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

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Luke sets down all the Apostles were called together cap. 6.13 Mar. 3.19 John sets down c. 1.40 41. first Andrew was called then Peter therefore we must remember the fore-mentioned distinction of Discipleship and Apostleship Casting their nets into the sea for they were fishers The calls of Christ usually meet persons when they are employed in their lawful callings V. 19. And he saith unto them Follow me and I will make you fishers of men Christ doth not call the learned men of the world the eloquent Orator the subtile Logician for to make his own power more manifest whiles he had such weak and simple instruments 1 Cor. 1.23 Where is the wise Where is the Scribe Where is the disputer of this world Follow me Leave not onely your lusts but your ordinary imployments that you may be instructed in the way that leads to life And I will make you fishers of men It 's a metaphor the sea is the world the fishes men the net the Gospel Math. 13.47 the fishers are the preachers Preachers are compared to fishers 1 For their painfulness fishermen must rise at all hours and undergo many hard storms so must preachers 2 For their watchfulness they must rise at all hours so preachers 3 For diligence Fishers must let down their net at all hours whether they take something or nothing so must preachers Men are like unto Fishes 1 As fish stands need of salt to keep it from putrifaction so do men stand need to be seasoned with the Gospel and with gracious discourse Col. 4.6 2 As fishes are begotten of water and live in it Rondel l. de pise c. 13. and are nourished by it and die without it so if you be taken by the Gospel You must be born of water and the spirit Joh. 3.5 of the bloud of Christ compared to water Ezek. 36.25 Rev. 7.14 and of the spirit of Christ without which you can neither live nor be nourished 3 As the greater fishes devour the less and the great Whale devours all so the great men of the world devour the smaller and the devil devours all unless rescued by Christ 4 Fishes as soon as they perceive the net swim away from it so natural men put away the Gospel from them Job 21.14 Acts 13.46 5 As fishes are not taken unless they take the bait so are not souls unless they receive the glorious things of the Gospel Rom. 1.16 6 As fishes wander in the sea confusedly until they be taken and put into fish-ponds so do natural men in the sea of this world till they be converted and brought into the Church V. 20. And they straightway left their nets and followed him The powerful work of Christ upon their hearts was so great that they leave their ship and nets to follow Christ yea every enjoyment they had as servants kindred calling There should nothing be too much for us to leave when Christ calls for it Luk. 14.33 we cannot else be Christs Disciples yea our very lives are to be left for Christ Matth. 10.39 God forbid we should rejoyce in any thing save Christ Gal. 6.14 Moreover what obedience they performed to Christ was speedy and present When God calls we must give present obedience so Abraham in sacrificing Isaac Exo. 22.29 Psal 119.60 we must not consider the issues and events of things when we have a clear command of God before us V. 21. And going from thence he saw other two brethren James the son of Zebedee and John his brother in a ship with Zebedee their father mending their nets and he called them We have here two called more from their Fisher-craft to be Christs Disciples whom he retains a good while with him about the doctrine of the Gospel For though men of mean parts and callings may teach yet not before they have learned themselves In that he calls poor Fisher-men we may admire the free grace of God and the greatness of his power who by such weak means could overcome the world 2 Cor. 4.7 The treasure of the Gospel was in such earthen Vessels That the excellency of the power might be of God 1 Cor. 1.26 27. V. 22. And they straightway left the ship and their father and followed him We may see 1 Their dependance upon the providence of Christ for they did not reason how shall we do to live if we leave our callings 2 All worldly things must be held with a disposition to part with them when Christ calls for them they presently left their nets This besides the command of God and example of Saints should move us that what we part with for Christs sake We shall have an hundred fold in this present world and life everlasting hereafter Matth. 19 27. 3 From their not going till they had 〈…〉 we should learn when we attempt any thing hazar●ious 〈◊〉 to see our call Heb. 11.8 Abraham being called 〈…〉 went not knowing whither he went The children of F●●●●aim going against their enemies without a call turned their backs in the day of battel Ps 79.9 compared with 1 Chron. 7.21 22. So Israel going up against the Canaanites when God forbad them by Moses to go were smitten by them Numb 14.41 42 43 44 45. 4 In that they leave ship and father learn that matters of affection as well as matters of profit must give way to Christ Gen. 12.1 2. V. 23. And Jesus went about all Galilee teaching in their Synagogues and preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom and healing all manner of sickness and all manner of disease among the People We have in this last part to the end of the Chapter two things 1 The diligence of Christ in preaching and working Miracles v. 23. 2 The effect hereof viz. Multitudes followed him bringing their sick unto him He went about all Galilee Persons that are not fixt to the oversight of one Church but have a Call to go into the World must not content themselves to tarry in any one place Christ went about all Galilee preaching in their Synagogues Where the seed is cast among much ground it 's probable some of it will take root and bring forth fruit And preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom That is the glad Message of the Kingdom of Heaven and the way to attain it If any man ask how Christ could be permitted to preach in the Synagogues it was partly because grave and godly and knowing men either known so to be or commanded by others were so permitted to speak so the chief Ruler of the Synagogue permitted Paul to speak unto the People Acts 13.15 After the reading of the Law and the Prophets the Rulers of the Synagogue sent unto them saying Ye men and brethren if ye have any word of exhortation to the People say on Besides Christ confirmed his Doctrine with Miracles and so all men whom malice blinded not might see that he was a Teacher come from God and therefore might easily have access into the Synagogue Now a Synagogue is the same
service committed to the meanest servants such a phrase in English I am not worthy to carry his Books after him Some take it as the custome of the Hebrews who going into some more holy place were wont to put off their Shoes Exod. 3.5 Josh 5.15 Put off thy Shoes for the place where thou standest is holy ground and those who were more rich or noble had some Body to carry their Shoes Other Evangelists have the Latchet of whose Shoes I am not worthy to unloose in which speech they allude unto the manner of their being shod In hot Countreys their Shoes had onely Soles below and tyed above and therefore they were to be loosed before they could be pulled off the Greeks call them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And we when we come home or go to bed call to the meanest Boy to pull off our Shoes Hence Psalm 108.10 Over Edom will I cast out my Shoe that is I will imploy the Edomites in the basest service as to take away my Shoes when they are put off John hereby acknowledges Christ to be his Lord and himself his meanest Servant He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with Fire Some think John Baptist hath respect to that Acts 2.1 visible pouring out of the Spirit in the shape of fiery Tongues at Pentecost though this be a truth as appears Acts 1.5 John truly baptized with Water but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence Yet may we understand it of the power of the Spirit or of inward Baptism whereby the Spirit in the Hearts of Believers burns up their Lusts not onely enlightening of them but inlivening and kindling in them holy affections As the Spirit is called Water from the purging away of our filth Titus 3.5 so is it called Fire because by a spirit of burning he burns up our dross Isai 4.4 The Lord shall purge away the Bloud of Jerusalem from the midst thereof by the spirit of burning In a word Gospel Preachers may baptize you with Water but the Spirit renews us inwardly by the Spirit Now that the Ethiopians baptize with Fire they add to the Institutions of Christ and to the Scriptures which shadows out unto us and presents to our memories the benefit of the Spirit by variety of expressions The Abissines brand the baptized persons with Fire Beza in loc This practice gave occasion to some bolder Library keepers in some Copies to blot out the word Fire The Spirit is well resembled by Fire because it hath the properties of Fire as to purge to drive away darkness to shine to kindle to snatch upwards to strengthen Ephes 3.16 to change into it self 2 Cor. 3.18 Believers are by the Spirit changed into the same glorious image Mark 1.8 It 's said he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost Fire is left out here for explanation sake it is added by the Figure Hendiadys The sum is Christ alone bestows whatsoever outward Baptism figures or signifies Now Fire in this place seems to be opposed to Water I baptize you with Water saith John Christ baptizes with Fire to signifie unto us that some fiery and spiritual power towards our purging and cleansing is represented to us by the Water of Baptism Besides this purging Fire bestowed on the Elect is opposed to that everlasting burning Fire which in the former Verse is threatned to fruitless Trees V. 12. Whose Fan is in his hand and he will thorowly purge his Floor and gather his Wheat into the Garner but will burn up the Chaff with unquenchable Fire John had set forth the power of Christ about Baptism now to awaken his Hearers the more some of whom were in a deep sleep he extends it further to the last Judgment which he shews by similitude of an Husbandman who when the Harvest is come gathers the Corn with the Chaff into the Floor and by and by thresheth it and separates the Chaff from the Wheat Whose Fan is in his ●a●d That is the Preaching of the Gospel before the L●rd ●owse us up thereby we are as it were folded up in an heap of confusion untill which come the whole World is like a great heap of Chaff Or rather by Fan understand his judging power He will thorowly purge his Floor That is his Church gathering out of the Field of the World his Corn he brings it into his B●rn as the Husbandman doth and when by an outward Call in the Ministry of the Word he hath brought them in because there are and will be many Hypocrites in his Churches hence he will thorowly purge his Floor as the Husbandman doth of the Chaff that is of wicked men who are compared to Chaff Psalm 1.4 Job 21.19 But this will be at the Day of Judgment which should be as a comfort to Saints and terrour to awaken carnal men so that the Floor signifies not the Place but the Corn upon it by a Metonymie Wheat into the Garner That is Saints into Heaven where the Sheep are at the Judges right hand from thence they go to Heaven Matth. 25. ult When the Fan hath once severed them that is his power and wisdom whereby he is able to sever Sheep and Goats whereby he is able to judg persons for every thing done in the B●dy whether thoughts words or deeds This Fan is said to be in his hand it shews the ●ear approach of the Judgment James 5.9 The Judg slandeth before the Door For if th●●e were some hundreds of years to the last Judgment yet compared with Eternity they are as nothing Burn up the Chaff with unquenchable Fire Not that it cannot be quenched but that it doth not quench in burning wicked men it never turns their Bodies to Ashes Neither is this impossible for the Sun it self which many suppose to be Fire is always burning and never quenched we reade of the Bush burning and not consumed Exod. 3. This Fire is still kindled by the breath of the Lord Exod. 30.33 This is five times together mentioned Mark 9.43 44 45 46 47 48. that we might the more fear it So that we see the wofull condition of the Chaff they are not onely severed from the Wheat but after the manner of the Nation of Palestine they are burnt in the Fire V. 13. Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan unto John to be baptized of him We have here in this second part of the Chapter the Baptism of Christ set down wherein we have 1 The end of Christ's coming from Galilee to Jordan which was to be baptized of John 2 We have John's Prohibition of him together with his Reasons I have need to be baptized of thee and comest thou to me 3 Christ's Answer to John shewing why he would be baptized which was for the fulfilling of all Righteousness v. 15. 4 Christ's Reception of Baptism amplified 1 From the Adjunct He ascended out of the Water being baptized being then thirty years old Luke 3.23 2 From the signs that
