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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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to behold THE fift and last thing concerning the testimony of the Prophets is the successe of their enquiry and diligent search and that in generall is that they were answered and resolved of God Now in the Lords answer there are two things to be observed 1. The manner how God gave his answer that is to say by Revelation To whom it was revealed 2. The matter of the answer which stands here of two parts The first concernes the persons the second concernes the things promised of God The persons are considered both negatively and affirmatively Negatively the Prophets were resolved that they themselves were not the men whom those Oracles concerned Affirmatively they were told that those things which they prophesied of they did minister unto us Christians Thus of the persons Now the things promised or prophesied of are not onely propounded but commended and further described and that two wayes 1. By the glory of their efficient causes and those are either lesse principall namely the Apostles and other Ministers of the Gospel or more principall namely the holy Ghost sent downe from heaven 2. By the adjunct respect of the Angels in heaven who are said to desire to look unto those things that are thus treasured up in the Arke of the Church Now from the coherence and generall consideration of these words we may be assured of this generall doctrine that such as diligently seek unto God shall be satisfied and resolved and answered God is no accepter of persons he that resolved the Prophets will answer us also it is an unchangeable order of promise such as seeke shall finde such as aske shall have such as knock shall be opened unto Mat. 7.8 yea he saith every one that asketh c. yea it is certaine that God will make this good unto the diligent use of every one of his ordinances as Prayer Esay 30.19 Ioel 2.19 Ier. 33.3 Reading Iob. 5.29 Hearing Esay 56.3 Mich. 2.7 Conference Esay 19.24.25 The use is first for confutation of their wretched Atheisme that scorne Gods ordinances as bare and empty actions but if there were no more to commend them then what this doctrine assures it might sufficiently censure them for their just contempt For in these and every of these the Lord meeteth his servants and doth as it were by a heavenly entercourse conferre with his people and familiarly make himselfe knowne unto them as one man is knowne unto another by conversation or his name therefore are they called his name in the third commandement 2. Secondly we should be incouraged in all distresses and doubts and ignorances to have recourse unto God and in all humility and constancy and faith to seeke unto him in the name of Christ who was ever knowne to be a Councellour unto his people but then let me adde this that wee looke to our selves when we come unto God for there are divers men whom God will not answer or if hee doe it is in justice as Mich. 3.7 Zach. 7.11 Ezech 20.3.31 But what must we doe that God might answer us 1. First we must be such as will answer when God calls else it is just we should call when God will not a●swer Zach. 7.11 2. Secondly when ever we receive a●swers from God wee must be sober and humble and take heed of swelling and pride else the Lord in freed of feeding u● with revelation may buffet us by the messengers of Sathan 2 Cor. 12.17 ● Thirdly we must take heed of security and spirituall sleepinesse for that will silence God and not answering may be iustly the scourge of it or else the Lord may permit the watchmen in stead of comfort to smite us with their words of reproofe and discouragement Cant. 5.6 7. 4. Fourth●y we must take heed of Idols in our hearts beloved sinnes For then either the Lord will not answer at all Ezech. 20.31.3 or he will give u● bitter a●swers Ezech. 14.3,7 or he will make our sins answer against us Esay 59.12 or his creatures as instruments of iudgements shall answer us Heb. 2.11 or if when our sins doe answer against us the Lord yet do heare it is meerely for his names sake Ier. 14.17 yet meere infirmities are no hinderances Rom. 11.4.3 5. Fiftly wee must bring a mind that will give glory to God without limiting God or daring to neglect or contemne Gods answers an instance of Gods indignation at such as will inquire at God what to doe and yet take their owne course i● evident Ier. 23.35,36 6. We must carefully distinguish betweene answers of tryall and direct answers Paul received an answer of death 2 Cor. 1.9 but yet he died not at that time The Lord will reserve the glory of absolute infallibility to his word As for private and secret revelations they are not alway to be infallibly trusted unto but such inward answers as have warrant from some promise of the word such are infallible but such could not Pauls sentence of present death be Thus of the generall viz. that God will answer Now the first thing in particular is how they were answered viz. by revelation Vnto whom it was revealed God answers divers waies For at some times extraordinarily hee hath given men their answers in dreames Mal. 2.12 sometimes by his Angels to men awake Act. 10.22 sometimes by the extraordinary revelation of the holy Ghost as Luke 2.26 Ordinarily also God answers more waies then one as sometimes by his works by giving what we desire of him sometimes by his word directing or comforting us sometimes by his Spirit especially in time of private prayer The first is by operation the second by information the third by consolation but here it is by revelation Againe Revelation is either uncreated or created There is an uncreated Revelation which is infinite and such is that which the Father reveales to the Son from all eternity The created Revelation hath three degrees 1. Imperfect 2. Perfect 3. And most perfect The most perfect revelation is in Christ-man in whom are all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge The perfect revelation is in Angels and blessed soules in heaven the imperfect is in men on earth The revelation vouchsafed to men on earth is either ineffectuall or effectuall The ineffectuall is a revelation not availeable to salvation such is that revelation which may befall wicked men For they may prophesie as is granted Mat. 7. But I call this revelation ineffectuall because they may be Castawaies for all this But properly Revelation is the heritage of the Saints For in them onely it is effectuall and thus the Lord doth grant revelation in two degrees 1. Sometimes it is such an illumination as works a full assurance sometimes it is an illumination that works onely a perswasion In weak Christians the work of the spirit of revelation is perswasion but in strong Christians it is full assurance Unto the revelation of full assurance I refer also these revelations of the Prophets
endure to be under the rule and authority of their husbands in this world for that estate of inferiority shall not last ever for in heaven God shall be all in all they shall be ruled by God and the Lambe Thus from the Coherence The first thing to be observed about the dignitie of Christians in generall is That they are heires Heires The doctrine is That all true Christians are heires Now for the opening of this doctrine two things must be considered 1. How they come to be heires 2. What their glory is in being so For the first Christians are not borne Heires I meane not heirs to God as is intended in this place but have it by the grace of adoption God hath but one Heire by generation and that is Christ all his other heires are by adoption such as hee chooseth of his meere Grace and makes them his heirs Now the mysterie of our adoption must be considered of in this manner A Christian by the Gospel is made a believer Now saith after an unspeakable manner engrafts him into the body of Jesus Christ Now being engrafted into Jesus Christ who is Gods Sonne hee thereby comes to the power to bee the Sonne of God and to be an heire with Christ. Christ is Gods Heire and so is all that is grafted upon Christ Ioh. 1.12 Now there is a double adoption the one imperfect in this life the other perfect which wee shall have after the Resurrection of the dead By the one wee have the promise of inheritance and by the other we shall have full possession Of the first is mention made Rom. 8.15 and the other Rom. 8.23 the first adoption is meant here For the second Adoption is called a glory by an excellence because there is no glory like to it even the adoption to be heires as it is in this life is the greatest glory in the world Now the glory of our adoption may appeare to be very great if we consider 1. By whom we are adopted viz. God If is be such a glory to be the Heire to any great Prince in the world what a surpassing glory is it to be the Sonne and Heire of God Rom. 8.17 and that if we respect either the excellence of God who is the King of all the earth and a●ove all kings or his eternitie he is such a Father as lives ever Hos. 1.10 An everlasting Father Esay 9.6 Other fathers that adopt may die before they passe the estate or at the best it is a kind of infelicity to enjoy the inheritance without the presence and love of the Father But not so here 2. The great price was laid downe to make us capable of this honour to be Gods Heires viz. the blood of Christ. There was never so much paid for all the inheritances in the world besides Gal 4.4 5. Heb. 9.14 15. 3. The great things we are heires to which I will but briefly touch here we are heires not only to all our eyes can see but to all things our hearts can thinke of Wee shall inherite the earth Mat. 5.5 Wee shall bee heires of the world Rom. 4. God will give us all the world yea we shall inherite eternall life as is to be shewed afterwards yea we are coheires with Christ Rom. 8.17 And what would we aske more 4. The great priviledges which Gods adopted children doe enjoy even in this life as 1. They have within them the spirit of Christ in their hearts therefore called the spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 16. Gal. 4.6 The spirit of Christ I say to drive away regall terrours and to testifie to their spirits that they are the sons of God and that he hath adopted them to heaven and to make them able to treat with God as a Father by affectionate prayer and as other Scriptures shew to lead them into all truth and to be the guide of their lives to tell them when they goe our either on the right hand or on the left And lastly to be their continuall comforter Iohn 16. Esay 30. 2. By the right of their adoption in Christ both their persons and their works are accepted before God so as they stand alwayes high in Gods favour howsoever they are entertained in the world Eph. 1.6 3. They have a name and honour shall never be taken from them an everlasting name no preferment so high as theirs Esay 56.4 5. And this is the greater priviledge because no meannesse or contemptiblenesse of condition on earth can bar them from the enjoying of this prerogative as the coherence of that place shewes 4. They have the Angels of heaven to attend them God shewes by that that he will have them looked unto as his sons and heires Heb. 1. ult 5. They may aske whatsoever they will of God and are sure to have it that may get any suit of God and he is so far from not granting that he rather complaines that they will not aske him often enough Iohn 16.23 6. If at any time they fall into distresse they have such interest in Gods speciall providence that a haire of their heads shall not fall to the ground without the providence of their heavenly Father And besides God will make himselfe marvellous in their deliverance if all worldly helps faile Esay 43.18 19 20 21. 5. If we consider the wonderfull maner of their communion with Christ and that foure wayes For first we have communion of nature with him and that by his Incarnation for he tooke our nature and so became our Brother And this doth nothing at all belong to Reprobates because Christ tooke not nature polluted with sin Heb. 2.14 Ye● we have communion with him in his divine nature as that nature doth dwell graciously in us and we are made like unto it 2 Pet. 1.4 Secondly they have communion of state with him which the Scripture acknowledgeth as a great mysterie for so they are said to live with him to suffer with him to die with him to be buried with him yea to rise with him to ascend to heaven with him and to sit together with him Eph. 2. yea to judge the world with him only preserving the difference betweene the head and the members in all this Thirdly they have communion of offices with him for he hath made them Kings and Priests with him The oile that was poured on his head hath run downe upon his members Rev. 1.5 6. so that Gods heires are all Kings and Priests A royall nation and a kingdome of Priests 1 Pet. 2.10 Fourthly they have communion in benefits with him for God as a Father hath blessed them in him with all spirituall blessings in heavenly things Ephes. 1.3 Communion they have with him in grace in this life and in glory in the life to come Lastly if we consider the assurance that Christians have given them for their right of adoption for first they have an Act for it in Gods eternall councell Eph. 1.5 Men that have an Act of
