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A14721 Theologicall questions, dogmaticall observations, and evangelicall essays, vpon the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to St. Matthew Wherein, about two thousand six hundred and fifty necessary, and profitable questions are discussed; and five hundred and eighty speciall points of doctrine noted; and five hundred and fifty errours confuted, or objections answered: together with divers arguments, whereby divers truths, and true tenents are confirmed. By Richard VVard, sometimes student in the famous vniversities of Cambridge in England: St. Andrews in Scotland: and Master of Arts of both the kingdoms; and now a preacher in the famous city of London. Ward, Richard, 1601 or 2-1684. 1640 (1640) STC 25024; ESTC S118017 1,792,298 907

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punishment this we must endure patiently for Christs sake II. Culpae The evill of sinne here this generall rule must be laid downe We must give no place unto sinne or we must not yeeld to sinne at all but altogether resist it every sinne is from Sathan 1 Ioh. 3.8 but wee must resist the devill to the face giving no place unto him Ephes 4.27 That is first wee must resist the motions of sinne in our selves Secondly wee must resist the perswasions of sin which come from others Thirdly we must resist the commands of superiours if they be sinfull that is no cōmand must make us do that which God forbids children are not to obey Fathers servants are not to obey Masters Schollers are not to obey Teachers when they injoyne the performance of that which God prohibites in his word Fourthly we must resist our brothers sinne that is reprove and blame it and not seeme to allow of it What is meant by this word Resist Quest 3 First sometimes it is taken in the best sense Answ 1 as elsewhere we are commanded to put on the whole armour of a Christian that wee may resist sinne sathan and temptation Ephes 6.13 Iames 4.7 and 1 Pet 5.3 and thus the evill of sinne is to bee resisted as was shewed even now Secondly sometimes it is taken in the worst Answ 2 sense and that according to a double exposition namely First it signifies Rebellare to Resist which is manifold in Scripture to wit I. Some resist the will of God Rom. 9.19 II. Some resist the Spirit of God Acts 7.51 III. Some resist the truth of God 2 Tim. 3.8 IV. Some resist the Preaching of the Gospel 2 Tim. 4.15 V. Some resist the Magistrate Rom. 13.2 Secondly it signifies Contradicere to contradict and gainesay Thus our Saviour promiseth to give unto his Apostles such a mouth and wisedome that their adversaries should not bee able to gainesay nor resist x Luke 21.15 And thus they who disputed with Stephen were not able to resist the wisedome and Spirit by which hee spake y Acts 6.10 So Elymas withstood Paul Acts 13.8 and Paul Peter Gal. 2.11 Quest 4 Is no evill of punishment to be resisted Answ Evills are of two sorts I. Naturall as sicknesse diseases poverty and the like the generall rule here is where meanes may bee used for the relieving of our necessities or griefes there they must bee used and therefore meate and medicines are not to be despised II. Worldly evils here the generall rule is where charitie is violated there sinne is committed and therefore all contentions are to be laid aside hence two questions arise of which briefely because we shall handle them more largely in the next Section Quest 5 Are warres then lawfull at all Answ 1 First Kings and Princes may lawfully undertake warres observing these foure things I. let the cause moving them unto warre bee lawfull II. Let it be weighty and of great importance III. Let it bee undertaken in Christian love and charitie IV. Let it be the last remedie of seeking to obtaine their rights that is let them first trie by all meanes that restitution and satisfaction may be made for their wrongs before they wage warre Answ 2 Secondly for the Subject it is his part to protect and defend both his King and Kingdome to the uttermost of his power and ability Quest 6 Is it lawfull to goe to law at all Answ 1 First the Anabaptists deny al Magistracie and consequently hold all sutes unlawfull Answ 2 Secondly some hold that it is never a sinne to goe to law Answ 3 Thirdly both these erre and therefore that a meane may bee found out betwixt these extreames I should lay downe here some Rules but they follow in the next Section Sect. 2 § 2. Whosoever shall smite thee on the right cheeke turne to him the other also Quest 1 Is this dutie of suffering and pardoning of injuries so necessarily required of every Christian that it is never lawfull for them to right themselves or to seeke justice from the Magistrate by desiring that the offender may bee punished Answ 1 First it is not lawfull for private persons either to revenge themselves or to desire the Magistrate to punish the offender according to their prescription for men must not be both Judges and Parties Answ 2 Secondly it is never lawfull for the offended to seek to be revenged by the Magistrate of the offender out of a corrupt and exulcerated mind that is out of a desire of anger hatred and revenge towards his neighbour Men for the most part goe to law that they may be revenged and as they say have their will of him who hath injured them this is not to be allowed Answ 3 Thirdly it is lawfull for him who is injured to seeke justice at the Magistrates hand according as he in equitie shall judge of his cause and wrong if he seeke it out of a love of justice and a meeke minde and with a desire that his neighbour may be the better by it as followes by and by We shewed before that this truth was questioned Quest 2 by the Anabaptists and therefore it may here bee demanded How it appeares that those who are injured may justly and lawfully repaire unto the Magjstrate for redres of their wrongs First because God hath instituted and ordained Answ 1 Magistrates Tribunalls and Judgement seates who yet approves of nothing which is contrary to christian love and therefore it is lawfull for the injured to appeale unto the Magistrate for succour against the injurious person Secondly because in all civill religion and Answ 2 well ordered Common-wealthes there are lawes enacted for the punishment of offenders and the recompence of wrongs which lawes were altogether vaine and idle if it were never lawfull to use the benefit of them against malefactors Thirdly because it is profitable for the evill Answ 3 doers that they should be punished for their evill deeds that the pray which they have unjustly got should be taken from betwixt their teeth whence it appeares that it is a worke of charitie sometimes to procure offenders to be corrected that so they may be amended Bishop Davenant s Colos 3.13 We shewed before that some thought it never Quest 3 a sinne to goe to law and therefore it may here be questioned when it is not and when it is First as was said in the former question hee Answ 1 sins who out of a malicious revengefull mind implores the aid of the Magistrate for the punishing of him who hath injured him Secondly the Magistrate is justly implored Answ 2 by the injured person to take vengeance or to punish the injurious in these regards namely I. That he who hath done the injurie may be corrected but without any malice to his person at al. II. That by this meanes he may be repressed lest other wise hee should wrong others in the like manner III. That for the time to come he may be
Doctori Greg. Past oftentimes the Lord out of his love mercy unto the people enables the Ministers to speak profitable and seasonable words unto them And on the other side the Lord sometimes for the sinnes of the hearers takes away the Ministers or the word from them Cum verbi auditores esuriunt pro eis reficiendis majora Doctoribus dona tribuuntur Greg. Past When hearers hunger after the word then the Lord for the refreshing comforting and satisfying of them doth give more Talents and greater gifts unto the Preachers But when people grow cold in their hearing or in their desires to heare or in their love unto the word then God often lessens the gifts of the Ministers or else takes away his painfull labourers sending Loiterers amongst them IV. He blesseth their labours and gives an increase to their indeavours 1 Cor. 3.6 Pedes quatuor bestiarum Evangelistarum Ezek. 1.7 ut scintillans aes aes candens est Praedicatio inde scintillae prodeunt quia ardent desyderio sonant verbo corda quae scintillae tetigerunt incendunt Greg. s Ezech. hom 3. The Ministers of the Word according to the Commandement of the Lord preach to their flocks and the Spirit of the Lord by their preaching doth oftentimes inflame their hearts and kindle their affections and fill their souls with sanctified desires and turn them truly unto himself And thus we see how the holy Ghost works and teaches in the Preachers of the Word he both making them M nisters and also able Ministers he both directing them what to speak and also blessing what they speak Secondly In Auditoribus the holy Spirit teacheth in the hearers as well as speakers for he makes their hearts often burn within them when they hear as Luke 34.32 Otiosus est sermo Doctoris nisi Spiritus sanctus adsit cordi audientis Greg. s Evang. hom 30. In vain doth the Preacher speak unto the ears of the Auditours except the Spirit speak unto the heart Nisi Spiritus sanctus auditorum corda repleat vox doctorum ad aures corporis incassum sonat nam formare vocem exterius possunt sed interius imprimere non val●nt Greg. Mor. lib. 27. Now although preaching be unprofitable without the Spirit yet seldome doth the holy Ghost fall upon any or come unto any but in the preaching of the word when Peter preached then many were pricked in their hearts Acts 2.37 yea then the holy Ghost fell upon many Acts 10.44 And in preaching Lydia had her heart opened Acts 16.14 What is here required of Hearers Quest 5 First they must pray when they come unto Answ 1 the Word and that I. For themselves that the Lord would be pleased so to assist them by his Spirit that they may learn Christ in the Ministery of the Word yea that he would give his holy Spirit unto them and fill them with the graces thereof this was Davids prayer for himself Psal 143.10 and Pauls for the Ephesians chap. 3. v. 18 19. and for the Colossians chap. 1. v. 9. Nulla in discrudo mora est ubi Spiritus sanctus Doctor adest Beda s Luc. hom 9. If the holy Ghost be our School-master then we shall not be Trewants but good proficients and at Schollers And therefore let us beg at Gods hands the Spirit of Revelation Ephes 1.17 c. that so we may go away from the Word alwaies bettered Pray with Augustine in one of his Epistles Sanctum opus semper inspira in me ut cogitem compelle ut faciam suade ut diligam confirma me ut te teneam custodi me ne te perdam Sanctifie thou O Lord so my heart that I may alwaies think that which is good strengthen thou so my hands that I may alwaies do that which is good perswade thou so my affections that I may above all things love thee the chiefest good establish thou me so in faith that I may hold thee fast and so keepe mee by thy Spirit that I may never lose thee II. Hearers must pray for the Preachers of the Word that speech and utterance may be given unto them Ephes 6.19 that the door of the Word may be wide open unto them Colos 4.3 That they may be permitted enabled to speak the Word freely 2 Thes 3.1 yea that they may so speak that their Word may become blessed unto their Auditours Rom. 15.29 30. And hence came that religious custome still practised by our Church to have Prayers and that both First before Sermons that the blessed Spirit would be graciously assistant and present both with speakers and hearers And also Secondly after Sermons that the same good Spirit would confirm what hath been spoken and establish and imprint it in the souls of the Hearers Answ 2 Secondly as Hearers must pray for the divine assistance of the Spirit in the hearing of the Word by which God ordinarily teacheth the mysteries of the gospel so also they must be carefull to hear what the Spirit saith in the Word reade Rev. 2.7 Acts 10.33 Certainly here there is a most lamentable neglect ordinarily amongst Hearers and little or no fruit can be expected of their hearing so long as that remains Hearers are wont I. To hear for fashion sake onely and not for the feeding of their souls Yea II. To absent themselves or keep themselves from the Word for the least cause or upon the smallest occasion that may be Yea III. To hear with prejudice or prejudicate opinions or imprudent censures for some hearers deride some tax and reprove the rudenesse or plainnesse of the speaker that he neither shews Eloquence nor Learning in his Sermons When this is amended either by him or by some other that is if we hear learned elaborate and eloquent peeces then we praise the eloquence learning wit and quicknesse of the speaker in all things seeing and judging man and not God And so long as we look onely upon man in the preaching of the Word so long we cannot expect the assistance of the blessed Spirit i●●he Word yea the more we look upon man the lesse we look for the holy Ghost And therefore in the hearing of the Word let us withdraw our ears and eyes and minds from men and look wholly up unto the Lord remembring that they who preach are his Messengers and that which they preach is his message and the word preached is made profitable onely by him that so we may desire assistance in hearing and expect a blessing upon our hearing onely from him and return all glory honour and praise unto him alone How may we know whether Christ have taught Quest 6 us the knowledge of God and mysteries of the Gospel or not First certainly he that is uncertain of this Answ 1 may be most certain that he is ignorant of it he that knows not whether he know God or not may be sure that he knows not God No man disputes whether there be a Sun or not except it be hid for
forest x Iob 39.1.2 c. IX He feedeth men giving them grasse for their cattle and hearbs and wine and oile and bread Psal 114.14 X. He feedeth all things Every creature expects his foode from him y Psalme 104.15.16 The eyes of all creatures looke unto him and he giveth them their meate in due season z Psalme 145.15.16 XI He governeth all things and giveth to all things life and spirit and breath and all things Acts 17.25 therefore in him we live moove and have our beeing Acts 16.28 yea by him all things consist Colos 1.17 and by his mighty word all things are sustained Heb. 1.3 May we ascribe nothing to chance or fortune Quest 2 but all to the providence of God The name of Fortune should be banished from all Christian countries Answ because all things whatsoever are ordered and disposed of by God Whether things Animate I. or Inanimate II. Whether things Good III. or Evill IIII. I. Animate things are disposed of by God and therefore a sparrow falleth not to the ground without the providence of God Mat. 10.29 II. Inanimate things are guided by God The Lot is cast into the lap but the disposing thereof is from the Lord Prov. 16.33 III. Good things come unto us from our God Thus Ioseph saith God sent me hither for your good a Gen. 45 7.8 and therefore we must never sacrifice unto our owne nets or ascribe any thing unto our selves IV. Evill things are ordered and disposed of by God If a man casually murther his neighbour he shall flie to the citie of refuge because I the Lord delivered him into his hand b Exod. 21.13 for a haire cannot fall from your heads without the providence of God Luke 21.18 And therefore wee must not murmur or complaine for any crosses but see the hand of the Lord in all things Thus we see that both things animate and inanimate good and evill are disposed of by God and therefore no place is left at all for Fortune If all things bee ruled by Gods providence Quest then whether neede wee feare the event of things We must not be carelesse in any thing of importance but we may be fearelesse of the event Answ as for example I. Dost thou feare hunger and thirst God will provide for thee Psal 107.6 II. Dost thou feare imprisonment God will either preserve thee or bring thee out Psal 107.10 c. III. Dost thou feare Plague God will deliver thee Psal 107.11 c. IV. Dost thou feare danger Hee will give his Angels charge of thee and they shall pitch their tents about thee Psal 34.7 and 91.11 yea the Lord will preserve thee as the apple of his eye c Zach. 2.8 VI. Dost thou feare wild beasts Thou shalt tread upon the Lyon and adder and they shall not hurt thee Psal 91.13 VII Dost thou feare death God will deliver thee Psal 91.7 Et sic de caeteris Thus the children of God are happie and blessed and neede not feare the event of any thing because all things are ordained and disposed by their heavenly Father Sect. 8 § 8. His Sunne to rise suum Solem. Quest Why is it called Gods Sunne Answ 1 First because he created it The Lord gave the Sunne for a light by day Ier. 31.35 Answ 2 Secondly because hee maketh it to rise the naturall course thereof being guided by him Answ 3 Thirdly it is called His Sunne because hee gives it freely unto us and not of debt Sect. 9 § 9. On the evill and on the unjust Quest 1 Why doth our Saviour adde this To teach us that he doth give and we ought to give good things to those who are evill Answ First Christ addes here the object of Gods mercy to teach us that God gives outward Quest 2 things unto wicked men Have wicked men any interest in or right unto any temporall blessing is not temporall right onely founded in grace Answ Those who never were endued with faith or supernaturall grace may have a true and a just title unto temporall things This may be confirmed by Gods owne gifts and who can have a more sure or just title unto a thing then hee who receiveth it from God who is Lord of all and gives nothing but his owne But God gives externall good things to the wicked and unbeleevers This is proved by out Saviour here himselfe God makes his Sunne to rise upon the evill and raineth upon the unjust Hence then I argue He who receiveth a gift from God hath a true title thereunto But wicked men receive many temporall gifts from God Therefore they have a true and just title unto them Indeede the manner how wicked men and unbeleevers use temporal blessings is oftentimes unjust yet the title therunto may be most just d Bishop Davenāt quest 30. Pag. 137. initio Secondly our Saviour here addes Evill and Vnjust to teach us That we must doe good even unto those who are evill remembring that the object of Mercy is misery and not merit therfore we must not enquire after the goodnes of the object but looke unto his want and poverty True it is wee must chiefly regard the houshold of faith not forgetting the rest Gal. 6.10 Ver. 46 VERS 46. For if ye love them which love you what reward have ye doe not even the Publicans the same Sect. 1 Object 1 § 1. What reward have ye The Papists object this place to prove the merit of our workes because our Saviour here implies that God will give us according to our Ans 1 workes It is true that God wil give us according to our workes but not for our merits ut praemium non ut meritum that which God gives unto us is given as a reward not as a thing deserved God will reward our workes but wee doe not merit that reward being in our best performances unprofitable servants e Luk. 17.10 That wee doe not merit that reward which shall be given unto us appeares thus First because this is to derogate from God and to arrogate unto men or as the Apostle saith most plainely of salvation be of works then it is not of grace and if of grace then it is not of workes otherwise grace is no grace f Rom. 11 6. Ephes 2.1.8 Secondly if salvation were of workes then rich men would buy heaven as they doe earth because they are the workes the Popish Clergie looke principally after Thirdly there is no proportion betwixt our workes and heaven and therefore nothing that we doe can merit heaven Fourthly that which is heere called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reward is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thankes Luke 6.32 Object 2 But they thus object against this If evill works merit death then good workes merit life if wicked workes deserve hell then good workes deserve heaven for contrarierum eadem est ratio there is for contraries one and the same reason Answer Good and evill workes are not
