Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n abundance_n glorious_a great_a 39 3 2.1554 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A04619 A commentary vpon the Epistles of Saint Paul to Philemon, and to the Hebrewes together with a compendious explication of the second and third Epistles of Saint Iohn. By VVilliam Iones of East Bergholt in Suffolke, Dr. in Divinity, and sometimes one of the fellowes of the foundation of Emmanuel Colledge in Cambridge. Jones, William, 1561-1636. 1635 (1635) STC 14739.5; ESTC S112377 707,566 758

There are 13 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Gods Councell as the Preachers be at this day the Iewes were honoured that God would speake to them by them but to us hee hath spoken by his onely Sonne therefore our honour is the greater we are set in an high chaire of dignity above them happy are the eyes that see that which we see Many Prophets and Kings have desired to see these things which we see and have not seene them God give us grace to use our happinesse to his glory and the salvation of us all In this the Old and New Testament are equall God is the Author of them both God spake by the Prophets then and he speaketh now by his Ministers The word of the Lord the burthen of the Lord thus saith the Lord. These were the preambles of all the Prophets God spake by the mouth of David as he spake by the mouth of all his Prophets So God speaketh by the mouth of the Preachers at this present day It is not you that speak but the spirit of your Father which speaketh in you Wee are the Ambassadours for Christ as though God did beseech you by us When we teach God teacheth when we exhort God exhorteth when we reprove sinne God reproveth sin It makes no matter what the man be that speaketh so as he be the lawfull Minister of Christ God speaketh by the man when the man speaketh Gods word When the Ambassadour of the King of Denmark of France or any other Countrey speaketh in the Court the King speaketh whose person he doth represent when my Lord Chiefe Iustice gives the charge at the Assizes the King gives the charge for he sustaines the Kings Person and is a Commissioner for the King so when the Preacher speakes in the Pulpit when he in Gods name gives a charge against pride malice c. God himselfe speakes and gives the charge Oh that this were imprinted in the hearts of all that come to Church the Preacher is a man as thou art but God speakes by him and if thou despise him thou despisest God that speakes in him VERSE 2. WE have seene the estate of them in the time of the Law Now let us take a view of our condition under the Gospell Theirs were the first dayes ours be the last In those that were the first dayes some new Doctrine was daily to be expected but in these last dayes GOD hath opened to us his whole counsell there is no mint of any new Doctrine to be looked for now nothing but the second comming of our SAVIOUR CHRIST is to be expected which hath revealed the whole will of his Father to us If an Angel from Heaven preach any other Doctrine than that which wee have received in these last dayes let him bee accursed 2 In the last dayes there is greatest aboundance of knowledge In the last dayes I will powre out my Spirit on all flesh GOD then was sparing of his Spirit he sent it downe by drops but now he powres it out upon the Church they had the Moone-light we have the Sun-light Therefore if we be ignorant our condemnation shall be the greater as GOD knowes a number of ignorant persons are in this glorious light of the Gospell yea in those Towns where the Candle of Gods Word hath shined brightly these many yeares together The preaching of the Word is a well of water but we will not come with our buckets to fetch water at this Well or if we doe we come with riven buckets the water runs out by and by 3 These last dayes wherein we live are the most dangerous sinne overfloweth with a full streame In the last dayes perillous times shall come Never did sin shew her selfe with such a brazen face as it doth now Men now stick not to set themselves against the Word of GOD it selfe to call the authority of the Scripture in question whether all things be true in it or not To band themselves against the Preachers if not openly yet secretly and to pull downe if possible the Church it selfe these be the last times wherein we live GOD keepe us in them by his holy Spirit 4 Seeing they be the last dayes let us not be so much in love with them Will any be bestowing great cost on his house the last day when he is to goe out of it These are the last dayes of the world wherein we are ready to be turned out of the house of this world therefore let us not be inflamed too much with the love of it In the first dayes when they entred first into the farme of the world they might be merry and jocund we live in the last dayes when we cannot have long to tarry in it therefore let us not be glewed and wedded to it let us use this world as if we used it not for the fashion of this world fadeth away in these last dayes let us so live that whensoever Christ comes to judgement we may meet him joyfully in the Ayre and be translated with him into his kingdome of glory Spoken unto us 1. To the Apostles first that saw and heard him then to all Christians His must be understood Mat. 21.37 But last of all he sent unto them his Son in his Sonne Col. 2.9 For in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily The which Sonne speaketh to us by his Ministers to the worlds end they had servants to speake to them but God hath spoken to us by his Son yet even his Son is little regarded Many of the Pharisies knew him to be the Son of God this is the Heire yet they said come let us kill him I am perswaded if CHRIST were now alive and preached many yeeres together in this Towne yet there be some so maliciously set against the Word and the preachers of it that they could finde in their hearts to kill him Hee that heareth you heareth me and he that goeth about to kill them goes about to kill CHRIST too What a vile age doe we live in What manner of Son not adopted but naturall 1 Heire The Son is the Fathers Heire he hath a right and interest to all his Fathers goods and lands when his Father is dead he hath the same power lordship and authority over all that his Father had So Christ Psa. 2.8 Iohn 16.15 Ioh. 17.10 Yet God his Father never dieth He is Heire as God and Man the King and Mediator of the Church All power is given unto mee in Heaven and Earth God appointed Him He did not intrude Himselfe He was not appointed Heire because being in time made He deserved it by His holy life as Photinus said not only Heire in time but with the Father before all times Of all Of all persons as well as of all things CHRIST hath a right to all he that taketh away any thing bequeathed to the Heire by the Will and Testament of his Father robs the Heire and is guilty of theft if we goe about to take
the levitie of it for the matter A short thing not worth the reading then away with the LORDS prayer with some of the small Prophets Abdie Nabum Sephonie Who art thou that despisest the day of small things Zach. 4.10 There was a little Citie and a wise poore man in it So here is a little Epistle and a wise poore man in it namely Onesimus whom God made rich in faith and in the graces of the spirit Our little Sister sayes the Church must not be contemned He that made the Camell and the Elephant made the Ant and the Bee too The same God is Author of little Epistles as well as of great they be all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inspired from above by God God made Pella as well as Hierusalem Lot said of Zoar is it not a little one Let my soule fly thither and live this Epistle is but a little one yet fly hither and your soule shall live Ye shall find much heavenly foode in it the shorter the way is the sooner it may be gone the shorter the Epistle is the sooner it may be read therefore read it to the comfort and instruction of you all The second thing that displeased them was the levitie of it for the matter of the Epistle trifling things are handled in it 1. It was written 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for one man that good Shepheard left 99. sheepe in the Wildernesse and sought up one One soule is to bee saved being more worth than a world One man is Gods Image and our brother therefore not to be neglected 2. For a base man 1. A servant CHRIST tooke on him the forme of a servant In saeculo there is great difference betweene a Master and a servant In Christo equall CHRIST died for servants as well as for masters Saul sought his fathers Asses and should not Saint Paul seeke up Gods servant 2. A fugitive the prodigall sonne was a fugitive yet his father embraced him Saint Paul reduced him à fugâ from his flight and caused him to flie to Christ with the wing of faith he lost his earthly master and found an heavenly master as Saul seeking Asses lighted on a kingdome 3. A thiefe he stole from his Master I but he did not continue a thiefe Saint Paul was a blasphemer and a persecutour the good thiefe was with CHRIST in Paradise the young man which Saint Iohn commended to the Bishop became a thiefe a master thiefe yet Saint Iohn went to him in his owne person and reduced him to CHRIST againe this thiefe became a good Spirituall thiefe one of those that did rapere regnum Caelorum therefore this Historie is worth the reading 2. There be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in it matters of small importance as Verse 22. he is sollicitous for his lodging so he is for his cloake and Christ sent messengers to provide a lodging for him therefore away with the Gospell of St. Luke and the 2. to Timothie In this Epistle is to be considered 1. The gate or entrance into it 2. The house it selfe or substance of the Epistle Verse 4. An entrance is made into it by a wise a Christian a loving an eloquent salutation where 1. The persons concurring in it 2. The blessings wished in it 3. The persons are saluting or saluted the person saluting is described by his owne name by his masters badge or Liverie His name is Paul his Hebrew name was Saul he was an Hebrew of the Tribe of Benjamin King Saul and hee were of one Tribe Paul is a little name and being the Apostle of the Gentiles hee takes most delight in that Saint Hierome supposeth he tooke this name of Sergius Paulus the proconsull tanquam à primo ecclesiae spolio as of the first spoile among the Gentiles which he tooke out of the Devils mouth as Scipio was called Africanus of Africk which he subdued and Metellus Creticus Creete which he conquered so he was called Paul of Sergius