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A52355 A brief exposition of the First and Second Epistles general of Peter by Alexander Nisbet ... Nisbet, Alexander, 1623-1669. 1658 (1658) Wing N1165; ESTC R37734 248,842 354

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intention in dying that He might lead us by the hand as the word here signifieth and give us ready accesse to a reconciled God He hath suffered for sins the Just for the unjust that He might bring us unto God 6. No lesser degree of suffering could be accepted from our Cautioner than the suffering of death there being no other way except all had eternally died to illustrate the exact justice and righteousnesse of God in punishing sin Rom. 3.24 25. and his faithfulnesse in executing that just threatning Gen. 2.17 to take away the sting out of the first death to His own 1 Cor. 15.55 and keep them from tasting of the second Joh. 8.51 for which cause the Apostle here affirms of our Mediator That He suffered being put to death 7 Although Christ did truly humble Himself even in respect of His Deity by assuming frail flesh in a personal union therewith Joh. 1.14 and obscuring the glory thereof for a time with the vail of flesh Philip. 2.6 7. Yet the Godhead being altogether impassible His sufferings were properly in His humanity to wit both in His soul which suffered the unspeakable wrath of God Joh. 12.17 Mat. 26.38 and in His body which suffered all sorts of torments whereof it was capable Luke 22.44 both which parts of humane nature are here comprehended in one because His soul suffered only while it was dwelling in flesh before His death being put to death in the flesh 8. Our Cautioner having paid our debt could not be holden in the prison of death but by the power of His own Spirit or Godhead which are essentially one was quickened in His humanity by the union of His soul to His body and raised up as an evidence that He was discharged of our debt and we in Him Rom. 4.25 as a pledge that we shall be quickened by the vertue of His Resurrection to newnesse of life Rom. 6.4 c. and after death raised to possess glory with Him 1 Cor. 15.20 for He was put to death in the flesh but quickened by the Spirit 9. All the considerations of our suffering Mediatour whereof the Apostle doth here mention several are strong inducements to His Redeemed People to suffer for Him when He calls them to that honour for so may every particular here mentioned be applied that since the Son of God being so innocent and just did suffer and by suffering did so compleatly satisfie Justice for so mis-deserving wretches and did suffer to the very death for so sweet an end to bring sinners to God and had so glorious in outgate It becometh all His Redeemed Ones to adventure chearfully upon suffering for Him to which every expression h●●e may be applied as a motive For even Christ hath suffered for sin the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God being put to death in the flesh but quickened through the Spirit Vers 19. By which also He went and preached unto the spirits in prison 20. Which sometime were disobedient when once the long-suffering of God waited in the dayes of Noah while the Ark was a preparing wherein few that is eight souls were saved by water Here is the seventh argument pressing upon Christians constant obedience to the Gospel notwithstanding of hardest sufferings The sum whereof is That since there are many souls of men and women to whom Christ did once by his Spirit in the Ministery of Noah and others of his Servants make plain the way to life and salvation who are now imprisoned in Hell for evermore because of their slighting so much patience and pains as the Lord did exercise toward them especially during the time of Noah's preparing the Ark wherein a few only escaped destruction by the flood Therefore it doth concern those who have the Gospel more clearly preached to them to give obedience thereunto whatever they may suffer for it within time Hence Learn 1. The second Person of the blessed Trinity hath been exercising his Mediatory Office long before his incarnation and by his Spirit the third Person speaking through his Servants hath been publickly inviting sinners to repentance and faith in himself for this preaching to the old world here spoken of must be the same in substance with that which is more clearly held forth now under the Gospel it being Jesus Christ the same yesterday and to day and for ever Heb. 13.8 who did then preach by his Spirit who speaks his mind only Job 10.13 14. By which he went and preached 2. When the mind of Christ is plainly held forth by the Ministery of his Servants then Christ himself comes to them to bestow himself and fellowship with him by his Spirit upon them that receive his Word and to deal with others in wrath as if they had rejected him immediatly and in his own Person dealing with them for though Christ did not preach in Person to the old world but only in the Ministery of Noah and others of his Servants Yet of Him it is here said that by his Spirit He went and preached 3. It pleaseth the Lord to invite to repentance and make offers of his grace unto many who will never obey his counsel nor imbrace his offers that he may make his grace more manifest while he doth more effectually prevail with his own that are among them Act. 18.10 and may take away all excuse from them that wilfully disobey his counsels and reject his offers Joh. 15.22 for there are spirits or souls who once had Christ preached to them that are now in prison 4. The souls of men and women do not 〈◊〉 to nothing nor die as their bodies but so soon as they are separated from the body must either go immediately to the place of blessednesse Luke 23.43 or else to this place of their everlasting imprisonment for though it could not be told where their bodies were that drowned in the ●●ood Yet their souls are to the fore and 〈◊〉 spirits in prison 5. Hell is a place of safe custody 〈◊〉 ●●ame of it here imports where there is no 〈…〉 Devils and damned souls to torment one another out of which there is no possibility of escaping for by this prison can be meant nothing else but Hell which elswhere in Scripture hath this same name Rev. 20.7 it being the place where only the spirits of them who were disobedient to the Lord are now in prison 6. Of all the sins that men and women commit who have the way of salvation truly preached to them this is of the highest nature and the chief cause of their damnation that they will not be perswaded to accept the offers of God's grace and mercy in Christ will not obey the sweet directions of his Word will not follow the motions and strivings of his Spirit with them thereby in which course whosoever do continue they look like those that are appointed for the prison of Hell for it is clear by comparing this Text with Gen. 6.3 that these here spoken of had
crosse by two further arguments The one taken from the omnipotency of God which is able to crush the proud and carry the humble through all their straits The other from the certain●y of the humble person's deliverance which is promised in the season fittest for it Hence Learn 1. Humility is a lesson so hard to be learned that Christ's Ministers had need to presse the same frequently upon his People and study many arguments to bear it in upon them for the Apostle having in the former verse by very strong reasons perswaded them to clothe themselves with that ornament he doth here again by other arguments presse the same in substance Humble your selves under the mighty hand of God c. 2. The consideration of the mighty power of God which is sufficiently able to protect and bear through all his Followers Joh. 10.28 and to find out and punish all that oppose him or them Psal 21.8 9. should move the Lord's people humbly to submit to their duty and to the hardest dispensation in following thereof for his Almighty Power here signified by his Hand is mentioned as a further reason of his Peoples humbling of themselves Humble your selves therefore under the mighty hand of God 3. Although the Lord's People who have attained to some approven measure of the exercise of this grace of humility under their straits may not expect a present deliverance out of them Hab. 2.1 3. Yet their delivery is made sure for them and they are certified by his faithfull Word that they shall be carried through till they meet with it for though he do not promise here to the humble that they shall be presently exalted Yet he maketh them sure of this that if they humble themselves under his mighty hand they shall be exalted 4. The deliverance of the Lord 's humble People cometh alwayes to them in the fittest time which is when the Lord hath perfected his work intended by their affliction Isa 10.12 particularly when they are brought to that measure of humiliation to which by their straits the Lord intends to bring them Lev. 26.41 when they are prepared by their straits to put a due price upon a delivery Psal 102.13 14. and when the cup of their enemies iniquity is full Gen. 15.16 for this word signifieth both the opportunity fixed and fittest for the exaltation of the humble He shall exalt you in due time Vers 7. Casting all your care upon him for he careth for you The fourth direction which is brought in as a special mean of attaining to the former is that Believers should by faith commit unto the Lord their thorow-bearing in their duty the event thereof and all their anxiety about these and that because the Lord's loving providence doth not suffer him to neglect them or any of their concernments Hence Learn 1. The Children of the Lord are subject to much sinfull anxiety in following of their duty which appeareth when they are hindered from their duty by looking more to their own weaknesse and the difficulties in the way of duty than to the sufficiency promised by him that calleth them to it Exod. 3.11 or when they are discouraged in their duty by the apprehension of probable hazards in the way of it Isa 51.12 13. of which evil the Spirit of the Lord would have them sensible while he findeth it necessary thus to exhort them Casting all your care on him 2. Although it be most commendable in Christians to entertain such a care of discharging their duty aright and of eschewing what may provoke the Lord in their way of going about it as stirreth them up to much diligence and employing of Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 7.11 Yet such a care whether anent the manner of their going about their duty or the successe and event thereof as doth distract their heart in duty and indispose them for it is sinful and to be shaken off by all that would discharge their duty acceptably for so doth the Apostle here direct Casting all your care upon him 3. The way to be liberated of anxiety and heart-dividing cares which indispose for duty is by prayer to commend the successe and event of our duty and our thorow-bearing therein to the Lord Philip. 