holy duties thus the Apostles when they ordaine Pastors and Elders fast i Act. 13.3 14.23 that the duties which are required of them and which they are to administer may bee performed in the evidence of the Spirit And therefore fasting were requisite and very convenient first for Ministers in the preparatiō unto the Lords day that their prayers unto God might bee the more effectuall for assistance in delivering of his word And secondly for people that they might the more earnestly implore the ayd of God in the hearing of his word And thirdly for Fathers and Godfathers the day before the Baptizing of the infant that their prayers may bee the more fervent unto God for the infant that it may be baptized with water and with the holy Spirit And fourthly it is requisite for all the day before the celebration of the Lords Supper because the worke which is to bee performed is great and of much weight being a covenant or contract betweene God and us and because the benefit is great if worthily performed therefore it should not be undertaken without the preparation of fasting and prayer A man that is to come into great bonds is very wary before hee signes and seales them to overlooke carefully all the writings to consider throughly of the purchase to enquire diligently into his owne abilities about the performance of the obligation to consult seriously with others of the title whether that be good and not rashly to doe any thing Thus should every one doe before the receiving of the Lords Supper carefully remembring these foure things First it may be that which thou art about to doe will tend to thy condemnation and destruction for he that eates and drinkes unworthily eates and drinkes his owne damnation k 1 Cor. 11.13 Secondly remember that the condition of this obligation made betwixt God and thee is the delivering up of thy sinnes and therefore how canst thou performe covenants with the Lord if thou knowest not what thy sinnes are nor where they are nor wherein thou offendest which things are very hardly knowne without prayer fasting meditation and examining of out waies workes words and thoughts Thirdly remember it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God a Heb. 10.31 because he is a consuming fire b Heb. 12.29 And therefore what will become of thee if thou hold not touch with him and be very carefull exactly to performe covenant And Fourthly remember that these things considered thou hadst better neglect all things when thou art to come unto the Lords Table then thy preparation thereunto And therefore the day before thou commest thither give thy selfe to examination meditation supplication and fasting For the better taking up and understanding of this observe that there is a threefold fast I. There is lejunium publicum a publike and generall fast this is not altogether so convenient for our examination and preparation unto the Lords Supper but yet were fit enough if authority should enjoyne it II. There is Iejunium privatum a private and particular fast this is requisite for every man before hee comes to partake this holy Sacramēt III. There is private-publicum jejunium private-publike fast and that is when a Father of a Family sets the day of preparation unto the holy Communion apart both for himselfe and all those within his gates who are to communicate that so he may the better examine how they are fitted and not suffer them to runne into the danger of eternall death by unworthy receiving The last question here will bee Why wee Quest 10 must fast To which I answer first because it is profitable Answ 1 and that in a threefold regard first to the Body secondly to the Minde thirdly to the Soule First fasting is profitable unto the Body because it encreaseth and continueth health the Fathers before the flood ate onely hearbs and fruits and roots and were long livers the Essaei were very temperate and lived untill they were very old c Hist Scolast yea experience teacheth us that cattle are more healthfull then men because they will not eat to excesse except it bee a dog but onely for the satisfying of nature Secondly fasting is profitable for the Mind as appeares by these three things I. it inlightens the understanding II. it strengthens the Minde unto prayer III. it availes unto Faith First fasting cleares the eyes of the Mind a man is more apt and better able to understand when he is fasting then when he is full as may be proved by these foure reasons The first is Naturall the mind followes the temperature of the body now fasting begets more pure Spirits feasting more troubled and grosse hence we say Aurora Musis semper amica meis it is the best studying in the forenoone The second is Civill the minde distracted by no employments can discerne of a thing more clearely and quietly now as was said before when we fast we must forbeare our ordinary and painefull callings that wee may the better give our selves to the examination of our selves and sinnes and therefore fasting helpes the Mind to understand The third is Spirituall because our affections are not then inflamed with the fire of concupiscence and lust as in feasting neither is our judgment so corrupt but we can more clearely discerne of the nature of sinne and vertue The fourth is Celestiall because God gives grace to those that fast aright as Daniel when he fasted saw visions And therefore if they bee any thing difficult which we cannot understand we must sharpen the Minde upon the whetstone of Fasting yea if we be weake in grace and desire to be strengthned let us give our selves to those prevalent meanes of fasting and prayer Secondly fasting strengthens the Mind unto prayer wherefore the Apostle conjoynes them d 1 Cor. 7. ● And therefore when upon any extraordinary occasion we desire that our prayers might prevaile with God wee must strengthen them with fasting Thirdly fasting availes unto faith reade Matthew 17.19.20.21 where our blessed Saviour himselfe expressly layeth downe this double conclusion unto his Apostles first that they cannot cast out divels without faith and secondly that this faith cannot be had without fasting and prayer Fourthly fasting is profitable for the Soule in these regards First it obtaines pardon and forgivenesse of sinne at Gods hands as we see in the Ninivites fast e Ionah 3.8.10 for although fasting and humiliation be not a satisfaction for sinne yet it is a testimony of sincerity that we both abhorre our by-past sinnes and desire to leave them Secondly fasting weakens the power and rebellion of the flesh and doth with more ease withstand the assaults of Sathan yea overcome him Thus we see that fasting is profitable Secondly we must fast because it is necessary and that in these two regards first because it Answ 2 is commanded for the proofe hereof reade these Scriptures Levit. 16 2● and 23.27 and Numb 29.7
griefes whatsoever as for example First if thou bee in any temporall danger then here is thy comfort that all things shall worke together for the best unto thee x Rom. 8.28 Secondly if thou bee derided for the profession of religion the holy Comforter will afford internall consolation unto thee Thirdly dost thou mourne for the sinnes of others and art in feare for them then here is thy comfort viz. 1. If they be righteous men who have sinned and for whose sinnes thou art troubled thou must remember they stand or fall to their own Master y Rom. 14.4 2. If they bee wicked men for whose sinnes thou mournest and whose persons thou art afraid of in regard of their sinnes yet thou maist be comforted through hope What hope can we have in bewailing the sins Quest 7 of the world and of wicked men Chrysost imperf First it may be that by thy prayers tears counsell Answ 1 advice some may be converted although the Apostle feares the worst and heares bad enough of those unto whom he writes yet hee hopes the best Heb. 6.9 Secondly the audaciousnesse and boldnesse of Answ 2 the wicked in sinning shall not be perpetuall for Christ will come to judge the world and therefore hence wee may have some comfort in our mourning for the sinnes of the wicked Thirdly God will glorifie himselfe either by Answ 3 converting them from sinne or by confounding them for sinne Wherefore in regard of Gods glory wee are not utterly deprived of comfort in our sorrow for their sinnes Answ 4 Fourthly at least when wee see apparantly that they belong not unto God we then mourne no more that is if we see them die in their sins as they lived in their iniquities then wee are to cease our mourning for them and therefore in bewailing the sinnes of the world wee have this hope that either our mourning shall be turned into mirth by their amending or shal be brought to end by their death Fourthly if thou grievest for thy owne sinnes committed against thy God thou maist hearken what the Lord saith and hee will speake peace unto thee he will tell thee he desires not the death of a sinner but rather that he should turne from his sinnes and live He will tell thee that the sacrifices of God are a broken and contrite heart and such a sacrifice he will not despise z Psa 51.17 Yea thy Christ will tell thee that if thou feele thy sinnes to be a burthen unto thee that hee will ease thy shoulders of that load if thou wilt but come unto him a Mat. 11.28 Thus the Lord hath particular comforts for all the griefes of his children or whatsoever their causes of mourning be And thus we have seene the first consolation which wee have from this Blessed Comforter and that is temporall Secondly the Holy Spirit gives unto all holy mourners spirituall solace and that two wayes first by mitigating their affliction by inward comfort hence they can rejoyce in tribulation b Rom. 5.3 yea hence they can cheerfully endure death c Rom. 8.36 as we see in Paul Acts 20. and in the other Saints Heb. 11.35 c. And in the Apostles who rejoyce that God is pleased to thinke them worthy to suffer for Christs sake d Acts 5.41 Secondly by giving unto them internall peace of conscience both with themselves and with their God e Phil. 4.7 insomuch as they become thereby more then conquerers in their greatest afflictions and tryals f Rom. 8.31.37 and 2 Cor. 1.4 Thirdly this Paracletus will give unto these mourners in Zion eternall consolation in the new Jerusalem which is above where and when Death shall be swallowed up in victory and all teares wiped from off their faces g Esa 25.8 and Apoc. 7.17 Revel 21.4 And their temporal mourning changed into eternal mirth as Abraham saith to Dives of Lazarus he in his life time received paines therefore now hee is comforted h Luk. 16.25 and hence it is called everlast●ng consolation i 2 Thess 2.16 yea joy and comfort which the heart of a mortall man is not able to conceive off k 1 Cor. 2.9.10 Quest 8 How many degrees are there of this Eternall Consolation Answ Two to wit First from death when the spirit returnes unto God that gave it and the soule is caried by the Angels into heaven to enjoy the joyes of that celestiall paradise with Christ for ever and ever The second is from the resurrection when the body beeing united into the soule both are made partakers of that eternall blisse when we can see God with these same eyes l Iob. 19.26 having put on immortality as a garment and our corruptible bodies being made incorruptible And therefore from the consideration hereof we may see how blessed a thing it is to mourne and to want comfort for a while here on earth and how wide they shoot that thinke those happy that laugh and rejoyce here on earth Extrema gaudij luctus occupat the end of temporall joy is eternall sorrow as wee see in Dives thou in thy life time receivedst pleasure saith Abraham therefore now thou art tormented m Luk. 16 25. We see worldlings rejoyce and expose themselves wholly to profuse laughter and mirth according to that of the Prophet The harpe and the violl the tabret and pipe and wine are in their feasts n Esa 5.12 with joy and gladnesse slaying Oxen killing sheep eating flesh and drinking wine o Esa 22.13 in bowles chaunting to the sound of the violl inventing instruments of musicke and anointing themselves with the chiefe ointments p Amos 6 5.6 But all this jollity doth not argue felicity the lives of worldlings being meerely tragicall that is merry in the beginning but the Catastrophe death and misery Balthazar feasts but by and by trembles and within few houres is slaine Dan. 5.5 And many more like him spend their daies in good things and in a moment goe downe into the pit q Iob. 21.13 And therefore let us remember how vaine all the joyes of this world are and not place our felicity in them or thinke our selves happy because we enjoy them but rath r thinke blessed are they that mourne What comforts may we be supported withall Quest. 9 in the time of our sorrow What consolations may wee propound unto our selves in our distresse that we may the more patiently beare and undergoe it Ruminate in the day of mourning and time of griefe of these five things Remember first Answ that affliction is common with thee unto all the faithfull and therefore thou mayest the better beare it r Heb. 12.8 Secondly remember affliction may bee grievous to the body but it is joyous to the soule our Saviour sayth Feare not him nor that which can kill the body but feare him and that which can cast body and soule into hell fire And therefore we should not