accompanied his Baptism which were three 1 The opening or cleaving of the Heavens so that something might be beheld above the Stars and Planets 2 The Spirit of God descending like a Dove and lighting upon him v. 16. 3 A Voice from Heaven testifying that Christ was the welbeloved Son of the Father in whom he was well pleased V. 13. Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan to John to be baptized of him To be baptized Quest Why doth Christ come to be baptized seeing he had no sin and John's Baptism was a Baptism of Remission of sins Answ 1 For the fulfilling of all Righteousness that is all the righteous promises of God Matth. 3.15 2 To allow of John's Baptism as instituted by God which was cavilled at by many 3 That in Baptism Christ might have the testimony of the Holy Ghost in the shape of a Dove that he was the Son of God and therefore to be believed on 4 Because Christ took our sins upon him and therefore as a guilty person and a penitent he offers himself to John's Baptism that being baptized by him he might as it were wash away our sins in himself he did as it were bury the old Adam under Water in his Burying and rising up from under the Water he did as it were lift up the World of Believers that were drowned 5 That for as much as baptized ones were the Subjects of his Kingdom that he might be like his Brethren in all things hence he took up Baptism to be imbodied with his People that he and they might be one Body 6 To bring in credit such a hazardous and contemptible Ordinance 7 That as God had instituted Circumcision the sign of the old Church so Christ would ordain Baptism as the sign of the new Church and that not onely by word but also by deed 8 That the Baptist might then declare unto the Multitude that this baptized person was the Messias so long hoped for John 1.29 30 31 32 33 34. Then When the Baptist had been a while preaching and baptizing and preparing the People for Christ and had told them that the Messias was speedily to be manifested to them and the people were on fire to have him manifested and as the people were in expectation and all men mused in their hearts whether John were the Christ then comes Jesus to Jordan where not onely signs from Heaven manifested him to be the Messias but John also openly declared him partly because the people were apt to think John the Messias to clear himself thereof and partly to make the Messias known being it was fully revealed to him John 1.33 The people being therefore instant that he would shew the Messias whom he preacht to come after him John answers that he had not seen him by face but onely had received this answer from God That he should in his Baptism be manifested to Israel and in this manner that the Holy Ghost in the bodily shape of a Dove should descend upon him See John 1.29 to v. 35. From Galilee The 2 thing is the circumstance of place Christ comes from Nazareth in Galilee least any should think the business was carried politickly betwixt John and Christ therefore providence orders it that till the 30th year of their age they live and are brought up in diverse places that John could say I knew him not Joh. 1.32 and when John began his ministry about Jordan Jesus did not adjoyn himself to him but abode in Galilee that John might know and preach this that the Messias was come into the world but was not yet made manifest and that he knew him not by face but that he should be manifested in his Baptism Moreover Christ when he comes to John doth not talk familiarly with him before he desires Baptism but then when he desired baptism he came out of Nazareth of Galilee Neither was Christ baptised in secret but when all the multitude were baptized Christ was Baptized Now it appears when Jesus was Baptized all the multitude was baptized Luke 3.21 It was the providence of God that a great concourse of people should be Baptized when Jesus was Baptized that so besides Johns testimony they might see the visible signs confirming him to be the Messias all which did so clearly confirm it that this was called his manifestation unto Israel Joh. 1 3● In Jordan Christs Baptism is set down from the place viz Jordan It was that River through which the people were brought into the Land of Promise Not as if Baptism were confined to a River but that it may be adminstred in a Pond or Lake or Sea or Brook or in any other water wherein there may be burying V. 14 But John forbad him saying I have need to be Baptized of thee and comest thou to me But John forbad him saying I have need to be Baptized of thee as if he should say if one of us must be Baptized I have more need to be Baptized of thee as the most worthy person then thou of me Quest But how doth this agree with that Joh. 1.31 33. I knew him not but he that sent me said unto me upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending like a Dove and remaining on him the same is he that baptizeth with the holy Ghost Ans That phrase of I knew him not must be limited to that circumstance of time before his coming out of Galilee when it was that the spirit revealed Christ to John I have need to be Baptized of thee as if he should say I le give reason of my refusal 1 My Baptism is a Baptism of Remission of sins but thou hast no sin therefore thou hast no need of Repentance nor no need of Baptism and I am afraid of prophaning Baptism if I should dispense it otherwise then it is appointed 2 Thou art not onely without sin but thou takest away the sin of others and into the Faith of thee others are Baptized for Remission of sins 3 It 's thy spirit onely that applies the Grace given in Baptism and I of my self cannot deserve it and therefore I have need to be Baptized of thee with the spirit and thou h●st no need to be Baptized of me with water Obs Holy Persons are sensible of their own corruption yea the more holy the more sensible 2 Obs The holiest Persons have need to be Baptized of Christ that is to be washed from their sins with the bloud and Spirit of Christ Joh. 3.5 3 Obs Though water Baptism must be but once yet the Baptism of the Spirit ought to be repeated again and again 2 Cor. 4.16 V. 15. And Jesus answering said unto him Suffer it to be so now for thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness then he suffered him Suffer it to be so now We have here Christs Reply acknowledging Johns arguments to be true in respect of his person but in respect of his office it being a state of emptying and abasement and humiliation therefore I
but a gladding of the beholders not the havers What is within government fears of insurrections and a servile courting of all sorts of men these are like pictures that seem goodly stuffe farre off but near at hand they are base and course 2 Exhortation to raise up your hunger and thirst after righteousness Psal 119.80 Mine eyes fail with looking but Lord when wilt thou comfort me Davids soul panted for God as the hart for the rivers of water Psal 42.1 2. yea his heart and flesh cryed out for the living God Psal 84.1 2. Psal 27.4 there was one thing his soul lookt after Multa novit vulpes verum Echinus unum magnum as the proverb The Fox knows many things the Hedge-hogge knows one great thing Holy persons long to know their duty as every man desires to know what belongs to the office he is imployed in Psal 119.33 34. so do they thirst for a conformity to it Psal 19.10 More to be desired are they then gold yea then fine gold sweeter also then hony and the hony comb Psal 119.130 I opened my mouth and panted for I longed for thy commandements He uses a Metaphor from hungry or thirsty persons look as when they are hungry or thirsty they greedily open their mouth to take in meat and drink to quench the thirst so when my soul considers the sence of Gods anger against sin or my own filth I flie to thy word to quench my thirst by thy promises and to get direction by thy commandements Motives to hunger and thirst after righteousness 1 The most abundant fulness of outward things avails nothing without this Luke 12.19 He had abundance of earthly things but the devils fetch'd away his soul when his barns would not hold his corn As Samuel bad Saul not to set his mind upon asses when he had a kingdom befallen him 1 Sam. 9.10 So say I why should thy appetite go after earthly things when thou hast such an object as holiness 2 The Lord is wont to fill every hungring soul with spiritual good things Psal 81.10 Open thy mouth wide i. e. thy desires and affections and I will fill it Luke 1.53 He hath filled the hungry with good things Psal 145.19 He will fulfill the desires of them that fear him 3 Christ invites every hungring and thirsting soul to come unto him Isai 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters as if a Physician should make a proclamation to all sick Patients to come unto him and he would heal them q d you have thirsted after vain knowledg honours wealth now here are spiritual dainties the Doctrine of Remission Pardon Peace thirst ye after these come ye to the Waters To the Water of Justification Rev 1.5 To the Water of Sanctification and Baptism Titus 3.5 here 's Wine and Milk that is all manner of Delicates Matth 11.28 Come unto me all ye that are weary of your corruptions and heavy laden under them that is that hunger after righteousness and I will give you rest John 7 37 38 If any man thirst let him come unto me and drink on the last day of the Feast Christ utters this speech he takes occasion from their drinking the Waters of Siloah which that day they were wont to draw out using that speech of Esay Ye shall draw Waters with Joy out of the Wells of Salvation Esay 12.3 Christ seeing this shews them who is the true Fountain of Salvation Zach 13.1 and takes his words from Esay 55.1 that is whosoever hath a desire after holiness and happiness let him come to me and I will quench his thirst He that believes on me out of his Belly shall flow Rivers of living Water Among the Hebrews there were certain Cisterns of stone to receive them and in the midst of them certain Pipes or Cocks out of which Water flowed Prov 5.15 Drink Waters out of thine own Cistern and running Waters out of thine own Well let thy Fountain be be dispersed abroad now every medium or concavity is called by the Greeks a Belly Mat 12.40 therefore Christ signifies that they who believe on him should be so filled with Water that it could not be contained within them but should flow out on every side with great streams now by Water he means the Spirit and by Living Water he means Spring-water or Water continually flowing all plenty of Water are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Rivers Matth 7.25 27 That from such a soul there should be plenty of the graces and comforts of the Spirit not onely for himself but for the benefit and comfort of others Revel 21.6 I will give unto him that is athirst of the Fountain of the Water of Life freely Now what is the Fountain of the Water of Life but onely the Bloud of Christ and the Fountain of his Graces Zach 13.1 compared with Rev 1.5 7 14. Rev 22.17 The Spirit and the Bride say Come and whosoever is athirst let him come and take of the water of life freely The Spirit invites all thirsting souls to come to Christ for as the Waters of a Spring can rise no higher than the Spring from whence they come no more can any holy desires further than the Spirit works them in us 4 The greatest part of our grace lies in desires Psalm 119.5 Psalm 38.14 Means to hunger and thirst after Righteousness 1 Feel thine own wants There needs not much Invitation to an hungry man to eat or a thirsty man to drink Revel 3.17 18 John 4.15 Sir give me this Water that I thirst not neither come hither to draw What drives a man to the Physician but the sight of his Diseases 2 See there is fulness for every want Art thou hungry he hath Bread John 6.51 The Bread which I will give is my Flesh which I will give for the life of the World Art thou thirsty he hath Water of Life Art thou a Babe Here is Milk to feed on Art thou sad Here is Wine to glad thy heart 3 Consider such as hunger and thirst shall be filled partly in this life by receiving the testimony of the Spirit witnessing with their spirits Rom 8.16 touching the reconciliation with God in Christ and some fruits of sanctification whereby the old man is crucified and the new man renewed in them but principally in the state of glory when they shall have perfect holiness and happiness 4 Sharp Sawces procure a stomach Let the bitterness of sin and afflictions procure a hunger and thirst after righteousness Jer 2.19 the Paschal Lamb was eaten with sowre Herbs to shew that Christ is sweet to them that feel the bitterness of sin 5 Purge your stomachs Naturally we feed on pleasures profits and carnal contents and we are apt to surfet on them Consider we the vanity of them Matth 6.20 Prov 23.5 1 John 2 16 17 1 Peter 2.1 2 q d So long as you delight in sin you will have no stomach to holiness Sin works on our soul as ill
