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A09442 Lectures vpon the three first chapters of the Reuelation: preached in Cambridge anno Dom. 1595. by Master William Perkins, and now published for the benefite of this Church, by Robert Hill Bachelor in Diuinitie. To which is added an excellent sermon, penned at the request of that noble and wise councellor, Ambrose, Earle of Warwicke: in which is proued that Rome is Babylon, and that Babylon is fallen Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Hill, Robert, d. 1623. 1604 (1604) STC 19731; ESTC S114472 318,460 389

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pleaseth his maiestie to make vs his children which truly beleeue in Christ and this is the fountaine of all grace loue and fauor Now if grace be taken for this fauor of God in Christ thē though the outward signs and sensible feeling of Gods fauor in Christ may be lost yet grace that is Gods fauour in Christ cannot be lost A father by some offence of his child may not shew signes of fauour to his sonne for a time but rather his anger by words or stripes yet for all this he carieth a fatherly mind to him not purposing to disinherit him So when a true child of God sinneth he then feeleth not the fauour of God for he turneth his countenance frō him for a time yet not so that his fauor is wholy lost but he still keepeth it towards vs not purposing to disinherit vs in Christ but is still our father and we his children Secondly grace signifieth not onely Gods fauour but the gifts of grace as faith hope repentance c. which are bestowed on them which beleeue Now these graces be of two sorts some necessarie to saluation without which we cannot be saued for without faith no man can be iustified sanctified or glorified Now from true faith proceedeth true hope and loue which three graces be especially necessarie to saluation and especiall graces of Gods spirit Secondly there are other graces which be profitable and needfull yet not necessarie to saluatiō as feeling of Gods fauor ioy and alacritie in inuocation of Gods name feare ioy c. and these are not so necessarie but that a man which hath them not may be saued Now then the three first faith hope loue cānot be lost finally or wholly being necessarie to saluation but the other may faith indeed may be weakened and wounded but neuer lost wholly but in part and for a time and so it is said here of the Church of Ephesus First that grace cannot be lost wholly and finally these reasons proue Math. 16. 16. Christ promised Peter and in him the whole Church that the gates of hell should neuer preuaile against him for when he saith they shall not preuaile the meaning is they shall shew very much strength but shall not ouercome or preuaile against the Church Though she may be foyled yet neuer ouercome The second reason is if it were possible he should deceiue the elect of God Mat. 24. 24. Christ taketh it for graunted that they which beleeue which are truly iustified and sanctified cannot fall finally so loose their faith Thirdly Ioh. 10. 28. Christ saith his sheepe shall neuer perish But they answer that so long as they remaine the sheepe of Christ they shall not perish but Christ cutteth off that obiection saying no man taketh them out of his hand they shall not be able by their naturall corruption to fall nor any man can take thē out of my hands The fourth reason is Ioh. 3. 36. He that beleeueth hath eternall life they say hopeth but he which hath it in hope truly he cannot loose it seeing hope cānot make a man ashamed Rom. 5. 6. and hope is grounded on faith Heb. 11. 1. Rom. 8. 30. whom God predestinateth he calleth iustifieth sanctifieth and glorifieth Now if he which beleeueth shall be iustified and glorified then he cannot fall away for he which falleth finally shall neuer be glorified Fifthly in the end of the chapter he saith nothing can seuer him and the church of the Romanes from the loue of Christ ergo not fall finally for then they may be seuered Sixthly Rom. 11. 29. Gods gifts of saluation are without repentance that is the peculiar gifts of his spirit necessary to saluation are without repentance They say God for his part repents not but man reiects that grace whereof God repented not but this makes Gods will subiect to the will of his creature and makes man to rule God to obey mans wil seeing they make mans will to rule Gods will man wils a thing God wils it not yet mans will must stand which is absurd A seuenth reason 1. Ioh. 3. 9. he which is borne of God sinneth not or cannot sin because the seed of Gods word is in him Now in the first chapter he saith that he which saith he hath no sinne lieth Iohn then meaneth here that he which truly beleeueth sinneth not that is sin ruleth not in him with whole consent but in part And man being partly flesh partly spirit as he is regenerate sin proceeds not from him but as he is flesh They answer so long as he abideth borne of God but when he ceaseth to be borne of God he sinneth then with ful consent but he cuts of that cauil and saith Neither can sinne seeing the seed of the word working by the spirit of God makeh him continue that he cannot so sinne Eighthly If a man may fall wholly and finally then he must be cleane cut off from Christ for he must first be cleane cut from Christ haue no coniunction with him before he can loose grace wholy Now if a man should be so often cut from Christ as he looseth grace then he should be often cut off and often reunited to Christ and if he should be so often reunited to Christ thē he should be so often baptised for baptisme is the sacrament of incision and ingraffing into Christ but that is absurd that baptisme should be any more then once administred ergo a man is but once ingrafted but once vnited to Christ and so cannot be reunited and neuer fall The last reason We pray Leade vs not into temptation that is suffer not Satan and sinne wholy to preuaile and to conquer vs. Now in euery petition there are two things first a commaundement to pray secondly a promise that we shall be heard therfore seeing there is a promise in the word that no true child of God shall be wholly conquered of sinne or Satan no true child of God can finally fall away Against these reasons are brought diuers arguments and they are of three sorts first testimonies of scripture secondly examples thirdly equity For scriptures they alleage these places First Exod. 32. 33. Moses prayeth to God that he may be blotted out of the book of life therfore he which is the true child of God may perish finally Answ. His petition must be vnderstood with condition if it be possible and so Christ let this cup passe if it be possible else Moses should pray for that he knew was not possible and so against his owne knowledge for he knew it could not be that one priuate man should die for the people or suffer eternal punishment for them Againe Moses in that petitiō doth principally shew his zeale and earnest loue he bare to Gods glory and the good of the people in that he neglected his owne life and desired that rather then God should want his glory and they perish he should rather die if it were possible eternally So Paul desired to be
Secondly in regard of his manhood because the holy Ghost hath powred foorth into his manhood the perfection of all graces and gifts whatsoeuer as he is annointed with the oyle of gladnesse aboue his fellowes And this perfection standeth in two things first in number secondly in degree or measure First in number thus Among Gods seruants some haue these graces some those none haue all but Christ hath all the graces which all men and Angels haue more too Secondly in degree for the graces of Christ are more in measure then all the graces of all the Saints and seruants of God whatsoeuer he hath the fountaine of all grace and therefore he is said to haue the Spirit without measure And for that cause also Christ is said to haue the seuen spirits This is spoken by occasion of the Church and people of Sardis which was a dead people and therefore Christ was able to quicken them and to put life and spirit into them That no man can haue fellowship with the Father or the holy Ghost but by Christ it is manifest by other places No man can come to the Father but by me so there must be a participation with Christ before there can be any with the holy Ghost This serueth for our instruction because among the Papists there be many great learned men which haue excellent gifts of nature wit memorie and vnderstanding and though they haue withall a reformed and ciuill life yet they want faith and regeneration How cometh this to passe that such worthy men hauing the common gifts of the spirit want the speciall The cause is this their Christ is a false Christ yea an idol Christ they professe the want of sauing faith and all is because they want Christ. Therefore no maruell though you see the greatest learned there mocke and scoffe at this speciall grace of the assurance of our election Againe many among vs looke to be saued by Christ and yet you shall see no grace neither of knowledge nor faith feare nor care to keepe Gods commandements or a good conscience no sparke of grace and yet looke to be saued by Christ. How can these stand together Though they say they haue Christ they deceiue themselues for they haue not the graces of the Spirit and they haue no grace because they are not in Christ and by that they may know they are not in Christ because they haue no grace To conclude then we must all be admonished to labour that we may be vnited to Christ our head truly to haue fellowship with him that in him we may haue fellowship with the Father and the holy Ghost No grace of God to life eternall will be bestowed vpon vs till we haue Christ himselfe Therefore first labour to be in Christ and to be truly ioyned and vnited to him by the bond of faith that by this meanes we may haue all graces distilling and flowing into our hearts by Christ. Now the second royaltieis he hath seuē starres that is the Ministers and Pastors of the seuen Churches Christ is said here to haue them because he is the soueraigne Lord ouer them he is an absolute Lord ouer all For he setteth them apart and giueth them whatsoeuer gifts they haue he appointeth them their offices duties and callings so as he hath rule ouer them he appointeth ordaineth maketh and preserueth them As he hath in him the fulnesse of spirit so is he a Lord ouer his Ministers he hath power to saue if they obey or to destroy if they rebell Ob. The Church maketh Ministers Ans. The right of making Ministers and ordaining them is Christs royaltie and belongeth to him the Church doth but testifie and declare who they be that Christ maketh Ministers and approueth them therefore he saith here the seuen starres be his Now the end of these words is to strike the heart of the Minister which is secure and negligent to make him know himselfe and his place that he may begin to haue sound conscience of his dutie And this point is an excellent motiue to make them looke to their dutie their gifts are not their owne nay they themselues are not their owne but Christs and he is their Lord. This very consideration cannot but be effectuall to stirre vp all pastors to regard their duties for seeing they are Christs they must not do their owne will We must renounce our selues in all things and therefore bethinke our selues our soules and our bodies are not our owne but Christs Let this consideration draw vs on to do thinke and speake nothing but that which Christ would if he will haue you liue be content because he is the Lord of your life if to dye be content because you are his and not your owne So much for the Preface Now followeth the second part of the Epistle containing two parts first a reproofe secondly a promise The reproofe in the first verse I know thy works in which is contained a reproof and withall a remedie in the next words I know Here note the vice and withall the reproofe the vice is hypocrisie for she pretended religion in outward shew but wanted it indeed Thou hast a name that is the Churches about thee iudge thee to liue that is to be borne anew beleeue in Christ to haue his spirit to guide thee but thou art dead in sinnes and wantest newnesse of life and regeneration The like we may say of many great Churches by name the Romish Church which though it seeme to liue yet in regard of spirituall life it is dead It pretendeth to be the true Church of Christ but in truth it is dead in sinne Yet some say it is not dead but diseased full of sores and sicknesses and though the throat be cut yet it breatheth and panteth but the truth is it is starke dead and cold it hath no spirituall life at all But some alleage the contrarie saying it hath the Sacraments in it and where there is a Sacrament there is a Church but they haue Baptisme therefore a Church Ans. Baptisme is not alwaies a note of a true Church for the Samaritanes had circumcision which was before Baptisme yet they were no people nor church of God Os. 1. 9. That there may be baptisme yet no church it appeareth because there may be baptisme without the preaching of the word As the Papists haue baptisme without the true preaching of the word so they haue the outward Baptisme but deny the inward Baptisme which is iustification by Christ and sanctification by his Spirit Againe I answer it is a Sacrament not to that church of the Papists but to the hiddē church in popery for the Lord euer hath his church among them he keepeth among them euen 7. thousand which neuer worshipped their idols Now then that Sacrament is reserued in that church not for the Papists but for Gods children among them By this we see Gods owne prouidence to call them by those meanes and for their sakes