This imports that he shall not be known in the day of Christ oh how wofull will that sentence be when he shall say away from me ye workers of iniquity I know you not Mat. 7.27 Hitherto of the foundation The founder followes who is described by what he is himselfe viz. God and what he is to us viz a Father Of God To be elect and knowne before others is a great benefit but to be chosen of that dreadfull and immortall being and that when nothing was must needs adde to this prerogative If God choose them it matters not who refuse them If God know them it matters not who is ignorant of them If God honor them it matters not who disgrace them He that fo●nded our election in his owne eternall praesc●e●●e is ●ee that founded this earth and spread over it this great heaven Iehovah Elo●im is his name and spirituall incomprehensible immortall infinite almighty is his nature The immense fountaine of all love mercy holinesse justnesse goodnesse wisdome and bounty It is he that before guided the wayes of eternity as he now doth of times What God hath done in time is done that we might know and praise him but what he did before time is without our measure and as it commeth neerer to Gods nature so it goeth farther from our apprehension at least till we be glorified in heaven But this is a sea over which no ship hath failed a Mine in which no spade hath delved an Abyssus into which no buck●t hath ●unke our sight is too tender to behold this sunne our understanding too finite to comprehend this glorious and infinite being and therefore I passe from what hee is in himselfe to consider what he is to us The Father God is Father to Christ to Angels to Men To Christ he is Father by nature as he is God and by personall union as he is man To Angels hee is father by creation and to faithfull men by adoption As hee is father to Christ I consider of it ver 3. here onely as he is father to the faithfull God hath an everlasting fatherly care and compassion over the faithfull and elect and this may serve for three sorts of uses 1. For consolation to the godly God useth them and ever will use them like a Father both for the affections of a father and for the provisions of a father he both loves them and provides for them as a father for his children Gods affection to the godly is a fatherly affection for it is 1. free and 2. tender and 3. constant 1. A fatherly love is a free love there needs no argument to a father but that this is my childe so it is with God 2. A fatherly love is a tender love it hath much compassion and care in it such is Gods love to the godly Looke how Parents pitty their children so doth God pitty them that feare him Psal. 103.13 yea God is troubled in their troubles and his bowels are turned in him in their discouragements and griefes Esay 63.8 Ier. 31.18 19. 3. A father still loves his childe so doth God and much more then all fathers or any of them For he loves with an everlasting love Esay 49.14 and is called an everlasting father Esay 9.6 Adde unto these that a father will love his childe though no body else doe so can God love us though he love alone Though naturall fathers and kindred forsake us Psal. 27.5.10 and spirituall fathers forget us Esay 63.16 17. yet God will never cease to love us hee will never leave us nor forsake us Onely we must ever remember that Gods love is a pure love For it hath not in it hurtfull indulgence he will not marre his children with too much fondnesse He can hide his face and though he will never take his mercies from them yet if they sinne he will scourge them with the rod of men he will afflict them though it be but for a short time Psal. 89. Esay 67.7 8 9. As is the affection of God so is his provision for the godly a fatherly provision he provides for them like a father yea like a heavenly father in their 1. attendance 2. dyet 3. preservation in trouble and 4. portion 1. For their attendance he provides for them better then the great men of the earth can doe for their children He hath given his Angels to bee ministring spirits to all these heires of salvation and these pitch their tents round abo●t them Psal. 34. Heb. 1.14.2 And for dyet they are fed with the food that perisheth not yea such food as he that eateth thereof shall live for ever John 6.27 3. And for preservation in trouble the power of God doth so keepe them that a haire of their heads cannot fall to the ground without the providence of their heavenly father Mat. ●● and ●o that 〈◊〉 all the haires of their head are numbred and the spirit of God is given them to teach them to comfort them and uphold them 4. And for portion he hath blessed them with all spirituall blessings ìn heavenly things and since the earth was forfeited into Gods hands againe he hath restored the inheritance of the earth to none as is the opinion of many learned but to them Other men hold without any title from God Ephes. 1.3 Esay 45.11 17 18 19. and in the world to come they shall shine as the starres of heaven and as the sun in the firmament Mat. 13.43 Ob. But God hath so many sonnes of this kinde how can hee provide for them all Sol. Our hearts are not troubled for that we beleeve in God and beleeve in Christ also In our fathers house there are many mansions if it had not been so Christ would have told us and he is gone before to make our places ready for us John 14.1 2. Ob. But they have so many adversaries without and within that there is great danger lest they be pulled out of their inheritance Sol. God that hath begotten them and given them to Christ is greater then all no man can plucke them out of his hands John 10.29 Object But they are for the most part a people of many and those continuall wants there is scarce any moment wherein they want not something and therefore must either be uncomfortable in themselves or burthensome to God Sol. Whatsoever they aske the father he will give it them It is no trouble to God to receive Petitions from them continually he delights in it and rather blames them for asking so seldome and so little Iohn 16.23 Ob. God himselfe plagues them with troubles as much or rather more then he doth other men Sol. The fathers of our flesh correct us and shall not the father of spirits do it and the rather if we consider that he shewes his love therein a man will correct his owne son more then another mans and he doth correct us for our profit that
diligence There are three sorts of men Sathan doth in the Church bewitch 1. The first are they that will take no paines at all nor trouble themselves to study about their religion and what belongs to their soules 2. The second are they that though they will take some paines and study diligently yet it is in by-studies as matters of controversie or the generall knowledge of religion or matter that may fit them for discourse or the like 3. Now a third sort there are that will not be drawn aside from the needfullest studies as are repentance assurance order of life c. but their fault is that they study not these diligently For they soone give over and finish not their works either of mortification or sanctification or illumination or preparation for salvation And thus much of the 10. Verse Verse 11. Searching when or what manner of time the Spirit which testified of Christ which was in them c. THe particular subiect of their inquiry was to have found the time of those glories the holy Ghost foretold should follow the sufferings of CHRIST Foure sorts of men have inquired about times and the manner of times For there is the observation 1. of the curious 2. of the weak 3. of the superstitious 4. of the wise 1 Curious men search into times prohibited and restrained from them They inquire what God did before he made the world and in what yeare and day Christ shall come to Iudgement with such like 2 The weake Christian many times is too busie about time as in his distresse his thoughts runne about the time of his deliverance and with impatience he asks How long when hee ought not to limit God but live by faith and leave the time unto God 3 The superstitious are imployed in observing time such were the Galathians of whom Paul was afraid This was their humour they did observe dayes and times not commanded of God but prescribed and kept afoot by the inventions of men 4 Now in the last place the wise observe time and thus they observe time necessarily or arbitrarily Necessarily they observe the seasons and opportunities of Gods grace and so not to observe time is a great offence Ier. 8.7 Luke 9. Mat. 16.3 Arbitrary they enquire after time as the circumstance of some great things wherein there appeareth some glory of God and good to the soule Thus the Prophets here enquire about the time of Gods manifestation of the great grace he promised to the Church Three things may be noted out of these words 1 That the times and seasons of all things are known unto God else the Prophets would not have searched but that it was a received principle that all the times of all things are set and knowne to God 2 That the Lord is many times loth to discover the precise time of his mercy as for a long time he would not let it be known when Christ should come so it was ab●ut the calling of the Gentiles and so it is about the time of our going to heaven For if it should be farre off men would grow the more impatient with their present condition and by this meanes God tries the faith and patience and obedience of his people and thus are blessings more admired and welcome when they doe come and by works of preparation the happinesse of the Elect is greatly furthered But is it not uncomfortable to be ignorant of the time when God will shew his mercy It is not for 1 The time is infallibly set by God 2 The Lord hath chosen and appointed the fittest time 3 The Lord is precise in keeping his time 3 The third Observation is that when the circumstance of time is not of absolute necessitie for our good to be knowne we must be sober and temperate and enquire with all humilitie we may learne this of the Prophets about salvation it selfe they are said to enquire diligently but about the time it is barely said they searched Thus of the third thing 4 The fourth thing is the Occasion which was an inspiration of the holy Ghost which testified of Christs sufferings and strange glories should follow after So that the efficient cause of the inspiration was the holy Ghost which was in them The finall cause was to testifie or beare witnesse The subject matter of this inspiration was twofold 1 Of the sufferings of Christ. 2 Of the glories should follow The Spirit that was in them Note that he saith not the Spirit of God but the Spirit of Christ so the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of the Sonne Gal. 4.6 He may be called the Spirit of Christ because he is given by Christ and because he is given to the members of Christ and because he should be especially manifested in the times under Christ and because it did especially reveale Christ and chiefly because it was essentially ioyned unto Christ and did proceed of Him and the Father from all eternitie Now for the use hereof Here is both Information and Consolation We may be informed here that the doctrine of the Trinitie was not unknowne in the Church of the Jewes in that we see that the Spirit of God was called the Spirit of Christ. As for that place in Act. 19. where some say they had not heard whether there were a holy Ghost or no It is to be understood of the extraordinary gifts of the holy Ghost which at the time of the conversion of many did fall upon them and not of the nature of the holy Ghost This doctrine also may comfort us greatly for whereas it it the office of the holy Ghost to mortifie the deeds of the flesh to lead us into all truth to be a comforter to beare witnesse unto our spirits to help us when we know not how to pray as we ought c. This doctrine I say may greatly incourageus to beg the holy Ghost and to beleeve our help therein seeing hee is sent of Christ and is at his disposing that dyed for us and gave himselfe for us how shall he not then give us his holy Spirit also if we aske it of him Further hence we may note that the Spirit of God is the onely immediate fountaine and originall of all Prophesies concerning times and things to come The Oracles of the Gentiles were but eyther delusions under ambiguous sentences or but coniectures or else when they did foretell aright they were permitted of God for the further hardning of the people eyther from Scripture or other revelation to foretell As for the Sibyls that prophesied of Christ c. it is no absurditie to grant that they were stirred up by the holy Ghost to prophesie of Christ among the Gentiles c. Verse 12. Vnto whom it was revealed that not unto themselves but unto us they should minister the things which are now shewed unto you by them which have preached unto you the Gospell by the holy Ghost sent down from heaven the which things the Angels desire