Paulus whom he converted There may be some probabilitie of it but Saint Augustins interpretation is rather to be embraced Paulus i. e. modicus pusillus de Saulo Paulus de superbo modicus immò minimus as he interprets his owne name minimus apostolorum 1 Cor. l5 9 It is nomen humilitatis a name of humilitie in that we must all be Pauls having a base and lowly opinion of our selves In the next place he is described by his masters badge or livery not the Apostle of Iesus Christ but the prisoner of Iesus Christ which is greater 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there can bee no greater thing to glorie of than this Some may be the Apostles of IESUS CHRIST as Iudas was yet not the prisoner of Iesus Christ the Apostles themselves gloried in this that they were counted worthy to suffer for the name of Christ. He uses this title to mollifie the heart of Philemon and to make it more inclinable to his suit for Onesimus hee must needs have an heart of iron that denies the request of a poore prisoner and the prisoner of Iesus Christ. There bee vincti diaboli vincti Iesu Christi Zedekiah was a prisoner bound in chaines by the King of Babel He was imprisoned for rebellion not for religion Barabbas was a famous prisoner as we say famosum scortum He was against Christ not for Christ. The good thiefe on the Crosse was a prisoner yet not for Christ but for his owne evill deeds we receive worthie of that we have done though Christ in mercy had compassion on him The Iesuits have alwayes boasted of their bonds imprisonment and martyrdome as they did in Wisbich Castle in Fremingam Castle and in other places they were vincti Papae non Christi The Popes not Christs prisoners All Queene Elizabeths dayes all KING Iames his dayes all King CHARLES his dayes never any was imprisoned or put to death simplie for Religion if they could have kept their fingers out of treason they might have kept their neckes out of the halter I would they would listen to that of Cyprian ardeant licet flammis what though they give their bodies to be burnt though they be cast to Wild beasts non erit illa fidei Corona sed paena perfidiae non religiosae virtutis exitus gloriosus sed desperationis interitus that is not the Crowne of Faith but the punishment of perfidiousnesse not the glorious end of religious vertue but the miserable destruction of desperation The Donatists complained of their persecution as the Brownists and Sectaries doe amongst us but as Saint Augustine told them yee suffer non propter Christum sed contra Christum persecutionem patimini non à nobis sed à factis vestris CHRIST was whipped that was persecution CHRIST whipped some out of the Temple that was no persecution Sarah beat Hagar and the Apostle calls that no persecution Ismael mocked Isaac and that hee calls a persecution Quid
abundance of rayne as made a gracious supply to the comfort of them all Saint Augustine writes of a certaine Barbarian servant which was made a Christian who never learned to read yet by three dayes prayers obteyned so much of God that he could read the bible to the admiration of those that were with him This should encourage us all to pray for our selves and others too Say on my mother sayd Salomon to Bathshebah I will not say thee nay So God by the secret inspiration of the spirit speakes to us say on my children I will not say you nay ascendit precatio descendit miseratio Wee have had the instrumentall cause now to the efficient which was Gods grace and mercy He doth not say your prayers shall merit my delivery but through your prayers I shall be given to you In the Greeke not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Gods free and undeserved goodnesse Prayer is a sacrifice well pleasing and acceptable to God I will lift up my hands as an evening sacrifice yet it is not meritorious When we have done all we can prayed as attentively as zealously as we can we are unprofitable servants and wee had need to pray to God to forgive the weakenesse of our prayers VERSE 23. THe second member of the conclusion is salutations sent to him from those which were with Saint Paul of whom the one is a prisoner the rest at libertie 24. The prisoner is Epaphras Hierom saies it is an Hebrew name Epaphras frugifer of spharah fructificare and indeed he was full of the fruits of righteousnesse by IESUS CHRIST Why may it not be a Greeke name he being a Grecian one of Colosse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expono He was a Preacher and good expositour of Scriptures a faithfull Minister of CHRIST My fellow prisoner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cuspide captus taken with the speare a captive in Warre So these were taken by the speare of Satan and Nero his bloudy instrument Before hee called him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his fellow servant now his fellow prisoner which is more for all his fellow servants were not his fellow prisoners Saint Paul gives him this as a more honourable title It is a greater dignitie to suffer for Christ then simply to believe in CHRIST It is no honour to bee fellowes in evill as Simeon and Levi were brethren in cruelty but in good and commendable things it is My fellow-Iudge my fellow-Bayliffe my fellow-Alderman especially fellow-prisoner in CHRIST IESUS To be Barabbas's fellow-prisoner is an ignominious thing but to be S. Pauls fellow-prisoner is a glorious thing Let us not be fellow-prisoners in the Divell as Traytors Thieves Murderers Iesuits but if we be fellow-prisoners in CHRIST IESUS let us rejoyce in it and glorifie God on that behalfe Vnto this may be applied the vulgar saying Est aliquid socios habuisse doloris It is a comfort to have a fellow-prisoner in a good cause They may pray together sing Psalmes together confer together edifie one another comfort one another Ieremie was alone in the Dungeon his sorrow was the greater S. Paul hath a fellow with him in prison at Rome his sorrow is the lesser VERSE 24. THe other that be at liberty are in number foure The first is Marcus Iohn was his Christen name Mark was his surname Saint Hierome interprets Mark to be sublimis High of Rum elevare To lift up he was lifted up by GOD to the Sacred Office of the Ministery There be three things that tend to his commendation 1. His consanguinity with Barnabas which was a Levite a great benefactour to the Church Saint Pauls especiall friend and is entituled the Sonne of Consolation he was his sitters Sonne 2. Is the piety of his Mother her name was Marie in whose house the Saints were assembled and prayed for Saint Peter when hee was in prison 3. His owne industry and forwardnesse in accompanying St. Paul and Barnabas whose Minister hee was yet there is one thing that is a staine in this faire cloth that is his departing from Paul and Barnabas He went not through with them in the worke left them in the plaine field and returned to Hierusalem which was an occasion of a great falling out betweene these two worthy Men. Neverthelesse by all probability he repented of it and became a more painefull labourer afterwards for at this present he was of good reputation in the Church else Saint Paul would not have set him in the forefront of his salutation The second is Aristarchus Mons operis amplioris sayes Hierome Har mons Magnaseh opus a Mountaine of a more ample worke he was of Macedonia and a Thessalonian he was Saint Pauls prison-fellow when he wrote to the Colossians but now at liberty The third is Demas Sileas sayes Hierome of Dum silere hee was dumbe and too much silent or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 popularis he was a popular Man a man-pleaser he loved the praise of men more than the praise of God Saint Paul sets a brand of infamy upon him Demas hath forsaken me and imbraced the present World But at this time he was in good account with Saint Paul otherwise he would not have done him so much honour as to place him before Luke Dorotheus reports he became an Idolatrous Priest and Cajetan cals him an Apostate But if this Epistle were written after the second to Timothie as it hath the after place then undoubtedly GOD gave him repentance he returned to CHRIST and to Saint Paul againe Insomuch as Ignatius reports that he was afterwards Bishop of Magnesia Howsoever that caveat may bee profitable for all Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall A great Starre fell from heaven the greatest of all may fall if GOD support them not with the hand of his Spirit Therefore let us all have an eye to our standing The fourth is Luke Ipse consurgens of Luz ipse Kum surgere And indeed he rose to great estimation in the Church he is low ultimus sed dignitate primus the last in place the first in dignitie He was a Syrian by Nation and of Antiochia Saint Paul his Disciple Hic est ille frater cujus laus est in Evangelio this is that brother whose praise is in the Gospell throughout all the Churches 2 Cor. 8.18 When Saint Paul sayes according to my Gospell he meanes S. Lukes Gospell He did Evangelizare calamo lingua he preached by his pen in writing a Gospell and the Historie of the Acts they be both eloquently written He preached also with his tongue as Epiphan recordeth in Dalmatia Galatia Italia Macedonia Nicephorus affirmes that he was an excellent painter another Apelles surely
