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

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of God in the good of others Hereto I aime in this second edition of this booke For my calling to this worke when mine accusers stand forth the executors of the dead shall answer for my discharge And for mine indeuour to doe good the small gaine of this reuised worke was truly returned to the right owners thereof If thou therefore returne glorie to God for good receiued to thy soule in this behalfe I haue my desire Here onely rests the doubt how this second edition should not be preiudiciall to his good estimation that published the former I answer well inough For I hope he intended the glorie of God in the good of his Church and the credit of the reuerend Author of this worke Now if any addition be brought hereunto his intent is furthered and wherein then can he be greeued If one man should helpe poore Orphanes to some lands or liuing he would not thinke himselfe wronged by another that should enlarge their iust claimes or settle their possession in a better tenure so I trust it fareth in this worke where thou shalt find vppon thy diligent view in some doubtfull things the Authors meaning truly cleared his method rectified many repetitions omitted and the matter specially towards the latter end somewhat enlarged If any thing be dissonant to the Authors iudgement in his liue-works which I hope thou shalt not perceiue rather charge the fault on me through ignorance or misunderstanding than entertaine in thy heart the least conceit of wauering leuitie in so godly learned and iudicious a Diuine who hath so well deserued of thy loue if thou loue the truth Thus crauing thy fauourable acceptance of my helping hand to do thee good I end with him That is the beginning and the end Let him that hath an eare heare what the spirit saith vnto the Churches Thine in him who is Lord of all T.P. ❧ A GENERALL ANALYSIS OF the Vision shewed to John The three first Chapters consist of a Preface containing the Title of the booke viz. Apocalypse or Reuelation described by seuen Arguments vers 1 2 3. Inscription of the vision wherein is Iohns Dedication To the seuen Churches Vers 4. Salutation including the Blessings wished for Grace Vers 4. Peace Vers 4. Authors of them viz. 1. The Father Vers 4. 2. The Holy ghost Vers 4. 3. The Son who Is described by His offices Propheticall Vers. 5. Priestly Vers. 5. Kingly Vers. 5. The execution of his offices in four works 1. Louing vs. Vers. 5. 2. VVashing away our sinnes Vers. 5. 3. Making vs kings priests Vers. 6. 4. comming to ●●dgement Vers. 7. doth confirme the former description Vers. 8. A Vision containing Circumstances foure Person to whom John Vers. 9. Place where Isle Pathm●● Vers. 9. Manner how In a Traunce Vers. 10. Time when On the Lords day Vers. 10. Parts The entrance into it containing The means of Iohns preparation viz. a voyce set out by The place whence it came Vers. 10. The greatnesse of it Vers. 10. The matter of it Vers. 11. Parts of his preparation Hearing noted in the meanes Vers. 10. Turning himselfe Vers. 12. Matter viz. a representation of Christ in maiestie set out by The place where John saw him Vers. 13. His forme or figure in His attire Vers. 13. The parts of his bodie Vers. 14.15 The properties thereof Vers. 16. His actions 1. A confirmation of John being sore afraid Vers. 17 18. 2. A commaundement to write Vers. 19. 3. The interpretation of the Vision Vers. 20. 4. Seuen seuerall commaundements to write seuen Epistles to the seuen Churches Chap. 2. 3. A GODLY AND LEARNED Exposition of the three first Chapters of the Reuelation REVEL 1.1 The Reuelation of Iesus Christ which God gaue vnto 〈…〉 his seruants things which must shortly be done which he sent and showed by his Angell vnto his seruant Iohn BEfore wee come to the words wher in is contained singuler mater fit for the time age this question must be handled Whether this booke of the Reuelation be canonical Scripture for some haue heretofore as also in our time called the authority of it in question But we are without all doubt to resolue our selues that it is canonical Scripture of equal authority with the rest of Gods book Our reasons be these first the doctrine contained in this booke is Apostolicall as any shall perceiue which seriously reads the same Secondly the stile of this booke is Apostolicall that is plaine simple and easie if we consider that the matter thereof is Propheticall Thirdly this booke hath bene approued and receiued for Canonicall by the common consent of Gods Church in all ages since the dayes of Iohn and was neuer refused of any whole Church but onely of some priuate men Fourthly the things foretold in this booke came to passe as they were foretold as among the rest in one for all may appeare by the prophesie of the two beasts whereof one came out of the sea the other out of the earth Chap. 13. the one prefigured the Romane Empire the other the Hereticall Apostaticall Church of Rome both which in all things are come to passe in these latter ages answerable to the Prophesie The contrary reasons brought to improue the authoritie of this booke are of no moment 1. Reason Iohn nameth himselfe sundry times in this booke whereas in penning the Gospell he did not once mention his own name though he had iust occasion so to do therefore it was not penned by Iohn but by some other and published afterward in Iohns name Answ. The reason is not good for there is great difference betweene an historie and a Prophesie The Gospell of Iohn is an historie of Christ now there is no necessarie reason why one man penning the history of another should name himselfe But this booke of the Reuelation is a Prophesie in penning whereof it is more requisite the prophet should put to his owne name so did the former prophets Ieremy mentioneth his name in his booke at least an hundred times so doth Isay and Daniell almost in euerie chapter Then seeing they do it so often it is no maruell if S. Iohn repeat his name fiue sundrie times in this whole booke 2. They obiect that his stile in this booke is not the same with that he vsed in the penning of the Gospell Ans. The difference of the stile ariseth from the difference of the matter seeing there he writes an historie here he pens a Prophesie Againe he writes not his owne words but those which hee receiued from Christ by particular reuelation 3. They say this booke hath bene reiected in diuerse ages as not Canonicall Ans. It cannot be proued that it was euer refused of any whole Church but of some particular men Now the disallowing of any priuat man cannot make a whole booke to be reiected for then the Epistles to the Hebrewes of Iames and of Iohn should not be Canonicall which yet be receiued of all
of God So Christ bids vs first to seeke the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse for when we are in Gods kingdome of grace reconciled to him in Christ then all things needfull shall bee ministred to vs Matth. 6.33 This discouers the bad practise of most men euery where who in seeking the blessings of God begin at the wrong end They will toyle themselues in their callings to get wealth honour pleasures and preferments but the fauour of God in Christ is not regarded which notwithstanding is the true and right foundation of all outward welfare Here some will say if God giue mee wealth honour and reputation then hee loues me for these be signes thereof I answere These be no sure tokens of his fauour in Christ for those that bee his enemies may enioy them all as Iob. 21.7 to the 14. This Dauid perceiued how the wicked might flourish in their outward prosperitie hauing more than heart could wish Psalm 73.3.7 And yet they stood but in slipperie places And therefore let no man herewith deceiue himselfe hee that wanteth Gods fauour in Christ is but a cursed wretch and a firebrand of hell though he had all the world for outward things at his commaund For all earthly things seuered from Gods speciall grace are but an heape of miseries The wicked mans peace is no peace sayth the Lord Isay 48.22 And the man that hath Gods grace in Christ though hee want all wordly benefits yet hee hath more than all the world without it for hereby alone hee is truly blessed and happie From him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seuen spirits which are before his throne Here is set down the first cause and author of these two Grace and Peace to wit God himselfe distinguished into three persons the father son and holy ghost The Father is noted in these words Which is and which was and which is to come The holy ghost in these And from the seuen spirits which are before his throne The Sonne in the fift verse And from Iesus Christ which is a faithfull witnesse and first begotten of the dead and Lord ouer the kings of the earth vnto him that loued vs and washed vs from our sinnes in his owne bloud c. S. Iohn in the first place describes the father by a distribution which expresseth the true nature of God in these words Which is was and is to come In which he alludes to that Exod. 3.14 15. where Moyses demaunds of God If the people should aske who sent him what he should answere The Lord bids him say Ehich Iehouah hath sent me which two names serue to one end namely to expresse the nature of God They are translated I am and the Lord but these English words doe not fully expresse their signification Yet S. Iohn expounds thē here making Ehich to signifie him which is which was and is to come Which words of Iohn also in the originall be more full in sence than our English tongue can well expresse And yet they may be thus explaned Grace and Peace be from him which is in himselfe and of himselfe a most perfect and absolute substance which was a most perfect substance and which is to come a most absolute perfect simple substance and essence In these words are touched sundry weightie points First touching the nature of God namely That God is a most absolute perfect substance and essence which hath his being in himselfe of himselfe and from none other Paule sayth An idoll is nothing 1. Cor. 8.4 that is nothing subsisting in nature but a meere fond deuice of mans braine But the true God is an essence subsisting and that of himselfe alone perfectly and herein differeth from all Idols and false Gods Secondly hereby we see a difference betweene God and all his creatures Euery creature is a substance as Angels and Men likewise mans bodie and soule are substances yet none of these haue being of themselues but from God and of God And yet wee must not conceiue that the creatures are parts of God though they haue their substances and being of him for then each creature should be God for the communication of the diuine substance cannot be without the diuine nature But Gods substance is indiuisible and incommunicable to the creature My meaning then is that God made the creatures out of himselfe of that matter which he created by his word and preserueth them beeing made Which by the way should teach vs to returne our bodies and soules by obedience vnto God in lieu of thankfulnesse endeuouring his glory all the daies of our life Thirdly hence wee learne that the Lord is Eternall euery way without beginning or ending for it is hee which is which was and which is to come Angels and the soules of men they bee eternall but not euery way though they be eternall in that they shall neuer die yet had they a beginning Secondly they are eternall not absolutely but by participation for God made them eternall but the Lord is most