among five perpetual principles and yet call them all by the name of a foundation yea such a foundationas other things were to be laid after in eodem genere edificii in the same kind of building for the Apostle saith Let us go on to perfection now what perfection doth he mean truly a perfection of the knowledge of Christ the foundation whereof was already laid And so he did for in the next place he comes to unfold the sin against the holy Ghost the doctrine of assurance to the heirs of promise the doctrine of Christs priesthood 4 All the Churches were under laying on of hands the Church of the Samaritans was under it Act. 8.12 14 17. compared On the same Church of Samaria which was Baptized were hands laid The Church of the Hebrews had this as a principle first laid Heb. 6.1 Object But how doth it follow to all the Churches Answ As we judg all the Churches were under Baptism though we do not reade of any of the Church of Thessalonica to have been baptized yet because we reade other Churches we conclude also they were So because we finde these two Churches to have been under Laying on of Hands we conclude all the Churches also so to have been because of the unity of the Rule Now the Rule is plain Acts 8.14 16 17. When the Apostles heard that Samaria had received the Word of God they sent unto them Peter and John who when they were come down prayed for them that they might receive the Holy Ghost The emphasis lies in this Pronoun Relative they the Antecedent whereto must be the baptized Samaritans whom Philip had baptized v. 12. also v. 16. it 's said For as yet he was fallen upon none of them onely they were baptized in the Name of the Lord Jesus So that Imposition of Hands was administred to all the baptized Samaritans v. 17. Then laid they their Hands on them and they received the Holy Ghost 5 The first Church should be a Patern to other Churches but the first Church continued in laying on of hands therefore other Churches ought to continue herein The Proposition appears 1 Thess 2.14 Ye Brethren became followers of the Churches of God 1 Cor. 11.16 We have no such custome neither the Churches of God The Assumption appears because the Apostle calls it a Doctrine Heb. 6.2 The Doctrine of Baptism and laying on of hands Now the first Church continued in the Apostles Doctrine Acts 2.42 of which Doctrine this was part Object But the first Church was scattered and though there was a Church among the Hebrews Heb. 13.7 17 24. Salute them that have the rule over you and all the Saints yet was not this Church the same for Acts 8.1 There was a great Persecution against the Church at Jerusalem and they were all scattered through the Regions of Judea and Samaria except the Apostles Answ All is oft in Scripture taken for a great part and so I take it here No doubt some could not fly besides they were scattered onely a little way that is into their own Countrey of Judea and Samaria and could easily return when times proved peaceable which by Pauls conversion shortly fell out for then had the Churches rest Acts 9.31 and were edified and multiplied Besides the Apostles were never scattered from Jerusalem who alone might make a Church had there been none else as Tertullian observes in his Book of Chastity Ubi tres ibi Ecclesia est licet Laici where there are three there is a Church though Laicks or People therefore this Church in the Hebrews who were under laying on of hands and that in the Acts is the same 6 If laying on of hands were not an Ordinance of God and of divine Institution then the Apostles in Administration thereof had practised will-worship nay which is more had left a Rule of will-worship unto us Heb. 6.1 But it 's absurd to think the Apostles would do either of these therefore laying on of hands on baptized persons is an Apostolical Institution Object But many of the Saints have received the Spirit without it as the Antiochians Acts 11. Answ So have they without Baptism and the Supper yet it 's no ground to live without any of them when we know them to be practised besides they are Chanels to convey more of the Spirit unto us I mean laying on of hands as well as Baptism 7 It appears by the testimony of ancient and modern Writers 1 Ancient Tertul. lib. de Resur cap. 8. The flesh is washt that the soul may be cleansed the flesh is overshadowed with laying on of hands that the soul may be enlightened with the Spirit Pamelius cites the Canon of Pope Urban viz. All believers ought to receive the Spirit after Baptism by the laying on of the hands of the Bishops that they may be found fully Christians And then he adds a Constitution of Clement which was most ancient viz. We must all make haste to be born again to God and at length to be signed by the Bishop that is to receive the sevenfold grace of the holy Spirit because else a person cannot be a perfect Christian if he remain so that is without laying on of hands not through necessity but through carelesness or wilfulness Also in his Notes on the same Book Num. 44. Similiter loquuntur c. In like manner so many as write of Baptism speak calling Imposition of Hands the perfection of Baptism Tertul. de Bapt. ad Quintillam cap. 8. saith It 's the fleshly or outward act of Baptism that we are dipt in Water the spiritual effect that we are freed from our sins then follows Laying on of Hands the Dispenser calling and inviting the Spirit of God by Prayer And in the same Book he saith To our Flesh rising out of the Water after our old offences the Dove of the holy Spirit comes flying bringing the peace of God sent from Heaven where the Church is the figured Ark. Cyprian in his Epistle to Jubaianus speaking of the Samaritans who had obtained a right Baptism he saith that it was not meet they should be baptized any further but onely that which was wanting was performed of Peter and John that Prayer being made for them and Hands being laid upon them the Spirit of God might be called upon and poured in upon them he adds which also is done with us that they who are baptized in the Church must be offered to them who are set over the Church and by our Prayer and Laying on of Hands they obtain the Holy Ghost Cyprian in his Epistle to Stephen Epist 72. speaking of those who came from Heresie to the true Church saith Because it is of no purpose to lay hands on them to receive the holy Spirit unless they receive the Baptism of the Church Hieron adversus Lucifer If thou askest why one baptized in the Church receives not the Spirit but by the hands of the Bishop which we affirm to be given in
might help their faith Whereunto some apply those prophetical Scriptures Ezek. 36.25 I will powr or sprinkle clean waters upon you and you shall be cleansed and Zach. 13.1 In that day there shall be a fountain set open for sin and for uncleanness This was called the baptism of repentance to show that none of right ought to take it up but those that repented first and those that believed first Act. 19.4 John there taught that they that were to be baptized should believe on Christ and hence his baptism was called baptism for forgiveness of sins for this John in his ministry made known Luk. 1.77 All Judaea That is persons of all age condition and sex not every individual person And all the region round about Jordan That is from all places of both sides of the river of Jordan Were baptized of him in Jordan confessing their sins That is they first confessing their sins were baptized of him together with the confession of their sins they profest a belief of the doctrine which he preached Tertul. in his book of repentance saith We are not therefore washed that we should cease to sin but because we have ceased because we are already washt in heart This very baptism in the manner of it Apol. to Antoninus was continued in Justin Martyrs time Whosoever are perswaded and believe those things to be true that are taught and spoken by us and have received that they can so live they are taught to pray fasting and to beg of God the forgiveness of their former sins we praying and fasting together with them then are they brought thither of us where there is water and with the same manner of regeneration that we our selves are regenerated are they regenerate in the name of the Father of all things and Lord God and of our Saviour Jesus Christ and of the Holy spirit then they are made a sacrifice in the water Tertul. to Quintilla cap. 1. Happy is the Sacrament of our water because the offences of old blindeness being washt away we are freed into an eternal life For the signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 take it out of Grotius The propriety of the word showes that this rite was wont to be done by dipping or covering all over with water not by sprinkling Also the places chosen for that rite prove it Joh. 3.23 John was baptizing in Aenon near to Salim because there was much water there Act. 8.38 39. The Eunuch and Philips going into the water and coming out of it and many allusions of the Apostles which cannot be referrd to sprinkling Rom. 6.3 4 5. We are buried with him by baptism into death that like as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father so we should walk in newness of life Paul proves they should not live in sin because they were dead he proves they were dead because they were buried in baptism Heb. 10.22 We finde the dipping of the body our bodies washed in pure water not the sprinkling of the brow So that it appears that sprinkling was not the baptism of John or Christ 1 From the subject of baptism It was not a part but the whole body 2 From the form It was not sprinkling but burying Col. 2.12 Buried with him in baptism wherein ye are also risen again 3 From the matter or element It was much water Joh 3.23 which needed not if sprinkling had been enough 4 From the adjuncts of going into the water and coming out practised by Christ Matth. 3. and by the Eunuch Acts 8.38 39. Magnus writing to know Cyprians judgment of them that were baptized onely by sprinkling in sickness answers in the end of his 66 Epistle 1 That divine benefits in nothing should be either lamed or weakned 2 Necessity compelling and God pardoning divine abridgements bestow the whole benefit on believers 3 He mentions that those so baptized were called Clinici or bed Christians 4 If any man thought they had got nothing because they were sprinkled he saith If they escape their sickness let them be baptized Whereby we may gather first That the right way of baptizing was by burying 2 Because the opinion of those times was that baptism took away sin and therefore many put off their baptism till near the time as they thought of their death but death coming upon them suddenly they took sprinkling of a little water in their beds instead of baptism with an intention to be buried in water in case they recovered Moreover the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to drown dip or plunge as Scapula in his Lexicon interprets it and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to sprinkle Mar. 1.9 John baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into Jordan which he could not have said had not the word baptize signified an application of the subject to the water not of the water to the subject Pareus on the 6th of the Romans saith The ancient rite in the Apostolical Church was this the persons baptized were dipped all over in a River with some tarriance under the water then they rose up again Dipping shewed crucifying and death because it was not without terrour and coming up out of the water signified resurrection with Christ Par. in Rom. 6. Mr. Fox saith Augustine and Paulinus baptized persons in rivers and not in hallowed fonts as witnesseth Fabianus cap. 119 120. Acts and Monuments Part. 1. pag. 138. After speaking of Austin he saith He departed after he had baptized ten thousand Saxons or Angles in the West River that is called Swale besides York on a Christmas day where note by the way Christian Reader saith Mr. Fox That whereas Austin baptized then in Rivers it followed then there was no use of Fonts See Acts and Mon. Part. 1. pag. 154. Also pag. 156. he saith During the life of King Edwin Paulinus christened continually in the Rivers of Gwenye and Swala in both Provinces of Deira and Bernitia Confessing their sins That is professed themselves guilty of sinful purposes and sinful customs and many sinful actions and that now they repented for them all Acts 2.37 38. Peter's hearers professed their faith and repentance for killing the Lord of life and were instantly baptized With this confession there went an holy hatred of their sins as the Ephesians shewed their wicked deeds so they burnt their conjuring books Acts 19.17 18. and if the confession of the sins of persons in these times baptized were more particular and with more grief it would come nearer the Apostolical practise Truly it argues a great change of heart when persons formerly proud unclean intemperate and unrighteous shall not onely confess themselves sinners but also such kinde of sinners Moreover they profest they fear'd the anger of God and desired to escape it at the day of judgement Also they confessed other believables that they believed on the Messias that was to come after and begin his preaching Act. 19.4 Also no doubt they made professions of their self-denial
will have it done saith Christ Suffer it to be so now so that in opposition to Johns arguments Christ brings two reasons 1 I am not yet declared to be the Christ by the descent of the spirit of God upon me and by the opening of the Heavens and by a voice from Heaven but come unto thee as a private man and therefore thou oughtest not to refuse me though I am greater then thee and therefore suffer it to be so now 2 For thus it becometh us to fulfil all Righteousness this is the second reason The meaning is 1 I am not baptized for that cause that others are for to signifie forgiveness of sin for I have no sin but to sanctifie Baptism that it may be a mean or an instrument of the application of the righteousness of Faith So Luther 2 Though I be greater then thee It 's the Fathers will I should receive baptism from thee and consecrate it in my body that they that are baptized into me may acknowledg me to be one of their brethren 3 This word righteousness must not be taken strictly but broadly not onely to signifie what belongs to the law but for whatsoever hath respect either to equity or honesty The Law of Moses had set down nothing of this Baptism and the Heavenly command John had received belonged onely to Repenting sinners yet Christ being a pattern of perfect innocency the sign Baptism was not in vain in him which signified a purpose of innocency neither could it be shewn more effectually how great an honour was due to the Rites appointed by God than if Christ should by his Example commend the use of them to us Again Christ by this Ceremony was as it were imbodied with us and to confirm to Believers that are baptized as they ought that they shall have the Heaven open unto them and the Spirit coming upon them 4 Christ understands not a justice of equality and of the Law but of equity and of his calling Therefore Christ answers to the Argument of the Baptist by a Distinction which was this The more unworthy ought to be baptized of the more worthy Christ answers Yea unless the righteousness of calling require the contrary that the more unworthy be called to baptize the more worthy but thou art called to baptize me for I am not here now as a Lord but as the Servant of the Lord to be