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A34956 The iustification of a sinner being the maine argument of the Epistle to the Galatians / by a reverend and learned divine.; Commentarius in Epistolam Pauli Apostoli ad Galatas. English Crell, Johann, 1590-1633.; Lushington, Thomas, 1590-1661. 1650 (1650) Wing C6878; ESTC R10082 307,760 323

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am mortified and dead onely in respect of my lusts which are unruly and sinfull motions of my flesh or sensuall appetite but in respect of my love and other holy motions proceeding from my spirit or rationall Will I am vivified and quickned Wherefore I am dead and aliue in respect of different faculties of my soule because the death of one faculty is the life of the other for the death of my flesh is the life of my spirit This kinde of death and life not only may but needs must consist comply and stand together in me for in effect and substance this death and life are but one and the same thing which under contrary names make up in mee that one and the same thing which is sanctity or holinesse For as in a journey there seem two contrarieties namely a departing from one place and a travelling to another yet really and in effect both these are but one and the same journey differing onely in tearmes of recesse from one place and accesse to another yet the motion interceding betweene those distant places is one and the same Or as in curing the body of some disease there seeme two contrary actions namely an expelling of the disease and an inducing of health yet really and in effect both these make but one and the same cure So in my Repentance regeneration renovation sanctification or by what names soever the Scriptures call the cure of my soule there seem two contrarietyes namely my forsaking of sin or dying to it and my approching to holinesse or living to God yet really and in effect both these are but one and the same conversation or walking Hence it appeares that mortification and vivification are really but one and the same motion making up in me that one and the same morall alteration which is my sanctification yet there is between them a rationall difference in 3 respects 1. Of their order for in order of nature or reason though not of time or continuance mortification is first for that beginneth that consequently vivification may follow 2. Of their object for the matter mortified is sin but that vivified is holines 3. Of the subject for the faculty mortified is the flesh but that vivified is the spirit Yet the faculty of my flesh is not mortified for the essence of it but for some qualityes of it for the faculty of the flesh doth also live in mee as much as that of the spirit for although unto some motions my flesh bee deaded yet unto some others it still liveth and conduceth to usefull and lawfull effects in mee For as in the killing of quick-silver the silver remaines after the killing it and serves for severall uses but that malignity ferity or quicknes of the silver which in the use thereof would prove noxious and hurtfull is extinguished and deaded So in the Mortifying of my flesh the faculty remaines after the mortifying and lives in me to divers good purposes but that fiercenes rashnes and quicknes of my appetite the lusts and frauds of it whereby it would usurpe over my Spirit to reigne and rule in me these qualities and motions of my appetite are mortified and extinguished that thereby she may become obedient and serviceable unto my spirit for the better speeding of many holy duties And so when a horse is made to amble his motion lives in him still but the trot of his motion is deaded and a pace is put upon it that moves with more ease to the rider Yet not I. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. no more I or no longer I the same man that I was before I was justified when sin lived in me For elswhere the very same words are translated No more I as Rom. 7.17 Now then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. it is no more I that doe it but sin that dwelleth in me And Rom. 7.20 Now if I doe that I would not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. it is no more I that doe it but sin that dwelleth in mee And in this very place our former English translation which was in use before that of King James hath it thus not I any more q. d. Though after my crucifying or mortifying I live yet I am not any more the man that I was before neither doe I live any longer the life I did when living a naturall and carnall life sinne lived in mee and over-ruled mee For the man that I was is now mortified and dead unto sinne it is crucified as Christ was crucified and because hee was crucified But now there is a great alteration in my morall life or conversation for my old man which was naturall and carnall being dead I am now become a new man and a new creature to live a life which is spirituall and christian For in vaine I professe my selfe a Christian unlesse I become