absolutely of himselfe eternall Fourthly note he sayth not from him which shall bee but from him which is to come that is to iudgement to giue vs to vnderstand That this eternall God is also a iudge of all his creatures especially men and Angels A point of speciall vse to moue vs to well before God with all good conscience If any shall flatter himselfe thinking hee shall bee dead before that day come I answere i● may be so What then thinkest th●u thereby to escape his iudgement No verily for this God commeth to iudge thee particularly by death and thereby to reserue thee to the iudgement of the great day O● that wee could seriously thinke on this it would be a meanes to mooue vs to repentance by breaking of the course of sinne and endeuouring ●o keepe a good conscience in all things Acts 24.16 And so shall we be readie to meete him at his comming whether by death or iudgement And from the seuen spirits which 〈◊〉 before his throne These words commonly are expounded of seuen Angels of God which stand before the thron● and minister vnto him But it cannot be meant of them for two cause a first because 〈◊〉 and Peace is here said to proceed from these seuen spirits but it cannot come from the holy Angels which attend to minister before the Lord. Secondly in this verse which is a benediction or a salutation of 〈◊〉 to the Church the seuen spirits are set before Iesus Christ the second person of the Trinitie but there is no reason nor respect for which the Angels should bee placed before Christ. The words are rather thus to be expoūded And from the seuen spirits c. that is from the holy ghost This exposition is most agreeable to all the circumstances of the text and the holy ghost may be called by the name of the seuen spirits for two causes First because though he be onely one in substance
shew mercie exercise iudgement keepe courts assises begin end and continue warre according to his commaundements And so in euery thing the direction of Christ should be their guide as it was to Dauid Thy lawes O Lord haue beene my counsellours Psal. 119.24 Fourthly if Christ bee soueraigne king then all earthly princes are bound to plant and establish in their kingdomes the religion of Christ else how can they shew themselues his loyall subiects Many imagine That earthly princes may admit vnto their subiects any religion for the peace of the ciuile state but this is against the equitie of Gods word in this place for wherein can earthly princes doe homage vnto Christ if they maintaine not his religion And their dutie in this behalfe is signified plainely in the parable of the mariage For when they that were bidden did not come the king sent forth his seruants which may be vnderstood of Christian magistrats to compell men to come to the mariage for that is the magistrates dutie in respect of the outward profession of true religion Fiftly seeing Christ alone is prince of the kings of the earth hence we learne that kings on earth in their dominions are soueraigne gouernours ouer all persons and in all causes next vnder Christ he is king of kings absolutely and they are vnder him alone and haue no other head but him Whereby wee see the presumption and arrogancie of the Pope and Sea of Rome in claiming supremacie aboue all kings and princes in the whole church vpō earth This is a deuice of the diuell and high treason against Christ for hereby hee is robbed of this royall prerogatiue to be the only prince of the kings of the earth Lastly seeing Christ is king of all kings we must not be discouraged when we be called to suffer any affliction for his truth let the tyrants of the earth rage and bend their force to hurt vs yet wee haue a king aboue them al for whom we suffer he is their king hee can stay and bridle them and if hee please confound and bruise them in peeces They cannot do any thing but that which he permits for hee rules in the middest of all his enemies Psal. 110.2 he can breake them in pieces like a potters vessell Thus much of the offices of Christ. The second part of Christs description is by the execution of his offices which consists in foure works The first contained in these words Vnto him which loued vs the second in these Which washed vs in his bloud the other two in the two verses which follow viz. 6 and 7. For the first which loued vs that is Iohn and the churches of Asia by proportion all other churches being parts of the true church The loue of Christ hath three degrees the first is a generall loue wherby he loues all his creatures approuing the same to be good as they be his by creation The second is the loue of mankind in that he was content to become a redeemer for mankind after their fall and not ●or any other creature no not for the Angels which fell as well as man who therefore remaine without all hope of saluation The third and principall is that wherby he loues his elect and chosen children which is that speciall sauour whereby he accepts of them to life euerlasting This third degree hath two parts First it is taken for his purpose to loue as when he saith I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau Rom. 9.13 Secondly for the act of louing which is the declaration of his purpose by spirituall benefits 1. Iohn 3.1 Behold what singular loue God hath shewed vnto vs that wee should be called the sonnes of God noting the declaration of his loue in the gift of adoption So in this verse by the loue of Christ vnto his church is meant the actuall declaration of his speciall fauour in accepting them for his children and bestowing many singular blessings vpon them Whereas S. Iohn placeth this in the first place of all the benefites of Christ That he loued vs hee would teach vs That this speciall loue is the very ground of mans redemption which excludeth all foreseene faith and workes from being motiues of mans election in Gods eternall councell and so proportionally all foreseene sinnes from being motiues in God of mans reprobation It may be obiected The loue of God as also of man respects a thing as it is good First the thing must be good and then it is loued and so in mans redemption God first foresees their goodnesse and therefore chuseth them Ans. There is great difference betweene the loue of the creature and of the creator The loue of the creature followes the goodnesse of a thing because he seeth it is good therefore he loues it But God the creator first loues the creature before it bee good and hence it comes that it is good because he loues it Secondly whereas Saint Iohn and all the churches of Asia as other true churches do beleeue and are assured that Christ loues them for that Saint Iohn taketh for granted this should moue all men to haue this care to labour aboue all things to be rooted and grounded in the loue of God seeing hee placeth that in the first place This is the principall thing wherein the Apostle would haue the Ephesians rooted and grounded and therefore prayeth That with all Saints they may be able to comprehend what is the breadth and length deapth and height th●●of Ephes. 2. vers 17 18 19. This we doe when we are assured in heart and conscience by the working of Gods spirit that he loues vs in Christ. So that he which denies vnto vs the assurance of Gods loue in Christ takes away the very ground of our saluation Now that we may haue this assurance of Gods loue wee must in all good duties to God and man draw neere to God with our hearts keeping a good conscience in all things and then will God draw neere to vs. If any man loue me saith Christ he will keepe my word and then my father will loue him and we will come in vnto him and dwell with him Iohn 14.23 meaning by the holy ghost which shall shed this loue into our hearts Rom. 5. vers 5. causing vs to increase in the feeling thereof as wee grow in faith and obedience towards him And hath washed vs from our sinnes in his bloud Here is the second benefit and action of Christ to his church Where first of all the very phrase hath washed vs doth import that the sinnes of men are as filthie spots in their soules and that himselfe and this church of God were touched with a serious consideration of their vilenesse by reason of their sinnes for washing presupposeth former filthinesse and pollution Thus did Dauid most sensibly feele his owne filthinesse and see his miserable estate when he desired the Lord to wash him throughly confessing thereby that his soule and body were so foulely stained and
more though God summon men to repent by his dayly iudgements yet few or none by true humilitie prepare to meete God and to preuent his iudgements Securitie spreads it selfe ouer the whole bodie of our people And this being our case and state it must needes bee that God hath beene long since in comming to vs by his iudgements and a● this day he is still comming because we still decay in loue and other graces and more and more goe on in sinne So that if we thus continue the truth is hee will come shortly vnto vs and that by most fearefull iudgements For this was written to the church of Ephesus to be a direction not onely vnto them but to all churches to the end of the world that be in the like or worser case What shall wee then doe Our dutie is taught vs in these words If not that is if thou repent not Wee must preuent the Lords comming in iudgement by vnfained repentance euery man and euery familie apart must repent priuately and the whole Church openly and publickely no way else wee haue to stay the Lords comming against vs by his fearefull iudgements The second part of this reason is a more particular threatening than the former And will remooue thy candlesticke out of his place Where hee sheweth with what particular iudgement hee will punish this church namely by remoouing away the candlesticke The meaning whereof may bee gathered out of the former chapter where particular churches were called candlestickes therefore here hee threateneth to remooue his church from the citie of Ephesus to take away the Ministerie of his Gospell and the profession thereof and in his iust iudgement to send among them Ignorance Apostacie and Heresie in steed of the knowledge of his truth This particular iudgement must be referred to the first words If not that is if thou repent not this will I doe I will make thee to be no Church and take my Gospell from thee In this particular threatening three points are to bee obserued one concerning the Minister the second concerning the whole body of the church the third concerning euery priuat man Touching the Minister note this If he shall decay in loue to God to his word or to his brethren or if hee lye in any one sinne knowne to himselfe it is a meanes to depriue him either of his calling or of Gods gifts bestowed on him for this threatening is here directed especially vnto the Angell of this Church of Ephesus When Ieremie had beene wanting in deliuering the Lord● will vnto the people partly for feare partly through impatience then the Lord becomes a Prophet vnto him saying If thou returne I will bring thee againe and thou shalt stand before me Whereby hee would giue him to vnderstand That if hee returned not he should cease to be a Prophet vnto him The same thing is true of all Gods Ministers if they decay in loue faile in their dutie or lye in any sinne they must speedily renew themselues by repentance or els God will depriue them either of their calling or of the gifts thereof True repentance and the renewing thereof is needfull vnto all Christians but especially to Gods Ministers if they would continue in his fauour and stand before him becomming his mouth vnto the people The second point concerneth the whole bodie of a Church to wit if a Church or people decay in loue to God to religion and to their brethren or doe lye in any common sinne they procure hereby the remoouing of the gospell from them and the abolishing of true religion The Prophet is a 〈◊〉 sayth the Lord and the man of the spirit i● mad This was a great and fearefull iudgement but mark● the cause All is 〈◊〉 thine iniquitie that is for the sinne of the whole church doth God send foolish Ministers If this bee so then wee haue iust cause in our Church to feare the remoouing of the gospell from vs for there is a generall decay of loue in many and in the most no loue at all Many scorne and contemn true religion and hate the professours thereof In regard whereof wee may wonder at the great patience of God that yet continueth his gospell among vs For God giueth men vp to strong delusion to beleeue lyes because they loue not his truth Wherefore being in this danger our dutie is to vse all good meanes to preuent this iudgement of God which can no other way bee done than by true and vnfained repentance by the whole Church in generall and by euery man apart and euery familie apart For when God shall speake suddenly against a nation or kingdome to root it vp and to destroy it if that people repent of their wickednesse the Lord will repent of the plague and iudgement which hee thought to bring vpon them Ierem. 