not sufficient to teach the truth in some things except we doe it in all Answ 1 First because the truth is but one and therefore the whole truth is to bee knowne As in obedience the whole law is to be performed or else wee are guiltie of the breach of all the Commandements r Iam. 2.10 So the Catholike faith is to bee kept whole and undefi●ed or wee cannot bee saved Athanasius in his Creede And therefore the whole truth and doctrine of religion should bee taught Hence Moses is commended because hee spake unto the children of Israel according to all that the Lord had given him in Commandement to say unto them ſ Deut. 1.3 And so Paul appeales unto the people that they know how that hee kept backe nothing from them But taught unto them all the will of the Lord. t Act. 20.26 Secondly truth should not be mingled with Answ 2 falshood or lying for they are like the Jron and the Clay that will not cleave together Daniel 2 43. And therefore saith Saint Paul I speake the truth in the Lord I lye not Rom. 9.1 Because all Ministers should bee carefull to avoide all lying and teach nothing but the truth and the whole truth unto their people Thirdly because it is the subtletic and the Answ 3 craft of the Divell to hide and conceale lyes under some truthes Thus Sathan by keeping backe part of the truth would have perswaded Christ that hee might lawfully have cast himselfe from the top of the Pinacle u Matth. 4 6. Thus the Pharisees say Christ blasphemes because hee makes himselfe equall with God v Ioh. 10.33 and undertakes to forgive sinnes which none but God can doe w Mar. 2.7 hiding untruthes under veritie Christ being God as well as man and therefore might pardon sinnes and without robbing of God make himselfe equall with him And therefore if we desire not to erre we must labour to know the whole truth of God in things necessarie unto salvation Quest 3 Is every truth profitable to be taught Answ 1 First oftentimes some truthes are lesse profitably taught in things De facto Answ 2 Secondly in hard and difficult things the teaching of the truth is sometimes lesse profitable and therefore those things which are more hardly understood should bee more rarely taught Yea hence Saint Paul would not have the Romans to receive him who was weake in faith unto doubtfull disputations Romans 14.1 Answ 3 Thirdly there are many nice and curious questions which being not necessarie unto salvation are lesse profitable to be taught Answ 4 Fourthly but those fundamentall truthes which are necessarie to bee knowne and beleeved and practised are profitable for us and those must bee taught one after another that so wee may adde line unto line and precept unto precept getting now a little and then a little untill we come to the perfect measure of perfect men in Jesus Christ Secondly Christ reproves and blames the Scribes and Pharisees because they taxe the more grosse sinnes but see not the inferiour Quest 4 Whence comes it that the carnall man can condemne the greater and more criminall sinnes of the world and land as the corrupt Scribes and Pharisees doe here Answ 1 First because the light of nature teacheth this for those things which the Law of God forbids as sinne the law of nature condemnes as vice Answ 2 Secondly the very tradition of Religion and practise of Morall honestie amongst men teacheth them to condemne grosse and enormious sinnes Answ 3 Thirdly the frequent and daily preaching of the Word in these places doth disswade us from sensible sinnes and teacheth us to condemn outward evill actions Quest 5 Why doth not the naturall and carnall man condemne internall sinnes as well as outward for the Word teacheth and discovereth those as well as the other Answ Because spirituall things are spiritually discerned and the naturall man cannot understand them 1 Cor. 2.14 15. Yee have that unction of the Holy Ghost therefore you know all things saith the Apostle 1 Iohn 2.20 27. as if he would say untill we be endued with grace from above wee cannot know or be truely convinced of our true and spirituall duty unto God Quest 6 What outward duties may a meere carnall man performe Answ 1 First hee may be an honest man many Philosophers were very honest men and yet but naturall men Answ 2 Secondly hee may heare the Word of God as Herod did and many doe daily Answ 3 Thirdly hee may heare the Word of God with joy as did Herod and the stony ground who brought forth a blade that is expressed some shewes of delight in the hearing thereof either externall or internall Fourthly he may confesse and acknowledge his sinnes as did Caine and Saul Fifthly he may humble himselfe as did Ahab Answ 4 who although a King yet sits in sack-cloth Answ 5 and ashes when God threatens him Sixthly he may make some satisfaction and Answ 6 restitution as did Iudas who brought backe the peeces of silver againe Seventhly he may reforme himselfe and life Answ 7 in some things as did Ioas for a time and Iehu and Herod who did many things Eightly hee may have some generall gifts of Answ 8 the Spirit as of prophecie with Balaam or of miracles with divers Mat. 7.22 Ninthly he may joyne himselfe to the societie Answ 9 of the professors of the Gospel thus did Simon Magus Acts 8.13 and Nicholas Acts 6.5 and Rev. 2.6 and many who at length left them 1 John 2.19 If the naturall mans estate be thus deplorable Quest 7 how may he be truely humbled in and under it for for the most part they are as fearelesse and hopefull as the best True it is that the naturall civill Answ morall honest man is so well conceited of himselfe for the most part that hee will not suffer himselfe to be checked or reproved and therefore that hee may learne to be humble and lowly in his owne eyes and labour to come out of his miserable blinde and corrupt condition let him carefully marke and observe these five things First the multitude of his sinnes let him here summe up 1. His usuall and daily offences which he commits and yet thinkes not of at all 2. His idle and vaine words yea his obscene and blasphemous speeches 3. The eruptions of his affections and passions which are sometimes transported with anger pride revenge covetousnesse and wantonnesse 4. His unknowne sinnes which are therefore unknowne because he doth not observe and marke his actions and therefore unknowne sinnes because as yet hee thinkes them lawfull not knowing them to bee prohibited by God Secondly let him consider his great neglect of good workes and duties as 1. how many duties he hath omitted and left undone both towards God his Countrey the Church the poore his parents kindred children and servants 2. How weakly and unworthily he performes those duties which he doth how farre short they come of
that hate you pray for them which persecute you Quest 1 Why doth our Saviour expresse or adde these particulars doth not this generall exhortation Love your enemies imply and include all these Frustrà fit per plura quod fieri potest per pauciora is not this unnecessarily to multiply words Answ This our Saviour doth for the hardnesse and senselesnesse and dulnesse of our hearts because spirituall things are difficultly aright understood except they be very plainely and clearly laid downe wee can sometimes understand generalls but are not able to inferre those particulars which are therein included Quest 2 Why are spirituall things so hard to bee understood by us Answ 1 First because they cannot be perceived without the helpe of the Holy Spirit 1 Corinthians 2.14 Answ 2 Secondly because we can easily find a knot in a rush we can find something to cavill at or to object against being in the reading and study of Scripture prompted hereunto by Satan and carnall reason who will invent some arguments against the truth of Gods sacred volume Answ 3 Thirdly because spirituall things are contrary to our natures and naturall affections wee can easi y understand those things which suite with our dispositions and are deare unto our affections but those things which are opposite unto them we cannot understand Vers 45 VERS 45. That yee may be the children of your Father which is in Heaven for he maketh his Sunne to rise on the evill and on the good and sendeth raine on the just and on the unjust Sect. 1 § 1. That ye may be the children of your Father Object Stapleton urgeth and objecteth this place to prove the merit of charitie because our Saviour commandeth us to love both our Neighbours and enemies in the former verses Vt fiamus filii patris that so we may be made the children of our heavenly Father Answ 1 First we deny that any merits of counsell or command or supererogatory workes can make us the sonnes of God Answ 2 Secondly we say that merits follow our filiation and doe not goe before it Answ 3 Thirdly the sense therefore of this place is one or both of these I. Shew thy self to be the son of God by thy love unto all Approba filiationem Calvin Beza Muscul Marlor approve thy filiation to be true by thy love unto thy enemies and by doing good unto those who doe evill unto thee II. Walke worthy of thy adoption and sonne-ship as if our blessed Saviour would say walke in your Fathers steps who doth good unto all There are here two things considerable namely First the Argument Secondly the Consequence First the Argument which our Saviour here useth is this Because ye are sons therefore c. as if hee would say The chiefest care of man is or should be that hee may bee made the sonne of God Obser Why should we principally endeavour to be Quest 1 made the children of our heavenly Father First in generall because all the promises of the Answ 1 Gospel depend upon this we cannot bee made partakers of any promise of God untill wee are his children for all the promises are made to such Secondly because adoption and filiation are Answ 2 seales of salvation we never can be assured that we shall be saved untill we are assured of our filiation Thirdly because it is the greatest dignitie in Answ 3 the world to be made the sonne of God David thought it a great honour to be an earthly Kings sonne in Law how much greater is it then to be the adopted sonne our heavenly Father which is the King of Kings and a Lord of Lords The blessed Virgin Mary was more blessed in being Gods daughter then Christs mother Fourthly because Christ onely loves those Answ 4 who are the children of God Fifthly because Christ died for this end that Answ 5 he might gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad Iohn 11.52 Sixthly because if we be not the children of Answ 6 God we are the children of the Divell Ioh. 8.44 Seventhly because if we be the sonnes of God Answ 7 wee shall be directed by his holy Spirit in our lives and conversations for as many as are led by the Spirit are the Sonnes of God Rom. 8.14 and contrarily Eighthly because if we be the sonnes of God Answ 8 by adoption wee shall then have communion with God and fellowship with his naturall and eternall Sonne Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 1.9 and 1 Iohn 3.2 Ninthly if we be sonnes wee are heires yea Answ 9 heires of glory if we be here adopted into the fellowship of sonnes we shall hereafter be crowned with a wreath of glory and raigne with Christ for ever and ever Reade Rom. 5.2 and 8.17 21. and Gal. 4.7 And therefore to conclude this Question If we desire 1. To bee assured that all the gracious and comfortable promises of the Gospel belong particularly unto us If 2. wee desire to be assured that we are of the number of those who shall be saved If 3. We desire to be promoted unto the greatest honour in the world If 4. Wee desire to be assured of Christs love unto us If 5. we long to be gathered by Christ into his fold If 6. We would not be the sonnes of Satan If 7. We desire the direction and conduct of the blessed Spirit If 8. We desire union and communion with God and Christ we must then labour and endevour to be made the sonnes of God We hope we are the sonnes of God and not of Quest 2 Satan but how may we be not only well perswaded but also certainely assured hereof Answ Wee may undoubtedly know whether we be the children of the most High by these signes Signe 1 First faith is a note of the sonne of God and therefore we must try whether we have faith or not Wee are the children of God by faith in Christ Iesus Gal. 3.28 And therefore if we have no faith we are strangers from God and the Covenant of grace Ephes 2.12 and 4.18 Signe 2 The next Signe is the Spirit and the testimony of the same he who is adopted into the fellowship of Sonnes is endued with the Spirit which unto his spirit testifieth the truth of his filiation Reade Rom. 8.16 and Gal. 4.6 And therefore we must examine what manner of certainty we have of our adoption I. If we have no assurance hereof we are very miserable II. If our perswasion be a lying presumption and our hope without any solid ground then our condition is much more miserable III. If our assurance be weake like a smoaking flax or bruised reede then we must labour that it may be more strengthned IV. If our assurance be strong and built upon that never-failing Rocke then wee are happy and blessed Rom. 8.38 and 2 Tim. 4.8 Signe 3 The third Signe is this if wee be the children of God we are led by the Spirit Gal. 5.25 and Rom. 8 14. wherefore we should examine
well as themselves Quest 3 Whether under this title father is onely the first person of the blessed Trinitie supplicated Answ 1 First although Christ here teacheth us to pray our father yet we are not hereby prohibited to supplicate either God the Sonne or Holy Ghost for we may pray unto any of them this word father being taken in Scripture two manner of wayes Namely Personally as it is distinguished from Sonne and Holy Ghost but not so here Mat. 20.19 Essentially as it doth distinguish God from man and so it is here taken to teach us that wee must pray unto none but unto God as followes by and by Answ 2 Secondly Christ is also called a Father Vnto us a sonne is given who shall be called the everlasting Father Esa 9.6 And therefore the Lord Christ is here included Answ 3 Thirdly the Holy Ghost is called by the Apostle the Father of lights Jam 1.17 and therefore this title Father doth not exclude the other persons of the blessed Trinity Fourthly it is our duty to supplicate and invocate Answ 4 all the three persons I. We petition God the Father for what wee stand in need of because he is the Author of every good thing which we enjoy Iam. 1.17 II. Wee supplicate God the Father in the Name and mediation of God the Sonne who is the alone Mediator betweene God and man hee onely laying flat the partition wall k Iohn 16. Act. 4.12 III. We implore the Throne of Majesty in the Name and Mediation of Christ to be pleased to impart spirituall graces and gifts unto us by the administration of the blessed Spirit and therefore this title Father includes not excludes the rest Why call we God Father Quest 4 First that we may acknowledge our selves Answ 1 to be his children and that in a foure-fold regard I. By Creation because he made and framed us Luk. 3.38 II. By Protection because it is he that takes care to defend us from all those dangers we are incident to fall into III. By Redemption because hee hath ransomed us by Christ from the captivitie of Satan IV. By Sanctification because it is the Lord that by his Spirit doth regenerate and sanctifie us l 1 Cor. 6.10 11. And therefore deservedly we call him Father in these regards although in no regard we have deserved to be called or made his children Secondly we are taught to call God Father Answ 2 that thus the prayers of the faithfull may be distinguished from the prayers of unbeleevers For First the godly regard no other father in regard of this Father Secondly the wicked they have God to be their Lord but not their Father he is Lord over them and rules over them but they deny unto him that love reverence and obedience which a childe ought to give unto his Father Thirdly we are taught to call God father to Answ 3 excite and stirre up in us a filiall reverence of him Psal 2.9 10. Fourthly we call God father to corroborate Answ 4 and strengthen our assurance of being heard Because We are present before And We make our wants knowne unto a Father who loves his children more dearely then any naturall parent doth his childe for his love unto them is infinite sempiternall yea eternall m Luk. 12.30 31. This Verse is a strong argument against the popish invocation of Saints our Saviour not sending us unto any creatures but unto God himselfe Pray thus Our father Why must we pray unto the Lord in all our Quest 5 necessities and not at all to the blessed Saints who love truly all that are good or belong unto God First because prayers to Saints are no where Answ 1 commanded and therefore it will be but will-worship to pray unto them Answ 2 Secondly because the Scriptures doe directly prohibit and condemne it Iudg. 13.16 Acts 10 26. Apoc. 19.10 and 22.10 Answ 3 Thirdly because we are punctually commanded to call upon God onely and alwayes Psal 50.15 Call upon me in the time of thy trouble so Ioel 2.13 and Act. 2.21 Answ 4 Fourthly because God afflicts us and brings us into straights for this end that he might draw us unto himselfe and not drive us from him unto others as wee see Exod. 3. and Psal 107. They cry and pray in their distresse not unto the Patriarches but unto their God Answ 5 Fifthly because invocation is a part of the worship and service of God and therefore it belongs onely unto him Ioel 2.13 14. and Matth. 4.10 Answ 6 Sixthly because prayer ought to be in faith Rom. 10.14 Now we must not beleeve in the Saints but onely in God In our Creed we doe not say Credo in ecclesiam sed Credo in Deum I beleeve in the Church but I beleeve in God Seventhly because we cannot say to the Saints Answ 7 Our father and therefore this prayer cannot bee said unto them neither any prayer according to this forme because as was said before wee are obliged negatively unto this see before Question 7. and Booke of Martyrs pag. 1274. Eighthly the last but not the least answer is taken from the nature of him unto whom wee ought to pray Here then observe he that wee Answ 8 ought to pray unto should be 1. Lubens willing to helpe us 2. Sciens one that knowes our necessities 3. Potens able to save First he whom we must pray unto ought to be lubens willing to helpe but there is none like unto the Lord in mercy hee being the Father of mercies And therefore he onely is to be invocated Secondly hee ought to be scien● one that knowes more then we our selves For I. He should know Genus morbi the kinde of the disease what our malady is the Physician and Lawyer can better understand our estates then we our selves and those that cannot are unfit and unable to helpe us II. He should know apta remedia what the best meanes are for the curing of our griefes lest otherwise they should give a stone instead of bread and hurt rather than helpe Sometimes we aske that which is hurtfull for us and therefore he unto whom wee should pray ought to know both what we are and what may be truly good for us for the time to come And these things the Lord knows better then all the Saints and Angels together Thirdly he should bee Potens able both To heare and that 4. manner of wayes namely First from Heaven unto earth this the Papists say the Saints can doe in a glasse that is the face of God but this is false as shall bee elsewhere proved Secondly to understand all languages and tongues wherein men pray this the Papists thinke the Saints doe and it may be so therefore I question it no further Thirdly to heare the sighes and see the hearts of all and this is necessary in a double respect to wit I. That they may be able to understand those who pray in the Spirit without a voyce or words Rom.