a new creature 2. Cor. 5.17 Therefore if any man be in Christ he is a new creature For neither Ceremony nor not-Ceremony nor any thing else availeth in Christ but onely this to become a new creature Gal. 6.15 For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but a new creature But Christ liveth in mee Not by his Person for so hee lives in Heaven sitting at the right hand of God But hee lives in mee by his spirit for his spirit infused into mee inspireth my spirit inlightning my minde animating my will and governing my actions to a life of holynesse whereto my single spirit in her naked state of nature could never of her selfe elevate and raise mee For unto my spirit the spirit of Christ is a Light a Strength and a Guide by whom I am lead and after whom I walke in the wayes of holynesse And Christ lives in mee by his life for as his death was the cause and paterne of my death whereby I am mortified with him So his life is the cause and paterne of my life whereby I am vivified with him For the holynesse of his life hath such an influence upon mine that according to the measure of grace and of my ability in my mortall condition I labour to bee holy as hee was holy that I may imitate and resemble his holynesse though I can not equall it However hee is the Rule whereby I live for I live not after mine owne will but after his and hee is the End for which I live for I live not unto my selfe to seeke my selfe but unto him to seeke him who dyed for mee and I therefore live thus because he dyed for mee For a like phrase to this is that 2. Cor. 5.15 And that hee dyed for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which dyed for them and rose againe And the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. But in that I now live in the flesh For so it is rendred in the Vulgar Latine in the Vulgar
everlasting life in the kingdome of Heaven Gods Will was to give them a present right to those blessings and those Jewes who effectually had that right they were justified And when the Gentiles who were both sinners and strangers were by the same Will made fellow-citizens with the Saints fellow-heyres fellow-members and partakers of Gods promise in Christ to have the same right unto the same blessings with the believing Jewes then were the Gentiles justified The Names of Justifying or other words whereby in Scripture this is expressed are too many to be mentioned here yet for the better understanding of the thing we may take notice of some which intimate either the causes effects affections or resemblances of it 1. Therefore it is called adopting or making Sons of God Joh. 1.12 As many as received him to them gave he power to become or be made the sonnes of God i. e. he justified them by giving them the right or priviledge of Sons for so the word power is explained in the margin 2. Manumising infranchising or making free John 8.36 If the Sonne shall make you free you shall be free indeed i. e. if the Son shall justifie you by giving you the right of freedome the Kingdome of Heaven ye shall have that reall and true freedome whereof your earthly freedome is but a figure or shadow 3. Reconciling or attoneing with God Rom. 5.10 For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God i. e. justified by way of amity or alliance to be made the friends and Sons of God and at the next verse following By whom we have now received the attonement i. e. by whom we have now been justified for in the originall the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in both these verses but is rendred in the 10. reconciled and in the 11. attonement 4. Inoculating or grafting Rom. 11.24 If thou wert cut out of the Olive tree which is wilde by nature and wert grafted contrary to nature into a good Olive tree i. e. if contrary to nature thou wert justified for as the Cions or Graft hath a right of life and maintenance to partake of the root and sap of that stock whereinto it is inoculated so the justified are made joynt-heyres with Christ to have the same rights with Christ into whom they are incorporated 5. Ingratiating or making accepted Ephes 1.6 To the praise of the glory of his grace wherein 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath made us accepted in the beloved i. e. hath justified and graced us by giving us a right in Christ who is the beloved of God 6. Infeoffing or estating Ephes 1.11 In whom also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wee have obtained an inheritance or have been infeoffed i. e. by whom we are justified to have that inheritance whereto God had predestinated instituted or ordained us in his will and testament 7. Seating or placing in Heaven Ephes 2.6 And hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus i. e. hath justified us by making us co-heires with Christ by Christ and giving us a present right to a future seat or possession in Heaven where Christ is already seated for in this life we doe not actually sit in heavenly places but in this life we