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A76798 Expositions and sermons upon the ten first chapters of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to Matthew. Written by Christopher Blackwood, preacher to a Church of Christ in the city of Dublin in Ireland. Blackwood, Christopher. 1659 (1659) Wing B3098; ESTC R207680 612,607 923

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are accompanied with holy affections and renewed desires of the same thing formerly in the same prayer requested Psalm 80.3 Cause thy face to shine upon us and we shall be saved this saying is thrice mentioned as v. 3. v. 7. and v. 19. So Psalm 67.3 5. this saying is twice mentioned Let the people praise thee O God let all the people praise thee 5 When used to stir up our dulness Psalm 107.8 15.21.31 Four times the Prophet saith O that men would praise the Lord for his goodness and declare his wonderfull works to the children of men Psalm 47.6 Sing praises unto our God sing praises sing praises unto our King sing praises There is twenty six times mention made of the Lords mercy enduring for ever Psalm 136.1 to the end 6 Sometimes the heart of a childe of God exceedingly runs upon some one desire and so he may vent it more than once in prayer without vain repetition So David Psalm 119. more than once Repetitions in prayer become sinfull 1 When affected as strains of eloquence and Rhetorick as he that cried Hyperbolical God thou that dwellest in the third Heaven of Hyperbolees 2 When empty frothy and impertinent wherein is no spiritual life or heat so those worshippers cryed from morning to noon O Baal hear us 1 Kin. 18.26 Not onely those that are directed to Idols but those directed to Saints as those in the Papacy Holy Paul pray for us holy Peter pray for us mentioning thirty or forty Saints in this manner yea even repetitions of this kind directed to God as in the common prayer book Lord have mercy upon us Christ have mercy upon us Lord have mercy upon us so in the Letany Good Lord deliver us is eight times mentioned and one and twenty times there is mentioned We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. 3 When men from want of holy notions of the word in their hearts through which the Spirit would convey it self are forced to use the same repetitions these in some measure disparage the spirit of praier and had need be humbled for their seldom reading of the word and meditation thereof from whence comes this strangeness and forcedness of repetitions 4 When men have an itch to pray as long as others that because an other hath praid an hour perhaps from a true enlargment they will pray as large as he hence some persons use vain repetitions when the spirit ceases from assistance and indisposition prevails it s our wisdom and humility to give out For they think they shall be heard for their much speaking Christ sets forth a ground why the heathens used vain repetitions because they thought they should be heard for their much speaking by gentiles he means the heathen or nations whereas the jews were called by the name of people and so they are contradistinguished twice Act. 26.17 23. These prophane nations thought that because they wearied themselves with the irksomness of a long prayer that therefore God would hear them because they would say many things they must needs say what is already spoken but when in prayer there is nothing spoken but that which is needful such an one ought not to be accounted a much speaker Quest Whether or no are long prayers and much speaking unlawful Answ 1 Long prayer may be upon extraordinary cases Moses continued a whole day in prayer Ex. 17.11 12. and Christ a whole night Luk. 6.12 nor are carnal men fit judges in this case who snuff at any small time spent in Gods service Mal. 1 13. crying When will the Sabbath be gone Amos 8.5 nor is the unregenerate part of Godly men a fit judge but before I answer hereto I must premise some things 1 The heart is not easily or suddenly gotten upon the wing yet in that doth the life of prayer consist it is a lifting up of the heart Psal 25.1 Many weights of dulness hardness heartlesness strangeness unbelief from whence arises dumbness discouragement and listlesness are upon the heart which are not easily removed now motion is a cause of heat hence to bring the soul to sensibleness there may be the longer essaying 2 If prayer have its due growth in the several parts of it con●ession petition intercession and thanksgiving it cannot be very short 〈◊〉 O● manifold wants to be supplied and benefits to be acknowledged import that our prayer usually cannot be very short But to answer 1 We are to abominate all long prayer which is performed for any carnal end or pretence whether to get an opinion to be men of parts or to seem religious and get applause or because others so pray The wicked scribes for pretence made long prayers Mat. 23.14 2 See that your length of prayer arise from a true enlargment of heart and from a gracious quickned frame which if it be your petitions will be free and not forced Powre out thy heart like water before the face of the Lord Lam. 2.19 that is thy petitions will come freely as water powred out thy lips will drop as the hony-comb which needs no squeezing Song 4.11 they will be also pat and seasonable according to occasion wherein the heart oft will be put into an holy melting frame After this manner Christ prayed Heb. 5.7 and such a frame of spirit is promised Zach. 12.10 these enlargements the people of God have more often in closet prayer then elsewhere because they can there more freely rip up their hearts and can most insist upon those petitions that will make the soul bleed and yern 3 In long prayers see that your hearts be able to hold out as well as your tongues Our worship must be with our spirit Joh. 4.23 Rom. 1.9 Paul served God with his spirit a short prayer made with servency and devotion prevails with God Jam. 5.16 more then long prayers which are but lip labour Esa 29.13 4 Gods people have upon extraordinary occasions usually used long prayer as Solomon at the consecration of the temple 1 King 8. so when under agonies and great troubles Psal 102.1 the overwhelmed soul powres out his complaint it comes like a flood so when the spirit comes to visit the soul with enlargement the soul in this case is wont to pray long and loth to let the Lord go Gen. 32.26 when we have the breathings of the spirit upon our hearts it s not our wisdom to give out Longa hora brevis mora Bern. God's long a coming and his tarryings are not long Shall we be watchful for winde and tyde and shall we not take the gales of the spirit moreover afflictions are wont to awake the soul hence the soul being awakened prayes with more earnestness and length Jacob when he feared death and destruction from Esau he cryed to God all night long Gen. 32. when the Church is in hazard of ruine also so Hester and the Church Act. 12.5 5 In long prayer we must have respect to them that joyn with us as to our selves when the mouth of
the Spirit into the Wilderness So that in the same day he was baptized he began his Fast of forty days He was led of the Spirit 2 His Tentation is set down from the efficient Cause v. 12. the Spirit He was led of the Spirit or driven or cast out by the Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so Mark or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 led away or snatched away These phrases set down the violent impulsion and force of the Spirit in his heart as appears Luke 4.1 Jesus being full of the Holy Ghost returned from Jordan and was led by the Spirit into the Wilderness It was not then Satan that led him but the Spirit of God Whether carried through the air as Elias 2 Kings 2.16 and Ezekiel cap. 3.12 and Philip when he was taken from the Eunuch or whether he went on his feet I leave it in the midst but from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sursum and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 duco I incline to think he was carried up into the air 3 Whither he was led viz. Into the Wilderness It 's like the great Wilderness where he was with the wilde Beasts yet are not any persons to live in Wildernesses now for Penance for though every action of Christ be for our instruction yet is it not for our imitation What popish Eremite is so carried as Christ was Christ went into the Wilderness to testifie his divine glory in abstinence not onely from flesh but from all manner of meat which hath no place in Eremites he went to be tempted of the Devil and therefore chose the fittest place even a solitary Wilderness We pray that we may not be led into Tentation If there were any such end of an Eremitical or Wilderness Life as Penance yet were it meet to be profest rather among men than beasts that they who have beheld our Fall may behold our Repentance And if the Warrant of a Wilderness Life be fetcht from the Example of Christ it must of necessity be shut up in the space of forty days and forty nights after the end of which forty days Temptation he lived the rest of his life in the society of men To be tempted of the Devil This was the end Christ was led into the Wilderness Christ was thus tempted first that he might be fitted for his Ministry by Tentations for knowledg of Tentations is one great requisite to make an able Teacher 2 To shew with what Weapons a Christian ought to oppose the Temptations of the Devil 3 That he might be succouring and helpfull to us in our Tentations Heb. 2.17 For that he himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted 4 To shew that Christ is stronger than Satan in time of Tentation 1 John 4.4 Christians overcome because greater is he that is in them than he that is in the World 5 That we may come unto him with boldness and confidence seeing he was in all the principal points of Tentations tempted as well as we Heb. 4.15 16. He