bee understood of Salomon then of Christ he is the fairest among men Verse 2. Grace was in his lips he rideth on the word of truth Princes have thrones so hath CHRIST Salomons throne was but for a short time this for ever and ever What manner of kingdome administred in equity Isai. 11.3 swayed with righteousnesse there is no respect of persons with him he is just in his government he will punish the wicked comfort and defend the godly CHRISTS Scepter is a scepter of righteousnesse there is no partialitie no unjust dealing with him If his owne servants sinne he inflicts punishment on them as well as on the wicked judgement beginneth at his owne house first If a King will reforme his kingdome he must reforme his owne court first so doth CHRIST in the government of the world if they of his owne family offend he will begin with them first Moses murmured therefore hee lost the enjoying of the land of Canaan David a man after Gods owne heart committed adultery therefore his wives were deflowred before his eyes and he had like to have lost his kingdome for it Therefore let not us that be within the Walls of the Church flatter our selves in our sinnes wee may drinke c. CHRIST will be mercifull to us nay his Scepter is a Scepter of righteousnesse he must punish sinne wheresoever he findes it VERSE 9. THat the Scepter of CHRISTS kingdome is a Scepter of righteousnesse hee proves by two effects he loves righteousnesse and hates iniquitie ergo it is a Scepter of righteousnesse Hebr. It is because both are good and true The cause of good government is the grace of God and God rewardeth good government Thy God by generation Ours by creation Hath anointed thee Hereby hee is distinguished from GOD the Father as Genesis 19.24 GOD the Father anointed him in respect of his humanity With the oyle of gladnesse with the graces of the Holy Ghost which make the hearts of the faithfull glad and cheerefull to every good worke as they that were anointed in the time of the law were made the fitter to those businesses which GOD injoyned to them Further because they made CHRIST glad to powre downe those graces on his Church IESUS rejoyced in the spirit Luk. 10. We are Christs fellowes as men as members of his body and as his brethren we are anoynted touch not mine anoynted Psal. 105.15 and 2 Cor. 1.21 Wee in measure hee above measure Rom. 12.3 Io. 1.16 Io. 3.34 he is Sanctus Sanctorum Who be those that are Christs fellowes Surely the faithfull wee are his servants and fellowes too The head is above all the members of the body yet the head and members are fellowes the husband hath a superioritie over the Wife yet the man and the Wife are fellowes Christ is our Husband we by his grace and favour are his Wife therefore his fellowes the eldest Sonne and heyre to a Nobleman hath many prerogatives above the rest of his brethren yet in that they be brethren the Sonnes of one Father they are all fellowes So CHRIST our elder brother is above us yet because wee are his brethren wee may bee termed his fellowes By this oyle of gladnesse is meant nothing else save the graces of the spirit The oyntment shall teach you sayes Iohn the Holy Ghost is this oyle or oyntment Where we have many observations and instructions 1. All the oyle that we have comes from God we have no grace but it is of him the uprightnesse of Noah meekenesse of Moses zeale of Phineas sincerity of David the patience of Iob the hope of Abraham the wonderfull faith of the Centurion the knowledge of Ezra and Paul that spake with tongues more than all the courage of Peter all is of God it is he that anointed us with his holy oyle therefore let us be proud of no gift but use all in feare and trembling to the glory of the giver There is one that bestowes precious oyle on thee with that thou anointest thy face and hast a cheerefull looke thou art not to praise thy selfe but him that gave thee the oyle all our spirituall oyle comes out of Gods shop therefore let us magnifie him for all if hee anointed Christ much more us hee was anoynted with this oyle as he was man otherwise as he was God he had all fulnesse of himselfe 2. If Christ were anointed above his fellowes then his fellowes also are anointed though not in that measure hee was wee have a little Crewse full of oyle but he hath a great Pot full of it yet every Christian must have some oyle else he is a Christian in name not in deed Hence it is that we are called Christians of Christ because wee are anointed as he was but none may be called Iesuits of Iesus because there is no Saviour beside him wee may communicate with him in the name of Christ but not in the name of Iesus and if we be Christs members we must have some oyle as well as our head Saint Paul profited in the study of the law above his fellowes therefore his fellowes profited something CHRIST was annointed above us therefore wee must bee anointed too If thou hast no knowledge in the will of God no faith no zeale hope meekenesse patience thou art no Christian therefore let us intreat the LORD to anoynt us with this oyle dayly more and more 1. Oyle was a token of consecration in the time of the law Aaron and his Sonnes Saul David and all the Kings by oyle were consecrated to the Lord and set apart to an holy use Iacob powred oyle on the pillar whereof he was purposed to make an altar to the Lord. So we by this heavenly oyle of the spirit are dedicated to God as a royall Priest-hood an holy nation a peculiar people zealous of good workes 2. Oyle gives a sweet taste to the meat whereupon God commanded that on the meat offering should be powred oyle and incense oyle for the tast and incense for the smell So this spirituall oyle of Gods graces makes us a sweet and pleasant meat to the Lord the wicked he will spew out of his mouth but in us that are seasoned with the oyle of the spirit he takes singular delight 3. Oyle supples the wounds that be in a mans bodie The Samaritane powred oyle into the wounds of the man that lay halfe dead by the high way side so the oyle of the spirit supples us against the wounds of sinne a certaine perswasion being setled in our hearts of the love of God towards us in Christ. 4. Oyle makes a man nimble therefore wrastlers in all ages were wont to anoint themselves with oyle that they might bestirre their joynts the better So the graces of the spirit make us more lively in Gods service to wrastle with great alacritie with Satan and all the enemies of our salvation 5. Oyle keepes the body Soluble and is a meanes to purge it from many grosse humours
So the graces of the spirit clense us from many sinnes which are the corruptions of the soule 6. Oyle swims aloft above all other things it will have the preeminence above all liquid things So the oyle of the Spirit carries us aloft makes us to have our conversation in heaven 7. Oyle makes the lampe to burne the five foolish Virgins went to buy oyle for their lamps So the oyle of the Spirit makes us to continue burning in zeale and all good workes 8. Oyle makes a man chearefull he hath given him oyle to make him a cheerefull countenance when men would looke cheerefully they annoint their faces with oyle So the graces of the spirit infuse unspeakable cheerfulnesse into the faithfull for this cause it is called the oyle of gladnesse none so merry none so cheerfull as they that bee anoynted with this oyle There was great joy in Samaria when this oyle came to the City when the Gospell of Christ was planted among them The Iaylor rejoyced with all his household that by Saint Pauls Preaching he believed in God the Christians in the Primitive Church being for the most part poore folke eate their meate with gladnesse and singlenesse of heart praising God This oyle makes us exceeding cheerefull in all estates and conditions Sometimes indeed we have cause of weeping for our selves and others Saint Peter wept bitterly for his denyall of Christ. There be some of whom I tell you weeping yet this cheerfull oyle of the Spirit comforts us in the middest of all calamities whatsoever in Sicknesse poverty in the losse of goods and friends too yea in the houre of death it selfe David was in a pittifull taking the City was burnt wherein he was his wives taken prisoners the people ready to stone him yet having this oyle in him he was of a cheerefull heart It is said of him yet David comforted himselfe in the Lord his God Some are afrayd to become strict livers because they suppose there is no mirth in that way Christians must be ever weeping with Heraclitus they may not goe to the Taverns and Ale-houses they may not bee dancing skipping and rejoycing as other men yes verily they that be right Christians anointed with this oyle of the Spirit are the merriest men in the world they may in some respect though not as he did be alwayes laughing with Democritus There is no peace saith God to the wicked if no peace then no true joy they may be merry in their cups as Belshazzar was but the soundest mirth is among the godly that are anointed with this oyle of gladnesse Come Warre peace health sicknesse death life they are merry in the Lord ready to sing as the Swanne doth at the sight of death What a joyfull man was Saint Paul when he was in the Lions mouth at Rome I am now ready to be offered henceforth there is laid up for me a Crowne of righteousnesse Therefore let us intreat the Lord to anoint us with this oyle of gladnesse it surpasseth all the joy and mirth in the world All the faithfull have some of this oyle but Christ is anointed with it above us all Semper excipio Platonem said hee So when we talke of rare and excellent men we must say we alwayes except our Saviour Christ. Noah was a famous man Abraham a notable man Moses David Salomon were of great renowne Peter Paul Thomas were adorned with singular graces yet Christ is many degrees above them As he sayes of a good huswife many women have done valiantly but thou surmountest them all So though many of GODS children were beautified with the oyle of the spirit yet CHRIST surmounts them all he is annointed above his fellowes they were as starres he as the Sunne Therefore let us all doe reverence to him we are Saints but he is Sanctus Sanctorum and of his fulnesse we all receive The principall scope of the place is this CHRIST is above all above all men above all Angels above all creatures whatsoever Which must needs bee a pillar of singular comfort for us to leane upon that the King and protectour of the Church is the high mighty and eternall God all stoope to him Let Satan spew out the Sea of his malice against us let his instruments rage never so much let the cruell and bloud thirstie Iesuits be continually plotting against us as out of all question they are never idle yet let us not be dismayed CHRIST our head and keeper is above all he hath all power in heaven and earth hee sits in the high tower of heaven sees all their doings and laughs them to scorne This doctrine concerning the deity of CHRIST in the pressing whereof the Holy Ghost is so large and ample is not lightly to bee passed over let us all apply it to our owne hearts that it may bee a bultwarke to us in the time of need that seeing he is God blessed above all for ever and ever so we may boldly put our trust in him in this world count our selves safe under the shadow of his wings and reigne with him in the world to come VERSE 10. AN other Argument from the Creation of the world Christ is the maker of heaven and earth therefore GOD Ier 10.11 Psalme 102.25 This Psalme intreateth of the deliverance of the Church out of captivity in Babylon of the re-edifying of the Temple and the repairing of the Walls of Ierusalem which is further to bee applyed to our deliverance from sinne to the building up of the Walls and Temple of the Church whereupon the Psalmist converteth his speech to CHRIST the true instaurator of the Church Lord to whom all Creatures are subject as servants to their LORD In the beginning therefore CHRIST was before that beginning Io. 1.1 Before Abraham was I am Io. 8.58 CHRIST is the beginning of the world who was before it had a beginning Layd the foundation of the earth made it firme sure and solid so as it cannot be moved contrary to those Philosophers that are of opinion that the heavens stand still and the earth moveth though it cannot be discerned with the eye And the heavens i. all the heavens the firmament and the ayre are the workes of thy hands it is a metaphor borrowed from Carpenters and Masons else God hath no hands CHRIST in setting up the building of the world observed an other order then earthly Artificers When they goe about to build they lay the foundation first and set on the roofe afterwards for they cannot build otherwise but this celestiall builder made the roofe first and the foundation afterwards first he spread forth the heavens as the roofe and afterwards laid the foundation of the earth which was a lively demonstration of his unspeakable power Heaven and earth is the workemanship of CHRIST the high and eternall God In that respect it should be admired by us all if thou haddest a picture of Apelles making that famous and renowned Painter wouldest