of Christ. Oh might some Minister think I shall never rule such a people or perswade with them yet you see God will put his Spirit in their mouth and men shall not be able to withstand the Spirit by which they speak he will give a doore of utterance and secretly bow mens hearts unto the obedience of the truth Secondly the consideration of this second doctrine may instruct us how to order our selves towards the meanes of salvation and so it may teach us 1. not to rest in the act done we m●y heare the best Sermons and receive the Sacraments c. yet if wee beg not the assistance of the Spirit all may be in vaine if we heard Christ himselfe yet it may not profit us 2. To beleeve in God when wee carefully use the meanes how unlikely soever the successe seeme to be God can work by the meanes as pleaseth him notwithstanding infi●mit●e● either of the teacher or hearer 3. To render all the praise to God and his h●ly Spirit in the mediation of his Son seeing thence flowes all blessing and good successe as being the onely originall fountaine of all holinesse and knowledge Thirdly in that the holy Ghost in the primitive times did so visibly fall upon the Apostles and the Disciples it may serve for divers uses 1. To confirme u● in the truth of the Gospell since the prophesies were therein so accomplished and the doctrine of Christ crucified so miraculously sealed 2. It may ●u●ble us that wee cannot see the glory of the Scriptures seeing they proceed from such a fountaine 3. It may make us in love with the Scriptu●es since they were penned by men so miraculously qualified by the holy Spirit of God 4. It may assure us of incredible successe if wee could stir up the holy Ghost in us we might get wonderfull knowledge and grace if we did strive in these times of the Gospell For though that manner of presence be cea●ed yet God is no respecter of persons but the Spirit of God now by lesser means is able to produce the same effects in the hearts of men in what is necessary to salvation For of these times it is that was spoken Ier. 31.33 to spare i●stances in other things 5. Lastly it may confirme us against the scornes and disgraces of the world by which men every where dishonor the knowledge and practice of the holy things brought to us with the Gospell These things that so many deride came to us from the holy Ghost who came downe from heaven to propound and conferre them up●n the Church Sent downe It is to be noted further that he saith that the holy Ghost was sent For from thence 1. I observe an evident proofe that the holy Ghost is a person distin●t from the Father and the Son 2. Hence ariseth the consideration of the nature of this mission Mission is a● att●●bute given here to the holy Ghost Now divine att●●bute are either essentiall or personall Essentiall are such proprieties as equally belong to all the persons in respect of the essence as to be wise just mercifull holy c. Personall attributes are such proprieties as are given onely to the persons apart the one from the other do note a difference of the persons as to beget to be begotten to send forth to be sent forth to proceed to conceive c. Now these personall attributes may be distinguished also thus Some are proper to each person alone so in one as not in any other as to beget in the Father to be begotten in the Sonne to proceed in the holy Ghost some of these attributes are common to two of the persons but not to the third as proceeding in the holy Ghost is both from the Father and the Sonne so to send forth is the attribute both of the Father and Son so likewise to receive is common to the Son and to the holy Ghost so that we see whither mission must be referred Yet to make it more cleere we must understand that there is a double sending forth the one internall the other externall Internall when the Father and the Son cause the holy Ghost to proceed Externall when the Father and Son send forth the holy Ghost for outward operations amongst the Creatures especially in the Church and thus the holy Ghost is sent forth by the Father Ioh. 14.16 and by the Son Ioh. 15.16 of this mission is that speech Gal 4.7 3. Here may be a doubt might some one say Doth not this mission of the holy Ghost expresse an inequality with the Father and the Son It doth not For 1. it is not alwaies true that he that is sent forth is inferiour to him that sent him For Ionathan may send David and David send Ionathan and yet be both equall Commission may import inferiority not mission or if it did hold amongst men yet it is not true in the Trinity 2. This word is used for want of words metaphorically to shadow out something above our reach For it doth not note either a servile subjection or a locall motion but it is used to expresse either some effect of his working or some signe of his presence so that the meaning is the holy Ghost was sent that is he wrought some notable effect on earth or shewed that he was present by some signe Now for some use of this sending of the holy Ghost we may in this doctrine observe 1. That to be sent of God is no disparagement unto us hee sent his owne Spirit 2. We may here note some things wherein wee may resemble and expresse the image of the holinesse of the Trinity in us Would we live together as the three persons in the Trinity doe Then 1. we must live without envie one at another 2. Wee must not think much to be imployed one by another or to be advised and appointed in well doing 3. The salvation of the elect should be dearer to us then any respect of our selves or our owne estate we must not seek our owne things The holy Ghost repines not at his mission and the Father thinks not his Son and Spirit too good to be sent unto us As we grow in these things so we more expresse a likenesse to the Trinity Downe from heaven Something may be noted in that the holy Apostle addeth that hee was sent from heaven 1. It imports what this world is it is but a place of misery and to come into it is to come downe 2. It expresseth what heaven is it is the place of Gods residence the place where God dwels the Palace of the great King as Princes have their Palaces so hath God and as a Princes palace differs from a cottage so doth heaven from earth The Use should be to inflame our affections towards this holy place oh how should wee lo●g to see where God dwels what natures have wee to long to see the courts of Princes and yet cannot long after the courts of our
of some Rom. 11.25 30 31. For the wind blowes where it 〈◊〉 and the spirit of Christ workes where and when it pleaseth him Iob. 3. and we have nothing but what we have received Secondly we should be exceeding thankfull to God for his rich grace in our calling and the rather First because this is no common favour but in speciall grace communicated to us For no man commeth but whom the Father draweth Secondly because it was done without respect of our owne workes without all desert on our part 2 Tim. 1.9 For God called us that were worldly carnall naturall and sinfull men strangers from the life of God dead in sins serving lusts and diverse pleasures yea such as never sought God wee were miserable sinners Ephes. 2.1 12. Mat. 13. Thirdly because of the meanes and manner of our calling God the Father worketh his part and I worke saith our Saviour An excellent worke when such workmen are needfull to it and in this worke the ministration of the Spirit exceeds in glory 2 Cor. 3.7 8. and it is a holy calling wherewith he hath called us 2 Tim. 1.9 Fourthly because they are so great happinesses to which he hath called us As to the fellowship of his Sonne to be sons and heires with him 1 Cor. 1.7 and to a Kingdome and so great glory 1 Thess. 2.12 2 Thess. 2.14 Fifthly because Gods gifts and calling are without repentance Hee will never repent that hee hath so called us Rom. 11.29 Esa. 54.7 8 9 10. Iam. 1.17 And thus of the second way by which we should shew our selves desirous to walke worthy of our calling Thirdly we should shew this by well doing wee must be carefull to maintaine good workes Tit. 3.8 For we were called that we might serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of our life Luk. 1.74 75. Fourthly we should therefore live contentedly when wee are assured of the worke of Christ in calling us with such a calling Iacob should not now be ashamed nor his face waxe pale Esa. 29.23 24. Fifthly we should in our particular be carefull to rest where we are in the doctrine we have learned and beene taught and not bee carried about with every wind of doctrine Eph. 4.11 12 14. Thus as the uses are common to the godly in generall Thirdly Ministers in particular from the consideration of this doctrine of our calling by Jesus Christ should learne to preach Christ and him crucified and to deny the excellencie of wisedome or words that mens faith may bee in the power of Christ It is Christ must give them increase they should learn of Paul 1 Cor. 2.2 4 5. One thing by the way I might note concerning the time of our calling we should not bee curious about that to know the day or houre when it was but we must rest satisfied to know that we are the called of Jesus Christ. And thus of the uses for instruction Use 3. Hence also may be concluded much terrour to wicked men that are not called in that this worke of calling is the doore of all grace communicated to us Now wicked men not called are of two sorts first some outwardly refuse their calling secondly some seeme to obey it but it is not effectually both are in miserable case but not both alike For the later are neere the Kingdome of God many times The first sort resist the Holy Ghost put the Word of Christ from them refuse to answer or obey reject the counsell of God harden their hearts and are therefore extreamly miserable for First they judge themselves unworthy of everlasting life Act. 13.46 Secondly they are in danger to be left and forsaken of God and have the meanes taken from them Ioh. 12.39 Thirdly God will provoke them many times to jealousie by calling a people to himselfe whom they account foolish Rom. 10.19 especially when they have rebelled against the meanes Ezek. 3.6 7. Fourthly God will laugh at the calamity of such men Prov. 1.26 Fifthly and they may be taken away with sudden destruction Prov. 1.17 Sixthly if they call to God it may be hee will not answer hereafter Pro. 1.28 29 30. Seventhly if they live in prosperity that shall destroy them Prov. 1.31 Eightly the dust of the feet of Gods servants shall witnesse against them in the day of Christ and then they shall be fearfully punished Mat. 10. Now there are another sort of wicked men that are called externally and in some respect internally too and yet are not right such as have temporary grace doe obey their calling after a sort and for a time for they assent unto a part of the Word of God which they receive with joy and this is called a taste of the good word of God they may also bee perswaded to leave divers sinnes as Herod was and may bee indued with divers graces of the Spirit which they had not before Heb. 6.4 5. Now this calling yet is not that effectuall inward calling which is in Gods Elect. For they receive not the promise of grace in Christ to them in particular to relie upon it not are they perswaded to forsake all sinne no● have they any one saving grace which is in the godly Now these men are miserable because they are not truly called and the more first because they were neere the Kingdome of God and yet want it secondly because they will be the hardlier drawne to see their miseries Harlots and Publicanes may enter into the Kingdome of heaven before them Hitherto of our calling and so of the positive description of the happinesse of a Christian the comparative followes in the last words of this verse and the whole 10. vers where the Apostle intends to shew them their happinesse now in Christ in comparison of that miserable estate they lived in before so that hee compares the estate of a Christian in grace with the estate of a Christian in nature and this hee doth first in metaphoricall termes in the end of this verse and then in plaine words vers 10. In this verse he compares their misery to darknesse and their happinesse to marvellous light Out of darknesse From the generall consideration of all the words two things may be observed First that it is 〈◊〉 even for godly men to bee put in mind of the mise●ie 〈…〉 For the consideration hereof may First keepe them humble to remember how vile they have beene Secondly quicken them to the reformation of the sinne that yet hangs upon them Col. 3.5 6 7 8. Thirdly worke compassion in them towards others that lie yet in their sins and teach them to deale meekly with them Tit. 3.2 3. Fourthly make them more watchfull to looke on a nature which hath beene so vile Fifthly quicken them to redeeme the time they have spent in the service of sinne 1 Pet. 4.3 Sixthly it should 〈◊〉 the greater price upon our happinesse in Christ and so is the consideration used here Secondly that a mind that