was in all points tempted like unto us let us come therefore unto him with boldness 6 Satan tempted Christ that in overcoming Christ he might hinder the Work of our Redemption by drawing him to sin for the high Priest that was to redeem us was to be holy and harmless and undefiled Heb. 7.26 7 That by his combating with Satan he might obtain victory to us John 14. ult 8 To let young Converts see that after Baptism that is the profession of a sincere and holy life Temptations hang over such 9 To let us see that bare Tentations are not sins unless we give our consent to them Satans Temptations to evil are our crosses and Satan's sins provided we groan under them and oppose them In holy men God works a distaste of Satans Temptations yet may a Saint have as horrid thoughts cast into his heart as the Devil can invent who is indeed the great temptation-master 10 That we by Christ his Example may learn to fight it out with Satan and not to give way like valiant Souldiers that stand and maintain their ground against their Adversary Ephes 6.11 Put on the whole Armour of God that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the Devil Learn we from this seeing Christ was led or driven of the Spirit to his Tentation that we do not rashly cast our selves into Tentations because we know not what weakness we may shew therein V. 2 And when he had fasted forty days and forty nights he was afterwards an hungred When he had fasted forty days Christ his temptation is amplified from the concomitants that accompanied his temptation which was prayer and fasting Because fasting kindles prayer therefore he used fasting as Moses and Elias had communion with the Lord miraculously Exod. 24.18 forty days and forty nights 1 King 19.8 so had Jesus Christ From hence Papists stablish Lent They say Christ his example is a command for us but by this reason all the miracles of Christ should be instead of a command but who can imitate Christ in miracles Moses at the receiving of the Law and Eliah at the restoring of it and Christ the restorer of the new Law fasted forty days apiece but what is this to us The example of Moses and Elias gave no warrant to the Jews to imitate that fast no more doth Christs fast give warrant to us to imitate that 2 There is great difference between Christ his fasts and Papists for Christ fasted but once they yearly Christ abstained from all meat and drink they onely from flesh and that which comes of it Christ abstained from food without need or appetite to it they hunger when they fast Besides in their fasts the Shambles are onely chang'd into Fishmarkets or into Grocers and Comfit-makers shops which are more pampering to the flesh Luke saith that in those forty days Christ did eat nothing Luke 4.2 but they eat every day Now for the fast of Christ it was supernatural For to fast above seven days is death for though sick persons in whom there is abundance of slimy phlegm and their natural heat is weak may live above seven days without meat for they are nourished of the moisture of the body and phlegm which the little heat in their body doth slowly eat up Yet man naturally cannot live without meat seven days because for want of nourishment the natural heat dies As the fire of a Lamp is put out for want of oyl the body also being dried becomes unfit that the soul should inform it besides the bowels as Hippocrates observes wanting chylous moisture growes together and then the man dies For Christ his divine power did keep his body strong without hunger and did likewise suspend the action of natural heat and other contrary qualities weakning one another and in the mean time afforded strength and animal spirits to the head and brain which were necessary to the
the spirit of truth that in all his decrees and determinations he cannot erre on the other side the French cry him out of his infallible chair and conclude him subject to errour and deposable by a general counsel yet in this brawling there 's no universal breaking of communion why then should not private communion be granted among those that fear God 7 The multiplicity of relations that tyes Christians to peace worship of the same God profession of the same faith expectation of the same hope suffering for the same cause begotten by the same word children of the same father have the same comfort of love the same fellowship of the Spirit Phil. 2.1 8 The benefits that come by it 1 The kingdome of God consists in it Rom. 14.17 Some Christians thought that others could not come to heaven if they did not eat such meats as they but Paul tells them The kingdome of God consists not in meat and drink but in righteousness and peace and joy of the holy Ghost 2 It 's the way to a long and an happy life 1 Pet. 3.11 3 The fruit of righteousness is sown in peace Jam. 3.21 q. d the crop of grace and glory is not reap'd of proud and contentious persons of such as make rents in Churches and would be many masters of which he speaks v. 1. nor of those who boasting of themselves and their opinions would alone seem to be wise but it will be reap'd of peaceable Christians who being of a peaceable spirit themselves endeavour to make peace among others and sow the seed of peaceable discourses in order thereto 4 By peace we resemble God for when in God there are three subsistences yet there is one will one love and one consent whereas in contention weresemble the Babel builders 5. Peace is the way to have the presence of God with us 2 Cor. 13.11 Live in peace and the God of love and peace shall be with you Some creatures are by artificial means invited as Pigeons by looking glasses and Larkes by the resemblance of the Sun in a looking glass by peace the God of peace is invited who unites those one to another that are united to him John 17.21 I le conclude with Bernards Distich Nullum turbavi discordes pacificavi Laesus sustinui nec mihi complacui 6 The peaceable carriage of you to others will cause others to carry peaceably to you Judg. 8.3 Gideon peaceably answering the men of Ephraim who did unjustly in proud wrath chide him their spirits abated towards him For they shall be called the children of God that is they who evidence their Christianity out of conscience of the command by stablishing peace among them with whom they live are and ought to be acknowledged among men as regenerate and thereupon called Gods children 1 They are his children in likeness as God sent his Son into the world to make peace 2 Cor. 5.19 so do they 2 They are like Christ who being God and man made peace with the blood of his cross Eph. 2.14 Col. 1.20 and took away all enmity betwixt God and us 3 They shall be called the children of God in heaven though sometimes in this world they are not seen nor acknowledged 1 John 3.1 4 They shall be so called because having first made peace with God they feeling the sweetness of it make peace with men Ob. But how can such as make peace with men be called Gods children seeing we find many carnal men good arbitrators and make-peaces among neighbours Ans 1 Such persons do it not out of conscience of the command but either out of vain glory or to keep themselves imployed in business and so to keep off their consciences or at most out of a principle of good neighbourhood whereas Gods children do it from the command 2 They make peace not out of the sence of inward peace they have with God but out of the beneficial concernment of neighbourly peace 3 Carnal men making peace it 's usual in matters of claim betwixt man in meum and tuum but peace-makers to whom the promise belongs make peace where there are heart boylings and sinister conceptions and heart grudges betwixt man and man 4 Carnal peace makers are stir'd up to do what they do upon sollicitations and intreaties but those to whom the promise is made are stirred up to their duty by the belief of the promise and it is done many times in secret where no man knows what they aime at but themselves know that they aime at a right understanding betwixt neighbour and neighbour Christian and Christian in order to peace Use Exhort to peace-making that this promise may belong to you as God is called the God of peace Rom. 16.20 1 Cor. 14 33.2 Cor. 13.11 Phil. 4.9 1 Thess 5.23 2 Thess 3.16 Heb. 13.20 So by endeavouring after peace you shall be like unto him V. 10. Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousness sake for theirs is the kingdom of heaven In this verse 3 things 1 The suffering its persecution 2 The cause not for wickedness but for righteousness sake 3 The crown theirs is the kingdom of heaven Quest What is meant by righteousness Answ Neither universal or paticular morral righteousness for many of the heathens suffered for honest interests and for righteous causes but spiritual righteousness is here meant as for the profession of their faith for conscience towards God 1 Pet. 2.19 This is thank worthy if a man for conscience towards God suffer wrongfully and endure grief So that righteousness signifies obedience to all the commands of God Here is inrightment to blessedness when we will rather suffer then transgress the commandment of God Observ They that are persecuted for Christ and his cause and commandements are blessed persons Jam. 1.12 Blessed is the man that endureth temptation for when he is tried he shall receive the crown For Application 1 Be exhorted to suffer persecution 1 For Christ's sake 1 Hereby thou wilt prove thy soundness of heart Dan 3.17 18 Shadrach Meshech and Abednego and Daniel cap. 6 shewed their sincerity herein unsound men will not suffer Persecution Gal 6.12 The denying of Circumcision was the Object of Persecution hence the false Teachers would have the Galatians circumcised lest they should suffer Persecution Matth 13.21 See it in the Stony Ground 2 This is the principal difficulty in Christianity to witness truth before Kings Psalm 119.46 and Councils Matth 10.17 To resist to Bloud Heb 12.4 and not to love our Lives so much as our Duty to God Luke 14.26 27 Rev 12.11 17 3 In all Persecutions for Christ thou shalt have wisdom to answer the Persecutour Luke 21.15 I le give you a Mouth and a Tongue that your Adversaries shall not be able to gainsay Acts 6.10 They that reasoned against Stephen were not able to resist the wisdom and spirit in Stephen 4 Thou shalt have strength to overcome the Persecutours 1 John 4.4 Greater is he that is in you