entered into the Church of the New Testament and to my duty therefore I will do what belongs to me and do thou what belongs to thee and so both of us will fulfill the righteousness of our respective calling I taking up Baptism and thou dispensing of it thou baptizing me with the Baptism of Water I baptizing thee with the Baptism of my Bloud 5 It is a point of Righteousness that Masters and Teachers should practise that they commend to others that by their own Example they may teach others Acts 1.1 Jesus began first to do and then to teach 6 By Righteousness he means whatsoever the Father hath commanded whatsoever is just holy and acceptable to God Then he suffered him We have here John's modesty that denying his own opinion he obeys Christ and receives him to Baptism It behoves our Reasons to fall down when stronger Reasons are brought and not to defend them because they were ours Though John thought it absurd and uncomely yet when he heard the Righteousness of both their Callings were fulfill'd thereby he gives way So did Peter John 13.8 that would not let Christ wash his Feet till Christ told him If I wash thee not thou hast no part in me then Peter suffered Christ to wash his Feet so John here it 's like kept Christ by his hands from entering into Jordan not out of stubborness but out of misguided reverence now Christ bidding John to suffer it to be so now and giving him Reasons thereupon he suffered him V. 16. And Jesus when he was baptized went up straightway out of the Water and lo the Heavens were opened unto him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a Dove and lighting upon him We have here Christ his receiving of Baptism set down 1 From the Adjunct when he was baptized he went up straightway out of the Water Because he was let go without the confession of sins when others were not as some think but rather because all made their profession before they came in and so straightway went out therefore little can be gathered from hence save that when he came out of the Water he went to Prayer to teach us to partake of Batism and the Supper with reverence Luke 3. Now for Christ's Baptism it was a burying of the whole Body in Water for it was with his Members thus Col. 2.12 Rom. 6.4 Heb. 10.22 He is not said to go out but to ascend because the Earth or Land is higher than the Water And lo the Heavens were opened We have the signs accompanying Christ his Baptism and confirming the same viz. the Heavens opening The Heavens were opened to him not that the Heavens were opened upon all the Earth but that part of Heaven where Christ prayed on the Bank of Jordan or upon the rest as John and other baptized persons but upon him The manner of the Heavens opening Mark sets down by cleaving the Heavens were cloven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to rend and cleave as he that cleaves Wood. This opening of the Heaven was a testimony of this heavenly Teacher and of his Doctrine that both he and his Doctrine were from Heaven which by the Dispensation thereof opens the Gate of Heaven to Believers Doubtless there was glorious Light that by the Beams thereof shone upon Christ like that which shone upon Paul going to Damascus Acts 9. By this Mystery the Lord signified that Baptism was now consecrated in the Body of Christ to be a sign of heavenly grace It 's very like that all the heavenly Orbs were open that men might have lookt into the Empyraean Heaven or the Heaven of the Blessed which also fell out when Stephen was stoned who saw the Heavens open and the glory of God and Jesus standing at the right hand of God Acts 7.55 56. Out of this 〈◊〉 of the Heaven came down the holy Spirit in the bodily shape of a Dove and sensibly let down it self till it abode on Christ And the Spirit of God descending like a Dove and lighting upon him We have here the second sign confirming the calling of Christ and installing him in his Office visibly This was for the fulfilling of the Prophesie Isai 61.1 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me Not as if Christ were without the Spirit before but now it was made visibly manifest to others Like a Dove Quest Whether was it a real Dove or onely a similitude Answ It was a bodily shape like a Dove Luke 3.22 It 's like it was not a true Dove but onely the form of a Dove formed by the Angel and
1 That as such sufferings abound so shall consolations abound 2 Cor. 1.5 so that what ever they lose they have an hundred fold with persecutions Mark 10.29 30. 2 It 's no new thing to be persecuted Abel was persecuted of Cain 1 John 4.12 Isaac of Ishmael Gal. 4.29 As he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the spirit so it is now yea whosoever will live godly shall suffer persecution 2 Tim. 3.12 so that we are not to count fiery trial a strange thing 1 Pet. 4.12 Brother shall persecute brother Matth. 10.21 and three shall persecute two in the same family Matth. 10.35 3 In the greatest violence persecutors can inflict believers shall not be forsaken of God 2 Cor. 4.9 persecuted but not forsaken not tempted above strength 1 Cor. 10.13 2 Tim. 4.16 17. All men saith Paul forsook me but the Lord stood with me when he came before Nero that Lion Matth. 10.17 I le give you a mouth that all your adversaries shall not be able to resist 4 God is wont to deliver his people from persecuting hands Persecutions befe● Paul at Iconium Lystra and Derbe but out of them all the Lord delivered him 2 Tim. 3.11 God delivers 1 Sometimes by setting one wicked man against another Acts 23.6 7 8. the Pharisees contended against the Sadduces for the resurrection and so took Pauls part 2 Sometimes by making the earth to help the woman Revel 12.16 3 Sometimes by providing some City of resuge Matth. 10.23 If they persecute you in one City stye to another 4 Sometimes by death when the death of his Saints shall set forth Gods glory John 21.18 Means to suffer persecution 1 Get assurance of pardon Guilt makes a man cowardly What made Paul so to triumph Rom. 8.35 Why he had assurance of pardon v. 38 39. I am perswaded neither life nor death shall separate me from the love of God 2 Pray and endeavour for a patient frame of heart When great troubles and an impatient heart meet how hardly are troubles born when Christ had told them they must be betrayed by brethren and friends and be hated of all he bids them possess their souls in patience Luke 21.17 18 19. strengthened unto all patience Col. 1.11 that is to patience in all things Hence be contented to be emptied from vessel to vessel you know how to live with your estates but learn how to live without them Phil. 4.12 13. 3 Look that the cause you suffer for be good 1 Pet. 4.16 If any man suffer as a Christian let him not be ashamed 4 Strive not to meddle with much of other mens estates no more then for meer necessity so that if we lose for Christ we our selves alone may be losers for such debts in persecuting times will be apt to contract disquiet 5 Go in Gods strength Peter going in his own strength came to deny Christ Mark 14.29 30 31. how came Paul to stand when others sh●unk God stood with him and strengthned him 2 Tim. 4.17 6 Get clearness of light When a man comes to suffer he will not go a jot beyond that he hath cleer light for H●b 10.34 after they were illuminated they endured a great sight of affliction Though the heart be upright and cause good yet the person suffers fearfully for want of 〈…〉 7 Look upon God in his greatness and so shall you not fear men how great soever Psal 27.1 The Lord is my light and salvation whom shall I fear Mat. 10.28 F●●r him that is able to cast soul and body in to hell fi●e 〈◊〉 51.12.13 Wheart thou that art afraid of a man th●● shall are and 〈◊〉 the Lord thy maker Heb. 11.27 Moses indured and was not affraid of the wrath of the king for he looked upon him that was invisible 8 Beware of the threats and flatteries of persecutors Be not scared with their threats Dan. 3.16 when they threaten fiery furnaces Lions dens nor yet allured with their flatteries Dan. 11.32 9 Be content to live in a low condition Many will comply to any thing because their spirits are so great they must live in such an height low conditions are crosses that must be taken up as well as other crosses Luke 14.26 27. 10 Either you must suffer with men for confessing truth or with God for denying it If it be the will of God its better that you suffer for well doing then for evill doing 1 Pet. 3.17 11 Get a holy resolution to choose persecution or any other affliction rather then to sin against thy conscience Job 36.21 Take heed regard not iniquity for this hast thou chosen rather then affliction 12 When thou choosest persecution rather then to sin against God the kingdome of heaven is thine as in the text Mens minds are apt to be broken and cast down in persecutions hence Christ promises a kingdome Matth. 19.29 Hence let us not under persecution bewail our condition as if it were most miserable seeing this kingdom will be yours V. 11. Blessed are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you and shall say all manner of evill against you falsely for my sake V. 12. Rejoyce and be exceeding glad for great is your reward in heaven for so persecuted they the prophets which were before you Here are 4 things considerable 1 The sufferings revilings set down by two aggravations 1 Saying all manner of evil against you 2 Saying it falsely 2 The cause for Christ his sake 3 The affections Christians must have under these sufferings viz. they must rejoyce and be exceeding glad 4 The grounds of this affection of joy which are two 1 The greatness of the reward in heaven 2 Their conformity herein to the Prophets and other holy servants of God 1 The sufferings which are revilings Obs The people of God in this present life are exposed to the worst and most false revilings for Christs sake Luke 6.22 They shall reproach you and cast out your name as evil for the son of mans sake Reas 1 From that enmity that is betwixt the seed of the woman and the seed of the Serpent Gen. 3.15 2 Because the Saints do not suite themselves to the manners and customes of the world but by a contrary course condemn the wicked manners of the world hence the world to justifie themselves and to condemn Gods people they load them with reproaches John 15.19 If ye were of the world the world would love its own but because ye are not of the world but I have chosen you out of the world therefore the world hates you 3 Because wicked men have a principle of hatred against Christians Matth. 10.22 Ye shall be hated of all men for my names sake Prov. 26.28 A lying tongue hateth those that are afflicted by it Use Be not discouraged under revilings seeing it is for the cause of Christ Heb. 13.13 Let us go forth therefore unto him without the camp bearing his reproach That is be not ashamed if
in the Life to come because their Reward is great in Heaven He means not the Reward of Merit but of Grace as if a King should give ten thousand pound a year for an hours service What I promise to give a man that is his reward though his service do not equal it as if I promise a man an hundred pound for making me a pair of gloves Now in merit there must be a proportion betwixt the work and wages for the recompence of merit is an act of righteousness now in all righteousness there must be equality when reward is promised to Gods children it is not to establish merit but to let Saints see that their labour will not be in vain Reasons against merit 1 God needs not any of our services nor gets no benefit by them Job 22.3 Can a man be profitable to God Job 35.7 8. If thou be righteous what givest thou to him or what receiveth he of thine hand Acts 17.25 He is not worshipped with mens hands as though he needed any thing 2 When we have done what we can we are unprofitable servants Luke 17.10 3 All good works are the workings of God in us and therefore reward is not due to our own works but God crowns his own grace in us so that Deus est debitor noster non ex commisso but promisso as Aug. saith God is our debtor not for any thing done by us but for his promise Matth. 10.42 So he promiseth to reward a cup of cold water given to a disciple 4 There is no proportion betwixt our sufferings and the crown of glory Rom. 8.18 2 Cor. 4.17 18. we ought to take heed herein because the Papists use it to destroy grace Seeing then there is a reward in heaven let us endure reproaches we endure bitter Physick and sharp cutting in hope of long health let us endure reproaches and other sufferings in hope of glory Heb. 10.34 Use Caution Render not reviling for reviling imitate Christ 1 Pet. 2.23 and Paul 1 Cor. 4.12 being reviled we bless Yea he took pleasure in reproaches 2 Cor. 12.10 Let us look to the reward in heaven as Christ did Heb. 12.1 2. 3 Things may comfort under these 1 That our heart is well affected to every man yea even such as rail against us Matth. 5.44 2 That in private prayer we can pray for such reproaches Psal 109.3 4. 3 That thou hast a God to make thy complaint unto in all revilings as Nehemiah did Nehem. 4.3 4. 4 Your great reward in heaven 2 Exhortation Carry patiently under revilings for else 1 Thou wilt disturb thine own peace 2 Hereby thou wilt by an impatient frame of spirit discover so much evil as may be a just cause of revilement 3 By impatiency herein we may make others think us to be guilty 4 By reviling again you harden others in their reviling 5 You show great weakness to think so as if there were no other means to deliver you from an ill name but by an ill tongue Psal 38.12.13 When Davids enemies spake mischievous things against him he was a man that is both deaf dumb yet must we not so neglect our names that we should neglect the crimes falsely objected to us and confirm the slanderers but we must say I have not a Devil also If I have spoke evil bear witness of the evil He that neglects his name is cruell a good conscience is necessary for us before God a good name before our neighbour Luth. Ob. But I am guiltless and innocent and they reproach me falsely Ans The more false the things are the more cause thou hast to rejoyce if they were true thou hadst cause to be confounded For so persecuted they the Prophets Here 's the second ground of rejoycing It 's no otherwise with you then with the ancient Prophets of God whom they persecuted with reproaches as David Psal 31.11 Who was a reproach among his neighbours Psal 41.10 Mine enemies reproach me saying Where is thy God So strange were his reproaches that his heart was as it were broken with them Psal 69.20 So Jeremy cap. 20 10. I have heard the defaming of many Report say they and we will report it Nay it hath generally been the lot of true Prophets to be persecuted Matth. 