A COMMENTARY VPON THE THREE FIRST CHAPTERS OF THE FIRST EPISTLE generall of St. PETER VVHERIN ARE MOST JUDICIously and profitably handled such points of Doctrine as naturally flow from the TEXT Together with very usefull Application thereof and many good Rules for a godly life By NICHOLAS BYFIELD Preacher of Gods Word at Isleworth in Middlesex To which is now newly added an Alphabeticall TABLE not formerly published 1 PET. 1.13 Wherefore gird up the loynes of your minde be sober and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Iesus Christ. LONDON Printed by MILES FLESHER and ROBERT YOUNG MDCXXXVII TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE AND MOST noble Lady the Lady LVCY Countesse of Bedford Grace and peace be multiplied MADAM BY reason of my Lords absence and your Honours a great part of the yeare past I have had more leisure than I desired and thereby opportunity to write out my notes on the first chapter of Peter and not knowing which way to testifie so fully as I ought my observance and duty to your Honor or to satisfie the daily opportunity of many friends I have adventured againe to come under the Presse that so receiving daily an increase of favors from your Honor I might thus publikely take occasion to professe my vowes of service and thankfulnesse beseeching your Honor to vouchsafe the acceptation protection and perusall of this abridgement of those Sermons many of which your Honor hath bin pleased to heare with great attention As for the desire of many go●●y friends herein I should not have beene easily inclined to hearken to it the world abounding with bookes even to loathing but that in writings of this nature and upon this Epistle there is some want and that I have received incouragement from the acceptation of my former labours and that I know the matter herein contained is wholesome and not unprofitable and besides having suffered an involuntary vacation in my weeke-daies attendance in your Honors family and an extreame losse in the want of divers of my chiefe bearers I was resolved to try whether I might be helpfull to the Church of God abroad by such an imploiment of my selfe in the houres I could spare from my study for the Lords day My most humble request to your Honour is that you would bee pleased to grace these notes with the liberty to passe under the protection of your name and favour I should much rejoyce if the reading hereof may make any supply of my intermitted service to your Honor and your worthy family The God of mercy and father of glory that hath abounded towards your Honor not only in the outward happinesse of unstained nobility greatnesse of meanes and favour with the highest on our earth but which is greatest of all in the unsearchable riches of Iesus Christ in the largenesse and eminency of many singular gifts and in aboundance of all good workes make you perfect to doe his will and worke in you an increase of al that is pleasing in his sight that you may never lose what you have wrought but be kept without offence till the day of Iesus Christ. Isleworth Iuly 1617. Your Honours servant in things of Iesus Christ to be commanded N. BYFIELD THE LOGICALL ANALYSIS OF THE first Chapter of the first Epistle of ST. PETER THis Chapter hath in it 2 things 1. matter of salutation verses 1 2. 2. matter of doctrine verse 3. to the end In the salutation consider 1. the person saluting 2. the persons saluted 3. the forme of salutation The person saluting is described 1. By his proper name Peter 2. By his office an Apostle 3. By the author of his office Iesus Christ. The persons saluted are described 1. By their outward estate 2. By their spirituall estate In their outward estate consider first what it was they were strangers dispersed here and there 2. where it was viz through Pontus Asia Galatia c. For their spirituall estate they were the Elect of God and their Election is amplified 1. By the foundation of it the foreknowledge of God the Father 2. By the meanes of execution of it the sanctification of the Spirit 3. By the ends of it which are two 1. the obedience of their lives 2. the fruition of the benefits purchased by the blood of Christ and applied by the sprinkling of his blood The forme of the salutation is in the end of the second verse grace and peace be multiplied c. Thus much of the salutation the doctrine of the Chapter followes which conteins both matter of consolation matter of exhortation The consolation is from verse 3. to verse 13 where consider both the proposition of the consolation verses 3 4 5. and the confirmation of it verse 6. to 13. In the proposition consider first the manner of propounding it 2. The arguments themselves The manner of the proposition is that it is exprest in forme of thanksgiving Blessed be the God and father of our Lord Iesus Christ. The arguments are three The first taken from their regeneration verse 3. The second from their glorification verse 4. The third from their preservation unto glory verse 5. The consolation raised from their regeneration is amplified 1. By the impulsive cause the aboundant mercy of God 2. By the effect viz a lively hope 3. By the cause of merit or efficacie viz the resurrection of Iesus Christ. The second argument is taken from our glorification which is said to be the ●nheritance of the Saints which is amplified 1. By the properties of it which are three For it is first incorruptible 2. undef●led 3. imma●cessible it withereth not Secondly by the manner of their present interest It is not now possessed but laid up for them Thirdly by the place where it lyeth and that is heaven The third argument is taken from our preservation unto glory verse 5 where consider 1. the meanes of our preservation which is both power in God and faith in us 2. The end which is salvation which is amplif●ed by the things that goe before it viz preparation and revelation in these words prepared to be revealed as also for the ●ime when it shal be communicated viz in the last time Thus of the proposition of the consolation the confirmation followes which is performed two waies 1. By prolepsis or the answer of objections verse 6. to 10. 2. By the testimonie of the Prophets verses 10 11 12. First the Apostle labors to confirm them against two objections The first objection might be taken from their crosses to which the Apostle gives answer by yeelding foure reasons why their manifold temptations should not dismay them 1. Because they may have much joy in the midst of many crosses verse 6. 2. Their heavinesse is but for a season verse 6. also 3. They are not bound alwaies to grieve at their crosses but when need requires verse 6. also 4. Because their temptations doe them good for they try their faith
God hath given of his free grace and shall be fully brought upon you at the last day when Christ shall bee shewed in his glory to the world Now there are six reasons which may induce you to the care of a holy conversation intended in the former dutyes 1. The first concernes the image of God ye are the children of God and therefore you should live so as becomes Gods children and expresse in your cariage the resemblance of the nature of God not given your selves over on● of the liking of sinne to the service and obedience of any of those corruptions which either your selves lived in before your calling or are usually found in such onely as know not GOD. But as God who by the power of his word hath converted you is holy so should you strive with respect of all his commandements to resemble the praises of God in all your car●age striving in every duty to follow your patterne And the rather because this hath beene anciently required in the old Testament of Gods people to propound unto themselves the imitation of Gods holinesse and to detest sinne because they would not be unlike to God 2. A second reason may be taken from the judgment of God For the time must certainly come when God whom we call a Father and call upon as a Father in this life will summon us before his Tribunall certainly and speedily and then no man shall escape but shalt be dealt with without partiality or any corrupt respect according as mens workes have beene either good or evill and therefore it behoves us that are in this world but as sojourners for a time to spend our daies in all carefulnesse and godly feare 3. A third reason may be taken from the consideration of our redemption which hath many important motives in it For it cannot bee but yee all know that your misery by nature was so great that yee could not be ransomed if all the treasures of gold and silver in the world had been given for you and when you were redeemed a chiefe respect was had to the freeing of you from the viciousnesse of your conversation in which vainely yee spent your times and which corruption in many things yee sucked in from the sinfull examples and precepts and ill education of your Parents and ancestors But especially if yee consider what a matchlesse price was given for your ransome even the pretious blood of Christ who as a most absolute sacrifice for our sinnes was without all soule of nature or life and so the full substance of all the ceremoniall sacrifices and in particular was the true lambe without blemish or spot that makes attonement for the sinnes of the world And the rather if yee consider that from all eternity God had ordained that Christ should dye for you and when the fulnesse of time came that God was to reveale his Sonne as the Saviour of the world hee shewed him in the flesh and caused him to be preached unto you and for your sakes with far more evidence and clearnesse than in for●er ages To you and for your sakes I say that doe constantly put your trust in Gods mercy through his merits that God that to shew he was fully paid the uttermost farthing of our debts came to the prison doore and let him out which he did when he raised him from the dead and besides exalted him to wonderfull glory when hee ascended up into heaven that so for the time to come you might beleeve and trust upon Gods goodnesse and favour to you without all feare or doubting 4. And the rather in the fourth place should you be carefull of the former exhortation if you consider your relation to the godly to whom ye are 〈◊〉 For seeing that by the spirit of God your soules are purified from the leprosie of inward evills by the holy course you have held in clensing your hearts of those evills which might hinder your internall sanctification in that obedience you yeeld to the truth of God and inasmuch as the end of all this reformation was that there might be a holy communion and affection without hypocrisie and dissembling among such as feare God who are all the children of one Father therefore see to it by any meanes that yee order your lives and hearts so that you may love one another both with ardent affection pure sincere hearts which you never doe unlesse you gird up the loines of your mindes and live soberly be setled in the assurance that yee shall altogether one day raigne in heaven 5. And fiftly the immortality of your soules should perswade with you you were made new men not as you were made men by a naturall propagation but inspired with a life that should never cease having the seed of this eternall life cast into your hearts by the word of God which in it selfe and by effect in you liveth and abideth for ever And lastly if you consider the mortality of your bodies All in a mans outward estate is but vaine and transitory the bodies of all men are but as the grasse which is to day and tomorrow is cut downe and cast into the oven Man is quickly and suddenly gone nor is the glory of mens outward estate better than their bodies For all the riches pleasures c. of this life in which men glory most they are but as the ' flower of grasse His body withereth like the grasse decaying in a short time till he have nothing left but the very roote of life and as for his riches and pleasures they like the flower fall off so as they are never recovered againe many times in this life but alwaies in death But on the other side the word of God upon which men should set their hearts continueth in the efficacie of it in the sense of it and in the fruit of it for ever and that you may not be mistaken this is that word of God which is daily preached unto you AN EXPOSITION OF THE FIRST EPISTLE generall of PETER CHAP. I. verses 1 2. 1. Peter an Apostle of Iesus Christ to the strangers that dwell here and there throughout Pontus Galatia Cappadocia Asia and Bithynia 2. Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father unto sanctification of the spirit through obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Iesus Christ Grace and peace be multiplied unto you THe purpose of the Apostle in this Epistle is to confirme the Christians to whom he writes in the faith and to assure them that it was the true grace of God they had received and to perswade them to all possible care of sincerity of life becomming the Gospell and to constancy in tryalls The Epistle stands of three parts 1. The salutation Chap. 1. ver 1 2. 2. The body of the Epistle Chap. 1. ver 3. to Chap. 5. ver 12. 3. The Epilogue or conclusion Chap. 5. ver 12.
