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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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is patient and endureth all things 1. Cor. 13. 3. Euery Christian must after a speciall manner resemble God herein who is a God of patience yea patience it selfe 4. Euery Christian must not onely possesse his soule by it but by faith and patience inherit all the promises of God vpholding himselfe in his expectation as the net is vpheld by the corke from sinking But it is here especially commended to the practise of old men for sundrie reasons 1. Because they of themselues are inclined to frowardnes waywardnes and are hard to please and beeing compassed with so many infirmities as they be the age it selfe beeing a continuall disease were they not supported by Christian patience they might easily fall from their ground giue place to the grudgings of murmuring against God impatience of their weake and wearie condition and so staine their profession and make their liues more burthensome to themselues and others then they need and therefore they are forewarned that when their bodies grow impotent their minds must not be suffered to grow impatient but by the strength of this grace to represse such impotencie 2. Because beeing thus incident to many weaknesses whereby they might disparage their age and profession they must put on patience to heare Christian aduise admonition and reprehension and not as the maner of old men is to storme and be enraged when they are put in mind of their weaknesses 3. Because that age seeing it selfe broken and crazie is very willing to enioy peace and quiet and consequently for most part readie inough to decline the crosse and persecution for the profession which indeed is the glorious armes of a Christian it was therefore a very seasonable exhortation especially in those troublesome times to old professors and auncient beleeuers to prouide themselues of patience that so they might not shrinke away in time of triall to the preiudice of the profession of Christ. 4. Because they by reason of their longer exercise and experience which is presumed in their age should be well seene and practised in this grace so as in their own troubles they should not be discomfited but say to themselues well this must be no newes to me I haue seene a number of Gods children afflicted and I haue seene what end God hath giuen them nay I haue not onely obserued his faithfull and seasonable deliuerance of others but my selfe haue swumme out of many deeps and sure I am I shall not sinke in this nay rather I ought to lift vp the hands of others that hang down and strengthen their weak knees as one able to comfort others in affliction by the comforts wherewith my selfe haue beene comforted of God Now for the soundnes of this grace here also vrged it standeth especially in three things 1. in a sure ground 2. in sound fruites 3. in the constant induring of it 1. The right ground of all sound patience is God himselfe And this is so when in any affliction either immediatly from God for triall or chastisment or more mediate by man or other creatures Gods instruments the eye of faith turneth it selfe vpward and causeth the afflicted soule to runne vnder the hand that smiteth and is as the hebrew phrase is silent vnto God Examples of both these we haue in Dauid who conflicting with Gods owne hand in his soule and bodie held his tongue and said nothing and the reason is rendred because thou didst it and in that great affliction brought vpon him by Shemei he would not reuenge himselfe vpon Shemei because the Lord had bidden Shemei curse Dauid Hezekiah receiuing a heauy sentence from God said the word of the Lord was good Secondly the sound fruits of patience are many I will reckon fiue which are the chiefe 1. To entertaine crosses alike and one kind of affliction as equally as another not thinking it strange to fall into diuerse temptations nor taking it to be in our owne power to chuse our owne rodds for the Lord cureth not all maladies with one plaister neither tryeth the same man alwaies with the same triall The sundrie kinds of trialls of the Apostles and how equally and patiently they carried themselues through them see 2. Cor. 6.4.5 our Sauiours counsell aymed hereat aduising his followers to take vp his crosse daily that is to make account of expect and forecast one crosse or other and when they come though they come euery day nay sundry in euery day they must be taken vp and cherefully and Christianly borne The second fruit of sound pacience is cheerefulnesse in affliction Heb. 10.39 the Saints suffered with ioy the spoyling of their goods Iames exhorteth the Saints to count it exceeding ioy when they fell into sundry temptations and how Paul tooke pleasure in infirmities reproaches necessities persecutions and anguish for Christ see 2. Cor. 12.10 If it be here asked whether this be not too Stoicall a precept for Christians who are commanded to weepe with them that weep and take to heart publike priuate and personall calamities I answer no Christian may be sensles in affliction neither can any affliction for the present be ioyous but grieuous and yet these two are not contrarie to mourne and yet to reioyce in affliction because they are not both attributed to the same part nor to the same cause weepe we may according to the flesh which is humbled and reioyce at the same time in the spirit by Gods spirit supported in affliction Againe weep we may for the miserie considered in it selfe