and the like Now if we would walke in this way of piety which leades unto life we must abstaine from all sinne whatsoever though never so pleasant or profitable unto us And this is no easie thing Reason 7 Seventhly this way is hard in regard of some circumstances namely 1. Of humility towards God we must in this way patiently permit and suffer our selves to be directed lead taught yea if we stray to be reduced reproved corrected by God and suffer all patiently and humbly at his hands And this we shall find a hard taske 2. Of humility towards men wee must not be proud or ambitious or haughty but make our selves equall with those of the lower sort although it be something hard to submit unto 3. Of watchfulnesse in this way we must never sleepe lest while we sleepe the enemy sowe tares Math. 13.25 Nay we must not so much as looke backe lest the plow slip out of our hands And this circumspection will be something difficult 4. Of suffering we must suffer in this way all crosses afflictions tribulations vexations whatsoever yea death it selfe if we be called thereunto patiently Philip. 1.28 Math. 16.24 Hebr. 12.3 And this is very hard for flesh and blood to do Eightly this way of piety is hard in respect of Reason 8 the end namely the glorious estate and condition of the faithfull in heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (m) Solon rare and excellent things are hardly attained and therefore if we do but seriously consider the glory excellency and felicity of heaven we wi●l easily assent unto this truth that the way of pietie which leades thither must needs be hard and difficult to walke in Reade Math. 5.48 § last for this purpose Is every hard way the way of piety Quest 9 There are hard waies which neither are pure Answer neither leade unto life there is will-worship as well as true worship Colos 2.18.23 The divell is Gods Ape and therefore will imitate him every herbe in the garden almost hath his counterfeit in the field as there are good and profitable Time and Sage in the Orchard so in the fields there are wild Time and Sage As God hath a hard way which leads unto life so hath the devill a hard way which leades unto death As for example First Baals Prophets walked a hard way when they cut themselves with knives and Lances (u) 1 King 18. Secondly the heathen Gymnosophists walked a hard way when they sacrificed humane flesh and virginity unto their Idols or false Gods Indeed these are very hard wayes but none of them leads unto life How may the true hard way be knowne Quest 10 By these two things to wit Answer First by the purpose of the heart he who purposeth with himselfe propoundeth unto himselfe the most strict rule of the will of God resolving not to please himselfe but the Lord and to obey him according to that Law which himselfe hath prescribed that man certainely walketh in the true hard way Secondly by the practise of the life if this resolution leade thee unto all kinds of mercy justice and holinesse (o) Mich. 6.8 Then certainly thou art one of that small number who walke in this true hard way It is a hard thing to walke in this hard way Quest 11 whereby therefore may we be encouraged thereunto First remember although this way be hard to Answer 1 walke in yet it is but short the labour is but momentary that life which this way leades unto is eternall and will never have end this way which leades unto that life is but short and will speedily have an end And therefore wee should hereby be moved to walke cheerefully herein because it is but like a short winter dayes journey Secondly remember thy labour shall be rewarded Answer 2 The Husband-man takes much paines in dunging or manuring of his ground in plowing and sowing of it and all in hope that he shall have a crop which will recompence his paines The Mariner endures many stormes and cold blasts in hope that his voyage will be prosperous and profitable The Hunter goes many a step cheerefully hoping that at last he shall meet with some game The Souldier exposeth his life to danger in hope of victory a reward And therefore why should not we endure the difficulties and inconveniences of this hard way seeing we are sure that our labour shall not be in vain but liberally rewarded 2 Cor. 4.18 Answer 3 Thirdly remember that thou shalt have help in all the difficulties and dangers of this way The Angel wrastled with Jacob with the one hand but upheld him with the other and therefore Jacob was able to hold out even untill the morning so God will direct us by his Spirit in this narrow path which leads unto life and we shall alwayes heare a voyce behind us saying this is the way walke in it God will strengthen out ancle-bones and enable us to runne with patience constancy and cheerefulnesse the race that is set before us God will arme us with might and strength in the inward man and enable us both to overcome our enemies which labour to oppose us and to performe those workes in some measure which he requireth of us And therefore seeing we are assured that the grace of God shall sustaine us (p) 2 Cor. 12.9 and his blessed Spirit assist us in all the dangers and difficulties of this hard way we shou●d be encouraged the more cheerefully to walke therein Quest 12 How must we walke in this hard way Answer 1 First put off thy all thy sinnes with blind Bartimeus cast away thy cloake and those sinnes which hang so fast on and cleave so fast to and doe so easily beset thee Hebr. 12.1 Mat. 5.29 Ephes 4.22 A man can never walke in this way except he lay aside this old man of sinne and corruption Answer 2 Secondly deny thy owne will and profit pleasure submit thy se●fe wholy to be guided by God Answer 3 Thirdly abstaine from all fleshly lusts which war against the soule 1 Pet. 2.11 resist all thy corrupt affections and labour to bring every rebellious thought in obedience unto the Spirit Answer 4 Fourthly follow and put on Christ Ro. 13.14 Quest 13 both by faith and imitation Phil. 2.5 Who are here to be blamed and reproved Answer 1 First those who walke in the easie way declining this which is hard Certainly this is a palpable deceit of Satans to make men beleeve that the way of e●se and pleasure will bring them to heaven Answer 2 Secondly those who expect rest in this life here we are commanded to take upon us Christs yoake and then he hath promised us rest unto our soules Mat. 11.29 but labour and paines watchings prayers and fastings examinations and reedifying of old ruines and decayes in our bodyes so long as we live In this life we must strive to enter into the true rest Hebr. 4.11 and this striving
follow the conduct of the Spirit p Rom. 8.9.14 framing their lives according to his will revealed in the word and not according to the lusts and desires of the flesh for the proofe of this observe I. All men are the vessels of God Esay 52.11 and 1 Thess 4.3 and 2 Tim. 2.20 II. But there are two things wanting in us to wit First we have no oyle we are naturally but empty Lamps Neither Secondly are we able to receive oyle for the naturall man cannot understand the things that be of God 1 Cor. 2.14 III. Therefore against this vacuity and emptinesse God hath given a remedy namely First the word this is the oyle which enlightens us And Secondly the Holy Spirit opens the heart Act. 16.14 as he did the heart of Lydia and makes it capable to receive this oyl and to understand this enlightning word And Thirdly then infuseth this oyl of grace and spirituall knowledge into our hearts Rom. 5.5 IV. And hence comes the effectuall vocation when we answer to Gods call For First the word cals us Rom 10. but we refuse to hear it Esay 53.1 Secondly the Spirit of God opens the heart enlightens the eyes and giveth unto the mouth a taste and relish of the word of God and heavenly things but we are ready to relapse and fall from all these graces Heb. 6.4 5 6. Thirdly the Spirit doth imprint stamp and set on the seale so sealing us unto the day of our salvation q 1 Cor. 1.21 22. And being thus sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise we then beleeve Ephes 1.13 And thus we see that faith is the worke of the Holy Ghost and how it is wrought by the word Secondly faith being once wrought in us by the Spirit we are then confirmed rooted grounded and established in the faith Coloss 1.25 and 2.6.7 Whence proceeds I. Internall peace of conscience Philippians 4.7 And II. Spirituall joy and rejoycing Rom. 5.1 and 14.17 and 1 Pet. 1.8 And III. Externall profession of Christ Religion and of our faith in Christ 2 Cor. 4.13 and 1 Timoth 6.12 Thirdly faith being wrought and infused in us and wee established in faith then wee are renewed and sanctified both in heart and life for Faith purgeth the heart Act. 15.9 and the heart being purged the life will be pure wherefore faith is called a holy unction r 2 Cor. 1.21 because from hence I. We have victory both over Sin Rom. 6.14 Sin shall no more have dominion over you because you are under grace And the World 1 Iohn 5.4 This is the victory that overcommeth the world een your faith And the Devill 1 Iohn 2.13 and 1 Pet. 5.9 and Rom. 16.20 Ephes 6.16 II. Hence wee have power of fructifying in good works and the fruits of obedience and sanctification Iohn 15.2.3 and Gal. 5.6 And therefore there is little signe of any faith wher either sinne raigns or God is coldly or remissy served Fourthly faith being wrought in us rooted in us and wee renewed and sanctified thereby hence we have hope according to the Apostles prayer Now the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in beleeving that you may abound in hope through the power of the Holy Ghost Rom. 5.13 and 1 Peter 1.5 And hence from this confident hope and assurance that we have in God of eternal life we hunger and desire and long to be dissolved and to be with Christ Philip. 1.23 and 2 Corinth 5.2 c. And therfore let us judge our selvs and our faith by these things Sect. 4 § 4. Not in Israel Quest 1 What is meant here by Israel Answ 1 First some understand these words figuratively of the faith of the Gentiles and Jewes Hier. s But that this is not the meaning will appear by and by Answ 2 Secondly some understand this only of the incredulous and unbeleeving Jewes but this cannot be the sense of the place because greater faith in the Centurion implieth a lesse in the rest I have found faith saith Christ implicitly in Israel but in none so much as in this Centurion And therfore by Israel cannot be meant the unbeleevers Answ 3 Thirdly some understand these words onely comparatively as though the Centurions faith were not greater simply but only comparatively in regard of some circumstances to wit I. In respect of the person Plus est idiotam pauca sapere quam virum multa ſ Chrys imperf s It is more for a child to understand a few things then for a man many II. In respect of the means it is more for an illiterate man to understand some few hard and difficult things then for a great and deep learned Scholler to understand many it is more for a man to be good in bad and ignorant places where hee hath neither good examples exhortations nor instructions then in good places where hee hath many shining lights and holy means And therfore although this Centurions faith in it selfe were but equall to the faith of many Israelites yet in regard that he was a Roman and they Jewes hee not injoying those meanes which they did his faith may be said to be greater then theirs Thus some I say expound these words and indeed this hath a fair glosse and helpes something but there is something more in the words for his faith was greater Revera as followes by and by Now these three Expositors interpret the word Nimis strictè Answ 4 Fourthly some by Israel so understand every Israelite from the beginning as if our Saviour would say I never found or there never was in any time in all Israel one of greater faith then this Centurion neither Abraham nor any other True it is that this phrase is sometimes thus used as in Matth. 11.11 Among them saith Christ that are born of women there hath not risen a greater Prophet then Iohn the Baptist that is not any as yet But yet it is not thus taken in this place because here our Saviour speaks of the time present onely that as yet in his preaching and journeying hee had not found one in Israel of greater faith except those which follow Answ 5 Fifthly some understand this of the time wherein Christ was upon the earth and of all absolutely in that time that is there was none at all in all Israel of greater faith then this Centurion As the three former answers expound the words Nimis stricté so these two latter Nimis latè for wee must neither extend them to all times nor to all persons of this age whereof Christ speaks as though the Centurions faith were greater then Peters Iohns or the blessed Virgins for certainly Maries faith was greater and Peters for he walked upon the waters And therfore this is to be understood of the auditors and hearers of Christ and not of his family How was the faith of the Centurion greater Quest 2 then all Israel or then the faith of any in Israel except the family of
makes us cold but by and by wee burn So at first we are afraid of sin by and by fearlesse therof at first our affections freez afterwards fry in the love of sin at first wee abstain from sinne and are hardly drawn to the committing of sinne but by and by custome makes it habituall and naturall unto us and us insensible of it III. In a Fe●er when we are cold yet even then we are hot within though we are not so sensible of that heat So even then when the naturall man fears and trembles to commit sin there is the fire of evill concupiscence which in time sets on fire the whole course of nature shews it selfe outwardly in the practise of sin IV. The Fever inflames the whole body even to the very toes of the feet So sin wounds and enfeebles us from the crown of the head to the sol● of the foot Esay 1.6 Answ 4 Fourthly si●ne may be resembled to a Fever Respectu effectuum in regard of the effects For I. The Fever in membris in the parts of the body workes this effect it debilitates and weakens the whole man so that hee cannot walke forth of doors nay bee cannot walke within his owne house neither is able to stand but forced to sit or lye and keep his bed So by sinne we are so weakned that wee are neither able to walke in the wayes of God nor run the race that he hath set before us nor worke out the work of our salvation with fear and trembling II. The Fever in intellectu in the understanding works this effect it disturbs takes away the use of reason making a man not know what he saith or doth And this is for the most part or at least very often mortall and deadly So when men grow obstinate and bold in sinning and are neither sensible of sinne nor punishment but will do whatsoever they will Ier. 44.16 it is an argument of a soule not distant from death III. The Fever In appetitu in the appetite produceth these effects namely First it loaths the most wholsome things So sinne makes us to loath both I. Good workes and duties and exercises of religion like the Iews who cryed when will the new Moons and the Sabbaths be done that we may return unto our sins Malach. 