23.34 So that we may say Which of the Prophets have not your fathers persecuted W●●ness Eliah Micaiah Amos c. 7.13 Zachary Matth. 23.35 36. Yea the Disciples Matth. 10.23 So that we may ●●y Gal. 4.29 As he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit So it is now Gal. 4.29 V. 13. Ye are the salt of the earth but if the salt have lost its savour wherewith shall it be salted It is thenceforth good for nothing but to be cast out and to be troden under foot of men Ye are the Salt of the Earth Quest Doth Christ call Ministers the Salt of the earth or all believers Ans Christ calls believers whether preachers or others the Salt of the earth 1 Because Christ not onely taught the twelve but all the disciples 2 Because it is not appropriated unto preachers alone but unto all believers to season others with grace for not onely preachers but all believers have the means of seasoning others as 1 Savoury speeches Col. 4.6 Let your speech be always with grace powdered with salt 2 Savoury examples Luke 14. ult Have salt in your selves and peace one with another that is as you live together in peace so let there be savoury and holy examples earth is put for the inhabitants of the earth by a Metonymie salt for them that do the duty of salt by a Metaphor But if the salt have lost his savor wherewith shall it be seasoned It is good for nothing no not so much as for the dunghill because it causes barrenness as if Christ should say If other men be unsavory you may season them but if you be unsavory who shall season you Use To apply this see 1 How unsavory mans nature is unless it be seasoned by the word Psal 14.3 men by nature are altogether become stinking their throats are like open sepulchres Rom. 3.13 Like putrified flesh to mans taste 2 See the duty of Christians which is to season others This is done 1 By the word which like unto salt gives rellish Psal 119.9 Wherewith all shall a young man cleanse his way by taking heed unto thy word 2 By a holy and blameless conversation Scandalous practises make persons to stink Gen. 34.30 Simeon and Levi by their slaying the Sichemites made Jacob to stink among the inhabitants of the land Holy practises insensibly gain others 1 Pet. 3.1 Wives be subject to your husbands that if any obey not the word they may be won by the conversation of their wives let no man be led with vain glory because of present hearers let us live blamelesly among men and speak nothing for trifling sake but being much silent to answer to what
pleasure 1 Joh. 2.16 V. 22. For verily I say unto you Till heaven and earth pass one jot or one title shall in no wise pass from the Law till all be fulfilled We come to the second Part viz. to a right information wherefore Christ came he came to fulfil it which fulfilling is amplified from the certainty thereof that heaven and earth shall sooner pass then that the least jot or title of the Law be not fulfilled Verily In the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it 's an Hebrew word set sometimes in the beginning sometimes in the end of a speech it hath divers significations which cannot be exprest in one word 2 Cor. 1.19 sometimes it signifies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 truly but being joyned to words of praying or wishing it hath the same signification with quaeso or utinam with I pray or Oh that or I would to God And therefore Davenant in Colos p. 526. saith it s derived of the Hebrew word Aman which in Hiphil signifies to believe in Niphal signifies to be firm stable and faithfull it 's a particle of confirmation and assurance When it is added to a prayer it is as it were the seal of it as Hierom speaks By this word believers show the sure perswasion of their hearts that God hears their prayer So that Amen is not the voice of one swearing but of one affirming a thing to be spoken by him or confirming a thing already spoken It 's of one affirming when it is set before a speech as here it is confirming when it is set after and doth as it were seal it Deut. 27.16 1 Cor. 14.16 Christ in regard of his truth and stability is called Amen Revel 3.14 Till heaven and earth pass It 's a Proverb as in English we say when the sky falls which according to the order of nature seems impossible as if he should say heaven and earth shall sooner pass then that things fore-told of God should not be fulfilled Esa 54.10 The Mountains shall remove but my covenant of peace shall not be taken away q. d. sooner Mountains remove then my covenant fail Psal 102.27 They shall waxe old meaning heaven and earth but thou art the same in the word of thy promise which undoubtedly shall be fulfilled No heresie hath overcome at length but the victory of the word abides Arrius Manicheus and the Papacy have perished but the word of God abides for ever Luth. Tom. 4.422 such phrases are Psal 89.38 Jer. 33.20 21. Psal 72.7 One jot or one title It 's a proverb Jod is the least of the Hebr. Letters and title or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or apex is a part of a letter as the head or tail of a letter hence that phrase de juris apicibus disputare to dispute of the titles of the Law It 's a Hebrew proverb there is not either a letter or a signe in the Law on which great mountains do not depend One title of doctrine is more worth then heaven and earth therefore we suffer it not to be hurt in the least Luth. Tom. 4.161 The Rabbins and other Jews had such a sollicitous care that they had not onely a most exact account of the sections and verses but they took notice of the Letters of the Alphabet as how often Aleph and Beth and other Letters were mentioned in the Old Testament so that there could not fail a title which would not from that wonderfull diligence be restored Q. Here might be a question mentioned by Prideaux de Punctorum Hebr. origine Seeing Iota's and titles or points are reckoned alike if the points were not in that time why doth Christ mention them A. There are three opinions concerning the beginning of the Hebrew points 1 That they were brought in with the Letters on Mount Sinai and given by Moses to God of this opinion was Picus Mirandula Junius Polanus and Broughton and many others both Jews and Christians 2 A second opinion that these points came in about the time of Ezra as Reuclin Buxtorf c. 3 The third opinion that they came in after the finishing of the Talmud and the threefold Masorah final textual and Marginal 500. years after Christ which is ascribed to the Tiberians those wise men For this opinion Elias the Levite is the Standard Bearer whom besides many Papists Luther Fagius Drusius and Martinius follow and to this opinion this Author leans 1 Because Origen Hierom Philo and other ancient translators never once mention these points and take away these points there 's nothing will be taken away from the certainty of reading as to matter and sence but onely in respect of pronunciation and easinesse of learners 2 In other Oriental tongues the points are later then the consonants why not then in the Hebrew seeing they draw their beginning from it These points were added not as elements of the tongue together with consonants but as distinctive and directive that the tongue might be preserved pure among so many calamities and might more easily be perceived and more exactly pronounced by others Moreover the Septuagint translated the Old Testament out of the Hebrew text unpointed Many other reasons may be seen in this Author But to answer to the question these tittle or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are certain pointed tops of letters parts of letters but points are not parts but added to the letters There are two titles one of the Law the other of Letters the Text speaks of the former Besides distinguish betwixt the rise of points and the perfecting of them whereby they went along with the text Ezra for the more easie knowledge of the text might invent some things and might passe it over to his successors who might increase them and therefore they might in Christs time be profitably in use in the Synagogue as the Text shews yet it followes not that the Text was pointed or that the Art of pointing was before the Tiberians which was 476 years after Christ who lived at Tiberias in Galilec Shall in no wise pass from the Law That is shall not passe without fulfilling But Christ of purpose handles this matter more darkly lest he should offend the tender mindes of the Apostles with those things which they could not well bear till the spirit was given who should lead them into all truth Joh. 16.13 So that the force of the argument is if one Iota or Jod or one point of a Jod cannot perish much less can the whole Law perish till all be fulfilled If we look to the letter Iota and not the Hebrew Jod some would gather it as probable that Matthew wrote in Greek but I have proved the contrary before and Christ speaking to the Hebrews saith one Jod as the Syriack and Hebrew hath it as Lapide tells us and the Greek Interpreter for Jod put in the Greek Iota which is equivalent So that the sense is there is not the least thing such as is Jod and Iota of those things which
he knowes our intentions for good when they are good Luke 21.2 V. 5. And when thou prayest thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are for they love to pray standing in the Synagogues and in the corners of the streets that they may be seen of men Verily I say unto you they have their reward Christ next unto a right direction in alms comes to give a right direction in prayer in which 1 He sets down the sins to be avoided 2 The manner of right performance The sins to be avoided are 1 Hypocrisie v. 5. 2 Vain glory v. 5. They love to pray standing that many eys may be on them 3 Vain repetitions v. 7. 2 The manner of right performance which must be 1 With confidence Pray to thy father 2 With secrecy Pray to thy father in secret v. 6. 3 Grounds hereof 1 Your father who sees in secret will reward openly 2 It 's a heathenish practise to use vain repetitions v. 7. 3 The knowledge God hath of your wants and his readiness to supply you v. 8. And when thou prayest thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are That is as the hypocritical Scribes and Pharisees For they love to pray standing in the Synagogues Q. Whether is it not lawfull to pray standing A. Yes Mark 11.25 When ye stand praying forgive The Pharisee and the Publican stood both when they prayed Luke 18 11 13. The Levites stood and cried with a loud voice unto the Lord Neh. 9.4 Abraham stood praying Gen. ●8 22 Moses and Samuel Jer. 15.1 and Job cap. 30.20 And sometimes and more frequently kneeling was used Solomon 1 Kings 8.54 arose from before the altar of the Lord from kneeling upon his knees Daniel kneeled upon his knees three times a day Dan. 6.10 Every knee shall bow to me Esai 45 23. I have left unto me 7000 that have not bowed the knee to Baal 1 Kings 19.18 Wherewith shall I bow my knee before the most high God Mic. 6.6 Let us bow down and kneel before the Lord our Maker Ps 95.6 To stand in prayer is not unlawfull but to stand that thou mayest be seen is unlawfull In the new Testament we read that Christ kneeled down and prayed Luke 22.41 Peter kneeled down when he prayed for Tabitha Acts 9.40 Paul kneeled down and prayed with them all who had brought him on his way Acts 20.36 Also Paul bowed his knees to the father of our Lord Jesus Christ Eph. 3.14 Stephen kneeled down in his last prayer Acts 7.60 Also Paul and his company kneeled down on the shore and prayed Acts 21.5 In prayer that gesture is to be used that doth most quicken and help to the duty The ancient Christians were wont to kneel in remembrance of the fall of Adam and of all his posterity and sometimes to pray standing in remembrance of the grace of Christ whereby we have risen from our fall Kneeling on the six days was a badge of our fall by sin but that we do not kneel on the Lords day is a signe of Resurrection From the times of the Apostles this custome came in as Irenaeus mentions Lib. de Pasch Quest Respons ad Orthodox q. 115. ascribed to Justin Aug. Epist 119.115 2 Q. Whether was it not lawfull to pray in the Synagogues A. Yes David saith Bless ye God in the Congregations Psal 68.26 For by Synagogues he means publick prayer which was used Matth. 18.20 Acts 1.14 practised by the hundred and twenty also Acts 4.24 Acts 12.5 where the Church were praying for Peter Grounds of publick prayer 1 There God is wont to communicate his presence Psal 26.8.65.4.52.8.76.1 2.132.13 14.133.3 2 The concurrent prayers of Gods people is wont to be more strong as many hands lifting at a burthen lift the burthen though great many flames of fire united in one are not easily quenched many springs of water conjoyned make the stream the stronger if the prayers of one Moses were so strong to keep God from destroying Israel Exod. 32.10.11 Psal 106.23 what will the prayers of many do Acts 12.5 as we see in Peters case who was delivered by the prayers of the Church 3 In that there are publick Officers chosen of Churches to present their requests before the Lord hence as those that are sollicitours for a Corporation had need to know the wants thereof so should the Officers of Churches in special be acquainted with the brethrens wants 4 Because publick occasions require it both in Church as the seeking some special mercy from God which concerns the whole Church as Peters deliverance Acts 1.5 12. the whole Church sometimes wants a mercy Matth. 