it from him that was raised from the dead for them They are dead to the world and that in three respects First in respect of their owne voluntary forsaking of the world and their mortifying of earthly desires ioyned with a sense of their owne mortalitie so was Paul as a man crucified to the world b Gal. 6.14 Secondly in respect of the worlds account of them For so soone as men get any true grace and retire themselues from the excesses of the time they are neglected and forgotten as dead men out of minde Thirdly in respect of the multitude of afflictions which doe many times ouerwhelme and drowne Christians It is not vnusuall in Scripture to say of men in desperate crosses they are dead men The Prophet Esay cals the people in captiuitie dead men when he saith Thy dead men shall liue c Esay 26.19 The Apostle Paul saith thus If we be dead with him we shall liue with him d 2 Tim. 2.11 Which hee seemes to explaine in the next verse thus If wee suffer with him wee shall also raigne with him Thus Dauid saith He was as a broken vessell forgotten as a dead man out of minde e Psal 31.12 And in another place he saith He was brought to the dust of the earth f Psal 22.15 And in the 88. Psalme hee saith his soule was full of euills hee was counted among them that goe downe to the pit free among the dead like the slaine lying in the graue yea he was laid in the lowest pit in the darknesse in the graue c. g Ps 88.4.5.6 I spare to alleadge other scriptures The vse may be Vses to teach vs as to obserue hence what may befall the best man so in the consideration of our owne estate to say within our selues as Iob did If I haue done wickedlie woe vnto me and if I haue done righteouslie I will not lift vp my head being full of confusion because I see mine affliction h Job 10.15 For though the Lord hath not yet thus ouerwhelmed thee with distresse yet in asmuch as he may doe it to thee as well as to others his deare seruants it should cause thee to walke humblie before God and to learne to die to the world before the world be dead to thee Againe hath misery broken in vpon thee and preuailed ouer thee so as thou seemest to be laid in darknesse as they that haue beene dead long agoe let not thy spirit be in perplexity in thee no strange thing is befallen thee Psal 143. Gods children are but dead men in this world Remember the time past and meditate
and all that worship his image and renew his marke shall then bee cast aliue into the lake that burnes with fire and brimstone a Reu. 19.20 False teachers which priuily bring in damnable heresies or speake euill of the way of truth haue their condemnation long since determined and agreed vpon b 2 Pet. 2.1.2.3 All Atheists that make a mocke of religion and the comming of Christ shall haue a principall portion of the fierce furie of Christ c 2 Pet. 3.3 c. All couetous worldlings and greedie rich men shall then be in a wofull case for the very rust of their cankred gold and siluer shall witnesse against them and shall eat their flesh as it were fire d Jam. 5.13 All mercilesse men shall then haue iudgement without mercy e Jam. 2.13 All whoremongers and adulterers and all that defile the flesh God will be sure to iudge f Heb. 13.4 A fearfull looking for of iudgement and violent fire shall deuoure all those Apostataes that sinne willingly after they haue receiued and acknowledged the truth g Heb. 10.27 How sure doe yee suppose shall his punishment be that doth despight the spirit of grace by which hee was sanctified h Heb. 10.29 All those that haue troubled Gods seruants shall beare their condemnation whosoeuer they be i Gal. 5.10 O man thou art inexcusable that iudgest another man wherein thou art guiltie thy selfe for the iudgement of God must needs be in truth against such as commit such things k Rom. 2.1.2.3 Especially if men grow master-like in censuring it will increase to greater condemnation l Iam. 3.1 All goats or vnruly Christians that will not be kept within Gods fence that is will not be ruled by Gods ordinances and ministers shall be separate in that day from Gods sheepe and as a people accursed to be cast into an vnauoidable fellowship with the deuill and his angels m Mat. 25. All hypocrites that say and doe not or doe all their worke to be seene of men take Gods couenant into their mouthes and hate to be reformed how shall they escape the damnation to come n Psal 50. Mat. 6. 23. All wicked men with their scant measure and deceitfull weights and wicked ballances shall neuer be iustified in the day of the Lord o Mich. 6.10.11 What shall I say It were too long to proceed to reckon all and it is a short labour to conclude with the Apostle No wantons nor drunkards nor railers nor extortioners nor theeues nor wrathfull persons nor gluttons nor idolaters nor iesters nor filthy talkers nor fearfull persons nor liers nor any that loue lies shall be able to stand in the day of Christ but shall be shut out of the kingdome of heauen and cast into the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone And thus of the vse for terror Secondly vpon the meditation of this last iudgement diuers lessons for Vse 2 our instruction are inforced First it should restraine vncharitable iudging and censuring one of another for lesse matters especially for things indifferent Who art thou that iudgest another mans seruant he standeth or falleth to his owne master Christ is the Lord of quicke and dead And therefore why doest thou condemne thy brother or why doest thou despise thy brother for we shall all appeare before the iudgement seat of Christ Inasmuch as the Lord Iesus Christ will iudge the secrets of all hearts and giue a iust triall to the actions of all men why should wee forestall his iudgement or in doubtfull matters b 1 Cor. 4.5 arrogate to our selues this honour of Christ If wee could consider that we shall then euery one giue accounts vnto God for himselfe c Ro. 14.12.13 wee should finde worke enough to doe to looke to our owne score Let vs not therefore brethren iudge one another any more Secondly are there any matters of difference amongst vs Let the Saints iudge them and end them d 1 Cor. 6 2. God will be contented to put his cause to them at the last day for we know the Saints shall iudge the world and therefore why should we refuse their arbitration Thirdly it should order and moderate our sorrowes for our dead friends Wee should not sorrow as people without hope seeing we beleeue that all that sleepe in Iesus God will bring with him e 1 Thess 4.13.14.17.18 Wee shall meet together againe in that day and afterwards liue with the Lord together for euer And therefore wee should comfort one another with these words Fourthly this summons to iudgement giues a dreadfull warning and admonition to the world euen to all men euery where to repent Inasmuch as God hath appointed a day wherein hee will iudge the world in righteousnesse by the man whom he hath appointed whereof he hath giuen an assurance in that he raised him from the dead f Act. 17.32 woe will be vnto vs if that day come vpon vs vnawares before wee haue made our peace and humbled our selues before God and by vnfained repentance turned from all our euill wayes It is an vnsearchable compassion that God shewes when he offers vs this mercy that if we will iudge our selues we shall not be iudged of the Lord in that day g 1 Cor. 11.34 And it will on the other side excessiuely incense his wrath when hauing such grace offered wee neglect it and death and iudgement finde our sinnes both vnremitted on Gods part and vnrepented on ours Fiftly seeing all these things must be dissolued how should it fire vs and daily quicken our dead and drowsie spirits to a constant care of all possible holy conuersation and godlines h 2 Pet. 3.12 vnlesse we would discouer our selues either to be Atheists that mocke at the iudgement to come or men giuen to a spirit of slumber that in soule sleepe it out and will not consider our latter end Seeing wee are all Gods stewards let vs arme our selues as they that must then giue accounts of our stewardship And since wee haue all receiued some of Gods talents and gifts in our seuerall places let vs be carefull to approue our selues to be good seruants and faithfull such as can returne them with aduantage lest the portion of the seruant that hid his masters talents in the earth fall vpon vs. Lastly since the day of iudgement is the day of our full and finall redemption and since he shall come as a theefe in the night euen in the houre that we thinke not let vs therefore watch i Mat. 24.44 and be ready alwaies carefull and diligent sighing and groaning longing and praying k Reuel 22. hasting to and looking for l 2 Pet. 3. this glorious appearance and reuelation of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ Vse 3 Thirdly this may be a singular comfort to all mortified and penitent Christians they may lift vp their heads and reioice with ioy vnspeakable and