is called that Counseller He is both King of and Counsellor to his Church And surely this title of right belōgeth to him for first by his office he aduiseth men how they shall escape eternall death and be saued secondly he teacheth how a man may please God in all his actions thirdly how he may flie sinne These three he doth daily in his church and children and that not by extraordinarie but euen by ordinarie meanes as by his word and spirit and therefore may well be called our Counseller neither can any either Angell or man thus counsell vs but onely Christ. Now in that Christ is such a person by office and profession therefore we must acknowledge him to be our Counsellor yea the Counseller of the Catholike Church and euery part therof Therefore we learne to do him all the honour we can Counsellors of the common law are feed reuerenced and honoured for their counsell though it be but for worldly matters and it oftentimes faileth Much more is Christ to be honoured whose counsell concerneth the things of God and cannot faile but shall stand Nay as his counsell is infinitely more excellent then the counsell of any other creature so much more is he to be honoured Further in all dangers and temptations one must resort to Christ for counsell for to this end is he a Counseller He told them they were miserable and therefore gaue them counsell declaring that he is at hand in all our miseries and distresse And therefore we must resort to Christ for his counsell and rest vpon it and order our selues according to it The good king Iehosaphat when the Moabites and Ammonites banded together was in great distresse but what did he We said he know not Lord what to do but our eyes are toward thee That is we looke to thee for counsel and direction we must rest rely vpon thee for wholesome counsel good direction So should all men do in distresse and daunger as we are now by reason of our sinnes and the professed malice of our enemies for by all likelihood these dayes are the time of our chastisement and correction therefore we must say as he said Therefore in all distresse whether it be sicknesse or pang of death forsake all ill counsell go not to wizards and Astrologians for helpe but humble your selues and pray for his counsell So much for the first part that is the maner of prescribing this remedie Now of the remedie it selfe As the miserie had three parts and those great miseries all so Christ propoundeth his remedie in such sort that it is answerable to the three branches of the miserie first gold that thou mayest be rich secondly rayment thirdly eye salue By gold according to the analogie of the Scripture we are to vnderstand the graces of Gods spirit as true faith repentance feare and loue of God man All these are called gold as the triall of our faith is said to be more precious then gold We may likewise vnderstand al other gifts of the spirit yea all Christs merits Christ himself the fountaine of all Purged by the fire That is precious and fine gold of speciall account that is purged from all drosse by the art of man This sheweth what is the propertie of his gifts and graces they are as precious as fine pure gold as 1. Pet. 1. 5. This is worth the marking that the gifts of Gods spirit are of great price and value and that before Gold Psal. 119. 72. Math. 13. 4. This teacheth all how to beautifie themselues in soule and bodie The blind and false opinion of the world is that strange attire and forreine fashions beautifie and adorne the bodie and it is commonly thought that Iewels and precious stones adorne vs and indeed it is true in some persons such as be great personages but strange fashions and outlandish attire disgraceth the bodie The right way to beautifie the bodie indeed and to make it truly glorious and to adorne the soule also i● to get these graces for these are as precious as fine gold Our bodies shold be the temples of the holy Ghost the houses of a worthie guest therefore we should the rather labour for the best ornaments And if you will adorne your selues as you ought you must do it with the graces of Gods spirit and abhorre these fond and absurd fashions which no wise man can like of That thou maist be rich c. These graces haue a further effect and serue not onely to adorne and beautifie but also to make men rich Here then see the common folly nay madnesse of men which spend all their time wit and strength to enrich their bodies and leaue their soules vnfurnished What a madnesse is this that so many should neglect true riches and studie for nothing more then that which is nothing lesse then riches euen counterfeit riches By this text it is more then manifest that such are more then mad and that this folly is very great Therefore seeing true riches be the graces of Gods spirit seeke for these So much for the first part of the remedie White garments That is Christ himselfe and his righteousnesse imputed As Gal. 3. 27. euen as a garment is put on the bodie so is Christ and his righteousnesse and the fruite thereof that is sanctification all this is meant by garments here Now the end is to couer the nakednesse of the soule which is deformed and defiled with sinne Eye salue That is the spirit of illumination knowledge wrought in the mind by the spirit of God For as eye-salue doth cleare the eye sight and sharpen the same where it was by some occasion hindred so doth Christ by illumination make a man know and vnderstand God in Christ and discerne betweene good and euill of things temporall and eternall Thus you haue the meaning of these words Now by the exposition you may see that by all these we can vnderstand nothing but Christ himselfe and his merits One and the same thing is signified by three words to shew that there is in Christ the fulnesse of grace and that he hath remedies for all our wants The Laodiceans were poore in spirituall goods and Christ was their riches naked and he their garment blind and he their eye-salue So that looke how many sinnes there be in men so many contrarie remedies there be in Christ. What wants soeuer be in vs he hath a supply of them all The Papists make him an insufficient Sauiour in that they patch our merits to his and so they disgrace Christ but we are to count Christ a most perfect and absolute Mediator and Redeemer in himselfe without vs. To buy The meanes how these worthie gifts of God are gotten Christ saith by buying and bargaining he saith not receiue but buy This is an allusion to the state of that citie which was rich and consisted most of Merchants which liued by buying and trafficke therefore he speaketh to them in their
any openly wicked in life or doctrine we must not keepe any priuate companie with him shew him no speciall familiaritie but withdraw our selues from such as burdens to vs. And hast examined them This sharpe dealing of the Church of Ephesus hath 2 parts the first is examination the second cōdemnation of the false Apostles The first part is the discouerie of these false Apostles The second the opposing of her selfe against them being discouered The discouerie of the false Apostles teacheth two points first that God hath giuen to his Church and to the Ministers and members of it speciall grace and wisedome an excellent gift of discerning 1. Cor. 2. 15. 1. Cor. 11. Spirituall men endued with the Spirit of God can discerne of the Lords bodie and bloud betweene bread and wine in the Sacrament and common bread and wine 2. Cor. 13. Proue your selues shewing that the Church and the members thereof haue power and the gift of wisedome to try whether they haue faith or not 1. Ioh. 5. Trie the spirits And here she hath power to discerne of false Apostles and by this gift the Church of God differeth from all other societies of men no societie saue the Church of God hath this gift to iudge betweene good and bad truth and error true Apostles and false Apostles Secondly we gather hence that the Church of God can iudge whether a Church be a true Church or not Some men it pleaseth to call this to question nay to deny that there is any Church in England but call it the synagogue of Satan and say there is no ministerie in it no word no Sacraments Now seeing the Church of God can iudge of vs in England and the churches in Germanie in Scotland other Euangelicall and reformed Churches iudge the Church of England a true Church it is so though they deny it For we must rather stand to the iudgement of one or many particular true churches then of any one priuate or of many men Yea seeing the church of God can iudge of false Apostles it hath also power to iudge of Scriptures to iudge which books be canonicall which are not And that which the church of Rome saith is false that the Church indeed can iudge but as it hath authoritie from their Church This Church of Ephesus had this power long before Rome was in such name nay it was in this time of Iohn of farre greater name then Rome and more famous and excellent The second point in what things this discouerie of false Apostles consisteth in what this iudiciall action standeth which God hath giuen to the Church It standeth in two things first examination of false doctrine and false teachers Secondly condemnation of thē after examination For the first he saith And hast examined for the second and found them lyers To come to this examination the Church of Ephesus had a gift of examination and did examine false Apostles and their doctrine But how may a particular Church examine a false Apostle and his doctrine To do this the man or Church which would do it must first prepare themselues and make them fit to examine and in this preparation must haue an humble heart and lowly spirit for God reuealeth not his will to proud men such as haue high minds in their conceit And in this humbling of himselfe he must cleane renounce his owne wit and reason and in regard of himselfe become a foole in his owne reason if he will be wise in the word of God After this preparation he must make prayers to God in his spirit that the Lord would reueale the thing to him and that he would open his eyes by the meanes vsed to iudge of truth falshood Luk. 11. Iam. 1. 5. In the next place he must labour throughly to know and well to conceiue of their false doctrines he must seek to vnderstand them their grounds the differences betweene them and the truth For it is a fowle fault to propound a mans error and not in that meaning he propounded it or gaue it They must further proue and trie whether the doctrine be of God or men To do this he must come to the word of God which must be iudge in the matter not a dumme letter as the Papists hold but the true iudge in all matters and most sufficient Esa. 8. 19. 20. Ioh. 5. Search the Scriptures Only the Lord must be iudge in his owne matters he must giue sentence and no Angell Saint or man Now this he doth in the written word therefore they must search whether such doctrines be contained in the Scriptures or can by necessarie consequence be collected out of them They must after all this looke to their liues for it is not possible that a false Apostle should lead a good life We must looke on his faith and repentance and the fruites of them for though he may bleare the eyes of the world yet if his life be well sifted it will appeare by his faith and repentance he is but an hypocrite and therefore Mat. 7. Christ biddeth vs trie them by their fruites A bad tree cannot bring good fruite but if a man trie and tast them though they appeare beautifull to the eye yet we shall find them to be but hypocriticall and this is a iudgement of God vpon such that they shal be descryed by this one marke by their liues and conuersations If they teach false doctrine they haue liues answerable they cannot but liue accordingly There was neuer any which was a famous hereticke in the Church but his life was stained with monstrous sinnes as the historie of the Church declareth The second part of the discouerie is condemnation or sentence against them for after she had examined them finding them not that they seemed to be she pronounced them to be false Apostles and lyers Note she calleth them lyers vseth sharp speeches and yet sinneth not seeing Christ commendeth her so Ministers to shew their hatred against vice may vse sharpe speeches not to raile or taunt but only to shew our hatred and misliking of sinne So Iohn Baptist calleth them a generation of vipers Christ called Herod a Foxe Paul the Galatians fooles In that she calleth them lyers it sheweth three things first that they spake falsely and deliuered that which was vntrue secondly that they sinned of knowledge thirdly that they did it of malice to hurt and deceiue the Church for these three be the properties of a liar Againe here we see that which Paul Act. 20. foretold by the spirit of Prophecie to be fulfilled that among the Ephesians should arise lyars on them which professed the Gospell with them Againe if men in the daies of the Apostles they being yet aliue durst so take on thē Apostolical authoritie to cal thēselues Apostles and were none no maruell if the Pope of Rome durst sixe hundred yeares after them take this vpon him and say he is Peters successor to take on him Apostolicall power