4.6 and by faith to commit both to him Prov. 16.3 for this is here the direction of the Spirit of the Lord for attaining to freedom from sinfull anxiety Casting all your care upon him 4. The Lord alloweth his Children to cast upon him all their anxieties both such as they have about their souls and matters of highest concernment and those about their bodies and lesser matters how small soever the thing be where-about their heart becometh anxious he alloweth them to commit the same to him for he knoweth that a very small matter is ready to occasion much vexation of spirit to his own Jona 4.8 Therefore doth he thus direct them to cast all their care upon him 5. It is not only the priviledge of Believers that they may disburden themselves of their distrustful heart-dividing cares by casting them over upon the Lord but it is also the very great desire of our God that we should not sink under the insupportable burden of our own needlesse cares and fears Yea it is his peremptory command to put these off our selves upon him which his People may not disobey except they would incur his displeasure and destroy themselves for this hath the force of a command Casting all your care upon him 6. As no duty can be rightly discharged by us while the Lord is not trusted with our thorow-bearing in it and with the event and successe thereof or while the heart is distracted with misbelieving anxiety about these So the trusting of God with these is the best way to come speed in every duty for the Apostle having exhorted before to duties toward their Overseers to one another and to God he brings in this as a mean of attaining to all these without which none of them could be attained unto Casting all your care upon him 7. Misbelieving anxiety whereby Christians break themselves with the burden of these cares which God requireth to be cast upon him is one of the greatest signs of pride in the world and to trust God with the weight of these in following our duty is a prime evidence of true humility for this is brought in as a special way how they should prove themselves to be humbled under God's mighty hand and as that without which they could not but declare their pride as both the construction of the words and their connexion with the former do import Humble your selves c. casting all your care upon him 8. Although the Lord be altogether free of such passions as care sorrow and the like which are in men Numb 23.19 Yet those of his People that cast their care upon him shall find no lesse proofs of his love both in warding off hazards so far as is necessary and providing every thing needful for
to cleanse and purifie the souls of His People both from the guilt and dominion of sin Ezek. 36.25 Yet His People who are meerly passive in the first infusion of grace Eph. 2.1 are thereafter made by Him active instruments in the carrying on of that work of mortification by employing Christs vertue for subduing and fighting in His strength against their corruptions as is imported in this Ye have purified your souls 4. The Lords mean of purging the souls of His People from the love and power of sin which is naturally in them is their obedience to His Truth which consists not only in their aiming at conformity to those precepts which enjoyn purity and holiness such as that is ver 15. but principally in their imbracing by Faith and use-making of the promises of the new Covenant wherein the Lord undertakes to work this purity Ezek. 36.25 26 27. This is the chief part of that obedience to the Truth which purifieth souls for saith the Apostle Ye have purified your souls in obeying the Truth 5. This obedience to the Truth which purifieth the souls of Believers cannot be attained unto by our own naturall strength or the use of the fittest means of grace without the special working of the Spirit of Jesus who cleareth to sinners the nature of that purity which is pleasing to God and powerfully worketh the same in them for so the Apostle affirms of those Believers that they had purified their souls in obeying the Truth through the Spirit 6. One special part of this work of purging the souls of Believers consists in the subduing of those filthy roots which are in their hearts contrary to that grace of love to the rest of the Lords People such as pride self-love and the like for this is here made their aim in purifying their souls that they might attain unto unfeigned love of the Brethren importing that their pains was much bent to purge out those evils which are contrary to that grace 7. Believers have need to be seriously pressed to exercise and grow in these graces and duties whereof they have already attained to some approven measure for upon those who had already purified their souls unto unfeigned love of the Brethren the Apostle presseth this See that ye love one another 8. It is not every sort of love to the Saints of God that evidenceth mortification and the indwelling of Christs Spirit but such only as is without dissimulation or hypocrisie which is unfeigned love such as flows from holy principles to wit respect to the Command of Christ and not from respect to our own credit or advantage only from desire of the true good of others and not from love to our selves which is Love out of a pure heart and such as breaks forth in real proofs and is continued toward others notwithstanding of provocations from them which is To love one another fervently Vers 23. Being born again not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the Word of God which liveth and abideth for ever The eleventh motive whereby the Apostle presseth upon Believers the study of holiness especially that branch of it which he was last upon to wit Love to the Saints is taken from the excellency of their spiritual original the sum whereof is That since they had a new life and nature in their regeneration wrought in them not by so fading a cause of principle as that which is the instrument of producing their natural substance but by the Word of God which in the effects it hath upon the Regenerate liveth and abideth for ever Therefore the excellency of their new nature and permanency of their spiritual estate should move them to walk suitably unto it and particularly to live in love with the rest of their Fathers Children Hence Learn 1. Every true Believer in Jesus Christ is in some measure acquainted with a new and second birth which is that work of God with sinners whereby there is a new spiritual life and nature communicated to them Eph. 2.1 and they are brought through some pangs and straits arising from the sight of their own sinfulness and fear of deserved wrath Act. 2.37 out of their darkness and bondage which is natural to them and is resembled by the state of the child before the birth into a state of light and knowledge of God in Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 and freedom from the slavery of sin and subjection to wrath Rom. 8.2 and whereby also they are made in some measure to resemble their heavenly Father and are inclined to obey Him and to love Him and all His Children 1 Joh. 5.1 for this the Apostle makes a description of true Believers that they are born again 2. Our life and nature that we have by vertue of this second birth or regeneration is far more excellent than what we have by the first our natural estate is subject to corruption and will be shortly dissolved but our spiritual estate can never fade for though all have immortal souls that are not corruptible yet the natural life and state of all shall be dissolved and the eternal being of those who are unacquainted with Regeneration and a second birth will be but an eternal corruption or perishing which should make all long to be acquainted with Regeneration for to lead us to esteem the one above the other the Apostle commends the one above the other from the difference of their seeds Not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible 3. Although the Word separated from the working of the Spirit can do nothing to the regenerating of a sinner Joh. 3.5 yet the Word is the ordinary instrument of the Spirit who makes use of all the principal parts of it in that work of the Law to put the sinner in some straits of the second birth through fear of deserved wrath and of the Gospel to revive the soul and liberate it from those fears and of the Law again to direct the Regenerate how to walk suitably to their estate for the Apostle explains what that incorruptible seed is of which we are born again to wit The Word of God 4. Although there be no life either formally or by way of efficiency in the letters or sound of the words of Scripture and though that Word passeth with the speaking as any other words do Yet in regard of the effects which through the operation of the Spirit it hath upon sinners such as fear and terror upon the believing of the threatnings Act. 2.37 comfort under crosses and quickning for duties upon the believing of the promises Psal 119.50 It is as the Apostle here calleth it A Word that liveth and in regard of the execution of eternal wrath upon them that reject it and of the performance of those everlasting blessings which are promised in it to them that receive and obey it it is a Word that abideth for ever 5. They who do professe and esteem themselves to be of the number of those who are born again should by
wit before their conversion they had not obtained mercy 5. The closing of sinners by Faith with Jesus Christ as the Gospel offers him to them doth bring them to a most sweet and excellent state namely to be owned and dealt with by the Lord as his People in a most special manner whom he will never forsake Psal 94.14 and to obtain mercy of him for pardoning their daily sinfulness Mica 7.18 for pitying and supplying as is fitting all their necessities as the word here translated to obtain mercy signifies and for bearing them through all the straits of their life Psal 23 6. and at last crowning them with glory 2 Tim. 1.18 All which is comprehended under this That they are now the people of God and have now obtained mercy 6. Of all miseries that can be exprest to live in an unconverted state under unpardoned sin is the greatest And of all priviledges in this world to be brought out of that state and to obtain mercy is the greatest and the most engaging to the study of holiness for the one is here held forth as the depth of misery and the other as the height of happiness and the change from the one to the other as one of the strongest engagements to duty lying upon those who in time past were not a people but are now the people of God who had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy Vers 11. Dearly beloved I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the soul The Apostle repeateth and enlargeth that which he pressed in the first Verse of this Chapter in order to their spiritual growth to wit That they should keep up the battel against their inward unmortified lusts and this is prest by three arguments The first is taken from Christ's affection and the Apostle's toward them as being dearly beloved of both The second from their hard lot in the world that they were strangers and pilgrims which was verified in a special way of these scattered Hebrews to whom he writes And the third is from the hazard of the prevailing of these lusts which is no lesse than the eternal ruine of the soul Hence Learn 1. There doth remain even in those who are far advanced in mortification such swarms of sinfull motions and strong inclinations to evils yet in a great part unmortified in them and so prone are they to give way to them and to fall slack in the battel against them that they have great need of exhortation upon exhortation and of one motive upon the back of another to stir them up to that exercise for even these whom the Apostle supponed to have made some progress in mortification Chap. 1. ver 22. and whom he had exhorted to further progress therein in the first Verse of this Chapter he doth here again exhort very earnestly to the same by several arguments Dearly beloved I beseech you abstain from fleshly lusts c. 2. True mortification of sin consisteth not only in abstenance from the outward acts thereof but in the weakning of the root and power of sin within and the inclinations and desires of the soul after the acting thereof which are here called fleshly lusts in regard they tend to the gratifying and pleasing of the flesh and are acted by the outward man abstain from fleshly lusts 3. The best way for Believers to fit themselves for the shewing forth of the praises of God in their practise is To set about the mortifying of those motions and inclinations to sin that remain in their heart these being the cause of all the out-breakings which dishonour God in their conversation Jam. 4.1 for this exhortation may safely be taken as the mean of attaining to that which is the great end of Christians calling exprest in the former Verse That they may shew forth his praise they must abstain from fleshly lusts 4. The love of the Lord manifested toward sinners should be a very strong argument to move them to fight against these lusts which dishonour him and mar the sense of his love and the further manifestation thereof for this stile Dearly beloved may be taken as an argument to the duty prest and understood mainly of the love of God to his People because the Apostle Paul Rom. 9.25 citing the place which this Apostle cited immediatly before doth find in it this stile in reference to God and therefore this Apostle may be conceived to make use of it here in the same sense as a motive to the study of mortification Dearly beloved abstain c. 5. Those who presse people to the mortifying of their beloved lusts had need not only to entertain much love to them in their hearts that so they may deal earnestly with them but likewise by some prudent expressions of their love to them insinuate themselves upon their affections that so the stirring of their passions which are ready to rise when unmortified corruptions are touched both in good 2 Chron. 