of tithes by the Ministers argues a superioritie that GOD hath given them over the people In things appertaining to their office they are greater than the temporalty they are Gods Ambassadours and workmen with him and the tithes are a tribute which the people are bound to pay them for their worke Here wee behold the greatnesse of the Ministerie and what great men the Ministers bee It is a thing worth the consideration of us all for the Holy Ghost wills us to consider it The receiving of tythes from the people argues the greatnesse of the Ministers to whom tithes are paid The world through the subtilty and malice of Satan hath a base opinion of the Ministers supposing them to be little men of no account or reputation yet in very truth whatsoever their stature be if as little as Zacheus whatsoever their outward estate and condition be though as poore as Peter and Iohn that said silver and gold have we none yet in truth they are great men Obadiah though the Kings steward had an high opinion of Elias sayes he art not thou my Lord Elias the King of Israel esteemed highly of Elisha My father the charet of Israel and the horseman thereof Herod reverenced Iohn Baptist and the very Devill speaking in the mayd spake honourably of Paul and Silas Constantine the Emperour used the Bishops at the Councell of Nice with marveilous respect he would needs have them to sit downe by him and he would not be covered when any of them were preaching The Spirit of God sayes in this place consider how great a man Melchizedec was So say I to you all consider what great men the Preachers of the word be Is not the Kings Ambassadour a great man they are Ambassadours of the King of Kings therfore great men Is not the steward of a noble mans house a great man these are Gods stewards the disposers of the secrets of God as Paul termeth them 1 Cor. 4.1 they are as Christ himselfe in their place and office he that heareth you heareth me Luk. 10.16 When they preach Christ preacheth therefore great men to be received as Angels from heaven yea as Christ himself yet some prophane persons there be that suppose them to be the least of all others of least account and estimation He is no Iustice of peace no governour in the Common-wealth therefore a little man a straw for him I but though in secular affaires they are subject to the civill Magistrates yet in spirituall matters they are above them I speak of subordinate Magistrates Consider them that labour among you and are over you in the Lord they are the Shepheards and all others though there be a Gentleman a Knight a Lord in the parish yet they be all his sheepe Therefore the Minister in respect of his office is a great man So let us esteeme of him and receive with meekenesse feare and reverence the word delivered by him The small account that the people make of the Preacher causes the Word of God to finde the lesser entertainement among them therefore banish that opinion out of your hearts and know them to be great men as indeed they be VERSE 5. AGainst that might bee objected What is the receiving of tithes an argument of greatnesse Why then the Levites are as great as Melchizedec for they take tithes Sol true indeed yet great oddes betweene them 1. They are of the tribe of Levi which GOD consecrated to the Priest-hood in that respect they have a right to receive tithes Melchizedec is none of that tribe yet hee takes tithes because his Priest-hood is more excellent in regard whereof he hath a greater interest to tithes 2. The people give them tithes because they have an expresse commandement from GOD to take them Abraham not by commandement but willingly of his owne accord gave tithes to Melchizedec because he knew he had an immediate autority to take them from God being in a more excellent manner the Priest of God 3. The Levites take tithes of the progeny of Abraham Melchizedec of Abraham himselfe the author and foundation of the whole stocke of the Hebrewes They have a commandement which is laid downe Num. 18.21 31. Lev. 27.30 Deut. 14.22 27. therefore they may lawfully take and who be they that dare resist this commandement According to the law not of their owne braines but by warrant from the Law Not of some but of all the people none are exempted from paying of tithes To tithe the people that is by a metonymie the goods of the people He shewes what is meant by the people the Israelites their brethren they were brethren in nature having all one father which was Abraham and in religion professing one God and religion This should make them more loving one to another 4. They tooke tithes or their brethren but Melchizedec of their father which was Abraham Vterini as it were though in this respect they and the people are equall both came out of Abrahams loines yet that did not priviledge them from paying tithes to the Levites There be two veines and two arteries from the loines which carry the seede to the place thereof therefore they are put for generation Though the Ministers bee advanced into a chaire of dignity above the people yet they must remember that they are their brethren The King is the subjects brother when thou makest a King thou shalt take him from among thy brethren much more is the Minister brother to those to whom hee speaketh Our Saviour Christ is not ashamed to call us brethren and shall wee disdaine to call the least Sheepe in our flocke our brother or our sister Wee must not bee as Lords and tyrants over God his heritage but carry our selves as brethren towards them Speake kindely have compassion one on an others infirmities as brethren VERSE 6. HEre we see Melchizedec Priest of the most high God received tithes and the Levites had a commandement to take tithes Now here a question doth necessarily offer it selfe whereunto the text draweth mee whether I will or no whether tithes bee the perpetuall maintenance of the Ministery or not A thing somewhat controversall in this last and wicked age of the world wherein charitie waxeth cold as to all in generall so to the Ministers in speciall Some if there were no law to compell them would give them neither tithes nor any other thing at all so unthankefull are they for the foode of their soules I but wee will not stand to mans courtesie for then in most places we should have a cursey but it shall be evinced out of the Word of GOD that tithes is that part and portion which God Almighty hath allotted to us It was not only the Levites maintenance in the time of the law but it is our maintenance in the time of the Gospell and must continue to the worlds end Bellar contendeth that tythes are due to the Ministery non jure divino sed ecclesiastico yet he alloweth that
at the first springing up of the custome was but worth a Groate is now worth tenne shillings and yet will yee against all reason hold that custome still 2. The Iewes had a custome upon small occasion to put away their Wives derived from Moses yet CHRIST brake the necke of that custome saying ab initio non fuit sic Moses permitted that for the hardnesse of your hearts because hee had to deale with a stubborne and stiffe-necked people but from the beginning it was not so So say I the law for the hardnesse of your hearts permits this custome as it doth eight in the hundred but looke backe to the originall and yee shall finde that from the beginning it was not so It is an Axiome in the law nullum tempus occurit regi The King never looses his right for discontinuance of time And shall the King of Kings be debarred of his right because of a new upstarte custome Flatter not your selves in your customes they are but broken reeds for you to leane upon St. Paul sayes If any man list to bee contentious we have no such custome nor the Churches of God So say I to you if any list to rob God and his Ministers of their right we have no such custome nor the Churches of God It is a wonderfull delusion that the Devill hath bewitched many withall stollen waters are sweete and all is good that we may take from the Ministers He that robbeth a Minister robbeth God Mal. 3.8 and is it no sinne to rob God he that stealeth from a common Christian is a thiefe but hee that stealeth from a Minister is a Church-robber the one is theft the other is sacriledge the one breakes the second table the other the first table Therefore take heed of this grievous sinne Tithes are the LORDS hee hath given them to us therefore take you good heede how yee take them away from us least you bee found fighters against God as wise Gamaleel said to the Councell Take away maintenance from any calling and it will quickly fall to the ground who would be a Merchant if hee must be a beggar all the dayes of his life Who would be a Clothier if he get no gaine by it Who would put his Sonne to the Vniversity there be at charges with him seven or eight yeares afterwards to be a Minister and to have no comfortable maintenance in his calling it is a matter of greater importance then we are aware of the denying of the Ministers right is the overthrow of the Ministery and so consequently of the Word of God whereby wee must bee saved in the life to come therefore let us not have a finger in it You thinke to waxe rich by defrauding of the Ministers but that is the high-way to poverty and beggery too Such money is put into a bottomlesse bagge it will never prosper Consider what the Lord saith Mal. 3.10 Prove me c. pay your tithes conscionably in truth and sincerity as you ought to doe and Gods blessing shall bee on you and yours steale from the Ministers of God