were without question dead to sinne also how then doth he speake to them to mortifie sinne doth it not imply they had not beene mortified before I answer Answ the Apostle may well vse this exhortation for diuers reasons First many of them perhaps were dead but in appearance they professed mortification but were not mortified Secondly it might be some of them had begun to vse some exercises of mortification but had not finished their mortification sure it is and wee may see it by daily experience that many being wonne by the word and smitten with remorse haue sometimes the pangs of sorrow for their sinnes but quickly are a weary of seeking sorrow in secret for sinne they giue ouer before they haue soundly and sufficiently humbled their soules But may some one say Quest how long should we continue our sorrowes or how long should we iudge our selues in secret for our sins I answer thou must not giue ouer thy sorrowes Answ We must continue sorrovving till vvee finde foure things Rom. 6. First till the body of sinne bee destroyed that is till that generall frame of sinfulnesse be dissolued till I say thou haue set some order in thy heart and life so as the most sinnes thou diddst before liue in bee reformed Secondly it were expedient thou shouldest still seeke to humble thy soule till thou couldest get as much tendernesse in bewayling thy sinnes as thou wert wont to haue in greeuing for crosses till thou couldst mourne as freshly for piercing Gods sonne as for losing thsne owne sonne d Zach. 12.10 Thirdly thou must sorrow till thou finde the power of the most beloued and rooted sinnes to bee in some measure weakned and abated Fourthly thou doest not well to giue thy sorrowes ouer till thou finde the testimony of Iesus in thy hart that is till God answer thy mournfull requests of pardon with some ioyes in the holy Ghost and the deawes of heauenly refreshings But will some one say must we lay all aside Quest Answ and do nothing else but sorrow till we can finde all those things Ans I meane not that men should neglect their callings all this while or that they should carrie an outward coun●enance of sorrowing before others or that they should all this while afflict their hearts with discontentment or the like For when the Apostle wils men to pray alwaies hee meanes not that they should doe nothing but pray but he would haue them to keep a set course of praying euery day and besides to watch to all the extraordinary occasions or opportunities of prayer which being done a Christian may be truely sayd to pray continually though otherwise he follow his calling diligently The like I say of sorrowing alwayes But that I may expresse my meaning distinctly I thinke till thou canst attain the former things What it is to sorrovv continually thou must obserue these rules First thou must lay aside thy recreations carnall reioycings for this the Apostle Iames imports when he saith Let your laughter be turned into heauinesse and your ioy into mourning c Jame 4.9 Secondly thou must beg sorrow at Gods hand euerie day constantly in the times set apart for praier till the Lord giue thee rest to thy soule by granting the things before mentioned Thirdly thou must not neglect the times of speciall fasting and humiliation if the Lord call thereunto f Esa 22 12. Lastly thou must vse speciall sobrietie in the restraint of thy liberty in earthly things and be watchfull to make vse of all opportunities of softning thy heart These things being obserued thou mayst seeme vnto men not to sorrow and mayst follow thy calling seriously and yet be truely sayd to sorrow alwayes Thus of the second reason why the Apostle exhorts still to mortification Thirdly the dearest and humblest seruants of God may be called vpon to mortifie their members that are on earth though they haue truly soundy repented of sinne before by reason of the euils of euery day which daily and afresh euen after calling breake out in their hearts and liues and for which they must still renew their repentance For their first repentance onely deliuers them from sinnes past they must renew their mortification as their corruptions are renewed Why sinnes are called members Members It is certaine by members on earth the Apostle meanes sinne and that fitly For first actuall sinnes in relation to originall sinne are as so many members that grow from it Secondly by a Metonimie of the subiect sinne may bee called our members because it is brought into action by the help and seruice of our members Thirdly if the Apostle had spoken to wicked men hee might well haue called sinne their members because they loue sinne as they loue their members and therefore to take away their sinne is to pull out their eyes or to cut off their hands or feet as our Sauiour shewes g Mat. 5.29 c. Fourthly sinnes in the Colossians and so in all the faithfull may bee heere called members comparatiuely with the bodie of sinne mentioned Col. 2.12 as if the Apostle should say the bodie of sinne is already cast off destroyed in you by your former repentance but yet there remaines some limbes of sinne Difference betvveen sin in the godly and in the vvicked some members of it these resist and in this sense wee may heere note a liuely difference betweene sinne in wicked men and sinne in godly men For in wicked men there is the whole bodie of sinnes that is all their sinnes vnremitted and vnrepented But in godly men the body of sin euen the greater number of their sinnes they haue abandoned onely some few members of their sins remaine which euery day molest them But before I passe from these words two things are further to be noted First that he saith your members Secondly he addeth which are on earth Your The Apostle saith well your members for indeede properly our sinnes are our owne and nothing else Which are on earth They are also well sayd to bee on earth because they are signes of the earthly man and because they tend only to earthly pleasures and contentments and because men with these vnrepented of are not admitted into Heauen Thus of the generall proposition Now followes the catalogue of sins to be mortified before I enter vpon the particular consideration of them some thing may be learned from the Apostles order First he teacheth men to reforme their owne personall vices then orders them for mortification of iniuries to other men sure it is Vicious persons vvill be iniurious persons that euery filthy person will bee an iniurious person and till men repent of their lusts and other such like personall corruptions they will neuer cease to be iniurious to other men And ordinarily men that are notable for malice or blasphemy that is cursed speaking such like sinnes as the Apostle after names Note they
Ioels counsell that if they would haue the Lord repent him of the euill and returne and leaue a blessing behinde him they must sanctifie a fast and call a solemne assembly l Ioel 2.13.14 c. Secondly by the seuere execution of iustice by Magistrates vpon notorious offenders and thus Phinehas staied the plague m Num. 25.1 Thirdly by the generall repentance of the people and thus Gods anger towards Nineuie was pacified n Jonah 3. Fourthly and especially by the intercession of Christ intreating for a Citie or Nation So was Ierusalem deliuered out of captiuitie as the Prophet Zacharie declares Zach. 1.12 Zach. 1.12 How priuate wrath is pacified Concerning the pacifying of Gods anger to particular persons I will first consider what will not pacifie it and then what will pacifie it For the first no multitude of gifts can deliuer thee o Ioh. 36.18 and the most mighty helpes cannot cause the Lord to with-draw his anger p Iob 36.18 it will not auaile thee to come before the Lord with burnt offerings and with calues of a yeere old The Lord will not be pleased with thousands of rammes or with ten thousand riuers of oyle Nor will the sonne of thy body make an attonement for the sinnes of thy soule q Mich. 6.6.7 To crie Lord Lord at home r Matth. 