1.13 II. Good Counsell for that we think to bee a hard saying and we cannot endure it Ioh. 6.60 Secondly as the Fever loaths that which is wholsome so it longs for that which is unwholsome So wee loath the heavenly Manna of the word and spirituall graces and love the vaine pleasures of sin although they be but for a season and the end therof destruction and death Rom. 6.23 Thirdly In a Fever there is a thirst not to bee quenched or satisfied but insatiable having no moderation in drinki●g if it can come unto liquor So many are furious in sinning and cannot cease to sin h 2 Pet. 2.14 although they see oftentimes that I. The thing is childish and of that nature that it is a shame for a man to be besotted therewith Yea II. That the event is perillous and dangerous And III. That both the estate is lessened and impaired and the body enfeebled and enervated therby Thus no feverish man is more mad after drink then wicked men are after their sins Fourthly Potus factitij made drinks quench not the thirst in a Fever but now pleaseth the Pallat and by and by displeaseth it it being only cool things which allaieth and asswageth the heat therof although often they kill because the stomack is not able to bear them So it is not ordinary comforts that appease the soule because they cannot fill the soule neither can they allay the heat of a wounded spirit but it is the word and the comminations and promises thereof which afford ease and peace to the troubled heart And yet sometimes this cooling Cordiall doth kill and drives accidentally to desperation as we see in Cain Gen. 4. and Iudas Mat. 27. Fifthly sinne may be resembled to a Fever Respectu finis in regard of the end thereof For I. Sometimes it ends in health and life of it selfe that is a man recovers sometimes out of a Fever without the use of any means or help of any man II. Sometimes the Fever ends in health and life by the use of good means and the helpe of the Physician III. Sometimes the Fever ends in a sickly and weakly estate that is when the Fever leaves a man oftentimes he fals into deafnesse and swellings and boyls and the like IV. Sometimes it ends in death Fevers often bring men to the period of their life now this is two-fold viz. First sometimes a Fever brings a man to a speedy death when he dies therof Secondly sometimes it brings a man unto a lingring death and that either I. By an H●ctick Fever which inflames the heart or lungs Or II. By bringing a man into a Dropsie Now to apply this First sinne herein differs from a Fever this as was said sometimes ends in health and life without the use of physick or helpe of the Physician but never that for sin cannot be cured or healed of it selfe Secondly sin is cured and healed by Christ who is the only Physician of the soule Thirdly if sinne end not thus in health and life by Christ then it ends either I. In a dry Hectick Fever and a barrennesse of all good fruits Or II. In a cold Dropsie or Lukewarmnesse in Religion Or III. In a deafnesse and unwillingnesse to hear the word of God Or IV. In filthy Vlcers and putrified Boyls of actuall transgressions V. The safest Crisis or conflict of nature in this sicknesse is evacuation and that either by vomiting purging sweating or bleeding So we must labour either to vomit up our sinnes by Confession or sweat them out by Contrition or purge them out by alienation and separation or else if the Lord love us he will bleed us and make us forsake sin by affliction as hee did by David and Manasses Quest 2 How may we know whether we are sicke of the Fever of sin or not By these plain signes namely Answ First if without thou be inflamed with the lust of sinne or if it shew it selfe in in thy life and actions Secondly if the fire of concupiscence kindle thy affections unto evill although as yet it doth not appear by thy actions and outward man Thirdly by examining what drink pleaseth us best whether is the word of God unpleasing to our taste or not c●rtainly if we be refreshed and comforted with the pleasures of sin and that the word of God relisheth not with us we are feverish Fourthly by examining whether Christ hath cured us or not whether we be freed from the Fever of sin or not For this Fever of the soule differs from the bodily Fever there being many in health of body and free in body from the corporall Fever but none at all from the Fever of
but of righteousnesse and true holinesse Answ 5 Fiftly we must not seek him in the way of new or strange opinions but in the way of truth submitting and subjecting both our selves and our opinions to the word of truth Esa 8.20 Answ 6 Sixtly we must not seek him idlely and sluggishly in our beds Cant. 3.1 but diligently and industriously Prov. 8.33 II. Other Copies reade and that more truly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 loosed untied or scattered abroad because things being untied must needs be dissipared the meaning therefore is the people were without a Shepherd therefore they went astray and were scattered to and fro hither and thither Observ 2 To teach us That except people be tied by Pastorall bonds and ligaments they must needs erre or except people be restrained by preaching and attended carefully by Preachers they will erre and go astray Reade Ier. 2.5 8. and 10.20 c. and 50.6 Zach. 10.2 and 11.10 15 c. Quest 4 Why do people stray when Pastours are a wanting Answ 1 First because it is the office of a Shepherd to go in and out before his flock Numb 27.17 And therefore where there is none to take that eare or to discharge that calling there the people must needs erre For I take it for granted that man by the light of nature or by the power of any naturall goodnesse that is in him cannot finde out or walk in the way of truth Answ 2 Secondly because those who break Pastorall bonds will be held by none that is those who will not be restrained from sin by the honour of God Religion his word and Ministers those will be subject to no tye at all but like mad or possessed men will break all bonds Reade Acts 20.28 and Heb. 13.17 III. Others reade Disjecti And expound it thus viz. First Errantes they wandred to and fro scattered here and there out of order and rank Secondly Fluctuantes they wavered not knowing what to hold nor what to do Ephes 4.14 but were like the Waves of the sea tossed to and fro Thirdly Iacentes stertentes dormitantes securi they were secure and fast asleep to teach us That those who are loosed from the Ministery of Preachers become secure or none are so secure Observ 3 or presumptuous as those who are destitute and deprived of preaching This appears thus First the Ministers are Watchmen set over people to keep them from sleeping in sin Ezech. 3. and 33. Secondly there is in people a naturall pronenesse unto peace and quiet and carnall security And therfore when those are gone which should keep them awake they must needs sleep Vers 38. Pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest Vers 38 that he will send forth labourers into his harvest § 1. Pray ye Sect. 1 We see here that although it be a good and necessary work to send forth labourers into the harvest yea a work pleasing unto God and profitable unto men yet we must not expect it without prayer To teach us That prayer is the onely way to obtain blessings and good things at Gods hands Mat. 7 7. Observ Luke 18.1 Act. 6.4 and Ephes 6.18 and 1 Thess 5.17 and 1 Pet. 4.7 and 5.9 How doth it appear that we cannot truly hope Quest 1 to enjoy any blessings without prayer It appears thus viz. First Answ because prayer is the ordinance of God and therefore Elias without it could not obtain rain 1 King 18. Secondly because prayer is the approbation of our faith if with a strong confidence and assurance we make our requests known unto God it argues faith in us Thirdly because by praying unto God for good things we shew that I. He is the Authour and fountain of every good gift and every perfect being Iam. 1.17 And II. That we depend upon him onely for those good things which we lack And therefore as without prayer we cannot be assured of any good thing so by prayer we obtain whatsoever is good for us What need is there of prayer feeling God Quest 2 hath decreed what he will give us As he hath decreed the end so he hath decreed the means he who sows not cannot reap Answ and he who eats not cannot live And therefore he that desires any blessing must submit himself to the use of those means which God hath appointed for the obtaining of it God knows vvhat we want and therfore what Quest 3 need we pray We pray Non ut docea● sed ut desiderium auge●●● August de orand● Deum not that we might instruct God Answ but that we might by prayer set a more sharp and keen edge upon our own desires after those good things which we want Object But we are commanded to cast our care upon God And therefore prayer is needlesse Answ It follows not for vve must first pray and beg and be instant vvith God for vvhat vve vvant and then cast our care upon him concluding Father not as I will but as th●u wilt Quest 4 Why must vve pray Answ 1 First because it is the most certain remedy God having promised to hear vvhen vve call Ioh. 16.23 c. Answ 2 Secondly because it is Pharmacum generale the most generall means for I. Prayer pierceth and penetrateth the heavens And II. Is a means to obtain victory in the day of battell Exod. 17. And III. Thereby rain may be procured in the time of drought 1 King 19. And IV. It is a means to make the barren Womb bear 1 Sam. 1.10 And V. By prayer vve may obtain pardon of our sins Luke 18 11. Yea VI. It changeth a revealed threatning Ion. 3.10 For Ionah had proclaimed Yet forty daies and Ni●i●eh shall be destroyed But the King proclaiming a Fast and commanding prayer changeth the Commination and sentence into mercie And VII It worketh miracles for by prayer Ioshua obtained that the Sun should stand still and Elias that the dead should be raised unto life And VIII It takes away evils and delivereth out of prison Acts 12.5.12 And IX It expels and drives away Sathan Luke 10. And X. It tyes Gods hands that he cannot punish Exod. 32.10 Let me alone saith the Lord that I may destroy this people Ligatum habent sancti Dominum ut 〈◊〉 punia● nisi ca●● permiserini ipsi Bern. s The Saints have the Lords hands by prayer so fast manacled that he cannot punish the wicked except they will give him leave And therefore these things considered there is great reason that we should pray for whatsoever good blessing we stand in need of whether temporall or spirituall Answ 3 Thirdly it is necessary that we should pray because it increaseth our spirits and enflameth our zeal Answ 4 Fourthly because thereby we worship and please God Acts 6.4 Quest 5 How must we pray Answ Generall Rules The Rules for prayer are either Generall or Particular First the generall Rules to be observed in Rule 1 prayer are these namely First we must pray with the Understanding that
is I. Not in an unknown language as the Papists do who pray in Latine II. Not without attention Qu●●●d● Deo audiri speras cum teipsum non attendis Cyprian How can a man hope to be heard of God that doth not himself mark what he utters The Papists here give a double distinction to wit First betwixt a perfect and a weak attention and this distinction as true we admit because we are imperfect in all services and weak in the best performances And therefore at best our Attention in prayer is but weak and imperfect yet we must strive unto perfection and labour that our mindes in prayer may be wholly taken up with heaven and heavenly things Secondly they distinguish betwixt an Initial perpetuated Attention that is Men they say must have an Intention to pray and an Attention to what they pray when they begin their prayers but there is no necessity of continuing this attention unto the period of their prayers This distinction as foolish and false I reject because their aim and meaning herein seems to be this That men must be attentive at first when they pray unto God that so they may procure the Lords attention to their prayers and when once God attends to what we pray then we need attend no more unto that which we powre out because God will hear it though we do not mark it Secondly we must pray only for good things Rule 2 such as are agreeable to the good will of God 1 Iohn 5. carefully avoiding all petitions which tend to the hurt either of our selves or our neighbour or our God or our Religion For if God hear from us and grant unto us such requests it is in anger according to the fiction of Myd●s his golden prayer or wish Thirdly we must pray in faith Mark 11.24 Rule 3 Iames 1.6 being assured that God loves us that God hears us that God is able to help us yea that he will help us in as much as may stand with his glory and our good Fourthly we must pray with the Spirit 1 Cor. Rule 4 14. Iude 20. Rom. 8.26 For if our requests be the signs and groans of the Spirit or dictated and suggested unto us by the Spirit then they shall be both pleasant unto and prevalent with our heavenly Father Fiftly we must pray in humility Luke 18.13 Rule 5 Latrones Errones docent ●e orare Hier. in vitas patrum As Beggars pray for an Alms and Theeves for a Pardon so must we for those things which we stand in need of Sixtly we must pray penitently How can we Rule 6 comfortably or confidently pray unto God untill we are assured that we are reconciled unto him and our sins pardoned Non prodest medicamentum d●● ferr●● in ●●h●●re Isidor In vain is the plaister applied to the sore so long as the Bullet or iron is in the wound In vain no we pray for mercie or any blessing from God so long as sin is not forsaken hated and repented of Seventhly we must pray perseverantly Rom. Rule 7 12.12 Continuing untill God have heard our prayers or granted our requests Eightly we must pray in the name and mediation Rule 8 of Christ Iohn 16. Acts. 4.12 And that I. Because he is the onely beloved Son of God with whom God is well pleased and in whom he is pleased with us Iohn 11.42 II. Because Christ by his office is our Advocate 1 Ioh. 2.1 III. Because he onely merited pardon and redemption for us particular Rules Secondly the more particular Rules to be observed in prayer are these viz. Rule 1 First we must pray daily and ordinarily remembring that God is daily to be worshipped but prayer is a part of his worship wherefore we must daily pray Luke 18.1 and 1 Thess 5.17 Rule 2 Secondly we must pray fervently sending forth lowd clamours and strong cries unto God Psalm 5.5 Rule 3 Thirdly we must pray for particular blessings for health Iames 5.15 for victory rain and the like as was afore said and that I. By an acknowledgment of thy duty that thou oughtest to pray unto God and thou wert unworthy to receive any good thing from him if thou shouldst be negligent herein And II. We must pray particularly upon a sure hope that we shall obtain what we want if it be good for us and the rather because we pray for it which is the Lords own ordinance appointed for the obtaining of what is awanting unto us Sect. 2 § 2. Vnto the Lord of the harvest We see here that our prayers must be made unto God for First Christ is the Lord of the harvest as appears by his sending forth of Apostles and Disciples f Mat. 10.1 and Luke 10.1 Yet Secondly he names not himself but the Lord that he may shew that labourers come from him Observ 1 Hence we may learn That we must pray unto none but unto the Lord Psalm 50.16 Quest 1 Why must we pray onely unto the Lord Answ 1 First because he onely can give unto us what we want salvation being onely in his hand Answ 2 Secondly because he onely can attend unto the prayers of all every where at once Answ 3 Thirdly because he onely knows the heart and discerns whether we dissemble with him or pray in sincerity Answ 4 Fourthly because he loves us above all others or none loveth us so much as he doth Iob. 3.16 Object It will here be objected we pray unto men for divers things Paul prays the brethren and men daily pray and petition Kings and great and rich men and that lawfully how then do we say that we must pray onely unto God Answ To pray may be two manner of waies understood namely First in generall for every petition and request and thus indeed it is true that we may petition sue and make requests unto men but it must be for some temporall not for spirituall things and these requests must be made unto living and mortall men not unto the dead and glorified Saints Secondly prayer sometimes is understood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for prayer for spirituall graces and eternall glory and thus understood we must pray onely unto God Quest 2 Why is God called the Lord of the harvest Answ 1 First because the harvest is his possession right Secondly because the harvest is gathered in by him Whence we may learn That the collection and gathering together Answ 2 of men unto the faith and profession of Religion Observ 2 is the work of God as evidently appears thus First Election is his Decree and the calling of men unto the truth first came from him Secondly as it came from God so it ends in him for the calleth men to the profession of Religion for his own glory Reade Ephes 1.4 5 6 Thirdly all things which serve hereunto are but Gods instruments whether the word or Spirit or Ministers or Day the Sabbath or Temple the Church yea or Christ himself All these are the