and thy wealth one way or other shall melt away as the waxe before the fire Therefore in the feare of God let us all looke to it let us as God hath given tithes to them for their livelyhood so give them cheerefully for God loveth a chearefull giver let us deale bountifully with GOD and his Ambassadours in this present life that he may deale bountifully with us and give us his owne kingdome in the life to come The second argument whereby the Apostle proves Melchizedec to bee greater than Abraham is laid downe in the last words of this sixth verse Hee that blesseth is greater than he that is blessed but Melchizedec blessed Abraham ergo he is greater than Abraham whom he blessed Hee doth not say him that had so many merits Abraham the Father of the faithfull had no merits whereof he might glory before God Hee was not justified in the sight of God by any of his workes but only by believing the promises this is our righteousnesse to believe the promises of God We are to make a precious account of Gods promises they be the most excellent jewells that wee can have hee doth not say hee blessed him that had silver and gold Sheepe and Oxen but the promises Abraham was a mervailous rich man God had blessed him exceedingly hee had at this time above three hundred uprising and down-lying in his house yet the Holy Ghost doth not say he blessed him that was such a wealthy man that had such large lands possessions but hee blessed him that had the promises The promises of GOD are the greatest riches that a man can have our silver and gold may bee taken from us but Gods promises shall abide with us for ever Now Abraham had not the promises for himselfe alone but for all the Children that believe as he did Acts 2.39 as hee had the promises so have wee and let us make much of them they must be our comfort in all calamities yea in death it selfe heaven and earth shall passe away but not a tittle of my word shall passe unfulfilled therefore let us highly esteeme of the promises of God they be the strongest pillars we have to leane upon VERSE 7. THe major proposition of the argument is proved by the confession of all and without all contradiction the lesse is blessed of the greater that which is of lesser account and reckoning the thing being put for the person I but is the lesse blessed of the greater Iacob blessed Pharaoh Gen. 47.10 and 1 Reg. 8.66 the people blessed the King yet they were not greater than Salomon we blesse God yet we are not greater than God 2 Cor. 1.3 There is a double blessing the one improper the other proper Improperly to speake to blesse is to wish well as to pray for one 1 Cor. 14.16 So the poore blessed Iob. Iob 31.20 So inferiours may blesse their superiours that is pray to God for them So the Child may blesse the father the people the Minister the subjects the Prince but properly to speake blessing is a pronouncing and an actuall bestowing of happinesse on them that are blessed Thus God Almighty doth blesse us all thus CHRIST blessed his Church at his Ascension into heaven hee left an actuall blessing with them and in them with us all thus the Priests in the name of God blessed the people and so doe we that be the Ministers of the Gospell at this day we as Gods Ambassadours and in CHRIST 's stead 2 Cor. 5. doe not only pronounce a blessing on the People but by the gracious operation of Gods Spirit wee are as Gods hands to powre downe a blessing on them In this respect we sustaine Gods person and are greater than the people whom we blesse The Papists ascribe too much to the blessing of the Ministers and we give too little to it they say that a Bishops
God and one another in love in some calling or other The eye serveth one way for the benefit of the body the eare another way the hand another way and the foote the lowest part of the body serves too the service whereof is so necessary as that the body cannot be without it We may serve God to his glory and our owne comfort in the meanest calling that is and let us all so serve him in our severall places in this world that wee may raigne with him in the world to come The Apostle doth not say whereof no man ruled at the Altar It cannot bee denyed but that Ministers in some sort are rulers of the people obey them that have the oversight of you in the Lord yet our office must not puffe us up with pride we must remember it is a service yea a painefull and an honourable service He that desireth the office of a Bishop desireth a worthy worke on us rather than honos prodesse rather than praesse 2 Cor. 4.5 Our selves your servants for CHRIST 's sake Yet it is not a base service as some imagine and in reproch they will say of a Minister hee serves at such a towne Wee grant we are servants yet in an high and honourable place we serve in the Church the house of God as stewards do in a Noble mans house we dispense to you the foode of life Therefore as all the household honours the steward so ought all the parish to honour the Minister VERSE 14. TO put it out of all doubt hee sheweth to what Tribe this Priest appertaineth he proves it by the common voice and testimony of all it is a cleere case all confesse it Of whom it is said the Lord said to my Lord sit thou on my right hand c. As the Sunne dispelling the clouds and darknesse of the night riseth in the morning and scattereth his beames over all the world So the Sonne of righteousnesse rose dispelling the foggie mists of the ceremoniall law and spreading the light of the Gospell over all the world Iudah both on his supposed fathers side Luk. 2.4 and on his mothers side Luk. 1.27 It seemes that Christ pertained to the Tribe of Levi too 1. Elizabeth was Maries Couzin she was Wife to Zacharie which was of the Tribe of Levi now they were to marry in their owne Tribes Sol They of the Tribe of Levi might take Wives out of other Tribes so as the inheritance were not transported out of the Tribe as 2 Chron. 22.11 yet the men not the women gave the denomination of the Tribe and the child was not said to be of that Tribe whereof his mother was but whereof his father was 2. Nathan was of the Tribe of Levi yet Christ came of him Luk. 3.31 It was not Nathan the Prophet but one of David's sonnes of that name 2 Sam. 5.14 It is manifest Christ was of the Tribe of Iudah the Sonne of David concerning which Moses Gods Scribe and Pen-man of that that was deputed to the Priest hood The Tribe is changed ergo the Priest-hood It pleased CHRIST to come of the Tribe of Iudah not for any holinesse that was in Iudah above the rest of the twelve Patriarchs Iudah himselfe committed incest with his daughter though unknowne to him at the least hee tooke her to be an Whore and lay with her but our Saviour made choice of this Tribe of his owne gracious goodnesse Though CHRIST descended of the Tribe of Iudah yet all of that Tribe were not sayed There are seald as many thousands of all other Tribes as of that and of that Tribe as Kings and others are noted to be wicked men Therefore wee must not flatter our selves in any outward prerogatives as the Papists doe They have a part of the coate wherein Christ went to be crucified some of the nailes wherewith hee was fastned to the Crosse they make pilgrimages to the Sepulchre of Christ c. All these are nothing to salvation Though thou couldest derive thy generation from Christ according to the flesh though thou haddest beene one of Christs brethren if possible lien in the same wombe yet that makes thee not the neerer to the kingdome of heaven Lay hold on Christ with a lively faith labour to say with Paul I live and yet not I but the Son of God liveth in mee then thou shalt be eternally saved Our LORD CHRIST is often honoured in Scripture with this title it may worthily bee adscribed to him He created us of nothing preserveth and upholdeth us being created hee bought us with his precious bloud when we were worse than nothing therefore justly is he our Lord. This we confesse in our Creede And in Iesus Christ our Lord this we professe in our prayers which end thus through Iesus Christ our Lord. Yet we use him not as our Lord yee call mee Master and Lord and yee doe well but then yee ought to behave your selves as dutifull and obedient servants to me Servants goe and come at the commandement of their Lord. I have servants under me sayes the Centurion I say to one goe and he goeth doe this and he doth it Doe we deale so with Christ our Lord hee sayes come not at the Ale-house there to sit quaffing and swilling till reason be buried in you yet we will be as drunken as Apes as wee use to speake Our Lord sayes your bodies are mine they bee my members and the temples of the Holy Ghost doe not prostitute them to Whores and Harlots yet we will do it Our Lord sayes one thing is necessary preferre the hearing of my Word before all worldly businesses yet if there be a Sermon in the Towne and a paltry faire a little from the Towne we will preferre the faire before the Sermon Christ shall speake to the walls for all us Our Lord sayes use my name reverently in all your talke yet we will make it as common as a Tennis ball and sweare by God and Christ at every word Is this to call Christ Lord Christ hath the name of our Lord and the Devill hath our service what a monstrous thing is this As in word we call Christ Lord so let our deeds shew us to be his servants we are bought with a price wee are not our owne but Iesus Christs therefore let us glorifie him in our Spirits and bodies which be his VERSE 15. THe second Argument is taken from the discrepant creation of Priests he that is made a Priest after an heavenly and Spirituall manner is greater then they that are made after an earthly and carnall manner our Saviour Christ is made after an heavenly and Spirituall manner they after an earthly and carnall manner therefore he is greater then they Hee makes an entrance into it by the cleerenesse and evidencie of the case More abundantly evident that the Leviticall Priesthood is gone and the Priesthood of Christ is come into the roome of it If after but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is