sinnes for in this Chapter we find that certaine men in this Church were giuen to fornication and idolatrie close and hidden sinnes Now here he is said to haue fierie eyes to shew them he seeth these secret sinnes he knoweth their hearts much more their sinfull workes and will punish them Then by this we haue a good remedie against all secret sins The nature of man is for shame and feare of punishment to abstaine from outward crimes but being out of the companie of men he will breake the commandement of the first and second Table without any care or conscience and this euery mans conscience can best testifie that though he can abstaine from outward sinnes for shame and punishment yet he will cōmit secret sinnes But these men should remember that though they be out of the presence of men yet they stand in the presence of Christ he seeth them his fierie eye pierceth to their inward thoughts and affections and though they may bleare the eyes of men yet they cannot bleare this fierie eye of Christ. If euery man would remember this the fornicator blasphemer or any sinner it would be a good meanes to bridle and stay thē from committing sinnes both open and hidden And his feet like fine brasse He is said to haue brazen feet to shew his strength and power by which he ouercame and bruised the head of the serpent on the crosse and fully vanquished hell death and sinne by his death and also doth subdue sinne and Satan and put them vnder not onely his brazen foot but vnder the feet of his seruants and members The end why he is said to haue feet of brasse here in this Epistle is to terrifie certaine wicked persons in this Church as fornicators and idolaters nay the whole Church of Thyatira which by these wicked men were in daunger to be drawne that way This then may be a remedie for all loose liuers namely to consider of Christs brazen feet to thinke that Christ our Sauiour is in the midst of the Church walketh there and that he hath a foote of brasse to trample and tread all his enemies to powder and to destroy them The want of this is the cause why men lie in sinne and heape sinne vpon sinne without care or conscience or any feare The second part of the Epistle is the Proposition wherein is propounded the substance and matter of the Epistle It hath two parts first a praise secondly a dispraise or rebuke The commendation in the 19. verse the dispraise in the 20. verse First she is commended generally I know thy workes secondly particularly for many duties and vertues I know thy workes that is I see and allow thy workes and wayes The end why he alleadgeth and repeateth these words is to stirre vp the hearts of his seruants to consider of his presence For Christ before hath fierie eyes and here he saith I know thy workes to make this consideration to sinke more deepely and imprint it more throughly In the second part he commendeth her for many duties and vertues first loue secondly seruice thirdly patience fourthly faith and increase of godlinesse First she is commended for loue that is loue to man not to God for for that she is cōmended after in the duties to God But by loue and seruice is meant duties to man performed by man to man To know this loue better note three points first what it is secondly the property of true loue to man thirdly how it must be practised toward men Loue to man is a gift of Gods spirit whereby a man is well affected to his neighbour for Gods sake First loue is the gift of the Spirit Gal. 5. 25. Secondly it is a gift whereby a man is well affected to his neighbour that is to reioyce at his good to defend to seeke and wish his good yea to be grieued with his hurt and miserie and withall to haue bowels of compassion to helpe him in his hurt and miserie Thirdly it must be to our neighbour not by dwelling or habitation but to them which be our brethren in nature haue the same flesh with vs beare the same image of God Then all men as they be men are our neighbours though they dwell at the worlds end whether beleeuer or infidell friend or foe to these we must be wel affected Fourthly it must be for Gods sake for God must first absolutely and principally be loued and man for him so that our loue to man is a fruit of our loue to God springing and descending from it As for the propertie of our loue to man it must be feruent and that in two things first if need require euery man is bound in the compasse of his calling to lay downe his life for his brother and for his neighbour 1. Ioh. 3. 16. Secondly it must be feruent towards our enemies in the world there is much hatred malice and iniuries Now we must loue those persons from whō these come and loue must be feruent that these like water do not quench it And for the practise of our loue to man the rule is that we loue him as our selues as we loue and wish well to our selues heartily so must we loue and wish well to him This is the law of nature to do to another as we would haue him to do to vs yea this is the law of God do to all men as you would haue them do to you Is a man to sell the diuell offereth him gaine if he wil lie Now consider by thine owne law wouldest thou haue another to deceiue thee by lying no surely then deceiue not thy neighor by false weights wares or otherwise By these three things we see for what this Church was commended This loue were to be wished in vs but alas it waxeth cold euery man is a louer of himselfe seeketh his owne good no man his brothers euery man spends his labor wit and his calling to help himself no man to do good to others to help the common good or the good of the Church but to the hurt or hindering of others for men think they may make the best of their owne sell as deare as they can but we should employ all our callings if we had true loue not onely to our owne good but the good of others euen the common good of the towne country or church When men come to the Church to heare the word to pray to receiue the sacrament then they seeme to shew great loue of God but look into their callings there is no loue of their brethren which sheweth they haue no true but an outward loue of God seeing they loue not their neighbour liue by iniustice seeking to fley him and draw out his very bloud by cruell dealing by griping pilling and polling now there cannot be true loue of God where this loue of our neighbour is wanting 1. Iohn 3. 21. The second vertue for which this church is cōmended is seruice In this place
gifts might be humbled in the consideration of this point Naamans seruant perswadeth him when Elisha the Prophet cannot 2. King 5. 12. Behold These words may also be vnderstood of the whole Church I haue giuen thee a doore that is a speciall priuiledge to enter into the kingdome of heauen and title to it I approue thy workes and this is a signe of it that I haue giuen thee entrance into the same Now this is a priuiledge not belonging to all men but onely to the Church of God Which confuteth vniuersall redemption If this then be a priuiledge of the Church to enter into the kingdome of heauen and to haue such liberty we must labour to vse it striuing to enter into that place We haue this priuiledge to see heauen open by faith we must not then be so slacke to enter into it but alas we make no account of it we are wholy possessed with the profits and pleasures of this life and our sinnes are such a loade to vs that we cannot enter in Oh let vs cast off such burthens that so we may more easily enter Which no mā shall shut That is no power after I haue opened heauen shall be able to shut it Here after the libertie he sheweth the continuance of it namely for euer How then is it true that Christ died for all men effectually if all men are not saued because they will not So Christ should for his part open heauen and they should shut it by their wils But Christ saith no power either of the diuell or man can shut it he hauing once opened the same For thou hast a litle strength Thou art indued with a litle and small measure of grace of faith hope regeneration yet according to that measure thou hast defended my word and not denied me in persecution By this we see that a man indued with a small measure of Gods spirit may do works acceptable to God and by the same come to life euerlasting if his grace be true grace Math. 17. if their faith be but as a graine of mustard seed it shall be able to remoue mountaines Now that which is true of miraculous faith that is true of iustifying faith if it be true though neuer so litle yet it shall be able to do workes pleasing to God and by the same we may come to saluation for God regardeth not so much the measure of grace as the maner that it be true not fained In this is a speciall comfort for those which labour to keepe faith and a good conscience Such are often troubled with the consideration of their owne weaknesse and wants but they must know that if they haue true faith though it be but in small measure the Lord accepteth of them if they labour to please God in all things for the Lord accepteth a man not for that he should haue but for that he bestoweth on him be it much or litle This may incourage those which be not so forward in religion which haue not made such proceeding as they should for many seeing the Lord to require so much they cast all off and neuer labour to come to know religion and to keepe faith and a good conscience But these shold remember that the Lord accepteth of small gifts if they be true he accepteth a man according to the measure of grace he bestoweth on him be it more or lesse Then we must not be discouraged for our wants imperfections and ignorances for if we labour to haue true faith the Lord regardeth not the measure of grace but that it be true grace Yet we must take heed we abuse not this mercie of God and take occasion to sinne and to become negligent and carelesse in the duties of religion but still labour to come to such measure as the Lord will most approue of Because c. Here Christ sheweth for what workes he commendeth this Church first she kept his word secondly she denyed not his name but maintained it in persecution against all his enemies And these two containe euen all the duties of a true Christian and the whole practise of all religion And these must be an example for vs we must labour to keepe his word and in all things to do his will Secondly we must in time of persecution defend his name and maintaine his word against all his enemies To keepe his word A few wordes but a great dutie for it signifieth that she in all things in euery commaundement of the law and Gospell had care to obey his word and will And happie were we indeed if Christ could say so of vs that we obeyed his word all the commandements of the law by obeying and the Gospel by faith and repentance c. But it cannot for though in shew we professe we do yet in life we shew we faile in most points of both Vers. 9. 10. In these verses are two promises concerning the conuersion of certaine Iewes Behold c. Here is the first promise concerning the the confirmation of the Church of Philadelphia Now it is likely in this citie there was a synagogue of the Iewes which bare men in hand that they were the true worshippers of God yet denied Christ the Sauiour and so persecuted this Church Now Christ here promiseth he will make this synagogue repent and become true members of Christ to professe Christ and worship him In this promise note three points first who is the author of their conuersion namely God for so it is said I will make them or I will bring them to that estate to worship me Secondly who be conuerted namely the synagogue of the Iewes Thirdly the fruites of their repentance they shall worship before thy feet First the author of their conuersion is Christ himselfe for so he saith I will make them to repent These are significant words which giue all to God in their conuersion of some and of all sinners God is the sole author man hath no stroke in his owne conuersion man indeed willeth it and is conuerted willingly yet not by nature doth he will it but by grace This confutes the Papists who hold that nature and grace may concurre in the conuersion of a sinner for a man say they being stirred vp by grace can will and do that which is good As a man being sicke he hath the facultie of walking yet being faint he cannot vnlesse he leane on anothers shoulder so a man hath a power to will that which is good but it must be stirred vp first by grace But Ephes. 2. man by nature is not onely sicke but starke dead in sin and cannot moue one foote no more then a dead man Obiect But say they then man should be but a blocke if he doth nothing in his conuersion Answ. Though he do nothing in the matter of conuersion yet he hath sense and vnderstanding which he can vse in naturall and ciuill causes though he cannot vse them in spirituall actions and so he is not