18. vers 7 8. The third point concerneth euery priuate man and it is this If any man decay in loue or want loue to God and to his brethren or lye in any sin knowne to himselfe This is a meanes to remooue the candlesticke from him to depriue him of his knowledge and other graces of God The affection of loue in the heart is like the watch of the clocke if the watch stand the wheeles stand as the watch goeth fast or softly so goe the wheeles answerably And so it is in man if his loue to God and to his gospell doe encrease then doth his knowledge and other graces of God encrease in his heart but if his loue decay then other graces decay and if loue be gone then farewell all pietie and true religion If we would know the cause of such palpable ignorance as is in many that haue long heard the gospell preached it is nothing but want of loue Heb. 3.12 13. The Holy ghost sheweth by what degrees men come to fall away from God First sinne deceiues them by drawing them to commit it then their hearts are hardened by custome of sinning Thence followes vnbeleefe in maine points of Religion and so they make Apostacie from God and set themselues against his truth Take heed therefore of lying in any sinne for that is the high way to finall Apostacie rather striue to encrease in loue vnto God and vnto his word and so shall all his good graces encrease in thine heart Out of this particular threatening some gather That a man may bee cut off frō Christ fall away finally from true faith and repentance For say they if a whole Church may bee cut off from Christ and become no Church then may any one member of the Church be cut off and become no member But a whole church may bee cut off as here we see and therefore may any one man Answ. This reason is not good there is great difference betweene the state of a whole Church and of one man that is a true member of Christ. For a particular Church is a mixt companie of true professors and dissemblers like
of an harlot Fiftly their bodies are temples and dwelling places not for earthly Princes but for the holy Ghost and therefore must be furnished with Gods graces and adorned with chastitie other gifts of Gods spirit that they may be fit mantion places for so worthie a guest But by fornication they are made the s●ies stables of the prince of darknesse Verse 16. Repent thy selfe or else I come vnto thee shortly and will fight against thee with the sword of my mouth Christ hauing layd downe the sinnes of this church and the errors of the Nicholaitans doth here propound vnto this church First a remedie for her recouerie Secondly a reason to inforce the practise of the remedie The remedie is in these words Repent thy selfe In it consider these points First what it is to repent Secondly why Christ so often vrgeth thereunto Thirdly to whome Christ prescribeth this remedie Of the first we haue spoken in the first verse of this chapter Briefly therefore Repentance is a change of the mind from euill to good and a turning from sinne vnto God Here repentance must bee taken more largely for all the duties that accompany repentance in the practise therof as I. Humiliation of a man by confessing of his sins vnto God and condemning of himselfe for the sinne II. Prayer wherby a man doth earnestly intreat the Lord for the pardon of the same sins III. Reformation wherby a man in hart proposeth and in life indeuoureth to leaue all his former sinnes and for euer after to do all things in obedience vnto God vnto all these doth the holy Ghost exhort them in this place II. Point Why doth Christ so often prescribe this duty of repentance and so much vrge it An. Not for that it is a cause or a meritorious means to procure remission of sins life euerlasting as the Papists do falsly and damnably teach for that nothing can do but the obedience passion of Christ but first because it is a token of Gods fauor procured a most excellent fruit of faith such as maketh a man cease to do euill and moueth him to do good Secondly because it is a way wherin mē must walke vnto the end that wold haue remissiō of sins life eternal III. point To whom is this remedie prescribed Answ. First to the church of Pergamus and then to the Nicholaitans in that church though they were most wicked men Touching the church of Pergamus they were before commended for most worthie graces for they had repentance and yet note Christ sayth still vnto them Repent thy selfe Herein teaching vs a most worthie lesson which euery one ought to learne and practise namely that the life of a Christian is a continuall practise of repentance When a man hath once repented that is not sufficient but euery new day must haue a new repentance for his dayly slips Wee are Gods embassadours sayth Paule for Christ beseeching you in Christs steed that you would be reconciled vnto God Now they were reconciled to God before for they are called the Temple of the liuing God His meaning therefore is That they should striue more and more after reconciliation with God both in regard of their further assurance and also for their particular sinnes wherein they dayly offended Euery Christian must dayly wres●●e with his owne corruptions which hee feeleth in himselfe that the longer hee liueth the more hee may grow in dislike with himselfe And in this distast of himselfe hee must dayly proceed that hee may euery day more and more grow vp in Christ. And least any should thinke that this was spoken to this church alone and not to vs consider that wee are in the same case with them their sinnes are our sins as we haue prooued We want zeale and seueritie against sinne and sinners Now being in the same fault with them wee must therefore practise the same remedy and renew our repentance though wee haue repented heretofore Secondly he prescribes this dutie to the Nicolaitans that held two damnable errours and no doubt liued accordingly in those sinnes and yet Christ barres them not from his kingdome but bids them repent Where note that great and grieuous sinners are not barred frō Gods mercie if they will repent Excellent is that saying of Isay God i● much in sparing and that of Dauid also With God is plentifull redemption This point is seriously to bee considered for wee haue in our congregations many that are well spoken of in the world and yet for knowledge of God and practise of life are flat Atheists We haue also among vs epicures blasphemers murtherers and fornicators with these Nicolaitans Now to all these and such like this doctrine appertaines not to embolden them in sinne but to assure them there is mercy in store for them with God if they will truly repent They must not turne the grace of God ●o wantonnesse and make his mercie a bolster to their iniquitie for this is despising of Gods bountie whereby they helpe vp vnto themselues wrath against the day of wrath but if with Iob they humble themselues in dust and ashes and crie to heauen for mercie from a broken heart that carrieth a resolute purpose to leaue all sinne then though their sinnes were neuer so many they shall all be drowned in the bottomelesse sea of Gods mercie though they were as crimson and scarlet which will take no other dye yet in Christs bloud they shall be made as white as wooll snow yea though they haue fallen often into the same sinnes which is most fearefull and dangerous yet vpon this vnfained repentance they shall bee restored to mercie for the fountaine thereof cannot be dried vp but see they doe repent for whosoeuer looketh for Christs merits must know that hee looketh for true repentance Thus much for the remedie II. point The reason wherby Christ would set an edge vpon the former remedie containeth a twofold threatening or commination the first against the whole Church in these words If not I come vnto thee shortly The second against the Nicolaitans in these words And will fight against them with the sword of my mouth For the first If not I will come vnto thee shortly these words were expounded in the fift verse The meaning is this If thou repent not I will come vnto thee testifie my presence by taking punishment vpon thee for thy want of zeale and of seueritie against sinne and sinners To this effect the Prophet Isay sayth Chap. 30.27 The name of the Lord shall come from farre to take punishment vpon the Assyrians In this threatening the phrase is to be noted Christ sayth If not I come vnto thee expressing a thing to come by a word of the time present To giue them to vnderstand that his comming vnto them by iudgements was as certaine as if it were present vnlesse they did repent Where this generall rule is to be obserued of all namely that when a Church or