16.10 and bad Mat. 14.4 5. may be prevented Therfore the Apostle breaths forth his affection to this People which may be safely taken to be also comprehended in this compellation as following after Christ and moving the Apostle to much earnestness Dearly beloved I beseech you abstain c. 6. As it may be the lot of those who in regard of their right to the Covenant of Grace and the benefits thereof are no more strangers and foreiners but fellow-citizens of the Saints and of the Houshold of God to be separated from their native Country as these Christian Hebrews were to whom this is spoken So what ever their condition in the world be they ought to esteem and confess themselves as the best of God's Saints have done Heb. 11.13 strangers and pilgrims who are absent from their own Country 2 Cor. 5.6 and may expect hard usage in their way Gen. 31.15 who ought to lay aside every thing that may hinder them in their journey Heb. 12.1 and have their hearts still homward Heb. 11.16 who should take little pleasure in the delights that offer themselves in the course of their pilgrimage Gen. 23.4 and esteem it a great honour to get leave to do any piece of service to God while they are upon their journey 1 Chron. 29.15 and should count much of any mercifull providence they meet with Ruth 2.10 and make their case an argument to God for his pity and kindness Psal 119.19 and a motive to themselves to abstain from every thing that may hinder them in their journey homward for this is brought in by the Apostle as an argument to all the duties of holiness and especially to the study of mortification that they were strangers and pilgrims 7. The inward motions of unmortified corruptions which are in the Godly do not only fight against the welfare of their bodies Prov. 14. 30. against that light and knowledge of God which is in their understandings Rom. 7.23 and against the graces and motions of God's
Spirit which are in their hearts Gal. 5.17 But likewise against the everlasting wel-being of their very souls so that these corruptions cannot be given way to except we would so far as in us lyes run the hazard of the losse of our souls for this is here a third motive to the mortifying of these lusts that they war against the soul 8. The Lord doth allow Christians to stir up their hearts to the study of the mortification of their corruptions by the consideration of the hazard that cannot but follow upon their prevailing which is no lesse than the wounding of their souls by every advantage their corruptions do get and the eternal losse and ruine of their souls by the continual prevailing of them as is imported also in this motive to the mortification of those fleshly lusts They war against the soul Vers 12. Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as evil doers they may by your good works which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation In this Verse the Apostle presseth the effect of his former exhortation and withall prescribeth a special mean of shewing forth the praises of God to wit That Christians should labour to express holiness in their outward conversation and this he beareth in by two arguments The first is That their lot was to converse among the enemies of the Gospel and such as would be glad to find occasion from their miscarriage to slander them as evil doers The second is That their holy walking among such might prove a blessed mean not only to stop the mouthes of their slanderous enemies but likewise to being about their conversion and consequently bring much glory to God when it should please him to visit them with his saving grace Hence Learn 1. In so far as the power of sin is weakened in the heart there will be a beauty and loveliness upon the outward conversation which if it be defiled with out-breakings doth clearly evidence the power and prevalency of unmortified lusts in the heart ●or as a necessary consequent or effect of the former exhortation to abstain from fleshly lusts the Apostle bringeth in this having your conversation honest 2. It is not so much by a fair profession or good expressions that Christians do shew forth the praises of God as by an honest conversation made beautiful and lovely as the word here translated honest signifieth to on-lookers by the right ordering of all the parts of it in duties to God and men Psal 50.23 by the manifesting of wisdom and meekness therein joyntly Jam. 3.13 and especially by the faithful discharge of the duties of their particular callings and relations 1 Thess 4.11 12. Tit. 2.9 10. for the way of the Apostle's bringing in this exhortation giveth ground to take this as an mean of attaining to what he had prest before to wit their shewing forth of the praises of God mentioned ver 9. having your conversation honest c. 3. The more wicked the society be with whom Believers lot is to converse the more should they be stirred up to the study of an honest conversation for the conviction or gaining of such for by this that these Christian Hebrews were among Heathens whom many professors of Christianity resemble in living like Heathens without respect to the Law of God Rom. 2.14 pursuing strongly their Idols as Heathens do 1 Cor. 12.2 and being unacquainted with the priviledges and duties of the Covenant of Grace as Heathens are Eph. 2.11 and ready to persecute all that run not their course 1 Pet. 4.3 All which the Scriptures cited make characters of Heathens the Apostle perswades them to study holiness of life having your conversation honest among the Gentiles 4. Those of whom the world is unworthy are often represented to the world as unworthy to live in it by those whose dishonest wayes are reproved by their honest conversation for it is here supponed to be the lot of the chosen Generation the royal Priesthood c. to be spoken against as evil doers 5. It is one of the characters of them that are without God in the world to be enemies to and slanderers of those who will not run with them to the same excess of riot for it is here a description of the Heathens that they speak against those who are of an honest conversation as evil doers 6. The best way for Christians to stop the mouthes of their slanderers is by an honest conversation without which any other means they can use will readily prove ineffectual for maintaining their reputation for here the Apostle prescribeth to Christians the study of a holy walking as a mean to put their very enemies upon an exercise inconsistent with slandering of the Godly having your conversation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as evil doers they may by your good works which they shall behold glorifie God 7. Although the Word accompanied with the powerfull blessing of God be the principal mean of sinners conversion Rom. 10.17 15. Yet the Lord may make use of the very carriage and visible acting of his People such as their equity in their dealings even with their enemies their patient bearing of injuries from them and continuing to expresse love and respect to them notwithstanding thereof to allure wicked men to fall in love with his way and to give him glory that ever sent them such a mean and blessed it to them for their reclaiming from the way of perdition for here an honest conversation is pressed as a mean of gaining the enemies of Christ and his People to glorifie God in the day of visitation 8. Neither the best use of natural power of free-will that unrenewed men may attain ●nto nor all the pains that the Godly can take upon them will be sufficient to bring about that glorious work of their Conversion whereby the Lord is so much glorified till he be pleased to visit them with his power Psal 110.3 and with his love to make the change Ezek. 168. for here as a necessary pre-requisit for the gaining of sinners to glorifie God the Apostle supponeth that there must be a day of visitation whereby must be understood a visitation in special mercy in regard it gains sinners to glorifie God 9. It is not any glory to our selves from men that should be our motive to an honest walking among them but that we may thereby bring some glory to God from them which being honestly aimed at by us shall bring sufficient glory to us along with it 1 Sam. 2.30 for this is here made the principal motive to an honest walking That thereby others might be moved to glorifie God in the day of visitation 10. The Children of the Lord should not lose their hopes nor quite their endeavours of gaining the greatest enemies to God or themselves among whom they live considering how soon and easily the Lord can make a change upon them for the Apostle
a motive to holinesse he doth here hold it forth again as a motive to constancy in holinesse notwithstanding of sufferings For ye were as sheep going astray but are now returned to the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls CHAP. III. THis Chapter hath three parts In the first containing the duties of married persons the Apostle presseth upon Christian Women first That they should make conscience of duty to their Husbands though they were Pagans that so they might be gained to fall in love with Christianity ver 1. by the sight of their chast and religious carriage ver 2. Secondly That they should not be much taken up with trimming of their bodies ver 3. But thirdly That their prime care should be to have their souls adorned with grace especially meeknesse because 1. that's an ornament durable and 2. it 's in high esteem with God ver 4. So should they resemble holy Women recorded in Scripture ver 5. and prove themselves heirs of Sarah's blessednesse ver 6. Next he exhorteth Husbands to a wise and tender walking toward them by some arguments ver 7. In the second part he exhorteth all Christians whatever their relations be to the exercise of such graces and duties of holinesse as serve for keeping up a comfortable communion among themselves and with the Lord ver 8. and disswadeth them from some evils that might mar the same Because first they were all called to inherite the same blessednesse ver 9. And secondly because a holy walking with God and a peaceable carriage toward others is the only way to sweeten the lives of Christians under all their troubles ver 10 11. Thirdly that that was the way to have God's favourable providence watching over them for good Fourthly to get acceptance to their prayers And fifthly to eschew his wrath ver 12. The third part