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A14185 Lectures upon the vvhole Epistle of St. Paul to the Philippians, deliuered in St. Peters Church in Oxford: by the reuerend and faithfull seruant of Christ Henry Airay ... and now published for the vse of Gods Church by C.P. ... Airay, Henry, 1560?-1616. 1618 (1618) STC 245; ESTC S100494 890,650 1,118

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vnto that righteousnesse which is of God through faith to the end I say that he might bring the Iewes from those outward things of the flesh vnto the inward knowledge of Christ Iesus he raised vp to this purpose this holy Apostle that he being a manfully furnished with all prerogatiues in all such outward thing● as they reioyced in might both be of greater authoritie with them and likewise haue the greater possibilitie to draw them from workes vnto grace from the law vnto Christ For if it had beene so that he had perswaded them to renounce all confidence in the flesh and to reioyce onely in Christ Iesus hauing himselfe no cause of confidence in the flesh they might happily lightly haue esteemed him and thought that because himselfe had nothing touching the flesh whereof to reioyce therefore he enuied them and perswaded them to renounce all confidence in the flesh But when now they should see that he that thus perswaded them was one that had greater cause of confidence in the flesh then had the best of them they must needs likewise see that surely his perswasions proceeded from a certaine and sound iudgment and not from any conceited opinion or hatefull enuy So we see that to teach men that pleasures and sumptuous buildings and riches and possessions and the like were all but vanitie and vexation of the spirit he stirred vp Salomon who hauing had his fill of all kinde of pleasures which either his eye Eccles 2. or his heart could desire and hauing built goodly houses and great workes and hauing gathered great riches and treasures and gotten large possessions aboue all that were before him in Ierusalem was so fit to teach that lesson that he saying of all those things that they were but vanitie and vexation of the spirit the truth thereof might the rather be beleeued So likewise when the Church had sate now a long time in the darknesse of Romish Egypt and had beene bewitched as with many other grosse errors so with this of iustification by workes and merits of their owne making we see that to purge the Church of these pestilent diseases he raised vp not many yeares ago in Germanie that reuerend Luther who hauing beene a long time more pharisaicall and zealous in those monkish waies and doctrines then the common sort of his order and hauing liued as Erasmus witnesseth Epist lib. 5. Melan. l. 6. Wolsac so that none of all his enemies could euer charge him with any note of iust reprehension might so much the rather preuaile with the Church to draw them from those dreames and dregs of superstition and idolatrie wherein they were drowned And thus oftentimes it seemeth good to the wisdome of our God to the end that he may the rather draw his people either from errors in opinion or corruptions in life to raise vp of themselues some such as haue as deeply beene drencht in those errors which they maintaine and delighted asmuch in those follies which they follow as they themselues that when they shall disclaime such and such errors or renounce such and such follies the rest may the rather hearken vnto them and be induced by them to disclaime their errors and to renounce their follies Whence I make this double vse 1. This may teach them whom it hath pleased the Lord to reclaime from error in opinion or folly in life to consider why the Lord hath thus in mercy dealt with them and accordingly to performe such duties vnto the Lord as are required of them Art thou then called out of the darknesse of Romish Egypt vnto the glorious light of the Gospell of Iesus Christ Art thou freed from the bondage of that Romish Pharaoh into the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God by the day-starre arising in thine heart It is a great mercy of the Lord vnto thee thus to deliuer thy soule from death and thy feete from sliding But consider thou whether the Lord hath not also in wisdome done this that thou hauing beene nusled vp in their superstitious errors and as egerly maintained them as they shouldst now labour to draw them out of darknesse into light and from vaine confidence in the flesh to reioyce in Christ Iesus What doest thou know but that the Lord therefore suffered thee for a while to sit in darknes and in the shadow of death that when afterward the day-starre should ●rise in thine heart thou mightest both labour the more with them and likewise be in the better possibilitie to preuaile with hem Follow thou therefore the example of this holy Apostle and labour to weyne them as from other their errors so from confidence in their workes and in merits of their owne making that they may reioyce wholly in Christ Iesus and onely put their trust in his name Againe hast thou haunted with vaine persons and beene delighted in the companie of the wicked hast thou runne with a theefe when thou sawest him and beene partaker with the adulterers hast thou giuen thy money vnto vsury or taken reward against the innocent haue thine hands wrought or thy feete runne vnto or thy thought deuised or thy heart consented vnto this or that sinne or iniquitie and hath the Lord now reclaimed thee It is a great mercy of the Lord no doubt vnto thee But consider thou whether the Lord hath not also in wisdome done this that thou mightest draw them with whom sometimes thou sortedst thy selfe vnto a reformation of their waies What knowest thou but that he hath reclaimed thee from such and such inordinate waies that hauing walked with them thou mightest be the meanes of reforming them As it hath pleased the Lord therefore to reclaime euery man from any error in opinion or folly in life so let him labour to reforme such errors or follies in them whom hee knowes to be intangled with them euer remembring that of our Sauiour vnto Peter when thou art conuerted strengthen thy brethren Luk. 22.32 and likewise that that he which converteth a sinner from going astray out of his way Iam. 5.20 saueth a soule from death and hideth a multitude of sinnes 2. This may teach them that are as yet holden with any error in opinion or folly in life to hearken vnto those whom the Lord hath raised euen of themselues to admonish them of their errors or of their follies For thus they should consider with themselues He was so affected as now I am and had as great skill and will to maintaine those things which now he doth oppugne as I haue and if the Lord haue now reuealed vnto him that which as yet he hath kept hid from mine eyes who am I that I should not hearken vnto him Againe he was so delighted as now I am and did runne after such sinnes and iniquities as he now speaketh against as now I doe and if the Lord haue now so lightned his eyes that he both seeth the folly of his owne waies and calleth me from the like
God forgotten to be gracious and will he shut vp his louing kindnesse in displeasure And againe Lord why abhorrest thou my soule and hidest thy face frome mee Lord where are thy old louing kindnesses thy terrors doe I suffer with a troubled minde thy wrathfull displeasure goeth ouer me and the feare of thee hath vndone mee His reall continuance ye see seemeth to be cut off and himselfe to be separated from the Lord but by his gronings and cries it appeareth that his holy desire still remained Pauls care likewise was interrupted and his reall continuance remitted when hee was so exalted through the abundance of reuelations 2 Cor. 12.7 that there was giuen vnto him a pricke in the flesh euen the messenger of Satan to buffet him yet in that he then besought the Lord thrise that that messenger of Satan might depart from him 8. it appeareth that this his holy desire still remained And this holy desire of perseuering is it which the Lord accepteth and then is he said to giue vs this grace of perseuerance when hee giueth vs a perpetuall will and desire of perseuering in that grace wherein wee stand howsoeuer the very act of perseuering by sinne tentation or other trouble seeme to be cut off and quite failed sometimes euen in the dearest of Gods children Here then is a notable comfort for the broken and contrite heart for the humbled and afflicted soule For tell me ô thou distressed soule hath the spirit sometimes witnessed vnto thy spirit that thou wast the childe of God Hath the loue of God sometimes beene so shed abroad in thine heart that thou hast verily perswaded thy selfe of the loue of God towards thee Hast thou sometimes beene delighted in the law of thy God and felt the sweet comforts of God in Christ Iesus in thy soule Why then is now thy soule so heauy and why is it so disquieted within thee Why doe thoughts arise in thy heart and why doth the sleepe depart from thine eyes O waite vpon the Lord and put thy trust in him for hee that hath begun a good worke in thee will performe it vntill the day of Christ Iesus He hath said it by his holy Apostle and shall he not doe it The strength of Israel will not lie 1 Sam. 15.29 nor repent for he is not a man that he should repent He hath begun a good worke in thee euen of his loue and his mercy towards thee and as himselfe so his loue is vnchangeable so that whom hee loueth once he loueth vnto the end O but therefore thou art troubled because he doth not seem to continue his louing kindnes towards thee Thou feelest not that ioy in the Holy Ghost that comfort in Gods loue which thou wast wont to finde thou art euen dead vnto the life of God Well did not Dauid cry out Lord where are thy old louing kindnesses where are thy former mercies Did he not pray restore me to the ioy of thy saluation and renue a right spirit within me And againe O quicken mee according to thy word quicken me according to thy louing kindnesse So that thou seest there hath no tentation taken thee but such as appertaineth to man euen such as haue ouertaken men after Gods owne heart But tell me doth it not greeue thee that thou doest not feele that assurance that comfort that ioy that thou wast wont to finde in thy God through Iesus Christ Doest thou not desire and long to feele that assurance comfort ioy that thou wast wont to finde in thy soule O yes it is thy doubtings that trouble thee and comfort which thou longest for Well then good enough It is a broken and contrite heart that greeueth at his sinnes Psal 51.17 that greeueth at his wants that the Lord loueth and a troubled spirit troubled at the cogitation of his slips and imperfections is a sacrifice acceptable vnto him And againe this holy desire of any grace is the grace it selfe A desire of comfort is a great part of comfort and a desire of perseuering is a chiefe part of perseuerance and hee that desireth any grace of God tending to saluation shall surely haue it For so Christ hath promised saying I will giue to him that is a thirst of the well of the water of life freely Apoc. 21.6 which is the same with that in the Prophet where it is said Ho euery one that thirsteth come yee to the waters Esay 55.1 and yee that haue no siluer come buy and eat come I say buy wine and milke without siluer and without money Comfort then your selues be of good comfort in the Lord all yee that thirst after and desire the things that belong vnto your peace Let not your sinnes or your wants and imperfections too much cast you downe or dismay you What if he will haue you to saile by hell to heauen He that continueth this holy desire in you will not suffer his mercies vtterly to faile from you for euer Heauinesse may endure for a night for a short season but ioy commeth in the morning after a while heauinesse is turned into ioy and sackcloth into the garment of gladnes Where he hath begun he will make an end and scattering this cloud he will shew vnto thee the light of his holy countenance In the meane time let that holy desire which is in thee be a pledge of his loue vnto thee and assure thy selfe he shall fulfill all thy hearts desire and restore thee to thy wonted ioyes againe LECTVRE VI. PHILIP 1. Vers 7. As it becommeth me so to iudge of you all because I haue you in remembrance that both in my bands and in my defence and confirmation of the Gospell you all were partakers of my grace THe second thing which heere I note is that God and God only had begunne that good worke of embracing the Gospell in them would as the Apostle was perswaded performe it vnto the end For once it plaine that the Apostle meaneth that God had begunne this worke in them and would performe it vnto the end and in that he saith not I am perswaded that God but that hee which hath begun c he plainely implieth that God only begunne that good worke in them and would performe it vnto the end For if any other but he onely had intermedled therein how should the Philippians haue plainely vnderstood the Apostle to speake of God when he said that he c. He if any other had had any hand heerein might aswell be vnderstood of that other as of God Hence then I obserue that both the beginning and the perfiting of our obedience to the Gospell and indeed of euery good worke in vs is only from God And to this the writings of the holy Ghost euery where agree The Apostle speaking in generall saith what hast thou that thou hast not receiued 1 Cor 4 7. no gift no grace no good at all but we receiue it from God
they might be blamelesse in the day of our Lord Iesus Christ Whence two doubts may be moued not vnworthy the answering The one is how one man may bee perswaded of another mans perseuerance or saluation what a kinde of perswasion it is which is of anothers perseuerance or saluation The other is whether the Lord performed this worke of the Philippians continuance in the fellowship which they had in the gospell vntill the day of Iesus Christ as the Apostle was perswaded hee would To speake first vnto this latter most lamentable it is but most true it is that in those places where sometimes the name of the Lord was called vpon and the gospell of Christ Iesus freely and sincerely preached not onely at Philippi but in many other Churches which the Apostles had planted in Macedonia and else where there now through the secret but iust iudgement of God barbarous Turcisme and abominable paganisme hath taken possession and holdeth it at his will But as we vnderstand this place of the Apostle so we are to make answer to the doubt for if wee vnderstand the Apostles perswasion to be touching the Church that then presently was at Philippi that the Lord would continue them in the fellowship of the gospell vntill the day of Iesus Christ .i. vntill their death when they should be translated into his kingdome of glory I take it that it may very well be presumed and safely auerred that the Lord performed this worke of the Philippians continuance in the fellowship which they had in the gospell vntill the day of Christ Iesus as the Apostle was perswaded he would for such was their loue and liberalitie towards the Apostle and such their constant abiding in the truth from the first day vntill then that as the Apostle thereupon was perswaded that the Lord would confirme them in that grace wherein they stood vnto their end so wee therevpon may perswade our selues that the Lord did confirme them therein vnto the end But if we vnderstand the Apostles perswasion to be touching the Church successiuely at Philippi that the Lord would continue that Church in all ages in the fellowship of the gospell vntill the day of Iesus Christ .i. vntill his second comming to iudgement then may it seeme that the Apostle failed in his perswasion because of their subiection now a long time vnto the Turke But euen here also it may be said that as when the Apostle wrote the Philippians shined as lights in the middest of a naughty and crooked nation so now also in that hellish thraldome vnto the Turke the Lord hath a Church there though not so eminent as sometimes it was yet a Church For as at the first the Apostles were sent as sheepe in the middest of wolues and as it may be hoped that Christ hath his Church euen in the middest of Romish Egypt so may it also be hoped that hee hath his Church in that heathenish tyrannie of the Turke and euen in the Citie of Philippi But I now rather approue the former answer as better agreeing with the circumstances of this scripture whereby it seemeth that the Apostle speaketh of them that then were at Philippi Now for answer vnto the second doubt which is how one man may be perswaded of another mans perseuerance or saluation wee must vnderstand that there is a threefold perswasion One grounded vpon the testimonie of the spirit vnto our spirit whereby we doe most certainely perswade our selues of whatsoeuer grace is sealed vnto vs by the earnest of the spirit And this perswasion is most certaine but this perswasion we cannot haue of any other but onely of our selues forasmuch as this ariseth of the testimonie of the spirit vnto our spirit Another perswasion there is grounded vpon the constant immutabilitie of God in his doings whereby wee certainely perswade our selues that whatsoeuer good worke God hath begun in vs he will confirme it vnto the end And a third perswasion there is grounded vpon charitie whereby wee perswade our selues of grace where we see obedience to the gospell constant abiding in the truth patience in troubles loue of the brethren and the like Now one man cannot be perswaded of an other mans perseuerance or saluation by the first kinde of perswasion grounded vpon the testimonie of the spirit because no man knoweth what the spirit witnesseth vnto anothers spirit but onely to his owne But both by the second kinde of perswasion grounded vpon the constancie of the Lord and likewise by the third grounded vpon charitie one man may be perswaded of another mans perseuerance or saluation By the first kinde of perswasion the Apostle was perswaded of his owne saluation when he said I am perswaded that neither death Rom. 10.38 nor life nor Angels and so euery one of vs vpon the like ground may perswade our selues of our owne perseuerance and saluation By the second and third kindes of perswasion the Apostle was perswaded of the Philippians perseuerance and saluation as in this place we see and so euery one of vs vpon the like grounds may be perswaded one of anothers perseuerance and saluation The first neuer faileth because the testimonie of Gods spirit whereon it is grounded is euer true The second likewise neuer faileth because Gods purposes are euer vnchangeable and with him is no variablenes neither shadowing by turning The third hath a wonderfull great probability but may faile because it leaneth on the outward fruits of the spirit in man whose heart none knoweth but he that searcheth it The first is not here mentioned the second is mentioned vers 6 and the third hath his ground vers 7. For a full answer then vnto the second doubt we say that one man may be perswaded of another mans perseuerance and saluation both by the second and third kinds of perswasion and farther that of whose perseuerance and saluation we are perswaded by the third kinde of perswasion of his perseuerance and saluation also we are to be perswaded by the second kind of perswasion .i. of whose perseuerance and saluation we may conceiue a good perswasion by the fruits of the spirit in them of them we are certainely to be perswaded that God will neuer leaue them or forsake them but confirme them vnto the end And thus I resolue vpon the reason which the Apostle setteth downe of his perswasion grounded on the constant immutabilitie of God in his doings for what saith the Apostle As it be commeth me saith he c. It becommeth mee saith the Apostle so to iudge of you euen to be perswaded that hee that hath begun this worke in you c. And why did it become him so to iudge so to be perswaded Because saith he I haue you in remembrance because I gladly remember this of you that both in my bands c. .i. that whether I were bound for the gospell or defended the gospell at Nero his barre or confirmed the gospell by my sufferings you all were partakers of my grace