sinne of impenitencie forbidden for the law condemnes no more than it reuealeth but it neuer reuealed repentance and therefore it doth not forbid or condemne the want thereof Secondly for the greatnesse of this sinne it may appeare because hereby men heape sin vpon sinne and Wrath vnto themselues against the day of wrath Some to aggrauate the grieuousnesse of this sinne say that impenitencie is the sinne against the holy ghost and that opinion is antient but yet false and erronious for the sinne against the holy ghost is a blasphemie Mat. 12.31 but this is not a blasphemy Again the sinne against the holy ghost is in this life but finall impenitencie is neuer before the end of this life Hence also the Papistes gather free will to good by nature shee did not repent therefore she had freewill power to repent if she would Ans. This reason is not good thus much may hence be gathered that she had freewil not to repent and to sinne for euery man sinneth freely but yet it followeth not that they haue the same power to cease from sinne or to repent without Gods special grace without which no man can will or doe that which is truly good before God Againe the same sinne which is reproued in this wicked woman may bee layd to the charge of the greatest number in our churches and congregations God hath giuen vnto men a long time of repentance to some ten to some twenty yeares but they repent not as their liues do plainly testifie for some liue in irreligion and prophanenesse some in Saboath breaking some in fornication and adulterie some in idlenesse some in couetousnesse and extortion giuing themselues wholly and spending all their time in seeking the things of this life neuer regarding with reuerence th● things of God Verse 22. Behold I will cast her into a bed and them that commit fornication with her into great affliction except they repent them of their works Christ hauing reprooued this church and this woman for their seuerall faults doth here giue speciall counsell and direction vnto them both whereby they may auoid escape the grieuous iudgements due vnto them for their sinnes both in this life and in the life to come This counsell of Christ hath two parts First to Iesabell and her company vers 22.23 The second to the church of Thyatira verse 24 25. The summe of Christs counsell to Iesabell is to repent which is not expressed but insteed thereof the reason to moue her to repentance is propounded And it may be framed thus If thou repent not I will pun●sh thee with sundry iudgements But thou wouldest not be so punished and therefore repent This reason hath two parts A threatning and an exception thereof The threatning in these words I will cast her into a bed and them that commit fornication with her into great affliction And before this threatning Christ prefixeth a word of attention Behold whereby hee would teach them and vs that wee ought seriously to consider of the threatnings that are propounded in Gods word against sinne and sinners When Iosias heard the booke of the law read hi● heart melted which it could neuer haue done vnlesse it had first trembled at the iudgements therein denounced And the pricking that was wrought in the hearts of the Iewes by Peters first Sermon was nothing else but a compunction wrought in them vpon consideration of the iudgements and condemnation due vnto them for crucifying the Lord of life The cause why sinne is so rise in euery estate and condition of men at this day is for that men set light by the threatnings of Gods word If men would tremble when they heare of Gods iudgements it would make them crie out Men and brethren what shall we do● but because God is mercifull therefore men feare him not Isay. 57.11 This threatning hath three seuerall parts according to the three seueral sorts of persons whom it concerneth The I. is against Iesabell her selfe who was the chiefe of them all in these words I will cast her into a bed The meaning whereof may bee gathered out of the like words of Iona●●● to Ammon bidding him lye downe on his bed and make himselfe sicke So that Christs meaning is that he wil strike her with some grieuous sicknes the place of the sick person being put for the sicknesse it selfe As if hee should say Iesabell takes her pleasure in fornication and thereto abuseth the bed I will therfore send on her some great sicknesse which shall cast her into her bed Here note Gods dealing with sinners In those thing● which they abuse for the furtherance of their sinnes will the Lord plague and punish them I●sabell abused her bed with fornication thither shee must bee cast with sicknesse Diue● in his life time abused his tongue and tast by gluttonie and therefore 〈…〉 now in in hell therein most of all plag●d and tormented at hi● crying 〈◊〉 drop of water to coole his tongue doth import gamesters take their pleasure in ●●●ding and dicing which many times God turneth to their wo for therby they are vsually brought to extreame want and miserie Ahab shed Naboths bloud to get his vineyard and for that sinne must his bloud the bloud of Iezabell and his children he shed And now in these dayes the couetous for their gaine doe suck● the bloud of the poore but that bloud will haue bloud from them againe The Lord will spoyle the soule of him that spoyle● the poore Prou. 22 2● This must make vs to beware how we abuse any creature of God to serue vs for any sinne for the Lord will cause that to bee a meanes of woe and punishment vnto vs which we misuse vnto our lusts Againe note here who is the author of grieuous sicknesses namely Christ himselfe For he saith I will cast her into a bed Sicknesses come not by chaunce or fortune but from the hand of God This wee must learne to beleeue and it will cause vs to make better vse of sicknesses than vsually we do If men did beleeue this it would make the hardest heart to repent in time of sicknesse for this they would say Hath God cast me downe with sicknesse no doubt it is to humble me for some of my sinnes to make me know them to leaue them and to turne vnto him This vse the seruants of God haue made hereof when the Prophet came to Hez●●ias and told him hee should die he turned his face to the wall and wept as for other things so for his sinnes especially And Iaacob being to die lea●ed on his ●●affe and by faith worshippe● towards the beds head lifting vp his body to do reuerence vnto God thereby testifying his humilitie faith and hope And the like ought we to do which if wee could wee should find our sicknesse would become a blessing vnto vs. The second part of Christs threatning is the punishment of her followers which
is not called the morning star because hee shineth to al the world in al time as the morning star doth but because he shineth vnto men in the last age of the world It is further sayd I will giue him it Where is promised fellowship and participation with Christ a● hee is this day-starre And herein are two benefits comprised First perfect illumination wherby ignorance shall be wholly taken away after this life when as men shall know God fully so farre foorth as a creature can know the creator Secondly the light of perfect glory for by fellowship with Christ wee shall bee made to shine as the starres as Daniel speaketh yea wee shall become Saints in light ●s the Apostle sayth Whereas Christ compares himselfe to the morning starre First wee see the grosse errour of many among vs who liue in blindnesse of mind and ignorance walking in their wicked lusts and pleasures without care of keeping faith or good conscience and yet persuade themselues that they haue part in Christ and shall bee partakers of his light and glorie But they are deceiued for all such as liue in blind ignorance and in sinne are meere darkenesse and so can haue no fellowship with Christ who is that bright morning starre for what fellowship can bee betweene light and darkenesse This bright morning starre serueth onely for them that receiue the light thereof and walke by it but those that walke in the darkenes of their sinnes haue no benefit by it Secondly seeing Christ is this morning starre wee must haue care to learne Peters instruction● namely Labour that this bright starre may rise and shine in our hearts This wee shall feele when we vse those meanes wherby the beames of this starre may shine vpon vs not onely for the enlightening of our minds but also for the heating and reuiuing of our frozen and dead hearts For as the Sunne in the Spring time quickeneth by it warme beames some things that lye dead all Winter so Christ Iesus this morning starre by the beames of his grace doth enlighten our minds and reuiue our dead and frozen hearts And till such time as wee feele these things wrought in vs we cannot say that this morning starre is risen vnto vs or hath shone into our hearts Thirdly whereas Christ appeareth in the morning when darkenesse is past wee are hereby taught to lead our liues in godlinesse righteousnesse sobrietie and in all manner of vpright and godly conuersation For the night is past and the day is come wherein wee may see to walke vprightly And therefore wee must cast off the vnprofitable workes of darkenesse as the Apostle exhorteth vs Rom. 13.12 And know this That those who in this light doe not walke accordingly but delight in sinnes the workes of darkenesse shall one day haue their fill Hee that loueth the darke for the hiding of his talent must bee cast for his reward into vtter darkenesse Let him that hath an eare to heare heare what the spirit sayth vnto the Churches Here is Christs commaundement the second part of this conclusion But hereof we haue spoken before Motiues to proceed Prou. 15.32 He that refuseth instruction despiseth his owne soule Luk. 9.62 No man that putteth his hand to the plough and looketh backe is apt to the kingdome of God Gal. 6.9 Let vs not be wearie of well doing for in due time wee shall reape if wee faint not 1. Cor. 12.31 Desire you the best gifts and I will shew you a more excellent way THE THIRD CHAPTER Verse 1. And write vnto the Angel of the Church that is at Sardis These things saith hee that hath the seuen Spirites of God and the seuen Starres I know thy workes for thou hast a name that thou liuest but thou art dead THese words containe the fift particular Commandement of our Sauiour Christ vnto Iohn wherein he is inioyned to write send a speciall Epistle to the Church of God in Sardis of this commandement we haue spoken before The Epistle it self is contained in the sixe first Verses it hath three parts A Preface the matter of the Epistle the Conclusiō The Preface in these words These things saith he which hath the seuen Spirits of God and the seuen Starres In this Preface first is set downe in whose name this Epistle is written to procure authoritie vnto it it is in Christs name whose soueraigntie is described by two royalties that is by two prerogatiues or priuiledges belonging to him as he is a soveraigne king of his Church the first is The hauing of the seuen spirits of God The second his hauing of the seuen Starres For the first royaltie In the first Chap. vers 4. I shewed that by seuen spirits were meant the holy Ghost from whom proceed all the gifts and graces that any men enioy and therefore whereas Christ is said to haue the seuen spirits of God the meaning is that he hath the holy ghost And this is a royaltie of Christ as he is the King and head of his Church If it be said that other seruants of God as Dauid Peter and Paul had the holy Ghost Answ. It is true but not in the same manner with Christ for he hath the holy Ghost two wayes in regard of his diuine nature of his manhood as Christ is God hee is the beginning of the holy Ghost for the holy Ghost is a person in the Trinitie proceeding from the sonne as well as from the Father in regard of which proceeding Christ is sayd to send the holy Ghost and to doe whatsoeuer hee doth by the holy Ghost as to ouercome death by the eternall spirite and to rise from death to life Secondly as Christ is man he hath the holy Ghost because the holy Ghost powred into him the perfection of all graces and giftes whatsoeuer And for this cause he is said to be anoynted with the oyle of gladnesse aboue his fellowes and to be inriched with the perfection of all graces and that two wayes both for number and degrees For number with men some haue some graces and some men others but Christ hee hath the graces of all men and all Angels nay moe graces in number then all men and all Angels haue And as they are in number perfect so they are perfect in degree for in measure they exceed the graces of all creatures men or Angels and therefore the Father is said to haue giuen the spirit vnto his son without measure thus much is meant by this first royaltie of Christ. Now the end why Christ is said to haue the holy Ghost is to shewe that hee is a most liuely head of his Church who is filled with plentie of all store of graces whereby he is able to inrich his Church and to reuiue the members thereof who are dead in their sinnes and such indeed was the speciall state of this Church First hence we learne no man can haue true fellowship with the