and on our selues and yet at the same time reioyce in the sweet fruit and euent of it both in regard of God which is his glorie and our selues namely the quiet fruite of righteousnesse So the Apostles Heb. 12.11 and Iames 1. my brethren count it exceeding ioy knowing that the trying of your faith c. that is if ye cannot reioyce in the sence of affliction yet you may in the vse of it because it maketh to the triall of your faith and encrease of your graces As the husbandman all his plowing and sowing time he hath nothing but his labour for his paines he goeth our weeping but carrieth with him a precious seed his reioysing lyeth in the fruits of his field and trauell in that he is sure he shall bring in his sheaues with ioy and although he soweth in teares yet he reapeth in ioy The third fruit of sound patience is thankefulnesse in affliction 1. Thess. 5.18 In all things giue thankes Iobs practise is recommended in Scripture for our imitation who blessed the Lord as well in taking away as in giuing We easily yeeld thankes to God for good things and therefore we ought for afflictions the which the Lord seeth to be good for his children and maketh them often both see and say so much as Dauid Psal. 119. It is good for me that I was afflicted that I might learne c. The fourth fruit is the expectation
the God of heauen For either Satan by his suggestion or his instruments or which is more to be feared we shall heare the whisperings and mutterings of our owne flesh saying Where is the God in whom ye trusted let not thy God deceiue thee any longer and with Iehoram Is not this euill from the Lord and shall I waite on him any longer to all which let vs be bold to answer with the Apostle I know whom I haue beleeued euen him whose bare word is aboue all bonds who neuer promised more then he was able to performe and neuer performed lesse then he promised faithfull is he that hath promised and no vnfaithfulnes of man can make him vnfaithfull The like truth and steadfastnesse carie all his denunciations and threats for neither when his messengers threaten wrath against the impenitent shall that be found a lying word but the sentence of the Iudge which cannot faile of execution True it is that the Lyon hath often roared but the beasts of the feild haue not trembled The Lord hath vttered his terrible voice against the vnrighteousnesse of men but his threatnings haue met with mockers who say euery vision is deferred and where is the promise of his comming with swarmes of Atheists who say there is no God but denie heauen hell and immortalitie of the soule in the meane time making leagues and couenants with hell and death with beastly Epicures who liue vnmooueably from their carnall delights and sensuall pleasures with heauie and dead hearted professours with whome they haue beene but as a blast all which sorts of men promise to themselues life although the Lord hath said of them they shall die and is not this to charge God expressely with a lie and as much as to say that he is not God But these shall know that the words the Lord hath spoken shall be done Ezek. 12.28 And as the Lord letteth his children see for the present that it is not in vaine to worship him so he letteth his enemies often feele euen before their death that all his words fall not to the ground when he meeteth them at euery corner with sundrie plagues and iudgements in their soules bodies estate name or freinds all which are the accomplishment of his word which shall not passe away when heauen and earth shall be dissolued Vse 2. Seeing God cannot lie let euery one of vs labour to expresse this vertue of God first and especially the minister in his place seeing he speaketh from God nay God speaketh by him he must therefore deliuer true sayings worthie of all men to be receiued that he may be able to say in his owne heart that which Paul spake of himselfe I speake the truth in Christ I lie not and iustifie that of his doctrine which Paul did of his writings the things which now I write vnto you behold I witnes before God that I lie not Now then is a minister a liar when he either speaketh false things as euery where the false Prophets are charged an example whereof we may see in Hananiah the sonne of Azur and Abab the sonne of Roliah and Zedekiah the sonne of Maaseiah who are said to prophesie lies in the name of the Lord in that when the Lords Prophets were commanded to carrie yokes about their neckes these would breake them and so caused the people to trust in a lie or else true things falsely misapplying that truth which they could not but vtter for this was euer the note of a false Prophet to make their hearts sad who should haue beene cheared and to speak peace to them against whom the Lord had proclaimed open warre so falsifying the word of the great God which iniurie no earthly King would suffer vnreuenged If a king should signe and send out his letters of death and execution against some archtraytor and the officer betrusted with them should serue them vpon some faithfull counseller who is neare and deare to his Prince so as the innocent and well-deseruing shal be put to death and the traytor suffered to liue in honour should not the life of this man so betrusted goe for the life of the other In like sort doth be who in Gods place whetteth his tongue against the righteous of the land and disgraceth the most forward in the wayes of God let him discourse against them in Scripture phrase and speak things in themselues neuer so true yet is he a lowde liar in the false applying of them