they seeme to be yet may they be as great in Gods fauour and abound as much in the graces of Gods Spirit as thou that hast all things that thine heart can desire And yet what a great fauour ordinarily it is for the inferiour to be admitted to the speech of his superiour Well admitting you both to be alike great in Gods fauour the difference which I find betwixt you is this that if thou be the greater and wealthier thou hast the greater account to make which may not be any cause vnto thee to disdaine thy brother The second point is that they vse their wealth and greatnesse to the glory of God and the good of their brethren For not the hauing but the well vsing of our riches and authoritie c. commendeth vs vnto God and how much soeuer we haue if we vse it not well that which we haue it is no token to vs of his grace and fauour towards vs. Nay if he giue vs riches and honour c. and not withall the grace to vse them as we should they are vnto vs an occasion of falling of falling from God of falling into idolatrie of falling into many foolish and noisome lusts of falling into all the snares of the diuell Hast thou then wealth honor authoritie c They are the blessings of God bestowed vpon thee whosoeuer thou art But wilt thou know whether they be speciall fauours bestowed vpon thee as vpon his deare child Consider then how thou vsest them for so they are and are not speciall fauours vpon thee Whereon if we did so thinke as we should we would not so delight and set our hearts on them as we do but we would think of wel vsing them a great deale more then we do As many therfore as God hath blessed with these things let them studie to glorifie the Lord by them that so they may haue comfort in them as in tokens of his speciall fauour towards them and alwayes remember to reioyce in the Lord as in your chiefest treasure Secondly for such as are abased and in want let this first be a comfort vnto them For this that they are abased and in want that they are hungrie thirstie cold naked reuiled persecuted the like is no token that God hath forsaken them or shut vp his louing kindnesse in displeasure towards them Nay this is the cup that many of the best of Gods Saints haue deeply drunke on before them Let them then comfort themselues in this that thus they are brought into the fellowship of the Saints of God Be it then tribulation or anguish or persecution or famine or nakednes or perill or sword or all these that presse vs let them not be able to separate vs from the loue of God in Christ Iesus our Lord but in all these things let vs be more then conquerours through him that hath loued vs. Whatsoeuer we suffer or want in the world let vs comfort our selues in this that it is the beaten way wherein many of Gods Saints haue walked vnto heauen Secondly let this teach them to bridle their tongues in their talke of them that are g●eat and wealthy It is a common fault with them of the meaner sort to say of them that they haue their riches in this world they haue their honour here on earth But we are to know that the Lord hath them that belong vnto him in both sorts of men high and low rich and poore Neither therefore let plentie be a preiudice to them that abound neither let want seeme to priuiledge them that lacke but as euery man beareth his want and vseth his abundance so let him be thought to haue his portion among the righteous Thirdly such as haue experience both of plenty and of want let them hence learne not to stoupe at the one or stumble at the other Let not their wants dismay them nor their abundance exalt them The Lord giueth and the Lord taketh away and his name is still to be blessed Whether therefore we are abased or abound whether we be full or hungrie whether we abound or haue want euerie where and in all things we are to blesse him knowing that all things are according to his will Now giue me leaue in one word to point at one other obseruation from these words In that he saith I can be abased and likewise I can abound c. I obserue a notable patterne of great perfection in a Christian for then we grow to a notable perfection when we can both be abased and abound be full and hungry c. and still be content with the one or the other without murmuring or grudging The philosophers and heathen writers haue talked much of bearing both aduersity and prosperitie patiently and haue set downe good precepts for walking constantly in them both without drouping in aduersitie or swelling in prosperitie But let any man tell me of the best of them that kept that constant course in both not danted with the one nor puft vp with the other Nay in this degree of perfection none of them can but our Apostle must be the patterne for vs to follow after that we may all of vs say with the Apostle I can be abased and I can abound c. Yea this is a thing which we should all of vs know by experience in our selues that we can be abased c. and wherein we should be instructed and taught as in a mysterie of religion to be abased and to abound c. for this is an holy point of Christian knowledge to know to be abased and to abound to be content with either and not to relinquish any Christian duty for either But alas how ignorant are all sorts of men herein In the Clergie what ambitious seeking after the chiefest dignities What heaping of liuings one vpon another benefice vpon benefice prebend vpon prebend of benefices in Commendam vpon Bishopricks In the Temporalty what ioyning of house to house and laying of field to field What prying and prowling into all kinds of commodities What thirsting and gaping still after more more And what is the cause of all We haue not learned both to be full and to be hungrie both to abound and to haue want It may be we can abound but we cannot be abased it may be we can be full but we cannot be hungrie it may be we can away with plenty but not with want This prickes and pinches and is as bitter vnto vs as death but haue we learned to abound and to be full Nay we know not when we abound or when we are full and besides that abundance and fulnesse makes vs wanton and proude and forgetfull of such Christian duties as we ought to performe as might easily haue bene proued if time had giuen leaue Long we then in our soules to grow forward in a good degree of Christian perfection Let vs learne both to be abased and to abound c. Let not abundance or plenty make vs wanton
imaginations of the thoughts of mans heart are onely euill continually Gen 6 5. and there is no feare of God before his eyes Rom 3 18. This then is it wh●ch we say that man before he be renued by the spirit of grace hath no power or faculty at all I say not to worke or doe ought at all for this were indeede to transforme him into a stocke or stone but to doe any thing that is good for it is God and God only that worketh in him both the good will Phil. 2.13 and the good deede euen of his good pleasure He enlightens the eyes of our vnderstanding and corrects our froward wils and then being renued by the spirit we vnderstand the things of the spirit of God and we will the things that are good and we runne the way of Gods commandements but euer with this necessary limitation onely by God Hee maketh vs vnderstand and will and runne as we ought and we vnderstand and will and runne as we ought Here ●hen first learne to beware of such as either tell you that man is able of himselfe to keepe the Law and to merit euerlasting life a grosse and now outwo●ne errour I hope or that man is able of himselfe to beginne that is good howsoeuer he be not able to perfit it but by the helpe of the Lord or that man being preuented by grace is then able by the helpe of grace ayding his weake nature to worke out his owne saluation for all these errors as Dagon must needs fall to the ground be●ore this testimonie of the spirit and doctrine of the Holy Ghost The Holy Ghost by the mouth of the Apostle saith that it is God which hath begun a good worke in vs and that he which hath begun it will go forward with it and performe it vnto the end What then if a man shall tell you that it is in man both to begin and perfit that which is good Or that it is in man to begin that is good though not to perfit it Or that it is in man by the helpe onely of God to doe that is good Let God be true and euery man a lyer Rom. 3.4 that he may be iustified in his words and ouercome when he is iudged Neither beginning nor ending nor increase of any thing that is good is of our selues as of our selues but he beginneth and he which beginneth performeth and perfiteth and none but he euen God onely It is the meere and onely grace and mercy of God not which aideth our nature being weakned but which changeth it altogether in qualitie bringing vs out of darknesse into light out of the power of Satan vnto God and translating vs from the death of sinne vnto the life of righteousnesse in Christ Iesus It is the meere and onely grace of God not which maketh an end of our saluation alone but wherein our saluation wholy doth consist Let no man therefore through va●ne and flatte●ing words deceiue you as if you your selues were somewhat when indeed you are nothing but learne and know and euer hold this for a sure ground that God onely beginneth increaseth and perfiteth our obedience to the gospell and euery good worke in vs. 2. Let the Minister and Preacher of the word hence learne what he may assume vnto himselfe in the fruits of his labors by the worke of his ministery Are his people reconciled vnto God brought vnto the obedience of the gospell begotten in the faith of Christ Iesus grounded and stablished in the truth instructed in the way of God perfitly c. He is not to take this honor vnto himselfe as if he had done these things for this hath God onely done and it is his worke as it is written and they shall be all taught of God Esay 54.13 Ioh. 6.45 If we be taught in the word he hath taught vs by his spirit if wee beleeue in Christ it is his gift by his spirit if we be reconciled vnto God hee hath reconciled vs vnto himselfe by Iesus Christ c. Hee I say doth all things onely not immediatly by himselfe but by the ministerie of his seruants And albeit he because he worketh not by his spirit but by the ministerie of his seruants sometimes vouchsafe them this honor that they beget men through the gospell and that they saue them that heare them yet is this onely his worke and onely vouchsafed by him vnto them because in this worke he vseth the worke of their ministerie Let not the Minister then dare to assume vnto himselfe that honor which onely belongeth vnto the Lord. This is his honor that in the great worke of mans saluation he vseth his ministerie and by him as his instrument worketh what he will Let this therefore be his glory and reioycing that the Lord by his meanes will saue his people and bring them to that inheritance which lasteth for euer in the heauens and let him so speake as his Minister out of his word that so he may be indeed a meanes to turne many to righteousnes 3. Hence you may learne in what account and regard yee are to haue the Ministers of Christ Iesus True and most true it is as already yee haue heard that God onely beginneth euery good worke in vs and likewise confirmeth and strengthneth vs and maketh vs to abound therein more and more But he doth it as also yee haue heard by their ministerie whom he hath separated for the gathering together of the Saints and for the edification of the body of Christ Ye are therefore so to thinke of vs as of the ministers of Christ and disposers of the secrets of God by whom he hath appointed to open your eyes that yee may turne from darknes to light and from the power of Satan vnto God that ye may receiue forgiuenesse of sinnes and inheritance among them which are sanctified by faith in Christ Iesus by whom he hath appointed to reueale his will vnto you and to fill you with the graces of his holy spirit and by whom he hath appointed to bring to passe all the good pleasure of his will in you And if any man thinke not thus of vs it is because he knoweth vs not neither him that hath sent vs nor what great works the Lord worketh what great mercies the Lord sheweth vnto his children by vs. But let this for this time serue to stirre vp and to warne your pure mindes that yee so thinke of vs as yee ought and as it becommeth them that are taught in the word to haue them which labour among you and admonish you in singular loue and reuerence for their works sake The third thing which here I note is that the Apostle saith that he was perswaded that he that had begun this good worke of embracing the gospel in them would performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ or as he speaketh to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 1.8 would confirme them in it vnto the end that
skill what is pure what not either in doctrine life or manners and then knowing that let vs care and studie to be pure and sincere and without all leauen of corruption either in doctrine life or manners The third thing wherefore the Apostle prayed that the Philippians might abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement was that they might be without offence .1 that they might not stumble at any thing but hold on in a constant course without stumbling or slipping ba●ke or standing at a stay vntill the day of Christ when their constant perseuerance should be rewarded For the Apostles desire was 1. that they might be able to discerne things that differed what were corrupt and bad and what were pure and good 2. That being able to discerne and try all things they might keep that which were good and might be pure from all leauen of corruption 3. That being pure from all leauen of corruption they might keepe a constant course in their puritie without stumbling or shrinking backe or standing at a stay and for these causes he praied that they might abound more and more in knowledg● c. Whence I obserue a third imployment very behouefull for all Christians namely that being in a good course they hold on without stumbling or standing or shrinking being pure and cleare from all leauen of corruption they keep themselues so vntill the day of Christ Are yee so foolish saith the Apostle to the Galathians that after yee haue begun in the spirit Gal. 3.3 yee would now be made perfit by the flesh The Galathians had embraced the Gospell and obeyed the truth but now through certaine false Apostles they had fallen from the pure doctrine of Christ and admitted some corruptions of that doctrine And therefore the Apostle reproues them sharply and tells them that it is no course for a Christian to begin in the spirit and to end in the flesh but hauing begun in the spirit by embracing the pure doctrine of Iesus Christ they should end in the spirit and hold fast that pure doctrine which they had embraced euen vntill the day of Christ So that hauing obeyed the truth we are not to yeeld to any corruptions of the truth or to let our hold slip but to hold fast the same vnto the end It is for the dogge to returne to his owne vomit and for the sowe that was washed to returne to her wallowing in the mire but the man that hauing put his hand to the plough looketh backe Luk. 9.62 he is not apt to the kingdome of God Being in a good way wee must with our Apostle still endeuour to that which is before and follow hard toward the marke for the price of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus But I haue lately spoken to this purpose and therefore now the time being past I will not farther trouble you Onely with the Apostle I pray that your loue may abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement c. LECTVRE XII PHILIP I. Verse 11. Filled with the fruits of righteousnes which are by Iesus Christ vnto the glory and praise of God IT remaineth now that we come vnto the fourth and last end here mentioned wherefore the Apostle praied that the Philippians might abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement and that was that they might be fruitfull in all good works set downe in these words Filled with the fruits In which words I note 1. the measure of good works which the Apostle wisheth to be in the Philippians which is pressed downe and shaken together euen that they may be filled with the fruits of righteousnesse 2. The definition of good works in that they are called the fruits of righteousnesse 3. The fountaine whence or author from whom good works if indeed they be good works are and that is Iesus Christ 4. The end whereunto good works if indeed they be good works doe tend and that is vnto the glory and praise of God So that besides the maine point which is the Apostles desire that the Philippians might be full of good works here hence wee may know all the causes of good works The materiall cause or matter and substance of good works is hereby known that they are called the fruits of righteousnesse for this sheweth that the very matter and substance of good works is those good actions which as good fruit grow and spring out of the righteousnes of God in vs. The formall cause or reason which causeth our works to be good works is hereby likewise knowne that they are called the fruits of righteousnesse for this sheweth that the reason why our works are good works is because of their conformitie vnto the law of God because they are done in righteousnes according to the righteous law of God The efficient cause or author from whom good works are is hereby knowne that it is said that they are by Iesus Christ for this sheweth that Iesus Christ worketh in vs whatsoeuer works are good agreeable to the righteous law of God The finall cause or end of good works wherunto they are to be referred wherfore they are to be done is hereby knowne that it is said that they are by Iesus Christ vnto the glory and praise of God for this sheweth that the end wherefore we are to abound in euery good worke is the glory and praise of God that his name thereby may be glorified These are the things which these words seeme vnto me to conteine Now let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence for our farther vse and instruction The first thing then which here I note is the rich grace wherewith our Apostle would haue the Philippians to abound in good works for he praied that they might abound more and more in knowledge and in all iudgement as for other ends before spoken of so for this that they might be filled with the fruits of righteousnes that they might abound in euery good worke My obseruation hence is that we are not onely to doe the things that are good and to worke the works of righteousnes but we are to abound in euery good worke to be filled with the fruits of righteousnes To doe good and to haue our fruit in holines and righteousnes is a thing much vrged and often commanded by the Holy Ghost in the scriptures and it is so cleare a case that it cannot be denied or shifted but that we are to do the things that are good to worke the works of righteousnes Yet so cūning are we to deceiue our selues that if at sometimes we haue done some things well we thinke we haue obeyed the voice of the Lord herein though we come far short of being filled w th the fruits of righteousnes The Holy Ghost therfore to meet with our foolish wisdom and to cleare the point plainely sheweth in many places of the scripture that as wee are to shew forth good works so we are to