vnto our selues and to make conscience of euerie sinne and to avoide and shunne the verie occasions thereof For so long as wee professe the Gospell and obey the same our names bee in the booke of life but when wee commit any sinne we doe as much as in vs lyeth make a penne and reach it vp to heauen to blot our names out of that booke and they that keepe a course in sinning doe plainely shewe that they were neuer truely written therein Secondly considering that the number of the elect is certaine it must bee a motiue to cause vs to labour for some a●●●rance of election that wee maye truely say wee haue our names written in Gods booke But here some bad person will saye seeing the number of the Elect is vnchangeable I will liue as I list for if my name bee in the booke of GOD it shall neuer bee blotted out and if it bee not in it can neuer be added Ans. These men deceiue their owne soules for they that haue their names written in the booke of life shall liue as these few did in this Church of Sardis in true faith and holy obedience For he that is ordained to glorification is ordained to iustification and sanctification and it is impossible for him that shall be saued to liue alway in sin and therefore these men must rather labour to repent and beleeue and to get some signes of their Election that they may know that their names are written in the booke of life The third benefite is this I will confesse his name before my Father and before his Angels That is in the day of iudgement I will acknowledge and professe him to be mine one of mine Elect that keepeth faith and good conscience vnto the end I will take him from the companie of the wicked world and set him on my right hand and aduance him to glory pronouncing vpon him the blessed voyce of absolution Come Thou blessed of my father Mat. 25.34 The end why this benefit is thus propounded is to draw this church to professe the name of Christ in this world for if they would professe Christ before men hee will acknowledge them for his owne at the last day This same reason here propounded must induce vs to make a true confession of Christ against the world all Christs enemies which to doe is a very hard matter and man of himself cannot stand out but yet the consideration of this that Christ will confesse him at the last day will be a notable motiue and means to inable him thereto If an earthly Prince should come to a man among a great company and call him by his name speaking kindly vnto him hee would esteeme it a great honour vnto him and for that he would not sticke to die in the Princes cause Oh then what honour is this that Christ Iesus will in the last day vouchsafe to all those that in this life doe sincerely confesse him and ouercome he will confesse them to bee his and receiue them to his owne glorie But on the contrary those that will not confesse him heere but disgrace him either by false doctrine or profanesse of life will Christ at the day of iudgement vtterly disgrace by denying them to be his and there pronounce vpon them the fearefull sentence of condemnation Goe ye cursed c. Which if we would then escape and also procure vnto vs the ioyfull voyce of absolution we must here labour to hold the truth of Christs doctrine also keep a good conscience vnto the end But if we only professe him in iudgement and not in the practise of a holy life surely Christ will professe that he knows vs not and then giue vs our portion with the diuell and his angels The commandement followeth vers 6. Let him c of which wee haue spoken Verse 7. And vnto the Angell of the Church which is of Philadelphia write These things saith he which is holy and true which h●th the key of Dauid which openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth Here beginneth the sixt particular Epistle of our Sauiour Christ from this verse to the 14. And before it as to the rest is prefixed a speciall Commandement vnto Iohn whereby he is enioyned to write this Epistle vnto the Church of Philadelphia the end of which commandement is to warrant the calling of Iohn to write this Epistle but of this we haue spoken before The Epistle it selfe containeth three parts a Preface the matter of the Epistle and the Conclusion The Preface in this verse These things saith hee c. wherein is set downe in whose name this Epistle is sent namely in Christs where as in the former Epistles he is excellently described for the winning of more credite vnto this Epistle And that first by his properties Holynesse and truth Secondly by his kingly office in the words following For his properties First Christ is sayd to be holy Quest. How can Christ be said to be holy as he is man considering hee descended from Adam who c●●ueyed his sinne and the guilt thereof to all his posteritie The common answere is this That indeed Christ descended from Adam as hee is man but his substance was sanctified by the holy Ghost in the wombe of the Virgin and thereby hee was freed from Adams sinne This answere is true but not sufficient for men besides the corruption originall take from Adam the guiltinesse of that sinne which Adam committed Now sanctification taketh away the corruption of sin but not the guilt thereof therefore a more full answere is this That all which come of Adam by naturall generation doe receiue by that order which God set in nature at the creation saying increase multiply both the nature of Adam and the sin guilt thereof But God for the preuenting of this in the Incarnation of Christ ordained that Christ should not come of Adam by naturall generation but by a miraculous Conception of the holy Ghost whereby hee tooke the nature of man with the infirmities thereof without the sinne of mans nature or the the guiltinesse thereof And thus is Christ free from sinne as he is man Further Christ is holy two wayes In himselfe and in regard of his Church In himselfe hee is holy sundry wayes first in regard of his Godhead for his diuine nature is holinesse it selfe Secondly as hee is man for his man-hood was not only freed from all manner of sinne by reason of his miraculous conception but it was also inriched and filled with holinesse and that in greater measure than all men and Angels for he receiued the gifts of the holy Ghost without measure And againe as he is man Christ is holy in regard of his obedience and actions for liuing on earth he did actually as our suertie fulfill the Law for vs. Secondly Christ is holy in regard of his Church First because hee is the authour of that holynesse which is in euery member of his Church
remaineth impenitent Whereas this censure is such as doth exclude a man both from the kingdom of heauen and the liberties of the Church till he repent we may here see that this censure ought to bee vsed with great reuerence feare and consideration euen such or greater as wee would vse in the cutting of a member from the bodie The abusing therfore of this sentence in small matters cannot but be a grieuous sin and a breach of the third Commandement wherein one of Gods most weightie ordinances is taken in vaine Further one speciall degree of Excommunication is Anathema which is when one is pronounced to bee condemned whereof Paul speaketh 1. Cor. 16.22 But this is not pronounced vpon any but on those that sin against the holy Ghost and therfore it is seldom vsed because that sin is hardly discerned cōsisting not so much in the speech as in the malice of the heart against Christ. The second part of this spirituall iurisdiction is absolution which is when a malefactor vpon his sufficiēt repentance is approued to be a mēber of the Church and is admitted to the kingdome of heauen And yet here the Church receiues him not into the kingdome of Christ but only declareth vpon his repentance what Christ doth and thus we see wherin Ecclesiasticall iurisdictiō consisteth what be the parts of the power of the keyes For the better discerning of this power of the keyes wee must remember foure special abuses hereof that haue takē place in Gods Church for many hundred years The first is this that in former Ages the church hath giuen this power of the keies to Peter alone debarring the same from all other euen from the rest of the Apostles as though they had only the vse not the right of this power But the ease is plaine this power belongs to euery true minister of the Gospel though they be not Apostles as well as it did to Peter for in the promulgation of this power Mat. 16.19 thogh Christ direct his speech to Peter yet he speaketh vnto all as the circumstances of the place doe plainly shew for Christs question Whom say ye that I am was made to all nowe because it would haue beene great disorder in that holy company for all of them to haue spoken therefore Peter being both ancient and bould of speech speaketh for all and the rest answered in his person and so accordingly Christ speaking to Peter doth make a grant of this power vnto all his disciples in his person And therefore Ioh. 20.23 He giues this power to all saying plainly Whosoeuers sins ye retaine they are retained c. So that the word of God is plaine in this point to satisfie the conscience of any that is not wilfully addicted to the Popish religion Quest. Whence haue the Ministers of the Gospell this power Answ. By succession from the Apostles for Christ saith Mat. 28.19.20 Goe and preach I will be with you to the end of the world Where he cannot meane the Apostles only but with thē all Ministers that did preach and baptise after them making this promise to the Apostles not as they were Apostles but as they were Ministers and preachers of his Gospel The second abuse is that the Church of Rome hath turned the power of the keies into a supremacie ouer the church making it to bee a soueraigne authoritie whereby Peter and his successors the Popes haue libertie to make Lawes Canōs constitutions which bind the conscience as also to make kings and to depose the same A most notorious abuse of this power which is no superioritie but a ministerie the chiefe power whereof consisteth in the dispensation of the word wil of Christ. For Christ said not to Peter I will giue thee the keyes of the kingdoms of mē but of the kingdom of heauen The third abuse hereof is that the church of Rome hath thereby for a 1000. yeeres almost barred Kings Queenes and Emperors from being Gouernors ouer the Churches of God an error flat against Scripture for when as good King Iosias intended the reformation of religion and the abandoning of Idolatrie he made a couenant with the Lord for the accomplishment of the same is said to haue caused all that were found in Ierusalem and Beniamin to stand to the couenant which he made Now shall we say Iosias did euill in causing thē so to doe God forbid It is recorded of him by the holy Ghost for his cōmendation Obiect But Gods pastors teachers haue the power of the keyes and princes haue not Ans. True but yet they haue a ciuil power wherby they rule ouer Gods Church for there is a ciuil power a spirituall power Princes rule not by any spirituall power but ciuilly therby they haue power to compell all their subiects to the outward means of Gods worship to forsake Idolatrie and may also punish those that obey them not Obiect By this power of the keyes Kings and Queenes are brought vnder Pastors Answ. In Pastors and Ministers we must consider their persons and goods their office and word which they bring Princes are ouer their persons and goods and yet may be vnder their word Ministerie because therein they stand in Christs stead Yet al this sheweth nothing why Princes in Gods Church should be so robbed of their right as the Church of Rome doth The fourth abuse is that the Church of Rome for some 800. yeeres hath turned the power of the Keyes vnto the Priest in their Sacrament of Penance for wheras by Gods word the Ministers power is onely to pronounce the absolution of Christ with them euery Priest sits as a Iudge and all the people come vnto him as to a Iudge making knowen vnto him all their thoughts words and deeds as neere as they can wherein they haue broken any Commandement which done the Priest enioynes him to bewaile his sinnes and after contrition doth properly giue sentence of pardon euen as Christ himselfe doth and then after appoints him workes of satisfaction to be done for the temporall punishment of his sinnes which done his sins are pardoned in heauen Where behold a most deuillish practise as may appeare by the manifold errors contained therein As first the confession of all a mans sinnes which hath no warrant in Gods word Secondly that the Priest should giue sentence of pardon is a most notorious practise whereby Christ is robbed of his honour for the Pharises could say None can forgiue sins but God that is properly Mark 2.7 Which Christ approueth and it is must true for he that can forgiue sins properly must make satisfaction for sins Thirdly they absolue from the fault but they will not forgiue the punnishment and thereby they robbe others to inrich themselues Fourthly they enioyne satisfaction to God by men for their sinnes whereby they doe nothing els but ouerturn the al-sufficient satisfactiō of Christ and enioine that to man which is impossible Al these are most