and wresting them against them vpon whom the eyes of the Lord are for good and with liars shall be kept without the gates of the ●oly citie and that most iustly in that he hath not lied of men but of God himselfe whom so farre as his malice could extend he hath endeauoured to drawe into his sinne in making him a liar also like vnto himselfe 2. Euery priuate man must take vp that exhortation to cast off lying and speake euery man truth vnto his neighbour and that because it is a peece and sparkle of Gods image and a part of the newe man which is to be put on Which reason the Apostle vrgeth sundrie times in the epistles And indeede no man can more liuely resemble the image of his heauenly father then by the practise of truth in which one word is included that whole image of God which standeth in righteousnesse and holines as Ioh. 8.44 the angels stood not in the truth As on the contrarie no man can more liuely resemble the deuil then by lying for he is a lyar from the beginning and the father of lies True it is there be many defences made for sundrie sorts of lies which we shall haue better occasion to scan in the processe of this Epistle but let all such as would haue themselues marked with the stampe of Gods children knowe that they onely can haue assurance of the pardon of sinnes in whose spirit is no guile and those onely shall rest in the holy mountaine that speake the truth from their hearts and they alone shall stand with the lambe on mount Sion and sing the newe song before the throne who haue no guile found in their monthes Doctr. 3. The last generall obseruation out of the former words teacheth what an infinite and free loue the Lord embraceth his elect withall in that be decreeth from euerlasting whatsoeuer he doth for them in the due season of it Hence it is that not onely in this place but thorough the Scriptures we may read that all the stayres whereby we climbe to heauen were laid by God before the world began If we looke at Gods predestination and election the names are written in the book of life from euerlasting Iacob was loued not onely before he had done good but before he was to doe it If to the ende which is the kingdome that is prepared from the foundations of the world If to the meanes which is Christ he is the
vnion when Dauid and God consult together Iehoiadab and Ioash and when Iosiah standeth with Huldas the Prophetesse and for a man to oppose the ordinances of Christ with this humane ordinance is to set the bodie and soule together by the eares Not therefore the faithfull Ministers of Christ but such as stand with the beast and his ordinances and with the Antichrist of Rome are enemies vnto magistracie and weakeners of the power of Princes while they teach that all Ecclesiasticall persons are to be exempted from the ciuill power while they binde their hands in freeing their subiects from all obedience euen in ciuill commands and while they highly dishonour them in giuing the Pope a power ouer them to set them vp and depose them at his pleasure and that in thei● owne dominions where they are onely vnder God And here first may be noted that after the Apostle had taken great paines in the planting of this Church of Creta yet were many things wanting and defectiue still for Titus is left behind him to redresse things defectiue which must not be conceiued as that the Apostles either thorough ignorance forgetfulnes or carelesnesse omitted any thing but because they were cast into straights of time and could not euery where finish euery thing at least effectually and executionally but onely by way of direction Which is a ground of sundrie considerations First it noteth what was the speciall worke of an Euangelist namely that beeing the companions of the Apostles they were to bring on the work of the Lord to perfectiō both by establishing that foundation they had laid building on further by their direction where they left off The office was middle betweene the Apostle and the Pastor the calling was immediate from the Apostles as the Apostles was immediate frō Christ. Where by the name Euangelists are not meant those who in a straighter sense are so called as whose helpe the Lord vsed to write the historie of Christ and beginnings of Christian religion two of which were Apostles and other two their companions as Marke and Luke but those whom we call vice-apostles or pastors fore-runners who were in preaching the Gospel planting the ministerie and administration of holy things to be as hands and feete wholly at the Apostles appointment to call and recall whether and when they would such as Timothie Titus Marke Tychichus seruing now in one Church now in an other as the Apostles pleased to vse them whose office because their calling was from the Apostles and their worke seruing the founding and rearing of the first Christian Churches and that by the direction of the Apostles must needs also cease with the Apostles Secondly notwithstanding many defects and wants in this Church and those great ones and that in constitution for we see their cities were destitute of elders and Church gouernours yet was it neither neglected by Paul nor separated from by Titus as a cage of vncleane birds teaching vs not presently to condemne a number and societie of men much lesse of Churches for want of some lawes or gouernment for no Church is not wanting in some if they ioyne together in the profession of truth of doctrine and worship for so many of the Churches planted by the Apostles themselues might haue beene refused for wanting some