containeth several motives to constancy in holinesse and encouragements against suffering in that way As first that well-doing was the way toward off the evil of all their troubles ver 13. Secondly that no trouble for well-doing should hinder but rather promove their blessednesse to which encouragements the Apostle subjoyneth six directions for attaining a right carriage under suffering First that they should labour to banish the fear of flesh ver 14. Secondly that they should adore the holinesse of God in carving out a suffering lot for them Thirdly that they should timously enrich themselves with the knowledge of the Truth so as they might be able to give a reason of what they suffered for Fourthly that they should manifest meeknesse toward their persecutors And fifthly entertain fear of their own miscarriage ver 15. Sixthly that they should labour still to keep a good conscience under their suffering so should their carriage convince and make ashamed their very persecutors which is their third encouragement ver 16. Fourthly that their sufferings after this manner should prove much more comfortable to them than if they were procured by their own miscarriage Fifthly that the good will of God had the carving out of these sufferings ver 17. Sixthly that innocent Jesus Christ had suffered to the death for reconciling them to God and for the applying of his purchase was raised by the power of his Spirit or God-head ver 18. Seventhly that there are many souls now imprisoned in Hell for slighting such Truths as Christ's Spirit speaking through Noah and others of his Servants had prest upon them ver 19 20. Eighthly that the spiritual safety of Believers from the deluge of Gods wrath was made no lesse sure to them by their Baptism and the work of Christ's Spirit with it than the temporal safety of Noah and those few persons with him from the floud was made sure to them by the Ark ver 21. And ninthly that their Surety is now in highest power and glory that he may bear them through all their troubles and possesse them in that salvation which he hath purchased for them ver 22. All which prove that Believers ought to follow their duty to him notwithstanding of all sufferings for him Vers 1. Likewise ye wives be in subjection to your own husbands that if any obey not the Word they also may without the Word be won by the conversation of the wives 2. While they behold your chast conversation coupled with fear THe Apostle being to point out the duties of married persons he beginneth with and insisteth most upon the duties of the Women partly because they had maniest discouragements and partly because their making conscience of their duty was the best means to provoke their Husbands to their duty Upon them he presseth subjection or dutifulnesse to their Husbands by two arguments The first is Because their obligation to their duty was no less strait than the obligation of others who stood in any of those relations mentioned in the former Chapter The second is Because their unbelieving Husbands might through Gods blessing be moved to receive the Gospel which formerly they had rejected ver 1. providing they did mark nothing but chastity and holinesse joyned with the fear of God and reverence toward themselves shining in the conversation of their Wives ver 2. And therefore Christian Women had reason to make conscience of duties even toward their Pagan-Husbands Hence Learn 1. They that would rightly divide the Word of Truth among the Lord's People must not content themselves to presse the duties of holinesse in general as they concern all Christians but must learn in their Doctrine to come down to the lowest relations that are among the Lord's People and to point out the particular duties of these it being in the discharge of such duties mainly that Religion is adorned Tit. 2.10 Therefore the Apostle after he hath spoken at large of the duties of holinesse belonging to all in general he comes among other relations to point out the duties of wives to their husbands Likewise ye wives be subject c. 2. The sum of a Womans duty to her Husband is subjection which doth consist in a reverend esteem of him as of one placed by the Lord in a degree of superiority above her which will produce reverent speaking of him and to him ver 5. and in giving obedience to his commands in things lawfull both which are in the signification of this word whereby the Apostle expresseth the whole duty of Wives to their Husbands Likewise ye wives be subject to your own husbands 3. However there be difference among those relations that are betwixt the Lord's People some of them having more of dominion and subjection in them as those last mentioned in the former Chapter betwixt Magistrates and Subjects Masters and Servants others of them having more of equality and love in them as this which is here betwixt Husband and Wife Yet the obligation to the duties of the latter sort is no lesse strict than to the duties of the former both being enjoyned by the same authoritie and so to be made conscience of upon
to have the same suitable to their several ranks and conditions which God would have distinguished in some measure by apparrel Esth 5.1 Gen. 38.14 while they affect a newnesse and strangenesse whether in the kind of their apparel or in their way of using of it Zeph. 1.8 and when much time and expences are wasted about apparel as is imported in the Apostle's words here In all which and the like cases the Lord's People are ready to offend in the matter of their apparel and that because there is in them much unsubdued pride and vanity ready to manifest it self that way Isa 3.16 18 c. and because they forget that apparel is given to make them ashamed in remembrance of their sin 1 Tim. 2.9 14. for the hazard of offending by wasting both time and means is imported in this disswasive of the Apostle Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the hair and wearing of gold or of putting on of apparel 2. Although the Lord allow persons who are in eminency above others to have ornaments beyond necessity Isa 22. ●0 21 22. and others to have more than ordinary at some special occasions Gen. 24.30 and all of his People to provide for things honest in the sight of all men Rom. 12.17 Yet when any Professor of Religion becomes excessive in the use of his liberty in these things he will be so far from commending Religion to others thereby that his practice will rather be a hinderance unto others to fall in love with it who may or will readily take occasion thence to think that Christians have no better things to take them up than these whereupon they wast their time pains and means for from this evil the Apostle here disswades Christian Women as they would gain their Heathen Husbands importing that their vanity and excesse in the matter of their apparel would rather hinder them than gain them to fall in love with Christianity Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the hair c. 3. They that would by their outward carriage commend Religion and win others to fall in love therewith must have their prime care exercised about their heart which if it be adorned with the graces of God's Spirit in life and practice the conversation cannot but be lovely to all rightly discerning on-lookers for the Apostle having told those believing Women before that it was their conversation mainly which would gain their Husbands he now condescendeth upon the way of attaining to such a conversation Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning c. but let it be the hidden man of the heart 4. Those that wast much time pains and means in decking and trimming of their bodies do ordinarily neglect their souls leaving these in a disorderly sordid and filthy condition for the Apostle disswading from the one and in opposition thereto perswading to the other importeth the inconsistency of such an adorning of the outward man with the adorning of the inward Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning c. but let it be the hidden man of the heart 5. The Lord hath been pleased to hide the hearts of every one from the knowledge of another who therefore ought not by their rash judging and censuring of the inward frame and state of others to invade the Lord's prerogative of searching the heart Jer. 17.10 but ought to bestow much pains for keeping in a right frame their own hearts which are hid from all eyes but God's as a prime evidence of their sincerity Psal 51.6 7. Therefore the inward frame of the spirit is here called The hidden man of the heart 6. That which mainly makes the carriage of a Professor of Religion a mean to gain others to Jesus Christ is the exercise of the graces of God's Spirit within especially meeknesse and quietnesse of spirit by the former whereof to wit meeknesse they keep down their passions from rising against others that wrong them or against the Lord's dispensation in exercising them more hardly than others Numb 12.2 3. whereby also they essay all amicable and loving wayes of reclaiming such as do wrong them before they go to the rigor of justice 1 Cor. 4.21 and by the latter to wit quietnesse of spirit they do eschew all needlesse contradiction of others Isa 53.7 all rashnesse in their actions Act. 19.36 all medling with things not belonging to them 1 Thess 4.11 and all expressions of miscontent with that lot which the Lord hath carved out to them Psal 131.2 All which are here required of Christian Women tied to unbelieving and profane Husbands as special means of gaining them to Christ for in order to their gaining the Apostle thus exhorteth the Wives to put on the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit 7. Where such a gracious frame of spirit is within as the Apostle here exhorteth Christian Women to labour for it will have visible effects that may be discerned without for the Apostle exhorteth Christian Wives to the study of meeknesse and quietnesse of spirit as a mean to gain their unbelieving Husbands which it could not prove except the effects thereof were visible in their carriage 8. The grace of Christ is such an ornament as being once put upon the soul doth never altogether fade or wax old The consideration whereof should make Christians more careful to have it in exercise in their hearts than to have on the best of their ornaments which will soon wear and wax old for as an argument to move Christians to put on this adorning of Gods grace the Apostle affirms it to be that which is incorruptible 9. Although every grace be the Lords own free gift Jam. 1.17 and the most Gracious cannot properly be profitable to Him Job 22.2 Yet He is pleased to esteem of his own grace and graciously to reward the persons to whom He gives it as if it were of much worth to Him The consideration whereof should heighten the esteem of grace in our hearts and quicken us to pains for getting and increasing of it for this end is this adorning of a meek and quiet spirit here commended from this that it is in the sight of God of great price Vers 5. For after this manner in the old time the holy women also who trusted in God adorned themselves being in subjection unto their own husbands 6. Even as Sarah obeyed Abraham calling him Lord whose daughters ye are as long as ye do well and are not afraid with any amazement Here are two further arguments whereby the Apostle presseth upon Christian Women the study of such a carriage as might prove a mean of gaining their wicked Husbands The one is taken from the example of holy believing VVomen registred in Scripture who counted it their best ornament to manifest their holinesse and faith by their dutifulnesse to their Husbands and particularly of Sarah who testified her obedience to her Husband by her respective and reverend language to him