Thirdly men will professe that they are rich in loue both towards God and their neighbours when as they loue the world and the pleasures thereof more than Christ and so haue no true loue of God in their harts Fourthly to make more plain that this spirituall pride raignes in mens harts mark this let any bodily calamity be made knowne to a man that is newly befallen him oh how is hee presently perplexed but let Gods Minister out of his word make knowne vnto him his inward fearfull estate that by reason of sinne hee is in danger of Gods iudgements and a firebrand of Hell hee is not affraide Worldly newes doth affright men much when as the threatnings of the word mooue them nothing What argueth this but that their hearts are fore-stalled with this false conceit I am rich The drunkard in his drunkennesse the filthie person in his vncleannesse and euerie man in his sinne sootheth himselfe with this God is mercifull I am rich and in his fauour hee will not condemne me Well it being thus manifest that spirituall pride is our common sin We must labour to see it in our selues and vse all good meanes that it may be remooued The means follow afterwards And increased with goods or am made rich so the words are these words are added onely for amplification to shew that this church had not any smal portion but an exceeding measure of spirituall pride The doubling of the words sheweth the strength of this conceit What 's the cause that this Church was growne to such an height of pride Answ. It may be it was knowledge wherewith no doubt the Angell of this Church and many therin did abound now the holy Ghost saith That knowledge pusseth vp This is true in all places great knowledg without speciall grace great pride This is the sinne of the Schooles of learning Where knowledge abounds there pride of heart abounds and men are puffed vp according to the measure of their gifts vnlesse by his grace and the sight of their sins God doe humble them And haue need of nothing This is a further signe of their great pride that they thought they needed not the helpe of any thinge or any person beside themselues And all such as thinke they haue no need of the blood of Christ for the washing away of their sinnes doe surfet and abound with this spirituall pride of heart This serues further to conuince our congregations of this damnable spirituall pride If any one be sicke in bodie hee streight sendeth to the Phisitian but not one of a thousand seeketh to the Minister till the pange of death draw neere The soules disease by sin is not felt there is no complaint for want of the blood of Christ. But if wee would be emptied of this pride wee must labour to see that wee stand in neede of Christ and euerie droppe of his blood till such time as wee feele that in vs there is no goodnesse in our hearts VVee are but the proude Laodiceans and our case is wretched and damnable And knowest not how thou art wretched and miserable and poore and blinde and naked Christ intending to strike this sin of pride to the verie heart doth here set downe the true cause thereof to wit Ignorance as if hee should say Thou knowest not thine owne naturall estate as thou art borne of Adam out of Christ and therefore thou art proude and thy pride maketh thee luke-warme Then he sheweth whereof they were ignorant namely of their naturall estate For the first Christ making Ignorance the cause of their Pride teacheth vs that Pride is not the first sin that euer was in the world as many both Papists and others haue thought True it is Pride is a great and mother sinne and the cause of many fowle iniquities but yet Ignorance is a mother sin wherof Pride springeth The cause why any person swelles with pride in himselfe is Ignorance of his owne naturall estate By this then wee are taught to learne to knowe our owne estate what wee are by nature in our selues without Christ for that is the way to pull downe our hearts For this cause the Prophets of God vsed to call men To a searching of themselues Zeph. 2.1 when they would bring the people to humilitie and grace that men seeing their estate by reason of their sinnes to bee damnable might bee humbled and caused to forsake themselues and come vnto Christ. And surely till such time as men bee humbled for their sinnes they will neuer get sound grace but be as the proud Pharisie hypocrits and dissemblers though they haue much knowledg But when a man hath searched his naturall estate then besides knowledg of himselfe come other most excellent graces as humilitie the feare of God and true obedience with good conscience And therefore first of all let vs labour to be acquainted with our own estate in our selues with our personall sins with Gods iudgmēts due vnto vs for them For this is the ground of true grace The spots and blemishes of our bodies we can soone espy and wipe away and why should wee bee lesse carefull of our soules which be farre better That Christ might fully make knowne vnto them their ignorance of thēselues it pleaseth him to desrcibe to thē their naturall estate so proportionally the naturall condition of all Churches of all people which is the state of mans miserie This he propoundeth two waies first generally in these wordes and knowest not how thou art wretched and miserable then by the parts thereof which be three Pouertie Blindnesse and Nakednesse For the first The word translated Wretched signifieth one subiect to calamities griefes and in a word to all miseries And that we may know who is thus wretched I will enter into a description of mans miserie whereof that we may conceiue aright two things are to bee considered First the roote and fountaine thereof for therein wee shall best see what miserie meaneth This root is originall sinne and it hath two braunches First that particular transgression whereby Adam sinned which was not only the sinne of his person but also of the whole nature of man spreading it self to all his posterity Christ excepted Secondly the defacing of Gods Image and the corrupting of mans heart which by reason of the fall of our first parents hath in it a pronesse vnto all sin both in will affection and in all the faculties of the soule In these two stands originall sin and in them and with them must wee conceiue of mans misery as in the root thereof Secondly we must conceiue of mans misery vnder the forme of punishmēt hauing relation to the first sin of Adam to the corruption of ech mans nature therby receiued The punishent of sin must be considered sundry waies according to the diuers kind of mans being either in this world or after For it is either in this life or at the end of this life or after this life
because the Papists make Christ but halfe a Sauiour in putting our merits vnto his and so disgrace him in his glorious worke wherein he is a most absolute Sauiour and Redeemer III. point The means whereby these worthy gifts of God may bee gotten is by buying and bargaining so Christ saith I counsell thee to buy of me Where he alludeth to the outward state of this Citie for it was rich and also giuen to much trafficke as Hystories record and therefore hee speakes to them in their owne kinde as if he should say you are a people exercised in much trafficke and delighted with nothing more than buying and selling well I haue wares that will serue your turne as gold garments and oyle therefore come and buy of mee These wordes must not bee vnderstood properly for so wee can buy nothing of Christ because there is nothing that is good in any but it proceedeth from the free gift of God in Christ. This is onely spoken by way of resemblance to buying and selling which stands in these points which are the principall things in bargaining First a man sees his want and desires to haue it supplyed and therfore goes to the place where such things are to be sold. Secondly he seeth the thing and he liketh it Thirdly he prizeth and valueth it Fourthly he maketh exchange for it by money or money worth Fiftly if it be a great summe he giueth earnest So in the getting of Christ there is a kind of resemblance to all these First a man must feele himselfe to stand in need of Christ and his merits because men see want of bread meat and drinke in their houses therefore doe they goe to buy the same Now looke how fencibly any man feeles these worldly wants so euidently should we feele our want of Christ and his merits For this is the first beginning that causeth vs to seeke to receiue Christ Iesus Secōdly feeling our wāts we shold hunger long after Christ that we might bee made partakers of him the vertue of his merits as a man that is to buy a thing doth take a liking thereof which doth stir vp a desire in him to buy so must we labour to haue liking of Christ which wil mooue vs to seeke vnto him Isay. 55.1 Hoe all they that thirst come and buy so that none make this bargaine but he that thirsteth Thirdly we must prize and value Christ aboue all things in this world euen at so high a rate that we account al things in regard of him to bee but lost yea euen drosse dunge as Paul did Fourthly we must make exchange How we can giue Christ nothing but his owne Answ. Properly there is no exchange and therefore he saith Isay. 55.1 Hoe come and buy without money for nothing Simon Magu● is heauily checked and accursed for offring to buy the gifts of the holy ghost Acts 8.20 And yet there is an exchange to be made We must giue him our sins and receiue his righteousnesse therefore he is said 2. Cor 5.21 To be made sin for vs that wee should be made the righteousnes of God in him See a most blessed exchange for our sinne and shame we receiue his blessed grace and righteousnes Quest. How is this exchange made Answ. In the practise of faith and repentance for when we humble our selues and confesse our sinnes praying earnestly for remission and beleeue our reconciliation by Christ then is hee our righteousnesse Lastly