he knowes our intentions for good when they are good Luke 21.2 V. 5. And when thou prayest thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are for they love to pray standing in the Synagogues and in the corners of the streets that they may be seen of men Verily I say unto you they have their reward Christ next unto a right direction in alms comes to give a right direction in prayer in which 1 He sets down the sins to be avoided 2 The manner of right performance The sins to be avoided are 1 Hypocrisie v. 5. 2 Vain glory v. 5. They love to pray standing that many eys may be on them 3 Vain repetitions v. 7. 2 The manner of right performance which must be 1 With confidence Pray to thy father 2 With secrecy Pray to thy father in secret v. 6. 3 Grounds hereof 1 Your father who sees in secret will reward openly 2 It 's a heathenish practise to use vain repetitions v. 7. 3 The knowledge God hath of your wants and his readiness to supply you v. 8. And when thou prayest thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are That is as the hypocritical Scribes and Pharisees For they love to pray standing in the Synagogues Q. Whether is it not lawfull to pray standing A. Yes Mark 11.25 When ye stand praying forgive The Pharisee and the Publican stood both when they prayed Luke 18 11 13. The Levites stood and cried with a loud voice unto the Lord Neh. 9.4 Abraham stood praying Gen. ●8 22 Moses and Samuel Jer. 15.1 and Job cap. 30.20 And sometimes and more frequently kneeling was used Solomon 1 Kings 8.54 arose from before the altar of the Lord from kneeling upon his knees Daniel kneeled upon his knees three times a day Dan. 6.10 Every knee shall bow to me Esai 45 23. I have left unto me 7000 that have not bowed the knee to Baal 1 Kings 19.18 Wherewith shall I bow my knee before the most high God Mic. 6.6 Let us bow down and kneel before the Lord our Maker Ps 95.6 To stand in prayer is not unlawfull but to stand that thou mayest be seen is unlawfull In the new Testament we read that Christ kneeled down and prayed Luke 22.41 Peter kneeled down when he prayed for Tabitha Acts 9.40 Paul kneeled down and prayed with them all who had brought him on his way Acts 20.36 Also Paul bowed his knees to the father of our Lord Jesus Christ Eph. 3.14 Stephen kneeled down in his last prayer Acts 7.60 Also Paul and his company kneeled down on the shore and prayed Acts 21.5 In prayer that gesture is to be used that doth most quicken and help to the duty The ancient Christians were wont to kneel in remembrance of the fall of Adam and of all his posterity and sometimes to pray standing in remembrance of the grace of Christ whereby we have risen from our fall Kneeling on the six days was a badge of our fall by sin but that we do not kneel on the Lords day is a signe of Resurrection From the times of the Apostles this custome came in as Irenaeus mentions Lib. de Pasch Quest Respons ad Orthodox q. 115. ascribed to Justin Aug. Epist 119.115 2 Q. Whether was it not lawfull to pray in the Synagogues A. Yes David saith Bless ye God in the Congregations Psal 68.26 For by Synagogues he means publick prayer which was used Matth. 18.20 Acts 1.14 practised by the hundred and twenty also Acts 4.24 Acts 12.5 where the Church were praying for Peter Grounds of publick prayer 1 There God is wont to communicate his presence Psal 26.8.65.4.52.8.76.1 2.132.13 14.133.3 2 The concurrent prayers of Gods people is wont to be more strong as many hands lifting at a burthen lift the burthen though great many flames of fire united in one are not easily quenched many springs of water conjoyned make the stream the stronger if the prayers of one Moses were so strong to keep God from destroying Israel Exod. 32.10.11 Psal 106.23 what will the prayers of many do Acts 12.5 as we see in Peters case who was delivered by the prayers of the Church 3 In that there are publick Officers chosen of Churches to present their requests before the Lord hence as those that are sollicitours for a Corporation had need to know the wants thereof so should the Officers of Churches in special be acquainted with the brethrens wants 4 Because publick occasions require it both in Church as the seeking some special mercy from God which concerns the whole Church as Peters deliverance Acts 1.5 12. the whole Church sometimes wants a mercy Matth. 18.20 the whole Church sometimes wants to have a judgement turn'd away Acts 4.24 also in the Commonwealth for to pray for the happiness of the Magistracy 1 Tim. 2.1 I exhort that supplications prayers be made for all men for Kings and all that are in authority By the blessing of whose prayers and examples is a City exalted Prov. 11.11 5 It 's for the honour and glory of God to have so many petitioners waiting on him for his royal assent a joynt cry of one and the same spirit from so many breathings of his people 〈…〉 prayer is as it were a publick hue and cry made our by an embodied Church against the common enemies of Je●●s Christ of their souls Praise waits for him in Sion Psal 68. ● 6 In publick prayer there is as it were the conjunctions of the spirits and graces of a body of Christ as it were in one Hence the whole Church Acts ● 42 as they continued in breaking bread together so did they in prayer and were as it were of one accord These all continued in one accord with prayer and supplication Acts 1.14 Acts 4.24 the Church lift up their voices with one accord the breathings of the spirit which were scattered in many are as it were united in one and as the waters of several channels disburthen themselves sometimes in one current so that where his name is thus recorded he is wont to come and blesse his people Exod. 20.24 In all places where I record my name I will come unto thee and I will bless thee Seeing then there are such conjunctions of spirits he that is the mouth ought to be carefull to present onely such requests wherein all Christians do agree and the body that are worshippers and all the worshippers are to come together like so many Doves to their windowes Esai 60.8 even the Prince himself not excepted Ezek. 46.10 that they may serve the Lord with one consent or shoulder Zeph. 3.9 the usual careless neglect whereof if it do not speak forth prophaneness yet doth it speak forth a spirit of lukewarmness 7 In publick prayer there 's a provocation of one another by godly examples In the corners of the streets That is where they might be beheld of the inhabitants of two or three or four streets at once whereas there is in sincere prayer 1 A proposing of the eye
condemn all forms seeing we read of sundry in Scripture as Psal 102. v. 1 c. Esai 63.15 to the end of cap. 64. ult Numb 6.24 Yet to use a form doth argue thou art a very babe who go by a form because they cannot go alone and to use a form when thou art able to powr out thine own heart more and better then any form can teach thee is to to offer to the Lord a corrupt thing when thou hast a male in thy flock Thou art a very babe till thou art able to express thy wants in conceived prayer what man is there that is sensible of his wants that cannot declare them to man and canst thou not declare them to God Christ hath given us this breviary of prayer as a looking-glass to see our wants Himself never used it nor could he in truth say Forgive us our trespasses seeing himself had none We never read the Apostles used this prayer but onely framed their petitions according to it Acts 1.24 Matth. 26.39 We ought then to look upon this as a pattern without which we might have wandred in our requests often asking things hurtful for us we ought then hence to draw the matter of our prayers This form or patern is usually divided into three p●rts 1 A Preface Our Father which art in Heaven 2 Petitions which are six or according to some of the Ancients seven 3 The Conclusion For thine is the Kingdom c. 1 The Preface Our Father which art in Heaven We call him Father 1 To shew that we are not to look upon him as a Tyrant or a Stranger that knows us not or as an hard Master but as a Father 2 To embolden us to come unto him 3 To shew his readiness to do you good Luke 11.13 If evil fathers will do good to their children will not our Father do good to his children 4 To shew that we believe our Election and Adoption 5 Assurance of his readiness and willingness to help us whereas formerly we durst not lift up our eys to Heaven Luke 15.18 Our 1 This word Our teacheth that however we believe for our selves yet Charity teacheth us to pray for others 2 To denote unto us a Communion of Saints how that they are so joyned together as if the want of one were the want of all 1 Cor. 12.26 If one member suffer all the members suffer with it 3 That we may not disdain the meanest Christian from being our Brother in Christ if God have adopted him for his Ephes 4.5 yet may a Christian in private say My Father Matth 26.39.27.46 4 To keep us from arrogating to our selves above others remembring we are of the company of sons On earth some Saints have more noble fathers than others but to the Father in Heaven all Believers are alike related 5 To encourage the weak that they may believe that God is no less their Father than the Father of Peter Paul c. 6 That we should not onely pray for our own necessities but also for the necessities of others James 5.16 applying in private Prayer that common Fatherhood to our selves And this Father we call upon we may look upon some times personally Ephes 3.14 1 Cor. 8.6 sometimes essentially for Father Son and Spirit so Christ is called the everlasting Father Isai 9.6 7 To teach us mutual sympathy 1 Cor. 12.26 If one member suffer all the members suffer with it Heb. 13.3 8 To teach us unity and agreement with our Brethren as members of the same body hence before we bring our gift we are to agree with our Brother Matth. 