another Fifthly that they should shew themselves courteous in their carriage and easie to be conversed with ver 8. Sixthly that they should not study to requite mutual injuries But seventhly rather seek the happinesse of them that wrong them All which especially the last two the Apostle presseth by this reason that they were all called to inherit one common blessednesse From ver 8. Learn 1. Although compleat onenesse of judgment cannot be expected among the Lord's People whilest knowledge is imperfect in all 1 Cor. 13.9 and dispensed in different measures Rom. 12.6 Yet it ought to be the sincere endeavour of every one so to drink-in the knowledge of all saving and necessary Truths themselves and to imploy their power according to their calling to make all others do the same that they may be so far as is possible as if one and the same mind were in them all as the word here signifieth which is in some good measure attained when Christians do agree in all saving and fundamental Truths and when their prime projects and designs as the word also signifieth do meet in one to wit the advancement of the glory of Jesus Christ without which unity of judgment there doth ordinarily follow among the Lord's People alienation of affection Gal. 4.15 16. and a losse of the consolations of Christ's Spirit which uses to be given through their communion among themselves Philip. 2.1 2. for this is it which the Apostle here expresly presseth Finally be all of one mind 2. Every one of the Children of the Lord ought to be so affected with the condition of another as if it were their own mourning with and for one another in affliction as if they were afflicted with them Heb. 13.3 rejoycing in and praising for their welfare as if they were in their case Rom. 12.15 considering that they are all members of one body 1 Cor. 12.26 and that this sympathizing frame of spirit is a special part of our conformity to Jesus Christ Heb. 4.15 for this is the second duty here pressed having compassion one of another 3. Whatever differences for worldly respects or measures of spiritual gifts there may be among the Children of the Lord there should be notwithstanding such affection and love in the most eminent and strongest toward the meanest and weakest as is among Brethren they being all Children of one Father Joh. 1.12 and the weakest owned by Christ as his Brethren Heb. 2.11 and co-heirs not only with the strongest but with Jesus Christ himself of everlasting blessednesse Rom. 8.17 and therefore that measure of affection which may be found among men without the Church who have not put off humanity is not sufficient for one of the Lord's People toward another for this is the third duty here pressed Love as Brethren 4. There can neither be unity sympathy nor brotherly love among the Lord's People unlesse they have hearts to pity the infirmities one of another and some prouenesse of spirit to do good to others even when they deserve the contrary at their hands for this word whereby the Apostle presseth the fourth duty is often used to signifie Christ's compassion to his own which is manifested in bestowing favours notwithstanding of provocations and signifieth such a tender-heartednesse as is evidenced by forgiving of wrongs Eph. 4.32 be pitiful 5. They that would keep up a sweet and profitable society with others of the Lord's People must shew themselves affable and pleasant in their carriage towards them studying to speak and do so far as they may with a good conscience what may be acceptable and engaging of their affections to them for this duty which is the last in the eight Verse as also all the former may be taken in reference to the keeping up of society with others be courteous From ver 9. Learn 1. Even those who have attained to such a carriage as ought in all reason to be lovely and honoured by all with whom they converse may notwithstanding resolve to meet with much hard usage and many slanders for the Apostle presseth here patience in the sixth place importing that they who had attained to all the former sive would notwithstanding have ado with their patience Not rendring evil for evil or railing for railing 2. The Children of the Lord may resolve not only to meet with hard usage and bitter language from the profane or those that are without but even from their fellow-Professors whether Hypocrites who will still be maligning the sincere Gal. 4.29 or even truly gracious whose corruptions oppose grace in others Job 16.20 for this last grace of patience prest in the beginning of the eight Verse cannot well be taken in reference to other persons than these in reference to whom the exercise of the former graces or duties were pressed which do clearly relate to other Professors and therefore this imports that they might be tried both with evil deeds and words from such while the Apostle thus dehorteth Not rendring evil for evil or railing for railing 3. However the best of the Children of the Lord are prone to study revenge and requital of private injuries as is supponed in this disswasive Yet must they not allow themselves in so doing as they love their own and others peace and desire to eschew the displeasure of God for usurping his place Rom. 12.19 Prov. 23.2 Not rendring evil for evil or railing for railing 4. So far should the Lord's People be from the study of private revenge and retaliation of wrongs done by one of them against another that by the contrary the greatest personal wrong by word or deed should not hinder one of them to procure the bestowing of blessings if they be able upon another to commend in them what they can discern to be praise-worthy or to pray for their true blessednesse which is a special draught of the Image of the Lord Mat. 5.44 45. All which is in the signification of this word whereby the Apostle expresseth the duty opposite to rendring evil for evil or railing for railing but contrariwise blessing 5. The consideration of that everlasting blessednesse which consisteth in the clear vision and full fruition of God in Christ through the Spirit and which sinners who are naturally under the curse are called to possesse as their free-gifted inheritance as the word here translated to inherit signifies should comfort the hearts of Believers against the worst usage and vilest reproaches of men which will be sufficiently made up when they come to possess that blessedness the thoughts wherof should take them off from all study of revenge toward those who may be heirs with them of the same inheritance and who could never wrong them so far as they have wronged the Lord who hath graciously called them to possess that free-gifted inheritance for this is here proposed by the Apostle as an argument to patience under wrongs and a disswasive from revenge among the Lord's people for even hereunto were ye called that ye should
and will not spare to spend their bodies and spirits and wast their means in the service of their lusts and cannot be satisfied with any that will not do the like as is imported in the signification of these words They think i● strange that ye run not with them to the same excesse of riot 4. Profane men cannot abide that the Godly should be in credit and reputation beside them partly because of their natural enmity against them Gal. 4.29 and partly because their way is a shame and reproof to theirs as Christ's was to his enemies Joh. 7.7 therfore they devise and spread false calumnies to hurt the credit as the word here signifies of the Godly speaking evil of you 5. Even the Godly are so little mortified to their credit before the world and do so little prize esteem with God and his People that the mockery and slanders even of profane men are ready to prove great discouragement to them in the wayes of the Lord for the Spirit of God finds it necessary here to guard against this discouragement by discovering of it and threatning the slanderers They think strange that ye run not with them c. speaking evil of you who shall give account c. 6. Although the saving grace of Christ doth not loose those upon whom it is vouchsafed from the relations they may have to gracelesse persons nor from the duties of those relations neither yet from fellowship with them in necessary commanded duties 1 Cor. 5.9 10. and 7.12 13. 1 Sam. 11.6 7. 2 Cor. 11.20 c. Yet it will make them separate from their sinfull fashions and loath their company in their sinful courses even though they should be wondred at and evil spoken of for so doing for the Apostle importeth clearly that those Converts to whom he speaks would not now keep fellowship with their former companions in their sinfull courses what-ever they might suffer at their hands while he saith They think it strange that ye run not with them to the same excesse of riot 7. Although a long-suffering God may let wicked men have a long time of prospering in their sinful wayes and persecuting of his beloved People yea and may defer his reckoning with them the whole length of their time Yet of necessity they must all of them at last appear before Him as their Judge at the great day when both those of them that have died before that time and such as shall then be found living must be present to give account to Him that judgeth quick and dead 8. The delay of the last reckoning with wicked men is not because the Lord is not ready for that work but because there is yet a number of the Elect to be gathered Rev. 6.11 their faith and patience is to be tried Rev. 14.12 and the wicked to be more ripened for judgment Rev. 14 15. So that there is nothing upon the Lord's part that hindereth the day of account for He is ready to judge the quick and the dead 9. So dear are the Lord's People to Him and so exact is He in his justice that there is not a thought in wicked mens hearts nor a word in their mouthes contrary to Him or his People but He takes notice of it and will exact a strict account thereof from them for here the Spirit of God signifieth His notice-taking of their admiring thoughts of the Godly and their ill speeches of them and assureth His own that for these they shall give account to Him who is ready to judge the quick and the dead 10. Although the Children of the Lord should not desire a wofull day upon the most wicked for any personal injury they have received from them Jer. 17.16 nor rejoyce when it comes upon them because they are their enemies Prov. 24.17 but rather should pray for their conversion and salvation Mat. 5.44 Yet it is both lawful and necessary for the Lord 's suffering People to consider how glorious the Lord will be in his justice upon so many of them as are irrecoverable and without the compasse of his electing love and thereby ought to comfort their hearts against their bitter flanders and other injuries of that kind for this is here given as an encouraging motive to the study of holinesse notwithstanding of any discouragement from such that they shall give account to Him that is ready to judge the quick and the dead Vers 6. For for this cause was the Gospel preached also to them that are dead that they might be judged according to men in the flesh but live according to God in the spirit The fourth argument to constancy in holinesse notwithstanding of any discouragement from the profane world is That seing the Gospel had been preached to the Saints who are now at their rest for this very end that they being exercised in their external condition with the hard censures and persecution of the profane might have the life of grace promoted in their hearts and so be fitted for life eternal there was therefore no reason why the Lord's People should be discouraged in that way because of such a lot as all the Saints departed had met with Doct. 1. All that believe the Gospel and give up themselves to the obedience of it may resolve to have many hard censures past upon them by those that do not profit by it to be judged by them a deceived and accursed people Joh. 7.47 49. a proud and precise company who will not do as neighbour and others do Mark 7.2 5. to have many false calumnies raised and spread of them Rom. 3.8 and to be condemned to the worst usage that wicked men can bring upon them Jam. 5.6 for this is here set down as the lot of the Saints departed and the consequent of their imbracing the Gospel For for this cause the Gospel was preached to them that are dead that they may be judged according to men in the flesh 2. Although the Gospel of it self tend to the making of peace both with God and amongst those that hear it Rom. 10.14 Luke 19.42 and the Lord doth no wayes approve profane mens censuring or condemning them that imbrace it Luke 10.6 Yet doth the Lord send the Gospel among men for this very end that upon occasion of his Peoples imbracing of it wicked men may vent their natural enmity against Him by their persecuting of His People that so they may be justly punished for that and other of their sins and His own People may be exercised by their opposition for their good which are just and holy ends upon God's part For for this cause was the Gospel preached to them that are dead that they might be judged according to men c. 3. It giveth much encouragement to the Lords People in the way of their duty against all discouragements from the profane to consider first That they are not singular in a suffering lot seing the same hath fallen to the Saints before in whose person God