we might partake of his holinesse and live and there is much fruit in the afflictions of the godly all working together for the best unto them If God spare wicked men it is because they are bastards and not sonnes and yet there is a great deale of difference betweene Gods usage of wicked men and of godly even in their trouble For he spares and pitties his owne children as a man will spare and pitty his owne son He never strikes them but it is in measure and in their branches He doth not make a full end of them to confound them as he will doe with wicked men Heb. 12. Esay 27. Ob. The world sees no such excellency in them or in their Estate Sol. The world knowes them not because it knowes not God their father they are now the sonnes of God but it doth not appeare what we shall bee but we know that when Christ shall appeare we shall be all like him 1 Iohn 3.1 2. This doctrine of Gods fatherly love to his people may serve for instuction 1. To godly men 2. To carnall men 3. To earthly fathers 1. Godly men should learne here to live like the children of God and so they'doe if they looke to three things 1. That they live without sin and not shame their father by their wicked lives their workes should shew and beare witnesse by their care to finish them that God is their father and set them about them Iohn 5.36 Their righteousnesse must exceed the righteousnesse of civill men in this world Mat. 5.20 and therefore their daily prayers unto God should be that hee would establish them in holinesse before him till the comming of Iesus Christ 1 Thess. 3.13 2. Secondly that they live without care having such a heavenly father to provide for them Mat. 6.25 c. 3. Thirdly that they live out of the society with wicked men cleaving only to the houshold of God 2 Cor. 6.18 they should love their fathers house Psal. 27.4 and deny utterly the love of this world Iohn 2.15 16. 2. Carnall men should hence take notice if it may be to be better advised and not meddle with the godly no not to despise the least of these little ones Their Angels alwayes behold the face of God for them and their heavenly father will requite their wrongs Mat. 18.10 c. 3. Earthly parents should here learne of God God cares for his children before they were and shall not they care for their children when God hath given them to them Gods greatest care is to provide holinesse for his children and should not they learne of God therein Lastly this may serve for reproofe both of some of the godly and also of the wicked that live in the Church of God some of the godly doe greatly forget themselves about this point that is such as stirre not up themselves to take hold of God and to call upon his name in their distresses but sit downe dismaide and dead hearted as if there were not the compassion care or help of a father in God this is reproved Esay 64.8 Those sons of Belial also that live in the Church and call God father but live like the Devill who indeed is their father whose workes they doe those I say are most bitterly reproved in these and such like Scriptures even from their daring to call God father Mal. 1.6 3. ult Ier. 3.4 c. Mat. 3.9 7.21 Iohn 4.23 8.38.41.44 1 Iohn 3.15 2 Iohn 9. Through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Iesus Christ. There is difference of senses about the understanding and dependancy of these words amongst Interpreters Some take sanctification in a large sense for mans righteousnesse in generall and obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Christ as the two parts or kindes of it by obedience understanding mans righteousnesse or holinesse in himselfe and by sprinkling of Christ● blood that righteousnesse of Christ that righteousnesse I say made ours by imputation both which are applyed or wrought by the spirit of God Some others make sanctification the end and obedience and sprinkling the meanes and so conceive that before mans sanctification there goes two things in God Election and fore-knowledge and two things in Christ obedience and sufferings and all this in both that we might be sanctified Others understand sanctification of the heart or spirit of man as a means intended in Gods Election for the fitting of us unto obedience of life and the fruition of the benefits purchased by the blood of Iesus Christ and thus I take it it is meant here The summe seemes then to be this that our lives may bee obedient to Gods will and that we may enjoy the benefit of Christs death we must be sanctified within in our spirits Sanctification of the spirit Man is said to be sanctified or made holy three wayes 1. Of not holy privatively and so man that was once without holinesse is made holy by regeneration and justification 2. Of lesse holy and so Gods children are daily sanctified by proceeding from grace to grace 3. Of 〈◊〉 holy negatively and so Christ as hee was man was sanctified For there was a time when Christ had not this holinesse in his humane nature viz. when his humane nature was not Spirit is taken sometimes for the holy Ghost sometimes for an evill Angell 1 Kings 22. Luke 10.20 sometimes for the Gospell which hath adjoyned to it the spirit or working of the spirit of God 2 Cor. 3.6 sometimes for the soule of man and so it is taken sometimes more strictly for the understanding the Queene of the soule the reason of mans minde and then the soule is taken for the feare of affections Ephes. 4. ●3 1 Thess. ● 23 sometimes more largely for the whole inward man the whole soule with all the faculties of it and so I take it here Divers things may be noted here in the generall 1. First that without sanctification we can never have comfort of our Election by our obedience others may discover our Election and by inward holinesse we may discerne it of ourselves 2. That our sanctification hath some dependance upon Gods election and that 1. as he hath ordained the rules of good workes we should walke in Eph. 2.10 2. as he hath bound himselfe by his decree to guide his people to the holinesse he doth require of them 3. That an outward civill life will not serve the turne God requires especially the sanctification of the heart of man 1 Sam. 16.17 when God looks for the markes of his owne people he trieth the heart and reines Ier. 11.20 4.14 Prov. 4.23 23.16 Gods wayes are in the blessed mans heart Ps. 84.5 4. That there is flesh in the best of Gods Elect in this life their spirits onely are sanctified Thus in generall More particularly concerning the sanctification of the spirit I propound two things distinctly
Evangelists published by the Apostles and demonstrated by six severall apparitions Now for the second The resurrection of Christ i●● fountaine of singular benefits unto us For from thence flowes 1. our glorification for hee went away to provide a place for us even to prepare those heavenly mansions for us 2. The resurrection of our bodies for the spirit that raised Christ from the dead hath thereby given us assurance that he will raise our mortall bodies also 3. The confirmation of our faith and that in divers things For his resurrection assures us that he is the promised Messias and sonne of God and that our debt is payed and that hee hath discharged the uttermost farthing for else he had not beene let out of prison and that he hath vanquished all our spirituall enemies and utterly foiled and disarmed them in that they could not keepe him downe when they had him in the grave but he hath triumphed over them 4. Our justification and regeneration for so the Apostle shewes in the 4. to the Romans that he rose againe for our justification and here it is expresly said that we are begotten againe through the resurrection of Iesus Christ. Quest. But may some one say If this be true that we are begotten again by the resurrection of Jesus Christ then it seemes men were not b●gotten againe in the old Testament or else not by the resurrection of Christ For he was not then risen Answ. For answer hereunto wee must consider in the resurrection of Christ two things 1. The act of his resurrection and 2. the vertue of it we are not regenerate by the act of his resurrection and for the vertue of it Faith could receive it aswell as the act was to come as now in us it doth the act being past Christ was risen in the old Testament three wayes 1. In the counsell of God 2. In the word of prophesie 3. In the efficacie of it Quest. But how doth it follow that we are regenerate because Christ is risen Answ. I answer Christ must be considered two wayes first naturally as man secondly mystically as head If Christ be considered barely as a man it doth not follow but if he bee considered in the mysticall union with his members as he sustaineth their person and was surety for them it will follow he rose againe to this end that he might receive power to raise our soules by the first resurrection and our bodies at the last day Or more plainely thus Our regeneration depends upon the resurrection of Christ three wayes 1. As his resurrection was a pledge and assurance that he would raise us he shewed his power that he could doe it he laid downe his body before our eyes and quickned it againe before our faces and gave us that signe to assure us of what he could doe fo●us 2. As by his resurrection he merited ours 3. The spirit of Christ applies the vertue of Christs resurrection for the quickening of us and the accomplishment of our whole vivification and new obedience The uses of Christs resurrection are both for consolation and instruction It may comfort us against all the accusations or temptations of Satan or the censures of the world who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen who shall condemne them Is not Christ dead or rather risen againe and sitteth at the right hand of God and maketh request for us hath hee not paid our debt hath he not fully triumphed over death sinne and hell Againe would we have a signe that in Christ all the promises of God shall be yea and Amen we need no other signe then this that as Ionas was three dayes and three nights in the belly of the whale so the sonne of man was three dayes in the heart of the earth and the third day rose againe Finally why should we now be afraid of death or any other spirituall or terrible enemy why should those last things dismay us hath not Christ had a most glorious 〈…〉 them in a most ●e●rible m●nomachy when they did the worst they could and therefore we may solace our selves in the conquest and say insultingly O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory Is not death swallowed up into victory thankes be to God which hath given us victory also through Iesus Christ our Lord. But if we would have benefit of Christs resurrection we must then seek the vertue of it to our selves as the Apostle shewes in his owne practise Phil. 3.9 Quest. But how may we extract vertue out of Christs resurrection Answ. We may get out the vertue of his resurrection by meditation seriously thinking of it and of the end of it by found contemplation pondering of it and by prayer begging the working of the spirit therein but especially laying hold upon it by faith and glorifying God by beleeving that it shall be according to Gods promise effectuall unto us And we must also attend to the motions of the spirit yeelding our selves over to bee framed by them and we must not thinke much to suffer the labours of Gods messengers to worke upon our stony hearts as the Angells of God rowling away the stone that lyeth sealed upon our hearts by nature And thus much of the resurrection of Christ and of the first argument of our consolation Now the second followes in the fourth verse Verse 4. To an inheritance incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for us or for you THis argument is taken from our glorification which is here generally described to be the inheritance of the Saints which is amplified foure wayes First by the properties of it and they are three For it is 1. incorruptible 2. undefiled and 3 immarcessible or that withereth not Secondly by their present interest in it it is not now possessed it is held only in title being laid up for them Thirdly by the persons that shall inherite and they are you that is you that are begotten againe Fourthly by the place and that is heaven the best place For it much commends an inheritance if it lye in convenient and commodious places Incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not c. Three things are here said in the praise of this inheritance which I purpose in the doctrine of them to handle together The first thing affirmed of this inheritance is that it is incorruptible and so it is in foure respects 1. because there we shall need none of those meanes of preservation which of necessity are requisite in this corruptible world neither for the body nor soule For our bodies wee shall need no aire food sleep heat or cold apparell or the light of the Sunne or Moone or mariage or physicke And for our soules wee shall need no sabbaths sacraments temple 2. Because our happinesse shall not bee annoyed with any thing that might corrupt it either without us or upon us