instruments of God for the gathering together of men unto the faith And therefore our Saviour here commandeth us to pray unto the Lord of the harvest § 3. That he would send forth labourers Sect. 3 How manifold is the sending of Ministers Quest 1 It is either First Extraordinary Answ as was frequent in the old Testament when sometimes men sometimes women were suddenly inspired with the Spirit of Prophesie Secondly Ordinary and this is two fold viz. I. An internall vocation and call from God and this hath in it these two things namely First God excites and stir● up such to have compassion upon the Church and Children of God and to desire that they were able to serve God in this great work of gathering in his harvest Secondly then God makes them able Ministers not of the Letter but of the Spirit 2 Corinth 3.6 II. An externall calling from men appointed for this end For the gatherers of this harvest must be both missi and permissi sent by God and allowed by men By the name of Labourers which our Saviour here gives to Ministers we may observe That the Ministers of the word are ordained unto labour Observ How doth it appear that the calling of a Minister Quest 2 requires so much labour and pains First it appears by the names given unto them Answ 1 they are called Fishers Mat. 4.19 Luke 10.2 and cōmanded to be painfull faithfull Shepherds Ioh. 21.15 c. Act. 20.28 and 2 Tim. 4.2 5. They are called Souldiers and Planters and Builders and the like 1 Cor. 9. and 3.7 and 16.10 16. and 2 Cor. 6.1 5 c. and 11.23 Philip. 4.3 and 1 Thess 5.12 and 1 Tim. 3.1 and 2 Tim. 4.5 Secondly by the work of the Ministers it appears Answ 2 that their calling requires much labour and pains For their work is to attend unto the Church of Christ which is no small work containing therein these four things namely I. To preach the word publikely Mark 16. 16. and 1 Timothy 5. ●7 and 2 Timothy 4.2 II. To labour by preaching to make th●●● people perfect men in Christ Jesus 2 Cor. 11.2 Colos 1.28 III. To love their people with their hearts and inwardly to be carefull of them and to pray for them Gal 4.11 IV. To suffer affliction and persecution if need require for the good of their flocks Reade 1 Cor 4.11 c. and 2 Cor. 4.8 c and 11.23 and 2 Tim. 2.3 c. Quest 3 How may a good Minister and painfull labourer be known Answ 1 First a good labourer gains more by his working than he spends upon himself in his diet so a good Minister doth not spend all his labour and study upon his flock but still saves and gains something for himself being himself bettered by his preaching and study Answ 2 Secondly a good labourer spends in a manner the whole day in labour and but a small part of it in eating so a good Minister spends both day and night 1 Thess 2 12. in care labour and study and in comparison of the time therein spent spends but little in refreshing of himself Answ 3 Thirdly a good workman works as painfully when his Master is absent as when he is present so we though absent in body should yet notwithstanding be present in spirit and as carefull privatly to pray for those who are under us as publikely to preach unto them Answ 4 Fourthly a good labourer is a shamed to come into his Masters sight that day that he hath been idle so a faithfull Minister will cry Perd●dimus diem and grieve for the mis-spending of any one day wherein he hath not brought some glory to God or good to his Church or benefit or comfort to some of his children Answ 5 Fiftly if a good labourer labour all day and gain nothing then he grieves for his bad successe so the good Ministers of God grieve and mourn when they labour all night and catch nothing Reade Luke 5.5 and Heb. 13.17 Sect. 4 § 4. Into his harvest Observ We may observe hence That the end of a Ministers labour is to gather in Gods harvest Here we must take notice of two things to wit First in every age of the world there is a double labour of Ministers namely first Se●d-time then secondly Harvest-time first they must sow then they must reap Rom. 15.20 and 1 Pet. 2.25 Secondly as in America there is a perpetuall harvest there being something ripe every moneth in the year in some part or other of it so is it with the Ministers 〈◊〉 for alwaies so long as the world lasts there will be a perpetuall harvest some still ready to be gathered to the faith and the profession of Religion What are the works which God requires of these labourers Quest God requires of them these divers and severall works viz. First to sow the ●eed that is Answ to preach the Word And Secondly to water it that is to nourish and cherish what begins to take root or to labour daily that the Word may be the more cleer to the understanding of the hearers and that they may grow up and increase in knowledge Ego plantavi hoc est initia p●sui quia primus ●ester ●●●tor fui Apollos verò ●igavit hoc est bene positam doctrinam illustravit ●●●it g Aretius in 1 Cor. 3.6 Thirdly to hedge in the corn that it be not trampled down that is labour to fence them about with Domminations Threatnings and legall fears that thereby they may be kept from sin and to hedge them in with sound Doctrine that the viperous brood of Heretikes may not seduce them Fourthly to labour to ripen the corn that is to strive that they may be the surer fixed and rooted in faith and built up in all holy and spirituall knowledge Ephes 1.18 Fiftly to harrow the field and to break the clots tha● is to labour to break and humble the obdu●●●● and obstinate hearts of hardned sinners by the hammer of the Word Sixtly to gather in the Wheat that is to gather men unto the Communion of the Saints for there is a double gathering of the righteous namely I. By the Ministery of earthly Ministers the Preachers of the Word when they are gathered unto the faith and profession of Religion and the true Church II. By the Ministery of heavenly Ministers the Angels when by them they are gathered into Gods gainer that is the Triumphant Church in heaven Seventhly to cast the Tares into the fire that is to give over unto Satan those who will not repent This we do unwillingly and alwaies but hypothetically because we are commanded to be mercifull and charitable and to hope the best TO THE CHRISTIAN READER CHRISTIAN READER If thou knowest me I know thou standest amazed and no wonder to see the insolencie of this our Age and how truly the Poet prophesied when he said Scribimus indocti doctique poemata passim That with the Cripple
of being double tongued Iob. 33.3 and 2 Cor 1.12 b 2 Cor. 11. ● and Ephes 6.5 Fourthly in a boldnesse unto that which is good not being hindred either by employments or dangers or feare but couragiously and confidently professing and serving God Reade Act. 4.19 5.29 Pro. 10.29 Is the Dove to bee imitated in all things Quest 4 No Answer for in her there are two things to bee eschewed To wit First negligence and foolish curiosity For while shee lookes about and turnes her head deliberating whether to flie the arrow or shot meets with her before she flie away Greg. Barth Aug. Secondly Pride for while she admires her feathers of divers colours about her necke or breast and trimmes and picks them so intending that that she intends not her owne safety she is often taken and seized on by the Hawke Plin. Barth We must not in these two things be like Doves but must take heed of delay and pride which are enemies unto saving health I. We must take heed of Pride which is a dangerous enemy for it makes us unwarie and spoiles all we doe Destruit omnia August When men begin to be proud either of themselves or their performances or parts it makes them carelesse of their wayes unthankfull towards their God and haughty and disdainfull towards their brethren And therefore is carefully to be shunned the end thereof being with Lucifer to be cast into Hell II. We must take heed of Negligence and Procrastination many end their ends before they have resolved to beginne them and finish their life before they have thought of living And therefore we must not deferre the worke of our salvation putting it off from day to day but while it is said to day make ready our selves to undertake it resolving that no labour feare or danger whatsoever shall hinder us from it Wherein is the Dove to be imitated Quest 5 In the Dove are many vertues Answer or vertuous qualities worthy imitation As for example First she doth no evill or hurt unto any but is I. Meeke without beake to hurt or talent to teare or Gall to plot or imagine mischiefe or intend harme to any And therfore if we would imitate the Dove we must not be angry or mischievous or revengefull for charity doth no evill c Rom. 13.20 nor is angry d 1 Cor. 13.5 but is patient and ready to remit Many in their words deeds and lives shew themselves more like Lions Beares Wolves Dragons Vultures and furies then meek Doves but we must take heed of this the end of these being destruction Ezech. 32.23 Ephes 4.32 Colos 2.8 II. Shee is is simple or innocent without deceit as in this verse And therefore in sacrifice she must not be divided Genes 15.9 Levit. 1.14 Thus we must be true and free from lying and deceit every one speaking the truth unto his neighbour from his heart Reade Zach. 8.16 Ephes 4.25 Colos 2.9 and 1 Peter 2.1 and labouring to be innocent and harmelesse in his life and conversation for God will protect the innocent but discover and infatuate the plots of the wicked who craftily imagine evill against their neighbours III. She is humble building her nest in the rock except some build or provided a Dovehouse or other place for her to breed and remaine in Thus we should be without carefulnesse for the things of this life labouring that God may be our Lord and then if he provide plentifully for us or prosper us or build us houses we must take it thankfully and praise his name but if otherwise we must be content to build in the rocke that is to live by faith in Christ and to learne to want and to abound Philip. 1.21 Colossians 3.3 Secondly she propoundeth good examples or examples of good unto us for our imitation and that I. Towards God II. Towards her selfe III. Towards others First the Dove is to be imitated by us or an example unto us of a double duty towards God viz. I. She is a very loving creature yea full of loue Thus we should be sick of love Cant. 5.8 loving our God before and above all things and all other things for God yea our neighbour because a member of God II. She is very fruitfull breeding sometimes ten sometimes eleven sometimes twelve times in a yeare Thus we should stir to be fruitfull bringing forth some good fruit unto our God every Moneth in the yeare every week in the Moneth every day in the week every hour in the day every minute in the hour like the trees of heaven which yeeld fruit every moneth Rev. 22.2 Thus we should be fruitfull but alas for pity for the most part we are altogether barren thinking it well if we can but say Negatively That we are neither Theeves nor Murderers nor Drunkards nor the like although wee cannot say Affirmatively what wee are or what good we doe Secondly the Dove is an example unto us of a fourfold duty in regard of her selfe For I. She is chast Conjugii fidem non violant e Plin. 10.24 Doves doe not couple with any but with their Mates Nec cum pluribus cocunt nec conjugium initum deserunt Arist They will neither wrong nor change nor forsake one another after they have made their choice but continue inviolable this bond of Love And as they are chaste so also they are pure in their food eating no uncleane thing at all Hier. but living onely upon Graine Arist Wherefore those are unlike Doves who seethe the scum with the broth Ezek. 24.6 and live impure and uncleane lives for we should labour that we might be purged from all pollutions both of the flesh and spirit and perfect holinesse in Gods feare 2 Cor. 7.1 Wee should examine our selves whether wee be Doves or Vultures Lambs or Wolves whether with Pigeons and Dove-like Peter Acts 10. wee let no uncleane thing come into our mouthes or like Swine we feed grosly and wallow filthily Gualter applies this to superstition and not injuriously for nothing is more impure and filthy in the sight of God than to mingle humane things with divine as a part of Gods worship Col. 2.18 II. She is constant keeping her own common Loat or Dove-house f Plin 10.34 and although she doe flye from it yet she returns againe Gen. 8.11 Esa 60.8 Thus we should remaine constant in the profession and practise of Religion and never start aside or separate our selves from it III. She is wary Iuxta fluen●a manent g Gloss they remain neere the water Ergo columba dicitur à 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rhod. that so in the water they may see the shadow of the Hawke long before he comes neere them whence Solomon saith His eyes are as the eyes of Doves by the Rivers of water Cant. 5.12 Thus we should labour to prevent the craft and subtilty of Satan lest otherwise he circumvent us he is a Lyon 1 Pet. 5.8 and watcheth