7. or the Temple of the Lord the Temple of the Lord ſ Ier. 7. abroad will not a whit abate of his fierce anger and as little will it auaile to build Churches mend high wayes erect Tombes for dead Prophets or the like workes of labour or cost Now for the affirmatiue if we speake properly nothing will quench Gods anger but the bloud of Christ For hee is the propitiation for our sinne t Ioh. 2.1 R●m 5.9 Yet in some respects and as meanes the Lord doth appoint vnto vs that wee might be capable of reconciliation these things are auailable First the duties of mortification as confession of sinne and iudging of our selues and examining of our hearts and liues If we acknowledge our sinnes hee is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes u 1 Ioh. 1.9 and if we iudge our selues the Lord will giue ouer iudging vs * 1 Cor. 11.34 If disobedient Israel will returne and know his iniquities the Lord will not let his wrath fall vpon him x Jer. 3.12.13 Godly sorrow also is very auailable to quench wrath If Ierusalem will wash her heart she shall be saued y Jer. 4.14 the Lord will heare the voice of our weeping z Ps●l 6.8 Praier also is of great vse and force for the Lord is a God that heareth praier a Psal 65.2 And the Prophet Zephany sheweth that if the people can learne a language once to call vpon the name of the Lord b Zeph. 3 9. in the sinceritie of their hearts hee will not poure vpon them that fierce wrath which shall certainly fall vpon all the families that call not vpon his name Secondly faith in the bloud of Christ procureth reconcillation and forgiuenesse of the sinnes that are past through the patience of God c Rom. 3.25 especially the worke of faith whereby a Christian perceiuing Gods anger and encouraged with the support of Gods couenant and promise in Christ doth in all tendernesse of heart importune Gods free mercy and wrestle and striue with importunitie casting himselfe vpon Christ for shelter and seriously setting himselfe against euery iniquitie euen because there is hope Hovv vve may knovv that God is pacified Finally wee may discerne that God is pacified diuers wayes First by induction from the practise of the former rules for if we doe what God requires we may conclude and inferre we shall receiue what God promiseth Secondly it may be perceiued by Gods presence in the meanes if we finde our hearts vnloosed and the passages of the meanes againe opened that is a comfortable testimonie that the Lord is returned Thirdly it may bee perceiued by the witnesse of the spirit of adoption speaking peace d Psal 85 8. to our consciences and with vnutterable ioyes quieting and satisfying our hearts Vses The vse followeth And first the doctrine of Gods wrath may greatly humble and astonish impenitent sinners Is the anger of the Lord kindled against thee how long then wilt thou be without innocencie e Hos 8.5 Be not a mocker lest thy bonds increase f Esay 28.22 Art thou an vncleane person a railer a drunkard an vsurer a swearer a lier a prophaner of Gods Sabboths a voluptuous epicure a carnall worldling or the like Be not deceiued nor let any deceiue thee with vaine words crying peace peace dawbing with vntempered morter for assuredly the wrath of God for these things commeth vpon the children of disobedience and who knowes the power of his wrath g Psal 90.11 Secondly seeing Gods wrath is so exceeding terrible and fierce blessed are all they that are deliuered from it in Iesus Christ We should be stirred vp to constant thankfulnesse because the Lord hath forgiuen vs the punishment of our sinnes 1 Thess 5.8.9 Heb. 3.11.12 so as now there is no condemnation to vs being in Christ Iesus Lastly seeing the Lords anger is so dreadfull wee should all learne to walke before him in all vprightnesse and feare and trembling fencing our selues with the breast-plate of faith and the helmet of hope being in all things sober and watchfull taking heed to our selues that wee be not hardened through the deceitfulnesse of sinne And thus of the wrath of God The children of disobedience The second maine thing in this verse to be considered of is the persons vpon whom it fals viz. the children of disobedience And by children of disobedience he meaneth generally wicked and vnregenerate men Now wicked men are of two sorts Some are cleerely out of the Church and haue beene branded in seuerall ages with seuerall tearmes of distinction as now the Infidels and before all the vncircumcised Gentiles Before the floud they were called sonnes of men Now others are in the Church and are children of God by creation generall vocation and externall profession but indeed are wicked and prophane Esaus The former sort were disobedient men D sobedient men and the latter are disobedient children Disobedient children And these disobedient children in the Church are of two sorts for some will not be tied to liue in their fathers house but that they may the more securely sinne and wallow in all filthy abominations they shunne Gods house for the most part and liue without any conscionable subiection to any ministerie Such was the prodigall sonne and such are our common swearers drunkards and vncleane persons nay they goe further for they speake euill of their fathers house and slander their owne mothers sons Now the other sort liue in their fathers house they come to heare and receiue the Sacraments they are there at bed
and boord but yet they will doe what they list Filij insuasibilita●is Filij incredulitatis Filij inobedientiae They will not be perswaded by the word spirit or seruants of God and so they are children of vnperswadablenesse They will not beleeue their fathers threatnings or promises and so they are children of incredulitie They will not conforme themselues to their fathers will and so are called children of disobedience 〈…〉 Now the estate of both these sorts of disobedient children is that the fearefull wrath of God is vpon them no father can so plague and cast off a wicked sonne as they are sure to be plagued and cast off of God As they are children of disobedience by their owne stubbornnesse so are they children of wrath by Gods iustice and if they continue thus they may proue children of perdition Q. Quest But how may the children of disobedience be knowne Ans Answ We may gather signes either from the consideration of these words or from other Scriptures From these words two wayes first he is a childe of disobedience The marks of a childe of disobedience that is led and ruled and hath all his thoughts and affections and his actions as it were framed and begotten and nursed vp by the corruption of his nature arising from the disobedience of the first man or by the temptations of Sathan the Prince of all darknesse and disobedience It is one thing to sinne by infirmitie to fall by occasion into a sinne and another thing to be led and ruled and to frame ones life and imployment after the rules and proiects that are hatched by the flesh or Sathan To be a childe to sinne that is to be ruled and mastered and led by it to be as it were at the command of lust and corruption that is not in a childe of God standing in vprightnesse Secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word here rendred disobedience imports vnteachablenesse such a disobedience as is wilfull when a man sinnes and will sinne and will not be perswaded either by Gods word or Gods spirit or Gods people that would aduise or admonish him To be of an incurable or inteachable disposition is a ranke signe of a childe of disobedience Further if wee marke the coherence in the second chapter of the Epistle to the Ephesians vers 2. compared with the first wee may easily discerne that a childe of disobedience is dead in trespasses and sinnes His soule can lie at rest though he be guiltie of neuer so many sinnes Cast a mountaine on a dead man and hee will not complaine or aile any thing And sure it is a notable signe of a childe of disobedience to be guiltie of a multitude of sinnes and yet to be senselesse vnder them to be able to goe from day to day and weeke to weeke and moneth to moneth and neuer to aile any thing for any sound remorse he findes for his sinne Especially when men are at that passe that the Prophet Ieremy complained of that though God strike them yet they are not grieued yea though the Lord consume them they refuse to receiue correction and make their faces harder then a rocke refusing to returne i Ier. 5.3 Q. But may not the wrath of God come vpon his owne children Whether vvrath may not come vpon Gods children as