are made to have a present right for our future sitting there 8. Allying or making nigh unto God Ephes 2.13 Yee who sometimes were farre off are made nigh by the bloud of Christ. i. e. ye who were sometimes strangers unto God are now justified and made to have an allyance with God amounting in a manner to a consanguinity and as effectuall as a nearenesse by bloud yet not by your bloud but by the bloud of Christ 9. Inabling or making meet Col. 1.12 Which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light i. e. hath justified us to make us fellow-heires and fellow commoners with the Saints 10. Translating in the next verse following Who hath delivered us from the power of darkenesse and hath translated us into the Kingdome of his deare Sonne i. e. and hath justified us by changing our state or condition from being bondslaves and captives in the Kingdome of Satan to be made Owners and Freeholders in the Kingdome of Christ 11. Pardoning or forgiving Col. 2.13 And you being dead in your sinnes and the uncircumcision of your flesh hath hee quickened together with him having forgiven you all trespasses i. e. having justified you by giving you a right of impunity or pardon whereby ye are released from the punishment of all your sinnes 12. Ransoming or Redeeming Revel 5.9 For thou wast slaine and hast redeemed us to God by thy bloud i. e. hast justified us by delivering us from the bondage and slavery of Satan and by asserting us into a spirituall freedome and a divine allyance with God The Matter of Justifying or the Right which thereby a man is made to have is a Right of State which is a permanent and stable condition wherein his person standeth remaineth and resteth and this State is as it were the standerd base or ground to all the rest of mans future rights priviledges and benefits which unto this state are incident and subsequent to be raised and built thereon For as in many Kingdomes of the world so in the Kingdome of God mens persons are made to stand and rest under severall states and conditions whereof the most remarkable are the two states of spirituall bondage and of spirituall freedome which being in themselves contrary draw after them contrary consequents and accidents Spirituall bondage is a restraint pressure closenesse or fastnesse of the spirit whereby a man stands tyed from good unto evill debarred from having the good that hee would and should have is hindred from doing the good that hee would and should doe is constrained to doe the evill that hee would not and should not doe is a drudge to the pleasure of sinne is a slave to the motions of his lust and a Captive under the power of Satan This is a state of wrath a low base terrene and miserable condition a condition farre beneath the proper nature and quality of man a condition that hath no right or interest to any spirituall benefit nor while it lasteth is capable of any a condition charged and loaden with so many burdens and miseries thereto incident and consequent that in poynt of Law the Bondman is reputed a dead man Contrarily spirituall freedome is a gallantry braven fluency cleernesse or loosenesse of the spirit whereby a man is inlarged from evill unto good is advanced to have that good which hee would and should have is inabled to doe that good which hee would and should doe is restrained from doing that evill whereto Sathan may tempt him is licensed to live according to his owne will or rather according to a better will then his owne namely according to the good will and pleasure of God whose will hee makes his owne will
to bee and bee called the friend of God was it not afterward continued by his worke in offering his son for was not that worke wrought by his faith and was not his faith and the Scripture mentioning it fulfilled by that worke The other example is of Rahab Likewise also was not Rahab the harlot justified by workes when she had received the Messengers and had sent them out another way i. e. The Justification of Rahab constituted long before by her faith whereby she became a Proselyte and an Israelite in beleeving that the God of Israel was God in Heaven above and in earth beneath was it not afterward continued by her worke in Receiving the Messengers For was not that worke wrought by her faith and at the sacke of Jericho was not she and her family preserved by that worke and thereby continued Proselites unto Gods People Now from these Examples and Similies of James but especially from his two reasons it evidently followes that workes doe justifie in the sense alleadged namely conservantly For because Faith without workes is dead and working with workes is by workes made perfect or effectuall therefore workes doe preserve and continue the life perfection and efficacy of Faith and consequently they preserve and continue the state of Justification which is the effect of faith and whatsoever doth preserve and continue Justification that doth Justifie True it is that Neither faith nor works are the principall