he hath chosen and adopted before the foundation of the world and his decree is beyond all degrees of comparison more vnalterable and vnchangeable than are the lawes of the Medes and Persians Yet such are the mercies of our God towards vs that howsoeuer wee can helpe nothing vnto our election or vnto our adoption into the sonnes of God yet may wee know whether we be elected whether we be the sonnes of God and besides we may giue proofe thereof vnto others And hereunto it is that wee ought to giue all diligence and to bend our selues and our whole studies that it may appeare both vnto our selues and vnto others that we are the sonnes of God A studie whereunto the comfort which thence may arise may be a sufficient inducement vnto any For wherein should wee rather labour than in that wherein wee may take the greatest comfort Or wherein can we take so great comfor as in this that wee know that we are and that it doth appeare vnto others that wee are the sonnes of God Herein alone is sound ioy and comfort and without this what can there be else but restlesnesse of thoughts and disquietnesse of minde Yea but you will aske mee how this may appeare either vnto our selues or others that wee are the sonnes of God I answer out of the Apostles euen by walking without rebuke in the middest of a naughtie and crooked nation by the fruits of the spirit shewing themselues in the holinesse of our conuersation Rom. 8.14 For as many as are lead by the spirit of God they are the sonnes of God Now who are they that are lead by the spirit of God Euen they that by the power of the spirit of sanctification mortifie the deeds of the body as there the Apostle sheweth and bring forth the fruits of the spirit So then they which walke not after the flesh but after the spirit flying from sinne as from a Serpent and being zealous of good workes they haue an infallible testimonie that they are the sonnes of God and heires of eternall life Hereby then wee our selues know that wee are the sonnes of God euen by the fruits of the spirit which hee hath giuen vs. And therefore Peter in the place before alleadged Giue diligence to make your calling and election sure immediately addeth For if yee doe these things that is if yee bring forth those fruits mentioned before ye shall neuer fall Where the Apostles plainly sheweth that the way to confirme our election vnto our selues is by the fruits of the spirit which he hath giuen vs. Hereby likewise wee make it apparant vnto others that wee are the sonnes of God if wee walke in those good workes which God hath ordained vs to walke in And therefore our Sauiour Christ exhorteth vs saying Let your light so shine before men Mat. 5.16 that they may see your good workes and glorifie your Father which is in heauen euen him whose sonnes they shall know you to bee by those good workes which they shall see you doe So that as the end wherefore wee were predestinate to bee adopted into the sonnes of God through Iesus Christ was that wee should be holy and without blame before God in loue so the meanes whereby wee are declared both to our selues and others to be the sonnes of God is our holy conuersation and walking without rebuke in the middest of a naughtie and crooked nation When therefore I say that we ought to giue all diligence that we may appeare to be the sonnes of God the meaning is that we ought to be holy in conuersation and without blame in the middest of a naughtie and crooked nation that so it may appeare that wee are the sonnes of God Yea but here againe it will be said where is he that is holy in all manner of conuersation And who is he that walketh without rebuke amongst the sonnes of men And therefore how can it appeare by the note of our sanctification that we are the sonnes of God I answer that howsoeuer our sanctification here in this life be so vnperfit that we cannot be holy in all manner of conuersation or walke without rebuke amongst the sonnes of men yet if we striue and labour if we studie and endeuour to be holy without blame and to walke as the sonnes of God amongst the sonnes of men hereby it doth and may appeare that we are the sonnes of God If we hate the sinnes of vnfaithfulnes and let no such cleane vnto vs if we suffer not sinne to reigne in our mortall bodies but striue to subdue the flesh vnto the spirit if we flie the corruptions which are in the world through lusts and studie to liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world if wee long and thirst after those things that belong vnto our peace and can in the needfull time of trouble come vnto our God and cry Abba Father hereby it doth and may appeare that we are the sonnes of God The godly strife against sinne and carefull desire of walking in the waies of God without rebuke they are the sure and vndoubted stampes of the spirit of our adoption into the sonnes of God and the certaine fruits of that spirit whereby we are sealed vntill the redemption of the possession purchased vnto the praise of his glory If thou desire further proofe of these things looke into the holy scriptures and they shall instruct thee sufficiently herein Mat. 5.6 Blessed saith our Sauiour Christ are they that hunger and thirst after righteousnesse Where our Sauiour sheweth that not they alone which are righteous but they also which hunger and thirst after righteousnes are blessed and consequently the sonnes of God So we read that Abrahams willingnes to offer vp his onely begotten sonne Isaac for a burnt offering vnto the Lord Gen. 22.12 was accepted with God for as sure a proofe of his faith and obedience as if he had offered him vp indeede Insomuch that in regard of his willingnes thereunto the Apostles plainely say that he did offer vp Isaac when he was t●ied Heb. 1● 17 Iam. 2.21 So litle difference the Holy Ghost putteth betweene the will and the deede when the will is inclined vnto that which is good 1 Chro. 28.2 The like may be said of Dauids willingnesse and desire to build a Temple vnto the Lord. He builded it not yet his purpose and desire to haue builded it was accepted with God And generally this is true that the will and desire is accepted with God as the deede so that the will and desi●e and indeuour to walke in the waies of God without rebuke doe plainely s●ew vs to be the sonnes of God and are accepted with God as if we walked holy and without blame The like is to be said of striuing against sinne that euen the very striuing against sinne doth plainely shew vs to be the sonnes of God For proofe whereof what neede any other than that example of the
the humor of very many alwayes to mislike the present state the most and to commend former times though a great deale worse yet a great deale more then the times wherein they liue so if once we come in talke of the Ministerie oh Ministers neuer worse neuer more idle neuer more couetous neuer more ambitious then now they are Yea enter this discourse and yee shall haue many will neuer want matter but the more they talke the more they may of this argument And I wish wee were able to stop their mouthes when they so willingly obserue the generall corruption in the ministerie in our dayes I wish wee were able to say truly that simply they speake an vntruth But I cannot neither is it my purpose to excuse the the faults of our times in the ministerie Bee it therefore true which indeed is true that very many of our coat and calling doe more seeke their owne then that which is Iesus Christ● is this fault now more generall in the Ministers then euer it was What are Ministers now more idle doe they now seeke their owne ease more then euer they did Doth not the Apostle in his day note Iohn Marke for this fault Act. 15.38 Are they now more couetous doe they now seeke their owne wealth more then euer they did Doth not the Apostle in his day note Demas for this fault Are they more ambitious 2 Tim. 4.10 doe they now seeke after and loue preeminence more then euer they did 3 Joh 9. Doth not the Apostle Iohn in his day note Diotrephes for this fault Oh but if a note were now taken of those that are faultie these wayes not one but very many should bee found faultie each of these wayes As though because the Apostle noted no moe there were then no moe Nay in that the Apostle noteth these of these faults wee know that euen then the Ministers of Christ were tainted with these faults but how generally wee know not But tell me ye that presse this point so hard that Ministers are now worse then euer they were say the most and the worst ye can can yee say more or worse then this that all seeke their owne and not that which is Iesus Christs And said not the Apostle thus much in his day as here we see The Apostle in his day meant it not vniuersally of all neither can yee say it at this day vniuersally of all that all seeke their owne and not that which is Iesus Christs Nay if wee shall speake vnto the point that which the truth is indeed I am perswaded that neuer in any age the number of faithfull Ministers was greater then our age hath and doth affoord neuer moe that with lesse selfe-respects and more zeale to Gods house laboured in the worke of their ministerie then now there doe I● may be that the graces of Gods holy spirit were powred downe in greater measure and abundance vpon some in some times heretofore then now they are and that the word hath beene more powerfull through a greater operation of the holy spirit in the mouthes of some heretofore then now it is as it was no doubt in the time of the Apostles with whom the Lord wrought most powerfully and wonderfully and as happily it hath beene in some since that time yet as I said before I am perswaded that neuer in any time there were moe more enflamed with the zeale of Gods spirit faithfully painfully and sincerely without selfe respects to labour in the worke of their ministerie and to build vp Christ his Church in faith and in loue and in euery good worke then now there are For if we should looke into all succeeding times after the time of the Apostles especially if we should looke into the times since the mysterie of iniquitie beganne to worke in and vnder that man of sinne what else should we finde but idlenesse and couetousnesse and licentiousnesse and ambition and what wickednesse not Hee hath lifted vp himselfe on high 2 Thess 2.4 and hath exalted himselfe against all that is called God or that is worshipped so that hee doth sit as God in the Temple of God shewing himselfe that he is God And what else doth his whole Clergie seeke but the abetting of his pride and the maintaining of his triple Crowne together with such ease and pleasure and profit as followes thereupon So that if euer it were truly said of any that they sought their owne and not that which is Iesus Christs then in my iudgement may it as truly be said of them as of any Thus then yee see that it is not the fault of our time alone that now Ministers seeke their owne more then that which is Iesus Christs but that euen in the Apostles time it was so as also that how generall soeuer the fault now be yet is it not more generall then euer it was but rather the number of them that seeke that which is Iesus Christs more then their owne is now greater then euer it was Take heed therefore men and brethren lest at any time ye be deceiued The Ministers of Christ they ate as beacons on the top of an hill in euery mans eye and euery mans tongue talking of them and what talke of them more common then of branding them with some fault or other thereby to discredit that truth which they preach It is no new thing yee see that Ministers haue their faults and hee is the best that hath the fewest And howsoeuer they tell you that Ministers are now worse then euer they were beleeue them not for if the worst be said that can be there cannot be worse then this that all seeke their owne and not that which is Iesus Christs and thus much said the Apostle in his time The third and last thing which I note from these words is that howsoeuer properly and in the meaning of the Apostle these words in this place be onely affirmed of the Ministers of Christ Iesus yet may they truly be affirmed euen of all men in generall that all men for the most part doe seeke their owne more then that which is Iesus Christs first looking vnto the things of this life and then afterwards vnto the things that belong vnto their peace in Christ Iesus This is a point which needs not long to be stood vpon being so plaine a truth in our owne experience that which way soeuer we cast our eyes vnto high or low rich or poore it cannot be denied For looke into the delights and desires of men and see what it is that they principally hunt and seeke after Are there not many that are so ambitious that they seeke by all meanes possible to be great and to be had in honour of all men And yet how many of them Psal 75. remembring that promotion commeth neither from the East nor from the West nor yet from the South but that God alone putteth downe one and setteth vp another doe first seeke
in their inferior brethren but that they should honor and much esteeme of whatsoeuer good graces in them First therefore in generall it is the rule of the Apostle that no man should despise another but that euery man should make himselfe equall vnto them of the lowest degree the high vnto the low the rich vnto the poore the wise and man of vnderstanding vnto the simple and ignorant For what hast thou ô man that thou hast not receiued Is thine honor and promotion great Psal 75.7.8 Promotion commeth neither from the East nor from the West nor yet from the South but it is the Lord that putteth downe one and setteth vp another Art thou increased in wealth and riches The Lord maketh poore 1 Sam. 2.7 and maketh rich prosperitie and aduersitie life and death pouertie and riches euen all these come of the Lord. Hast thou more wisdome and knowledge and vnderstanding then others of thy brethren Iob 38.38 The Lord onely hath put wisdome in thy reines the Lord only hath giuen thine heart vnderstanding Not to instance in moe particulars that of Iames in generall is most true Euery good giuing and euery perfit gift is from aboue Jam. 1.17 and commeth downe from the father of lights with whom is no variablenesse neither shadowing by turning Now wherefore hath he made thee great and mighty that thou mightest tyrannize ouer and oppresse thy brother Wherefore hath he made thee rich and wealthy that thou mightest grinde the faces of the poore and lift vp thy selfe in pride aboue them Wherefore hath he made thee wise and of an vnderstanding heart that thou mightest disdaine and laugh at the simplicitie and rudenesse of thine inferior brother Nay whatsoeuer blessing it is that thou hast it is conferred vpon thee for the honor and glory of thy God and for the good and comfort of thy brother Mat. 26.11 Yee shall haue the poore alwaies with you saith our Sauiour Christ and in Deuteronomie the Lord saith there shall be euer some poore in the land Deut. 15.11 therefore saith the Lord thou shalt open thine hand vnto thy brother to thy needy and to thy poore in the land It is then that thou maiest doe good vnto thy poore brother that God hath made thee rich and wealthy it is that thou maiest instruct and that thou maiest aduise thy brother in what he standeth neede of thee that he hath made thee wise and learned it is that thou maiest strengthen and lift thy poore brother out of the myre that God hath made thee great and mighty I wish our great and mighty men of the world that still climbe and neuer thinke themselues high enough I wish our rich and wealthy worldlings that make no end of gathering riches and increasing their substance I wish our wise and great learned men whose knowledge puffeth them vp more than is meete would consider these things and lay them vp in their hearts and practise them in their liues But doe they not rather glory in these things as though they had not receiued them or at least knew not for what end they had receiued them When they are become as great as Haman doe they not proue like vnto Haman euen such as thinke of nothing but of oppressing and vndoing and murthering the people of God When they are become as rich as Nabal doe they not proue as churlish and as ill conditioned as Nabal euen such as will part with nothing for the releeuing of the necessities of the poore Saints of God When they are become as wise as Ahitophel doe they not proue like vnto Ahitophel euen such as vse their wisdome and counsell vnto the vtter ruine of Gods children and desolation of his inheritance The world seeth and let the world iudge whether it be so or no. As for vs men and brethren let vs know that the wise man is not to glory in his wisdome nor the strong man in his strength nor the rich man in his riches but he that reioyceth is to reioyce in the Lord who giueth him wisdome and honor and strength and riches and all things plenteously Neither is he for these things or any things of like sort to aduance himself aboue his brethren as though he were the man vnto whom all men should bowe and on whom all mens eyes should be set but he is so to vse these things to Gods glory and to the good and comfort of his brethren and to make himselfe equall vnto them of the lowest degree This I say let vs know and let our knowledge breake forth into all holy practise that so we may liue without pride and disdaine and contempt one of another submitting your selues one vnto another euery man esteeming other better than himselfe and communicating the things wherewithall God hath blessed vs whether wisdome or knowledge or riches or what else soeuer to the good one of another with all cheerefullnesse and in all singlenesse of heart And let this be spoken touching that which in generall all men who are any way aduanced aboue their brethren may learne from this great mildnesse of the Apostle in equalling Epaphroditus almost with himselfe and magnifying the gifts and graces of Gods spirit in him notwitstanding that he was farre inferior vnto the Apostle 2. From this same example they in particular that are of greater places in the ministerie may learne a good lesson which is not to extenuate and lessen the gifts and graces of Gods spirit in their inferior brethren but to honor and esteem whatsoeuer graces of God in them though farre meaner then those in themselues For are they not worthily reproued which say as it is in Esay stand apart come not neere to me Esay 65.5 for I am holier then thou And are they not as worthily to be reproued who because of their places and gifts aboue their brethren carry themselues insolently towards their brethren and in stead of countenancing and gracing them doe vilifie and disgrace them notwithstanding the good gifts and graces of God in them Who greater in the Church then Paul was and whose gifts greater then were his If he then so countenanced those who were his inferiors much in the ministerie that he called them his brethren his companions in labour his fellow-souldiers if he for such gifts and graces of Gods spirit as he saw in them though farre inferior vnto his owne yet loued and honored them for them why should it not be thought a thing most beseeming them who are of eminent gifts and place in the Church herein to follow the holy example of the blessed Apostle Why should not they vse those that are their inferiors in the ministerie as their brethren as their companions in labour as their fellow-souldiers Why should no● they grace and incourage and stirre vp Gods graces in their inferiors Humblenesse and meeknes and brotherly kindnesse much beseemeth all the children of God one towards another but most of all the Ministers