vvell as the children of disobedience Is God neuer angry with his owne seruants Ans God may be angry with his owne people for when the Prophet Dauid saith his anger endureth but a moment k Psal 30.5 hee implies then that God will be angry And in the 89. Psalme though the Lord saith hee will not take away his goodnesse and his mercy yet if they keepe not his law he saith expresly he will visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquitie with stripes l Ps 89.32.33 And thus he is angry with them sometimes for their couetousnesse m Esay 55.17 sometimes for their carelesse worship n Esay 64.5.7 sometimes for vnworthy receiuing o 1 Cor. 11. sometimes for their losse of their first loue p Reu. 2. but generally euery grosse sinne angers God by whomsoeuer it be committed But yet there is great difference betweene Gods anger towards his owne children and that wrath that commeth vpon the children of disobedience and that principally in three things First wrath comming vpon the faithfull is not eternall but temporary and in this life only for they are deliuered from the wrath to come q 1 The. 1. vlt. for there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Iesus they are already past from death to life But so are not wicked men For God is so angry with them in this life that his anger may continue for euer and not be extinguished in their very death And not only so but Gods anger with his own children euen in this life is not for all their daies but only a very short time of their life For as Dauid saith his anger endureth but a moment weeping may endure for a night but ioy commeth in the morning r Psal 30.5 And in another place he saith he will not alwayes chide neither will he keepe his anger for euer ſ Psal 103.9 And the Lord witnesseth by the Prophet Esay that he forsaketh but for a small moment he hideth his face in a little wrath but he hath mercy with euerlasting kindnes t Esay 54.7.8 When a child of God falleth he is sure he shall rise u Mich. 7.8 but it is not so with the vngodly Secondly as Gods wrath differs in the continuance so it differs in the measure it is milder towards his children then it is towards the children of disobedience Which appeares to be so two wayes For first Gods anger as it is manifested in outward iudgements vpon his owne people is euer proportioned to their strength he doth not consider what their sinne deserues but what their spirits are able to sustaine He will not suffer them to be tempted aboue that which they are able but will giue issue with the temptation that they may bee able to beare it x 1 Cor. 10.13 And the Prophet Esay sheweth that the Lord hath great care lest by contending ouer-long with his people the spirit should faile and the soule which he hath made y Esay 57.16 And the Prophet Dauid shewes that God deales not with his people after their sins nor rewards them after their iniquities but as a father pittieth his children so the Lord pittieth them that feare him z Psal 103.10 14. But now with the wicked it is much otherwise for the Lord neuer asks what strength they haue to beare it or how they will take it but what sinne they haue committed and how they haue deserued it Besides the affections of Gods children are sweetned with many mercies for though the Lord be angry for their sinne yet if they will seeke
had a warrant by his calling and commission to rehearse the sins of others For Gods ministers are enioyned to shew Gods people their sinnes But a like liberty is not lawfull to euery priuate man Priuate men may remembers others of their estate past if it may stirre them vp to thankfulnesse or if it may further them in humiliation for new offences or they may exhort one another lest any be deceiued by sinne and so for preuention of corruptions vnto which they are by nature prone or in some speciall cases to cleare Gods iustice against hard-hearted sinners otherwise it is a vile and sinfull course to be raking into the liues of others but especially to be grating vpon the faults past of penitent sinners Where God hath pardoned what hath man to doe to impute And thus of the coherence and generall consideration of the words This verse containes two specialties of their miserie by nature First their continuance in sinne in that he saith yee walked Secondly their delight in sinne in that he saith yee liued in them that is it was the life of your life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In which That is in which sinnes and so it teacheth vs that we should be more troubled for sinne then for crosses For he doth not say in which miseries or iudgements but in which sinnes and corruptions As any are more spirituall sin is their greatest sorrow and as any are more carnall they are more troubled with crosses Yee A man can neuer be soundly and profitably humbled till he minde his owne sinnes The knowledge of sin that is transient is dangerous as we may see in the Pharisie The more he knowes by the Publican the prouder he is in himselfe but the knowledge that is reflexed is profitable And therefore the Publican that troubled himselfe about his owne sinne went home more iustified than the other And therefore the Apostle here tels not of the misery of other men but expresly guides them to the consideration of their owne misery This should teach vs without shifting or delay to search and try our owne waies and to grow skilfull in recounting the euils of our owne liues The true knowledge of our selues is a great step in a holy life T is that the most of vs neuer attaine to And yet it is of singular vse it would make vs humble in our selues compassionate towards others easie to be admonished tender-hearted in Gods worship more apt to godly sorrow and of great ripenesse and dexteritie of knowledge in cases of conscience Also Sinne is a poyson that ouerflowes all sorts of men This also takes in rich men and great men and lea●ned men and old men and the ciuiller sort of men There is no estate calling or condition of men nor sex or nation but they haue been infected with this plague It hath runne ouer the whole earth And therefore it should humble rich men and learned men and all sorts of men Looke not at thy wealth or thy wit or thy learning or thy nobilitie or thy same amongst men looke at thy filthy nature thou hast now or thou hast had the plague vpon thy soule and as wise and learned and rich and ciuill and noble as thou haue died of this sicknes and are in hell Walked This word notes not onely inclination to sinne but action not only words but practise and in practise not onely a falling by infirmitie but continuance and progresse in sinne To walke in sinne is to proceede in sinne from one kind to another and from one sinne to another and to lie and dwell in sinne And this is the wretched condition and thraldome of euery one by nature thus hard is it to giue ouer sinne and were it not for the great mercy of God thus would all men continue Why men liue so long in sin Qu. But what should be the reason that men continue so long in sinne and are so loth to get out of this miserable path Ans The soule by nature is dead in sinne i Eph. 1.2 And all flesh is couered with a vaile of blindnes k Esay 25.8 And Sathan the prince of darknes workes effectually in the children of disobedience besides the course and custome of the world that lies in wickednes l 1 Ioh. 5.18 Ephes 2.2 much hardens and confirmes the sinner and the minde and will of the flesh is stubborne And withall euery wicked man is a great student He deuiseth and imagineth and forecasteth how to finde out waies to set himselfe in a way that is not good And many times God in his fearefull iudgement deliuers many a man vp to a spirituall lethargie and slumber and reprobate minde that hearing he may heare and not vnderstand and seeing he may see and not perceiue hauing his heart false and his eares dull and his eyes closed vp lest he should be conuerted and humbled m Act. 28.27 The vse may be to teach vs to inlarge our hearts in the sense of Gods goodnesse that hath deliuered vs from an estate that was in it selfe so fearefull Especially it may comfort vs against our infirmities that howsoeuer we faile by occasion yet by Gods mercy we doe not walke in sinne We proceede not from degree to degree and from sinne to sin it is a happy time with a Christian when he getteth victory ouer his sinnes so as at least by degrees he gets downe the power of them And on the other side they are in a wofull estate that haue