Manna haue power ouer nations be clothed in white made pillars in Gods temple and sit with Christ Iesus in the throne of his Father And though the sonne of Ishai cannot make vs Captains of thousands yet that Sonne of Dauid will make vs the sonnes of God That we may do so we must beleeue the Gospell put on Christ Iesus and be renewed by repentance The first is necessarie the second comely the third profitable To come to the first it is necessarie we should beleeue for he that beleeueth not is condemned alreadie he is condemned in the counsell of God in the ministerie of the word and in his owne conscience and he shall be condemned in the day of iudgement for the wrath of God abideth vpon him The more I consider the fruites of faith the more I see the necessitie of faith Through it we are saued by it we are iustified in it we liue We are saued from Satan iustified before God and liue in the Church In the Church nay by it we liue in heauen for he that beleeueth in the Sonne of God hath euerlasting life Faith is that which purifieth the heart maketh the whole man to runne the wayes of Gods commandements giueth entrance to grace accesse to God in prayer made the Elders well reported of and each Christian to stand to the profession of Christ. It is that hand by which we must apprehend Christ that shield by which we resist all the fierie darts of the diuell and that meanes by which we do good to others By faith we receiue the spirit are members of Christ we are risen with him he dwelleth in our hearts we feed on him continually resist Satan are the children of God and the word which we heare becometh profitable And what shall I say faith is of such a qualitie that it vniteth vs to Christ maketh vs certaine of our saluation bold in our profession ministreth true ioy giueth temporall blessings sanctifieth our gifts and maketh vs refuse the pleasures of this present world In a word no sinne can condemne him who hath this true faith and no vertue can saue him who wanteth it To come to the second which is Christ the obiect of faith The most comely garment that euer we can weare it is to be couered with the robes of Christs righteousnesse Iacob was blessed by Esaus garments we are blessed by Christs garments What we see through a greene glasse seemeth all to be greene and what God seeth thorough Christ it is al amiable We must put on this aparel not as the Church in the Canticles I haue put off my clothes how shall I put them on againe or as a gowne that we cast off when we come to our home but we must so put him on that we neuer put him off againe We must put him on by imputation imitation infusion and profession by imputation of his righteousnesse imitation of his vertues infusion of his Spirit and profession of his name Thus we must labour to get Christ for what though a man could commaund the earth with Alexander the sea with Moses the fire with Eliah and the Sunne with Iosuah What though he were as rich as Salomon as wise as Achitophel as strong as Sampson as swift as Ahimaaz as beautifull as Absolon as fortunate as Metellus descended as Paul was of the bloud royal of Princes yet hauing not Christ he hath nothing Yea say a man had the abstinence of Aristydes the innocencie of Phocion the holinesse of Socrates the almes deedes of Cimon the moderation of Camillus the honestie iustice and faithfulnesse of both Catoes all these out of Christ were but splendida peccata and to be esteemed as dung in regard of Christ. For haue him and haue all things want him and want all things he is in at and after death aduantage I come to the last it is profitable to repent for if we turne to the Lord he will turne to vs and that we may turne consider his mercies in forgiuing his benefites in giuing his patience in forbearing and his iudgments in punishing The word preached sinnes committed and that few shall be saued the shortnesse of life the vncertaintie of life and the certaintie of death the ioyes of heauen the torments of hell the comfort of the elect and that else we can haue no comfort in death pray we cannot vnlesse we repent and perish we shall vnlesse we repent but blessed shall we be if we do repent But manum de tabula Magister adest this discourse following will teach vs these things and it am I bold to present to your Worships Iohn sent his Reuelation to many Churches and I present his Epistles to many worthie personages and to whom may I better present them thē to you Iohn was a disciple full of loue and you are breethrē full of loue The Preacher of these Lectures was well knowne to many but to none better then to many of you especially to those who were in my time worthie members of that most worthie Colledge with him And the rather I do it that times to come may reioyce in the Lord that from one honorable root haue issued so many profitable branches to the Church You are sixe brethren as pillars of your house there were three sisters as fruitfull vines of the same one is not but is with the Lord and her I knew a Ladie of admirable vertues the other two are and long may they be so You are all brethren by nature of one venter nation of one countrie grace of one spirit affection of one heart fortune in great fauour and of one hope by your holy behauiour And concerning brotherly loue I need not to write vnto you for you are taught of God to loue one another Your Scilurus at his death need not teach you concord by giuing to each of you a sheafe of arrowes which cannot well be broken whilst they are conioyned for you by your amitie make your selues inuincible If Chilo the Lacedaemonian died for ioy to see one sonne crowned at Olympus and Diagoras Rhodius did the like when his three children got the garland at a wrestling and Iacob so reioyced to heare of his one Ioseph to be aduanced greatly in the kingdome of Egypt how might that happie father of yours reioyce to see at one time one sonne sitting as high Sheriffe of the shire another preaching before the Iudges of Assize and the third pleading as Councellor at the barre and all the rest of great expectation in the kingdome Thus wise sons are a ioy to their parents and all may behold how good and comely a thing it
practise this because we bring from our cradles naturall presumption which perswades vs that we be in the fauour of God that we haue his loue to vs. But we must cast off this naturall presumption and take a new course and the first step to come to grace is to see that we want grace we must see that we be lost sheepe prodigall children in our selues the very fire-brands of hell and this to see our owne want of grace is the first step to grace The second step is to desire it when we see that we want it to hunger and long for it Thirdly to lay hold on it to apprehend this fauour and grace by true and liuely faith to apply the promises of saluation by faith in Christ Iesus and this is the last steppe to get this grace Secondly in that he sets downe first grace secondly peace here is the true order of seeking for things and blessings in this life First for grace and Gods fauour secondly for peace and welfare not first peace and welfare but first for grace So Christ bids vs first to seeke the kingdome of God and the rigteousnes thereof and then when we are in Gods kingdome of grace all things needfull shall be ministred to vs. This discouers the bad practise of most men who begin at a wrong end first with peace in their callings to get honour riches pleasure or preferment neuer seeking first for grace and Gods fauour but if we would haue peace we must first haue grace But men if God blesse them in riches health and wealth they say Oh God loues me but alas we deceiue our selues for we may haue peace yet want grace we may haue this welfare health wealth libertie and yet want grace nay the peace of the wicked is no blessing but a curse And though the Lord giue a man health wealth libertie which be but common blessings he may be out of his grace and fauour seeing the Lord bestowes these common blessings on those which be his enemies Psal. 73. 12. But though the wicked haue all these common blessings they be accursed And though a man had grace the fauour and true loue of God and had no other health wealth nor libertie yet he were most happy and blessed Frō him which is was c. Here he sets down the cause efficient and the author of these two Grace and Peace the Author is God distinguished into three persons the Father Sonne and holy Ghost the Father in these words which is was and is to come the holy Ghost is noted in these words And from the seuen spirits which are before his throne thirdly the Sonne in the fift verse S. Iohn in the first place describes the Father by his true nature in these words Which is was and is to come in which he alludes to that Exo. 3. 14. 15. where Moses demaunds of God if the people should aske who sent him what he should answer the Lord tels him say I am Ehjeh Iehouah hath sent me where are two names to one end namely to expresse the nature of God Now S. Iohn he expounds them here where he saith He which is which was and is to come Further these two names Ehjeh Iehouah be two such names as cannot be translated fully in our English tongue but are more significant in their originall Hebrue tongue for they import thus much Grace and peace be from him which is in himselfe and from himselfe a most perfect and absolute substance which was and which is to come a most absolute perfect simple substance and essence so that he is a nature most simple pure and subsisting in and by himselfe 1. Cor. 8. 4. An idoll is not so it is nothing in and of it selfe but onely in mans braine it hath no subsisting and being of it selfe by nature but by mans art and thus the Lord differs from all false gods seeing he hath his being in and from himselfe not of or by any other thing None other hath this propertie but God By this we see the nature of all creatures which is that though they haue their subsisting and being as mans body and soule yet it is not from themselues but from God not taken out of his essence for then they should be God And the Lord hath no parts as we haue but he makes all things out of himselfe of nothing Seeing then we haue all we haue of God our bodies soules and all we inioy we must in lieu of recompence in thankfulnesse and obedience giue our selues soules and bodies to his seruice to do his will and pleasure The Lord is most absolute and eternall euery way without beginning or ending Angels and the soules of men they be eternall but not as absolutely though they be eternall in that they shall neuer die yet had they a beginning Secondly they are eternall not absolutely but by participation for God made them eternall but the Lord is most absolutely euery way eternall From him which is to come That is to iudgement to iudge all his creatures especially men and Angels That God which is was which hath his being of in and from himself he shall come to iudgement This must we remember and thinke of that he which is God of himselfe and by himselfe which giues vs life and being he shall iudge vs and this will be a meanes to make vs do our dutie in conscience But many men flatter themselues saying God will not come in my time to iudgement but though the Lord come not to generall iudgement in this life yet he will come in particular iudgement by death in this life Thirdly if we would alwayes remember this it would bridle out liues and make vs keepe a good conscience before God and all men Act. 16. 24. And from the seuen spirits which are before his throne These words commonly are expounded of the Angels of God which stand and minister vnto him but it cannot be meant of them for two causes First those which are here called seuen spirits from these grace and peace come but it cannot come from the holy Angels which attend to minister before the Lord. Secondly in this verse which is a benediction or a salutation of Iohn to the Church the seuen spirits are set before Iesus Christ the second person of the Trinitie which cannot be true of the Angels who in no respect can be placed before Christ therfore it cannot be vnderstood of the holy Angels But for my part I vnderstand it thus And from the seuen spirits c. that is from the holy Ghost This exposition is most agreeable to all the circumstances of the text and the holy Ghost is called the seuen spirits first because though he be one in substance yet he is seuen that is many in gifts and operations and for this cause the spirit of God cals himselfe the seuen spirits Secondly he cals him so because he sets downe the Father Sonne and holy Ghost as he saw them