officers for a time although they were after supplied How much better were it that the spirit of meekenes should lead into a patient expectation when God will further beautifie his Sion to make her become the praise of the world then that the spirit of pride should hurrie vs into a rash and peremptorie sentence against euen whole Churches Did not Paul when the Church of Galatia had reuolted from the Doctrine of free iustification by Christ yet call and account it a Church still Let them shew any of our errors of this nature Obiect But those Churches and this in Creta was in constituting but yours after a long time by publike lawes and common consent haue refused the lawes of Christ and that after you haue beene conuinced not to be the Church of Christ. Ans. But where is this sufficient conuiction If it be said in their bookes the truth is although they haue pointed vs to some wants yet none of them haue sufficiently concluded vs no Church at all and suppose our case were altogether as ill as they would make it who are they that they should giue vs a bill of diuorcement If a priuate man erre and offend must he not first be admonished and then censured and iudged but by whom by priuate men no but by the Church and shall not a whole Church or many Churches challenge the same forme of proceeding and therefore seeing this is not done by our neighbour reformed Churches which no doubt are the true Churches of God wee remaine and shall truely retaine the name of the Church and people of God and leaue them to the reforming of their error both in the matter of their plea as also in the manner of their proceeding Thirdly we learne hence that no Church is hastily brought to any perfection The Apostles themselues the master builders with much wisdome and labour and often in long time made not such proceedings but that had they not prouided labourers to follow them with a diligent hand all had beene lost Much a doe had they to lay the foundation and prepare matter for the building and yet this they did by conuerting men to the faith and baptizing them but after this to ioyne them into a publike profession of the faith and constitute visible faces of Churches among them required more helpe and labour and for most part was left to the Euangelists So as the building of Gods house is not vnlike to the finishing of other great buildings with what labour are stones digged out of the earth with what difficultie depart they from their naturall roughnes what sweate and strength is spent ere the Mason can smothe them as it is also with the timber and yet after all this they lie a long time here and there scattered a sunder and make no house till by the skill of some cunning builder they be aptly laid and fastened together in their frame So euery mans heart in the naturall roughnes of it is as hard as a stone his will and affections like the crabbed and knottie okes invincibly resisting all the paines of Gods masons and carpenters till the finger of God in the Ministerie come make plaine and smoothe way working in their conuersion And yet many conuerts although they belong to the Catholike Church make not a particular visible Church till they ioyne in some publike seruice and worship of God according to the lawes and orders appointed by himselfe 2. Besides this inward ineptitude and resistance neuer had any building except Babels towers which had Gods owne hand from heauen against them such outward opposites against it as this hath here is Satan and all
canst so nimbly take all advantages and forfeitures consider whether God deale so or thou wouldst haue him to deale so strictly with thee doth he strike so soone as thou hast sinned and so soone as he hath thee at an aduantage and yet he might say I hope I doe no more but iustice and lawe I require but my couenant Oh therefore let euerie Christian looke into this cleare mirrour and say with himselfe oh how softly and tenderly doth our God deale with sinnefull flesh he layeth not about him nor presently bringeth the forfeit of his lawe vpon me but hath sent out his gospel a mercifull moderator of that rigour without which euerie day would bring a newe deluge of iudgement against all flesh euen so must I in imitation of my heauenly father deale with my brethren not seeke or take the forfeites which the lawe suffereth me to doe but by Christian softnesse which the Gospel teacheth me remit of that rigour and extremitie for shall the Lord powre out a sea of mercie vpon me and shall not I let one droppe fall vpon my brother and would not I haue God to deale in iustice with me and shall I stand altogether vpon iustice and lawe with an other And thou also that takest thy brother by the throat and castest him into prison and there detainest him for some debt vnto which he is altogether insufficient here is lawe also and iustice and I thinke it meete that such should be punished whether for their ouersight or yet much more for their craftie or vniust dealing but yet mercie and equitie must at length take place where there is extreame insufficiencie especially Consider how insufficient thou wert if the Lord should exact all thy debt how he contenteth himselfe to correct thee with the rods of men in mercie and not with scorpions nor in wrath aboue that thou art able to beare he might by his couenant require totall obedience of his whole law but seeing thy state to be broken he is contented to take as thou art able euen a debt of ten thousand pound as it were by a penny a yeare go thou now and doe the like be mercifull euen as