of Christ Iesus on● towards another And if in whomsoeuer they be the gifts and graces of God are by all men to be acknowledged and to be honored then surely especially in the Ministers by them that are Ministers of Iesus Christ with them howsoeuer in place they be aboue them This point might be much inlarged and what the practise is might be obserued and most worthly reproued if this place were as fit for the vrging as the time requireth the vrging of this point But my especiall desire and purpose is in this place to insist and stand vpon such things as may be most for your vse LECTVRE XLIII PHILIP 2. Verse 26. For he longed after all you and was full of heauinesse because yee heard that he had beene sicke IT remaineth now that we proceede vnto the causes why the Apostle sent Epaphroditus now presently vnto the Philippians if first we shall obserue one or two notes from one or two of those titles wherewithall the Apostle honoureth him in the 25. verse Amongst those titles wherewithall the Apostle honoreth Epaphroditus yee see how he calleth him his companion in labour In labour In what labour In the preaching of the Gospell of Christ Iesus and in the building vp of his body by the worke of his ministerie What then Is preaching of the Gospell of God such a labour Is the worke of the ministerie and the teaching of the people in the waies of God such a matter that it is to be counted or called a labour Surely no in many mens account it is not An easie matter and no labor at all for a Minister to speake an houre vnto his people What paines can this take him What toyle can be in this worke No more but turne the cocke and then the water gushes out He is either worth litle or else too too dainty that will not come at euery call vnto the people to preach to them Thus many account this worke litle or no labour Well is cunning in a race where there is striuing for the maistery or for the winning of the price or of the crowne that they runne for is thi● any labour They in those Countries where this running is much vsed can tell that it is a labour And how often doth the Holy Ghost compare the worke of the ministerie vnto this running in a race To goe no farther for proofe we heard and spake of this comparison in the 16 verse of this chapter Phil. 2.16 where the Apostle exhorted them vnto their duties both towards God and men that he might reioyce in the day of Ch●ist that he had not runne in vaine nor laboured in vaine that he had not runne nor laboured in vaine what is that that is that hi● preaching amongst them had not bin in vaine vnto them Againe is the worke of the husbandman whose worke hath end but is continually either dunging or tilling or reaping or gathering in the fruits of his ground or hedging or ditching or the like is this any labour The husbandman knoweth and we can easily imagine that it is a labour And doth not the Holy Ghost sometimes call the Ministers of the Gospell Gods husbandmen and you that heare Gods husbandry and oftentimes compare them vnto husbandmen We together saith the Apostle are as Gods labourers 1 Cor. 3 9. and yee are Gods husbandrie and Gods building Where it appeareth by the antithesis betweene the Minister and the people that the Minister is called Gods labourer that is Gods husbandman euen as the people are called Gods husbandrie And in the latter Epistle to Timothie the Minister is plainly compared vnto an husbandman 2 Tim. 2.6 whose portion it is to labour before he receiue the fruits Againe is the worke wherein men through painfulnesse and earnestnesse doe euen wearie themselues is it any labour If any be then certainly that is And doth not the holy Ghost so speake of the Ministers worke as of a worke wherein they euen weary themselues with hard labour Wee beseech you saith the Apostle that yee know them which labour among you 1 Th. 5.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and are ouer you in the Lord which labour that is which painfully and earnestly labour amongst you till they be weary But what need moe proofes for this point The Minister that will speake plainly to the vnderstanding of his people that will speake soundly vnto the heart of his people that will speake in the euidence of the spirit vnto his people that cares what and to what purpose he speake vnto his people must certainly labour both for speaking plainly and soundly and in the euidence of the spirit and for speaking to good purpose Nay what part is there of his ministerie which is not full of labour Ier. 1. To plucke vp to root out to throw downe to build and to plant all workes of the Minister all great workes and all workes full of labour So that whatsoeuer account men make of the worke of the ministerie and of the preaching of the Gospell of Christ Iesus it is a worke full of labour no lesse painfull to the minde then is the worke of the husbandman or artificer to the body and consequently the Apostle well called Epaphroditus his companion in labour euen in a painfull labour in preaching the Gospell of Christ Iesus This should teach the people ouer whom the Lord hath made them ouerseers willingly to yeeld vnto them whatsoeuer dutie by the Law of God or man belongeth vnto them whether it be of maintenance for their liuelihood or of reuerence vnto their persons And first for their maintenance it is the Apostle his disputation in the former to the Corinthians that those which sow vnto others spirituall things should reape their carnall things 1 Cor. 9.11 If wee haue sowen vnto you spirituall things saith the Apostle is it a great thing if wee reape your carnall things 13. Doe yee not know that they which minister about the holy things eat of the things of the Temple and they which wait at the Altar are partakers with the Altar So also 14. saith the Apostle by way of application hath the Lord ordained that they which preach the Gospell should liue of the Gospell For as the Apostle had said before 7. Who goeth a warfare any time at his owne cost or who planteth a vineyard and eateth not of the fruit thereof or who feedeth a flocke and eateth not of the milke of the flocke As if he should haue said no man doth so The reason whereof he bringeth out of the Law of Moses 9. For it is written saith he in the Law of Moses Thou shalt not muzzell the mouth of the Oxe that treadeth out the corne In which whole disputation that being presupposed and taken as granted which I haue proued namely that the worke of the ministerie is no idle speculation but a painfull and hard labour yee see how the Apostle inferreth thereupon as I now
God submit themselues vnto his will who will dislodge them when it seemeth best to his godly wisdome and in the meane time let them this know and therein comfort themselues that howsoeuer their fight bee long and great yet that the Lord hath so done with their enemies as Iudah dealt with Adonibezek Judg. 1.6 euen cut off the thumbes of their hands and feet that is so abated their power and broken their strength that though they continually assault them yet can they neuer preuaile against them This therefore I doe not say as if I liked that any should desire to die before his time appointed of the Lord come but rather to lesson vs in this that when our glasse is runne and our time appointed of the Lord come we should not then be vnwilling to lay downe our liues but rather bee then glad and reioyce that our warfare is at an end and that wee shall be ioyned with our head Christ Iesus A man would thinke wee should greatly desire to be deliuered from these miseries whereunto this life is subiect rather to triumph ouer our enemies then to liue still at the staues end with them rather to raigne with Christ in the valley of blessing where there is peace and ioy and life for euermore then to fight vnder Christ in the valley of teares where hee shall beare away many strokes though not any deadly wounds because his life is hid with Christ in God What then should bee the cause why wee should not most willingly lay downe our liues in the time of death Surely in my iudgement it is because in the time of our health wee minde too much earthly things and set our affections too little on the things that are aboue For if in the time of our health our conuersation were in heauen as it should bee wee would most patiently and willingly looke for the Sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile bodie that it may be fashioned like vnto his glorious bodie and when death approched we would cry with the Apostle Come Lord Iesus come quickly To conclude this point therefore when our time appointed of the Lord comes let vs willingly lay downe our liues and let vs be glad and reioyce that our warfare is at an end And to the end that in the time of death we may do so let our conuersation in the meane time in the time of health be in heauen let vs set our affections on the things that are aboue and not on the things which are on the earth For he longed after all you c. In these words the Apostle setteth downe the cause why he now presently sent Epaphroditus vnto the Philippians and did not stay him till either Timothie or himselfe should come vnto them The cause was as appeareth by the Apostle because Epaphroditus greatly longed it is not said after his owne people and them of his owne familie but because he longed after the Church at Philippi neither so onely but after all the Church at Philippi neither did he onely long after them all but so he longed that he was full of heauinesse till he might come vnto them And why did he so long after them that he was full of heauinesse till he might come vnto them The Apostle saith because the Philippians had heard of his sicknesse Epaphroditus then longed after all the Church at Philippi and was full of heauinesse till he might come vnto them and therefore the Apostle sent him presently vnto them and againe Epaphroditus knew that the Philippians had heard of his sicknes and therefore he longed after them all and was full of heauinesse till he might come vnto them To knit vp then both the causes in one and to gather the summe of all the cause why the Apostle sent Epaphroditus now presently vnto them was because Epaphroditus hauing heard that the Philippians knew of his sicknesse longed greatly after them all and was full of heauinesse till he might come vnto them and comfort them ouer his sicknesse lest they should be swallowed vp of too much griefe for both Pauls bands and his sicknes Here then I note what mutuall loue and affection there should be betweene the Pastor and his people euen the like that was betweene Epaphroditus and his people of Philippi The Pastor his sicknes or sorrow whatsoeuer should be the peoples sorrow and heauinesse of heart and againe the peoples trouble of minde or affliction of bodie should be the Pastors anguish of soule and vexation of spirit So it was betweene Epaphroditus and his Church at Philippi as here we see and so it was betweene Paul and all the Churches at least on his part as himselfe witnesseth saying that such was his care of all the Churches 2 Cor. 11.29 that if any were weake he was also weake and if any were offended he also burned And I wish I could truely instance in the like affection betweene many Pastors and their people in this our day But such examples are not euery where with vs nay in too many places with vs the Pastor cares not if he may haue their fleece though hee neuer see or heare of his people and flocke and againe in too many places the people care not if they may haue their forth in their owne delights and desires though they neuer see or heare of their Pastor Yea so farre are they from this sympathie and mutuall loue and affection one towards another that so the one may haue his profit and the other their pleasure they are not much touched without any further respect either of other Well it should not be so but the ioy of the one should be the ioy of the other and the griefe of the one should be the griefe of the other Now here happily it may be demanded why either Epaphroditus or the Philippians should be so full of heauinesse and take the matter so much to heart seeing his sicknes which was the cause of all this heauinesse came vnto him by the will of God and his gracious prouidence Whereunto in one word I answer that this mutuall heauinesse one for another was onely an argument of their mutuall loue one of another not any argument of their ignorance or doubt of Gods prouidence in his sicknesse Our Sauiour Christ as we read groned in the spirit and was troubled in himselfe Joh. 11.33 and wept for the death of Lazarus This shewed his great loue of Lazarus as the Iewes very well gathered saying behold how he loued him 36. but will any man gather hence that he knew not or doubted of Gods prouidence in his death Nay himselfe plainely said in the beginning of that chapter that that sicknes was not vnto death but for the glory of God that the sonne of God might be glorified thereby So that albeit he knew that his death was by Gods prouidence God so prouiding that his Sonne might thereby be glorified yet such was his loue towards him that
presented vnto your view the great mysterie of godlinesse euen God manifested in the flesh iustified in the spirit 1 Tim. 3.16 seene of Angels preached vnto the Gentiles belieued on in the world and receiued vp into glory He it is and he alone it is that is made of God vnto you wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption that hee that reioyceth might reioyce in him Reioyce therefore in him and beware of such as teach you to reioyce in any thing but in him Thus ye see how this exhortation is partly a conclusion of that which went before and partly a ground and foundation of that which followeth The excuse which followeth is to meete with that conceit which the Philippians happily might haue vpon his often admonition First by word and now by writing to beware of false Apostles For thus the Apostle thought they might conceiue and thinke with themselues you haue often when you were with vs admonished vs of false Apostles and Teachers when you taught vs and preached vnto vs Christ Iesus you ceased not to warne vs to beware of such as would seeke to seduce vs from that truth which you taught vs and wee haue beene diligent so to doe neither haue we giuen place to any of their doctrines And therefore you needed not to haue troubled your selfe this admonition needed not to vs The Apostle therefore to meete with this telleth them that for him it is no griefe or trouble to him at all to write the same things vnto them which before hee had taught them by word of mouth and for them hee telleth them that it is a sure and a safe thing that they be often admonished of false Teachers that so they may be the more warie of them Thus much for the vnderstanding of these words Now before wee proceed any farther let vs see what obseruations we may gather hence For our vse and instruction The 1. thing which here I note is the maner how the Apostle doth exhort the Philippians which is in most milde and kinde and good sort speaking vnto them as vnto his brethren yea calling them his brethren not that they were his brethren naturally according to the flesh by carnall generation but his brethren in Christ begotten in one wombe of the Church the spouse of Christ vnto one God the father of our Lord Iesus Christ and father of vs all by one immortall seed the word of God through one spirit whereinto we are all baptized borne by spirituall generation not of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Exhorting then the Philippians whom hee had begotten in the faith vnto Christ by his ministerie hee speaketh vnto them as vnto his brethren in Christ most mildly and kindly and louingly So we see he doth in the second Chapter and twelfth verse where exhorting them to humilitie and obedience and to finish their saluation with feare and trembling hee speaketh thus vnto them wherefore my beloued as ye haue alwaies obeyed c. So in the next Chapter he ioyneth both these together and a great deale more and saith Therefore my brethren beloued and longed for my ioy and my crowne c. Most milde and louing exhortations And wherefore vseth hee such mildnesse in his exhortations vnto them No doubt the rather to winne them to hearken vnto him and vnto that whereto hee exhorteth them For as sharpe and bitter words often stirres vp striefe and anger so a soft tongue milde and louing speeches much auaile to effect that which a man desires Here then is a lesson for vs whom God hath set apart vnto the holy worke of his ministerie that we should not onely be carefull to instruct ●hem that heare vs in the wholesome words of truth but that a meeknesse also of spirit wee should exhort them vnto the things that belong vnto their peace A thing practised by Christ himselfe and practised likewise by the Apostles of Iesus Christ as by many places in the new Testament it may easily appeare Here then happily you will say vnto me how is it then that many of you are so sharpe and eager in speech how is it that ye follow not the practise of Christ and of his Apostles We are indeed sometimes sharpe wee come sometimes with a rodde as the Apostle speakes yea sometimes we bring an axe with vs and lay it to the roote of the tree to cut it downe that it may be cast into the fire sometimes we pluck vp and roote out and throw downe sometimes wee strike and wound and kill and herein wee follow the practise of Christ and of his Apostles Would it not seem a sharp speech vnto you if we should lift vp our voices and crie Mat. 12.34 Ioh. 8.44 O generation of vipers how can ye speake good things when yee are euill or if ●e should say ye are of your father the Deuill and the lusts of your father ye will doe or if we should say ye fooles Luc. 11 40.42.43 c. did not hee that made that which is without make that which is within also or if we should come with woe vpon woe vnto such and such men And yet speaking thus we should speake no otherwise then our Sauiour Christ did Did not the Apostle likewise vse sharpe peaches vnto the Galathians when he said vnto them Galat. 