same houre what yee shall answer verse 19. and that in being thus handled you are no worse dealt withall than your Master was verse 24. Fourthly the next degree is yet more sad and this is banishment and persecution from Citie to Citie when they persecute you in this Citie flee ye into another where the evill is persecution and the remedy flight verse 23. Fiftly the last but not the least kind of evils is a bloody death for Christ Brother shall deliver up brother to death and the father the child verse 21. But the remedy is this that they need not feare those who can but only kill the body verse 28. i Pareus s VERS 23. Verse 23 But when they persecute you in this Citie flee yee into another for verely I say unto you yee shall not have gone over the Cities of Israel till the Sonne of man be come § 1. When they persecute you flee Sect. 1 Our Saviour here doth expresly teach us Observ That there is no other remedy against persecution but only flight How doth this appeare Quest 1 First by these examples Iacob fleeth Gen. 27. Answ 1 and Moses Exodus 2.15 Act. 7.29 and Elias 1 King 17. and David often and the woman the Church Revel 12.6.14 Secondly it will appeare by distinguishing Answ 2 the right of power given from the use of that power For I. Princes and great ones have right and power given from God Rom. 13.1 But II. The use of this power comes from the corruption of their owne hearts And yet because they have their power from God they are therefore to be obeyed either with an active or passive obedience and not to be resisted or rebelled against Quest 2 Who are faulty here Answ 1 First they are too blame who neglect the meanes for although wee must lay downe our lives for Christ when and where there is no evasion or way to escape yet when wee may flee we ought and leave the successe and event unto God committing our selves wholly unto him Answ 2 Secondly they are faulty who rebell to free themselves from persecution for our Master did not teach us this who could have prayed for twelve legions of Angels and have had them but hee would not hee permitted not Peter to wound with the sword but checked his too hot and forward spirit And hence the Primitive Church would rather suffer themselves to be led as sheepe unto the slaughter then take up weapons against their Princes and Governors although they were but Heathens k Lege Apol Iustin Tertul. Bellarmine and the Papists obey Donec vires habeant untill they be able to make their parties good but no longer Indeed some thinke that it is lawfull to withstand if God give lawfull power to repell an unlawfull force the King of Navarre withstood King Henry of France when he raised persecution But I confesse I dare not subscribe or assent unto it both because Christ our Lord who might by a lawfull troop of Angels have overcome all his wicked adversaries would not doe it but said his kingdome was not of this world and also because Tertullian tels us that the Christians in the Primitive times were able to have driven the Emperour out of his Dominions and to have pulled him from his Throne and sufficiently to have defended themselves and their religion from the power of the Tyger but they would not And therefore as an unwarrantable thing we and all Christians must carefully avoid it Answ 3 Thirdly they are here to blame that in the times of persecution flee not but faint yea faile and fall from their profession basely and cowardly denying Christ and the faith Thus did the Samaritanes and thus the Priscillianists thinke they may lawfully doe But our faith and Profession is not to be forsaken our Christ is not to bee denied nor the truth to be betrayed for any perill or paine whatsoever yea wee must be so farre from denying of Christ that wee must not so much as blush or so much as feare to professe him if wee desire ever to come where he is l Rev 22.15 A beautifull face is unfitly masked it should rather be seene now the face of Religion is faire beautifull and amiable and therefore it were a shame to hide that head and face under a bushell which should rather like a Citie set upon an hill bee held forth to the view of all m Mat. 5.16 Christ hath nothing in him whereof we need be ashamed for he is the best of all neither is there any cause why wee should feare to professe him for he is the greatest of all and of all others most able to protect and defend us There are some commended by the Spirit and Christ because they loved not their lives unto death and yet wee desire to be so commended wee must so labour to deserve that commendation Reade Act. 20.24 21.13 Fourthly they are faulty here who although in the times of persecution they doe not fal from Answ 4 their profession unto superstition yet they dare not openly confesse Christ and the truth these must consider why they hide and conceale Christ and dare not openly professe him I. Hast thou any thing in the secret closet of thy heart which thou darest not reveale that is art thou afraid to reveale any truth or trust or fundamentall point of religion Is not religion like the Church Tota pulchra all glorious and beautifull Then why shouldest thou be ashamed to professe thy faith A good face need not blush to be seene neither any be ashamed to shew forth the face of religion to any II. Dost thou feare danger or death why remember that we must not esteeme our lives in regard of Christ wee must not to save our bodies dishonour our head but labour to glorifie him in life and death and if he require it by our death as well as our life III. Art thou not assured of protection Then remember if thou have Christ thou shalt have all things yea if Christ bee with thee thou needest not feare though all the world be against thee Rom. 8.31.32 God hath decreed the end and determined what shall come to passe and therefore in all perils of this nature wee should say with the three children We know that our God whom wee serve is able to deliver us but if hee will not wee will suffer for him Dan. 3.18 Fiftly they are extremely to blame who thinke and stiffely maintaine that it is not lawfull to flee in the times of persecution when our Saviour expresly here saith If they persecute you in one Citie then flee to another Is it lawfull then to flee in the times of persecution Quest 3 First some hold that it is not lawfull for any Answ 1 at all to flee Tert. ad Fabium because our Saviour expresly bids us not to feare those who kill the body Matth. 10.28 Secondly some thinke that it is lawful to flee Answ 2 yea
must learn to deny our selves Answ 2 Secondly presumption and therefore we must be circumspect it being a dangerous thing to be deceived in the state and condition of the soul or to cry Peace Peace unto our selves while sudden destruction hangs over our heads Answ 3 Thirdly the love of sin this is a sweet seeming potion to the body and a sweet poyson unto the soul And therefore we must hate sin as we would hate hell for the wages of sin is death Romans 6.23 Answ 4 Fourthly idlenesse deceives many and hinders many from giving a due regard unto the Law and that both by making them to protract time and also by quenching and cooling all zealous motions in them Wherefore we must shake off all delays and labour carefully to practise the precepts of the Law Secondly the next provoking cause which made them say that Iohn had a devill was because he was abstemious and moderate yea seemed more austeer and rigide than themselves were and therefore they envie him Whence I might observe two things viz. First that an Hypocrite hates him that is more holy than himself Esa 65.5 Secondly that an austere life it odious and Observ 1 irksome to a carnall man 1 Pet. 4.4 Observ 2 Why do carnall men so carp at an austere life Quest 5 First because thereby Hypocrites and formallists Answ 1 are excelled in glory and therefore they envie such a life in any as shall ecclipse their light Secondly by such a life wicked men are reproached Answ 2 and therefore they hate such that are so reserved and chary of their society that they shun the company of all that are wicked Ephesians 5.11 Thirdly such a life condemns the licentiousnesse Answ 3 of flesh and blood who saith Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall dy Esa 22.13 And therefore all Epicures belly-gods and intemperate persons detest and abhor such a life We have seen the moving causes of the peoples censure given of Iohn namely because he preached the terrours of the Law and because he lived a strict life we may now consider What the effect of this censure was Quest 6 Rash Judgement for they say He hath a Devill Answ Hence two things may be observed namely First That rash judgement is seldome right Observ 3 judgement 1 Sam. 1.13 Mat. 7.1 Rom. 14.10 13 and 1 Cor. 4.5 Colos 2.16 Secondly That there is nothing so good or Observ 4 holy but malice can deprave Rom. 1.30 and 2 Tim. 3.3 Iohn Baptist Malice saith hath a devill although the holy Ghost say That he was sanctified in the womb yea Christ the Lamb without spot they say is become a friend and familiar companion of sinners What is here required of all men Quest 7 First wicked men yea all men must hate and Answ 1 forbear all calumny lest thereby they condemn the generation of the just Reade Psal 15.3 and 73.15 Luke 3.14 Secondly the righteous must labour to cut Answ 2 off all occasions that is labour so to live that the wicked may be ashamed to speak evill of them How must we so live that we may escape calumnies Quest 8 and slanders Saint Peter gives us three remarkable rules to be observed for this end namely Answ First we must abstain from all sin whatsoever Rule 1 whether against the first or second Table 1 Pet. 2.11 do no evill and then men can have no ground to build an evill report upon Secondly shine before men in the works of holinesse Rule 2 and uprightnesse let them see nothing but good in us that they may be able to say nothing but good of us 1 Pet 2.12 Thirdly obey Magistrates and Superiours in Rule 3 those things which are not against God or his word or his Law for this is the wil of God that thus we should put to silence the ignorance of foolish men 1 Pet. 2.14 15. § 3. Christ came both eating and drinking Sect. 3 How and wherein is Christ opposed to the Quest 1 Baptist First Iohns Disciples thought that they were Answ 1 Corrivals but because that I know of now none think so therefore I slip it Answ 2 Secondly they differed in conversation because Iohn was abstemious and more reserved but Christ was more familiar that so by all means he might win and gain some Observ 2 From whence we may learn That Christ tryed all wayes and means for our salvation for that being the scope of his sending and coming into the world and there being nothing that he more deeply desired than that he would certainly leave no means unsought for the effecting of it Quest 2 What did Christ do for our salvation Answ 1 First in himselfe he taught us he prayed for us yea when we were enemies he laid down his life for our ransome Rom. 5.6 7. he checked the proud Iohn 10. and cheered the humble Matthew 11.28 Answ 2 Secondly in his Apostles he did much for our salvation for he sent and commanded them to preach he endowed them with gifts and made them able Ministers he distributed severall abilities among them making some sons of consolation and some sons of thunder yea he inspired them with his Spirit for the writing of the Scripture the rule of Truth Answ 3 Thirdly in his Ministers he shews his care over us and his desire of our salvation for he hath left a succession of Ministers for the gathering together of the Elect and as Paul became all to all men so the Lord hath given us Ministers of all sorts that so we might be left without excuse he hath given us ancient and grave Ministers he hath given us solid learned Ministers he hath given us meek and milde Ministers yea he hath given us Ministers of our nation and not strangers only and the like And thus he hath given us Pastours according to our severall dispositions yea some who can change themselves or take unto themselves any form in indifferent things for the winning of all sorts unto Christ 1 Cor. 9.20 21 22. Answ 3 Thirdly Christ and the Baptist differ in preaching for Iohn preached the Law and wrath Mat. 3.7 11. unto repentance Lugubria Gualt s But Christ preached or proclaimed the sweet messages of the Gospel Mat. 3.28 Ioh. 7.37 c. Observ 2 From whence we may learn That there is a double preaching necessary unto salvation viz. Threatnings and Promises the Law and the Gospel thus we see Samuel did 1 Sam. 12. and Esa 1. Quest 3 Why is it necessary that both Law and Gospel Promises and Threatnings should be preached Answ 1 First because there are divers sorts of men as for example I. Some hearers are soft and mollified and of tender eares and hearts some are hard and obdurate which stand in need of a sharp wedge to rend and tear them II. Some sinners are bashfull some shamelesse and impudent 1 Corin. 5. and 2 Corin. 2. And therefore the shamelesse must be shent and shamed III. Some sin openly and apparently
the true Doctrine of the Lord and leads the sincere Ministers of the Church and the faithfull people unto all truth yea because hee dwels in those places and brests where heavenly truth raignes and beares sway but absents himselfe from all that love lyes and errours Answ 6 Sixthly sometimes hee is called Paracletus the Comforter because he sustaines the heart of the faithfull in affliction by comfort faith patience perseverance and hope of eternall glory Iohn 14. and 15. and 16. Quest 3 What are the offices operations and workes of the holy Spirit Answ They are many and respect either the Prophets or Christ or the Apostles or Ministers or the faithfull and Elect people of God First the workes of the Spirit respect the holy Prophets whom he governed inspired and taught enflaming them with the knowledge and light of the true Messiah and of things to come Thus David in Spirit called Christ Lord Mat. 22. And Zachary and Elizabeth and Simeon are taught many things by the Spirit which they foretell of Christ Luke 1. and 2. Secondly the operations of the Spirit respect Christ for he helped the conception and nativity of the Messiah The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee c. Luke 1. and Matth. 1. Before they came together Mary was found to be with child of the Holy Ghost yea the Spirit was given unto Christ by God out of measure Iohn 1. and Luke 4. Iesus being full of the Holy Ghost c. and Luke 10 He rejoyced in spirit although this may be understood of the internall motions Thirdly the operations of the Spirit respect the Apostles and Evangelists hee inspired them when they were to write the Scriptures 2 Pet. 1.19 Hee led them in the truth of their preaching and brought those things into their minds which before Christ had taught them He made them able Ministers enduing them with the gift of tongues and the power of Miracles and with all graces befitting such a calling Fourthly the works of the Spirit respect the Ministers and Ministery of the word of God for he makes them able Ministers he cals them to the work of the Ministery yea he is the Governour of the Ministery who doth conserve deliver and propagate the true Doctrine and that by means viz. the sincere Doctors of the Church whom he hath promised to direct Fifthly the operations of the Spirit respect the faithfull elect children of God for I. He regenerates them Iohn 3. Except a man be born of water and of the holy Ghost c. II. He quickens the hearts of men and doth excite and inspire spirituall motions therein III. He comforts and cheers sorrowfull souls and raiseth up those who are dejected in spirit from whence he is called the Comforter IV. He leads them the right way They shall hear a voice behinde them saying This is the way walk in it V. He excites and provokes the minde unto an ardent invocation of God teaching the faithfull to pray in the Spirit VI. He gives to the faithfull an assurance of their Adoption and Glorification Rom. 8.15 16 And therefore if we desire to be made partakers of these graces and blessings let us labour for the Spirit by faithfull fervent and frequent prayers unto God VERS 20. A bruised Reed shall he not break Vers 20 and smoaking Flax shall he not quench What is meant here by Flax Quest 1 The word in the Originall is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Answ and hath divers significations namely First sometimes it is taken generally for any threed Secondly sometimes more strictly for a linnen threed Thirdly sometimes for the string of a Harp Fourthly sometimes for a Fishers line which is made of threed Fiftly sometimes for sails Sixtly Syrus reads lucernam crepitantem non extinguet he will not quench the crackling lamp because when a lamp is ready to dye or go out it makes a creeking or crakling noise And Tremellius for linum flax puts lucernam a lamp whose match or wick is made of flax and who smokes and makes a noise as if it were ready to dye and yet this Christ will not quench Hence then observe That there is a weak Faith which yet is true Observ and although it be weak yet because it is true it shall not be rejected of Christ Psalm 103.2 How doth the truth of this appear Quest 2 It is evident from hence Answ because Faith is not created simul semel perfect at the first as Adam was but is like a man in the ordinary course of Nature who is first an imperfect birth and then an infant then a childe then a youth then a man or like a grain of Mustard-seed Mat. 13.31 33. and 1 Pet. 2.2 for Faith groweth and encreaseth unto perfection as is cleer from these places Prov. 4.18 Ephes 4.13 and 2 Pet. 3.18 and 1 Corin. 