18.20 the whole Church sometimes wants to have a judgement turn'd away Acts 4.24 also in the Commonwealth for to pray for the happiness of the Magistracy 1 Tim. 2.1 I exhort that supplications prayers be made for all men for Kings and all that are in authority By the blessing of whose prayers and examples is a City exalted Prov. 11.11 5 It 's for the honour and glory of God to have so many petitioners waiting on him for his royal assent a joynt cry of one and the same spirit from so many breathings of his people 〈…〉 prayer is as it were a publick hue and cry made our by an embodied Church against the common enemies of Je●●s Christ of their souls Praise waits for him in Sion Psal 68. ● 6 In publick prayer there is as it were the conjunctions of the spirits and graces of a body of Christ as it were in one Hence the whole Church Acts ● 42 as they continued in breaking bread together so did they in prayer and were as it were of one accord These all continued in one accord with prayer and supplication Acts 1.14 Acts 4.24 the Church lift up their voices with one accord the breathings of the spirit which were scattered in many are as it were united in one and as the waters of several channels disburthen themselves sometimes in one current so that where his name is thus recorded he is wont to come and blesse his people Exod. 20.24 In all places where I record my name I will come unto thee and I will bless thee Seeing then there are such conjunctions of spirits he that is the mouth ought to be carefull to present onely such requests wherein all Christians do agree and the body that are worshippers and all the worshippers are to come together like so many Doves to their windowes Esai 60.8 even the Prince himself not excepted Ezek. 46.10 that they may serve the Lord with one consent or shoulder Zeph. 3.9 the usual careless neglect whereof if it do not speak forth prophaneness yet doth it speak forth a spirit of lukewarmness 7 In publick prayer there 's a provocation of one another by godly examples In the corners of the streets That is where they might be beheld of the inhabitants of two or three or four streets at once whereas there is in sincere prayer 1 A proposing of the eye
to this I say lay aside passion and then come 1 Tim. 2.8 Lift up holy hands without wrath pray for the party with whom lately thou hast been angry and that is a sign thou comes with a new disposition 8 Take heed of Satans temptations who will be ready to propose businesses then to hinder thee 2 Use furtherances for prayer as 1 when the spirit bespeaks prayer and puts the soul into a frame to long to be alone to vent it self to God when the wind and tide serves its good then to hoyse up sails Psal 27.8 Seek my face thy face will I seek 2 The second furtherance is when the soul is in tribulation Tribulation sets an edge on prayer hence Psal 50.15 we are bid to call on God in the time of trouble no better master to teach a man to pray next to the spirit then necessity In trouble the grace of prayer is much revived Esa 26.17 Lord in trouble they have visited thee they powred out a prayer when thy chastning was upon them Look upon Passengers in a storm and arrived at the haven look upon persons in prison and at banquets compare persons on beds of sickness and the same persons in strength of health and abounding with outward comforts in the one estate they are full of contempt of God and security in the other prone to cry earnestly for mercy Hezekiah when Sennacherib came against him very much given to prayer when he was delivered from his enemy ready to be lifted up David in adversity gave himself to prayer Psal 109.4 in prosperity falls to number the people 3 A third furtherance is calmeness of spirit when the spirit is neither in a hurry of passion nor a hurry of business for unfinished business is apt to run in the mind and to disturb at that time the soul having so many bussings in its ear can neither hear it self speaking to God nor hear God speaking to the soul 4 In Gods approaching to our soul Lam. 3.57 Thou drewest near in the day that I cryed unto thee thou saidest fear not Esa 55.6 call upon him while he is near Noble Princes in their progress are wont to grant petitioners their sutes its wisdom then to petition the Lord when near to us Psal 145.18 one time or other God's near to every holy heart therefore then call on him Psal 34.18 Quicken us and we will call upon thy name Psa 80.18 5 When promises are near fulfilling Psa 102.13 Thou shalt arise and have mercy upon Sion for the time to favour her yea the set time is come meaning of seventy years This is some good hope that Christs coming is near because the Saints are stirred up so generally to pray for it The reading of Jeremies prophecy Jer. 29.10 that God would visit his people after seventy years put Daniel upon praying for the accomplishment thereof Dan. 9.2 3 4. Object I would thus pray but I finde I am so straitened that I cannot pray Answ It is so with the best of Saints sometimes that their souls are bound up they are like poor Infants that feel pain but cannot tell where their pain lies hence Psal 51.15 Lord open thou my Lips By grieving the spirit we become straitened for when the spirit is withdrawn we are like Mills that want Winde or Water and cannot grinde In such times it is persons are backward to stir up their souls to take hold of God Isai 64.7 To help us against straitnings 1 Use holy motion Motion is the cause of heat motion brings a benummed member to feeling let us make essays even when deadness is upon us yea when most straitened a gracious heart is to stir up it self 2 Tim. 1.6 Stir up the gift of God which is in thee Exod. 35.21 They came every one whose heart stirred him up and every one whom his spirit made willing to bring the Lords offering 2 Complain of thy straitness say Lord I am in Prison and cannot come forth I would willingly display all my wants to thee but cannot weep over my unbelief but am not able Why withdrawest thou thy self Why art thou so far from helping me and from the words of my roaring Psal 22.1 2 Isai 63 17. 3 Beg enlargement of God Psalm 119.32 I will run in the way of this Commandment as well as other but when when thou shalt enlarge mine heart Isai 35.6 The tongue of the dumb shall sing when waters break forth in the wilderness 4 Take heed thou straiten not thy self neither for time nor place For time persons often causlesly put themselves into the compass of so little time that they cannot enlarge persons frequently inuring themselves to straitning in the end begin to like it well enough So for straitness of place they do not use their voices because they cannot use them without being heard of others let it be your wisdom to chuse such a place wherein you may not be straitned as to your voice or otherwise 5 Consider what a dangerous thing it is to 〈◊〉 taken with a Palsey in the tongue that a man cannot tell where his pain lies All Imprisonment is comfortless but this the worst in other Imprisonment we may perhaps have much access to God but not in this many men have enlargements of all sorts of blessings upon them as Liberty Estate c. onely as it was said of the Corinthians 2 Cor. 6.12 They are straitened in their own bowels for Prayer and Praise and yet little lay it to their hearts Such kinde of straitnings when they are long they are dangerous for persons that have lain long under straitnings are ready to lay aside endeavours for their liberty because they have often used it to no effect 6 Usually reade the word before thy closet prayer and meditate of it in the use whereof the fire kindles besides those good things which thou diddest reade out of the Word will remain in thy thoughts and conduce to season thine heart 7 Walk humbly under straitnings especially when they are of any long continuance so the Church Song cap. 5. v. 5 6. I sought him but I could not finde him I called unto him but he gave me no answer Job 30.20 Job cries out I cry unto thee but thou dost not hear me I stand up but thou regardest me not Quest But seeing Saints are sometimes straitned in Prayer as well as carnal men wherein is the difference Answ Godly persons though sometimes they have straitnings yet have they also enlargements now and then Lam. 3.44 compared with v. 57. One while the Church saith The Lord compassed himself with a cloud that her Prayer could not pass through anon she saith Thou drewest near in the day that I cried unto thee thou saidst Fear not Psalm 31.22 I said I am cast out of thy sight here was the Prophets straitning nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my supplications here was his enlargement see Psalm 6.1 compared with v. 8. Jon. 2.7 Carnal men they may
Remission of sins which is spread over me Luth. Tom. 4.76 Now that happiness consists in forgiveness appears thus 1 Sin exposes us to all misery both in this life and hereafter Rom. 3.23 now it 's a happiness to be freed from this misery 2 The blessing cannot come upon us till the curse be removed Gal. 3 1● 14. now we are not freed from the curse till our sins be forgiven 3 Where God forgives there 's none can condemn Rom. 8.1.33.34 now it must needs be a state of happiness to be free from condemnation 4 Without forgiveness there 's no reconciliation now we can never be happy till God and the soul be reconciled That reconciliation goes with forgiveness appears 2 Cor. 5.19 God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them 2 Use Triall whether God hath forgiven thy sins 1 There will be then a writing of Gods Law in thy heart because the branches of the new covenant are inseparable Heb. 8.10 12. where God remembers sin no more he so writeth Gods Law in the heart 2 The sealing of the Spirit manifested to Gods people in Prayer Ephes 1.13 After ye believed ye were sealed Every comfortable answer in Prayer doth help to clear up pardon to the soul 3 A thankfull frame of heart in the receipt of this privilege Psalm 103.1 2. Bless the Lord O my soul why who forgiveth all thy sins Hezekiah praises God for this mercy Isai 38.17 Behold for peace I had great bitterness but thou in love to my soul hast delivered me from the pit of corruption for thou hast cast all my sins behinde thy back 1 Tim. 1.13 14 15. 4 With pardon there is a subdument of the reigning power of sin Mic. 7.18 19 Rom. 6.14 Rom. 8.1 2. Jebusites will dwell in the Land whether you will or no onely they are conquered and become tributary Josh 17.11 12. 5 Pardon of sin is accompanied with sanctifying grace as the Lord took Joshua's filthy garments off so he gave him change of raiment Josh 3.3 4. Ezek. 16.9 10 11. There 's ever a love goes to the Lord. Luke 7.47 speaking of Mary Magdalen he saith Her sins which are many are forgiven her for she loved much Her love was not the cause of remission but a declarative sign thereof the Pharisee findes fault with Christ for suffering a sinner to be so familiar with him Christ answers She is no sinner he proves it because her sins were forgiven her but how proves he that why she loved much And as it is accompanied with the grace of love so with the grace of fear Jer. 32.40 6 Repentance and Forgiveness goes together Luke 24.47 Acts 2.38 39. Acts 3.19 Acts 5.31 Therefore whatsoever evidences Repentance evidences Forgiveness 7 Pardon of sin is accompanied with sovereign love to God 1 John 4.19 We love him because he first loved us and for the degree see Matth. 10.37 so Mary Magdalen Luke 7.38 compared with v. 47. Love is in true Faith as the Fruit in the Root 8 Peace of Conscience is an evidence Rom. 5.1 being justified by Faith we have Peace with God I mean such a Peace as arises after trouble or deliverance from danger and frees the soul from slavish fears 9 A desire of more and more assurance This is an Argument that we have tasted the sweetness of Pardon in some measure There are three things proper to Saints they think they can never be humbled enough nor thankfull enough nor assured of Gods love enough Hence David after Nathan had come to him and assured him of pardon prays Psalm 51.8 Make me to hear joy and gladness that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoyce and not being satisfied herewith v. 12. he prays Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation Onely if the evidence of the Spirit shew not it self always in the same measure we must have recourse to those Evidences God gives sometimes knowing that these Evidences which come from the Spirit as a cause and the fruits of sanctification as effects are occasional refreshings for the soul in its way to Heaven but not daily food for the soul to feed upon Feasting is not for every day except the Feast of a good Conscience that the Conscience witnesses we live not in the omission of a known duty nor in the commission of a known iniquity 10 We know it by these three witnesses the blood of Christ pacifying the conscience 1 Joh. 5.9 the witness of water altering our natures and the testimony of the Spirit saying I am thy salvation thy sins are pardoned such testimonies ought to be carefully kept even as a malefactor carefully keeps a pardon under seal which he means to produce for his life at the next assizes between the Lord and a true believer there is as it were a mutual contract Faith sets to its feat that God is true in that he promiseth Joh. 3 3● And God by his Spirit seals unto the believer that he shall be undoubtedly brought to the salvation he hath bel●●●ed 11 When thou canst produce some promise that doth discharge 〈◊〉 which the Spirit ●●th made over to thy soul as that Esa 43.25 Joh. 3.16 It s not bare remembring promises is so comfortable as those promises made over to thy soul wherein thy soul rests and received comfort If a man have paid his debts he is able to produce his acquittance that they are paid When we have such promises so made over to produce they are as it were acquittances under hand and seal Suppose that without the in-come of the Spirit in the promise thou shouldest believe which I doubt of yet through the in-come of the Spirit in the promise thou mayest know that thou dost believe As the pipes of a conduit convey water hither and thither so doth the Spirit in the promise believed convey grace and comfort into our hearts Yet some think that when God gives a particular promise it is not to measure our condition by but to uphold the soul in the condition of desertion or temptation Hence though Hezekiah had a particular word for deliverance the three children had not 3 Use to believe the forgiveness of sins and labour after assurance thereof Wherefore came Christ into the world Wherefore hath he carried our nature into heaven and there appears for us Why hath he given us his oath Heb. 6. Why hath he given us the signes of the Covenant Why have we so many commands to believing and so many reproofs of unbelief Why have we besides the sealing of the promise with the bloud of the testator the sealing with the spirit of promise as a pledge a pawn and an earnest but onely to urge us to believe Though we will not believe a mans word or bond yet upon sufficient pawn we will deal though the man be but weak and shall we not trust God for that for which we have so good a pawn as his Spirit And in order to this thy