with delight and pleasure the English may be well retained 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for deditus voluptati The Papists following the vulgar translate it then to have the fruition of a temporall sin and Ribera is a greater patron of the Latine then of the Greeke hee sayes the Greeke might bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so the vulgar hath done well but Cajetan is more ingenious saying that temporarii is put for temporarium Of ease and quietnesse safety and security delicate fare honour and dignity in Pharaohs Court These hee might have there enjoyed yet hee rejected them all VERSE 27. THese pleasures are amplified by two adjuncts they be temporary and sinfull though he had enjoyed them he could have had no long lease of them hee must one day have forgone them all 2. They were sinfull pleasures Some say so called because without sinne he could not have disclaimed his owne people rather because they are the occasions of sinne the instruments of sinne and can hardly be enjoyed without sinne In it selfe it is no sinne to bee in the Court of Princes but through our corruption it sometime becommeth sinne Or in a particular manner they had beene sinne to him if for them he had disclaimed the people of God David had an hard choyse that might justly put him to a stand a man would thinke that Moses had an easie choyse whether hee would live in prosperity or in adversity this required no great deliberation Who would not rather embrace prosperity yet he rather chose adversity A Physition sayes to a sicke man here is a boxe of Iuncats and a boxe of Pils the Iuncats will overlay thy stomack the Pils will purge thee and make thee whole he rather chuses the Pils then the Iuncates so the pleasures in Pharaohs Court would have overcharged Moses soule adversity with Gods people would be a meanes for the saving of his soule therefore he rather chose that Let us not be too much bewitched with prosperity it may be as a cradle to rocke us asleepe in sinne adversity may be as a Charret which though it jogge us and make us sicke for the time yet at length it will carry us to heaven Therefore if it bee the will and pleasure of GOD let us rather chuse that as Moses did it is better to have Lazarus his paines and to goe to heaven then all Dives his pleasures and goe to hell Pleasures are Syrens that deceive us all we are all too greedy of pleasure yet here be two soure sawces that may make us loath the sweetmeate of pleasure 1. For the most part they be sinfull the pitch and tarre of sin cleaveth to these earthly pleasures Riches seeme pleasant things to us yet they be thornes to pricke us and snares to entangle us meate and drinke Corne and Wine are pleasant things yet they often breed surfetting and drunkennesse Silver and Gold are pleasant things it doth a man good to looke on them yet they are as thieves to steale away our hearts from God and as plummets of lead to drowne us in perdition if we looke not well about us Hardly can we use these pleasures but we shall defile our selves with sin and banish our selves out of the kingdome of heaven therefore let us be wise and circumspect in the use of them 2. Wee can enjoy them but a season Hast thou faire houses large lands ample possessions Canst thou dispend one thousand three thousand per annum thou canst hold them but a season peradventure this night thy soule shall bee taken from thee and then whose shall all these be Art thou a wealthy Merchant a rich Clothyer a Gentleman Knight Lord thou canst enjoy thy place but a season it may bee Seventie yeeres and what is that to eternity who would bee a King for an houre and a miserable beggar all the dayes of his life after and who would live in all jollity here for an houre and frye in hell world without end Therefore let us not be besotted with these transitory pleasures but desire the joyes that abide for ever The reasons that induced him to it are 1. A reverent estimation of the miserable estate of Gods Children in this life 2. An heavenly contemplation of their happy estate in the life to come VERSE 26. THis choyse was built on judgement Accounting in his account it was the greater being lead to it by the direction of Gods spirit his judgement being enlightned and directed by the Spirit of God Not thinking or supposing conjecturing but esteeming Hee doth not say heaven to bee greater riches but the rebuke of Christ. The Papists translate it improperium Christi the nicke name of Christ. The Hebrewes being in a strange Country in great servitude and bondage were obnoxious to many opprobrious and contumelious speeches and usages therefore he sayes the rebuke of Christ and that is put generally for all afflictions But how was that the rebuke of Christ Christ was not borne then he could not then be mocked Hee was agnus occisus ab origine mundi Christ hath beene afflicted from the beginning of the world as he was after his Ascension into heaven Saul Saul why persecutest thou me The afflictions of the Church are called the rebuke of Christ the shame and ignomie of Christ not actively but passively that shame and rebuke wherunto Christ is exposed in this world When we are rebuked and persecuted Christ is persecuted When Ishmael mocked Isaac hee mocked Christ when the Aegyptians oppressed the Israelites they oppressed Christ when the body is afflicted the head is afflicted when the Wife is afflicted the Husband is afflicted So when we are sicke hungry or naked Christ is Gal. 6.17 Col. 1.24 As Abraham saw Christ by the eye of faith So did Moses and hee esteemed highly the rebuke of Christ. What estimation had he of it 1. Hee did not esteeme it to be poverty though indeed the Israelites were very poore but riches Not rich in the positive but in the comparative degree not great riches but greater than all the riches in Aegypt Not then the Sheepe and Oxen but the treasures nay than all the treasures in it not only then all the treasures in the Court but in all Aegypt they had many treasuries abundance of Gold and Silver yet in Moses judgement the rebuke of Christ was a greater treasure Greater not de praesenti but de futuro There is the Sonne and heyre of a Nobleman that shall have great lands and possessions yet in the meane season he is kept under he fares hard he is under a severe Schoolemaster yet a wise man will say I esteeme his estate better than the condition of a riotous person that presently lives in jollity So Moses knew howsoever they were afflicted here yet the riches of heaven should one day be theirs therefore hee accounts the rebuke of Christ greater riches than the Treasures of
Love not in word and tongue onely but indeed and truth Ioabs health and Iudas kisse are too frequent Let us love truely as Saint Iohn did Having averred it for his owne part he do●h amplifie it on the behalfe of others Not I onely It might joy her that hee loved her being the disciple whom Iesus loved but it must needs be a greater joy to her that all did love her Yet it is with a restraint all that have knowne the truth revealed in the Word for thy Word is truth saith Christ. All that have knowne it he speakes De notitia approbationis as Aquinas doth well interpret it of the knowledge not of speculation but of approbation that approve love and embrace the truth for indeed they that be of the houshold of faith are lead by one and the same Spirit therefore where one loves all love But is this so great a matter to be loved of all Woe be to you when all men speake well of you true when all tag and rag good and bad speake well of us For then wee should be happier than Christ himselfe was he could not have every mans good word Some said he was a good man others nay but he deceiveth the people All did not love him but all the godly all that loved the truth and where they love God himselfe loves therefore wee are to rejoyce in the love of the faithfull VERSE 2. THe last is the procreant cause of this love Where first there is the Loadstone that drew this love 2. The permanencie of this love in regard of the foundation whereupon it is built for the truths sake truth lasts for ever so shall this love doe They did not love her because she was an honourable Lady a beautifull Lady c. but because of the truth of the Gospell that had taken firme roote in her heart Some love for pleasure Isaac loved Esau because Venison was his meate that was his delight An adulterer loves an harlot for the satisfying of his filthy lust Some love for profit they love their friends as they doe their cowes horses and grounds for the benefit they reape by them Some love for beauty so Shechem loved Dinah Some love for honour and promotion in hope to be preferred by such a great man All these stand upon a tickle ground pleasure vanisheth and that quickly too then love vanisheth together with it When Amnon had gotten his pleasure of Tamar he hated her more than before he loved her Riches betake themselves to their wings as Salomon speaketh and flie away then love flies away too If a rich man become a poore man we set not much by him Honour is mutable the naile that is now aloft is in the dirt as it fell out with Haman then he is little regarded of any of his followers Beauty fades away like a flower then love fades away too love for the truths sake for Christs sake for the Gospels sake and that will be a permanent love But what is this truth Is not that changeable No verily For as Aquinas doth well distinguish though fides qua creditur ceaseth when we be in heaven yet fides quae creditur shall be in heaven though justifying faith ceaseth for we shall not neede to beleeve in Christ any longer when we shall see him face to face Yet the doctrine of faith which wee beleeve touching eternall happinesse purchased by Christ shall remaine when wee be in heaven the truth shall be with us for ever VERSE 3. THat shall suffice for the description now to the precation Where 1. There is the blessing prayed for 2. the persons frow whom 3. An addition made to those blessings The blessings prayed for are three grace mercy peace these be with you In the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall be with you but the future is put for the imperative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be with you and abide with you forever Aquinas doth thus distinguish them Gratia culpam delens Grace wiping away the guilt of Sinne Misericordiam poenam indulgens mercy remitting the punishment of sinne Pax Deo reconcilians peace reconciling us to God rather Grace is the roote the undeserved love and favour of God by which we are all that we are By the grace of God I am that I am Without him we are nothing the other are the branches budding from it Mercy which hath reference to our manifold miseries Peace arising of our reconciliation to God by Christ Being justified by faith wee have peace with God The persons from whom First from God the Father as the Author of all goodnesse Every good gift commeth from above form the Father of lights c. Then from Christ the Sonne of God and the Mediatour of mankinde who is 1. The Lord the Lord and King of the Church 2. Iesus a sweete Saviour that hath saved us from our sinnes 3. Christ the annointed King Priest and Prophet