and prime efficients of my Justifying because God is the personall principall and prime efficient who makes mee to have my right and who makes mee to hold it but faith and workes are the reall mediall or meane efficients on my part For God willeth and ordayneth that fayth should bee my title whereby I acquire and have this right and that workes should be my tenure whereby to continue and hold it From my title I wholly exclude my workes allowing them neyther efficiency to justifie nor presence in my person at my Justifying For faith alone without any efficiency or any presence of workes within mee doth make me to have this right Because when I am to bee justified I have not within me any workes at all that any way qualifie me or can bee truely sayd to be resident in mee For manifest it is that I am then in the state and condition of a sinner if not legally of a transgressor against the Law yet morally of one somewhat improbous who was many wayes peccant in the rules of morality equity decency and mercy and jurally of one calamitous who must suffer and die like a sinner for the proper subject of Justification is a sinner But from my Tenure I exclude not faith but include and suppose it adding and adjoyning my workes unto it Because in my Justification faith hath a double efficiency first a procreant to constitute it and secondly a conservant to continue it Yet that degree of conservancy which flowes from faith is so imperfect that unlesse it be perfected by the accesse of works fayth alone is not able to conserve it selfe for without workes shee is dead Yet from my Tenure I exclude the solitarinesse both of my faith and of my workes for neither faith alone without workes nor workes alone without faith but both concurring and joyned together viz. faith conducting and co-operating with workes and workes accompanying and seconding faith doe justifie me conservantly as my Tenure making mee to continue and hold that state of divine alliance which faith alone did create and constitute And heerein I give the preeminence to faith for I say not thus Workes with faith but thus Faith with workes doth make up my Tenure faith as the principall and workes as accessories thereto to animate enable and render faith effectuall unto that effect which alone without workes it can not performe Because faith without workes is imperfect and dead but working with workes is by workes made perfect and effectuall And true it is that Workes doe also justifie declaratively because they declare manifest and shew that faith which doeth justifie efficiently and which alone without workes is efficient procreantly and which being alone without workes can not be declared For words will not serve the turne to declare the existence of faith but this service must be done by works And therefore the existence of that faith which is solitary alone and without workes can by no meanes bee sufficiently declared Hence saith the Apostle Jam. 2.18 Shew mee thy faith without thy workes Shew me if thou canst or thou canst not shew mee that faith of thine which is without workes or which is solitary or alone by it selfe for by thy words in saying thou hast faith it is not sufficiently shewed and by thy workes it cannot possibly be shewed because as thou acknowledgest it is a solitary faith which is alone by it selfe destitute of workes And I will shew thee my faith by my workes i. e. But I will shew thee my operary faith which worketh with workes for I will and doe declare it by my workes because I acknowledge that my faith is seconded and accompanied with workes Now because faith is declared or shewed by workes therfore workes are a Signe of faith and consequently they are a Signe of Justification to declare and shew the state of it because faith is a cause whereof Justification is the effect and whatsoever is a Signe of the cause is also a Signe of the effect Yet this is not all and the whole influence which workes have unto Justification that they are a Signe of faith to declare it But moreover workes are a cause of faith to effect it yet not a cause procreant to constitute and produce it but a cause conservant to continue and maintaine it For Jam. 2.26 As the body without the spirit is dead so faith without workes is dead also Now the Spirit whereby the body respireth and breatheth is a cause of the body yet not a cause procreant to give the body life and being but a cause conservant to continue and maintaine the life and being of it And consequently workes are also a cause conservant of that Justification whereof faith is a cause wholly procreant and partly conservant and to conserve Justification is to justifie For seeing that unto many words I willingly allow severall senses not only modall but reall I cannot with equity deny the like courtesie unto the Verbe Justified for the honour of those two great Apostles Paul and James who were planters of the Gospel and pillars of the Church especially when I consider the severall parties with whom they had to deale For Paul by his assertion opposeth the Judaizers who as was formerly shewed upon the 14. verse of this Chapter were Operaries and Rituaries standing so much for the workes and Ceremonies of the Law that they made workes the sole and whole efficient cause of Justification both the cause conservant to continue and maintaine the state of it and also the cause procreant to