5.24 Which art in Heaven 1 To shew that how ever earthly parents have a good will to help their children yet want power yet our Father being in Heaven and being the God of all might hath power to do for us above all that we can ask or think Ephes 3.20 Psalm 115.3 2 To take away erroneous conceptions of God wherein carnal men are ready to think of him like earthly parents 3 To denote unto us his special presence he hath in Heaven there his power wisdom goodness do most shine forth and from thence are manifested to us Psalm 19.1 The Heavens declare the glory of God 4 That when we come before him we should come with reverence and lifting up of heart Lam. 3.41 Let us lift up our hearts with our hands to God in the Heavens where God is not circumscriptively as the body of man bounded by such a place nor definitively as the Angels but repletively filling all place for the Heaven of Heavens is not able to contain him 1 Kings 8.27 5 To shew to us that though God be every where Psalm 139.7 8 9. Whither shall I flee from thy presence If I ascend up into Heaven thou art there if I make my bed in Hell behold thou art there if in the uttermost parts of the Sea thou art there Amos 9.1 2 3. yet he is said to dwell in the Heavens Psalm 2.4 Hear from Heaven thy dwelling place 1 Kings 8.30 there his majesty and glory most shines forth Psalm 112.5.123.1 yet doth he dwell in humble and holy hearts Isai 57.15 1 Cor. 3.16 As the soul of man which is wholly in the whole and in every part yet is said to be in the head or heart more than elsewhere because there more than elsewhere it exerciseth his power and effects so though God be essentially every where and in all places wholly yet he works not grace and gifts equally in all parts but he works in Heaven more than in Earth in the godly more than the wicked and in one of his children more than in another in the Saints in Heaven 〈◊〉 than in the Saints on Earth and in the humane nature of Christ more than in any creature Hallowed be thy Name This is the first Petition and Christ his meaning is 1 That Gods glory be every where magnified it 's put in the first place because Gods glory must be preferred before all things Prov. 16.4 The Lord hath made all things for himself Thus must every one do that calls God Father So that if our credit or profit come in competition therewith we are willing to renounce not onely them but every thing else for the Lord. 2 That the Name of God which is God himself be magnified The Name of God is not so many Letters but God himself Holy and reverend is his Name Psalm 111.9 It was the speech of the men of Bethshemesh Who is able to stand before this holy Lord God 1 Sam. 6.20 God is glorious in holiness Exod. 15.11 The Trinity is said to be holy Isai 6.3 Holy holy holy Lord God of Hosts The Father is holy John 17.11 The Son holy Luke 1.35 Acts 4.27 The Spirit is holy Ephes 4.30 Grieve not the holy Spirit of God God is not onely holy but holiness in the very abstract Amos 4.2 The Lord hath sworn by his holiness that is by himself Saints are holy
Remission of sins which is spread over me Luth. Tom. 4.76 Now that happiness consists in forgiveness appears thus 1 Sin exposes us to all misery both in this life and hereafter Rom. 3.23 now it 's a happiness to be freed from this misery 2 The blessing cannot come upon us till the curse be removed Gal. 3 1● 14. now we are not freed from the curse till our sins be forgiven 3 Where God forgives there 's none can condemn Rom. 8.1.33.34 now it must needs be a state of happiness to be free from condemnation 4 Without forgiveness there 's no reconciliation now we can never be happy till God and the soul be reconciled That reconciliation goes with forgiveness appears 2 Cor. 5.19 God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them 2 Use Triall whether God hath forgiven thy sins 1 There will be then a writing of Gods Law in thy heart because the branches of the new covenant are inseparable Heb. 8.10 12. where God remembers sin no more he so writeth Gods Law in the heart 2 The sealing of the Spirit manifested to Gods people in Prayer Ephes 1.13 After ye believed ye were sealed Every comfortable answer in Prayer doth help to clear up pardon to the soul 3 A thankfull frame of heart in the receipt of this privilege Psalm 103.1 2. Bless the Lord O my soul why who forgiveth all thy sins Hezekiah praises God for this mercy Isai 38.17 Behold for peace I had great bitterness but thou in love to my soul hast delivered me from the pit of corruption for thou hast cast all my sins behinde thy back 1 Tim. 1.13 14 15. 4 With pardon there is a subdument of the reigning power of sin Mic. 7.18 19 Rom. 6.14 Rom. 8.1 2. Jebusites will dwell in the Land whether you will or no onely they are conquered and become tributary Josh 17.11 12. 5 Pardon of sin is accompanied with sanctifying grace as the Lord took Joshua's filthy garments off so he gave him change of raiment Josh 3.3 4. Ezek. 16.9 10 11. There 's ever a love goes to the Lord. Luke 7.47 speaking of Mary Magdalen he saith Her sins which are many are forgiven her for she loved much Her love was not the cause of remission but a declarative sign thereof the Pharisee findes fault with Christ for suffering a sinner to be so familiar with him Christ answers She is no sinner he proves it because her sins were forgiven her but how proves he that why she loved much And as it is accompanied with the grace of love so with the grace of fear Jer. 32.40 6 Repentance and Forgiveness goes together Luke 24.47 Acts 2.38 39. Acts 3.19 Acts 5.31 Therefore whatsoever evidences Repentance evidences Forgiveness 7 Pardon of sin is accompanied with sovereign love to God 1 John 4.19 We love him because he first loved us and for the degree see Matth. 10.37 so Mary Magdalen Luke 7.38 compared with v. 47. Love is in true Faith as the Fruit in the Root 8 Peace of Conscience is an evidence Rom. 5.1 being justified by Faith we have Peace with God I mean such a Peace as arises after trouble or deliverance from danger and frees the soul from slavish fears 9 A desire of more and more assurance This is an Argument that we have tasted the sweetness of Pardon in some measure There are three things proper to Saints they think they can never be humbled enough nor thankfull enough nor assured of Gods love enough Hence David after Nathan had come to him and assured him of pardon prays Psalm 51.8 Make me to hear joy and gladness that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoyce and not being satisfied herewith v. 12. he prays Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation Onely if the evidence of the Spirit shew not it self always in the same measure we must have recourse to those Evidences God gives sometimes knowing that these Evidences which come from the Spirit as a cause and the fruits of sanctification as effects are occasional refreshings for the soul in its way to Heaven but not daily food for the soul to feed upon Feasting is not for every day except the Feast of a good Conscience that the Conscience witnesses we live not in the omission of a known duty nor in the commission of a known iniquity 10 We know it by these three witnesses the blood of Christ pacifying the conscience 1 Joh. 5.9 the witness of water altering our natures and the testimony of the Spirit saying I am thy salvation thy sins are pardoned such testimonies ought to be carefully kept even as a malefactor carefully keeps a pardon under seal which he means to produce for his life at the next assizes between the Lord and a true believer there is as it were a mutual contract Faith sets to its feat that God is true in that he promiseth Joh. 3 3● And God by his Spirit seals unto the believer that he shall be undoubtedly brought to the salvation he hath bel●●●ed 11 When thou canst produce some promise that doth discharge 〈◊〉 which the Spirit ●●th made over to thy soul as that Esa 43.25 Joh. 3.16 It s not bare remembring promises is so comfortable as those promises made over to thy soul wherein thy soul rests and received comfort If a man have paid his debts he is able to produce his acquittance that they are paid When we have such promises so made over to produce they are as it were acquittances under hand and seal Suppose that without the in-come of the Spirit in the promise thou shouldest believe which I doubt of yet through the in-come of the Spirit in the promise thou mayest know that thou dost believe As the pipes of a conduit convey water hither and thither so doth the Spirit in the promise believed convey grace and comfort into our hearts Yet some think that when God gives a particular promise it is not to measure our condition by but to uphold the soul in the condition of desertion or temptation Hence though Hezekiah had a particular word for deliverance the three children had not 3 Use to believe the forgiveness of sins and labour after assurance thereof Wherefore came Christ into the world Wherefore hath he carried our nature into heaven and there appears for us Why hath he given us his oath Heb. 6. Why hath he given us the signes of the Covenant Why have we so many commands to believing and so many reproofs of unbelief Why have we besides the sealing of the promise with the bloud of the testator the sealing with the spirit of promise as a pledge a pawn and an earnest but onely to urge us to believe Though we will not believe a mans word or bond yet upon sufficient pawn we will deal though the man be but weak and shall we not trust God for that for which we have so good a pawn as his Spirit And in order to this thy