3.1.3 O foolish Galathians who hath bewitched you that yee should not obey the truth are ye so foolish that after ye haue begunne in the spirit yee would now be made perfit by the flesh And did not Iames likewise vse great sharpnes boldnes of speach against richmen saying Iam. 5.1.2.3.4.5.6 Go to now ye rich men weepe and houle for your miseries that shall come vpon you c. ye haue liued in pleasure on the earth and in wantones ye haue nourished your hearts as in a day of slaughter ye haue condēned killed the iust and he hath not resisted you therefore we be sometimes somewhat rough and sharpe ye see we do not therein swarue from the rule and practise of Christ or his Apostles Eccles 3.1.3 To all things saith the Preacher there is an appointed time and a time to euery purpose vnder the heauen A time to slay and a time to heale a time to breake downe and a time to build c. So I say there is a time to bee rough and sharpe and there is a time to be milde and gentle there is a time to strike and wound and there is a time to comfort and to heale The same God that came in a soft and still voice vnto Eliah 1 Reg. 19.12 Num. 16.32 Leuit. 10.2 and not in the earthquake not in the fire came vnto Korah Dathan and Abiram in the earthquake and vnto Nadab and Abihu in the fire and the one sort were deuoured by the earthquake and the other sort by the fire When men are hardened in sinne and will
doctrine of those that laboured to subuert his Gospell the word of our saluation he satisfieth not himselfe with saying take heede or beware but for the better impression of his caueat he ioyneth both together and saith take heede and beware In which places the very carefull admonitions of our Sauiour Christ and of our Apostle expressed by so many ingeminations sometimes of beware beware beware some times of take heed watch and remember sometimes of take heede and beware doe most euidently shew what a needfull thing it is for vs to take diligent heede of false Teachers least any of vs bee seduced by their inticing speeches from that doctrine which wee haue learned in the Gospell of Christ Iesus And sure it is a thing no lesse needfull for vs now then at any time heretofore it hath been to beware of false Teachers For haue we not now many euery where which creepe into houses 2 Tim. 3.6 and lead captiue simple women laden with sinnes and led with diuers lusts haue we not now many euery where which compasse sea and land to make one of their profession Math. 23.15 so to make him twofold more the childe of hell then they themselues are haue we not now many euery where by whom the way of truth is euill spoken of and such as with fained words would make marchandize of your soules haue we not now men arising euen of our owne selues and speaking peruerse things to draw disciples after them yes my brethren Rome and Rhemes sweare many and send them vnto vs as to draw vs from our allegiance vnto our Soueraigne so to corrupt our sincere mindes with their poysoned doctrines And these wander vp and downe secretly and in corners speaking euill of the way of truth and leading back againe as many as they can vnto the abominations of Egipt Againe others there are arising of our selues who whether seduced by others or through malecontentednesse or by the iust iudgement of God blinded that they cannot see the light or howsoeuer else bewitched but many others are euen arising of our selues who priuily sow cursed tares in this field of the Lord who first closely slaunder the truth and the most godly and Christian professors thereof and then afterward closing in farther with you draw you on by little and little till at length be drunke with the cuppe of their fornications Many such I say there are amongst vs and therefore very needfull it is for vs to take heed and beware of them Yea but how shall we know them they professe Christ and the same Apostolique Creed with vs they admit the Canonicall Scriptures as we doe they say they condemne idolatrie and superstition as we doe how then shall we know them They come indeed in sheepes clothing but inwardly they are rauening wolues by their fruits yee shall know them They may well be called as these false Teachers among the Philippians dogs euill workers the concision For my 3. note therefore and obseruation from these words I will briefly hence gather certaine notes whereby yee may know and discerne false Teachers LECTVRE L. PHILIP 3. Vers 2.3 Beware of Dogges beware of euill workers beware of the concision For we are the circumcision which worship God in the spirit c. IN this exhortation or caueat in that the Apostle noteth these false Teachers which were crept in amongst the Philippians by the name of dogs of euill workers and of the concision I obserue certaine notes whereby to descry and discerne false Teachers euen such as it is very needefull for vs to take heede of and to beware 1. Therefore it is a note of false Teachers euer like dogs to be barking and snarling against the truth and against the professors thereof For this they take of dogs euen vpon no reason to be barking and they thinke the field halfe wonne if they can fasten any slaunder vpon the truth or vpon those that haue beene or are chiefe professors thereof If this in this place of our Apostle be not happily enough to satisfie some touching this note of false Teachers the Apostle Peter also giueth the very same note of false Teachers where hee saith That as bruit beasts led with sensualitie 2 Pet. 2.12 and made to be taken and destroyed they speake euill of those things which they know not euen of the way of truth which they know not and of the Prof●ssors thereof whom they cannot brooke Such were those false Teachers that troubled the Church of Corinth both calling into doubt a chiefe article of our faith the resurrection of the dead and likewise speaking very contemptibly of the Apostle Paul himselfe traducing him vnto the people as one rude in speech and one that had no gifts of knowledge or of wisedome as we may plainely see by his first Epistle to the Corinthians Marke then I beseech you who now at this day they are that speake euill of the way of truth and of the Professors thereof Who are they now that tell you that the Scripture conteineth not all thing● necessarie to be belieued to saluation that tell you that the holy Scriptures though truely translated into vulgar tongues may not be read indifferently of all men for feare of great harme that may ensue thereupon Who are they now that tell you that the reading of the Scriptures is the very b●ne of religion and vertue and good life among vs Do not these speake euill of the way of truth euen of the holy word of truth Againe who are they now that fill their mouthes with as bitter words and odious speeches as out of their malicious hearts they can against Luther Caluin Martyn Beza and the like Who are they now that speake so contemptibly against the Ministers of the Gospell as that they fill your eares with all mannes of euill sayings against them Whosoeuer euer they be that thus speake euill of the truth and of the Professors thereof they haue a marke of false Teachers Marke them therefore diligently and beware and take heede of them A second note of false teachers it is like dogges principally to respect their bellies and more to serue their owne bellies then the Lord Iesus Christ for this they take of dogges to be so rauenous and greedie for the bellie as that through couetousnesse with fained words they make merchandise of mens soules This note of false teachers our Apostle also giues in the epistle to the Romans here hauing exhorted the Romans to beware of false Apostles and Teachers he giueth them this note to know them by They that are such saith he Rom. 16.18 serue not the Lord Iesus Christ but their owne bellies and with faire speech and flattering deceiue the hearts of the simple They serue their owne bellies that is they seeke their owne gaine and respect their owne aduantage in their profession of religion And the Apostle Peter likewise giues the same note of them where he saith that they haue hearts exercised with
circumcision euen they which worship God spiritually c. so that hauing spoken of spirituall circumcision we haue spoken in a generality both of this and the rest that followes Yet it will not be amisse somewhat more particularly yet as briefly as we can to speake by occasion of these words of the spirituall worship of God There is no people so farre without God in this world Iewe or Gentile Turke or other but that both they know there is a God and likewise thinke they worship him with true worshippe But how a great many nations and languages should either know the true God or truely worshippe him it can scarce be imagined seeing they want the holy word of life where alone we both clearly know him and likewise how to worship him Nay how should not they most grossely erre touching the true worship of God seeing where the word is there are so many errors touching the true and spirituall worship of God Witnesse those manifold will-worshippes of God which men haue deuised vnto themselues and for which they haue no warrant at all in the word such as are forbidding of marriage and forbidding of meates to some men at all times and to all men at sometimes vnder pretence of holy religion and deuout seruice of God But for our instruction in this point let vs hence obserue that not only in the spirit of our minde purified by the spirit to serue him in holinesse and in righteousnesse but that if we will not erre in the performance of true and spirituall worshippe vnto our God we must proceede by this rule of reioicing in Christ Iesus inasmuch as by reioycing in Christ Iesus wee worshippe God spiritually For what is there required in our spirituall worship of God which by our reioycing in Christ Iesus is not performed vnto him Is it not our spirituall worship of God to loue him to put our trust in him to feare him to pray vnto him to obey him and to glorifie him both in our bodies and in our spirits And are not all these things performed vnto him by our reioycing in Christ Iesus We reioice in Christ Iesus knowing that in him we are beloued and therefore we loue God who we know doth loue vs in Christ Iesus Againe we reioice in Christ Iesus knowing that in him all the promises of God are yea and Amen and therefore we belieue in God put our trust in his name who we know for his sake maketh good all his promises vnto vs. Againe we reioice in Christ Iesus knowing that by him an atonement and reconciliation is made betweene God and vs and therfore we feare God whose wrath we know is now appeased towards vs by the mediation of Christ Iesus Againe wee reioice in Christ Iesus knowing that by him we may go boldly vnto the throne of grace and therefore wee poure out our praiers vnto God who wee know giueth vs whatsoeuer wee aske by faith in his name Againe wee reioyce in Christ Iesus knowing that through Christ wee are able to doe all things and therefore wee obey God who wee know strengtheneth vs in Christ to doe all things that hee requireth of vs. Againe wee reioyce in Christ Iesus knowing that hee is made of God vnto vs wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption and therefore we glorifie GOD both in our bodies and in our spirits who we know hath giuen vs his sonne and together with him hath giuen vs all things also So that through the reioycing which we haue in Christ Iesus we worship God spiritually with all holy worship of loue of faith of feare of praier of obedience and of glorifying his name both in our bodies and in our spirits Yea and whosoeuer hath not this reioycing in Christ Iesus it is impossible that he should worship God with this spirituall and holy worshippe For how shall hee loue GOD that is not perswaded of the loue of God towards him in Christ Iesus how shall hee belieue in God and put his trust in his name that knoweth not that all his promises are yea and Amen most certaine and sure in Christ Iesus How shall hee feare God as a dutifull childe that assures not himselfe of his reconciliation with God by the death and intercession of Christ Iesus How shall hee pray vnto God in faith that knows not that his praiers shall bee accepted and heard in Christ Iesus that offereth our praiers vnto God and makes continuall intercession for vs How shall hee obey God in that which he commands that knowes nor that God in Christ Iesus doth enable him to doe that which hee commandeth How shall hee glorifie God in his body or in his spirit that knowes not what great mercies God hath vouchsafed vnto vs through Christ Iesus So that vnlesse wee can reioyce in Christ Iesus euen because wee know all these thinges wee cannot possiblie worshippe God with spirituall worshippe Will you then men and brethren haue a direction for your spirituall worshipping of God Surely it is needfull Ioh. 4.24 for God is a spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth Let this then be your direction Reioyce in Christ Iesus reioyce in him because yee are beloued in him and then surely yee will loue God who loues you in Christ Iesus Reioyce in Christ because in him all Gods promises are made good and performed vnto you and then surely yee will beleeue in God and put your trust in him who keepeth promise and suffereth not his truth to faile for euer Reioyce in Christ because by him yee haue receiued the attonement and then surely yee will feare God whose wrath was appeased by the reconciliation of Christ Iesus Reioyce in Christ because through him your praiers are accepted and heard with God and then surely ye will powre out your praiers vnto God who giues you whatsoeuer yee aske in faith in his name Reioice in Christ because in him ye are made able to doe all things and then surely yee will obey God who strengthneth you in Christ to doe all things Reioice in Christ because by him yee are redeemed and saued and by the power of his spirit sanctified and then surely yee will glorifie God both in your bodies and in your spirits who with Christ his Sonne giueth you all things both for this life present and likewise for that that is to come So that there cannot be a better direction for our spirituall worship of God then to reioice in Christ Iesus because by our reioicing which we haue in Christ Iesus wee are enflamed to loue God to beleeue in him to put our trust in him to feare him to pray vnto him to obey him and to glorifie him both in our bodies and in our spirits which is our spirituall worshipping of God Whence it is also easie to ghesse why it is that wee faile so much in the spirituall worshipping of God which is euen hence because wee faile in our reioycing