in vision Now S. Iohn saw the holy Ghost in forme of seuen lights in a vision Reu. 4. 5. Which are before the throne This he speakes by comparison taken from earthly kings which fitting in their thrones do there shew their might and maiestie most So S. Iohn he saw God the Father sitting in a throne by vision and Christ at his right hand and before the throne the holy Ghost Hence it followes not that he is inferiour to the Father and to the Sonne but by this comparison and kind of speech S. Iohn sets out the office of the holy Ghost which is to be sent by the Father and Sonne to the Church to enlighten the members thereof and to sanctifie them Seeing that he ascribes grace and peace from God the father and also from the seuen spirits that is the holy Ghost hence we note the holy Ghost is very God for from whom grace and peace proceeds he is perfect and very God We learne that we may direct our prayers to the holy Ghost for to whom grace and peace is ascribed to him we may direct our prayers seeing he can giue grace c. but they be ascribed to him and he can giue them ergo we may pray to him for them There be some which doubt whether we may pray to the holy Ghost but they may aswell doubt whether he be God or not but they say we haue no example Ans. It is false for here we haue an example for though this grace and peace c. be a blessing yet in substance it is a prayer as though he had said O Father Sonne and holy Ghost let thy grace and peace be vpon the Church Which are before the throne of the Father Hence we note the holy Ghost is a substance and a person subsisting not a quality as some Heretikes hold confessing the Godhead of the Father of the Sonne and denying the Godhead of the holy Ghost But here we see for the holy Ghost he is a substance and person subsisting standing before the throne of the Father not a gift or grace proceeding from God but a person distinguished from the Father and the Sonne the Father he sits on the throne the Sonne is on his right hand the holy Ghost distinguished from them both stands before the throne And from Iesus Christ. That is grace and peace from Iesus Christ. Where Christ Iesus is ioyned to the Father and the holy Ghost in bestowing grace and peace on his Church Ob. Why is Christ the second person of the Trinitie placed after the holy Ghost the third Person Answ. For two causes First Christ is considered two wayes first as he is the Sonne of the Father secondly as he is the Mediator of the Church Now as he is the Sonne of the Father he is the second Person in Trinitie and so before the holy Ghost in order Secondly as he is Mediator and so he is after them both the Father and the holy Ghost Esa. 61. 1. The Spirit of the Lord is vpon me hath sent me to preach Where Christ is sent by the holy Ghost to preach as he is Mediator and so as he is sent in that respect he is after the holy Ghost Secondly he is placed after the holy Ghost because the maner of them which pen the Scriptures is to set them in the last place of whom they meane to speake last So Mat. 1. he setting downe the genealogie of Christ from Abraham though in all those there was none more excellent then Christ yet he is in the last place because of order the Euangelist meaning to speak and treat of him he sets him in the last place purposing still to continue his historie of the life and death of Christ. So here S. Iohn he placed Christ in the last place because he purposed to continue his historie in speaking of the death and passion of Christ and other things which concerne him Now what saith he of Christ From this fift till the ninth verse he describes Christ first by his offices secondly by the execution of his offices His offices are three first he is set out by his propheticall office in these words which is that faithfull witnesse secondly by his priestly office the first begotten of the dead thirdly by his kingly office and that Prince of the kings of the earth First his propheticall office First he is a witnesse Secondly a faithfull witnesse Thirdly that faithfull witnesse First he is a witnesse Esa. 55. 4. I gaue him to be a witnesse to the nations In that he is called a witnesse there are signified many duties of his propheticall office as first to reueale the will of his Father secondly to certifie the Church of the certaintie of the same and in these two stand his whole office propheticall First to reueale his Fathers will to the Church is his office for there is none which knowes his Fathers will but he which came from the bosome of the Father and he hath declared it Ioh. 1. 18. And he hath not onely declared his Fathers will since he came in the flesh but from the beginning he reuealed the will and word of God When the Lord rained fire on Sodome Gen. 19. 24. there Iehouah the Father rained downe by Iehouah the Sonne So when the couenant was made to our first parents it was made in Christ the promised seed It was renewed to Abraham and the Patriarkes from the Father by the Sonne as appeared in the bush where Iehouah appeared but 1. Cor. 10. there he is called Christ. The Prophets and the Apostles wrote as they were inspired by Christ they were but his instruments to speake and write that he put into them by the holy Ghost The matter and the stile and phrase of the Scripture all came from Christ. Nay when any particular man comes to vnderstand the Scriptures this is by the working of Christ he opens their eyes He gaue the disciples vnderstanding as they went to Emaus to vnderstand the Scriptures The second duty of Christ is to certifie men of his Fathers will and that in conscience of the certainty of his Fathers will This certification is generall or particular When he certifieth men that the word written or spoken by man out of the word is the word of God neither nature nor learning can do this but it is proper to Christs Propheticall office and for this he saith to his disciples he will send them the comforter which shall leade them into all truth Here we must know first by what meanes he assureth vs secondly the principall cause of this assurance The meanes is the word it selfe The principall cause is the operation of the holy Ghost By this three points are resolued First the Papists aske how a man can come to know that the Scriptures read and taught be the word of God Answ. We must here haue recourse to the word and to the faithfull witnesse and desire
forme and shape Like the son of man Hence some gather that it is not Christ but some Angell which is described but they are deceiued for he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first and the last and he that was first dead then aliue which belongs to Christ alone Like the sonne of man but more significant it is in the originall Like a sonne of man if it be translated The sonne of man then Christ must be vnderstood but in the originall it is A sonne of man according to the phrase of the old Testament where when they would signifie one that was a man they called him A sonne of man that is man like a man in forme and shape Christ is said to be like a sonne of man not that he appeared to Iohn in his manhood for that was in heauen but in a likenesse appearance and resemblance of his manhood and as he doth not appeare here so in no place after his ascension he appeareth in his true manhood Stephen saw the sonne of man stand at the right hand of God Act. 7. but that was in heauen and Paul heard him speake Act. 9. and being rauished 1. Cor. 13. but then also he was in heauen And this Christ doth to a speciall end to shew that whereas men much regard and esteeme his bodily presence as his Apostles and friends did who had too great a desire of it we must not seeke to haue earthly familiaritie with him but we must lift vp our hearts by faith and so haue spirituall familiaritie and acquaintance with him And so he biddeth Mary touch me not being not yet glorified to checke her too much desire of his bodily presence but he would haue her and vs to lift vp our hearts by faith and haue spirituall familiaritie and acquaintance with him in heauen Then hence the defence of consubstantiation and reall presence of the body of Chirst is in the sacrament is but needlesse seeing it is sufficient Christ is present in spirit not bodily any more but we must lift vp our harts to heauen and there for euer liue and rest in him The Papists gather of this in that Christ appeared after his ascension in the appearance and forme of a man that they may make the image of Christ who being God appeared in the forme of a man Secondly the Father who is figured by an old man Dan. 9. and the holy Ghost in the forme of a Doue they hold they may picture thē not in any forme but in that they appeared Answer It is not vnlawfull for vs to haue the pictures of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost as they appeared in forme as Christ in a man the Father in an old man the holy Ghost in a Doue to illustrate and set out the history but we deny and hold it vnlawfull to haue any of them or the picture of Christ if it were to be had to religious vses to put vs in remembrance of Christ to worship God in or at or by it for thus to worship God is flat against the second commaundement Clothed with a garment downe to the feete In these words following is described the garment and attire wherein Christ appeared to Iohn The first part of his attire is a long robe or garment down to the feet He appeared in this kind of garmēt first to shew he was the high Priest of the new testament after his ascension to do the the office of the high Priest because this was one of the garments which the high Priest vsed when he offered sacrifice So Christ hauing offered himselfe on the crosse he is still high Priest for vs to make intercession for vs to his father Secondly he appeared in this kind of attire to shew he is the Prince and King of peace because this long robe and garment is in all nations where it is vsed a signe of peace so Christ hauing this garment is not a King of war but of peace Esay 9. Thirdly to shew he excelled in wisedome and counsell for this garment in all nations which vse it was giuen to them which excell in wisedome and counsell so Christ here is clothed with this long stole and robe to shew that he excelleth in the spirit of wisdome and counsell because the spirit of wisedome is in him without measure Esay 9. 6. Col. 2. Hence for the attire of our body we learne that it must be sutable and answerable to those good things which be or ought to be in our hearts as this garment of Christ to shew he was high Priest secondly that he was King of peace lastly that he excelled in wisedome and counsell So our attire should be such which may signifie the vertues which be in vs as our knowledge obedience sobrietie temperancy humilitie and all the good gifts and graces of God we must not onely shew out the graces of our hearts by word but euen our attire must set out what they be And as we must be candles in teaching and instructing in life and conuersation so we must shine and shew forth the vertues of our heart by our attire But alas our practise is contrary for our apparell is now sutable to all our corruption and vices of our hearts to set out our pride to preach to the world our lightnesse and loosenesse of life the vanity and folly of our heart so that if a man see one go though he neuer be acquainted with him neuer spake to him yet he may know his fondnesse folly loosenesse of life pride and corruption of his heart by his apparell The second part of his attire is that he was girded about with a golden girdle about the breasts which is to shew that Christ was ready prepared to do all the offices of a Mediator for vs for the girding vp of the body the binding of mens apparell to them is a signe of diligence and care to do ones dutie as the not girding of the clothes but to leaue thē loose is a signe of negligēce and carelesnesse Then seeing Christ is girded vp it sheweth he is ready prepared to do the office of a Mediator to all men and so Christ whilest he was on the earth he shewed this he saued all the poore sinners which came to him and since his resurrection he is not negligent but ready prepared girded to do the office of a Mediator to all true penitent sinners This must be a singular comfort to all which haue any sparke of grace that Christ he is ready to attend on them to do the office of a Mediator for them When we be in affliction crosse he is ready prepared at our elbowes to deliuer vs and comfort vs when we be ready to die he is not farre off but stands by vs ready to cary our soules to heauen in all things he is ready to all the workes of a Mediator to helpe vs in all the workes of our saluation Christ he is not like