same act effected both these things for by his suffering on the Crosse hee confirmed the New Will and Testament for hence his bloud is called the bloud of the New Testament and the Wine at the Communion is the memoriall of that Bloud Mat. 26.27 And hee tooke the cup and gave thankes and gave it to them saying Drinke ye all of it for this is the bloud of the New Testament And by the same suffering hee cancelled the first Will and Testament Col. 2.14 Blotting out the handwriting of Ordinances which was against us which was contrary to us and tooke it out of the way nayling it to his Crosse Yet hee cancelled the first Will but onely Consequently i. e. upon his confirmation of the last Will it followed necessarily that thereby the first was cancelled and frustrated Am dead to the Law In respect of the Law I am putatively or as it were a dead person who am no way acted or moved at any thing in the Law not at her Promises nor her Judgements nor her Precepts in any kind whether for matter of Policy Ceremony or Morality For I regard neither what she promiseth nor what she threatneth not what she commands nor what she forbids And these words of mine are not presumptuous nor any way opprobrious or reproachfull to the Law because the Law it selfe is the cause why I am thus dead unto the Law namely because the Law it selfe is dead for through her death to me I to her am dead Yet my Person is not dead but my subjection to the Law is dead for my subjection was correlative to her dominion and Relatives as they mutually give being one to another so they mutually take away each others being for when either of the Relatives faile the whole Relation ceaseth the dominion therefore of the Law being dead doth make my subjection to dye with it As by the death of the Husband the Wife also dyeth Yet not in her person as she is a woman but in her relation as she is a wife for she ceaseth to bee a wife though still she remaine a woman For by this comparison the Apostle doth elegantly illustrate both the death of the Law and the death of the Jew unto the Law Rom. 7.2 For the woman which hath an husband is bound by the Law to her husband so long as hee liveth But if the husband bee dead she is loosed from the Law of her husband i. e. Shee ceaseth to bee his wife And from hence hee inferres this conclusion vers 4. Wherefore my brethren yee also are become dead to the Law by the body of Christ That I might live unto God These words are a tacit prevention of an objection that might bee made against his former words For some man might say unto him if the Law bee dead and you dead to the Law and free from the dominion of it then you may freely sinne without controule Heereto his answer is I am not dead to the Law for that purpose that I might sinne But contrarily I am dead to the law that I might not sinne but might dye as well to sinne as to the Law For I am therefore dead unto the Law that I might live unto God by framing all my actions according to his grations Will his last Will and Testament which is the Will that hee hath surrogated to the deceased Law of Moses that was his former Will but is now infringed and which is the Rule whereby I am now to walke that my wayes may bee acceptable and pleasing unto God For to this very end the Old Law is dead and I am dead to the Law that I might become a new Creature to live a new life in the service of God To serve him not carnally after the old way in the Old Testament but spiritually after the new way declared in the New Testament Rom. 7.6 But now wee are delivered from the Law that being dead wherein wee were held that wee should serve in newnesse of spirit and not in the oldnesse of the letter A like expression to the words in hand wee have Rom. 6 11. Likewise reckon yee your selves to bee dead indeed unto sinne but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. And another afterward Rom. 6.13 Neither yield yee your members as instruments of unrighteousnesse unto sinne but yield your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead and your members as instruments of righteousnesse unto God VERSE 20. Text. I am crucified with Christ Neverthelesse I live yet not I but Christ liveth in mee and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Sonne of God who loved me and gave himselfe for me Sense I am crucified i. e. Quasily or in a maner for my old man or the man that I was is mortified or put to death With Christ i. e. By way of resemblance as Christ was put to death and because he was put to death Neverthelesse I live 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. But I live viz. a temporall life in this world Yet not I. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. No more I or no longer the same man that I was before when sinne lived in me But Christ lived in mee i. e. Christ by his spirit and by his doctrine is the guide and rule of all my life And the life which I now live in the flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. But in that I now live in my mortall body or body of flesh I live by the faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. I live in the Faith or in the Religion q. d. though I live in a body of flesh Yet my life is not fleshly but religious Of the Sonne of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. That of the Sonne of God q. d. the Religion wherein I now live is not that of Moses but that of Christ who is the son of God And gave himselfe for mee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. And delivered himselfe for mee viz. unto death or suffered death for my sake Reason This Verse is a Confirmation of his words in the former wherein hee affirmed that hee was dead unto the Law not to this end that hee might freely sinne but to this that hee might afterward live in the service of God the reason is saith hee because I am crucified with Christ For his being crucified doth argue or prove him dead because all Crucifying is dying and being crucified effectually is being dead though all dying bee not crucifying for crucifying is but one kinde of violent dying And his being crucified with Christ doth argue or prove that hee lived to God Because Christ though hee dyed on the Crosse yet now liveth unto God The rest of the Verse being a further Declaration of this first clause is adorned and varied with pathetick expressions arguing his divine and pious affections wherein by continuing his former Personation in transferring upon himselfe the person of a man
avoyd sinn as a man is sayd to flye because of his enemyes i. e. to avoyd his enemies And lastly if I have any right in Christ I must be thus Crucified with Christ Gal. 5.24 And they that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts i. e. have vowed and are bound to crucifie the flesh and must performe it for heere againe the action is put for the duty The End for which I am crucified or mortified is to continue my Justification to preserve and maintaine my divine state of allyance and inheritance with God For as formerly hath beene shewed my Justification is continued by good workes especially workes of love but unto such workes my mortification must needs be antecedent as a necessary preparative without which I can performe no good workes at all For unlesse I first bee dead unto sinne how can I possibly live unto holinesse whose actions are good workes unlesse the old creature first dye how can I become a new creature to bring forth the fruits of the spirit Doe men gather Grapes of thornes or Figs of thistles ●or can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit Our Saviour Christ sayth John 12.24 Except a corne of wheat fall into the ground and dye it abideth alone or is without fruit but if it dye it bringeth forth much fruit So except a man justified become also mortified there comes no fruit of it but if hee bee mortified much fruit will come of it And the end for which I am crucified or mortified with Christ as hee was and because hee was is to Continue my Communion or fellowship with Christ For as my Justification to be the son and heyre of God doth make mee to communicate or partake in the alliance and inheritance of Christ to bee a co-ally and a co-heyre with Christ who is eminently and supreamely the son and heyre of God so my mortification to be dead unto sinne doth make mee to communicate or partake in the suffering and glorifying of Christ that suffering as hee did I may be glorified as he is Rom. 8.17 And if children then heyres heyres of God and joint-heyres with Christ if so be that wee suffer with him that wee may bee also glorified together But because upon the eighteenth Verse of this Chapter I shewed that my state of Justification is mutable and therefore requires a tenure to maintaine it that the tenure maintayning it are good works and that those good workes are acts of love therefore correspondently unto those verities I shall heere subjoine these two following 1. The first worke of my love is to love my selfe For the objects upon whom my love is exercised are God my neighbour and my selfe but because the acts or workes of my love toward these three objects must not bee practised in a disorderly way but in a right and due course therefore they must commence and begin at my selfe Yet by my self e-love I meane not my Lust which is a sensuall desire of the flesh to have worldly good as pleasure profit and credit for my Lust is an inordinate improbous and malignant motion of my flesh or sensuall appetite condemned in the holy Scriptures and therefore is that man in me that must be mortified and that sinne that must