of the Church the Sonne of the Father Therefore God as well as the Father Where then is the holy Ghost Saint Augustine will have him to be comprehended in the gifts for we can have no gift but by the holy Ghost the destributer of them Or as Aquinas saith the holy Ghost is understood in the other two persons being nexus utriusque he sacred bond that unites them together The blessings annexed and added are truth and love Caietan with some others referre them to Christ the Sonne of the Father in truth and love that is his true and beloved Sonne they be rather to be adjoyned to the former and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with truth i. the vertue of truth and love to God and man these make a demonstration of the former to the world VERSE 4. NOw let us enter into the bowels of the Epistle The matter of it is a gratulation and an exhortation verse 5. First he praiseth her for the time past then he doth incite her for the time to come the gratulation is expressed by a joy wherewith he was ravished where 1. There is the greatnesse of his joy 2 the object of his joy 3. the rule for the ordering of it I rejoyced Christians may be joyfull Rejoyce in the Lord alwayes againe I say rejoyce At that time Iesus rejoyced in his Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he danced as it were for joy as here Saint Iohn rejoyceth in his Spirit and not a little but greatly too As the wise men rejoyced with an exceeding great joy when they found Christ. So he rejoyced with a great joy that he found of her children walking in the truth of Christ there is the object of his joy That I found by diligent observation when I was at thy house and by the constant relation of others since Of thy Children not all but some of them seldome are all good
3 4. the other is Hospitalitie 5. his Sincerity is set forth by the joy wherewith Saint Iohn was ravished in regard of it The joy is first specified v. 3. then amplified v. 4. In the specifying of this joy there is 1. The greatnesse of it 2. The ground of it He did not envie it as Iosuah did the prophecying of Eldad and Medad but he joyed in it not a little but greatly vehemently as the Wise men rejoyced with an exceeding great joy when they saw the starre againe There is gaudium in carne in the flesh that is the adulterers joy gaudium in vindicta in revenge that is the malicious mans joy gaudium in mundo that is the worldlings joy gaudium in Christo that is the Christian mans joy We must rejoyce at the good things that be in others The ground of his rejoycing was a report that came to him of Gajus when the brethren came Preachers and common Christians that were with Gajus and testified to the truth boare witnesse of the truth that is in thee 1. Of thy sincere dealing and liberality to all The good things that be in others must not be smoothered or buried in silence our tongues must be as trumpets to sound them abroad that which the woman did to Christ in powring a boxe of precious oyntment on his head must be spoken of throughout the world the faith of Abraham the zeale of Phineas the patience of Iob the Centurions Synagogues Cornelius almes and the bountifulnesse of Gajus shall be propagated to all posterity Fame is like a ship that receives all passengers like a wagon that entertaines all good and bad Bad things goe abroad and good things goe abroad but here is the difference 1. Bad things goe speedily good slowly the one flies like Eagles the other creeke like Snailes Davids adultery went further then his sweet and heavenly songs 2. The one are inlarged the other diminished the one halfe of Salomons wisedome came not to the eares of the Queene of Shebah 3. The one all heares of but a few of the other Thousands heare of a false report as that Saint Paul preacht against the Law and Moses hundreds do not heare of the other 4. Bad things goe without ceasing men are like flies that are ever insisting upon soares the report of good things is like an hue and cry that quickly fals downe in the Countrey 5. The one we tell of with delight we take little pleasure in talking of the other the one shall be at ordinaries the other shall finde never an ordinary yet we ought rather to testifie of the one rather than of the other God and his Angels take delight in the one the devill in the other Let us witnesse of the vertues wherewith God hath adorned any It shall redound to his glory and it shall be a spurre to pricke on others to the like This is illustrated a pari Even as thou walkest in the truth 1. In the truth of the Gospel which thou dost adorne by thy good workes Thou dost not content thy selfe to beginne in the truth but thou walkest in it like a good traveller till thou come to the end of thy journey to the Celestiall Canaan VERSE 4. THen this joy is amplified by a comparison Some read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 greater grace But most Greeke Coppies have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 joy In the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greater joy than these Some referre it to the brethren mentioned before then in these men that relate this of thee Some Greeke Coppies have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 greater joy than this So the question were at an end Yet the plurall for the better exagarating of it may be put for the singular as if all joyes were comprehended in this What is that Then to heare that my children walke in the truth Why Saint Iohn was a perpetuall Virgin He had no children acording to the flesh but he had spirituall children among whom Gajus was one because he preached the Word of truth to him Preachers are fathers mothers and nurses too Fathers Though ye have ten thousand instructors in christ yet not many fathers I have begotten you through the Gospel Mothers My little children of whom I travel in birth againe till Christ be formed in you Nurses We were gentle among you as a nurse cherisheth her children Therefore we are to be loved and honoured of the people Some rejoyce to see their children flourish in wealth and honours of the world then in the graces of the Spirit It is more joy to them to see them Gentlemen Knights Lords c. than to see them upright and constant Christians It was not so with St. Iohn no more must it be with us We may joy to see them great men in the world but no joy to this to see them great in Christ. VERSE 5. THe second vertue commended in him is his hospitality and charity Whereof there is 1. A relation of it in this and part of the 6. ver 2. The prosecution of it 6. 7. 3. The necessity of it Not in him alone but in all christians ver 8. In the relation 1. The manner how he did it 2. The persons to whom it was extended Touching the manner Thou dost faithfully whatsoever thou dost In the Greeke not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou doest a faithfull deede making a faithfull demonstration of thy faith by thy workes as it becomes every faithfull man to doe Shew me thy faith by thy workes We must not onely doe bonum but doe it benè not onely that which is good but we must doe it with a good intention for God is not so much pleased with Nounes as with Adverbs This Gregorie sets downe excellently well 1. We must not doe them superbè proudly with a proud opinion of our selves thinking highly of our selves because we have done them as the Pharisee did which spread the Peacocks feathers of his works before God in the Temple In knowing of them we must not know them though they be recta good things yet we must account them minima little in our own eyes acknowledging when we have done all that we can we are unprofitable servants God may find many blemishes in our best workes 2. We must not doe them ambitiosè with an ambitious minde to get glory to our selves as the Pharisees did who had a trumpet sounded at their gates for the publishing of their almes Vaineglory is a secret thiefe that accompanies us privily in all our best actions to cut the throat of the soule when we have done them 3. We must not do them mundanò for wordly lucre and commodity hoping to enrich our selves by it as Iudas did by the boxe of oyntment he pretended the benefit of the poore but he intended his owne benefit If we doe them for these sinister ends we lose our reward The only scope we aime at must be
deviation from the Lawe of God shall wee therefore sinne The proper fruit of sinne is death yea death everlasting It is by accident through Gods mercie if any good come of it therefore let it be carefully abandoned by us all He does not say perhaps he therefore ranne away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 usus est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he uses a word of better report he departed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was separated from thee by the permissive hand of Gods providence After that men have repented of their sinnes we must not aggrava●e but in some measure extenuate them Not Noah's drunkennesse but Noah's unadvised drinking Not David's adultery with Vriah's wife but the matter of Vriah Not Peter's apostasie but Peter's deniall Not Onesimus running away but departing Before they be humbled we must be as Trumpeters to waken them out of their sinnes Lift up thy voice as a trumpet After that we must be as Nurses to cherish them before Corazives after lenitives before wee must come with the Law as a Schoolemaster to whip them after with the Gospell to comfort them before we must be Bonerges the sonnes of thunder after Barnabasses the sonnes of consolation But for how long did he depart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for an houre It is the last houre Our whole life is but an houre in respect of eternity The whole race of our life is but the running of an houre-glasse and a short houre-glasse too a spanne long There was a woman that had an issue of bloud twelve yeeres an other that was bowed by Satan eighteene yeeres a man diseased in his feete 38. yeares all in comparison of eternity was but an houre Endure with cheerfulnesse an houres paine here that thou mayest have eternall joy hereafter Having made a narration of Gods providence in his flight hee makes an application of it to Philemon 1. Shewing the end of it to be that he might receive him with advantage 2. Declaring the manner how hee should receive him Verse 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. à fugâ from his flight 2. à me from me 3. à Deo from GOD. In all these respects let him bee welcome unto thee But for how long not for a season as before but for ever Some interpret it for ever .i. to serve thee for ever so long as yee both shall