inward voice he should say thy sins are pardoned Rom. 8.16 2 Cor 1.22 Eph. 4.30 It s not enough onely to have a general foundation laid that God and Christ bare good will to all believers but the Spirit comes and saith Christ hath a special good will to me and stirrs up in me a liking to him again and a willingness to take him with the parting with every lust and enjoyment And to this there follows after we have gone on in believing a while a further sense of the Spirit which is sometimes interrupted after sealing thereof through remaining unbelief and practical weakness so far as to question our condition but in some this seal of the Spirit is so clear and strong that the soul questioneth not its estate in grace ever after conscience of unkindness to such a friend should much trouble us Now we may know this voice of the Spirit from delusion because it is given to us when the soul is humbled and melts in prayer or forsakes some dear enjoyment for God and it leaves behind it a holy self abasement in respect of our unthankfulness and our ill requiting the Lord and a lifting up the head to think upon death and judgement as dayes of redemption We see then that besides the acts of faith which is to take Christ and to cast our selves upon the mercy of God there is the fruit of faith to be assured hereof in order thereto the Spirit first gives us those graces and workings which are our evidences then helps us to feel those evidences in our selves and then raises comfort in the soul upon those discoveries Obj. But doth not the doctrine of assurance breed security loosness presumption Answ The favour of God believed breedeth love of God where there is love there is a fear of every thing that may divide betwixt the soul and God Nothing more quickens a soul to chearful obedience then the assurance of Gods love 2 Cor. 5.1 compared with ver 15. He is a graceless child that will venture to offend his father because he knows he neither will nor can disinherit him So graceless should we be if knowing of Gods love to our souls we should presume to sin against him Rom. 6.1 compared with ver 15. Shall we sin because we are under Grace God forbid 2 Those that are sure of salvation though they need not fear damnation yet may they fear to bring upon themselves wrath as sickness trouble of conscience c. Obj. But we cannot be sure of perseverance without which what is assurance Answ Yes from these promises Joh. 10.28 29. None shall pluck them out of my hands Joh. 10.28 29. and from Christ his prayer Luk. 22.31 3● God will not suffer us to be tempted above the power of grace to unsettle any habit though to the unsettlement of some act Rom. 8.38 39. 4 Use Seeing God forgives sins 1 pray for sensibleness and sight of thy sins Lam. 3.39 For daily we fall into not onely sin but sins 2 For humiliation under them 1 Cor. 11.31 4 For forgiveness of others Eph. 4.32 5 Seeing God forgives sins 1 Take notice of Gods patience that bears with our sins from day to day 2 Pet 3.9 2 Note that humane satisfactions can be of no force 3 That we should not onely have a care of our own salvation but of the salvation of our brethren in asking pardon for them if we see them sin a sin that is not unto death 1 John 5.16 4 That even righteous and justified persons stand need of being justified still Rev. 22.11 5 That our sins being called debts we may see that all sorts of punishments are owing unto us for our sins till God forgive them in Christ and the sin being forgiven the punishment also is forgiven hence that which Luke calls Sins Luke 11.4 Matthew calls Debts 6 Seeing God forgives sins and assures thereof do not you from Satans temptations misdoubt those Evidences which you have seriously examined and found to be true Suppose your Friend give you an Inheritance and good Evidences to assure you of it and a cavilling fellow shall come and tell you your Evidence is naught will you upon his prattle judg your Title nothing So the Lord hath forgiven your sins and you have good Evidences thereof will you then upon Satans cavils judg your Evidences nothing When I die I descend into Hell I am undone what shall I do no help remains besides the Word I believe in God c. We were created of the Word and it behoves us to be returned into the Word Luth. in Gen. 37. 9 If we have not this assurance we shall be in no better condition than Heathens who have no hope 1 Thess 4.13 Ephes 2.12 So Justin Martyr speaks of Socrates these words Now is the hour of going away at hand for me to death for you to a longer life but whether of us go to a better estate is unknown unto all save to God Cohort ad Graecos pag. 26. How much better spoke holy Luther The Devil in the hour of death will shew thee all thy wicked life do not despair which Satan desires but believe and say I know all my life is damnable if it should be judged but God hath commanded me to trust not in my life but in his mercy This wisdom we ought to follow in the hour of death there the flesh trembles that it must go into a new life and doubts of salvation if thou follows these thoughts thou art undone here thine eys are to be shut and say with Stephen Jesus into thine hands I commend my spirit then certainly will Jesus be present with his Angels and be the guide of the way Bernard when sometimes he was sick to death sounded no other thing than this I have lost my time because I have lived wickedly but one thing comforts me thou wilt not despise a broken and a contrite heart Also Lord Jesus thou holds the Kingdom of Heaven by a double right 1 Because thou art the Son of God 2 Because thou hast purchased it by thy Death this thou keepest for thy self by right of nativity that thou givest me not by the law of works but of grace As we forgive our Debtours This is a motive or as some call it a sign because we frankly forgive our Debtours therefore we desire God to forgive us From hence learn 1 That unless we pardon the wrongs done to us we desire Gods vengeance against our selves 2 That wrongs done by others to us make them Debtours to us which though in respect of the sin against us we are bound to forgive yet in respect of the damage we sustain in our Estates we may require satisfaction 3 It 's an evidence that God hath and will forgive us if we do freely without exercising private revenge forgive others Col. 3.13 Forgiving one another if any man have a quarrel against any as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you In nothing do we more
shall onely shew his opinion 3 Let it be with modesty and humility not in a proud magisterial way that it may appear the desired satisfaction arises meerly from conscience and not from humour 4 With a care to preserve the authority and reputation of the Teacher Titus 2.15 5 Upon due satisfaction given to sit down and hold your peace and not for the defence of your own opinion and credit to violate peace and holiness See Acts 11.18 6 To avoid all words that may force strife that the hearer may go away and report that God is among this people whiles they can peaceably debate of the things of God 1 Cor. 14.25 See 2 Tim. 2.23 7 Be sure that what you have to reply against any thing delivered be of moment and strength else your selves who shall reply will suffer reproach and scorn herein and come under the name of a gain-sayer Titus 1.9 8 In case words tending to no profit but to the subverting of hearers shall be brought the Preacher is to charge them before the Lord That they strive not about words to no profit 2 Tim. 2.16 Also v. 14. Shun profane and vain bablings for they will increase unto more ungodliness and their word will cat as a Canker as Hymenaeus and Philetus who denied the Resurrection so Quakers Antiscripturists are thus to be charged For the time will come when men will not endure sound doctrine but will turn away their ears from the truth and shall be turned into fables 9 Sometimes apostate Professours stirred up by the Devil this way as well as others may make great resistance against the words of a faithfull Preacher 2 Tim. 2.14 Alexander the Copper-smith greatly withstood the Apostles preaching and it may be suspected that some will be apt to abuse this Liberty proudly opposing sound Doctrine for meer trifles 10 Herewith rejoycing Jer. 15.16 Thy words were found and I did eat them and thy word was unto me the joy and rejoycing of my heart Psalm 119.162 David rejoyced in the Word as one that findeth great spoil Acts 2.41 Object But the stony ground received the Word with joy Matth. 13.20 Answ So they did and it was well that they did but 1 Hypocrites joy in some part onely but right hearers joy in every part hypocrites joy in the promises not in the precepts 2 Hypocrites joy in the notion onely but the right hearer joys in those truths as having an interest in them We rejoyce in the sight of a Diamond but joy more in the property The joy of one is like the joy of a man that is glad to see a fine field of Corn the joy of the other is like the joy of him that is the owner of this field of Corn. 3 Hypocrites joy in the Word after the outward man as apprehending most of the duties equitable and reasonable and many of them advantageous to a mans Estate credit and relations but a right hearer delights in the Law of God after the inner man Rom. 7.22 4 True joy is accompanied with fear Psalm 2.11 Rejoyce in him with trembling and also righteousness Rom. 14.17 The Kingdom of God consisteth in righteousness peace and joy of the Holy Ghost It 's otherwise in hypocrites their joy is accompanied with love of some Lust 11 Practise Christian conference Mal. 3.16 The godly when they met together spake often one to another of the providence of God The two Disciples going to Emaus communed together and reasoned of what they heard from Christ Luk. 24.15 Exhort one another daily while it is called to day Heb. 3.13 In speaking of the good things we have heard we do not onely warm others but our own hearts also 12 Retain and hold fast the Word 1 John 3 9. The seed of God abideth in him Cares pleasures will be apt to steal away the Word Else the fowls of the air will devour it Luke 8.5 For as many fowls follow the Seeds-man to pick up what is sown so do many Devils follow Sermons to pick up the seed Devils are called Fowls of the Air both for the nimbleness of their motion in a little time they will compass the whole earth Job 1.7 and from the place of their habitation which is the Air Ephes 2.2 13 Avoid all cavilling objections against the Word 1 Tim. 6.3 4. we ought to consent to the Doctrine according to godliness without any cavilling It 's one thing to make an objection in order to Christian satisfaction and another thing to cavil from pride and conceitedness Cavillers in Pauls time were out of Churches 1 Cor. 1.23 Where is the disputer of this world Take we heed they be not now in the Church It was the wickedness of the Jews that they were gain-sayers not onely their ears but their hearts Rom. 10.21 against Gods truth I have stretched out my hand to a gain-saying people 14 Practice meditation Deut. 32.46 set your hearts to all the words I testifie among you this day As a plaister works not unless it be bound on to the sore no more doth the Word unless meditation bind it on the affections Unclean beasts contrarily chew not the cud As the ground cannot be quickned with fruit unless it receive the seed no more can our hearts be quickned with the Spirit and fruits of it till by the use of hearing and meditation we have taken in this seed Many are so far from meditating that they are like children when schooling time is ended glad who can first get out and think not of what they have learned 15 Consider the benefits you shall have in the preaching of the Gospel when rightly received As 1 The graces and comforts of the Spirit conveyed in the beginnings and increases thereof even as Conduit-pipes carry water hither and thither Luke 24.32 Did not our hearts burn within us whiles he talked with us by the way Gal. 3.2 5. 2 Therein glad tydings are conveyed Rom. 10.15 How beautifull are the feet of them that bring good news Upon the hearing of it we feel as it were new spirits to return to us how much more when we hear tydings of reconciliation from God how should our hearts abound in comfort shall other news revive us not this 3 The excellency of the ministry we are under it is the ministry of the Gospel far more excellent then that of the Law 1 In the Law they saw darkly we with open face 2 Cor. 3.18 2 The one is the ministration of death but the Gospel is the ministration of righteousness and life v. 7 8 9. Obj. But may not the Gospel also be called a ministration of death Answ Yes by accident not directly when souls will not obey the Gospel it turns to their condemnation As a Princes pardon cannot kill any one of it self but being despised it doubles the guilt and brings to a more hasty destruction so the pardon of God in the Gospel killeth not any but being despised causeth more heavy destruction But the Law