though we can giue nothing vnto Christ yet hee giu●th vnto vs an earnest in this bargaine to wit some portion of Gods spirit and some small measure of his graces as grace to bewayle our sinnes to humble our selues and to pray for the pardon of them with purpose not to sinne againe these be the earnests of this bargaine And thus is heauen bought and sold between Christ and vs the receiuing of his true sauing graces be they neuer so small euen as a penie is a suffi●ient earnest for a bargaine of a hundred pound Here we see we are commanded to buy Christ and to make a bargaine with him whereby we may haue right to him and his merits But how goes the case with the world surely many come where this bargaine is offered but few there be that buy Wee are like to Passengers on the sea who see many goodly buildings sumptuous Cities fruitfull Ilands but they make no purchase of them they only prayse them as they behold them and so passe by so wee come and heare the doctrine of Christ and his merits and approoue of the same but where is the partie that maketh this bargaine Come to particular points and it will appeare that few bargaine for Christ. For who feeles his own miserie as he ought Who perceiues himselfe to stand in such neede of Christ as he doth worldly wants wee feele and are affected with them but in regard of spirituall wants we are sencelesse and yet til we truely feele our miserie we neuer come to make this bargaine with Christ. Againe come to our desire hungring after Christ In bodily thirst and hunger wee can say I hunger or I thirst but who can say I hunger thirst after Christ and his righteousnesse Alas our hearts are full we feele no want nay they are dead we feare none euill and as for our valuing and esteeming of Christ we are plaine Gaderens and Esawes wee preferre the world and the basest things therein before Christ. And for the exchange we are loth to part with our sins to put on Christs righteousnes Which plainly shewes wee make no exchange and though we bee willing to lay heapes of sins on Christ yet who takes Christes righteousnesse and declares the same by the fruites thereof And lastly for the earnest of the spirit though some there be that haue receiued it yet the body of our people as their consciences can tell them haue not receiued it for they want knowledge faith and other graces By all these it is more than manifest that this bargaine is not made And yet true it is that for worldly base barganes he must rise early that will goe beyond them But what a shame is this that we should be so expert in vile earthly things and haue no regard of this excellent and heauēly bargaine Wherfore seing Christ calleth vs hereunto let vs make this one bargaine with him and that presently which wee shall testifie by doing the fiue former duties let vs neuer bee at rest till we may say each one for himselfe I haue bargained with Christ and receiued his earnest Yea our care should be that this bargaine be made not with vs alone but with our children Many are forward to bring vp their childrē in good trades wherein they may buy and sell for their liuing wherein they doe well but withall they ought to be as carefull to teach them to make this bargaine with Christ and then they doe farre better For this
For the first I know thy workes many doe expound this of workes of mercie and liberalitie but that wil not so well stand for he saith to euerie church I know thy workes and yet some of them are blamed for want of these good workes By works then is meant the wayes that is the practises and dealings of the whole church as well of ministers as people in all their affaires Also by knowledge here we must vnderstand a knowledge that goeth with application as may appeare by comparing this with the fourth verse whither it hath relation for thus they must go I know thy workes and approue of them and yet I haue somthing against thee So that his meaning is I know thy workes that is all thy wayes and dealings in thy life and conuersation are manifest vnto me and I do generally approue of them Here first in this testimonie of his knowledge Christ ministreth a remedie against secret sinnes and offences The theefe the murtherer and adulterer wait for the night wherein to attempt their shamefull practises The tradesman in secret falsifyeth his weights and mingleth his wares among most men fraud oppression and iniustice do abound and all because they thinke that if men see not all is well as Dauid saith the wicked man saith God shall not see he will not regard But if men could thinke and bee persuaded of this that Christ seeth and knoweth all their wayes it would cause them to make conscience not onely of grosse sinnes but euen of their hidden and secret offences Secondly whereas this knowledge is ioyned with approbation it may be demanded how this can stand with the iustice of God to approue of that which is not answerable to the tenour of his law as the best workes of the most righteous man are not beeing stained with some corruption Isay. 64 6. Answ. The Gospell which is another part of Gods wil reuealeth more vnto vs than euer the law could do namely that if a man bee in Christ to him there is no condemnation and that God will accept his true desire and endeuour to please him for the deed it selfe 2. Cor. 8.12 And thus according to the tenour of the Gospell Christ approueth of their workes in this place though they were not able to abide the ●igor of his law But a Papist will here reason thus If a righteous mans workes bee approued of God then they are no sinnes for God will not approue of any thing that is sinfull and if his workes be no sinnes then he may fulfill the law and so bee iustified by his workes Answ. That which Christ approueth simply hath no sinne in it but here he onely approueth of their workes in part namely so farre foorth as they came from the work of his spirit in them but as they proceed from the will of the worker which is in part corrupt they are not free from the staine of sinne and so he approueth them not Againe workes of grace are approued of Christ with the pardon of sinne for accepting of the person he remitteth the faults that be in his good workes and so onely approueth his own worke in him And so here we must conceiue of his approbation of their workes to wit as proceeding from his spirit and hauing the faults thereof remitted in his owne merit The speciall commendation of this church is for particular actions The first whereof is diligent labour which is an excellent worke especally in a minister of Gods word to be painefull in his particular calling for the faithfull instruction and godly regiment of his particular charge Hence Paule saith 1. Tim. 5.17 He that laboureth in the word and doctrine is principally worthy double honor And herein Paul matcheth yea preferreth himselfe before other Apostles That hee laboured more abundantly in the ministery of the Gospell than they all 1. Cor. 15.10 Hence we learne that the worke of the ministerie if it be done as it ought is a worke full of great paines and labour contrary to the common opinion of men who thinke that the life of the minister is full of ease and his calling a matter of nothing such as may be done with the turning of the hand but here the iudgement of Christ is other wayes who vseth not thus to approue a light or idle worke Secondly this commendation of diligence in the minister must admonish all christians that desire to be approoued of Christ to giue all diligence to learne and know the will of God that they may do the same And here a common fault is to be reproued many will heare but where is their labour to grow in knowledge in grace that is wanting which i● the cause of such fruitlesse hearing as is common in the world For earthly things men refuse no paines but Gods heauenly knowledge and graces are not regarded What a shame is this that men should bestow their strength and wit about base and transitorie things and yet neglect the main good which concernes their soules for euer Thirdly the ministers diligence in teaching must prouoke conscience of obedience in the hearers that is the end of his worke without this hee spends his strength in vaine and therefore with the Apostle they must indeuour in all things to keepe a good conscience before God and all men Act. 24.16 The second thing which Christ here commends is patien●e in bearing the crosse which doth vsually accompanie the Gospell of Christ. And this indeed is praise worthy in the angel of this church for herin he goeth before sundry worthy prophets Ieremie was maruellous impatient for the mockings of the people And though Ionas had beene schooled in the whales belly yet when all things went not according to his mind in the destruction of Niniuie he became exceeding discontent Herein must all the ministers of the Gospell become followers of the Angell of this church While they labour in the Gospell of God they must possesse their soules with patience and make knowne to all men their meeke and mild spirit Yea euerie christian in the profession of religion must learne to practise this duty Luk. 8.16 The good ground receiueth the seed and bringeth forth fruit but how with patience Neither can wee possibly attaine to eternall life vnlesse we arme our selues with patience to beare the crosse for whosoeuer will liue godly must suffer affliction 2. Tim. 3.12 Through many tribulations we must enter into heauen Act. 14.22 II. Againe here obserue how Christ ioyneth labour and patience together this he doth for two causes First to let vs see the fruit of sinne which God hath set on the labour of man Before the fall the labour of mans calling was practised without all trouble or paines but since mans fall the best callings haue their crosses and vexations which are the punishments of mans transgression Socondly to shew vs the malice of Sathan against the good progresse of the Gospell Paul saith to the Thessalonians