euer in respect of his manhood for after he ascended into heauen there he liueth in glorie with the Father and holy Ghost because in the manhood of Christ dwelleth the power of the Godhead bodily Colos. 2. The second thing is why he liueth for euer namely that he might giue eternall life to his Church and all his true members God giueth vs eternall life by his Sonne 1. Ioh. 5. 11. and this is the ground of all ioy this that Christ liueth to giue vs eternall life is the foundation of the Church and the ground of our happinesse We must then consider of Christ as a roote he liueth not for himselfe as a roote doth not liue for it selfe but to giue life to all the branches and true members of the Church And we must consider of the manhood of Christ as a common treasurie or storehouse of eternall happinesse therefore Iohn 6. Christ saith My flesh is meat indeed and he which eateth his flesh and drinketh his bloud shall liue for euer shewing that his flesh and manhood hath power to giue life and quicken his true members yet not as considered in it selfe but as the same is ioyned with the Godhead and is the manhood of God and the flesh of God for it hath all this power from God The meanes whereby he giueth eternall life is the mysticall coniunction betweene him his members First God the father giueth Christ to the Church and euery true member of the same as he hath promised to giue him Now he giueth him as he is Mediator of the Church euen whole Christ yet the Godhead of Christ is not giuen of the Father but onely by the operation thereof in the manhood whereby the manhood is made able to satisfie Gods iustice but the manhood of Christ that is really giuen his very substance his flesh and bloud is really giuen to euery beleeuer and the benefits of the manhood also are truly giuen vs as righteousnesse and life eternall as really as lands or goods are giuen to men Now to whom Christ is giuen with him God giueth the Spirit of Christ for Christ and his Spirit come together and this Spirit createth in the heart of a man the instrument of faith by which Christ giuen of God is receiued of vs and we by faith apprehend his bodie and bloud and the merits thereof And we receiue not Christ in imagination or in our braine but euen as God the Father giueth him in the word and Sacraments really and truly And as the spirit of Christ createth in vs faith so it knitteth vs also to Christ our head really though mystically now from this mysticall coniunction betweene Christ the head and vs the members proceedeth eternall life thus First he which is ioyned and knit to Christ in this life and receiueth him he beginneth by this coniunction to liue an eternall life in dying to all his sins and to liue to God to liue as Christ liueth a spirituall life And this I may call the first benefit of our spiritual vnion with Christ. Secondly man thus vnited shall rise to glorie in his bodie And so the second fruite of this mysticall coniunction with Christ is the resurrection of the bodie for this coniunction with Christ after it is begunne it is perpetuall it is neuer broken so that though a man lie in his graue many thousand yeares yet he is thē vnited to Christ is in the graue a mēber of Christ by vertue of this mysticall vnion he shall be raised at the last day As we see the sappe of trees in winter time is in the roote and the branches seeme to die but in the spring when the heate of the Sunne cometh then it creepeth out into the branches and they bud and bring foorth fruite so man hath his winter time in the graue but in the last day because he is ioyned to Christ the roote he shall haue his Sommer and be raised by the power of this mysticall vnion Thirdly man so vnited shall liue euer therefore the third benefite is eternall life and happinesse By this mysticall vnion we shall haue eternall felicitie and euerlasting life in heauen there we must possesse it but it cometh from this mysticall vnion with Christ our head In this life it is begun and is neuer broken in regard of the roote and ground therof but lasteth for euer and by it Christ conueyeth eternall life to vs. In these words Behold I liue for euer Amen is the ground of two maine articles of our beleefe namely of the rising of the bodie and of life euerlasting for Christ he liueth for euer to giue life to vs for euer and this is the ground of our ioy as to Iob I know my Redeemer liueth c. Now doth Christ liue to giue vs life in heauen then we must haue our conuersation in heauen for where Christ is there should be our conuersation because he is the foundation and ground of eternall life to vs. Now that our conuersation may be in heauen we must often and seriously consider of this eternall life purchased to vs by Christ and for this cause he saith Behold I liue and withall as we must consider of it we must haue our affections set on him our ioy reioycing and affiance because Christ liueth that he might keep eternall life for vs. We vse to haue most care to preserue that part wherein life is preserued so seeing Christ is the foundation of our life and the author of it we should haue most care of him Now followeth the third part of the distinction though I was dead yet I haue the keyes of hell and death In these words we must not imagine hell to be a bodily place kept with locke and key as our houses be Nay it cannot be proued out of the Scriptures that it is a bodily place or the punishment of hell in regard of our soule and conscience is bodily seeing it is the sense feeling of Gods wrath and vengeance in bodie and soule therfore it is rather spirituall But Christ here borroweth a comparison from earthly stewards who when they haue any thing committed to them and haue the keyes put into their hands this sheweth they haue power and authority of al. So Christ hath the keyes of hell and death that is power ouer hell and death and dominion of them both As if he had said Though I once was dead in the graue yet now I haue power and dominion ouer hell and death and haue vanquished them both Seeing Christ alone hath power ouer hell and death no creature else properly hath authoritie to forgiue sinne but onely Christ for he which can forgiue sinne must haue power ouer hell and death but he can take away death the punishment of sin and hell the reward of it ergo he alone can forgiue sin Then we see the Priesthood of the church of Rome is full of blasphemie who hold that man called thereunto can properly forgiue sinne
when a man keepeth this promise made in baptisme and performeth this condition to God and stipulation then he is faithfull to God when he breaketh it then he is vnfaithfull 1. Pet. 3. 21. Secondly the Lord he giueth his seruants many graces as faith hope loue repentance c. these he committeth to man to see how he will vse or abuse them 1. Tim. 6. 20. we must labour to keepe them to vse them well and this if we do to Gods glorie and to our owne good then we be faithfull to God else not as if a man commit a thing to be kept by another if he loose it or keepe it not well he is not faithfull to him Be faithfull As if he had said Thou hast made a promise in baptisme to keepe faith and a good conscience and thou hast had many graces promising to vse them well to keepe them in life and death be faithfull in persecutions afflictions keepe faith and a good conscience and then thou artfaithfull Against this dutie three sorts of men offend first they which though they haue made a couenant in baptisme to serue the Lord to keep faith and a good conscience yet liue in ignorance and securitie neuer seeking to know the Lord to vnderstand his will or to obey him yet these will brag of their good meanings though they haue no care at all to please God no care to keepe their couenant made with God and their stipulation in baptisme to him Secondly they which for a good while haue had faith and a good conscience and haue come to serue the Lord yet after long time fall away being entangled with the world with the profits and sinnes thereof and so leaue all and come to breake faith and a good conscience both these are vnfaithfull seruants and their reward if the Lord dealt in iustice with them is destruction and yet all men in a maner be of these two sorts they either liue in ignorance or fall away after a long time The third sort are they which professe a long time liue in faith and good conscience and be earnest professors yet in time of triall and persecution they will leaue all profession of religion to saue themselues Then seeing all these offend we must labour to know God to obey him to keepe his graces bestowed on vs to the end to liue and die in his seruice and to lose our life rather then any one grace which God bestoweth vpon vs. And I wil giue thee the crown of life Here is a reasō to moue thē to go on in persecutiō to be faithful to the end Hēce the Papists gather that a man may merit heauen seeing there is promised a crowne of life Ans. It is called a crowne of life by resemblance for as men in a race first run and after they obtaine the crowne at the end of their race so men must first in this world liue godly run and finish their course after that they haue their crowne in heauen I answer againe this reward is not of the worke but the promise is made to the workers not to the martyredome but to the martyr which hath by suffering death shewed his faith in Christ it is not made to the passion or suffering but to the person suffering not for his suffering but to him as he is in Christ declared to be so by his suffering death So then that promise is not made to the work but to the worker and not for his work but for the worthinesse of Christ in whom he is a true member of the Church The vse then is that if we keepe this promise in Baptisme made before God his Angels and the Church we shall haue the reward of all which is the crowne of life in the kingdome of heauen promised to such as be faithfull to the end Let him which hath an eare heare In these words are the cōclusion or last part of the Epistle Now in these three verses for the most part is a rehearsall of those things which Christ deliuered before in this and in the former Chapter Now seeing Christ the head and Doctor of his Church is most perfect in his doctrines both for matter and maner of deliuering the same seeing he repeateth againe and againe the same things and seeing Peter put them often in mind of their common saluation hence we note that Ministers may often repeate the same doctrine not onely the same matter but in the same maner and words So did Christ the head Doctor of the Church so may we or any preacher preach the same sermon againe in maner and matter not for to ease our selues but for the good and benefite of the Church as Christ seuen times repeateth the same doctrine to the good of the Church and common benefite of all The hearers then if they find the Preacher shall deliuer the same doctrine againe or often they must not find fault for then they might as well find fault with Christ himselfe who not once or twise but often repeated the same words In this eleuenth verse is a conclusion of the Ep●stle to the Church of Smyrna and it hath two parts first a commaundement secondly a promise In the commandement first what is cōmanded secondly to whō The duty commanded is to heare There are two kinds of hearing good and bad Here he requireth good hearing with faith and obedience not naked and bare outward hearing Then we see the true knowledge of the Gospell standeth in hearing with faith and obedience for we know no more then we beleeue and obey if we beleeue and obey nothing we heare and know nothing with sound hearing to saluation The second thing is to whom the commaundement is giuen to them which haue eares to heare for some are deafe some be liuely and hearing hearers They are deafe which heare onely with outward and bodily eares not affected in hart nor chaunged in life by the word they are good hearing hearers which are touched and affected by the word changed and renued in life by the same hauing not onely outward eares of the head but inward bored by Gods spirit in the heart Hence we learne two things first that election is not generall and vniuersall of euery particular man for there is was and shall be euer some deafe hearers Secondly we learne our duty that we must not onely heare the word and lend our outward eares but withall ioyne faith obedience and conuersion in life so heare that we be changed in life and turned to God else our hearing is fruitlesse nay to damnation The third thing is what they must heare What the Spirit saith namely that which is before in the former words deliuered by Christ. The principall things be these first that the Lord seeth and regardeth the tribulations and afflictions of his Church secondly that Gods Church and people being to suffer the crosse and afflictions must forethinke of it and consider of it before