thine heauenly father is mercifull But shewing all meekenesse to all men In this precept three things must be considered 1. The vertue prescribed meekenesse 2. The manner how it must be excercised it must be shewed openly 3. The persons to whom to all men The nature of this grace will appeare in the description of it Meeknesse is a grace of God whereby the heart and affections are enclined vnto a mild and louing a kind and curteous carriage towards our neighbour euen then when they might be prouoked to anger Where three things are laid downe to be further opened to the better knowledge of this vertue 1. That it is a grace of God for the next verse will teach vs that we are borne as rough as Esau in our corrupted nature and therfore this strippeth and goeth beyond the best nature beeing a fruit of the spirit and is called the spirit of meekenesse because it is such a peculiar work of the spirit and proceedeth not of the flesh 2. The worke of it is properly to preserue Christian affection in moderating all reuengfull passions not suffering the heart to be easily ouercome with bitternesse but is as a wall or fence of the soule receiuing all the shot of iniurious and hostile actions and speaches and yet keeping all safe within not permitting the possessor hastily or violently either to offer to another or remooue from himselfe such iniuries The mother of it is humilitie the daughter is long-suffering and therefore we read it set betweene these two in diuerse places The next attendants or handmaids of it are inwardly a quiet peaceable spirit for these hath the Apostle combined as inseperable 1. Pet. 3.4 outwardly 1. soft answers such as that of Abigail which broke the wrath of Dauid 2. compassion or affliction of spirit in sight and sence of the afflicted 3. readinesse to forgiue offences 3. I say it preserueth peace within when it is prouoked to warre to anger and returne of wrongs for then is the cheife vse of this grace which is therefore added because many men seeme to haue attained this vertue when it is neuer a whit so Let them alone offend them not you shall haue them gentle courteous affable and tractable inough but crosse them a little and stirre their blood oh now you must pardon them they haue their affections and you shall know they can be passioned and angrie as well as others here shall you see the best nature betraying her meeknes But Christian meeknes must step in to ouercome euill with good when it is prouoked to returne euill or else what great thing dost thou it is no hard thing for the very Infidell and Turke to be kind to the kind nay the wild beast if thou goest no further will be as meeke as thou who the most of them hurt not vnprouoked Secondly this meeknesse must be shewed forth not hidde with our selues but it must be brought into the light that others may haue the benefit of it for as this grace is a signe and pawne of our election which as the elect of God we must put on and araie our selues withall Collos. 3.12 so also must it be the ornament of our vocation whereby we glorifie God adorne our profession and winne others vnto the liking of it Hence the Apostle praying the Ephesians to walke worthy of their high calling teacheth them that this they shall doe if they put on humblenes of mind meeknesse long suffering c. Ephes. 4.2 for otherwise if men partake not in these our graces the vnitie of the spirit in the bond of peace cannot long last vndissolued Thirdly this meeknes must be shewed to all men beleeuers vnbeleeuers freinds enemies the better and the worse which is a speciall point not to be neglected because it is the ground of the verses following Quest. But if meeknes must be shewed yea all meeknes to all men how may we warrant any anger against any man in any sinne or offence or how may any seueritie be put on against any offender Answ. This beeing a grace of the spirit it crosseth not any other of them so as it is no enemie to that of zeale which we haue vrged out of the 14. verse of the former Chapter and Christians mistake this grace when they dreame it to be a bottomles charitie and vnder pretence of meeknes can beare with any euill which indeed is nothing else but an irreligious and mute approbation and association in the euill He that commandeth to be angrie but not to sinne maketh it a sinne not sometimes to be angrie neither did the meeknesse of Moses hinder but that he might be exceeding angrie at the calfe they had made Whence it followeth that publicke persons must publickly represse and reprooue open sinnes disturbing the
a word the very scope of this washing in Iordan directly concludeth against that Popish collection of his for why doth the Lord command him to goe and wash in Iordan rather then as he expected that the Prophet should lay his hand vpon him or by a word heale him Surely no stronger reason can be giuen then this that he should not attribute any power or vertue of the cure to the Prophets hand bodie or person but seeing he must doe that in which there is no such power at all but is so vnlikely a meanes of cure as Naaman almost scornefully reiected the whole glorie of the worke might returne to the God of Israel As vnlikely yea more that water should wash the leprosie of sinne from the conscience as the outward leprosie from the bodie of Naaman and indeede the worke in both is from the spirit of the Lord. The like may be said of the poole of Siloam wherein the blind man must wash and for that place in the 5. of Iohn concerning the poole of Bethesda which healed all manner of