1.7 and 2 Corin. 1.7 and 10.15 and 2 Thes 1.3 Quest 3 Who are here to be reproved Answ Those who tax condemn and contemn the weak children of God Mark 9.24 Quest 4 Must we sow cushions under mens Elbows must we cry peace peace unto them 1 Thes 5.3 must we not reprove them for their weaknesse of Faith must we be blinde leaders of the blinde and not tell them of their faults Answ Extreams are here most carefully to be avoided for as we must not lull them asleep so we must not be snares unto them some sing a secure man asleep and others choke a half dead man we must neither be beds of Down unto them nor sharp Knives we must neither be soft Cushions for them to rest themselves securely on nor yet to choke them withall And therefore three degrees are to be observed namely First some utterly reject all weak ones and tax all weaknesse in Faith of hypocrisie Certainly these are either proud or cruell men Secondly some comfort and establish those who are weak saying Be quiet thou hast Faith and Grace enough and thou art good enough thou needest no more neither must thou be too righteous Eccles 7. These are soft but not safe Cushions these are fawning flatterers and not faithfull friends Thirdly some comfort and exhort saying Be of good cheer he who hath begun a good work will also finish it in you Philip. 1.6 and therefore pray that his Grace may abound in you verse 9. yea do not sit still but go forward and march on in the way of the Lord Heb. 6.1 Now this is the safest and best course for three things are to be acknowledged namely I. That the maturity of Faith doth consist in the perfection thereof Rom. 8.38 and 2 Cor. 5.6 and 2 Tim. 1.12 and Heb. 10.22 II. That doubting is not blamelesse for a wavering staggering and doubting Faith is every where taxed as Ephes 4.14 Iames 1.6 Heb. 10.23 III. That it is every mans duty perpetually to encrease and to labour to abound in Knowledge Love Faith Spirit and in all graces and vertuous qualities 2 Pet. 3.18 Rom. 15.13
that there is in the servants of God hypocrisie or pride or sinister respects or secret ends or the like for which they scandalize them as though it were indeed as they sinisterly imagine Answ 2 Secondly the very Doctrine of the Gospell is hard and therefore is offensive to the nature of man who desires to walk in the way of ease Iohn 6.60 and 1 Corinth 1.16.21 Answ 3 Thirdly Sathan doth continually raise up some enemies or other and therefore the Church in no age hath or shall be free from some who therein shall give offence to Religion and the Gospel of Christ Acts 2.13 and 4.1 and 5 17 40. and 6.11 and 1 Cor. 16.9 Quest 3 What is here required of us Answ 1 First we must not wonder although the profession or professours of Religion be scandalized yea compassed about with calumnies for Christ himself was calumniated Luke 2.34 and 12.51 And the Primitive Church was reported to have sacrificed children to have been Nicolaitans with other wicked scandals slanders Answ 2 Secondly we must expect oppositions that so wee may be armed the better against them and that I. By a constant resolution that no detractions derisions slanders nor reproaches shall cause us to turn our feet out of the wayes of God And II. By circumspection and watchfulnesse Ephes 5.15 Thirdly we must take heed that we be not offended with any thing that happens or falls out but avoid the Ordinary causes of offences which are these to wit I. Some are offended with Religion because the persons of the Religious are despised Read Matth. 13.57 c. Mark 6.3 Iohn 7.41 47. II. Some are offended with Religion because the life of the Religious is somewhat popular and not so strict as they would have it Thus some stumbled at Christ when they said Why doe the Disciples of Iohn and of the Pharisees fast but thy Disciples fast not Matth. 9.11 Iohn 8.48 III. Some are offended with Religion because the Religious are still subject to the crosse and under the rod Matth. 26.31 and 1 Corinthians 15.19 IV. Some are offended even with the Doctrine of the Gospel Acts. 28.22 and 1 Corinth 1.23 And that either First because the Gospell is preached Acts. 4.2 and 13.45 c. Or Secondly because Christ publisheth and proclaimeth himself to be the Son of God Iohn 5.18 Or Answ 3 Thirdly because it seems absurd that we should obtain life by Christs death or be freed from death by him who was taken captive of death and subjected thereunto Thus the Two Disciples were offended because of Christs death Luke 24. And hence the Christians were made a mocking-stock of by the Iews because they beleeved in a crucified God Iohn 6.52.60 Or Fourthly because Christ abrogated the Law of Moses Acts. Or Fifthly because he gives salvation freely unto us without any merit or work of ours Matth. 9.3 Philip. 3.9 Or Sixthly some are offended because Religion is too severe and will not allow them sometimes to follow and fulfill the desires of their own hearts Or Seventhly some are offended with Christ because he is to liberall and free in reprehending of them Matthew 15.12 Iohn 8.33 45. Or Eighthly some are offended with the Gospell by reason of the many dissensions and diversities of opinion amongst Christians and this is the frequent Objection and cavill of the Turks and Heretikes Now these and all other causes of offence we should cautelously avoid and let nothing make us stumble at Christ or at Religion § 3. Vt Scandala that offences should come Sect. 3 The meaning of these words Woe bee unto the world by reason of offences is woe bee unto the world because many scandals shall arise therein and there shall be many offences in the plurall number Scandala to teach us That many offences are to be expected in the world Observ What is an Offence or Scandall Quest 1 First in generall the word is derived from the Answ 1 Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which comes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from halting because a stumbling blocke being laid in the way causeth a man to halt and fall Some say that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies that crooked part of the trap whereunto the bait is fastned upon which the creature eating and gnawing puls the trap down upon it self Suidas Secondly or the word Scandall comes from Answ 2 the Hebrew word or the Syriacke For Syrus saith that Machshula a Scandall comes from Cesal Impingo to beat knock or dash against it Now the Hebrews say that Michshol a Scandall comes from the root Casal which signifies to offend And therefore to scandalize and offend doth signifie a giving occasion unto others to stumble and fall and hurt themselves Thirdly more particularly this word Scandall Answ 3 is taken three manner of wayes to wit I. Sometimes for evill losse and an impediment and thus it is frequently taken in the old Testament II. Sometimes it is taken for an offence against the conscience of our Brother who is zealous for Gods glory Thus the Athenians were an offence unto Paul whose heart burned and whose Spirit was troubled in him when he saw their Idolatry Acts 17.16 III. Sometimes it is taken for a tentation whereby our Brother is drawn unto sinne Now these two latter properly are Scandals and offences but not the rst The meaning therefore of the point is this That so long as we live in the world we shall heare and see many things which will offend us if we be zealous for Gods glory yea many things whereby God is dishonoured and Religion scandalized yea we must expect temptations and provocations from others unto evill that so we may arme our selves against them and labour to prevent them Quest 2 How many sorts of Scandals or Offences are there Answ There is a double offence or Scandall namely First Scandalum datum an offence which is given and this Offence is either I. In the will of the Agent and that whether it respect First a mans self that is either I. His gain pleasure or satisfaction now this is understood of those who tempt others unto adultery or drunkennesse or murther or lying or theft or perjury c. Or II. His pride not caring who is offended Sic volo Thus I will doe let others think what they will I care not Now these are blame-worthy not so much because they look upon their brethren in envy as because they doe not respect them in love for we should bear that love unto our Brethren that we should not offend them at al if it lay in our power for if we willingly offend these little ones when we are left free we are inexcuseable and subject to the woe denounced in the Text. Or Secondly these voluntary offences respect our brethren when men do those things which are offensive to the Children of God and that out of envy and for this end that they may be offended
of the graves and went into the City and appeared unto many Many Papists yea Popish writers hold Object that soules after they are departed may returne on earth again and appeare unto men this opinion they would ground upon this place arguing thus At the Resurrection of Christ many rose againe and therefore the soules of dead men may returne againe First we deny not but God is able to raise the Answ 1 dead unto life and to send a Spirit backe unto the earth againe for a time but whether he wils this to be at all or as often as the Papists would have it for walking Spirits and Ghosts are most frequent with them we know not and leave unto them to prove for they must neither argue from his power to his will He being able to doe more then he is willing to doe nor from an extraordinary worke to an ordinary he doing divers rare and admirable things sometimes upon some speciall occasion which he will not ordinarily doe Secondly to the place objected we answer that Answ 2 their soules did not onely appeare but their bodies also were restored unto life And therefore the Argument followes not Thirdly those who were raised did not forewarne Answ 3 the living of any judgement to come or command them to doe this or that for the deads s●ke viz. either to pray for them or to goe on pilgrimage to some Saint c. which is the ordinary and usuall charge of the Popish Spirits And therefore they have from this place but a bad foundation to build their apparition of Spirits upon Fourthly these in the text were raised up for these Answ 4 ends namely I. To confirme Christs Resurrection from death unto life II. To confirme our Resurrection by Christ God the Father shewing hereby unto us that Christ by his death had overcome and destroyed death to the faithfull and that at the last day their soules and bodies shall be knit together and live with God and Christ for ever VERS 54. Vers 54 Now when the Centurion and those who were with him watching Iesus saw the Earthquake and those things which were done they feared greatly saying Truly this man was the Son of God We shewed before how Fevardentius affirmes that Christ did not truly complaine that he was forsaken of his Father verse 46. and we answered one of his Arguments in that place He now summons up the Centurion and watch against us arguing further thus from hence Object for the confirming of his assertion The Centurion notwithstanding Christ so complained and cryed out yet confesseth thus of him This truly was the Sonne of God and a righteous man and therefore he was farre off from imagining that Christ was forsaken of God Fevardent Page 474. First the Centurion being a Romane understood Answ 1 not the language wherein Christ complained crying out That he was forsaken Secondly the Evangelist here plainly sheweth Answ 2 that not the hearing of those words but the seeing of the Earthquake and other things which were done drew that confession from the Centurion That Christ was the Sonne of God Answ 3 Thirdly we deny not but that notwithstanding CHRIST truly complained he was forsaken yet he was the Son of God still for the hypostaticall union was not thereby dissolved as we shewed before verse 47. but as the soule of Christ being parted from his body was separated onely from it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 locally not hypostatically Damasc lib. 3. de fid Cap. 27. And as the soule ceased working in the body and yet was not divorced in the personall being from the body so the filiall union was not dissolved though the effectuall feeling were for a while discontinued Vers 59 60. VERS 59 60. And when JOSEPH had taken the body he wrapped it in a cleane linnen cloth and laid it in his owne new tombe which he had hewed out in the rocke and he rolled a great stone to the dore of the Sepulchre and departed For the understanding of these two verses we must observe That as often as the Jewes buried any they were wont to role a great stone to the mouth of the Cave and now the cave or vault it selfe they termed from the act of buriall Keber which sig●ifieth a place of buriall or from its forme Magnara a denne or Cave The severall cels or receptacles in which the body was laid they called Cucim graves or tombes and the stone they named Golel a rolling stone These Caves or vaults the wealthier sorts would paint garnish and beautifie at the mouth or entrance of them whence commeth that phrase Sepulchra dealbata painted tombes VERS 63. Sir we remember that that seducer or deceiver said while he was yet alive After Vers 63 three dayes I will rise againe These wicked Scribes and Pharisees call Christ a Seducer and Deceiver Quest now how doth it appeare that he was no such person First it is evident thus If we looke upon Morall Answ 1 things he was the Master of all morall vertues Secondly if wee looke upon divine things he Answ 2 was given to one God and after the manner of the Iewes worshipped one God And although hee did not worship this God with the sacrifices of sheepe and oxen yet he did with the sacrifices of a pure mind which sacrifice the Lord much rather accepts of And Thirdly it is cleare from his Miracles for they Answ 3 shew his divinity And Fourthly it is manifest because he seduced us not Answ 4 by his doctrine for he both did spake all things well teaching us nothing contrary to the law of God Euseb lib. 3. de demonstr evang Cap. 4 5. CHAP. XXVIII Verse 1 VERS 1. In the end of the Sabbath as it began to dawne towards the first day of the weeke came MARY Magdalene and the other MARY to see the Sepulchre Sect. 1 § 1. In the end of the Sabbath as it began to dawne The words in the originall here are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is And in the evening of the Sabbaths which begins to shine upon one of the Sabbaths Or as Syrus reads it And in the evening in the Sabbath the light of which evening is the first light in the weeke From hence some doubts and demands may arise viz. Quest 1 What is meant here by Vespera the Evening Answ 1 First sometimes and that oftentimes this word Evening doth denote and signifie the whole time of the night but it doth not so signifie in this place Answ 2 Secondly the Evening doth properly signifie the beginning of the night but not so neither in this verse Answ 3 Thirdly sometimes the Evening signifies that part of the night which preceeds the morning and thus it signifies in this place Quest 2 What is meant by the Sabbath because in this verse mention is made of a double Sabbath In the Evening of the Sabbath which shines before one of the Sabbaths Answ 1 First sometimes this word Sabbath is taken for