of the spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned Where by the naturall man hee meaneth the man whose heart and vnderstanding the Lord hath not yet lightened by his holy spirit who as yet is not brought vnto the true knowledge of Christ and of him he saith that he neither doth nor can perceiue the things of the spirit of God nay more then that that the things of Gods spirit are meere foolishnesse vnto him Yea so it fareth ordinarily with the naturall man that he putteth darknesse for light and light for darkenesse bitter for sweete and sweete for sowre And if any be more carefull of his waies then the rest so that he can say with the Pharisie I am not as other men extortioners vniust adulterers I fast twi●● in the weeke I giue tythes of all that euer I possesse if he be ciuilly honest mercifull and liberall if hee be iust towards others sober in himselfe and so precisely carefull of his waies as that he be vnrebukable before men hereon hee sets his rest and stands vpon it that these things are such an aduantage vnto him as that God should doe him great wrong ●f hee should not saue him for these things But tell him that all these and all the like things are but as a staffe of reede on which if hee leane it will breake into shiuers and hurt him tell him that Christ Iesus is the onely rocke of saluation vnto all them that put their trust in him that there is no other name giuen vnder heauen whereby we can be saued but onely by the name of Christ Iesus and that if he wil be saued he must repose all confidence in him and renounce all confidence in his workes or in any thing without Christ whatsoeuer hereat he will stand amased and with Festus he will say to him that shall tell him thus thou art besides thy selfe much learning doth make thee madde Thus it fareth with vs all before such time as we be renued in the spirit of our mindes either wee take pleasure in vnrighteousnesse or else we repose too much confidence in our supposed righteousnesse and for the wisedome of God we all count it meere foolishnesse and madnesse But so soone as the Lord vouchsafeth by his spirit to circumcise vs with the true circumcision of Christ so soone as the Lord giues vs a new heart and puts a new spirit within vs then we beginne to abandon the delights in the flesh and to sauour the things of the spirit then the case beginnes to be altered and wee to bee quite of another iudgement For then our eyes which were before dimme and shut vp being opened and cleared and the foggie mists of blindnesse darknesse and ignorance which couered our vnderstandings being expelled then wee begin to condemne our former waies then wee beginne to count the things losse which before seemed a vantage vnto vs and then we beginne to hearken vnto the things that belong vnto our peace So that whereas before we had confidence in the flesh now we renounce all confidence in the flesh and reioice only in Christ Iesus whereas before wee pleased our selues much in things which we willed and did now we see that in vs i. in our flesh dwelleth no good thing but that God onely worketh in vs both the will and the deed euen of his good pleasure whereas before wee counted the wisedome of God foolishnesse now we see that our owne wisedome is foolishnesse and that onely the wisedome of God is true wisedome For when the Lord hath put his spirit within vs then we walk in his statutes and keepe his iudgements and doe them Eze. 36.27 but before we doe not Deut. 30.6 3. when he hath circumcised our hearts thee we loue the Lord our God with all our heart and with all our soule before wee doe not and as our Apostle here saith when we are circumcised with the true circumcision that is when we are regenerated by God his holy spirit then we reioyce in Christ Iesus and haue no confidence in the flesh but before we haue confidence in the flesh and reioyce not in Christ Iesus A great change and a good change because from the worse vnto the better Let this then teach vs to bend the knees of our soules vnto the Lord our God for the grace of his holy spirit that the bright beames of his spirit shining into our hearts all mists of blindnesse darknesse and ignorance may be expelled thence and wee brought both vnto the perfect knowledge and obedience of Christ Iesus For if he guide vs wee wander not if he instruct vs wee erre not if he command the light of the glorious Gospell to shine vnto vs then is our darknesse turned into light But otherwise our foolish hearts are full of darknesse otherwise wee erre and wander out of the right way wherein wee should walke and lay hold on errour in stead of truth and embrace follie in stead of wisdome for it is the spirit alone that leadeth vs into all truth Ioh. 16.13 1 Cor. 12.3 and directeth vs vnto all wisdome and but by the spirit no man can say that Iesus is the Lord. Let vs therefore alwayes pray for the light of Gods spirit that it shining in our hearts our darknesse may be turned into light our feet may be guided into the way of peace and our eies may be opened to see the mysteries of Gods will and the wondrous things of his Law Secondly in that the Apostle after that he began to know Christ counted those things no vantage but losse which before he knew Christ seemed vantage vnto him I obserue that such workes as wee doe before wee be iustified by faith in Christ Iesus seeme they neuer so good yet they are no vantage vnto vs either vnto iustification or vnto saluation For what were the things that seemed vantage vnto the Apostle before he knew Christ Was not one of them and whereof he made speciall account his vnrebukeable walking in all the commandements and ordinances of the Law his workes done according to the Law The verse immediately before sheweth that hee counted that one of his chiefe prerogatiues And yet he counted these workes done according to the Law before he beleeued no vantage at all vnto him for his iustification or saluation by Christ Iesus Now if the Apostle so iudged of his workes done according to the Law before hee beleeued this may be a sure proofe vnto vs that such workes as are done before grace and faith in Christ Iesus seeme they neuer so good yet they are no vantage vnto vs either vnto our iustification or vnto our saluation Well they may haue a shew and semblance of vantage vnto vs but indeed they are no vantage vnto vs either to prepare vs to the grace of iustification or to moue the Lord to shew mercy on vs and saue vs for without faith it
with men but not with God Which is in effect as if he should haue said If Abraham were iustified by workes then was he not iustified by faith Againe that place in the eleuenth chapter to the Romans is plaine to this purpose where it is said If it be of grace Rom. 11.6 it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace but if it be of workes it is no more grace or else were worke no more worke For albeit the Apostles speech there be of the election of the Iewes and not of the matter of iustification yet the Apostles reason being drawne from the nature of grace and workes it holdeth as well in the one as in the other euen generally for speake of election speake of iustification speake of saluation or the like still it holdeth If it be of grace it is no more of workes or el●e were grace no more grace but if it be of workes c. For if it be of grace whether it be righteousnesse or saluation or whatsoeuer it be it is giuen freely but if it be of workes then is i● giuen not by fauour or freely but by debt the nature of grace and the nature of worke inforcing either of them so much The reason why if our righteousnesse be of workes it is not of faith and if it be of faith it is not of workes is because the one of these excludes the other Gal. 5.4 for as the Apostle saith Whosoeuer are iustified by the Law yee are fallen from grace As if he● should haue said Iustification by the Law excludes iustification by grace Rom. 3 27. And againe the Apostle saith that our reioycing is excluded by the Law of faith As if he should haue said wee are iustified by faith and that excludes all our reioycing in any righteousnesse by our workes So that yee see plainly that if our iustification be by the righteousnesse of workes then is it not by the righteousnesse of faith and if it be by the righteousnesse of faith then is it not by the righteousnesse of works This may serue to instruct and to arme vs against their damnable errour that tell vs that we are iustified and accounted righteous before God partly by faith in Christ Iesus and partly by our good workes done here in the body For if they may be thus mixt as they tell vs the one with the other if our righteousnesse before God may be both by faith and by workes then why doth the Apostle so oppose the one against the other why doth hee alwayes so carefully seuer the one from the other why would hee be found in that day not hauing his owne righteousnesse but onely the righteousnesse which is through the faith of Christ why may not righteousnesse be counted both by fauour and by debt why may not righteousnesse be before God both by grace and by workes why should our reioicing be excluded by the law of faith For what else are all these things but so many inuincible arguments that wee cannot be iustified before God both by faith and by workes Shifts I know they haue whereby they deceiue themselues and many other vnstable soules whom they leade into the same pernicious errours with themselues But let vs hearken what the spirit saith neither let vs couple together the things which the spirit hath sundred If the spirit haue told vs that the wages is not counted both by fauour and by debt that righteousnesse is not both by grace and by workes let it suffice vs that the spirit hath said so and only let vs seeke ●hether it be by grace or by workes that we are counted righteous before God Secondly I note that the Apostle would be found in that last and great day not hauing his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law that is not hauing that righteousnesse which is his by the performance of those things which the Law required as his cloke to be couered withall when hee shall stand in the iudgement and in the congregation of the righteous For that the Apostle expoundeth to be the righteousnesse of the Law which is by performance of the workes of the Law according as it is said Rom. 10.5 Rom. 3.27 The man that doth these things shall liue thereby Whereupon it is also called the Law of workes the Law which commandeth those workes by the obseruation whereof a man is called righteous The Apostle would bee found not hauing this righteousnesse which is by the workes of the Law What then would he be found in that day without any good workes without all holinesse of life without all righteousnesse by the Law Was it his desire to be found a sinner in that day Did hee thinke it would be better for him if he should be found vnrighteous then if he should be found righteous in that day No such matter Nay when he was now ready to be offered vp vpon the sacrifice and seruice of their faith whom he had wonne vnto the faith when the time of his departing out of the body was at hand hee reioyced that hee had fought a good fight that hee had finished his course that he had kept the faith And when hee laboured in the worke of his ministerie more abundantly then all the rest he had respect vnto his reioycing in the day of Christ that he had not runne in vaine nor laboured in vaine He knew that the sentence in that day would passe thus Ma●t 25.34.35.36.37.38 c. Come yee blessed of my Father inherit yee the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world for I was an hungred and yee gaue me meat c. And againe Depart from mee yee cursed into euerlasting fire c. He knew that his watchings his fastings his stripes his imprisonments his perils his labours his care of all the Churches should not be in vaine in the Lord. He desired therefore no doubt to be found in that day filled with the fruits of righteousnesse and abounding in euery good worke hee desired no doubt in that day to heare that voice Mat. 25.21 It is well done good seruant and faithfull thou hast beene faithfull in little I will make thee ruler ●uer much enter into thy masters ioy How then would he be found not hauing his owne righteousnesse which is of the law 1. for righteousnesse by the ceremoniall law he cared not at all for that he iudged that simply to be but losse to be but dung 2. for righteousnes by the morall law by the obseruation of the duties commanded in the first and second table touching the loue of God and of his neighbour he iudged that also to be dung in respect of any merit if hee should bee iudged by it He would therefore be found in that day not hauing his owne righteousnes which is of the Law euen of the law morall as to be iudged of the Lord by it by the merit of it He would haue righteousnes and holinesse
this knowledge of Christ and withall see and consider with your selues what a longing and thirsting desire you should haue after this knowledge of Christ The knowledge of Christ Iesus euen by hearing and by reading and by faith is as not long since we heard the most excellent knowledge that is but this experimentall knowledge of Christ to know by experience in our owne soules that he is such as by the word we beleeue him to be this is the most sweet and most comfortable knowledge euen so sweet and so comfortable as passeth all vnderstanding If yee haue this knowledge of Christ yee are already entred in part into those ioyes which are reserued in heauen for you If yee haue it not ô thirst after it and giue your soules no rest till yee come vnto this knowledge of Christ Giue all diligence vnto the reading and hearing of the word of life pray alwaies with all manner of prayer and supplication in the spirit that yee may know Christ with a feeling knowledge and with a sweet experience in your owne soules that whatsoeuer yee haue heard and beleeued of him is most true The second thing which here I note is from what roote this experimentall and feeling knowledge of Christ issueth and springeth and that is from the righteousnesse of faith For so we are to vnderstand this knowledge of Christ to be a vantage following the renouncing of our owne righteousnes and reioycing in the righteousnesse of Christ by faith as that this vantage springeth from the righteousnesse of faith Hence then I obserue that onely they know Christ by this experimentall knowledge who being iustified by faith doe by a true and liuely faith happly the righteousnesse and obedience of Christ Iesus vnto themselues For then doe we begin to haue this feeling knowledge of Christ in our owne soules when by faith we lay hold on the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus to be iustified thereby and the more sure hold that we lay by the hand of faith on the righteousnesse of Christ Iesus the more wee grow vp in this feeling knowledge of Christ Iesus We beleeue saith Peter vnto Christ Joh. 6.69 and know that thou art the Christ the Sonne of the liuing God We beleeue saith he and know as if he should haue said we beleeue and in our owne soules by the testimonie of the spirit witnessing it to our spirit we know that thou art the Christ the sonne of the liuing God Faith then in Christ Iesus is the roote whence this feeling knowledge of Christ commeth and the more stedfastly we beleeue the greater feeling of this knowledge doth the spirit of God worke within our soules Many of vs I feare me want this feeling knowledg of Christ many of vs that say thinke that we know him know him not by experience in our owne soules many of vs that haue heard and read of him know not that he is made of God vnto vs wisdome or righteousnesse sanctification or redemption many of vs know not what treasures of wisdome or knowledge or saluation are laid vp in him for vs many of vs I feare mee feele not in our selues the sweetnesse of Christ the fruits of his sufferings the comforts of his promises the riches of his mercies many of vs I feare me onely know Christ as we heare of Christ and read of Christ but know him not by his comfortable presence in our owne soules And what is the cause of all this Surely we haue no roote in our selues we want that true and liuely faith whence such knowledge should spring Wee deceiue our selues flattering our selues and saying we beleeue in Christ we know Christ when as we neither beleeue in him nor know him A smattering faith and a smattering knowledge of Christ we haue but a iustifying faith or sauing knowledge we haue none Is then a iustifying faith the roote whence a feeling and sauing knowledg doth spring Let this then teach vs to vse with all religious reuerence those meanes which the Lord hath ordained for the begetting and increasing of faith in vs that we may beleeue and know and growing in faith we may grow also in the knowledge of Christ Iesus Let vs with reuerence hearken vnto the word preached and celebrate the holy Sacraments two ordinarie meanes which the Lord vs●th thereby to beget and to increase faith in vs. For faith comes by hearing as the Apostle witnesseth where he saith Faith is by hearing and hearing by the word of God Ro. 10.17 Seeing therefore wee cannot know Christ vnlesse we beleeue in him and seeing we cannot beleeue in him vnlesse we heare his word preached that we may beleeue in him and know him let vs willingly flocke as doues vnto the windowes vnto the house of the Lord to heare the word preached Againe as by the word preached so likewise by the vse of the Sacraments the Lord as by meanes strengthneth and increaseth our faith in vs. In the Lords Supper the bread is broken for vs giuen to vs we take it and eat it and digest it and it is made one substance with vs the wine likewise is powred out for vs giuen vnto vs we take it and drinke it and it is made one with vs. All which rites and actions what else are they but so many pledges and seales for the strengthning and increasing of our faith in the benefits of our saluation pu●chased by the death and passion of our Lord and Sauiour Christ Iesus The bread that is broken for vs in that Supper and the wine that is powred out for vs they are so sure pledges vnto vs that Christ his bodie was broken for vs and his bloud shed for vs as that we ought as stedfastly to beleeue the one by faith as we clearely see the other with our eyes So likewise the bread and the wine that are giuen vnto vs by the Minister in the Supper they are so sure pledges vnto vs that Christ by his Spirit giueth vs his bodie and his bloud euen then in the supper as that we ought as stedfastly to beleeue the one by faith as we clearely see the other with our eyes So likewise the bread which with the hand of our bodie we take and eat and the wine which with the hand of our bodie we take and drinke are so sure pledges vnto vs that by faith our soules doe feede vpon the bodie and bloud of Christ as that we ought as stedfastly to beleeue the one by faith as we clearely see the other with our eyes Lastly the bread and wine which being digested are turned into our substance and made one with vs and we with them are so sure seales vnto vs that by a mysticall vnion and spirituall coniunction we are made one with Christ and Christ with vs members of his bodie flesh of his flesh and bone of his bones as that we ought as stedfastly to beleeue this by faith as we perfectly know that by sense Such are the helps