their corruptions growing vpon them both for power and number and continuance O woe will be vnto them when the master shall come and finde them so doing And thus of the first specialty The second is Ye liued in them That is The wickedest men many times most liuely yee set the delight of your hearts vpon them Sinne was the life of your liues None many times more liuely and in greater iollity then such as are in greatest danger of Gods wrath and so cursedly vile is mans euill disposition that as many men are the more sinfull they are the more secure and full of carnall liuelinesse Who more frollicke then our drunkards swaggerers swearers abominable filthy persons Yea they carry themselues as if they had found out a life of excellency and contentment aboue all other men and yet are buried in the ditches of monstrous wickednes and are descending swiftly to their owne place hasting to the vengeance to come Many times the holiest men are most pensiue and the vilest men most liuely Liued There is a fourefold life of men A fourefold life The life of nature the life of corruption the life of grace and the life of glory The first life Adam liued before his fall The last the blessed liue in heauen The third the godly liue after their conuersion on earth and the second is the life of all the vnregenerate Sin is aliue It hath a liuing being in the vnconuerted sinner It is a monster
ingendred in the heart of man by coniunction with Sathan seating his seuerall limbs in the seuerall faculties of the soule Now it will not be amisse to consider how we may know when this monster is aliue when he is dead Sinne may be knowne to be aliue How we may know when sinne is aliue first by the flaming desires of the heart and thoughts of the minde inordinately bent vpon things forbidden Secondly by the command and authoritie it holds ouer all the faculties and powers of the soule and bodie vsing them as seruants and executioners of the lusts of the flesh Thirdly by the contentment men place in knowne euils Fourthly by customarie practise And lastly if this monster by the deceitfull working of Sathan should liue still for a time as many times it doth euen in the worst men yet there is a way to try whether it be a-liue or no. For bring it to the law and it will presently reuiue If it be pricked and pierced with the terrors and reproofes of a sound application it will shew it selfe by vnquietnesse and vnruly distempers And on the other side it is certaine sinne is dead and when it is dead if thy flaming desires to euill be quenched Secondly if the command ouer the facultie of the soule be ceased Thirdly if a man seeke and place his chiefe contentment in spirituall things Fourthly if the customarie practise of euill be broken off and dissolued and lastly if the heart will abide the searching and sound application of the law In them So wretchedly is the vnregenerate heart of man composed that he doth not only liue and sinne but he liues in sinne and with sinne and by sinne too He liues in sinne because he is drowned vnder the power and guilt of sinne He liues with sinne because he is not a guest onely but a soiourner also with his sinne Sinne keeps the house and the sinne is at bed and boord there And he liues by sinne too for most sinners cannot contriue how to liue without them The letcher cannot liue without his mistris the vsurer cannot liue without his gaine and so of the rest All these are woefull circumstances of euill and doe marueilously decipher out a soule that feeles not the life of Iesus Christ in him and they impart also a further misery It is easie to commit sinne but it is not easie to be rid of sinne a man may also quickly forget his sinne but he shall not so quickly forgoe his sinne for howsoeuer by Gods singular patience he liues for all his sinne yet by the singular wretchednesse of his condition all his sinnes will liue with him they are not transient but so long as he liues his sinne will liue with him yea it will goe with him too when he dies if it be not preuented with speedy repentance The vse also of all this may be to teach conuerted Christians that are deliuered from this wofull misery to walke as children of the light hauing their fruit in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth hauing no further fellowship with the vnfruitfull workes of darknes seeing all is now made manifest by the light n Ephes 5.8 9.11.13 yea they should striue to expresse as much life of contentment in the works of new life and light as before they euer felt in the paths of sinne and darknesse and if wicked men walke on with such vnwearied resolutions and endeuours in such a dangerous estate how should Christians be stir'd to all possible constancy in well-doing seeing they are sure that all that walke vprightly walke safely Thus of the seuenth verse VERS 8. But now put yee away euen all these things anger wrath malice cursed speaking filthy speaking out of your mouth HItherto of the mortification of vices especially against a mans selfe Now followes the mortification of iniuries And therein I consider first the exhortation it selfe in the eight verse and a part of the ninth Secondly the reasons vers 9.10 11. In the exhortation I consider first the charge put away euen all these things secondly the catalogue of iniuries to be put away and mortified anger wrath malice c. From the coherence in that the Apostle fastens this branch of the exhortation vpon the remembrance of their misery in the former verse it shewes that the meditation of our misery is as good to kill or beat downe the power of rage and strong passions and distempers as it hath beene shewed to be good to kill lust and couetousnes When you see men or women of heady passions and violent affections fall into affliction of conscience then imagine they will hurle off their natures and grow more calme and meeke but till then seldome doe any mend or not for any long time Now That is in the time of grace and so it giues vs occasion to consider that grace yeelds no liberty to sinne Now that thou hast receiued the true grace of God there is no time left for passion fretting cursed speaking or filthy speaking or lying or any such iniurious euils Grace inioynes vs to take leaue of our old affections and our owne peruerse courses Many such things as before thy conuersion might in some respects beene more borne withall must now be left for the conuerted Christian must liue circumspectly precisely watching in all things and walking wisely both at home and abroad he must part with his old humors and peruerse qualities and therefore their condemnation sleepeth not Iud. 4. that turne the grace of God into wantonnesse Put away Sinne is not truely repented of till it be put away Now sinne is put away two waies First by iustification and so God puts away our sinnes How sinne is put away for when God pardoneth iniquity hee casteth it away and neuer sees it or remembers it more o Mic. 7.18 19. Secondly by sanctification and so we must put away our sinnes We must put away or pull downe sinne as the rebell puts downe his weapons when he seekes the seruice of his Prince or we must deale with our sinnes as God deales with the mighty that is we must put them downe from their seates if we cannot destroy them from liuing yet we may disturbe them sitting or raigning or resting in vs or we must put them away as the wronged husband doth his filthy wife We must diuorce our sinnnes that by couenant they should neuer be ours more We will neuer loue them and let them sleep in our bosome and dwell with vs and be familiar with our natures as they haue beene Now we put away sinne three waies First by confessing them to God Secondly by godly sorrow washing the stain and filth of them from off our hearts Thirdly by renouncing and forsaking the practise of them all are here intended but the last principally and this we must know will not be done with ease if it be truely and soundly done The Prophet Micah meanes something when he saith of the Lord