73.2 17. but rather to endure sufferings from them that they may not share with them in their wofull end for that the Godly might not run with their prospering persecutors to the same excesse of riot nor faint under sufferings from them The Apostle doth again represent to their hearts the consideration of their unspeakably terrible end by this other question Where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear 3. The consideration of this difficulty in the way of the Godlie's salvation is sufficient to convince us that their end must be unspeakably terrible who are so far from taking paint to be saved that they shake off all duties of Religion as the word ungodly signifies and give themselves up to all wickednesse as the word sinners doth import and so hast their own destruction for so much is imported in the connexion of the first part of this Verse with the latter If the righteous scarcely be saved where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear Vers 19. Wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls to Him in well doing as unto a faithful Creator Lest the sharpnesse of the trials whereof the Apostle gave fore-warning in the former words and the difficulty of attaining salvation by reason thereof might discourage the hearts of the Godly The Apostle giveth here the seventh and last direction which is That they should give up their souls to the keeping of their Lord f●r whom they suffered and so hold on in their duty notwithstanding of sufferings and this direction the Apostle beareth in by two arguments the one is That whatever they did suffer was carved out to them not by the lust of men but by the good-will of their God The other is That under their sufferings for well-doing they might be at quietnesse concerning the eternal salvation of their souls and their through-bearing till they come to the possession thereof having put them in his hand who is both able to save them having made them and all things of nothing and in testimony of his good-will to save them hath engaged his faithfulnesse in his Promises for that end and therefore Believers had no reason but to go on chearfully and constantly in their duty notwithstanding of all their sufferings Hence Learn 1. The consideration of the difficulty that is in the way of the salvation of the Lord's People by reason of the many fiery trials they have to go through should stir them up to make sure work about their souls by putting them in Christs hand so shall they have courage and strength under their sufferings for this last direction is inferred upon the former purpose as the first word maketh clear Wherefore let them that suffer c. commit the keeping of their souls to Him 2. The Lord's People should more highly esteem of and be more solicitous about t●e preservation of their souls especially in a troublesome time than of all things else in the world it being a special part of heavenly wisdom and prudence to ensure that by faith putting it in Christ's hand So will they be sure of quietnesse of spirit under all their sufferings Psal 31.5 and will value the lesse other losses their best Jewel being in safety 2 Tim. 1.12 for the Spirit of God doth not mind them of taking course to preserve other things knowing they were ready to spend too much of their care that way in an evil time but giveth them this direction for quieting their hearts however other things went Commit the keeping of your souls to Him 3. They that have committed the keeping of their souls to Jesus Christ as they would have comfort under their sufferings must hold on in the way of well-doing considering that however their souls that are committed to him cannot be lost yet their assurance and comfort cannot be kept but in that way therefore the Apostle qualifieth this direction Commit the keeping of your souls to Him in well doing 4. They who from the sense of their souls hazard to perish for any ability themselves have to preserve them and from their desire to have their soul 〈◊〉 ●●fety above all other things do by faith put them in the hand of a Saviour for mercy and salvation and having so done do betake themselves in his strength to the way of their duty whatever they may suffer in it they need not doubt of Christ's taking the charge and custody of the soul thus committed to him for that they may be confident he will take the charge of them and safely keep what is committed to him he thus by his Spirit speaking through the Apostle commandeth Commit the keeping of your souls to Him 5. The sufferings of the Lord's People come not according to the lust and will of their adversaries but are measured out and ordered by the will of the Lord which is alwayes a good will towards his own making all things work for their good Rom. 8.28 The consideration whereof should hearten them under all their sufferings for this is here asserted as an argument to constancy and chearfulnesse under their sufferings that they did suffer according to the will of God 6. They that would have courage under their sufferings from powerful adversaries must by faith lay hold upon God's Omnipotency manifested in the works of Creation The consideration whereof cannot but give strength and courage to Believers under their sufferings they having the Lord and all his Properties engaged to be forth-coming for them in the Covenant of Grace and especially considering that their through-bearing and deliverance cannot but be easie to Him who made all of nothing for that the Apostle may encourage sufferers he representeth the Lord to their faith under the consideration of a Creator 7. The consideration of the Lord's faithfulness in keeping of his Promises is a strong pillar of the Saints confidence that they shall be well born through all their trials seing his good will hath moved him expresly to pawn his faithfulnesse for every thing they need particularly for pardoning their sin upon their confession 1 Joh. 1.9 for enabling them to the duties of holinesse 1 Thess 5.24 and for bearing them through all their sufferings 1 Cor. 10.13 1 Thess 3.2 3. for this consideration of the Lord joyned with that of his Omnipotency is here held forth to the faith of sufferers as a strong ground of their confidence anent the safety of their souls and their being well born thorow all their trials He is a faithful Creator CHAP. V. THis Chapter hath three parts In the first the Apostle having insinuate himself upon the Officers of the Church ver 1. perswadeth them to the prime duties of their Calling and disswadeth them from the main evils incident to them ver 2 3. by the consideration of the glorious reward abiding Christ's faithful Servants ver 4. In the second part he presseth the duties of the slock that they should be subject to their Officers and
numerous party to back them in their soul-destroying courses 2. That they and their followers should prevail to bring saving Truth in disgrace among many Doct. 1. It is not strange to see the most dangerous Hereticks have many followers every error being a friend to some lust 2 Tim. 4.3 and having often more of prosperity and applause attending it than Truth 1 Cor. 4.8 10. and because of the activity and fair pretences of them that vent it Mat. 23.15 Rom. 16.18 for these and the like causes many shall follow their pernicious wayes 2. They that are loft of God to the leading of the spirit of error do not only enslave their judgments to their seducers But do also give up themselves to back them in all the courses they take to propagate their errors and increase their faction even although these courses no lesse than their errors be destructive to the honour of Christ and welfare of souls for the Apostle saith Many shall follow not only their errors which he called damnable before but their wayes which are called pernicious 3. As error is received Truth goeth out of request the lovers thereof bending all their wit to disgrace those Truths that discover the vilenesse of their errors Rom. 3.8 and to raise and keep up hot contests among the Professors of the Gospel Gal. 1.7 thereby giving occasion to a third party who resolve to side with none but to slander or as the word is blaspheme the whole profession of Christianity Rom. 2.24 for the Apostle here makes the slander of Truth the consequence of embracing error and doth point at a third party who would take occasion from Hereticks prevailing to slander the Truth By reason of whom the way of Truth shall be evil spoken of Vers 3. And through covetousnesse shall they with fained words make merchandise of you whose judgment now of a long time lingreth not and their damnation slumbreth not Followeth the way how these false teachers came to have so great successe held forth in two branches 1. Their immoderate desire of gain and glory made them very industrious And 2. their figurative or plaistered language as the word signifieth made them easily gain a number of poor souls to be compleatly at their disposal as wares are under the power of the Merchant that hath bought them for which dealing he doth forewarn that God's watchfull providence was framing His decreed judgments for them Hence Learn 1. However they that seduce fouls by error may seem to be the most mortified men in the world Col. 2.23 and most desirous of the good of souls Gal. 4.17 Yet is the rise of all their pains with people from some unmortified lust such as the immoderate desire of gain or applause for the Spirit of the Lord is in this to be believed what ever they pretend that through covetousnesse make merchandise of His People 2. False teachers are in their way of dealing with souls very like unto cheating Merchants 1. in their using of much fair and plaistred language to commend their errors 2. In their activity and stirring from place to place as the word in the Original of making merchandise doth signifie to vent them And 3. in their unsatisfiableness till their followers become their compleat slaves both in judgment and practice All which is held forth as clear resemblances betwixt them and cheating Merchants in these words With fained words shall they make merchandise of you 3. However the judgment of such men be hardly believed because of their successe and fair pretences and may be long suspended for the exercise of the