bee put to death or whereto I must die But by my self e-love I meane that effect of my faith which is a rationall affection of my will doing service to the spirit and moving so contrary to my lust that by meanes of my Love my lust must bee mortified for my self e-love is my Will to doe and also my doing of that good which is decent honest and holy and for the doing whereof the spirit sanctifies mee as the seeking of mine owne salvation my neighbours edification and Gods glory which last is the first in my intention though it come the last in execution For if I conceive it a thing possible for mee truly to love eyther God or my neighbour before I have truely loved my selfe I greatly deceive mine owne soule Because my Love to my selfe is the standerd canon or rule of that love which I owe to my neighbour for the law of Love commands mee to Love my neighbour as my selfe i. e. As I love my selfe so must I love my neighbour if therefore I doe not really and truly love my selfe how and whereby should I proportion regulate or measure out any true love unto my neighbour And because my Love to my selfe is also the standerd canon or rule of that love which I owe to God for the law of Love commands me to Love the Lord my God with all my heart with all my soule and with all my mind i. e. Really and truely to the utmost of my power not barely as I love my selfe but much more and in a greater measure If therefore in my heart soule and minde I have no true love at all how can I love God with all that love which is in my heart soule and mind or when I have no measure of love to my selfe how can I be sayd to love God in a greater measure then I love my selfe True it is that my love to God is the first Commandement i. e. the first for dignity but the first for practise is love to my selfe and therefore my love must begin at my selfe that thence proceeding to my neighbour it may determine in God who is the chiefest highest and finall object of it That rebounding backe againe from him it may for his sake bee increased upon my neighbour and for my neighbours sake upon my selfe And my love to God is the greatest Commandement i. e. the greatest for performance but the least for performance is love to my selfe and therefore againe my love must begin at my selfe Because I am to begin at things least and most easie for if I can not truely love my selfe which is the least and easiest performance how shall I love my brother which is greater and harder and consequently how God which is the greatest and hardest taske of love For seeing God is invisible whom I see not and my brother is visible whom I see it must needes bee a matter of greater difficulty to love God then to love my brother for 1. John 4.20 Hee that loveth not his brother whom hee hath seene how can hee love God whom he hath not seen Doth it not from hence plainely appeare that hee is but an hypocrite who professeth to love God and yet loveth not his brother for too manifest it is that many Christians who professe the love of Christ are so farre from brotherly love that they hate their brother for whom Christ dyed and hate him more then doe many Jewes who professe themselves enemies unto Christ And my soule bleeds to consider the bloody Warres that for many yeares have raged and still continue in most parts of Christendome wherein more Christian blood hath been spilt by Christians then ever was shed
by all the Heathen Oh what a foule staine is this to the profession of Christ that they for whose salvation Christ was crucified should dayly practise one anothers destruction Amongst many other causes whereby Christians fall into these Unchristian courses it seemes this is one by mistaking the course and order of love in beginning the practice of it upon God in whom the practice should determine This is not the way of true zeale but the errour of that which is blind 2. My first selfe-love is to mortifie my sinnes For my mortification is a worke of true love to my selfe Because this worke is a killing or deading of that ferity or wildnesse which naturally is bred in my flesh i. e. in my sensuall appetite by subduing mastering and taming her motions and desires regulating and ordering them in such manner that about carnall pleasure they runne not into the sinnes of uncleannesse to pollute defile and surfeit my soule with gluttony drunkenesse and whoredome that about worldly profit tney fall not into the sinne of Covetousnesse to fill my heart with the thornes of worldly cares and with the hookes of filthy lucre that about worldly credit they rise not into the sinne of Pride to swell my minde with the tumors and botches of humane praises and commendations Is not this worke of mortification a doing of my selfe great good and therefore a worke of true love to my selfe for if I beare not from my selfe so much love to my selfe as to fortifie watch and ward my soule against the invasions and assaults of these sinnes I am a traitour to mine owne soule for is not hee is