God in the day of Christ. But I rather choose to understand it of the Christian. Some think the three words should note the three waies of exalting Christians and so they should have praise in words honor in gesture and glory in deeds but I think they are but severall words to expresse joyntly one and the same thing Before I come to the maine doctrine here are divers things to be noted which are implyed both concerning Honor and the appearance of Christ. Concerning Honor these thing● may be noted First that faith and sincerity in this world for the most part want praise and honor and glory from men and therefore he promiseth them that howsoever it goe yet in the day of Christ saith shall not want praise c. It is here no wonder to be made as a signe or wonder even in Israel Esay 8. If men refraine from evill one beast or other will prey upon them Esay 9 15. To be reviled with all man●r of evill sayings is ●upposed by our Saviour M●t 5.11 They that are after the flesh have done it and ever will persecute those that are after the spirit Gal. 4.29 Secondly it seemes the Lord taketh a power unto himselfe and his word even to judge and determine the cases of Honor. It is a fond conceit that our great Gallants have that they think that in defence of their Honor they are not bound to the word but they are deceived and they doe well perhaps to shun the sentence of Scripture in the case of their monomachies or single fights for it yeelds them but small comfort to embolden their great spirits For these are the words of the holy Ghost It is a mans honor to cease from strife but every foole will be medling Prov. 20.3 Thirdly perfect Honor will never be had till the day of Judgement which should the more confirme us in a contempt of the honor of this world In this world they are many times praised whom God abhorreth and men say to the wicked thou art righteous It is an usuall thing that they that forsake the law themselves praise the wicked Psal. 10.3 Prov. 24.24 Secondly earthly honor is wonderfull deceitfull many get it by ill meanes and men may be praised by them that curse them in their hearts and besides earthly Honor will not abide nor can man continue here to enjoy it long Eccl. 8.10 Psal. 49. 13. neither will it content the mind of man if it be had Eccles. 6.2 and for the most part it makes men sensuall man in honor understands not but they live and die many times as the beasts that perish Psal. 49. ult Now concerning the revelation of Jesus Christ we must know that it is taken sometimes actively and sometimes passively Actively and so for that work of Christ by which hee reveales his Father and his will to his members so Mat. 11.23 Gal. 1.12 Now passively there is a threefold revelation of Christ 1. In his flesh 2. In his spirit 3. In his glory In his flesh for so godlinesse is a great mysterie in that God was revealed in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 In the spirit so Christ was revealed in Paul in that by the spirit the grace of Christ was revealed in him Gal. 1.16 Thirdly Christ shall be revealed at the last day in his glory from heaven and this revelation is meant here as it is also 1 Cor. 1.7.2 Thes. 1.7 The doctrines implyed are three First that Christ shall come againe and be revealed from heaven and therefore woe to those mockers that walk after their lusts and aske when his comming shall be Secondly that Christ is as it were hid till his second comming and so he is in sixe respects 1. First in respect of the sense of our mortall eyes the heavens like a curtaine hide him from us Act. 1. 2. Secondly in respect of the admirable glory of his person For at that day his glory shall be revealed which now is as it were hidden 3. Thirdly in respect of the estate of his members our life is hid with Christ. He is not glorious in the outward glory of his members Col. 3.3 4. In respect of the manifestation of his love he hath not shewed himselfe to wicked men Ioh. 14.22 nor fully revealed himself to the faithfull it doth not yet appeare what they shall be 1 Ioh. 2.3 5. Fiftly in respect of the secrets he shall then break open little doe we know or heare of what he will then discover when hee shall break open the everlasting counsels of God and discover the depths of Gods providence and the deeds of all both good and bad and the glory of the Elect and the eternall misery of the damned 6. Sixtly in respect of the suddennesse of his comming Luk. 17.30 All which should make us the more to long for his appearing for that shall be such a time as never was The third thing implyed is that the thought of the day of Judgement is a sure refuge to a Christian minde when many other comforts for the present faile But the maine doctrine is that faithfull and patient Christians shall have a great deale of praise and honor and glory in the day of Christ. Christ will be made marveilous in them 2 Thes. 1.11 they shall shine as the stars of heaven and as the sun in the firmament Dan. 12. Mat. 13. they shall appeare in singular glory when Christ appeares Col. 3.4 But shall Christians have no glory till that day Yes For first there is a naturall glory stamped upon their very persons Col. 2. ult Secondly they are already vessels of glory in Gods decree Rom. 9. Thirdly true honor is restored them in the kingdome of gra●e for God acknowledgeth them so doe the Angels of God and they have honorable priviledges and such graces as will bring to glory And lastly God many times doth honor them with speciall Honor before men Hest. 8.16 Psal. 64. 3. to the end Act. 28.10 The Uses follow And first the consideration of this great praise and honor and glory in the revelation of Christ should serve for instruction in divers respects For it should quicken us to faith and good works seeing our labour shall not be in vaine 1 Cor. 15. ult Men will say in that day Oh blessed was he or she that beleeved It may also perswade us to cheerfulnesse and patience under afflictions and the scornes of the world we shall then have praise enough what need we care for a little disgrace in the meane time and shall we ever be ashamed of Christ and his truth that will thus honor us at the last day Finally we may here learne of Christ how to esteem of tryed Christians we should learn of him to praise them and honor them Secondly this doctrine should wonderfully comfort Gods servants How should they exult in the glory and honor they hope for They shall then have so much honor as the Kings of the earth
and I place all under the head of imperfect revelation because though the things revealed to the Prophets were perfectly revealed in respect of certainty and evidence yet it was but a revelation in part that is of some things onely There were many things knowne to Christ and the Angels which the Prophets never knew There is also difference betweene Visions and Revelations Visions are external in some things shewed to the sight Revelations are internall shewed ●nely ●o the understanding But what is the difference betweene Revelation and Knowledge and Prophesie and Doctrine mentioned 2 Cor. 14.6 There are two waies by which men come to the understanding of Gods will The one extraordinary and that is by revelation and the other ordinary viz. by knowledge attained by labour and industry in the use of meanes this the Apostle calls knowledge now prophesie and doctrine depend upon these two For men did vent and utter their revelation by prophesie that is by foretelling things to come and men doe vent their knowledge by doctrine and teaching others Are not we more miserable now then they were in the times of the Prophets seeing they had revelations and we have none We are not for these reasons 1. Because we have the substance of all their revelations For their most glorious revelations were concerning Christ to come whom we possesse as the riches of the Gentiles whom they had not in the flesh but saw him a farre off 2. Because the Lord hath now fully revealed his will in the Scriptures of the old and new Testament to be a perfect guide unto eternall life 3. Because we have all their revelations that could profit us in any speciall measure we have them I say left upon record written for our learning 4. Neither are wee altogether without revelations that for the riches of them answer the full value of their revelations For to omit that God hath revealed his Sonne in the flesh in these latter ages of the world which was a greater shew then was ever made in heaven or in earth to omit this I say 1. In the doctrine of the Gospell now there are divers riches mines and mysteries of knowledge broke open which were hid since the world begun from ages and generations Col. 1. 26. Rom. 16.26 and these made knowne not to Apostles onely but to babes and infants Mat. 11.25 to abiect Gentiles as well as Jewes Luke 2.32 for revelation of the Gentiles to young men and maidens Act. 2. 2. Christ is revealed in the hearts of men now as well as then and that is the best revelation the works of the grace of Christ such as his image graciously revealed in their hearts Christ lives in his people now Gal. 1.12 2. 20. Rom. 8.29 3. The righteousnesse and favour of God is with a speciall lustre revealed from faith to faith Rom. 1.17 4. The Lord doth still assist his servants in speaking and hearing and teaching to profit we have more than we bring into the pulpit and th● Lord still opens mans understanding and is with our mouthes to give us a doors of utterance Eph. 1.18 Col. 4.3.2 Cor. 3.5,6 5. The Spirit of Christ doth reveale now also both daily the things given us of God 1 Iohn 5.10 2 Cor. 2.10 and at some times the particular pleasure of God in some speciall cases 6. We are neerer unto and wait for the revelation of Christ and the sonnes of God from h●aven of which theirs was but a glimpse and in this we shall in the day of Ch●●st have as full a measure as they Their revelations were but a drops to this sea Rom. 8 1●,19.2 Thes. 1.7.1 Cor. 1.7 So that we are happy sixe waies in respect of revelation The Use should be therefore to learne thankfulnesse and contentation as resting assure● tha● if wee truely feare God though hee make us not Prophets yet his secrets shall be with them that feare him and he will answer us when we call and shew us great and hidden things Thus of the manner how God did answer them the matter followes which concerneth either Persons or things Persons in these words T●at not unto themselves but unto us they did minister The plain meaning is that the Lord would have them to know that they were implyed in these prophesies of glory not that they should thereby reveale any further blessednesse unto themselves for they should die before those daies come but should therein doe service unto Churches that should come long after Here are divers things to be noted hence That the Lord hath beene used to deny the requests or desires of his serva●ts in respect of the circumstances of their suits such as were time place manner meanes measure c yea we see how he denieth his best servants in the letter of his desires Isaac must not have his will concerning Esau nor Ioseph concerning Manasses Moses may see Canaan but he must not enter in David must not prosper in his beloved Absolon the Apostles must not be great in an earthly kingdome nor Paul have his tentation depart just as soon as he prayes Ionah must not be humored nor Elias die when he list David shall not bring in the Arke at his pleasure nay Christ himselfe must not be heard in the very letter of his desires for the cup did not passe from him The Use is therefore to commit our waies to God with all patience and humility and never rebell in our hearts if the Lord crosse us but rather confesse our errors and yeeld our selves to God as knowing that all shall work together for the best c. and he will so heare and so answer as may be best for our best good The Lord hath been used to traine his servants to know that their labours are to be spent for the good of others as well as themselves thus the Prophets must heare of it God hath distributed his gifts not onely for the use of each member but for the benefit of the whole body 1 Cor. 12. The Use should be to teach all sorts of men to promote to their uttermost the common good and to doe it out of conscience and heartily and with all diligence as we would care for our owne things especially promoting the edification of the body with all love and industry Rom. 12.6.1 Pet. 4.9 10. Eph. 4.26 Thus should ministers and magistrates and masters of families and every Christian with his acquaintance We are Stewards of Gods gifts and they must be implo●ed about Gods worke not our owne onely the Masters advantage is most principally to be respected and therefore this must needs be a great reproofe to such as can onely minde their owne things and not the things of Iesus Christ Phil. 2. It will be a singular comfort to such as excell in gifts or riches or power if they can say at their death beds not unto my selfe but unto the servants of God
that is sowed in the field or in the wombe If it be taken in the first sense then the seed is grace the sower is Christ the field is the heart of man or the world the sowing time is the day of redemption and the harvest is the end of the world But I rather take it in the other sense and then the seed is grace the womb is the heart the Father or sower is Christ 1 Cor. 15.43 the instrument of generation is externally the word internally the Spirit of God the birth is the practice and exercise of the gifts of grace the nurse is the minister and the meanes of nursing are preaching and the Sacraments Saving grace is likened to seed in the wombe because first it is formed by an admirable coition of the Word and Spirit in the heart of man causing unspeakable delight in the soule Secondly because the gifts of grace doe thrive and grow up in the godly from small beginnings though at the first but as a graine of mustard seed yet after it is once conceived it will grow marvellously and speedily This doctrine may serve for a threefold use 1. It may comfort and that divers waies 1. Because it imports a marriage of the soule with Christ. It is God that gave the soule in marriage with Christ a great preferment 2. Because thou art cured of barrennes and therefore rejoyce oh thou soule that wast barren Christ hath made thee a mother of many children 3. It may comfort thee against the weaknesse of thy gifts and the grace received though thy faith joy feeling c. be but as a grain of mustard seed yet that God that giveth to every seed his body can make his grace to thrive and prosper in thee 4. From hence a godly man may know that he is truely borne againe for if thou have felt that sweet delight when the Word and Spirit of God did joyne with thy soule this delight is an infallible signe of thy regeneration and that Christ is formed in thee Ob. But the temporary faith feeleth joy Ans. There is great difference betweene the joy of the godly and the joy of the wicked in receiving the word for first in the wicked there is no grace left in the soule after hearing nor new gifts or dispositions the soul is empty and void of seed for all that joy Secondly if there were some seeds of grace yet it abideth not it is like the morning dew there is no true ●once●tion Or thirdly if it did abide for a time yet it increaseth not as the fruit of the wombe doth the godly grow in grace 2. It may serve to teach us 1. highly to prize the graces of the soule they are the divine seed of Christ in us Christ in the same is formed in us The light love desires joyes humility c. in the heart have the true picture of Christ upon them 2. To be carefull to preserve the grace we have received seeing it is the seed of God in us 3. To carry a high opinion of all the godly seeing they are the beloved ones of Jesus Christ. 3. Lastly for great reproofe of the whorish affections of all wicked men that shutting the doores of their hearts against Christ suffer the devill and concupiscence to engender in them and to fill the soule with multitudes of bastardly births of sinne Iam. 1.14 Incorrupt●ble The grace begotten in the hearts of the godly is incorruptible and so it is in divers respects 1. In respect of the matter of them For this grace consists of innocency and in●●r●uption so meeknesse is called incorruption 1 Pet. 3.3 2. In respect of the Author of it it proceeds from the incorruptible God 3. In respect of the continuance of it it never dieth 4. In respect of the end it tends to it is that faire fruit that will grow up to eternall life This may serve for consolation and instruction for consolation many wayes 1. This shewes that every godly person is an excellent one they are immortall creatures they have divin● sparkles in them How dare wicked men despise them when God hath thus honoured them His God King Crowne Inheritance gifts are all immortall 2. They may conceive comfortable hope that God will bee carefull to preserve and blesse his owne worke Gods blessing shall be upon thy seed and his Spirit will refresh thy buddes For upon all the glory must be a defence 3. It may comfort thee against death when thy corruption hath put on this incorruption of true grace thou being made thereby immortall thou maist triumph over death as 1 Cor. 15.54 Art thou an immortall one take heed of discontentment This was the first s●one even the devills sinne This may comfort thee in thy perseverance to the end the seed is immortall and therefore thou shalt never fall away Therefore hath God given thee his Spirit within thee to tend these little graces yea the Angels of God performe their service no doubt to the spirits of the godly That thou canst not fall from grace these Scriptures may establish thee 1 Ioh. 5.9 Mat. 12.20 Esay 65.22 23. Ier. 23.4 1 Cor. 1.8 9. 1 Pet. 1.5 2 Tim. 1.12 Ioh. 13.1 Ier. 32.40 41. Heb. 12.3 7.37 For instruction and so it may teach both godly men and wicked men Godly men should the more enforce their affections to the love of the Lord Iesus Christ in incorruption Eph. 6.24 and be carefull to avoid all the inticements of sinne and Sathan by which their hearts might be corrupted they should walke in the spirit Rom. 8.1 And keepe themselves from all filthinesse both of flesh and spirit desiring to know no other happinesse then Christ and him crucified And wicked men should take notice of it that corruption cannot inherit incorruption and unlesse they repent of their sinnes and set their hearts upon the word of Christ they can never be made immortall Hitherto of the property of the seed the instruments of the generation of it follow viz. the word of God which is f●rther praised 1. For the Author of it 2. For the vigor and effiacie of it it liveth 3. For the continuance of it it liveth for ever By the word of God Before I enter upon the particular observations of it we may observe the effectualnesse of the Apostles speech concerning the word Hee doth not mention it but with a lively praise of it and that hee doth not casually doe but with a great deale of reason For it is exceeding needfull to have the praises of the word often and lively exprest For it may be a means to heale that contempt of the Word that usually raignes in the most Besides the praise of it may lift up our hearts to consider the greatnesse of Gods mercy in bestowing his word upon us The word he gave to Iacob was a greater gift then he bestowed upon all the world besides And the praises of the word doe also raise up in the godly