more then hee hath put them in minde of but his meaning is that if they thinke not as he doth touching the points mentioned but differ from him in iudgement yet God will also reueale this truth vnto them as he hath done other truths My note hence in briefe is that we are to take heed how we take things vpon the credit of the ancient Fathers The Lord is greatly to be blessed for them and it is with all thankfulnesse to be acknowledged that they by their godly labours haue greatly profited Gods Church But yet their words and the senses which they giue of the Scriptures are to be weighed in the ballance of the Sanctuarie and to be examined according to the Scriptures For this by examination we shall finde that diuers times they misse the meaning of the holy Ghost and sometimes they plainly alter the words of the holy Ghost This place giueth euident witnesse vnto both where both the words are so altered and the meaning so missed by this holy Father as that in both he swarueth from the holy Ghost as before was euidently shewed The more to blame they th●● take a Fathers word for warrant good enough and thinke their plea good if in the exposition of a Scripture or debating of a question they haue the suffrage and liking of one or two Fathers The second thing which I note is the manner how the Apostle dealeth with such of the Philippians as differed from him in iudgement euen in these points of righteousnesse and saluation He doth not by and by despaire of them or reiect them as heretikes or thunder our sharpe threatnings against them but in all mildnesse of spirit signifieth his hope that God will reueale their errour vnto them that they which now are otherwise minded then he is may be of the same minde that he is But withall we must note what manner men they were with whom the Apostle dealt thus kindly They were no such men as wilfully opposed themselues against the truth or such as were so vtterly bewitched that they would not obey the truth but such as hauing not long since embraced the truth by his preaching were now a little seduced and drawne aside by such false teachers as were crept in amongst them Whence I obserue that we are for a time to beare with the ignorance of our weake brethren and to reteine a good hope of them though they doe not wholly subscribe vnto that truth which we embrace This also our Apostle teacheth vs to doe where he saith Rom. 15.1 We which are strong ought to beare the infirmities of the weake and not to please our selues we which are strong in knowledge in faith in hope or any good grace of God ought ●o beare with such of our brethren as doe yet come short of vs ●n any such grace neither ought we so to please our selues ●herein as to be puft vp in our selues and to contemne others ●ut being lowly in our owne eyes we are to hope that God will ●ake their darknesse to be light and supply what wanteth in ●heir weaknesse And much to the same purpose is that his ex●ortation where he saith Brethren Gal. 6.1 if a man be fallen by occa●ion into any fault yee which are spirituall restore such a one with ●he spirit of meeknesse if a man be fallen by occasion of his ●lesh of the world of the Deuill or of any instrument of Sa●an into any fault either of doctrine or of manners yee which ●re spirituall yee which are more strongly susteined by the ●pirit of God restore such a one with the spirit of meeknesse ●nd labour to bring him vnto that truth in doctrine or holinesse of life from which he was fallen Which sheweth that we are not to giue ouer for forlorne those that are holden with some error but rather that we are for a time to beare with ●hem and to hope that the Lord will bring them vnto the ●nowledge of the truth And see what great reason there is to moue vs hereunto Did we not all sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death Were we not all ignorant of the waies of God and of the things that belong vnto our peace Yes surely vntill the day-starre euen the sunne of righteousnesse arose in our hearts our mindes were full of darknesse and the way of truth we knew not For as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 2.14 The naturall man whose vnderstanding is not yet cleared by Gods spirit perceiueth not the things of the spirit of God but they are foolishnesse vnto him Hath then the Lord in his great mercy towards me made my darknesse to be light and brought me to the knowledge of his truth and shut him as yet vp in darknesse and in ignorance Or hath the Lord brought vs both to the knowledge of his truth and hath he suffered him by occasion to fall from the way of truth and susteined me by the strength of his holy spirit And shall I in either of these cases insult ouer him contemne or disdeine him determine or iudge rashly of him to be a forlorne man an Atheist a reprobate Or am I not rather bending the knees of my soule vnto the Lord for his mercies towards me to hope that in his good time he will lighten his vnderstanding that was shut vp in ignorance or raise him vp againe that was fallen and in the meane time to beare with the ignorance of the one and the error of the other Yes my brethren so long as their ignorance of the truth is vntainted with cankred malice against the truth we may hope that the Lord will call them at the sixt or ninth or some good houre and reueale his holy truth vnto them and in the meane time we are to beare with them and to support one another through loue And for this cause the holy Apostles when the word which they preached was vnto them that heard them as water powred vpon a stone yet ceased not to instruct them with all patience hoping that God would reueale the things vnto them which as yet were h●● from their eyes This then should teach vs not to despaire of them vnto whom the Lord hath not yet reuealed some part of his truth nor to withhold from them such wholesome instructions and admonitions as may draw them from that ignorance or error wherewith they are holden but in all godly sort to labour with them prouing if at any time God will open their eyes that they may turne from darknes vnto light from the power of Satan vnto God The Minister is after the example of our Apostle to instruct with all patience them that be ignorant and them that be contrarily minded in that truth of Christ Iesus which hee hath learned and to deale with them to be like minded as he is and if they be otherwise minded yet to labour with them and to hope that God will reueale the truth vnto them Others likewise whose eyes the Lord
the head should disdaine to direct the steps because it is aboue the foot The father of the childe that was possessed with a dumbe spirit saw no doubt his owne weaknesse to be great when our Sauiour said vnto him If thou canst beleeue Mar. 9.23 all things are possible to him that beleeueth Yet he fainted not but holding on a good course hee said Lord I beleeue helpe mine vnbeleefe 24. And our holy Apostle knew right well how strong he was in the spirit and how he abounded in the graces of the spirit yet hee disdained not to become as weake vnto the weake 1 Cor. 9.22 that he might winne the weake and gaine them vnto Christ And both these marched in their ranke and fought well inasmuch as the weake fainted not because he was weake nor hee that was strong disdained not the weake because he was strong Let no man therefore be discouraged or faint because he is weake and vnable to runne with the formost Some in marching forward must be before and some behinde Let not him that is behinde faint but march forward Let him march after the rule prescribed him by his Generall let his word be a lanterne vnto his feet and a light vnto his paths to direct his going in the way of his commandements To haue strength to runne with the formost is a great grace of God and to bee sought after by all manner praier and supplication in the spirit But if thou walke forward in that weaknesse of thine according to the measure of grace that is giuen thee by the rule which thy God hath prescribed thee this shall bring thee peace at the last and guide thee vnto the hauen where thou wouldest be Let not thine heart therefore bee troubled nor feare In what weaknesse soeuer it is that thou walkest blesse thy God that hath set thee in the way and proceed as hee giueth grace in the way LECTVRE LXVII PHILIP 3. Verse 17. Brethren be followers of mee and looke on them which walke so as yee haue vs for an ensample For many walke c. NOw the Apostle goeth forward and hauing before proposed his owne example vnto the Philippians thereby both to instruct their vnderstanding in matters of doctrine and likewise to stirre them vp vnto all holy desires in the whole course of their life now he exhorteth them to follow his example and the example of such as he is that in him they may haue a patterne to rectifie their iudgements in the truth and to follow after Christian perfection in all holy conuersation of their life Here then first wee haue the Apostles exhortation vnto the Philippians secondly certaine reasons to moue them to hearken vnto his exhortation The exhortation in these words Brethren c. The reasons in the verses following vnto the end of the chapter His exhortation consisteth of two parts first that the Philippians would be followers of him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 neither doth the word simply signifie followers but that they would bee followers ●ogether of him Which may haue a double meaning either ●hat they would all with one mind and with one heart iointly ●ogether follow his example or else that as other Churches which hee had planted in the faith followed his example so ●hey likewise together with them would follow his example Howsoeuer that be meant it is cleere that the Apostle would haue the Philippians to looke at him and as they had heard him to be minded and seene him to walke so he would haue ●hem to follow him in wholesomenesse of doctrine and integritie of life Hee knew that examples as ordinarily they are wont to doe with men might much preuaile with them Lest therefore they should happily be drawne away by the exam●ples of the false teachers hauing it may be a greater shew of holinesse in their life then they had soundnesse of iudgement in the truth he draweth them vnto his owne example and exhorteth them to be followers of him The second part of his exhortation is that they would follow the example of them that were like vnto him being so minded towards the truth as he was and walking so in holy conuersation of life as he did For vnto the former part of his exhortation that they should be followers of him there might happily exception be taken that he was much absent from them that hee was now in prison that it was hard to tie them to the imitation of one man to one mans example Hee doth not therefore tie them to the imitation of himselfe alone but hauing exhorted them to be followers of him he saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and looke on them with a diligent eye vnto them as vnto the marke whereat yee shoot which walke so so soundly grounded in the truth and so earnestly endeuouring after Christian perfection in this life as yee haue vs for an ensample in whose doctrine is nothing but pure in whose life is nothing but holy So that he allowes them to follow the example of other then himselfe but with all hee doth not leaue it vnto their choice to follow whom they will but markes them out what manner of men they should chuse for examples to follow namely such as were like him and such as of whom they might truly say he walke so hee embraceth the same truth and ordereth his whole life as our Apostle did The summe then of his exhortation is as i● he had thus said Brethren ye haue heard and know how I am minded towards the truth and how I follow hard towards perfection in my life Bee yee followers of mee in both these things and walke so as yee haue mee for an ensample Neither doe I tie you only to my selfe to follow mee but looke who they are that walke so shewing themselues an ensample of good workes with vncorrupt doctrine with grauitie integritie and with the wholesome word which cannot be reproued as yee haue mee for an ensample and looke diligently on them and follow them as they follow mee and both of vs Christ Which being the meaning of these words in this exhortation let vs now further see what notes wee may gather hence for our vse and instruction The first thing which I note is that the Apostle would haue the Philippians to follow the example not of whomsoeuer each man in his priuate fancie did best like of but of him and of such others as walked so as they had him for an ensample Whence I obserue that in the course of our Christian walking wee are to follow the example of such as by their holy walking shew plainly that they haue beene brought vp in the schoole of Christ and that they are the faithfull children of God An ordinary thing it is for men to looke at the example of others and so to walke as they haue others for example for the example of others going before vs is a great inducement vnto vs to doe the like whether the thing
Dan. 12.3 that they that be wise shall shine as the brightnesse of the firmament and they that turne many vnto righteousnesse shall shine as the starres for euer and euer Matt. 17.2 And a glimpse of it Peter Iames and Iohn saw when Christ was transfigured in the mount before them 1 Cor. 15. And the Apostle at large shewes the whole manner of it to the Corinthians First then hence wee learne that the body of Christ is not so deified or glorified as that the essentiall properties of God are communicated to it as to be omnipotent infinite present euery where c. For this being true that our bodies shall be made like vnto his glorious body then our bodies also should then be omnipote●● infinite euery where c. which no man will say They erre therefore that maintaine the body of Christ to be really present euery where Secondly hence we may learne not to be dismaied at whatsoeuer sicknesse danger or death It may be that thus our bodies may be turned into the graue and that death haue there dominion ouer vs for a season but in the last day our bodies shall be taken out of the power of death and made like vnto Christ his glorious body Thirdly hence we may receiue great comfort that we haue such a Sauiour as will thus change our vile bodies and make them like vnto his glorious body Hee will be a perfect Sauiour and therefore as he receiues our soules at their depar●ure out of our bodies to keepe them safe vnder his custodie ●and protection so will hee also in the last day change our vile ●odies and make them like vnto his glorious body that so he may be a perfect Sauiour both of our soules and bodies The fift and last thing which from these words I note is ●ouching the meanes whereby Christ in that day shall glorifie ●ur vile bodies For here is the doubt which the carnall man ●akes He cannot see nor conceiue how the bodies which are ●urned into dust and ashes which haue beene some torne in ●eeces by the beasts of the land some deuoured by the fishes of the sea some eaten vp by the fowles of the aire how they ●he same in substance should possibly be raised vp againe and ●lorified To meet then with this my obseruation hence is ●hat Christ by that diuine power and effectuall working ●hereby hee raised vp his owne body from the graue and ●hereby hee is able to doe what hee will euen to subdue all ●hings to himselfe shall raise our bodies in that day euen the ●el●e same in substance that wee laid downe and shall glorifie ●hem Christ he is the first-fruits of them that sleepe and by ●is resurrection he hath sanctified all the elect thereunto and 〈◊〉 according to the working of his mighty power hee raised ●imselfe from the dead so by the same working of his migh●ie power shall he also raise vs vp It may be that this may ●eeme impossible with men Luk. 18.27 but the things that are impossible ●ith men are possible with God And why should it seeme so im●ossible Can the potter make a new vessell of the same lumpe 〈◊〉 clay if the first fashion did dislike him and is not God ●uch more able out of our dust to raise againe our dead bo●●es Can the Goldsmith by his Art sunder diuers metals ●ne from another or the Alchymist draw one metall out of ●●other and is not God much more able to distinguish the ●ust of mens bodies from the dust of beasts and the dust of ●ne mans body from another and to draw out our bodies ●o● whencesoeuer they lie Was God able in the beginning 〈◊〉 create all things of nothing and is hee not much more able 〈◊〉 make euery mans body at the resurrection of his owne matter Againe shall napkins be brought from Pauls body and diseases depart from them shall the shadow of Peter helpe the weake and sicke shall Elizeus his bones giue life to a dead corpes cast into his graue and shall not Christ much more by his diuine power change these vile bodies and make them like vnto his glorious body Hee that doubteth of his power shall be drencht vp of his maiestie Take this one proofe further from our daily experience At night wee lie downe and sleepe and in the morning wee wake and rise vp againe Our death what else is it but as a sleepe and our resurrection what else but as it were an awaking againe And as in the one it is so in the other the mighty power of God shall be seene when by his power hee shall raise vs vp out of the sleepe of death and glorifie vs with himselfe in the kingdome of hi● Father This then may serue vs to meet with all doubts against this point of the resurrection and glorification of our mortall and vile bodies He which is willing hath also power to doe it and by his power hee shall raise vs vp in the last day and shall change our vile bodies that they may be fashioned like vnto his glorious body We are not therefore to doubt of it lest so wee also denie his power but rather wee are to comfort o●● selues in this that he who by his power is able to subdue all things vnto himselfe will also by his power raise vp our bodies in the last day and will change our vile bodies that they may be fashioned like vnto his glorious body Laus omnis soli Deo THE FOVRTH CHAPTER LECTVRE LXXV PHILIP 4. Verse 1. Therefore my brethren beloued and longed for my ioy and my crowne so continue in the Lord ye beloued 2. I pray Euodias and beseech Syntiche c. MAny and notable and most worthy our continuall meditation haue bin the points which we haue heard by occasiō of the things contained in the former Chapter as touching necessary watchfulnesse against false teachers together with certain marks of such ver 2.19 touching the true circumcision of the Spirit ver 3 touching the vanitie of all confidence and reioycing in any thing without Christ ver 4. to 9 touching iustification by the alone righteousnes of Christ Iesus through faith in his bloud v. 9 touching sanctificatiō by some sence of the knowledge of Christ and of the vertue of his resurrection in our selues c. and by an holy acknowledgement of imperfection and pursuite after perfection ver 10. to 15 touching Christian perfection ver 15 touching the sole rule of mans life ver 16 touching an holy imitation v. 17 touching euill and vngodly walkers ver 18 19 touching an holy conuersation ver 20 touching the expectation of the faithfull for Christ his second coming v. 20 touching the glorification of our vile bodies in the day of Christ by the power of Christ ver 21 some of which the Apostle purposely disputeth and others by occasion he toucheth For in that Chapter ye may remember that the Apostle instructeth the Philippians touching circumcision and