with him in his glory in heauen Ephes. 2. 7. 2. Cor. 6. the Saints shall iudge the world that is shall be witnesses and approuers of Christs sentence not that they shall haue power to giue iudgement but they shall be caught vp first and he giuing sentence they sitting by him shall approue it Secondly he giueth vs this power because he by this inables his in their owne person to ouercome sin the world and their owne corruption By this we see our dignitie euery seruant of God hath power ouer nations ouer the world to rule and breake them in peeces to iudge and condemne them Is this our priuiledge then we had need to take heed of all sinne for we cannot condemne other men of sin and be guiltie of sin our selues For it is a great disgrace for a Iudge to condemne a malefactor of murther or theft and be guiltie himselfe So Christ if we be full of sinne and make no cōscience of it he wil neuer let vs sit to iudge the world with himselfe Then seeing we are Kings Iudges and haue such priuiledges we must looke to our selues Againe this is our comfort in persecution if thou be the child of God thou art a King a Iudge though thou be now poore abused and persecuted yet the time cometh when thou shalt iudge and condemne thy persecutors and be auenged of them And rule the nations as a shepheard ruleth his sheepe that is to gouerne and feed them Iohn 21. Feed my lambes that is feed and rule Hence the Papists gather Peter was the generall Bishop to guide and feed Christs sheepe that is the world but then euery Christian should be a Pope for euery one hath power to rule the nations ouer the whole world but none will say euery one should haue so large authoritie then it is not meant of supremacie Further from this place the Papists gather that Saints be patrons of countries and kingdomes secondly that we may pray to Saints in heauen for say they they haue rule of nations ergo they know them and what they do But they abuse the text for it is not said any Christian shall rule ouer one nation but ouer all indefinitely neither do they rule as Christ but as hauing benefit of his power Again both their collectiōs are bad for by nations here is not meant any country or kingdome but the wicked onely they haue rule ouer not all nations simply but wicked men and vnbeleeuers And I will giue him the morning starre Here is the second benefit promised by Christ to him which ouercometh namely the morning starre with all the benefits which come thereby The morning starre is that starre which riseth before the Sunne some time of the yeare and by heathen men is called Venus which in deed is Christ himselfe Reu. 22. 16. Now Christ is called a star first because he illuminates mens wils and vnderstandings in things belonging to saluation secondly to shew that the prophesie of Balaam Num. 24. is now in the new Testament fulfilled for now Christ hath by his Apostles reuealed himselfe plentifully to all nations Againe he is called the morning starre for speciall resemblance for that starre riseth not at midnight or in the beginning of the night but in the morning in the beginning of the day and then shineth brighter then all the rest So Christ the true morning starre came not in the beginning of the world or in the middest of it but in the latter age he came in the new testament and fulnesse of time and now he reuealeth his will more fully then euer in the old testament 2. Pet. 1. 9. Christ then is called this morning starre for in the old testament they had darknesse and candle light but now Christ shineth out brightly I will giue him Here is a promise of two benefits first perfect illumination and lightning whereby all ignorance shall be dispelled after this life and men shall then so farre know God as mans nature can comprehend The second benefit is the light of glory not onely of knowledge but perfect glory for by fellowship of this glory of Christ we shal be made like Saints and Angels shining starres in the kingdome of heauen Seeing Christ is a starre we see how they be deceiued which liue in sin and ignorance without good conscience in pleasure and securitie and yet they thinke they belong to Christ they haue the true light but such as liue in blindnesse neuer seeking to know Gods will obey him these are in darknesse haue no light in Christ for what fellowship is there betwixt light and darknesse We must follow Peters rule first labour to haue this starre to shine in our hearts which is when we vse meanes to haue the beames of this Sun to shine on vs to get knowledge in the mystery of our saluation by Christ to haue this Sun of righteousnes to lighten our minds and withall to warme and refresh our dead soules as the sun in the spring reuiues all things which seemed dead We must set open the doores of our hearts and entertaine this comfortable light Seeing Christ is the morning starre not that shines in the night but in the morning in the day time we must labor to leade our liues in godlinesse and sobrietie as children of the light Rom. 13. 12. and if we will not walk in this light it shall be taken from vs and we shall be cast into eternall darknesse Let him which hath an eare Here is the second part of the conclusion but of this often before CHAP. III. VERSE 1. And to the Angell of the Church of Sardis c. THIS is the fift particular commandement to Iohn that he should write an Epistle to that great and famous citie of Sardis The Epistle hath three parts first a Preface secondly body or substance thirdly a conclusion First the Preface sheweth in whose name the Epistle was written to giue it the more authoritie It containeth a liuely description of Christ in his kingly office as he is the soueraigne head of his Church and that in two royalties and priuiledges first in that he hath the seuen spirits secondly the seuen starres For the first I shewed what it meaneth chap. 1. vers 4. namely the holy Ghost who is the author of all grace so that to haue the seuen spirits is as much as to say he had the holy Ghost Ob. All Gods seruants haue the holy Ghost therefore that is no peculiar priuiledge of Christ. Ans. True but not in the same maner for Christ had it two wayes first in regard of his Deitie secondly of his humanitie First as he is God he hath in him the beginning of the holy Ghost for the holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Sonne Therefore Christ is said to send the holy Ghost and to worke by him and whatsoeuer he doth in the Church he doth it by him and for that cause Christ is said to haue the seuen spirits
must heare and then be called In this last age only the word is sent to al natiōs it was not so in former ages Againe false it is that God giueth grace generally to all men so that euery particular man hath grace offered to saluation if he wil receiue it but God gaue not the word to all for all haue not heard therefore they could not haue grace The second dutie is to hold fast this signifieth two things first to maintaine the doctrine taught by the Apostles and receiued of them secondly to practise the same in their life but of these before The third dutie is to repent that is though she repented before yet she must restore and renew her repentancce Hence we learne that we must not only begin but often renew our repentance and not onely for great sins but for litle slips and defects in grace as dulnesse of heart want of zeale coldnes in practise of religion c. Now because this Church was ready to die Christ addeth a reason to put life into her if she haue any grace If thou wilt not I will come on thee as a theefe A most terrible threatning if thou wilt not renew thy repentance restore that grace decayed in thee I will come as a theefe sodainly and with speedy destruction that thou shalt haue no time or way to escape it Note here that this threatning is not absolute but with condition and it is the most terrible commination in the whole word of God where Christ threatneth to powre out his whole wrath on a Church so as they shall haue no time or meanes to escape it Then we hauing the same sin that she had being dead in security by reason of our long prosperity we had need of this admonition to moue vs to watchfulnesse to restore Gods graces decayed in vs yet it seemes we make light account of all these things If a man had any sparke of grace this would stirre him vp but if this most fearefull commination will not moue vs then the end of all must needs follow euen the heauy wrath and iudgement of God must lay hold on vs and cast vs into eternall destruction where is no hope of helpe for then a man might haue some comfort if after a long time she should get out but he must liue there for euer without al end of pain when he hath bin there a thousand yeare his paine is still as great and as much nay no end he can haue Then we must awake from our sins repent for our sins our securitie dulnesse and coldnes in religion stirre vp the graces of God in vs shake off our ignorance and that because against these sins Christ giueth out this most terrible and fearefull commination Vers. 4. Notwithstanding thou hast a few names Before Christ had reproued this church of hypocrisie now he commends her for a few which professe his name among them But Christ had said before that the church was dead how then can this be a true church Ans. Though the body of the Church were dead in sin yet a few some of them were true beleeuers and testified their faith in obedience Out of this coherence we haue two instructions to learne first that a particular church and congregation is called a church in regard of the better sort and part and those which beleeue in Christ and haue the priuiledges also in regard of the better part which beleeue for the Catholicke Church is a number of men on earth beleeuing in Christ. Now the particular church is a member of the Catholicke Church so farre as they beleeue in Christ. Those which beleeue not are no part of the true church but as bad humors in the body are no true parts of the body so these are no true parts of the Church Secondly we see a distinction betweene man and man in this church though all be called yet some called be dead some aliue in Christ and continue so Now the cause of this distinction is not from the will of man but from the good pleasure of God Rom. 11. 4. The whole body of the Israelites fell to idolatry yet the Lord had seuen thousand which bowed not the knee to Baal What is the cause of this not the will of man but I haue reserued seuen thousand which haue not bowed to Baal saith the Lord. So then his will and good pleasure is the cause why some stand and some fall So the cause why some in this church of Sardis liued some were dead is because the Lord in his good pleasure left some to themselues and to othersome he gaue his spirit This as before confutes vniuersall grace which derogates much from the grace of God For this why some stand some fall comes from and higher cause euen from the power and will of God which leaueth some to themselues and inableth some to stand by his spirit Thou hast a few names Here is the commendation of the better part of the church there be yet a few persons knowne to me by their names which haue not defiled their garments Here he alludeth to the ceremoniall law for the Lord in the ceremoniall law made a distinction betweene things cleane and vncleane not in themselues but by his appointment Now among the Iewes if a man with his hand or garment touched a thing vncleane he was defiled which ceremony signified to them that they should abstaine not onely from sin but all appearance of euill in that they might not touch any vncleane thing no not with their garments Then here Christ would shew there were sundry in Sardis which did abstain both from sin and all occasions shews and appearances of sin though the body of the church were dead yet many in Sardis made such conscience of sin that they auoided the very occasions of sinne Hence we see that the seruants of God be few in number the bodie of the church is dead in sin but a few be so far frō sin that they defile not their garments that is auoid all occasions of sin Christ prepareth the kingdome of heauen for a litle flocke Esay saith only the best part of the Iewes must be saued the rest hardened and the way to hell is broade and easie and many runne that way the way to heauen is contrary Mark 7. 7. Then seeing the seruants of God be few we must not follow the multitude but this sin carieth many a man to hell and to sin when men desire to do as the most do to liue as the most liue we must rather follow the litle flocke of Christ and not runne after the multitude A few names That is persons knowne to Christ by their particular names they be called names because Christ writeth their names in a bill Then we see Christ knoweth his seruants particularly by their names Luke 10. he knoweth all our haires much more our names Iohn 10. Christ calleth his sheep by their names This is a speciall comfort for