diseases the text saith plainly that it was the Angels stirring of the water and without it nothing was done and if the power had beene proper and naturall or inseparably tyed to it it would haue healed the second and third that had stepped in as well as the first So we say when the spirit of God mooueth these waters of baptisme there followeth a cure without which if a man were euery day baptized it would be vnavaileable to regeneration and sanctification Thus not to followe the rest and wast time in them we may see that when men willingly blind themselues it is iust with God to giue them vp to all delusions that in seeing they might not see nor vnderstand Vse 2. As to magnifie and reuerence these sanctified waters as the outward meanes in the right vse of which the spirit worketh and exhibiteth that which they represent so also to beware least wanting this inward worke of the spirit which giueth all efficacie and comfortable fruit of baptisme it become not a barren and a naked signe the rather in that the Lord himselfe obserued this corruption among his owne people that they stood too much vpon outward institutions as the Temple the law circ●mcision the fathers c. and therefore in many places charged them not to trust in such lying words but to get the foreskinne of their hearts circumcised as well as the foreskinne of their flesh and not to rest in the title of a Iewe which was to be one but outwardly and in the letter nor that they were descended of Abraham according to the flesh except they were Iewes within and descended of Abraham according to the faith also so as by doing his workes they might resemble him So when we see Christians stand so much vpon outward baptisme and are well contented without the inward vertue of it when we see them glorie in the bare title without the power of Christianitie it is our part to imitate the Lord and his Prophets and call our people to get the circumcision not made with hands but by the finger and spirit of God which is more then to wash the foulenesse of the bodie for it is to put off the sinfull bodie euen the wicked corruption of the heart for so it is expounded to be the resemblance of Christ in his death and buriall first and then in the life of grace and glorie to which he rose againe Boast not then of thy baptisme without this change of thy heart and life for then thou boastest of a broken vowe call it not thy Christendome vnlesse by it thou beest set into Christ and transplanted by it into the similitude of his death thou art no better before God then an heathen o● Turke notwithstanding thy bodie hath beene washed in this lauer if thy heart still remaine foule and filthy and as good neuer a whit as neuer the better And this I speake of good ground and in the language of Scripture Do we not see the Iewes charged as not circumcised although they had the skinne of their flesh cut Isai. ●4 57.3 and Steuen goeth not as we say behind the doore to call them st●ff●necked and vncircumcised so why may not we speake the truth retaining in our hearts and stile the reuerence of that holy ordinance that the water in baptisme further then ioyned to the word and applyed to this holy ende authentically to seale that which God hath engrauen vpon it is no better vnto the vnbeleeuer then ordinarie pumpe water It is too Iewish and yet too common that the religion and profession of Christiās standeth for most part in outward shewe and glorie and such things as are made by the hands of men wanting that spirit and truth which is indeede the crowne of Christianitie and yet alas what will the representation of Christs death and resurection doe good if the vertue and power of it be wanting in the soule Vnto thy outward baptisme get the heauens opened as in the baptisme of Christ and see that the spirit hath descended vpon thee to the conuerting of thy soule and begetting thee to a newe life for this is the soule of baptisme without which it is a dead letter and a fruitlesse ceremonie Vse 3. As it is with baptisme so is it with all other ordinances of God no outward meanes of saluation can be effectuall vnlesse the inward worke of the spirit be added We haue power to come and heare the word but vnlesse the anoynting teach vs we shall remaine vntaught yea let the Apostles themselues preach the Lord must worke with them also or nothing will be done These two the spirit of the Lord vpon vs and his word in our mouthes make vp a sweete harmonie And how is it else that men after so long powerfull preaching and frequent hearing remaine ignorant hard hearted rebellious surely the reason is because the Lord giueth not an heart to perceiue and because the spirit bloweth not there to giue the seeing eye and hearing eare which where it is wanting a man may sit out as many summons as Pharaoh did and neuer the better yea the more hardned So in afflictions and corrections which are durable and lingring on many why do men profit so little why doe they not open the doore of discipline why are not the roddes of correction the tree of life to a number surely because the spirit boareth not the eare he teacheth not the right vse of them Obiect But what can I doe withall if the spirit teach me not Answ. The spirit would not be wanting if men would come preparedly to be taught But 1. men come without beleefe and mingle not the word with faith and so it becommeth vnprofitable or 2. without repentance whereas the humble shall be taught in the way onely or 3. without praier and the spirit powreth not out these waters of grace but vpon thirstie