them but more especially they are in a cursed condition that seeke lies u Psal 4.4 and teach their tongues to lie * Ier. 9.5 neither let men please themselues that they can doe it couertly For liars are for the most part easily found out there is amongst the rest 3. signes of a lyar and in one of the three he vsually discouers himselfe Three signes of a lyar 1. To vary incontinently x Pro. 12.19 2. To hearken to a false tongue y Pro. 17.4 3. To loue lies z Reuel 22.15 But let euery one that feareth God obey this counsell of the Apostle to put lying in the Catalogue of sinnes he would daily watch against And because by nature wee are all prone vnto this sinne we should remember it euen in our praiers to God that he would remoue farre from vs vanitie and lies a Pro. 3.8 Before I passe from this vice there are certaine questions a Quest to be answered a Answ as first whether all lying be sinne or no. That this may be vnderstood men vse to diuide lies into three sorts There is an officious and a pernicious and a iesting lye All men condemne the pernicious lie many excuse the lie in iest and some commend the officious lie but the truth is all are naught And therefore the Apostle saith lie not at all for he speaketh indefinitely But it will be obiected that the midwiues and Rahab and Micholl did lie but it must be answered that their zeale and piety was to be praised Obiect but the meanes they vsed was not to be imitated If any obiect that the Patriarches vsed lying they must know that diuers speeches of theirs which to some seeme to bee lyes indeed were not For Sarah was Abrahams sister and Iacob was Isaacks first borne by diuine dispensation and prophetically and so Pauls speech about the high Priest may be excused when he saith he knew not that he was the high Priest For from the death of Christ the right of the Priesthood ceased If it bee further obiected Obiect that of two euils the lesse is to be chosen I answere Answ that that rule is to be vnderstood of euils of inconuenience not of euils of sinne Now that it may further appeare that it is not lawfull to lie no though it were to saue others from great danger These reasons may be weighed First we may not do euill that good may come of it b Rom. 3. 2. Peter was rebuked for dissembling though it were as hee conceiued to a good end euen to auoide offence and scandall c Gal. 2. 3. Nay it is not lawfull to him though it were to defend Gods cause or to preuent his dishonour therefore Iob saith earnestly and in great heate will yee speake wickedly for God and talke deceitfully for him will yee accept his person d Iob 13.7.8.9 c. 4. If wee might lye to saue others out of danger then wee might lye to saue our selues also for we are not more bound to care for the safety of others then our owne but wee may not lye to saue our selues for then Peter had not sinned by denying his Master keeping his faith and his heart seeing it was to saue his owne life Lastly wee might as well commit fornication with the Moabites to draw them to our religion or steale from rich men to giue to the poore as to lye to profit Quest Quest But is it not lawfull to suppresse the truth sometimes Answ Answ Truth is either religious or politicall For religious truth being asked of our faith we are ingenuously to professe it Now politicall truth is to be considered either as it is required in iudgment or as it is to be vsed in cases out of iudgement As for the truth before a iudge it may not bee concealed when thou art called to answer the truth but in priuate conuersing wee are not alwaies bound to reueale all the truth for the precept Speake euery man the truth e Eph. 4.15 is an affirmatiue precept and so doth not binde alwaies and at all times and in all places Besides charitie bindes vs to conceale and couer many infirmities and a wise man keeps in some part till afterwards and besides it is apparant men are not bound to discouer their secret sinnes to all men Samuel also is taught to conceale a part of the truth when he went to annoint Dauid And thus of the catalogue of iniuries Seeing you haue put off the old man with his workes In these words with the verses that follow to the 12th is contained three reasons to inforce the mortification of iniuries I. They are the workes of the old man vers 10. and they haue by profession put off the old man and so they should doe his workes II. They are now in the state of grace they are new men and therefore haue new manners they are by the meanes renued in knowledge vers 11. and therefore ought to grow in practise euen in the mortification of what remaines of corruption they are renued after the Image of Christ and Christs image is the patterne of all holinesse and they must therefore leaue those sinnes because how like soeuer they bee to the humors and dispositions of the most men yet they are not found in the Image of Christ III. God is vnpartially righteous and iust if men minde not mortification he cares not for them though they were Iewes circumcised freemen And contrariwise if they doe conscionably striue after the holinesse of Christ and the mortification of sinnes hee will accept them though they were Graecians Scythians bond c. In these words is heedfully to be noted the matter to be auoided both the old man and his workes 2. The maner imploied in the metaphor put off with the time haue and the persons yee The old man is by some taken to be their old condition of life in the time of Idolatrie by others to be their custome and habit in sinne vvhat the old man signifieth but it is generally by the most taken to be the corruption of nature and inborne prauitie that vicious humor and ill disposition that naturally is in euery one of vs it is the image of the first Adam in our hearts This corruption is here said to be the man Why corruption is called the man because it is seated in euery part of man and because it rules and frames a man and because it liues in man so as sinne only seemes to be aliue and the man dead and because God will take notice of nothing in the sinner but his sinne And vvhy it is called the old man 2. The old man partly in respect of the first Adam whose sinne is ours by propagation and who is called old to distinguish him from the second Adam a 1 Cor 15.4.5 and partly in respect of our state of corruption which in the renued
estate we change so that our condition after calling is said to be new and our disposition before calling said to be old This corruption may be said to be old also by the effects for in godly men it waxeth old and withereth more and more daily by the power of Christ in them and in wicked men it spends the strength and vigor and power of the faculties of the soule and makes him more and more withered and deformed in Gods sight and withall it hastens old age and death vpon their bodies Also in some men sinne may be said to be old in respect of continuance this is most fearefull age in any corruption is a most grieuous circumstance of aggrauation it is best not to sinne at all and the next to get quickly out of it What are the works of the old man Thus of his nature now of his workes The workes of the old man are in generall workes of darknesse of iniquitie of the flesh vaine vnfruitfull corrupt abhominable deceiuable shamefull and tend to death And now particularly if we would know what he doth and how he is imployed wee must vnderstand that he giues lawes to the members against the law of God and the minde that hee frames obiections and lets against all holy duties that he striues to bring the soule into bondage and captiuitie vnder imperious lusts that he inflames the desires of the heart against the spirit that he infects our vaine generation and workes both sinne and wrath for our posteritie but more especially his workes are either inward or outward inwardly he works Atheisme impatience contempt carnall confidence hypocrisie he forges and frames continually and multiplies euill thoughts he workes lusts of all sorts he workes anger rage malice griefe euill suspitions and the like Outwardly he workes all sorts of disorders impieties vnrighteousnesse and intemperance A catalogue of his outward workes are set downe in the Epistle to the Galathians b Gal. 5.22.23 He is here in the coherence described to be couetous filthy wrathfull cursed and lying and all these are well called his workes because he rests not in euill dispositions but will burst out into action besides it is his trade to sin and they are well called his workes because they are properly a mans own for till a man repent he hath nothing his owne but his sin and it is to be obserued that his works indefinitely must be put away as if the holy Ghost would imply that all his workes were nought for his best workes are infected with the viciousnes of his person or else they are not warranted in the word or they are not finished or the end was not good or the manner not good or they were wrought too late or being out