assurance of thy pardon get more and more earnest of the Spirit Men that deal in great matters love to get as good earnest as they can the fuller earnest the more security Again people keep and esteem an earnest more then other mony because it hath reference to further matters which other mony hath not So should we esteem the Spirits testimony as sealing us up unto the future inheritance in heaven at which day it shall cease to be any further an earnest as earnest mony ceases to be earnest when the whole sum is paid Mean time till we come into that glory the Spirit though it do not always confirm us to present sence yet doth it confirm us to present experience from the former workings thereof which we have felt as the former movings of the infant in the mothers womb confirm the mother that she is with childe though at the present she feel no moving at all thereof Obj. But the heart is deceitful Ans The Spirit in us is too holy to deceive and too wise to be deceived When there is an object to be seen and an eye to see and light to discover the object to the eye sight must needs follow so in a believer there is grace to be seen and an eye of faith to see it so is there a light of the Spirit discovering that grace to the soul Obj. But some as Papists and others think there can be no assurance of remission of sins and of salvation A. That we may be assured herein appears 1 The Word bids us make our pardon and salvation sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Heb. 6.11.10.22 which were in vain if such a thing could not be 2 The Saints have been assured hereof Job saith c. 19.25 I know that my Redeemer liveth and that I shall stand up with him on the earth at the last day and I shall see him not with other but with the same eys 2 Cor. 5.1 Paul saith We know if our earthly tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God Abraham Rom. 4.21 22. 1 John 3.14 1 John 5.14 15. We know we are translated from death to life we know we have the petitions desired 1 Pet. 5.1 I am also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed Peter speaks of himself in this life Obj. But what these Saints had they had by special revelation Answ No. For the Saints Peter writes to had obtained like precious faith with himself 2 Pet. 1.1 And Paul saith I am perswaded that neither life nor death shall be able to separate us from the love of God See he names other believers as well as himself Rom. 8.38 39. 2 All the Saints have the same Spirit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 though not in the same degree Timothy saith I know whom I have trusted 2 Tim. 1.12 See there is a certainty in knowledge The Hebrews knew in themselves they had a better and enduring substance which was the ground they not only patiently suffered but also joyfully endured the spoyling of their temporal substance Heb. 10.34 They did not onely conjecture it but knew it in themselves Peter when Christ asked him whether or no he loved him he did not answer Lord thou knowest we cannot tell truly whether or no we love thee but appeals unto Christ saying Thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee John 21.15 16 17. Peter mentions it three times shewing the undoubted assurance he had thereof 3 The Scripture bids us prove our selves as concerning our estate to God ward Gal. 6.4 Let a man prove himself that he may have rejoycing in himself alone 1 Cor. 11.28 Let a man examine himself and so let him eat 2 Cor. 13.5 Examine your selves whether you be in the faith This bidding us search our conscience according to the rule and the declaring that rejoycing followes thereon doth denote unto us that assurance of remission of sins may be had It is ridiculous to think that the Spirit should bid us search for that which cannot be found 4 That certainty and assurance of salvation may be had appears from the many signes and evidences the word of God sets down of our being in Christ of our having the Spirit of our regeneration uprightness confidence to say that he that hath these graces is not sure whether he have them or no is a great mistake for do not I know that I love the Lord better then any thing that I love my brother yea mine enemies that I combate against all sin hunger after righteousnesse that my heart closeth with every command of God that I hate all sin do not I know that I have comfottable answers from God in prayer when I have them Comfortlesse is the assurance of hope arising from humane conjecture allowed by Papists and differs from Theological or divine hope arising from faith 5 The doctrine of doubting of remission of sins or conjectural hoping for salvation is a comfortlesse doctrine for 1 It kills our joy and thankfulness for how can I joy in or be thankfull to him who for ought I know may damn me another day and how can I joy in a thing which I know not whether I shall have or no 2 This doctrine of doubting stuns and hinders our proceeding in a godly course How can a man have a heart to go on when he cannot tell whether all he doth will come to any thing yea or no The Scripture ordinarily exhorts to duty from the knowledge we have that our labour will not be in vain Gal. 6.9 Be not weary in well doing knowing in due season you shall reap if ye faint not 1 Cor. 15.28 Be ye alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know your labour will not be in vain 3 The doctrine of doubting must needs fill the conscience with much anguish and anxiety A man that is condemned and hath no way to escape but by a pardon must needs be in perplexity of mind till he know of his pardon so must the soul needs be that sees its own lost estate and knows nothing of the pardon of his sins 6 From experimental feeling when I trust to a person promising to give or lend me any thing I know I trust to him and rest on him for what he hath promised and shal I by faith rest on Christ and know no such thing 7 From the testimony of the renewed conscience for our spirits regenerate witness our good estate Rom. 8.16 Yea even this is witnessed even in weak Christians though with some fear of the contrary the poor man cryed out Mark 9 2● Lord I believe help my unbelief How could we say we believe if we could not know it we cannot speak that truly whereof we can have no certainty 8 From the seal of the Spirit witnessing with our spirits Take heed of expecting such inward witness of the spirit as some expect viz. a discovering of your adoption without first discovering the signes of it as if by an
Jesus knowing their thoughts said Why think ye evil in your hearts Jesus knowing their thoughts Here was one note of his God-head to know the thoughts 1 Cor. 2.11 What man knows the things of a man save the spirit of man which is in him He must needs be God which did this 1 Joh. 2.24 25. Jesus did not commit himself to them because he knew all men and needed not that any should testifie of man for he knew what was in man He did not know their hearts by outward gestures as by whispering laughing but he knew their hearts without signes when they sat quiet and still nor did he know them by the revelation of another as the Prophets did 1 King 14.3 4. as the Prophet Ahiah did the wife of Jeroboam but by his own power as being the searcher of hearts which God onely is And needs must he know the thoughts because he created the heart Psal 94.10 11. besides else how should he make manifest the counsels and secrets of the heart Rom. 2.16 1 Cor. 4.5 Why think ye evil in your hearts That is false malitious and blasphemous things as if I were onely a man when I am God These thoughts were evil 1 coming from the devil and their wicked hearts 2 In respect of matter as being derogatory to the majesty of Christ From this two observations 1 The thoughts of men are known to Christ 2 The consideration of this that our thoughts are known to Christ should be a check unto us from thinking evil in our hearts Obs The thoughts of men are known to Christ 1 Because he is God now all thoughts are known to God Gen. 6.5 God saw that every imagination of the heart of man was onely evil continually Job 21.27 I know your thoughts and the devices which ye wrongfully imagine against me Job 42.2 No thought can be withholden from thee yea God perceives and knows the inward thoughts of the heart Psal 49.11 Their inward thought is their houses shall continue Amos 4.13 he declares unto man his thought Psal 139.23 Try me and know my thoughts Psal 50.22 1 Cor. 3.20 2 Because he is the searcher of the heart Rev. 2.23 All the Churches shall know that I am he that searcheth the reins and the heart now the thoughts being a great part of the heart he must needs know them Luke 9.47 When the Disciples were thinking which of them should be greatest Jesus perceiving the thought of their heart took a little childe and set him before them Matth. 12.24 25. 