Godly and punishment of those who receive not the love of the Truth with strong delusion Yet it is most certain according to the foreknowledge and decree of God it is swiftly approaching and shall light upon them by way of surprizal for their judgment now of a long time lingreth not and their damnation slumbreth not Vers 4. For if God spared not the Angels that sinned but cast them down to Hell and delivered them into chains of darknesse to be reserved unto judgment The Apostle proveth the certainty of the judgment threatned against these false teachers by a threefold instance in this and the following Verses The substance of the first which is in this Verse is That if the holy Lord did not spare the Angels His most glorious Creatures when they sinned against Him but did presently imprison them in the pit of Hell reserving them for further judgment These false teachers and their followers have no reason to dream of exemption Which conclusion flowing from this and the following instances the Apostle findeth not necessary to expresse but leaveth to their own conscience to infer Doct. 1. Although it be ordinary for sinners to harden themselves against threatnings because of their excellencies and priviledges conferred upon them by the Lord Rev. 18.7 Yet nothing of that kind can shelter them from the wrath of a provoked God but the more of these gifts there be and be abused the greater measure of wrath may be expected Therefore is the judgment of God upon these excellent and priviledged Creatures the Angels brought to prove the certainty of the like wrath to come upon false teachers who by reason of their excellent enducments and esteem in the Church were ready to make light of the Apostle's threatnings If God spared not the Angels c. 2. It ought to be esteemed marvelous mercy in God that He doth not presently thrust sinners down to Hell when they provoke Him and much more that He hath provided a remedy and offers pardon to them Every moments sparing after the comission of sin should be thought wonderfull indulgence in God who spared not the Angels but as the words in the Original will bear imprisoned them while they were sinning secluding them from all possibility or hopes of recovery for ever He spared not the Angels that sinned but cast them down to Hell and delivered them into chains c. 3. The fallen Angels who are the Devils are under such a powerfull restraint of Divine Providence that they cannot move or act any thing but in so far as the Lord 's holy Justice and Wisdom permitteth and ordereth them for the punishment of the wicked or exercise of the Godly for they are reserved in chains of darknesse which are nothing else but God's irresistible Power and terrible Justice over-ruling tormenting and restraining them 4. Although the Devils when they are permitted can appear visibly as if they were at their own liberty and can seem jovial as if they were free of torment 1 Sam. 28.13 that so they may the more effectually prevail with such poorslaves as have provoked God to give them up to their delusion Yet go where they will their Hell is alwayes with them they live in the constant feeling of the wrath of the Almighty as their being delivered in chains of darkness doth import and in the dreadful expectation of a more high measure of
nothing of the wrath due to those who count it their heaven to exceed in all carnal delights notwithstanding of the light of the Gospel thereby disgracing their holy profession and making but a sport of deceiving their own souls since they can in the mean time deceive others insinuating themselves in the esteem and society of the Godly whether in their religious or ordinary feasts ver 13. who are so under the power of their unclean lusts that they cannot but manifest their filthy disposition being altogether impotent to resist temptations themselves and ensnaring with their errors and vile practices such others as are not well setled in knowledge and grace And who are so sold to the love of their gain that they make it their heart-exercise to attain thereto for all which he pronounceth them heirs of God's fearful curse Doct. 1. The wrath of God against sin had need to be oft inculcated to the guilty and knit unto the several branches of their sin that so they may have the more lively apprehensions of that wrath and may have their hearts accustomed to think upon it whensoever they think upon their sins that so they may be either stopped in the course of their sin and hastened to repentance or left the more inexcusable Therefore the Apostle in branching out the sin of false teachers and their followers doth so frequently intermix threatnings or some new representation of that wrath they have to expect They shall utterly perish in the former Verse and here they shall receive the reward of unrighteousness and they are cursed children 2. When God reckoneth with the wicked they shall not want a grain weight of the wrath due to them for since they have slighted the use-making of Christ's righteousnesse which makes sinners righteous and the study of holinesse which proveth them righteous they shall receive the reward of unrighteousness which in the Original doth signifie a due proportion of wrath to their sin 3. That which doth ripen wicked men for wrath is not their sins only simply considered but mainly the several aggravations ordinarily attending their sins whereof there may be seen here nine in number As 1. This doth exceedingly aggrege mens sin when they count it their very paradise to satisfie their lusts for so the word in the Original They count it their Eden to riot The more Heaven men apprehend in their sins the more Hell they will find 2. When men become so impudently bent upon their lusts that neither the light of the worlds knowledge of their sin nor th● light of the Word discovering the evil and hazard thereof doth restrain them both which may be comprehended in this other aggravation of their sin They count it pleasure to riot in the day time 3. When men by their sins do stain a holy profession that they have made before the world for if these men had not had a fair profession and high esteem in the Church they could not have been spots and blemishes while they feasted with the Lords people which is here made another aggravation of their guilt 4. When men do not only live in sin but do make a sport of it beguiling their own hearts with groundlesse apprehensions that there is neither such evil nor hazard therein as the Word holdeth forth and their own conscience sometimes suggesteth for this is another aggravation They sport themselves in their own deceivings 5. When in the mean time of their living in the slavery of their lusts they are carefull to keep up their esteem with the Godly and attend all occasions of converse with them that so they may cloak their sins for it is here made another aggravation of their guilt that all this wickednesse is committed while they feast with the Lord's People 6. When mens lusts are so vigorous within that they manifest their predominancy in their very outward carriage for this is a further aggravation of their sin They have eyes full of adultery 7. When men become so impotent to resist their lusts that the satisfying thereof becometh their very element out of which they cannot rest as the word here signifieth They cannot cease from sin which is also another aggravation of their guilt 8. When sinners become infectious and insnaring with the bait as the word beguiling in the Original signifies of fair pretences many others to swallow down their foul errors and profane practices this also is a high aggravation of their guilt 9. When men make it their heart-exercise whereabout they spend their wit and affections to fulfill their fleshly desires for this is here the last aggravation of their sin An heart they have exercised with covetous practices Doct. 4. Although it be possible that the Lord's People may without guiltinesse admit into their ordinary and intimate society the worst of men while they do not discover themselves as is clear concerning Ahithophel and Judas Yet doth the admission of such into their society oftentimes prove a great snare especially to those that are admitted while they take occasion there-from to harden themselves in those sins and to count the lesse of that vilenesse the commission whereof doth not mar their esteem and society with the Godly for this is one thing that helped these soul-deceivers to deceive themselves and willingly to overlook the evil of their own condition that notwithstanding of all their wickednesse they were admitted to the society of the Godly and did passe among them for such While they feast with you 5. When men labour not to mortifie their inward lusts the Lord oftentimes doth justly suffer them to manifest the predominancy of these lusts over them in their outward carriage As grace which is lively within will put some beauty upon the outward man Eccl. 8.1 So corruptions vigorous within will readily bewray the person to be its slave Isa 3.9 Having eyes full of adultery or as it is in the Original of the adultress 6. So bewitching is the spirit of error where it entereth and so devoted are deluded souls unto their seducing teachers That though these teachers be judicially plagued of God as ordinarily such are with profanity of life Yet this doth not make their followers loath at them or abhor their errors for though they did riot in the day time and had eyes full of adultery Yet were they still beguiling unstable souls 7. Those who are not rooted in knowledge by clear information and frequent meditation of the Truth and have not their hearts established with Grace by the frequent exercise thereof will readily be a prey to soul-deceivers for these whom they beguile are here called Unstable souls 8. No man doth serve one idol alone but many at once he that is wedded to worldly pleasures will be also to his credit● the want whereof doth mar his pleasure and if pleasure and credit be two of a mans idols readily gain will be the third that so he may the more easily attain to the other two Therefore doth the Apostle