believers are called Israel Gal. 6.17 And in particular it is a consolation to Preachers of the Gospel who when cast out by one people will be received by another I rather expound this place of the second sending than of the first because in the first sending the Apostles were used courteously Luke 10.17 and they came rejoycingly telling Christ the Devils were subject to them And no such hardships happened to them that we reade of We may learn three things 1 That Saints must prepare for persecution 2 Tim. 3.12 All godly must suffer it As he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit so is it now Gal. 4.29 If the Son of God were persecuted John 15.20 Saints must not look to go free John 15.20 Hence in or about the same year Christ spoke this there broke out a Persecution against the Church Acts 8.1 2. after the death of Stephen 2 When Gods people see themselves persecuted in one City they have a call to fly into another City Matth. 23.34 3 There will be some Saints and Cities that will be ready to receive persecuted Saints untill the coming of Christ 2 Cor. 4.9 Persecuted but not forsaken 2 Tim. 3.11 Prov. 14.26 V. 24. The Disciple is not above his Master nor the Servant above his Lord. V. 25. It is enough for the Disciple that he be as his Master and the Servant as his Lord if they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub how much more shall they call them of his houshold Christ brings here a second Reason why Christians in general and Preachers in particular should patiently endure persecution because herein it is no otherwise with them than was with their Master Christ which Christ backs with a twofold Reason 1 The Scholar thinks it honourable to be made equal to his Master 2 Servants refuse not that condition which their Masters patiently endure So that Christ reasons that if he had suffered reproaches and slanders from the Jews and lookt to suffer greater even the death of the Cross then must you my Disciples prepare for the like It much tends to patience to know the evils that hang over us which Christ hath foretold us and hath gone before us by example in All ingenuous Christians are much troubled with reproaches hereby to be rendered odious but it is with them no otherwise than with Christ It would be counted an absurd thing to see a General of an Army going on foot and all the private Souldiers riding in Coaches and on horseback so will it be to see Christ the Captain of our salvation to lie under the reproaches of glutton drunkard deceiver devil and in the mean time we his Souldiers to be in honour with the world If they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub how much more shall they call them of his houshold Beelzebub was the god of Ekron 2 Kings 1.3 Is it not because there is not a god in Israel that ye go to inquire of Baal-zebub the god of Ekron See also v. 6. The learned render it to signifie the Lord of a Fly or having a Fly because he was worshipped and called upon against a Plague of Flies because they believed he expelled and destroyed those Flies which infested And Nazianzen against Julian witnesseth that Beelzebub was made in fashion of a Fly Hence the Septuagint translate Beelzebub deum Muscam the god Fly Now the Jews partly out of scorn and partly out of abomination called the Prince of the Devils the god Fly which name took its rise in this manner The ancient Jews with great consent declare among other Privileges which God bestowed on his Temple at Jerusalem this was one that when such a number of sacrifices was daily slaughtered there was never any Fly beheld in the Temple which when Jupiter who was most famous among the Heathens could not do but always his Temple did abound with multitudes of Flies Grot. in loc therefore he was called the Jupiter of Flies Now the Jews learning from the Prophets that the gods of the Gentiles were Devils and the Predictions they foretold to be the works of unclean spirits they called the Prince of the Devils by that name wherewith the Prince of the supposed gods was called as we see Matth. 12.24 Now the Pharisees would perswade the people that the Miracles that Christ did were done by the power of the Prince of the Devils therefore most blasphemously they called Christ Beelzebub as if he were his Vicar and Deputy So that Christ reasons If they have called me the Master of the house Beelzebub much more you of my houshold Therefore seeing I patiently bear their reproaches See John 8.48 49. Do you also in like manner Christ should not onely be to us a Patern of Holiness but of Sufferings We may also see the near relations betwixt Christ and us he is the Master we his Scholars he is our Lord and we are his Servants he is the Master of the house Believers his houshold V. 26. Fear them not therefore for there is nothing covered that shall not be revealed and hid that shall not be known The words are an answer to an Objection in the mindes of the Disciples viz. we could easily contemn the reproaches of the wicked if our innocency did appear unto others now we lie under suspition and we have no defence To this Christ answers Fear not their reproaches your innocency covered over with slanders shall one day be revealed 3 So that here 's a third Reason I fear them not in all their reproaches malice blasphemy therefore do not ye fear them 4 There is nothing covered that shall not be revealed Here is a fourth Reason your innocency howsoever now aspersed shall be cleared up the slanders of the Jews concerning the magical arts of Christ and his Apostles the horrible Lyes of the Pagans concerning the incestuous Copulations of the Christians and their drinking mans bloud were in time discovered what they were Obs Secrecy of sin will not privilege it David committed Adultery secretly but God revealed it before the Sun 2 Sam. 12.12 Cains Murder and Jezebels Murder of Naboth clouded innocency comes forth as in Joseph slandered by his Mistris and David slandered by Sauls Courtiers So covered iniquity shall not always be hid Psal 90.8 Heb. 4.13 1 Tim. 5.24 25. Sometimes both innocency and wickedness are brought forth in this life Psalm 37.6 He shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light and thy just dealing as the noon-day And as innocency so secret wickedness Prov. 26.26 Whose hatred is covered by deceit his wickedness shall be revealed before the whole congregation And as in this life so especially shall they be brought forth at the Day of Judgment Eccles 12.14 God will bring every secret thing to judgment 1 Cor. 4.5 Then will God manifest the counsels of the heart 2 Cor. 5.10 Luke 12.2 Some expound it thus Fear not to preach my Gospel though few
thou dye Contrary when men either think in their prosperity they shall never be moved or put off the evil day far off as they did Amos 6.3 how can they take up the cross when it comes 2 Believe that all things shall work together for thy good Rom. 8.28 and that they come from the hand of a father Joh. 18.11 yea even sore sufferings God is wont to hide his face and withdraw his hand from Saints and suffers them to mourn to be sold to be cast in prison to dye no otherwise then if they were the enemies of God Luth. in Gen. 37. 3 Get low thoughts to all earthly comforts Pro. 23.5 Wilt thou cause thine eys to flye upon that which is not As the Margin reads it that is it is not that which it seems to be riches honours preferments are not that they seem to be Think of the vanity of credit with men of great mens favours c. what will these be in the day of death 4 Look upon the crown Christ endured the cross despising the shame and is now set down on the right hand of God What was the ground he endured the cross Why it was for the joy that was set before him Heb. 12.2 Acts 14.22 Rom. 8.18 2 Tim. 2.12 5 Look upon the sweet comforts Saints finde under the cross their comforts abound most then even as their sufferings also abound 2 Cor. 1.5 Hence the Martys found Prisons more comfortable then Palaces As Princes use to recompense them who have suffered loss in their service so doth Christ make up the sufferings of his people with comfort 6 Beware of having a squint eye upon the issues and events of things before we let conscience give judgment but let us have a full eye upon the rule and upon the command so Abraham in sacrificing his son Gideon in cutting down the Idol Paul Gal. 1.15 consulted not with flesh and bloud when God called him to preach 7 Look to Christ who hath taken up the Cross before us Heb. 12.2 8 We are not esteemed by Christ as his Disciples till we have the disposition to take up the Cross whatsoever our profession of Faith may be Luke 9.23 Luke 14.26 9 Beware of indwelling corruption which still counsels us rather to balk duty than to expose our selves to the cross How oft doth the flesh put persons upon lying upon deceitfull distinctions to escape the cross That which lies in the bottom is they are loth to lose such gain to displease a good friend to procure the enmity of such a man as may hurt us to part with such an Office or Employment To remedy this hold no mans friendship but in subordination to duty and look upon all gain as cursed which is got with the wounding of the soul Matth. 16.26 10 Consider that herein we express our friendship to Christ when we will not let any cross part him and us Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should rejoyce in any thing save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ For one friend upon choice to suffer for another argues entire friendship so for us to suffer for Christ upon choice and not upon necessity argues much friendship towards Christ 11 Inure not your self to pleasures and delicacy How hardly will the cross be born of such Moses when he was a Courtier he slighted the pleasures of the Court Heb. 11.25 12 Submit to live in a low condition for want of which frame of spirit many dare not take up the Cross they know not how to be poor it was otherwise with Paul Phil. 4.13 I have learned in every estate therewith to be content 13 Rid thy heart of slavish fear as fear of Imprisonment Revel 2.10 Fear none of these things thou shalt suffer the Devil shall cast some of you into Prison Slavish fear of contempt of multitudes keeps some from duty contrariwise in Job cap. 31.34 Did I fear a great multitude or did the contempt of families terrifie me Fear of Excommunication oft keeps men from taking up the Cross John 12.42 Among the chief Rulers many believed on him but because of the Pharisees they did not confess him lest they should be put out of the Synagogue Excommunication is much to be dreaded but when we have an absolute certainty upon the conscience in the witness of any cause of God we are not to dread it for even Excommunication hath sometimes unjustly afflicted Saints Isai 66 5. John 16.2 As it 's a folly to be affraid of a painted man drawing a Sword so it 's a folly to be terrified with the name Church when it is blasphemously used for it is onely a painted Church or vizard of a Church Luth. in Gen. 21. The Censure of the Church shall not separate me from the Church if truth joyn me to the Church Luth. Tom. 1. cap. 58. 14 Bear not the Cross because thou hast secondary refuges but meerly out of conscience of a command of Christ for example some men will bear the cross of outward losses for Christ when they have got enough to maintain them in the world but not before when as the same thing that was a truth to them now was a truth to them then O but then they were poor but now otherwise But is not duty duty and must duty give way to temporal concernments and not be obeyed till we can without inconvenience and loss obey it It 's a usual deceit in most mens hearts they will first bring about the ends they desire and then take up the cross but in taking up the cross we are not to take the delay of one day Luke 9.23 no nor one hour Gal. 2.5 15 Often cast up what Christianity and a good conscience may cost thee I have not a stronger Argument against the Popes Kingdom than that it reigns without the Cross Luth. Tom. 2.223 Luke 14.28 29. What man goes to build and considers not whether he have to finish it Who goes to sea and prepares not for a storm The benefit will be this to wit when we meet with troubles the soul will say These are the things that I lookt for Men cast up the easie part of Religion but do not cast up the hard part 16 Be earnest for God to give thee an invincible resolution that when the flesh asks you will you omit no duty though it costs you never so much you may answer no as Daniel cap. 6.10 who would no omit praying though to be known to pray was a matter capital Micaiah would not balk the telling of Ahab a Message from God though Imprisonment and the Bread and Water of Affliction was like to befall him Queen Hester would speak for the Church though she should perish therein John Baptist would not forbear to admonish Herod though Imprisonment and Death should be his Reward Prisons and Death would not keep off the Apostle from fulfilling the course of his Ministry Acts 20.24 yea he saith He rejoyced if he were offered upon the