3 Because he hath discovered to men their thoughts as here to these Scribes and to Judas before he acted any treason Luke 5.32 Luke 24.38 when the Disciples were affrighted Christ says Why do thoughts arise in your hearts The woman of Samaria John 4.29 He told me all that ever I did Use 1 To confirm unto us the God-head of Christ why because he knows our thoughts 2 Beware 1 Of vain thoughts which is 1 For matter when we shall think on foolish things Prov. 24.9 The thought of foolishness is sin 2 For manner when we shall think of God and good things in an unholy manner either irreverently or idolatrously Psal 50.23 Thou thoughtest I was such an one as thy self 3 For order when we shall think of good things disorderly If a Printer print never so well yet if one word stand where another should it will quite spoil the book 4 For end when we shall be thinking of good things for a bad end as to be thinking of the Scriptures how to colour over some sin to be thinking of God in extremities that he might deliver us out of this or that trouble resolving still to follow our lusts 2 Beware of wicked thoughts Prov. 30.32 If thou hast thought evil in thy heart lay thy hand upon thy mouth Esai 55.6 7. Let the righteous man forsake his thoughts Acts 8.22 Repent of this thy wickedness and pray God if perhaps the thoughts of thy heart may be forgiven thee 5 Though they think of God they delight not to think of him Rom. 1.28 they think of God but they know not how to shun it Obj. But thoughts are free Answ In Courts of men they are because man cannot make a Law that can reach the thoughts but not in the Court of heaven Jer. 6.19 I will bring upon them the fruit of their thoughts Obj. But we cannot hinder wicked and vain thoughts from arising in the heart Answ We cannot hinder them from being but we may hinder them from lodging in us Jer. 4.14 We cannot hinder persons from coming to our house but we can hinder them from lodging in our house we cannot hinder a Bird from flying over our heads but we may keep it from making a nest in our hair Q. Whence come these wicked thoughts in the heart Answ 1 From Satan who inspires and injects evil motions These sometimes are discerned by the suddenness coming like a flash of Lightning by their violence It 's a sad thing to have the devil Lord of our imagination as in Judas John 13.12 By their strangeness being thrown in as Josephs cup in Benjamins sack By their unnaturalness tending to destroy so to Christ Cast thy self down Thus Satan suggested to David to number the people 1 Chron. 21.1 Some think it more sad for the devil to run away with our thoughts then estates 2 From corruption Matth. 15.19 Out of the Heart proceed evil thoughts Jam. 1.14 15. Now whether they come from Satan or corruption they shall not be imputed to us if we disallow them Obj. I disallow them Answ If thou doest they will be burdens to thee and thou wilt complain to God in prayer against them and strive to turn thy imagination from them to God that the thoughts of God may be the possessions of thy heart 3 Try what thy thoughts are whether they be good or bad Trials 1 When they come from a good principle within A good man hath a good treasure in his heart Matth. 12.35 and from thence he brings forth good things hence his purposes are onely good Prov. 11.23.12.5 2 When good thoughts are not onely cast into the soul but we study them Many think because they have some thoughts of death judgement heaven and hell of repentance God and Christ therefore their hearts are good but these thoughts are onely the hauntings of the spirit to leave them more inexcusable Contrarily godly men strive to study good thoughts Psal 119.59 3 Whether are the good thoughts thou hast transient or permanent and abiding Gen. 6.5 The Lord saw all the thoughts of mens hearts were vain Obj. They had some good thoughts how could this be Answ They were vain for want of duration 4 Whether are thy thoughts brought forth into act Godly men act the good they think of Psal 119.59 I thought upon my wayes what then followed I turned my feet into thy testimonies Luke 15.18 The Prodigal thought of his misery what followed
and grace 2 Tim. 1.6 Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift of God which is in thee by the putting on of the Hands of me Paul speaks of such gifts and graces as were raked up in ashes as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies which the Apostle bids him rake out of the ashes or make alive as you do fire almost dead by blowing of it Object But this gift and grace given to Timothy was given by the Presbyters when he was ordained an Evangelist and not by Pauls laying on of hands after Baptism Answ Paul speaks of such a gift as was given by the laying on of his own hands 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the Imposition in Ordination to Preaching was by the Hands of all the Eldership 1 Tim. 4.14 where the Greek words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying a conjunction of persons but 2 Tim. 1.6 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to denote the act of one man Object But the Apostles who laid on Hands after Baptism were such Apostles as were immediately called of Christ as Peter John and Paul how will the Consequence hold from them to the Apostles of the Churches Answ There 's a twofold Call 1 Immediate or personal 2 Mediate or virtual the Apostles of the Churches though they act not by an immediate and personal call yet they act by a mediate or virtual call of Christ 2 Matthias though chosen mediately of the Church had the same power the eleven had who were immediately called of Christ why may not then Apostles chosen of the Churches have the same power For what difference betwixt the eleven called immediately and Matthias called mediately or any others of like kindes when they can make their power appear and so much the more when persons whether immediately or mediately called can make one and the same end appear in their Office viz. the work of the Ministry the perfecting the Saints the edifying the Body of Christ Quaere Whether there be any essential difference betwixt the twelve Apostles and the Apostles of the Churches 3 If Imposition after Baptism belong onely to Apostles called immediately it had been in vain to have called it a Foundation to have conjoyned it with Faith and the Resurrection sith the persons that had the administring of it were most of them dead and the rest in a short time would be dead Ergo I conclude that Apostles whether called immediately or mediately may lay on Hands on baptized persons Object But if laying on of hands be an ordinance of Christ what is conveyed in it Answ An increase of the Spirit 2 Tim. 1.6 Stir up the gift of God which is in thee by the putting on of the hands of me So that as the Spirit is conveyed in the use of prayer Luk. 11.13 and preaching Act. 10.44 Gal. 3.3 5. and Baptisme Gal. 3.28 and supper 1 Cor. 10.16 so also is it conveyed in the laying on of hands Quest But what are those gifts of the Spirit which are or may be conveyed in laying on of hands Answ 1 An increase of all habits of grace as 1 Boldness to confess Christ When Paul bids Timothy stir up the gift of God which was in him ver 7. he shows what gift he means even boldness for God ver 7. God hath not given us a spirit of fear but of power of love and of a sound mind ver 8. Be not thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of the Lord. q.d. he that hath received the Spirit aright in laying on of hands hath an habitual intention to confess without blushing against all oppositions whatsoever or at least it is his duty so to have 2 The Spirit is a free agent dividing to every one severally as he pleaseth 1 Cor. 12.11 to one is given a word of wisdom and knowledge to another strengthning grace to another comfort to another power to resist temptations to another constancy the Spirit knowing what grace is most wanting to his people in a right receiving of an ordinance is wont to help herein Yet know that laying on of hands is not all this ordinance or the principal part thereof but prayer is the principal So much Melchiades de consecra dist 5. The holy Spirit gives beauty in Baptisme to innocency in confirmation he performes an increase to grace Chemnitius cites some sentences out of the ancients as out of Urban All believers by the laying on of the hands of the Bishops ought to receive the Spirit after Baptisme that they may be found full Christians and he the same person gives to confirmation these prayers that we may become spiritual that the heart may be enlarged to wisdom and constancy that we may be wise to discerne good and evil to resist malice to resist wicked desires that we being kindled with the love of eternal life may be able to lift up our mindes from earthly to heavenly things Clemens saith a person Baptized receives the seven forme grace of the Spirit else in no wise can he be a perfect Christian nor have a place among the perfect Although he have been Baptized after he shows what he means hereby viz. a spirit of wisdom and understanding a spirit of counsel and strength a Spirit of knowledge-and godliness and fill him with the fear of God So much the compilers of the Common Prayer-book thought who after they had acknowledged laying on of hands ought to be retained saying we make supplication unto thee for these children upon whom after the example of thy holy Apostles we have laid our hands to certifie them by this signe of thy favour and goodness towards them come to adde that they apprehended an increase of grace to be conveyed therein as in the first prayer of confirmation appeareth in these words Almighty God who hast vouchsafed to regenerate these thy servants by water and the holy Ghost and hast given unto them forgiveness of all their sins strengthen them O Lord with the holy Ghost the Comforter and daily increase in them the manifold gifts of grace the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and Ghostly strength the Spirit of knowledge and true Godliness and fulfill them O Lord with the Spirit of thy holy fear Amen And then the Bishop laying on his hands said these words Defend O Lord this child with thy heavenly grace that he may continue thine for ever and daily increase in thy holy Spirit more and more untill he come to thy everlasting Kingdom And in the rubrick after confirmation none were to be admitted to the Lords Supper till such times as they were confirmed Object But if the Spirit be conveyed in Laying on of Hands let us see a Promise of God for it that an increase of the gifts and graces of the Spirit shall be given therein Answ A command of God is enough to receive an Ordinance though there were no Promise annexed concerning benefits herein Now I have before proved a command 2 Some