promises of doing much good to the Church They give out themselves to be wel-springs of comfort to the Lords People and clouds to drop down their doctrine as rain to make the Church fruitful whileas in effect they did but disappoint poor souls and darken the Truth for which the Apostle threatneth them with everlasting darknesse as their portion Hence Learn 1. They that do most hurt to the souls of the Lord's People by venting most dangerous errors among them make oftentimes the fairest promises of doing most good to them that so they may feed People with vain expectations of more than ever they can find from them faithful Ministers being sensible of their own insufficiency 2 Cor. 3.5 and of the necessity of a divine concurrence with their pains 1 Cor. 3.7 are more ready to expresse their fears of Peoples disappointment 2 Cor. 11.2 3. than to make such large promises of much comfort and profit to People by their means as false teachers use to do for here these seducers give out themselves to be what faithfull Ministers ought to be Wells of consolation receiving from Christ the Fountain and giving out to His People what may comfort them and Clouds to drop down their doctrine as rain in season to make them fruitful 2. Whatever be the fair pretences and promises of false teachers the Lord's People can meet with nothing but disappointment from them and whatever esteem they may have among the best for a time God will take His own time to manifest what they are in effect and to undeceive His own People for here they that gave out themselves and were esteemed to be the chief instruments of the comfort and fruitfulnesse of the Church as the similitudes of Wells and Clouds whereby they set out themselves do import are here discovered to be such as did disappoint and in disappointing increase the anxiety of these that expected comfort from them as Wells without water do the weary travellor and to be such as are acted by the restless spirit of Satan into every airth where their fore-named idols of gain and applause can be had as clouds that are carried with a tempest 3. The judgment of false teachers whereof their followers shall get a share shall be very proportionable to their sin for they promise to be Wells of consolation to the Lord's People and do disappoint them they themselves delight to walk and to lead others in the works of darknesse they darken the Truth of God and in this course they are restlesse as clouds carried with a tempest and therefore the threatning is exactly suited to these sins For them the mist of darknesse is reserved for ever Vers 18. For when they speak great swelling words of vanity they allure through the lusts of the flesh through much wantonnesse those that were clean escaped from them who live in error Here is the next course which soul-deceivers take to ensnare poor souls by their errors to wit a high and lofty stile of language which their love to their lusts made them to affect and whereby they were very taking with unmortified wanton professors especially such as have been turned from Paganism to the profession of Christianity Hence Learn 1. They that vent error do ordinarily hold it forth under some lofty strain of language and high-bended expressions beyond what is ordinary such as may be most taking with and admired by the hearers whileas faithfull Ministers can trust Christ to make plain Truth spoken in the simplicity of words effectual for the salvation comfort and edification of His own which is their main scope 1 Cor. 2.4 for it is here a character of false teachers They speak great swelling words 2. When the vail of odd and soaring expressions wherein false teachers delight is laid aside and the naked purpose held forth under them is considered it will be found of no worth but either some untruth or that which maketh nothing to the true advantage of souls both which are vanity for here their great swelling words are words of vanity 3. An affected lofty stile of language in uttering things divine doth ordinarily flow from some unmortified lust in the speaker especially the love of applause and is also mainly taking with wanton unhumbled souls when it doth provoke to more vanity and lightnesse by diverting them from the study of their natural vilenesse their need of Jesus and the necessity of the mortification of their heart-evils for they who speak great swelling words of vanity they allure through the lusts of the flesh through much wantonnesse both which last clauses may be understood as well of the principle which doth bend the preacher to that strain as of the qualification of these hearers with whom it is most taking 4. There may be a very remarkable external change from vile and blasphemous opinions idolatrous and profane practices to a profession of Truth and suitablenesse of the outward conversation to it where there is no saving or inward change made of the heart from the love of secret lusts to the love of Christ and His grace the one without the other may be occasioned by the power of example the majesty and clearnesse of Truth which is in nothing contrary to natures light the beauty of holinesse shining in the conversation of Professors and outward advantages which sometimes may attend the profession of Truth and Holinesse for these here who were yet given to the lusts of their flesh and much wantonnesse had once clean escaped from the blasphemous opinions profane and idolatrous practices of those without the Church who are here called them that live in error 5. Whatever change of this sort be wrought upon men unless they labour to find the power of Christs Spirit changing their nature and mortifying their inward lusts they will easily be a prey to seducing spirits and carried to those sins which are no lesse dishonourable to God and destructive to their own souls than those wherein they lived before for here those who had once clean escaped from the vile opinions and wicked practices wherein Pagans live are now by the seduction of false teachers turned profane and licentious Christians Vers 19. While they promise them liberty they themselves are the servants of corruption for of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought in bondage The last of those means whereby false teachers do ensnare so many of their hearers is their pretending to make clear to them and possesse them in that Christian liberty whereof the Gospel speaketh which they could not at all perform in regard themselves were compleat slaves to their lusts as captives in war are servants to their conqueror Hence Learn 1. The Doctrine of Christian liberty which is in it self most sweet and saving holding forth our freedom from the Law as a Covenant of work Rom. 7.4 and from the curse thereof Gal. 3.13 from the dominion of Satan Heb. 2.14 15. the terror and allurements of the world Gal.
the Lord's People and which will be comfortable to them and approven of God now and hereafter must be manifested in all the parts of their conversation both in their outward carriage and secret practice in their common affairs and religious performances in duties of Gods immediate Worship and in duties relating to their neighbour as is imported in this What manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godlinesse 5. In the discharge of all the duties of holinesse Christians ought to look much to the qualification of their persons that they be reconciled with God through Christ and daily renewing the friendship by the exercise of godly sorrow for sin and a living faith in the Mediator and by keeping their hearts in frame for the particular duties of holinesse they are called to for the Apostle doth not put the question how holy ought our conversation to be but what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godlinesse 6. If the holiest on earth would put their conscience to speak to them after serious consideration of the terror and glory of the second coming of Christ they would be much unsatisfied with their present measure of holiness and would have their desires quickned and their endeavours strengthened after a further measure thereof as is imported in this question of the Apostles put to his own and others conscience What manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godlinesse including himself ver 13. Vers 12. Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God wherein the Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat The second use of the former doctrine is That the consideration of so dreadfull and glorious a day should make all the Lord's People live in the constant expectation thereof by their prayers and pains furthering these works which must be done before it come which use together with the former the Apostle beareth-in by a new representation of the glory and terror of that day Hence Learn 1. To live in the constant expectation of Christ's glorious appearance is both the duty of all the lovers of Him and a special mean to make them grow in holinesse Therefore is this expectation prest here by a word of the present time importing that it is both a perpetual duty in it self and a special mean of attaining to what is prest before What manner of persons ought ye to be c. looking for the coming of the day of God 2. Although the time of Christ's second coming be so fixed in the decree of God as that it cannot be altered Act. 17.31 Yet ought the Lords People to be no lesse earnest in ●astning their own preparation for it and by their prayers and other means competent to them in their stations furthering these great works to be done before than if that day could be hastned by them for the word in the Original signifieth not only our hastning toward that day but also our hastning of it See Isa 16.5 Looking for and hasting the coming of the day of God 3. It is safe for the Lord's Ministers frequently to represent to His People those Truths that are much contradicted by enemies of Truth that are but little considered by His People and which have greatest influence upon their practice to restrain them from sin and provoke them to duty for such is this Truth concerning the terror and majesty of the last day which the Apostle having spoken of before repeareth here again Wherein the Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat Vers 13. Neverthelesse we according to His promise look for new Heavens and a new Earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse Here is the third use of the former doctrine and it is for the consolation of Believers against all their pains and sufferings in Christ's service and especially against the losse that they may apprehend to be in the fore-mentioned dissolution of all things They have a more excellent state to look for a new World when the old is destroyed where only righteousnesse shall have its constant abode This promise of the new Heavens and the new Earth was first given out to the Church by Isa 65.17 and 66.22 and had some accomplishment as these places make clear at the return from Babylon which was a new World to the ruined and exiled State and Church of the Jews It is also made use-of by the Apostle Paul as having spiritual mercies in it such as conversion regeneration and the like which is as a new World to sinners for he marketh it to have accomplishment this way 2 Cor. 5.17 And yet this Apostle here leadeth Believers to expect more out of that same promise not any worldly or temporal felicity as Millenaries dream because it is a state promised after the day of judgment as fully satisfactory to Believers where no sin but only righteousnesse shall have its constant mansion which cannot agree to any earthly happinesse but must be understood of everlasting blessednesse set forth under these borrowed expressions Doct. 1. One and the same promise may contain several sorts of mercies both temporal and spiritual to be le●●en-out at several times to the Lords People and yet may have its full accomplishment only in Heaven for such is this promise of new Heavens and a new Earth out of which Isaiah hath drawn temporal deliverance Paul spiritual mercies and Peter here everlasting blessednesse Many promises in Scripture are of the same nature e. g. That promise Isa 25.8 The Lord God will wipe away tears from off all faces was in part accomplished when the mourning Church came rejoycing home from their exile in Babylon as is clear Psal 126. That same promise hath also been often made good in the Lord 's comforting of particular persons humbly mourning for their sins as appeareth by Psal 116.8 And yet that promise is to have its full accomplishment in Heaven as is clear by Rev. 21.4 The consideration whereof may serve to direct us to a right use-making of many promises 2. The state of Believers in the other life will be wholly new their bodies will be new like Christs glorious Body Philip. 3.21 their spirits also new 1 Joh. 3.2 their duration new a constant presentnesse of enjoying the Lord 1 Thess 4.17 Their exercises shall be new to sing new songs to the Lamb Rev. 5.9 and to follow Him where-ever He goeth Rev. 14 4● Their cloathing shall be new glory and immortality 1 Cor. 15.53 New food and refreshment to eat of the Tree of life and drink of the Water of life Rev. 22.1 2. and a new light and sun to shine upon them the glory of God and of the Lamb being the light of that new World Rev. 21.23 All which are but borrowed expressions to set forth the glory of that Estate which cannot be fully set forth for even the Apostle not having