reason of sinne a punishment and in it owne nature a curse And all the hurt that cometh by the creatures whereas they be at enmitie betweene themselues or with men it is a curse for mans sinne And in that they be subiect to vanitie too all is for the punishment of our sinnes Further all losses and damages and crosses whatsoeuer and wants of temporall blessings they are miseries The like we may say of all callings for there is none but it is subiect to griefes and vexations no man can carie himselfe so in any calling but he shall feele some woe and miserie And as in this life so in the end of this life the miserie is bodily death that is a separation of the soule from the bodie which if man had not fallen should haue remained vnseparable This in it owne nature is a fearefull curse for it is the very gate of hell And after this life followeth the full accomplishment of Gods wrath all the miseries in this life are but preparations to that Then cometh destruction endlesse in the place of the damned For this destruction is first a separation from God and excludeth men from all societie with him secondly an apprehension of Gods wrath in the whole man bodie and soule for euer Thirdly it is in the place of the damned with the diuell and his angels therefore this miserie is the summe and accomplishment of all miseries the rest are but beginnings of this Thus you see what mans miserie is Now then considering what is the fountaine of our miserie originall sin what is the nature of miserie namely it is a curse and punishment we see what it is to be wretched and miserable Thou art wretched That is tainted with sinne and subiect to punishment for it in this life in the end of it and after it Now touching this generall point we are to consider the end why Christ saith this And knowest not c. Which is that he might teach them and vs to learne to know our miserie and to feele it and to be touched in conscience for it Whosoeuer shall but lightly reade ouer this Epistle shall see that this is the very end of it for they thought themselues to be highly in Gods fauour when it was nothing so indeed I pray you all therefore which are now assembled here to heare things touching eternall life and the saluation of your soules forsake abandon other conceipts and turne your eyes to this that you may see what be the miseries to which you are subiect and when you see them go further labour that your hearts may be touched that you may euen crie out with the men of Ierusalem What shall we do Till then we shall be like these Laodiceans neither hote nor cold We shall neuer haue true and sound religion in vs till we feele the waight of our miserie I acknowledge that the sight of our miserie is Gods grace but go to the root and seeke that all pride may be expulsed and you may embrace the Gospell which ministreth a remedie for all miserie But thou art miserable This word miserable signifieth one that is worthy to be pitied which he vseth to expresse the greatnesse of their misery meaning that they were so far subiect to misery that they were to be pitied of all men so that this is not added to shew any new thing but to inlarge the former Learne we hence that it is not our dutie to disdaine a sinner that is in misery or to reproch scorn but to pitie him the more grieuous sinner a man is the more he is to be pitied It was Dauids maner so to do 1. Sam 16. and he was so farre from contemning a sinner that he shed riuers of teares Psal. 119. 136. And Ezec. 9. the good man was moued with the bowels of compassion when the people were sinfull The like is in Ier. 9. It was the Corinthians fault when the incestuous man had sinned they were neuer a whit humbled or moued with pitie but puft vp with pride and contempt so that they scorned him and Paul reprooueth it in them And this is a fault in many of vs that men are not humbled when they see other men sinne our hearts are not touched with sorow for it but rather puft vp If we haue receiued more grace then other let vs not despise or scorne them which haue not the like measure Thus much of their misery in generall As for the particulars they are in number three that he might strike their hearts with a sense of their misery he is not content to set it downe in generall termes but enters into particular names three maine miseries of theirs The first word signifieth one so poore that he hath not a rag to his backe nor a bit of bread to put in his mouth more then he gets by begging But here he meaneth spiritual pouertie which what it is we shall best vnderstand when we know what is true riches to wit the grace and fauour of God in Christ for the pardō of sins to life euerlasting So the poore man is he that wants this that hath no good thing acceptable to God who in regard of his soule is as a begger which hath nothing for the maintenance of this temporall life Thus you haue the meaning of this first word Now the end likewise is to be considered why Christ calleth them poore namely that they and we might striue to see our pouertie that we might become poore in spirit for they thought themselues rich therefore Christ to beate downe this conceit and to prepare them to true grace tels them they are poore in regard of grace and life eternall And here we are taught a principall point of religion namely to feele our owne pouertie that we haue no goodnesse in vs and therefore to despaire vtterly of our saluation in regard of our selues This is greatly commended in the Scriptures therefore learne another dutie As we are by nature poore and haue no goodnesse in our selues so labour to see it and to be out of heart with our selues that is to be poore in spirit otherwise you may come to church heare the word receiue the sacraments but neuer haue saluation or haue spirituall blessings except you be first acquainted with your poore estate that you are very beggers nay more plaine bankerupts for so Christ taught vs to pray Forgiue vs our debts therfore Christ tels the proud Church of her pouertie Happie and blessed were our state and condition if we could learne this and lay aside our pride for we are so poore that we must pleade nothing but pardon no merit or satisfaction If we did this then would we esteeme aright of the Gospell and haue some comfort by it Now because we haue not this we do not embrace the Gospel heartily and chearfully as we ought Cary therefore away this lesson with you that the beginning of all grace is to feele the want
owne kind as if he should say You are a people exercised in buying and selling and are delighted with nothing more therefore come I haue wares for you of sundrie sorts gold garments and eye-salue buy of me Then the word buy must not be vnderstood properly for so we can buy nothing of Christ but all is giuen vs. This is said onely by way of resemblance and I will shew wherin it standeth The principal things in bargaining are these first a man that is to buy seeth his want desireth to haue it supplied secondly he cometh to the place where it may be had calleth for it looketh on it and liketh it thirdly he maketh the price and value of it he cheapeneth it fourthly he giueth money for it or moneys worth and so buyeth it fiftly if it be a great summe he giueth earnest in hand So by a certaine proportion and resemblance there is a kind of bargaining between vs and Christ. For a man must feele himselfe to stand in need of Christ and of his merits and so see his owne want and miserie For because men see want of bread meate drinke and cloth in their houses therefore they go to buy of the baker brewer butcher and draper c. Well then looke how sensibly a man feeleth the want of these things so euidently should we feele our want of Christ and his merits And as the feeling of our want is the beginning and occasion of our going to buy so it should be in this our merchandise Againe we should hunger and long after Christ. As a buyer taketh liking of and longing for that he wanteth and is thereby stirred vp to buy so besides the sense of our want we should hunger and thirst after Christ. Besides we must prize Christ at so high a rate that we count all things else as drosse and doung as Paule counted most excellent things no better we must value him aboue ten thousand worlds Lastly we must make an exchange How seeing we can giue him nothing but his owne therefore he saith Come buy without money Simon Magus would haue bought him for money and was deceiued Yet there must be an exchange we must giue him all our sinnes and receiue his righteousnesse See here a most blessed exchange for our shame and confusion we haue Christs righteousnesse and his merits How Thus when we begin to humble our selues and pray for remission and reconciliation then this change is made Though we can giue him no earnest yet he giueth vs earnest What is that It is some portion of Gods spirit some small measure of his grace that is our earnest that we shall haue the kingdome of heauen And thus heauen is bought and sold betweene Christ and vs. When the heart mourneth for sin and praieth for pardon and purposeth to sin no more this is the worke of Gods spirit in vs and the earnest of our eternall saluation in heauen Be our graces neuer so few or small it is a sufficient earnest as a penie is for a bargaine of a hundred pound Seeing all these things concurre to the receiuing of Christ therefore he calleth it bargaining So this point is plaine how this spirituall bargaine is made and why it pleaseth Christ to terme it so Now we see that we are commaunded this dutie but how stands the case with vs Surely though many come to Church few make that bargaine which is mentioned we are like passengers by sea which see many goodly buildings fruitfull lands soiles and sumptuous cities but they make no purchase of them so we come and heare the word but where is the partie that makes this bargaine with Christ Come to particulars I appeale to all your consciences who almost feeleth or seeth his owne want and miserie Men can soone see the want of necessaries in their houses but this they cannot see And as for the desire of Christ and longing for him there is none When you are drie or hungrie you can say you are drie and hungrie but who saith I thirst for Christ If we looke to our estimation of Christ we are plaine Gadarens and of Esawes mind we set more by a messe of red pottage and esteeme the basest things aboue Christ and his merits nay we are loth to part with our sins and to take his righteousnesse we will rather keep them stil then change for the better Who taketh Christs righteousnesse and declareth it by fruites We can be content to loade Christ with our sins but we wil not be loden with his righteousnes Is this a good change No it is not Euery man can say he must rise betimes which shall go beyond him in base and earthly bargaines but who hath regard of this excellent and heauenly bargaine Then to conclude I pray you al make this bargaine with Christ and do it presently let it be your first worke You are carefull to put your children to good trades and you do wel but be as carefull that they may make this bargaine and you shall do much better This is the cheapest and the best bargaine that euer was made it will make you and yours rich for euer as for other bargaines many cannot get them and many loose them when they haue gotten them this onely is durable Verse 19. As many as I loue c. We haue heard a sharp reproofe and as sharp a threatning by which because they might take occasion to doubt and despaire of Gods mercie and fauour in Christ Iesus therefore now he takes away all occasion in the 19. and 20. verses First thus If I vse to rebuke and chasten all that I loue then you need not doubt of my mercie albeit I rebuke and threaten you so This I take it is the proper occasion of these words Now see the meaning I loue Christ loueth the creatures two wayes first as a Creator secondly as a redeemer As he is a Creator he loueth them with a generall and common loue whether the creatures be reasonable or vnreasonable As Redeemer he loueth them with a speciall and peculiar loue not cōmon to all but to that part of mankind onely which is elected and chosen to saluation And of this last loue he speaketh here as if he should say As many as I loue communicating with them my righteousnes and life eternall I rebuke The word hath a larger extent and signification first to conuince one of a fault and then to checke or reproue the person and it cannot well be rendred in one English word And chastice that is with such a kind of correction which a father vseth to his child which is called nurture to breake a child of his fault and to teach him obedience and so it is vsed Prouer. 3. 12. whence this text is borrowed The meaning then briefly is this All those persons whom I loue I conuince of their particular faults and rebuke them and like a louing father I chastise them and nurture them to breake them of their vices