draw out some words that shall be against the Governours or the Laws of the place where you live Matth. 22.15 16 17. 2 Take heed of feigned and treacherous men who shall bring you to Councils Psal 55.12 13 14. 3 Of enticing men who shall perswade you by flatteries to deny the faith Dan. 11.32 34. 4 Take heed of all natural men indefinitely It behoves Christians to stand upon their guard seeing all men naturally have an hatred unto them therefore must we beware of them though they be civil and courteous For they will deliver you up to the Councils Not onely unto the Council of three and twenty but also to the great Synedrium or the Council of 70. of which mention was made cap. 5.23 so was Peter and John Acts 4.7.5.27 and Stephen Acts 6.12 And they will scourge you in their Synagogues Acts 5.40 Peter and John were so scourged Heb. 11.36 For even by Synagogues civil Courts were meant 1 Machab. 7.12 Of this mention is made Acts 5.21 The high Priest came and they that were with him and called the Council together and all the Senate of the children of Israel The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all the Eldership of the children of Israel Because the things they acted against the Apostles seemed to be dangerous to the Commonwealth they took the voices and advices of the chief men herein they joyned the Senate of the City with the Senate of the people This was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the great Synagogue So that Christ his speech ascends higher then before so that his meaning is You shall not only be brought before ordinary Consistories but extraordinary Conventions and Assemblies shall be called together to try you Before this extraordinary Convention the Apostles were beaten with rods V. 18. And ye shall be brought before Governours and Kings for my sake for a testimony against them and the Gentiles And ye shall be brought before Governours and Kings Christ still ascends higher in his speech to wit that for the witness of his truth they should be brought before Governours and Kings By Governors he means Vice roys and Governors of Nations Provinces and also before Kings that depute such Governours For the distinction of Governours from Kings see 1 Pet. 2.13 Submit your selves to every Ordinance of man whether unto the King as excelling the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or unto Governours as to those that are sent of him Besides when Christians have been condemned by Councils the execution of them hath been by secular powers as in Queen Maries raign and now under the Spanish inquisition Yea many times Princes have themselves sate in judgment against Christians as the Emperour Sigismond c. When Christians shall thus be brought before Kings and Governours Christ would have his Disciples not to be dazled with the glister of earthly Majesty but to be of undanted spirits when they come before them as Paul was before Nero 2 Tim. 4.17 Thus Paul was brought prisoner to Faelix and Festus Acts 23.24 Peter and James to King Herod Agrippa Under pretence of Law civil judicatories condemn and execute Christians For my sake Because ye preach me to be the Messias and that through faith in me all that believe shall obtain remission of sins We should look to the cause why we suffer even that we suffer for Christ Hence Peter and John rejoyced that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for his name 1 Pet. 4.14 15 16. If any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed Rom 8.36 For thy sake we are killed all the day long Meaning in one place or other either actually or by way of sympathy Indeed the Princes and Councils of the world have other pretences for their malice against Christians but the true cause is for the sake of Christ But if we be brought before Kings and Governours let it be onely for the sake of Christ Let none of you suffer as thieves and murtherers and busie-bodies c. 1 Pet. 4 15. For a testimony against them and the Gentiles That is to witness against the Council and the great Convention of the Jews and to witness for me against the Rulers and Kings of the earth Your imprisonment whipping and death shall witness both to Jew and Gentile Qu. But how or wherein Answ 1 That you have witnessed the truth before them and therefore that you are free from their blood 2 They shall witness your ingratitude in the day of Christ and their faithfulness 3 They shall be inexcusable in the day of judgement when they shall alledge they knew not Christ Moses went to Pharaoh Exod. 7.3 and Isai to a stubborn people c. 6.9 so Ezekiel c. 2.2 to v. 8. That they might be without excuse 4 They shall be witness against you for not believing their Message The Lord will call out Peter and say Didst not thou warn the Jews and to Paul Didst not thou warn the Gentiles the Romans and Faelix and Agrippa he will say Yes Lord but they would not believe but instead of receiving our Message they whipt and imprisoned us Was it so will the Lord say and the unbeliever will then be speechless What follows Christ will say Depart thou cursed into everlasting fire 5 As wounds and scars testifie the constancy valour and faithfulness of Souldiers to their Prince or General so Prisons whippings torments shall testifie the faithfulness of Christians to Christ Luke 21.13 V. 19. But when they deliver you up take no thought how or what ye shall speak for it shall be given you in that hour what ye shall speak Here is a consolation when they should be brought to answer before Kings and Governours that the Spirit should pour into their mindes what they should speak Take no thought how or what ye shall speak Not as if we were in this case to be careless stupid or negligent but Christ means we should not be carkingly carefull or over fearfull The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 21.14 Settle it in your hearts before hand not to meditate what you shall answer in which Christ doth not forbid all foregoing meditation but that which hath a distrust of the providence and help of Christ And all laborious preparation such as is used in speeches and oratory and therefore Mark hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the like sense Christ forbad carefulness for the morrow Matth. 6.25 that is perplexing and distracting carking Therefore those who are daily in expectation of suffering in their questions and torments should be much in prayer that God would give them wisdom to answer and courage to suffer For it shall be given you in that hour what ye shall speak That is if any thing be wanting in you the Spirit shall supply it and suggest it to you Acts 6.10 The Libertines were not able to resist the Spirit by which Stephen spake Luke 21.15 I will give you a
mouth and a tongue which all your adversaries should not be able to gainsay or resist And here Christ meets with an Objection which the Apostles might make viz. Whence shall we that are unable to speak defend our selves and cause against Councils great Assemblies and Princes who many times with their presence astonish great Orators To this Christ saith I will give you a mouth and a tongue Christ will not leave his Witnesses in the midst of danger V. 20. For it is not you that speak but the Spirit of your Father that speaketh in you Christ further strengthens his Disciples as to discouragement about their own weakness whereas they might object we are fishermen though it should be spoken to us yet we cannot being unlearned be able to speak to this Christ saith It 's not you that speak but the Spirit of your Father that speaketh in you Will a father leave a childe when he knows he is in hazard of life for his fathers sake and will your heavenly Father leave you in danger for the witness of his truth Surely no. And look as the preparation of the heart and answer of the tongue is from the Lord Prov. 16.1 so shall the Spirit not onely dictate unto you fit Arguments and Apologies but also shall form your tongues to express them even to the astonishment of your Adversaries The Council Acts 4.13 when they saw the boldness of Peter and John and perceived that they were unlearned and ignorant men they marvelled Acts 5.27 28 29. Acts 7.51 52 53 54. Now in that Christ saith it is not you it is not meant absolutely but comparatively not so much you as the Spirit of God by you The help of Angels at such a time to assist is much but the assistance of the Spirit is far more without which in such an hour of temptation the best parts and abilities would fail There cannot be a greater assistant than this Spirit Luk. 21.15 This comparative speech is like that Matth. 