Christians thrive not and who also is it whose case some one of these seaven is not Let us every one examine our selves for a thousand to one we are kept back by some one of these It were singular wisdome to note which it is and to strive to amend that we may not be such starvelings in godlinesse still The point then is cleare that most Christians are but as new borne babes Now what use should we make of it First It may serve to humble many of us that have had time enough and abundance of meane● and helps to have beene like teachers and yet have even now need to be taught the principles again To us belongs justly that reproofe in the fift to the Hebrewes 13. Secondly many d●ties must be vrged upon us if we grant our selves to be but as new borne babes For 1. We must therefore be teachable and tractable obeying them that have the oversight of us bearing their words of admonition and loving them with a singular love 2. We must therefore be the more willing to beare the chastizements of God that father of our spirits For if we have had the fathers of our flesh which in our young yeares have corrected and that often for our profit to subdue the faults in us which that age did breed and sometimes when they corrected for their owne pleasures more than for our profit How much more should we subject our selves to the corrections of God that finde in us being but babes so much perversenesse so much negligence such head strong passions such frequent disohebience and the rather because he never corrects us for his pleasure only but for our profit that he might make us more holy and more fruitfull and more meeke as the Apostle shewes Hebrewes 12. 3. We must therefore sticke more affectionately and constantly to the word and suffer our soules to be daily fedde with this sincere milk of the word without which it is no more possible for us to grow in grace then a weake child can doe in nature without milk and food 4. Yea the consideration of our estate that we are but children should beget in us a desire to expresse those praises spiritually which that infant estate in nature doth resemble For 1. Children in nature are without malice they may fall out one with another but they carry no malice they are quickly friends againe so should we much more 1. Cor. 14.20 2. Children live without care they are never troubled for what they shall eate or what they shall put on for the time to come so should wee doe as our Saviour Christ shewes Matth. 6. 3. Children are not lifted up with pride for the great things they are borne unto nor doth the childe of a Prince scorne the fellowship of the childe of a begger but can play with him and make himselfe equall to him so should it be with us we should bee void of great thoughts of heart and not be lifted up in our selves or despise others but make our selves equall to them of the lower sort especially seeing there is no difference in our birth They are borne againe by the same immortall seed that we are which our Saviour Christ is peremptory in Matth. 18.3 Thus much of the third point 4. A fourth thing may be here noted and that concernes the priviledge of weake Christians viz. that they are esteemed of God and not deprived of his favour and care for them because they are weake 1. Parents love their little children as well as their elder children so doth God 2. Parents provide meanes to bring up their little children so doth God they shall have sincere milk to make them grow 3. Parents provide such as shall tend their children and litt●e ones so doth God he hath committed them to the charge of Christ so as the least grace in them shall be preserved though it were but like a bruised reede or the smoaking weeke of a candle Matth. 11. 4. Parents beare with the naturall weaknesse of their children without lessning their fondnesse to them so doth God with infinite indulgence Psalme 103. 5. Parents will not endure it to let them be wronged or hurt and much more wo shall be unto them that offend one of Gods little ones Mat. 18. 6. Parents provide portions and inheritances for their little children so doth God acknowledge them for his heires yea heires with Christ his eldest sonne Rom. 8. 17. A fift point that may be noted from hence is that only converted christians can desire the sincere milke of the word with true affection wicked men can no more affectionately desire the word than a dead childe or no child can doe the breast Quest. But have wicked men no desire after the word Answ. They may have but onely it is for the most part in two cases First when they desire to hear the word onely for mens wits or eloquence or the like carnall ends and so they desire not the sincere milk of the word Secondly in the case of a temporary faith where the delight and desire after the word is not constant like the appetite of a child to the breast for they will fall away in the time of temptation and all their desires prove but as the morning dew Desire the sincere milke of the word Hitherto of the first reason taken from the consideration of their present estate and neede of the word The second reason is taken from the consideration of the nature of the word which they should desire It is sincere pure there is no deceit no mixture in it And it is milk it is wonderfull apt for nourishment There are two things then here said of the word in praise of it First that it is milk secondly that it is sincere Milk This is a metaphor Sometimes by milk is meant a man that is godly cast into affliction by which God straines all the moats of corruption from him while his heart is poured out like milk with griefe and feare Thus Iob saith of himselfe God had strained him out like milk Iob 10. ve● 10. Sometimes by milk is meant the rudiments of religion the principles and grounds of Catechisme and so it differeth from strong meat so it is taken Heb. 5.12 1. Cor. 3.2 Sometimes it signifieth the word of God in generall which is given to the Church for nourishment of their soules to eternall life and so it is taken here as in Esay 55.1 the word is called both milk and wine and water and in other places hony It is hony for the sweetnesse of it It is wine for the power it hath to revive and refresh the spirit of man and make his heart glad It is water for cooling and quenching of his spirituall thirst and it is milk for nourishment It doth more for nursing up mans soule than the milke of the breast can for the bodies of infants The consideration whereof should work in us the desire to which the
an egge they savour not the things of the Spirit Rom. 8. 1 Cor. 2.13 Of this afterwards But yet it may not be denied but that some wicked men may goe so farre as to taste of the good VVord of God and of the powers of the life to come and of heavenly gifts as the Apostle granteth Heb. 6.5 6. Quest. Now there-hence ariseth a great question what should bee the difference betweene this taste in wicked men and the true taste in godly men Answ. For answer hereunto divers differences may be given First in the things tasted there is a difference For wicked men may have common graces yea and miraculous gifts too by imposition of hands and these are a great taste given them of the glory of Gods Kingdome but they never taste of saving graces or if a taste of saving graces were granted yet they taste as it were of the River running by them but not of the Fountain whereas the godly have the very Spring of grace flowing in them Secondly in the time of tasting This taste in wicked men is but for a season it cannot hold long in them and therefore is their faith and joy said to be temporary whereas godly men may keep their taste to their dying daies not only in the gifts of saving graces but in the very sense of the sweetnesse of Christ and the word too c. Thirdly in the manner of tasting For wicked men may taste of the Gospell and Religion by senses or by a dimme kind of contemplation or by a sudden illumination as by a flash of lightning but they cannot taste with their hearts clearly by Faith Or thus wicked men may in the generall taste that is know and believe that the Mystery of Christ is true but they cannot taste or know this Mystery with particular and sound application as theirs Fourthly in the grounds of this taste or delight For a wicked man perswaded by false reasons setled in the common hope or transported with an high conceit of some temporary and common gifts and graces may be much delighted and joyed in the word and the thought of going to heaven for a time but he never rightly applyed the promises of grace in Christ nor doth he ever possesse so much as one infallible signe of a child of God Fiftly in the effects and consequents of tasting for 1. A wicked man may taste but he never digests an evill conscience casts up the food againe or choakes and poisons it whereas in godly men their taste abides in them and they digest the food they receive The vertue of it continues with them 2. A godly man is transformed and made another man by this taste so is not the wicked man it is not a savour of life to the wicked 3. A true taste in the godly workes as is before noted a high estimation and sound contentment so as the godly place the felicity of their lives in this communion with God and his word But that can never a wicked man doe Sixtly and lastly wicked men may seeme to taste and yet doe not Many men professe Religion and delight in the word and in Religion and so religious duties who yet never did attaine to it but constantly found a wearinesse secret loathing and many times a secret and inward ill savour in the word and in the duties of Religion so as the taste is more in their mouthes when they talke with others then in their hearts when they are afore God It will not be amisse particularly to cleare that place in the Hebrewes in all the three instances of tasting First they are said to taste of heavenly gifts so they doe when they have common graces as sometimes some kindes of faith joy hatred of some sinnes love of Ministers or some godly praises for some ends c. Or when they have miraculous gifts confirmed by imposition of hands or otherwise as they had in the primitive times and these gifts are excellent and heavenly because they are mighty by the Spirit of God and came downe from the Father of spirits but saving graces they cannot have Secondly wicked men may taste of the Spirit and good Word of God by feeling some sudden flashes of joy either out of admiration of the meanes of delivering or frō some generall conceit of the goodness of Gods praises Iob 23.12 and the happiness of the godly Psal. 119.23 24 50. But they can get no such taste of the word as to desire it as their appointed food constantly Psal. 119.14 72. Or to make it their greatest delight in affliction or to love it above all riches 1 Thes. 1.5 or to receive it with much assurance in the holy Ghost or to redresse their wayes by it Ps. 119. 9 45 59. so as the taste of the word should put out the taste and rellish of sinne For let wicked men be affected as much as they will their taste of sinne will remaine in them I meane the taste of their beloved sinnes nor can he deny himselfe and forsake his credit friends pleasures profits much lesse life it selfe for the Gospels sake Mark 10.29 Thirdly wicked men may taste of the powers of the life to come by joying at the thoughts that they shall goe to heaven and pleasing themselves in the contemplation of it But it is still a false taste for they have no sound evidence for their hope nor doe any marks of a child of God app●are in them nor can they alledge one sentence of Scripture rightly understood for the meanes of it The use of all this may be threefold First for Tryall All men should seriously try their estates in respect of this taste by pondering upon what is before written concerning the nature and differences of it Secondly it should worke exceeding thankfulnesse to God if wee have found this sound and secret taste in the Word we should every one and for ever say In the Lord will I praise his Word Psal. 56. Thirdly Here is matter of terror unto wicked men and that first to such of them that never felt any sweetnesse in the Word How should they be amazed to thinke of it that God doth from Sabbath to Sabbath restraine his blessings from them and as contemning them to passe by them and take no inward notice of them 2. But especially here is unspeakable terror to such as have had that taste in the sixt to the Hebrewes if they should ever fall from it as is there mentioned For if this taste goe out of thine heart take heed of the sinne against the holy Ghost For at the losse of taste begins that eternall ruine of these men If thou be not warned in time thou maist come to such a condition as it will be impossible for thee to bee ren●ed by repentance Heb. 6. 5 6 7. But least this doctrine should be misapplied as it is sometimes by such as are distressed with Melancholy or vehement affliction of Spirit I will a little more