live alluding to that place If the servant say thus I love my Master I will not goe out free then his Master shall bring him to the Iudges set him to the post bore his eare through with an awle and hee shall serve him for ever .i. to the yeere of Iubilee So that hee should serve Philemon for ever .i. during life that is not sutable to the place 1. The opposition requires it should be taken for eternity He departed for a while but thou shalt receive him for ever 2. In the Greeke it is an Adjective not an Adverbe that thou shouldest receive him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eternall not onely for a time in this world but also to reigne eternally with CHRIST together with thy selfe and the rest of his Saints being now engraffed into CHRIST by faith as thou art This implyes the resurrection of the body for if Onesimus should not rise againe he could not bee eternall Idoneus est reficere qui fecit hee that made the body of nothing can remake it when it is consumed to nothing The faithfull are omnipotentes in CHRISTO omnipotent in CHRIST I can doe all things by IESUS CHRIST that strengtheneth mee that is Luther's collection and they bee aeterni in CHRISTO eternall in CHRIST In CHRIST wee shall all be made alive againe meet him in the ayre be translated with him into the Kingdome of glory and abide with him for ever The wicked are eternall too they in endlesse torments the godly in endlesse joyes which neither eye hath seene nor eare heard nor can enter into the heart of man VERSE 16. BVt how is he to receive him not now because an alteration is made in him now as a Servant He doth not speak it in contempt of servants Dominus servus diversa nomina sed homines homines paria sunt nomina Master and servant are diverse names but men and men are equall names Thou art a man a weake man a sinfull man as well as thy servant therefore despise not thy servant One may goe to heaven as well out of the degree of a servant as of a master Let none of you suffer as a thiefe there the name of thiefe is a contemptible name so is not the name of a servant here when as he sayes not as a servant non ut servum tantùm not as a servant only Ioseph esteemed Mary not as a Wife but as a woman greatly honoured by God to bee the mother of him that was both GOD and man yet he esteemed her as his Wife So here What then but above a servant Why a brother and a brother is more than a servant We are all brethren maximè cùm fides accedit media qua omnem superbiam amputat especially when faith conjoynes us together which is as a knife to cut off all pride In CHRIST there is neither bond nor free but we are all one in CHRIST IESUS The Father and the Sonne are brethren the Minister and the people are brethren if they believe in Christ. So also the Master and the servant are brethren we have one Father which is God one mother the Catholike Church one elder brother which is IESUS CHRIST one inheritance the kingdom of heaven we are all brethren and godly servants are to be used by their masters as brethren Before Paul called Onesimus his Sonne Verse 10. Now his brother in the one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the one is manifested his naturall affection in the other his benevolence and equality What brother a beloved brother beloved of all good Christians but especially of Saint Paul who was his Father as well as his brother upon that he inferres he should bee more beloved of PHILEMON because he is tyed to him with two bonds to St. Paul but with one The one in the flesh the other in the LORD Grace alone knit him to Saint Paul grace and nature too to Philemon By the flesh is meant Carnall affinitie by the LORD spirituall Onesimus was Saint Pauls only in the Spirit he is PHILEMONS in the spirit and in the flesh too they be neere to us in the flesh that be neere in carnall and outward considerations as man and wife brethren kins-folke countrey men Townsmen of one house or one familie Laban said to Iacob thou art my bone and my flesh the fire warmes them most that be neerest to it GOD is more beneficiall to the good Angels then to men because they be neerer to him then men in nature spirits as he is in quality
of greater holinesse than men in place because they be with him in the Court of heaven Our kindnesse si caeteris paribus if other things be correspondent should extend it selfe more to them that be neerest to us in the flesh Hee that hath this worlds wealth and sees his brother want So he that hath this worlds wealth and sees them that be neere to him in the flesh especially if there be neerenesse in the spirit too how dwelleth the love of God in him Neverthelesse the spirituall affinitie is in some regards to bee preferred before all Who is my Father my Mother sayes Christ hee that doth the will of my Father in heaven hee is my Mother brother and Sisters VERSE 17. THen he concludes the receiving of him with a kinde of adjuration If thou hast me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in thy opinion and judgement it is well translated if thou count mee What a partner 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one of the same countie together with thy selfe of the same communion of Saints of the same house-hold of faith he doth not say if thou count me a Prelate a ruler of the Church but a partner he is content to be unus ex illis non supra illos to bee one of them part and part like not one above them The Angels count us partners I am thy fellow servant and one of thy brethren CHRIST counts us partners Heb. 2.14 and shall we disdaine to call one another partners There bee partners in nature so are we all partakers of the same ayre of the same water of the fruits of the same earth partakers of miserie and of death there bee partners in office as Church-wardens and Constables they that answer for a child at the font are called partners There be partners in grace partakers of the divine nature not of the substance but of the qualities of it partakers of one Christ of one heaven Such a partner did St. Paul desire to be accounted and happy are they that be in this partnership He is very earnest with Philemon as Lydia was with Paul and Silas If yee haue judged me to be faithfull to the Lord come to my house they durst not but count her faithfull to the Lord and Philemon durst not but count Saint Paul a partner Now receive Onesimus or exclude me out of thy partnership he pressed sore upon him But how should hee receive him As my selfe as my owne bowels Thou wouldest receive me affectuosè reverenter with a loving affection and with reverence so receive him Papè quanta verbi dignitas Good Lord how doth he dignifie Philemon by it O admirable love especially to a fugitive and a servant VERSE 18. THe last argument to perswade the receiving of him is ex parte debiti concerning the debt which he oweth and wrong that he hath done to him which he would have to be no hinderance to the businesse Where 1. There is a concession of the wrong and debt 2. St. Pauls undertaking for the satisfaction of it Verse 18. 3. A confirmation or strengthning of the satisfaction 4. An amplification of the satisfaction Verse 19. Injured thee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in any thing or owes thee namely ought Wherein wee have confitentem reum hee himselfe with teares hath acknowledged it to me So that the particle If here is not nota dubitantis but concedentis At his departure as fugitive servants are wont to doe he carryed away with him a piece of Plate or some other thing if he have so done as I know he hath impute it to mee set it on my account I will be countable for it and discharge all Here first we see that restitution must be made of wrong Restituere as Aquinas doth well define it est aliquem iteratò in possessionem dominium rei substituere Restitution is a constitution of a man in the right possession of the thing againe The wrongs whereof restitution is to be made are bona animi corporis famae fortunae the goods of the mind if we have heene the meanes of the distraction of any the goods of the body if we have wounded any the goods of fame if we have defamed any the goods of fortune as wee call them but indeed the blessings of God this text leadeth us only to the latter If we have wronged any this way let us be carefull to make restitution non remittitur peccatum nisi restituatur ablatum sinne is not remitted unlesse the thing taken away be restored 1 It is Gods precept if the wicked have restored the pledge and given againe that which he hath robbed till restitution be made he remaines as a thiefe and robber 2 Iudas made restitution he brought againe the thirty peeces of silver they are worse than Iudas that make no restitution 3 The thing remaining unlesse it be restored will ruinate thee and thy house too The taking away of Naboths Vineyard was the overthrow of Ahab and his house If we have so lived that we may make Samuels chalenge at our dying-day whose Asse or Oxe have I taken to whom have I done wrong It is a sweet thing yet a rare thing if our conscience tels us we have wronged any let us make satisfaction for the wrong De quanto how much is to be restored we will not curiously dispute at the least simplum the same thing if it be possible if not yet something equivalent thereunto and according to the quantity of the wrong if the party have susteined much wrong by a long detention of it then duplum or triplum as the Schoolemen speake Zacheus offers a fourefold restitution the which he doth not by the way of supererogation as Aquinas will have it but in an extraordinary fervent zeale for the demonstration of the efficacy of his conversion The person to whom restitution is to be made is the party himselfe if he be alive or else his heires Et ubi non est haeres ecclesia haeres sayes Eusebius where there is no heire the Church is heire But in any case let restitution be made and that with as great expedition as may be for nec per modicum tempus in peccato morandum for there is no dwelling in sinne no not a small time Lactantius affirmes of the Romanes si restitutionem facerent ad casas egestatem reverterentur if they should make restitution they must come to poore Cottages instead of their magnificent Palaces So would many it is to be feared if they made restitution of all wrongs especially to the poore Church which hath beene wronged in all Ages 2 Here it is apparant that debts are to be paid Rather than Philemon should bee unpaid Saint Paul will pay him a matter of greater moment than we are aware of 1. It must be preferred before our living and maintenance When the Prophet had made a bountifull provision of Oile for the poore