of Christ they were not presented by Christ vnto God in whom onely they can be accepted Thus of the matter to be reformed the manner followes Put off The faithfull are said to put off the old man six waies 1. In signification or sacramentally and so in baptisme 2. In profession or outward acknowledgment and so we professe to leaue off the practise of sinne 3. By iustification and so the guilt of sinne is put off 4. By relation and so in our head Christ Iesus he is euery way already perfectly put off 5. By Hope and so we beleeue he shall be wholy remooued at the last day 6. By Sanctification and so he is put off but in part and inchoatiuely the last way is here principally meant Now in respect of Sanctification the old man and his works are put away first in the word for so Christians are said to be cleane by the word c Joh. 15.3 And to be sanctified by the word d Ioh. 17.17 The word first begins the worke of reformation it informes renues chaseth away the affections and lusts of sinne c. And then secondly the Christian at home puts him away by confession and godly sorrow and the diuorce of daily practise of reformation This is in effect that which is signified in the other metaphor of crucifying the old man e Rom. 6.6 for to crucifie him is to lift him vp on the crosse of Christ and to naile him with the application of Gods threatnings which causeth the paines of godly sorrow Haue Q. Can men put off the old man in this life Answ They may by inchoation not perfectly Q. But when may wee haue the comfort of it that the old man is put off and crucified in vs. Ans When he is so subdued that he raignes not for to take the benefit of the word crucified to crucifie is not absolutely and outright to kill and therefore it is said in the Creede Christ was dead after he had said he was crucified to note a further degree Now then as I conceiue of it sinne is crucified when we make our natures smart for it so repenting of our sinne as we allow no sinne for to crucifie a man is to leaue no member free prouided that we be sure that the old man be so pierced that he will die of it though he be not presently dead Yee The persons are indefinitely set down to note that it is a duty required of all sorts of men to put off the old man and this worke it is required of great men of learned men of wise men of young men in a word of all men without exception The vses follow Vse And first we may here informe our selues concerning the necessitie of mortification there is in vs such corruption of nature and such works of corruption as if they be not mortified they will certainely mortifie vs. Secondly here may be collected matter of confutation and that of Popish antiquity for euery man carries that about with him that may prooue that a thing may be ancient and yet vile Thirdly how can the most of vs escape but the reproofes of God must needs fall vpon vs for euery man looks to the mending of his house and his lands and his apparell c. but who lookes to the mending of his nature euery man hath courage to put away an euill seruant and an adulterous wife but where are the people that will resolutely set vpon the diuorce of sinne men may be deceiued but the truth of God will remaine vnchangeable if we haue not put off the old man with his deceiueable affections and workes we haue not after all this hearing learned Christ as the truth is in him f Eph. 4.22.23 but when I speake of putting of I meane not that sinne should be put off as men put off their garments with a purpose to put them on againe after a certaine time VERS 10. And haue put on the new man which is renued in knowledge after the Image of him that created him IN this verse is contained the second reason to inforce mortification taken from their new estate in grace The reason in it selfe intreats of the new birth and describes it by shewing
of the name of Christ aboue all others are exactly to looke to themselues to euery word and euery deede 1. Because they are neerer the courts of the great King they liue alwaies in the presence chamber 2. Because God hath bestowed vpon them more blessings and therefore as he giues more wages requires more worke 3. Because they are more obserued then any other A loose word is more noted in them then execrable blasphemy in others they are more talked of for seeing a vaine sight then others for haunting of leud playes 4. Because their hearts are made pure by the bloud of Christ and fine white linnen is sooner and deeper stained then course ragges 5. They are trusted with more glorious riches A little sinne in them much grieues Gods spirit whereas a great sinne troubles not a wicked man that hath no spirit of God in him 6. They are sure to haue a recompence of reward for euery good worde and worke and therefore to further their owne reckoning and glorie should bee aboundant in the worke of the Lord. Vse therefore to quicken vs to a desire to walke precisely circumspectly exactly Ephes 5.15 striuing to redeeme the time that hath been lost in the seruice of sinne and the world Giuing thankes to God euen the Father by him These words are diuersly considered Some thinke the former words are an explication of these as if he should say be carefull in all things to glorifie God for this is right thanking of God when men do not only praise God in words but in obedience Some thinke in these words is lodged a reason of the former as if he should say glorfie God in all your actions and seeke to God by praier in the name of Christ and ye shall bee sure of singular blessings and grace and comforts from God and in the assurance thereof when ye prouide to pray or practise prouide thankes ready also for God will not faile in the successe Some thinke these words to be an inlarging of the former rule by wishing them whatsoeuer fals out to be thankefull so as neither prosperitie puffe them vp nor aduersitie deiect them but I take it to be a distinct rule from the former and so heere is to be noted 1. The dutie required viz. Giue thankes 2. The explication of it 1. By the obiect to God euen the Father 2. By the efficient cause by him Giuing thankes Concerning our thankfulnesse to God I consider Why. 1. the necessitie o● it God will not dispense with it therefore in Ephes 5.20 the former rule being omitted this is specially vrged and 1 Thess 5.18 this is charged vpon vs as the will of God in Christ Iesus Secondly For vvhat for what wee must giue thankes viz. for Christ as the fountaine of all fauour Eucharist hence the Sacrament ordained to that end for all the comforts of Gods election and loue for all graces and meanes of grace coher for our libertie in Christ euen vnto outward things ſ 1 Cor. 10.30 for any successe or victorie ouer our corruptions of nature t Rom. 7 25. in short for all things whatsoeuer u 2 Cor. 4.15 1 Thess 5.18 Hovv 1 Cor. 14.16 3. How viz not like the Pharisie with pride of heart and selfe-liking with opinion of merit or with ostentation but with obseruation of 4. rules 1. If we blesse we must blesse in the spirit i. with vnderstanding and feeling in our hearts 2. When we giue thankes we should doe it with such tendernesse that our praises should awake the graces of Gods spirit to make them get life and grow Our praises should stirre vp faith in Gods promise loue to Gods glory feare of Gods presence hatred of our sinnes ioy in the holy Ghost * 2 Cor. 4.15 3. With a deepe sense of our owne vnworthinesse and thus the 24 Elders are said to cast downe their crownes and fall on their face when they praised God Reu. 4.9 10. and 7.12 Luk. 17.4 By all meanes We must praise God by Psalmes praier celebration of the Sacrament workes of mercy and obedience Hovv long 4. How long That is answered Eph. 5.20 Reuel 7.12 Alwayes If wee must pray alwayes then wee must praise alwayes wee may no more neglect thanksgiuing then praier Nay when praier shall cease because all mortall infirmities and wants shall cease yet thanksgiuing must goe with vs within the vaile and liue with vs for euer in heauen Vse 1. To inflame vs to the holy practise of thankfulnesse daily and alwayes watching hereunto preseruing sense not forgetting Gods mercies euen making it our daily sacrifice 2. To humble vs vnder our vnthankfulnesse for grace knowledge the word fellowship in the Gospell and all kindes of blessings yea wee sinne greatly in not giuing thankes for our successe in our callings yea many are not yet instructed to giue thankes for their food Let those remember that men are said