9.13 I will have mercy not sacrifice that is not so much sacrifice as mercy The force of the Argument is It 's not so much your cause as mine and my Fathers therefore my Spirit and the Spirit of my Father shall answer for you As when Balaams Ass spoke it was not so much the Ass that spoke as the Lord in the Ass Numb 22.28 so it was the Spirit that spoke in the Apostles Acts 4.19 and in Stephen V. 21. And the brother shall deliver up the brother to death and the father the childe and the children shall rise up against their parents and cause them to be put to death Here 's a third evil to which Christians must look to be exposed to viz. as the hatred of all men in general so of their own kinsmen in particular because the hatred they have against you for the cause of Christ is stronger than the bond of natural affection Hence it breaks in pieces the bond of natural love Hence as it was in Christs kindred that not onely they would not believe in him John 7.5 but also said he was mad Mark 3.21 so is it in worldly men who hate their relations for difference of Religion Hence Ishmael hated Isaak and Esau persecuted Jacob and Josephs brethren sold him Alphonsus Diazius slew his brother John for the confession of the Gospel Sleydan lib. 17. We see the like History in the Life of Woodman persecuted by his own brother in Queen Maries time This should quiet our hearts when we see our friends and kindred rage against us for conscience sake It should also learn us not to be too confident in carnal relations how near soever allied to us Micah 7.5 Trust ye not in a friend put ye not confidence in a guide keep the doors of thy mouth from her that lieth in thy bosom He that is false in his duty to God how can he be expected to be faithfull to friends Learn also in declining times when friends prove false to look to God Micah 7.6 7. The son dishonoureth his father and the daughter riseth up against her mother therefore saith Micah I will look unto the Lord I will wait for the God of my salvation This unfaithfulness was not onely a symptome of those bad times but it hath been the frame of many carnal hearts since V. 22. And ye shall be hated of all men for my Names sake but he that shall endure unto the end the same shall be saved And ye shall be hated of all men That is of all unregenerate men that receive not Christ whether they be Jews or Gentiles noble or base whether kindred or strangers old and young Wicked men hate all good men if not actually because they know them not yet habitually they do if they knew them they would hate them even for the good in them Psalm 38.20 which hatred proceeds from that enmity put betwixt the Seed of the Woman and the Seed of the Serpent Gen. 3.15 As love arises from similitude so doth hatred from dissimilitude The World cannot hate you but me it hateth John 7.7 Why because I testifie the works thereof are evil The World also hates Saints because they are not of the World John 15.19 For my Names sake That is for a powerfull profession of it The Gentiles raged much as Augustine observes because they heard that Jesus Christ would be worshipped alone now they thought it absurd that they should cast off all their other gods continued to them for so many ages for him alone Not onely Papists but carnal Protestants rage against the godly of the time if they will witness Christ in any powerfull manner and follow the Light of Gods Word further than the times will bear I am guilty of such and such evils said Bradford but this is not that mine Enemies persecute in me but Christ Nor is it to be forgotten that because the word of Christ in the mouth of Saints urges an union with the hearts of wicked men hence those who urge herein are hated especially if it be any such part of the word as exposeth to some present cross Besides it was the manner for Scholers to be called by their Masters names as Aristoteleans Pythagoreans so Christians are called from their profession of Christ Acts 11.26 and for the profession of living by the rules of their Masters is it that Christians suffer 1 Pet. 4.15 If any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed Acts 5.41 Peter and John rejoyced that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for his name But he that shall endure unto the end the same shall be saved Here is 1 A duty 2 A promise The duty is to endure to the end to endure all persecutions hatreds adversities to the end both of the persecutions and of life To obtain the crown it 's not enough once and again to overcome but to overcome and endure to the end and this is some comfort that though they be long they will
countrey he was willing to go with Christ Luke 8.38 3 His obedience when Christ sent him back again to his own countrey and kindred he was willing to go trying whether that effect of Doctrine which could not be by Christ might by him being one of their own countrey become effectual withall in sending him thus Christ shews that an active life is to be preferred before a contemplative first the body must be exercised in labour and then be refreshed by contemplation CHAP. IX V. 1. And he entred into a Ship and passed over and came into his own City V. 2. And behold they brought unto him a man sick of the Palsey lying on a Bed Jesus seeing their faith saith to the sick of the Palsey Son be of good chear thy sins be forgiven thee WE have in this story 1 The return of Christ from the countrey of the Gergesenes into his own City Capernaum whence lately he came v. 1. 2 His miraculous power in not onely healing a man sick of the Palsey but also forgiving his sins v. 2. 3 The cavil of the Scribes against him charging him with blasphemy for his forgiving the Palsey-man v. 3. 4 Christ his vindication of himself together with his asserting his power to forgive sins 1 By his knowing their thoughts Why think ye evil in your hearts v. 4. 2 Because he was able to do the thing which was more hard therefore he was able to do that which was more easie v. 5 6. Whether is it easier to say Thy sins be forgiven thee or to say Arise and walk q. d. You think it harder to heal a Palsey man than to forgive sins now you have seen me do that which you think harder therefore can I without blasphemy do that which is easier 5 The effect this Miracle had among the Multitude they 1 Marvelled 2 Glorified God who had given such power to men v. 8. He came into his own City That is of Capernaum called his own because usually he dwelt there and preached more Sermons and did more Miracles there than elsewhere That Capernaum is meant here appears Mark 2.1 Matthew saith cap. 4.13 Leaving Nazareth he came and dwelt in Capernaum They brought him a man sick of the Palsey lying on a bed A palsey is the dissolution of the sinews of the body which are the instruments of motion without which a man cannot move or walk Hence this Palsey man was born of four Mar. 2.3 For charity requires that the well and healthy succour the sick Luke sets down there was so great a multitude came to the house where Christ was that no man could come in Hence those that bore the Palsey-man uncovered the roof and let down the Palsey-man to Christ though doubtless the rubbish did fall down yet was not Christ offended Herewith learn we to take all opportunities to come to Christ and to bring others to him Jesus seeing their faith saith to the sick of the Palsey Son be of good cheer thy sins be forgiven thee Christ seeing both the faith of the Palsey-man and of those that brought him speaks thus not as if another mans faith can profit to the forgiveness of our sins but hereby Christ applies pardon to the Palsey-man and to so many as believed who helped to bring him to Christ Thy sins be forgiven thee Nothing will cheer the soul unless forgiveness of sins go along with it not to have a disease removed Christ is not onely the Physician of diseases but of sins first he forgives the sins and then heals the Palsey to show that sin is the root and fountain of diseases Whereas the conscience of former evils might perplex the Palsey-man that he should not obtain healing Christ tells him that sin the cause of sickness was pardoned and therefore he might comfortably expect healing This was not faith of miracles which is a confidence of a future miracle but faith of justification which if the Palsey-man had not before by Christ his speaking it was wrought in him but it seems he had it before in that Christ calls him Son Quest Why did Christ first forgive his sins before healing of him Answ 1 Because sin was the cause of sickness and to remove the effect there must be first a removing of the cause Palsey and other diseases arise rather from sin then from natural causes 2 That forseeing the calumny of the Pharisees against Christ his miracle Christ might prove his Godhead first by this that he knew the thoughts secondly by this that he had power on earth to forgive sins We may see Christs bounty that he heals the whole man Joh. 7.23 Learn we from our afflictions to reflect upon our sins as the cause of them V. 3. And behold certain of the Scribes said within themselves This man blasphemeth Here 's the calumny of the Scribes and Pharisees against Christ which was this he that is not God but takes upon him power to forgive sins he blasphemes but Jesus the Son of man is not God and yet takes upon him power to forgive sins therefore he blasphemes The proposition was most true 1 Because none can forgive offences against God but against whom they are committed 2 Because to forgive sins in God is not onely to forgive the guilt but the punishment and curse but the Pharisees err'd in the assumption Hence Christproved himself by two reasons that he was God Within themselves Not among themselves as if they had been murmuring one among another of Christs doings hence Matthew saith not v. 4. Jesus knowing their words but saith Jesus knowing their thoughts Now that they said within themselves was as Mark tells us cap. 2.7 Who can forgive sins but God alone Isa 43.25 I am he that blot out thine iniquities Mic. 6.18 Who is a God like unto thee forgiving iniquity transgression and sin Jer. 31.34 I will forgive their iniquity and remember their sins no more It s like the Scribes remembring these and such like places and not considering what was spoken out of the Old Testament concerning the Messiah conceived these murmurings in their hearts This man blasphemeth Omitting the acceptions of this word as else where it is taken here it signifies to arrogate that which belongs unto God unto a mans self The Lawyers or Scribes thought this power mentioned 2 Sam. 12.7 Nathan to David saith The Lord hath put away thine iniquity was incommunicable now Christ in token that he had this power 1 Works a miracle 2 Searches their hearts which is onely peculiar to God 1 King 8.39 Thou onely knows the hearts of the children of men Jer. 17.10 11. I the Lord search the heart 1 Sam. 16.7 The Lord looks upon the heart Rom. 8.27 Yet was the arguing of these Scribes of no weight to reason thus God never gave the power of forgiveness of sins to any man hitherto therefore he cannot grant it none of the Prophets could do it therefore the Messias shall not be able to do it V. 4. And