Namely in the Lord that is in the knowledge and in the faith of Christ Iesus rooted and built in him and stablished in the faith But what meaneth he by this that he saith So continue in the Lord So that is as hitherto ye haue done and as now ye haue bene taught by example in mine owne person renouncing all confidence in the flesh counting all mans righteousnesse by any workes whatsoeuer but losse and dung and reioycing onely in Christ Iesus so continue and perseuere in the Lord rooted and built in him and stablished in the faith do this ye beloued in the best bond of loue And let this be spoken touching the points of this generall exhortation and the meaning of the words Now let vs gather hence some notes for our further vse The first thing which I note is from the kind and louing termes wherein the Apostle writes vnto the Philippians He exhorts them vnto perseuerance in the knowledge and faith of Christ Iesus but in such a tender and louing maner as that therein he bewrays a most kind and louing affection towards them saying my brethren beloued and longed for c. And so in his second exhortation in ver 2. he prayeth Euodias and beseecheth Syntyche and likewise in his third exhortation in vers 3. he beseecheth his faithfull yoke-fellow Whence I obserue a necessarie dutie for the Minister of the Gospell which is to be so tenderly affected towards his people as that in all kind and louing maner he labour to win them vnto that which is good and to weane them from that which is euil His people should not be kept strait in his bowels but should haue a large roome in his heart so that whether he write or speake vnto them it may appeare that it is out of his loue and tender affection towards them Thus our Apostle professeth in plaine speech that he was affected towards the Corinthians where he saith O Corinthians our mouth is open vnto you our heart is made large 2. Cor. 6.11 ye are not kept strait in vs. And this affection both our Apostle and the rest of the Apostles bewray alwayes in all their Epistles instructing them to whom they wrote as in the wholesome word of truth so in all meeknesse of spirit and mildnesse of speech Rom. 12.1 as from a loue most vnfained and Christian I beseech you saith our Apostle to the Romanes brethren by the mercies of God Iam. 1.19 and in like sort in all his Epistles Iames My deare brethren let euery man be swift to heare slow to speake and slow to wrath 1. Pet. 2.11 Peter Dearely beloued I beseech you as pilgrims and stranger abstaine from fleshly lusts which fight against the soule Iohn My babes 1. Ioh. 2.1 my litle children I write vnto you that ye sin not And Iude Ye beloued Iude 17. remember the words which were spoken before of the Apostles of our Lord Iesus Christ These were their bowels of loue towards their brethren in Christ and in such bowels of loue should the Ministers of the Gospell after their example deale with their people exhorting them and admonishing them with all patience long suffering and in all loue vnto them leading them forth besides the waters of comfort which may spring vp in them into euerlasting life It may be that here some wil say O we should like this wel if the Ministers of the Gospell would do thus but some of them are so sharpe that they seeme to forget that they are Ministers of the Gospel at least they remember not this dutie Why because they are sharpe and come with a rod Is it an argument against the father of the bodie that he loues not his child because he sometimes reproues him and sometimes punisheth him with the rod Or is it no argument against the father of the bodie and shall it be an argument against such fathers as beget you in Christ Iesus through the Gospell Againe did not those holy Apostles that came in such a spirit of meeknesse as we haue heard come also somtimes with a rod The proofes are so pregnant that I thinke none will doubt of it as neither of this that their coming with a rod was in great loue Againe did not the same God that came to Eliah onely in a soft and still voice come vnto Corah Dathan and Abiram in the earthquake and vnto Nadab and Abihu in the fire Againe are there not in our congregations some such as had need to be wounded as well as some such as had need to be healed And if we loue both must we not bring with vs both oile and vineger Both sharpnesse and meeknesse in their due places are needfull and a wise discretion in them both is most needfull and in both the wise Minister sheweth forth the bowels of his loue Indeed the termes of loue are different when we come with a rod and when we come in the spirit of meeknesse Wil ye then that we come vnto you in these terms of loue which our Apostle here vseth of my brethren beloued and longed for Here then is also a necessary dutie for you that ye be our ioy and our crowne that so vnto the rest we may with the Apostle adde these also my ioy and my crowne Ye by receiuing the wholsome word of truth which is able to saue your soules and by bringing forth the fruites thereof in a sober righteous and godly life in this present world should be the matter of our reioycing ouer you in Christ Iesus So was the elect Ladie vnto whom Iohn wrote his second Epistle as he witnesseth saying I reioyced greatly 2. Ioh 4. that I found of thy children walking in the truth as we haue receiued a commandement of the Father So was Gaius vnto whom Iohn wrote his third Epistle as he witnesseth saying I reioyced greatly when the brethren came 3. Ioh. 3. and testified of the truth that is in thee how thou walkest in the truth I haue no greater ioy then this 4. to heare that my sonnes walke in veritie So was Philemon vnto Paul as he witnesseth saying Philem. 7. We haue great ioy and consolation in thy loue because by thee the Saints are comforted And so was Timothy vnto the same Apostle the reioycing of his heart because he continued in the things which he had learned So herein should ye fulfill our ioy that ye suffer the word of the Lord to dwell in you plenteously that ye and your children walke in the truth as ye haue bene taught in Christ Iesus that your faith groweth exceedingly and that the loue of euery one of you aboundeth towards another And as thus ye should be our ioy so should ye also be our crowne Ye by your faith in Christ Iesus and by your loue towards all Saints and by your growing vp in all things into him which is your head that is Christ by the worke of our ministerie should
that here he thus spoke as he thought by the rule of charitie For what saith the Apostle in another place of charitie 1. Cor. 13.7 namely that it beleeueth all things and hopeth all things yea and where it seeth certaine fruites and effects of election and saluation there it is certainly to be perswaded of election and saluation Our Apostle therefore seeing how faithfully those his fellow-labourers had laboured in the worke of the Ministerie with him in the planting of the Church at Philippi how constantly they had walked in the truth notwithstanding the great opposition that was against them how vnblameably they had had their conuersation amongst men in charitie thus he iudged that their names were in the booke of life And this may verie well stand with the other that the Lord onely knoweth who are his For that which properly belongeth vnto the Lord absolutely and by himselfe to know whose names are in the booke of life that the Apostle assumeth not to himselfe but seeing the fruites of their election in their liues he by the rule of charitie thus iudgeth of their saluation that euerlasting life was surely sealed vp for them with God To come then vnto my note the thing which here I note is the Apostles charitable iudgement of his fellow-labourers in the Gospell of Christ Iesus By their fruites he iudged that they were branches of the true vine vpon their holy profession and constant endeuor to increase the kingdome of Christ Iesus he pronounceth that their names were written in the booke of life Whence first my obseruation in generall is that the children of God not onely may and ought certainly to be perswaded of their owne saluation in Christ Iesus but further that they are by the rule of charitie to assure themselues of the saluation of such of their brethren as walke in the truth hauing their conuersation honest For albeit this be most true that not any can be so certaine of any other mans election or saluation as of his owne because he feeleth onely in himselfe the testimony of the Spirit witnessing vnto his spirit that he is the sonne of God and because onely in himselfe he knoweth his faith towards God and his loue towards all Saints not onely by the outward fruites thereof but like wise by the inward motions thereof which he feeles in his owne soule yet may the children of God by such outward fruites and effects of their election as they shall see in their brethren according to the rule of charitie iudge that they are the chosen children of God and heires of saluation So we see that the Apostle writing to the Romanes Corinthians Ephesians writeth vnto them as Saints by calling sanctified in Christ Iesus chosen in him before the foundation of the world and predestinated to be adopted through Iesus Christ vnto God And why did he thus iudge of them Euen because of their communion with the Saints in the Gospel of Christ because of the testification of their faith and of their loue towards all Saints whereby they shewed themselues to be partakers of the fatnesse of the true oliue Christ Iesus So Peter writing vnto the strangers that dwelt here and there throughout Pontus Galatia Cappadocia Asia and Bithynia calleth them the elect of God And why Euen because of their constant faith constant loue and constant abiding in the Church of Christ Iesus So Iohn calleth them vnto whom he wrote the sonnes of God and the Lady vnto whom he wrote the elect Ladie because they continued in the Church and walked in the truth Do we then see in our brethren the outward fruites of an holy vocation of regeneration and sanctification Do we see them make an holy profession of the blessed truth of Christ Iesus giue good testimonie of a sincere faith in Christ Iesus walk in holy obedience towards God and loue towards their brethren faithfully labour in the workes of their calling and denying vngodlinesse and worldly lusts liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world Of such we may and are to perswade our selues that they are reserued vnto the same inheritance in heauen with vs and of them we may say that they are the sonnes of God elect in Christ Iesus our Lord vnto eternall saluation prepared to be shewed in the last times And besides this that the holy Ghost by the mouth of the Apostles warranteth vs hereunto the rule also of charitie directeth vs so to do For as before we heard Charitie beleeueth all things 1. Cor. 13.7 charitie hopeth all things Which yet is not so to be vnderstood as if charitie were foolish rashly to beleeue euery thing that is told and there to hope where there is no cause of hope for that the Wiseman maketh a note of a foolish man Prou. 14.15 where he thus saith The foolish will beleeue euery thing But so charitie beleeueth all things and hopeth all things as that it keepes it selfe within the rule of pietie wisedome and religion If the thing displease God be repugnant to the truth be hurtfull or disgracefull to any of Gods children charitie beleeueth it not hopeth it not But where there are good tokens of Christianitie plaine signes of a sincere faith euident testimonies of an holy obedience there surely the rule of charitie bids vs beleeue and hope the best and there we may be bold to say that they are the sonnes of God that their names are written in the booke of life And is it not our Sauiours rule that we should iudge of the tree by the fruite for that a good tree bringeth not forth euill fruite Mat. 7.18 nor an ill tree good fruite If it beare grapes will any man iudge it to be a thorne if it bring forth figs will any man iudge it to be a thistle Nay by the fruite the tree is knowne what it is and if the fruite be good it may thereby be knowne that the tree is good Right so if we haue our fruite in righteousnesse and holinesse it may thereby be knowne that we are the branches of the true vine Christ Iesus Whether then we looke vnto the example of the Apostles or vnto the rule of charitie which the Apostles followed or vnto that rule of Christ to discerne of the tree by the fruite we see that the children of God may not onely perswade themselues of their owne saluation in Christ Iesus but further also may certainly iudge of the saluation of their godly brethren Now see viri fratres men brethren the great necessitie that there is that we should be thus perswaded one of another euen so great as that without it the bond of peace loue and Christianitie cannot be maintained For how can we loue them of whom we haue no hope that they shall be heires of the same saluatiō with vs How can we haue peace with them of whom we are not perswaded that they are at peace with God How can we pray with them and
his Epistles saying The grace c. Salute sometimes he addeth the manner with an holy kisse For that was the manner of the Christian salutation to embrace one another and to kisse one another Salute then in token of my loue and affection vnto them all the Saints generally nor onely so but particularly euery Saint in Christ Iesus without omission of any one that being washed in the bloud of Christ Iesus and sanctified by his Spirit do leade an holy and godly life amongst you For such here he calleth Saints in Christ Iesus that he would haue euery one of these in particular saluted appeareth by his vsing of the singular number Here then first I obserue a good ground of that Christian custome commonly vsed in writing of letters vnto friends that are absent which is to send commendations to remember their salutations and health-wishes to such of their friends as are ioyned vnto them in any neare bond of duty or of loue Which as it is a good testimony of their kinde and louing affection towards their friends so is it a good meanes to preserue and to increase friendship and is in effect a prayer for their health and welfare And for these causes it is that this custome of long time hath bene and is still amongst Christians continued Which may teach vs alwayes by all meanes to reteine and maintaine our loue and friendship with the Saints in Christ Iesus and therefore when we conuerse with them in all louing sort to vse them and when we are absent from them in our letters to salute them euen euery of them as here our Apostle doth As therefore the Apostle before exhorteth so do I whatsoeuer things pertaine to loue euen to the preseruing or increasing of your loue with the Saints in Christ Iesus those thinke on and do The second thing which here I note is that the Apostle saluteth the Saints in Christ Iesus Whence I obserue that the name and title of Saints is fitly and truly giuen vnto men vppon earth Psal 16.3 All my delight saith Dauid is vpon the Saints that are on the earth and vpon such as excell in vertue And the Apostle in all his Epistles still writeth vnto the Saints and faithfull brethren as ye may see in the beginning of all his Epistles But who on earth are fitly and truly called Saints Euen they that being purified by faith and sanctified by the Spirit and washed in the bloud of the Lambe deny vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world For they that are such are led by the Spirit of God they haue put on the Lord Iesus Christ and he is made of God vnto them wisedome and righteousnesse and sanctification and redemption Yea but are not all the sonnes of men so long as they dwell in these houses of clay vnrighteous and vnholy How then can any in this life be fitly and truly called Saints Iob 15. True it is that He layeth folly vpon his Angels and that the heauens are not cleane in his sight and that truly and properly the Lord onely is holy and that of all the sonnes of men it is most truly said that there is none that doth good and sinneth not no not one Yet in Christ Iesus all the seede which is according vnto promise is counted holy holy for that he is made of God vnto them sanctification and holines holy for that they are washed from their sinnes by the bloud of the Lambe and sanctified by the Spirit of grace holy for that what is wanting in their obedience and holinesse is hid and couered in the perfect obedience and holinesse of Christ Iesus and holy for that sanctified desire which is in them after holinesse And therefore our Apostle writing to the Corinthians saith Ye are washed ye are sanctified 1 Cor. 6.11 ye are iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God Ye are sanctified that is ye are made Saints and holy So that howsoeuer in themselues all the sonnes of men be vnrighteous and vnholy yet euen in this life all the Israel of God in Christ Iesus are fitly and truly called Saints in such sort as hath bene said Vaine then and foolish is their conceit that imagine that there are no Saints but such as haue departed this mortalitie in the feare and faith of Christ Iesus They indeede are well called Saints and holy is the remembrance of them neither need they the shrines of a sinfull deceiuer to be called Saints But not vnto them alone but vnto you also beloued is this title due to be called Saints if ye be in Christ Iesus and walke worthy of that calling whereunto he hath called you Walke therefore worthy of that calling whereunto ye are called Mortifie the deedes of the flesh and walke not after the flesh but after the Spirit Be ye filled with the fruites of righteousnesse and be ye holy in all maner of conuersation as he which hath called you is holy The greater impossibilitie that there is in it to be perfectly holy striue ye the more earnestly after it and howsoeuer ye come short yet with all eagernesse endeuour still your selues vnto that which is before and follow hard toward the marke for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus This is the practise and this is the study of them that are sanctified by the Spirit of God and these things if ye thinke on and do ye are Saints in Christ Iesus Otherwise ye are no Saints neither do ye belong vnto the couenant of grace And this know for a suretie that whosoeuer are not Saints on earth shall neuer be Saints in heauen As therefore ye desire in your soules there to be so studie and giue all diligence here to be Be ye in Christ Iesus and then ye are Saints be ye Saints and then ye are in Christ Iesus The brethren Hauing remembred his owne salutations now he addeth also the salutations of others vnto the Philippians And first he remembreth the greetings and salutations of the brethren vnto the Philippians The brethren c. where by the brethren which were with him he vnderstandeth those that laboured with him in the Gospel Whence I obserue that in letters sent vnto men absent these formes of speeches haue not bene vnusuall or misliked to say The brethren salute thee or Salute the brethren All the brethren saith the Apostle greete you 1 Cor. 16.20 Colos 4.15 And againe Salute the brethren c. The more is it to be wondred at that such formes of speech should now be censured and they that vse them noted and traduced for such and such men Can any man follow a better patterne then the example of the Apostle Or can any man haue a better warrant then the warrant of the Apostle It may very well be thought that if Paul were now liuing and should now vse such formes of salutations as these