treacherous villaine that will suffer his City to be entred by that enemy whom hee hath power to repell If I have any love to my life and health I am carefull to keepe my selfe from the Pox and the Plague are the Pox and the Plague more dangerous to my body then are drunkenesse and whoredome both to my body and soule Or is a soule defiled with these sinnes lesse filthy then a Leper or lesse ugly then a face all crusted with the Pox. And my mortification is the first worke of my love Because untill this worke bee done I can doe no workes of love at all None to my selfe for when I am a Drunkard a Leacher covetous and proud how can I performe such love to my selfe as to furnish and adorne my soule with the virtues of Sobriety Chastity Liberality and Humility For by what meanes can these virtues enter while their contrary vices keepe the possession of of mee None to my Brother for when I am covetous and greedy after worldly gaine to get what I can out of my brother how can I performe the duties of Justice and Equity to give my brother his right and his due in all things that are his either by Law or Reason Or when my Covetousnesse makes mee so nigardly that to thrive in the world by sparing and saving I scarce allow my Family meat and drinke fitting for it according to my condition how then can I doe the offices of Mercy and Kindnesse to my brother in giving meat to the hungry and drinke to the thirsty in entertaining the stranger cloathing the naked and visiting the sick Yet these are the workes of brotherly love whereby I must bee tryed at the day of Judgement and whereby the finall sentence must passe upon me Lastly untill this worke be done I can doe no workes of love to God my acts of piety and devotion in prayers prayses and thanksgivings for the worship and service of God cannot passe for workes of love For when I am a Drinker or a Leacher can I love God and will God accept love from a loathsome soul that stinketh of Drunkennesse and Leachery When I am covetous can I love God and will God accept love from an idolatrous soule for is not covetousnesse idolatry and can I worship two such contrary deities as God and an idol or can I serve two such contrary masters as God and Mammon When I am proud can I love God and will God accept love from a lofty soule that is puffed up with vaine glory preferring her owne prayse before Gods glory But some man may say that God loved us then when we were sinners and so loved us that he gave his Sonne to die for us To him I answer that indeed God did so yet he loved us not to this end that we should continue in sin but to this that wee should not continue in it but mortifie and put it to death that being purged and cleansed from it we might thereby be prepared and fitted to love him againe with love beseeming his acceptance Hence againe there appeares another hypocrisie when I am carefull to mortifie the sin of my brother before I have killed mine owne And the exercise of this hypocrisie in mistaking the due order and practise of mortification hath beene one cause of the greatest troubles in the Church of Christ For as my practise of love must not begin at God but end in him so my practise of mortification must not begin upon my brother but must commence at my selfe and determine in him That having first cast out the beame out of mine owne eye I may see cleerely to cast out the mote out of my brothers eye that having first beaten down the beames of pride and covetousnesse which are inward malignities in my selfe and the rootes of all evill unto others I may mortifie the moates of swearing and drunkennesse which are the outward infirmities of my brother For if mine owne beame move me to mortifie my brothers moate I quicken a greater sinne in my selfe to kill a lesse in him Very fitting it is for the advance of Gods glory that my brothers idolatry should be mortified but when my covetousnesse moves me to mortifie it that I may devoure his estate I kill an idolatry in him to quicken a greater in my selfe For of all idolatry covetousnesse is the greatest because it is an idolatry altogether prophane without any colour or shew of piety Hence sayth the Apostle Rom. 2.22 Thou that abhorrest idols doest thou commit sacrilege i. e. Art thou so covetous as to rob God For all sacriledge is a worke of covetousnesse and all robbing of God is a foul impiety An objecti ∣ on Neverthelesse I live 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. but I live Heerein he prevents a tacit objection which some man might seeme to make against him thus You say you are dead to the Law and yet alive to God and yet againe that you are crucified with Christ how can these contrarieties stand together that you should bee thus both dead and alive the Answer The answer Although I am dead to the Law not living by her rule and am dead to sin not serving sin nor suffering sin to rule over me but have crucified or mortified it Neverthelesse I live unto God according to his rule unto his service for I