then to eat to God when they giue thanks Rom. 14.6 To whom then doe they eat that giue not thankes Certainly not to the Lord. Finally if the poore Gentiles were so punished for vnthankfulnesse Rom. 1.21 that had but the glimmering light of nature to guide them and read their lessons only in the booke of Gods workes what shall become of vs in the day of the Lord that haue the light of Scripture of the Gospell of the Spirit of the Sacraments and so many incomparable fauours bestowed vpon vs Vnlesse wee repent of our vnthankfulnesse wee shall perish with a worse destruction then Tirus and Sidon or Sodome and Gomorrah To God euen the Father These words are to be vnderstood not diuidendly but conioynedly and so declare who is our God euen he that hath proued himselfe a Father in Christ louing vs in him and accepting of vs and heaping many blessings vpon vs two sweet words He is a God there is his maiestie he is a Father there is his loue and therefore great incouragement to go to him with all suits and praises With all suits he is God and therefore able to help and Father and therefore willing to help With all praises hee is God and therefore meet to be worshipped he is a Father and therefore will accept the calues of our lips nor according to what we bring but according to what we desire to bring and all this should make vs both to hate it to praise men or Angels or sacrifice to our nets and also to honour him with the affection of children and with the feare of creatures By him these words may be referred 1. To singing of Psalmes in the former verse and so they note that all ioy is vaine without Christ yea these spirituall and better sorts of delight are vaine vnlesse Christ be ours How miserable art thou when thy tongue sings Psalms and Christ dwels not in thine heart many men sing the word of Christ that haue no part in the word Christ 2. To the word Father next
them in that cleerenesse we now see them Thirdly willingly to suffer for righteousnesse 2 Thess 1.5 Lastly Ministers should here be informed and prouoked by all meanes possible in season and out of season to exhort perswade beseech men and turne themselues into all formes to preuaile for it is about a kingdome they labour Thus for instruction 2. It serues for reproofe first of such as can be so easily content either to want or lose the meanes the kingdome of God is taken from them Math. 21.43 Secondly of the waiwardnesse of caueling hearers that can neuer be set downe but are still obiecting against this word of doctrine or the estate of Christians these are condemned Math. 11.16 c. Thirdly it is a great terrour to rich men in speciall who are threatned with impossibilitie to enter into this kingdome if they doe not aboue all other men looke to themselues Math. 10.23.24 Fourthly of the discontentments of Gods seruants vnder crosses is there no king in Sion or is it no priuiledge that the first Dominion is come vnto them Mich. 4.9 Fiftly it specially reprooues those wicked persons that professe by their workes they will not haue Christ to raigne ouer them by his word Luk. 19.14.27 Zach. 14.17 woe is vnto them and woe to such as shut vp the kingdome of God before men Math. 23.13 3. For comfort to all Gods seruants Did so great Kings and Prophets desire to see these things we see what is it to enioy such a Kingdome was it a great offer in Herod to offer halfe his kingdome what is it in God to giue a whole Kingdome better then any kingdome on earth yea this comfort is the greater in that such christians whose grace is but like the graine of mustard seede may be possessed of this Kingdome Which haue beene to my consolation Doct. The labours of Gods seruants are a great comfort vnto good men it is a comfort to see Gods worke prosper and besides ioy in the holy Ghost is wrought in their hearts by the power of the word preached Quest What should be the reason Why many hearers haue no more comfort in hearing why many that come constantly to heare Gods seruants yet get not consolation or not the comfort they desire Answ The lets of comfort are either 1. in men or 2. in God In men they are either of frailty without any great sinne or such as arise of sinne The lets of frailtie are specially two 1. Bodily distemper by sicknesse or melancholy but this may be tried thus if they bee dead hearted in all other things aswell as hearing and praier c. 2. Waiwardnesse in the distresse of conscience when the soule refuseth comfort Psal 77.3 The lets of comfort that arise of sinne may be considered two waies first as they are in the worser sort of men Secondly as they are also in the better sort In the worser sort these are the lets First impenitencie Ier. 8.6.8 Secondly peruersnes Ier. 6.10 Thirdly vile affections such as are 1. Worldly griefe or fretting 2. Worldly cares these are thornes 3. Rage and passion Rom. 15.4 4. Lust 2 Tim. 3.6 5. Enuie 1 Pet. 2.12 4. A spirit of slumber Rom. 11.7.8 c. 5. Contrariety or contradiction in opinions Phil. 2.1.2 In the better sort 1. want of preparation plowing must go before sowing Math. 17. Of attention Isa 55.3.4 Of estimation of comfort receiued Iob. 15.11 Of godly sorrow Isa 61.62 2. Preuailing of other ioyes 3. An ouer high expectation 4. Presumptuous sinnes 5. Spirituall satiety and fulnesse when they seeme to haue grace enough and want nothing too like the Laodiceans Reuel 3. Thus in men 2. God doth restraine consolation sometimes for reasons secret to himselfe sometimes for reasons reuealed but not to vs as 1. To teach vs to know that comfort is his gift and to draw vs to looke aboue the meanes 2. To teach vs to liue by faith and not by sense 3. To scourge vnthankfulnesse 4. To compell vs to the vse of other of his ordinances too much neglected Thus of the lets To passe from this point we may here obserue 1. An imitable praise in the Apostle he enuies not the labours of his brethren he is so farre from it that he reioyceth in it 2. We may see that the wisest and greatest men haue need to be comforted of meaner men 3. Here is a reproofe of such workemen as by their labour grieue Gods people and are as thornes and goades in their sides but comfort them they doe not Thus of the salutations of the Iewes The salutations of the three Gentiles follow the first is Epaphras who besides the report of his salutation is described 1. by his office the seruant of Christ 2. By his relation to them who is one of you 3. By his loue to them shewed by striuing in praier for them 4. By his zeale not onely for them but for the two neighbour Churches vers 13. This Epaphras was the Cities preacher among the Colossians he is kept back at Rome for a time that so Tichicus might confirme the doctrine before taught by Epaphras Quest But why is the Apostle so long in speaking of him being so short in the mention of the rest Answ It is the Apostles discretion to honour him before his owne people A seruant of Christ He was a seruant of Christ first as a man and so by the necessitie of creation he must serue Christ whether he would or not 2. As a Christian man and so he serues him willingly and in religious workes 3. As a Preacher of the Gospell and so he serues Christ in a speciall function in the Church Doct. 1. Ministers are Christs seruants whence followes two things first they must doe his workes Secondly they must not be seruants of men Doct. 2 The estate of the Ministers of God is an estate of seruing not of raigning they are not Lords ouer Gods heritage nor must they thinke to be like the Prince of the Nations Doct. 3. It is a great honour to be Christs seruant for all his seruants are freemen and their wages is euerlasting and therefore wee should loue to be his seruants neither should it euer seeme euill vnto vs to doe his worke Besides it is a great comfort to poore Christians though they cannot be Kings and Apostles yet they may be Christs seruants which Kings and Apostles haue accounted their greatest honour Thirdly men must take heed of despising or abusing Ministers seeing they are Christs seruants yea it is not safe to abuse any Christian for that very reason Lastly seeing it is so great a dignitie to serue Christ both Ministers and people must be carefull to performe Christs seruice with obseruation of what Christ requires for the manner or rules of his seruice Ministers must not seeke their owne things Phil. 2.21 they must not bee giuen to wine nor to filthy lucre nor fighters nor couetous not prophane in their families not young schollers not