it meaneth for meat and drinke is neuer knowne till a man be hungrie Yea to many that liue in the church this Manna is hidden for though men heare the doctrine of Christ yet not one of an hundred feele in themselues any want of Christ let the conscience speake and this will prooue true Ignorant people blesse themselues and say all is well Christ is a sauiour when as indeed to them Christ is hidden Nay which is yet more lamentable to many which teach and preach Christ Christ is hidden Manna for many of them neuer felt in their hearts and conscience that they had need of Christ for the pardon of their sinnes and the saluation of their soules It is not the knowledge in the brain that maketh Christ known to man but knowledge in the cōscience when a man feeles in his heart and soule that hee stands in need of the bloud of Christ and all the benefits of his passion for his redemption saluation And seeing this is the condition of the world wee on the contrarie must labor to feele in our selues our owne pouertie to see in our selues that we stand in need of Christ and of all the benefits of his passiō to free our souls from the gulfe of hell and the wrath of God Away with bare mentall knowledge for till we haue this true sense of our owne wants wee can neuer get into our hearts any sound grace Secondly is Christs hidden bread not reuealed to all Then calling effectuall to saluation so as if hee will euery man may be saued is not vniuersall for then should Christ not be hidden but reuealed to all which is not so Election therefore and effectuall vocation is definite particular And thus much of the first branch of this gift The second gift is a white stone Here Christ borroweth a comparison from the custome and manner of the gentiles to whom these Epistles are directed A white stone was of great vse among thē For first the iudge in giuing sentence vsed white stones and blacke stones the giuing of a white stone was a token of absolution the giuing of a blacke stone a signe of condemnation Here then the giuing of a white stone may signifie Absolution from Christ of all a mans sins and trespasses Againe when the gentiles would know which were luckie dayes as they spake and which were vnluckie they vsed to cast lots with white and blacke stones and that day which light on a white stone was iudged to be a lucky day that which light on a blacke stone was iudged to be vnlucky This practise they vsed as might be shewed by sufficient records And though this practise haue no warrant yet may Christ allude vnto it to signifie vnto them that hee will giue them good successe in all their actions yea happie dayes and a blessed life full of all ioyes and pleasures Others doe expound it of giuing victorie whereof the giuing of a white stone was a signe but this is not so fit neither can it bee shewed by true record that they had such a practise I rather take it Christ alludeth to the first and here promiseth to him that ouercommeth the true remission of all his sinnes and full absolution not in regard of ciuill punishment but in respect of guilt and punishment before God which is eternall damnation Here note one infallible token of the pardon of sinne namely to ouercome that is to renounce our selues and by faith relie wholly on Christ testifying this faith by maintaining good conscience and true religion vnto the end And therefore if anie desire to know whether God haue absolued him of his sinnes let him labour thus to ouercome and then shall this assurance be sealed vp vnto him The third gift is a new name written in the stone What this new name should be S. Iohn expresseth in his first Epistle chapter 3. vers 1. saying Behold what loue the father hath shewed to vs that we should be called the sonnes of God This new name therefore is to bee the sonne and heire of God in Christ. And because it is giuen of God himselfe therefore wee must not thinke it is an idle name or a bare title onely but withall God giueth him a new condition whereof this name is a token and title God changed Abrams name called him Abraham but it was when he had changed his estate and made him the father of the faithfull And there was a change in Iacob when God called him Israell This new name then signifieth the giuing of a new estate to a man or womā which they had not before namely their regeneration whereby they are made to die vnto sinne and to liue vnto God for therewith goeth the blessing of adoption whereby they become the sonnes of God and heires with Christ and so haue heauen and earth for their possession and all miseries and crosses yea sinne it selfe turning to their good they haue also the protection of Gods holy Angels in this life and at the last gaspe death to bee no death but a strait passage to eternall life Further this new name is sayd to bee written in the white stone that is in the pledge of absolution which sheweth the vnion of these two Absolution and Regeneration So that whom the Lord of his mercie absolues from their sinnes them in his bountie hee brings to a new estate and condition He that is in Christ is a new creature 2. Cor. 5.17 A point to be obserued as yeelding speciall aduice to reforme the grosse and common abuse of Christ. Men persuade themselues that Christ is their Sauiour and will pardon their sinnes for he is mercifull and thereupon they take occasion to liue as they list But let no man herewith deceiue himselfe for they that haue absolution haue regeneration also a new condition of life goes with the fruition of Gods mercie in Christ they that go on in sinne haue not the pardon of sinne the corruption of sinne must bee abolished where the guilt of sinne is absolued and their liues are reformed that haue their sinnes remitted Here some man may say Why are not those called by this new name to whom Christ giues it for vsually men are called after their names The answere is made in the end of the verse Because no man knoweth that name saue he that receiueth it that is in that manner and certainetie as hee that receiueth it And therefore the children of God must not be much offended when they are reuiled for their profession because the world knowes not their estate Here we may obserue diuerse points First that hee which is the child of God and hath this new name giuē him knows that hee is Gods child iustified and sanctified Neither is this knowledge by probable coniecture onely and good hope as the Papists would haue it but certaine and infallible for else others should know it as well as hee that receiueth it which is here denied Each one is bound in
satisfaction of Christ is properly that key whereby heauen is opened beeing opposite to mans sinne whereby it was shut And Gods Church and Ministers cannot properly open Heauen by any power they haue but onely reueale vnto men what Christ hath done for them and withall apply vnto them the doctrine of Christs satisfaction which is reuealed And in this regard they are said to open and shut the kingdom of heauen not as Lords but as ministers seruants Next I adde that this power is giuen to the Church that is to the companie of of true Beleeuers called to saluation by Christ and to none other and therefore it is sayd of them Whatsoeuer you bind on earth shall be bound in heauen c. Thirdly I adde the end of this power of the keyes To open and to shut heauen How the Church doth this Christ that gaue this power knoweth best and hee hath set it downe Iohn 20.23 Whosoeuers sinnes ye remit they are remitted and whosoeuers sinnes ye retayne they are retayned The Church therefore opens heauen when it pardons mens sinnes and it shuts the same when it lawfully retaines their sinnes and holdeth them vnpardoned besides this there is no opening and shutting of heauen committed to the Church Quest. Can the Church pardon sinne or retaine the same Answ. Yes for these are the wordes of Christ but let vs see how It is one thing to giue sentence of the pardon of sinne and another to pronounce the same sentence giuen To giue the sentence of the pardon of sinne is onely proper to Christ the head of the Church no Saint nor Angell hath that priuiledge but yet the Church pronounceth the sentence of pardon giuen by Christ. If wee should say the the Church should pardon sin we should rob Christ of his honour for that is a priuiledge of his Godhead Thus wee se● what the power of the keyes is The right vse of this power is when the Church doth vse the same for the opening and shutting of heauen First in the name of Christ alone as a seruant Secondly according to the rule of Gods word not after mens affections or inuentions Thirdly for this end to bring sinners to repentance to continue them therin that they may be saued and to the Church thus vsing this power Christ hath promised that whatsoeuer they binde in earth shall be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer they loose in earth shall bee loosed in heauen Mat. 18.18 Further this power of the keyes hath two parts the ministerie of the word and spirituall iurisdiction The key of the Ministerie of the word is set downe established by Christ Mat. 16.19 I will giue vnto thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen c. This ministery of the word is a key because it opens shuts heauen this it doth two wayes First by teaching and explayning the substance of religion the doctrine of saluation whereby men must come to heauen in that regard is called the key of knowledge Lu. 11.52 Secondly by applying the promises of the Gospel and the threatning of the Lawe For when in the ministerie of the word the promises of remission of sins life euerlasting are applyed to beleeuers that repent then the kingdom of heauen is opened when as in the same ministerie of the word the curses of the law are denoūced against impenitent sinners then is the kingdom of heauē shut Yet touching the ministerie of the word this distinction must be remembred that otherwhiles the church is certen of the faith repentance of some men or some congregation and then they may pronounce remission of sins absolutely But otherwhiles they are vncerten of their faith and repentance or of their impenitencie then they must accordingly remit or retaine mens sins that is conditionally pronouncing the remission of sins to all that repent denouncing damnation to all that repent not And thus is the word to be publikely handled in Gods church at this day because our congregations are mixt companies consisting of some that repent beleeue and of others that doe not truely repent nor beleeue The second part of this power of the keyes is spiritual iurisdiction I call it spirituall to distinguish it from that outward iurisdiction whereby the common-wealth is gouerned That this spiritual iurisdiction is a key may appeare Mat. 18.16.17.18 If thy brother offend thee saith Christ admonish him priuately if hee heare thee not yet take with thee two or three if he heare not them tell it to the Church if he refuse to heare the Church let him bee vnto thee as an heathen man and as a publican Then followeth the promise Verely I say vnto you whatsoeuer ye bind on earth shal be bound in heauen and what soeuer ye loose shal be loosed in haauen This spirituall iurisdiction is a power whereby the Church pronounceth sentence vpon obstinate offenders in the Church and puts the same in execution And it hath two parts Excommunication and absolution Excommunication is an action of the Church in Christs name excluding an obstinate offender that is a professor of the Gospel from all the priuildedges of the Church and from the kingdom of heauen So Paul commandeth the incestious man to be committed to Sathan that is not onely put out of the kingdome of Christ but also after a sort made subiect vnto Sathan to bee outwardly afflicted by him And therefore Christ saith If he heare not the Church let him be vnto thee as an heathen man that is as one that hath no title to the kingdome of heauen Heere may some say Can the Church thrust any man out of the kingdome of heauen Answ. It is Christ only that receiueth men in thither and it is he alone that must thrust them out the Church doth not properly either receiue men in or put them out but onely pronounce and declare what Christ doth in this behalfe As if a man that liues in the church bee a common drunk●rd the Church finding in Gods word that no drunkard can inherite the kingdome of heauen which is the sentence of Christ may pronounce the same against him and so exclude him from the kingdome of heauen Obiect The true child of God may be excōmunicated but he can neuer be excluded from the kingdome of heauen Ans. The true childe of God may for a time and in part be excluded the kingdome of heauen In part as a man that hath freedome in an incorporation may lie in prison for some trespasses and so want the vse of his freedome though he be a freeman so the child of God for committing sinne may want the vse of his libertie and freedome which he hath in Gods kingdome and for a time while hee liueth in sinne without repentance yet wholly and for euer hee cannot but so soone as hee repents hee shall bee receiued certainely againe for no man is to bee barred either from heauen or the Church any longer then hee