was the lot of David in his time Secondly that all this was foretold in the old Testament and therefore might not seeme strange Thi●dly that all those oppositions should be in vaine for God would reject and confound those opposites and would prosper and advance the right of Jesus Christ without the help of those men In the particular consideration of these words three things must be noted First the persons threatned viz. the Builders that is the Scribes and Pharises and those that under pretence of religion did oppose Christ. Secondly the cause of their punishment viz the refusing of Christ the foundation stone Thirdly the judgement inflicted upon them which is twofold the one implyed the other expressed There is a judgement implyed viz. That though they were by calling and in the account of the multitude Builders y●t God would reject them and goe on with his work in converting both Jewes and Gentiles without them The judgement expressed is that Christ whom they so much hated and opposed should be in spight of their hearts and to their extreame vexation made King of the Church and exalted to supreme power over all things and the onely stay of the whole Church both of Jews and Gentiles And herein it is to be noted both the manner how this shall be done in the word is become or is made and also the time in that he saith It is made Builders Quest. A question may be moved here for the sense viz. how the Scribes and Pharises and such like men can be said to be builders Answ. For answer hereunto wee must understand that the Scribes and Pharises and so wicked men that possesse eminent places in the Church may be said to be builders First in the account of the multitude whatsoever they were indeed yet they were so accounted as builders and prime men in managing the affaires of the Church Secondly the Scribes and Pharises may be acknowledged in some respect as builders indeed They did God some worke For howsoever they did not soundly teach Christ yet they drew the people by their doctrine to avoid on the right hand the Stoicall strictnesse of the Essenes and on the left hand the profane irreligiousnesse of the Sadduces Thirdly they were builders by calling they have the name not so much from what they were as from what men in their places had been or ought to have been And these are the persons that oppose Christ and are thus severely judged of God Divers things may be hence noted First that men may be great in their owne opinion and in the account of the world who yet are nothing set by of God such were these Pharises Luke 16.14 15. And therefore we should labour for a spirit without guile and not be wise in our selves or rest in outward shews but seek the praise of God we are safe if God allow of us though all the world disallow us Secondly that God will acknowledge freely any good he finds in his very enemies as here the Pharises are not denied the title of Builders for that general work they did in encountring the Sadduces and Essenes And as they are called Builders so are the devils called Principalities and Powers to import what is any way of praise in them notwithstanding their horrible fall Which should teach us to learne of God to doe likewise towards all our enemies and withall it may much comfort us If God will doe thus with his enemies what will he doe with his owne children and servants how will he honour and reward them and if the notorious oppositions of the Pharises cannot hinder Gods acknowledgement of that little goodnesse was in them how much lesse shall the meere frailties of the godly that will doe nothing against the truth though they cannot doe for the truth what they would hinder the glorious recompence of reward and acceptation with God! Thirdly we may hence note that Christ and Religion and the sincerity of the Gospell may be disallowed and opposed by great learned men by such as are of great mark in the Church even by such as were Governors of the Church in name and title Quest. 1. Two questions doe easily rise in mens minds upon the hearing of this doctrine The first is Whence it should be that learned men who have more means to understand the truth than other men and by their calling more especially tyed to the study of all truth yet should be drawn to oppose or reject Christ and the truth Answ. I answer that this may come to passe diversly First sometimes it is because of their ignorance neither may this seeme strange that they should be ignorant for though they may be very learned in some parts of study yet they may be very blockish in some other Besides the naturall heart of man doth not take any great delight in the study of the Scriptures and therefore the answer of Christ was proper Yee erre not knowing the Scriptures or the power of God Secondly in some it is because of their secret Atheisme Many learned men be very Atheists in heart and such were some of the Pharises for they neither knew the Father nor Christ as he chargeth them Thirdly some have a spirit of slumber they have eyes and yet cannot see as in the case of some of those Pharises they could not apply the very things themse●ves spoke For being asked about the King of the Jews Mat. 2. they could answer directly out of the Scriptures and give such sig●●s of the Messias as did evidently agree to Jesus Christ and yet these men were so infatuated that when God shews them the man to whom their own signs agree they cannot allow of him Fourthly in some it is envy They are so fretted at the credit and fame of Christ or such as sincerely preach Christ that for very envy they strive to destroy the work of God and to disparage the progresse of the Kingdome of Christ they cannot endure to see all the world as they account it to follow Christ. Fiftly in others it is ambition and desire of preeminence and the quiet usurpation of the dignities of the Church that they alone might raign and be had in request this no doubt moved the Pharises and was the cause why Diotrephes made such a stir in the Church Sixtly in others it is covetousnesse and desire of gain These are they that account gain to be godlinesse as the Apostle speaks and such were some of the Pharises Luke 16.14 Seventhly in others it is a wilfull and a malicious hatred of the truth and such was it in those Pharises that were guilty of the sinne against the holy Ghost Quest. 2. But how shall a simple ignorant man stay his heart and be setled in the truth when the wise and learned men of the world oppose it how can he tell it is the truth which they reject who have more learning and wit than he Answ. I answer A simple and single-hearted
as he is the efficient cause It is true that some have imagined that the soule of man was made of the substance of God because it is said God breathed into man the breath of life Gen. 2.7 as if he infused into him somewhat from himselfe as a part of his divine substance And the Apostle Paul saith Act. 17.18 We are the Progeny of God and Saint Peter saith We partake of the divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 Now this opinion cannot be true and was worthily condemned by the Fathers as hereticall for Then man should be God For whatsoever God begets from himselfe is God and therefore we say Christ is God Then some part of Gods nature should be infected with sin and ignorance and be damned in hell too which is wonderfull blasphemous to beleeve Now for the places alledged That in Gen. 2. must be understood figuratively for God hath not properly breath but he meaneth that God after a wonderfull manner did infuse the soule into the body And for the place in the Acts we are said to be the progenie of God● not in regard of substance but in respect of resemblance in gifts with which mans nature is adorned And for the place in Peter we are said to partake of the divine nature in the same sense namely as we are qualified with gifts as wisdome goodnesse holinesse in some kinde of likenesse of God It remaines then that we are of God effectually because God hath created our soules and formed them in us This then is the truth that God doth create the particular soule of every man and inhere it to the body when it is formed and distinguished in the parts thereof This may be proved diversly First it is cleare it was so done with the soule of Adam for his body was already framed and then his soule breathed into him Now if the soule of Eve and of all others had another manner of beginning than the creation of God it would have beene mentioned in the Scriptures but that is no where mentioned Secondly Moses calls God the God of the spirits of all flesh Num. 16.22 and 27 16. Thirdly David saith the Lord fashioneth the hearts of all men alike Psal. 33.15 It is Gods worke then to create the heart Fourthly Solomon saith Eccles. 12.7 The body returnes to the dust and the soule to God that gave it in the dissolution of all things they returne to the first causes and matter As the body may be proved originally to be of the earth because it returnes to dust so must the soule be of God because it returnes to God which is said to have given it Fifthly the Prophet Esay useth this phrase concerning God and in his name The soules which I have made Esa. 57.16 Do you aske how the soule comes into the body The Lord answers I made it Sixthly the Prophet Ezekiel shewing how man becomes a living creature speakes thus Thus saith the Lord to these bones I will cause a spirit to enter into them and they shall live Ezek. 37.5 Seventhly the words of the Prophet Zecharie are yet more cleere Thus saith the Lord the Lord which spreads out the heavens and foundeth the earth and formeth the spirit of man in him Out of these words it may be proved that God created the soule of every man and that it is his onely worke For first he saith expresly God formed the spirit in man Secondly this worke of God is compared to two other workes viz. the spreading out of the heaven and the laying of the foundation of the earth Now it is evident that those two things he did of himselfe of nothing without any meanes Lastly that place in Heb. 12.9 is most cleere The words are these Wee have had the fathers of our flesh which chastised us and we reverenced them how much more should we bee subject to the Father of our spirits and live Where is a manifest antithesis betweene the flesh and the spirit and the fathers of our flesh and God the Father of our spirit we had our flesh from our parents and our spirit from God I might adde the reason taken from the manner of giving of the soule of Christ for he was made in all things like to us sinne onely excepted Now it is evident that Christs soule was not begot by carnall propagation and therefore it was created of God Ob. 1. Now against this is strongly objected that if the soule be created immediately of God then it is created either pure or sinfull if pure then how is it that the soule is guilty of originall sinne if impure then how can it be avoided but that God must be the author of sinne Answ. This reason drave divers of the Fathers in the time of Hierom●● especially the Westerne Fathers to beleeve that the soule was propagated from the Parents and Saint Augustine is doubtfull which opinion to take to the inconveniences of each opinion seemed so great But other Divines answer this objection in this manner First that the soule is created of God pure but joyned to a body conceived in sinne which is no injustice in God because he delivers the soule but into such an estate as man had cast himselfe into by his owne wilfull sinne bringing this corruption not onely upon himselfe but upon all his posterity who fell in him Hee by agreement with God being as the common sort of mankind was with him to stand or fall in that generall respect Nor may it be doubted but that the body may worke upon the soule as we see by experience when the body is full of cholericke humours it inclines the soule to anger and so when the body is burdened with melancholy humours it evidently makes sadnesse even in the very minde c. Another answer may be this God creates the soule pure but yet that soule is guilty of owing though not of doing debendi though not agend● it is charged with the debt of Adam as children may be charged with their fathers debts Now this is one part of originall sinne As for the other of corrupt inclination it is to answer modestly if we say we understand not being assured of two things the one that God is the Father of spirits and the other that all men are infected with sinne from the wombe Both are to be beleeved though in this life we cannot explicate it And what hurt is it if wee be ignorant how sinne entred into our natures seeing it concernes us to know it is there and to learne how to get our natures recovered Ob. 2. Other living creatures beget the like to themselves both in body and in soule too and therefore by this doctrine men should be more unable and unperfect than any living creature For if he do beget but onely the body he doth not beget one in specie like to himselfe Answ. Though God create the soule yet it followes not but that it may be truly laid that man begets a man and that
witnesse if we doe that which conscience thinks well to comfort us and if we doe that which conscience thinks ill to discourage us Rom. 2.15 and 9.1 Yea conscience is the guide of our lives We are here pilgrims and strangers farre from our home and in journey continually now God hath set consciences in us to be our guides that in all things we are to doe we may be directed and incouraged by conscience taking the direction and warrant of conscience as a speciall ground of our actions so as to doe cont●ary to what conscience bids us is a sin for it doth not only witnesse about what is past but it directs us about what is to come as now to be done But the principall worke of conscience whether we respect God or man is to keepe court in the heart of man There is in man Forum Conscientia a Court of Conscience a secret Tribunall is set up in the heart of man and therein fits conscience and arraigneth accuseth bringeth witnes sentenceth and doth execution Now concerning the judgement of conscience keeping an Assise in the heart of man two things are to bee considered first the law by which conscience judgeth secondly the manner of the proceeding in judgement For the first Conscience judgeth of the actions of men by vertue of certaine principles as I said before which it findeth in the understanding gathered either from the law of nature or from experience of Gods providence or from the Scriptures Now the manner how it proceeds in judgement is in forme of reasoning as I said before for in the minde the conscience findes as it were a booke of law written which is in the keeping of the faculty they call it in schooles Synt●resis from hence the conscience takes the ground of reasoning and from the memory it takes evidence of the fact or state of the man that is arraigned and then by it selfe it judiciously concludes and passeth sentence and so it proceeds whether it condemne or absolve In the judgement of condemnation it proceeds thus First it cites or calls for the soule to be tried then it accuseth in this forme out of the body of the law kept in the minde it takes the conclusion it meanes to workes upon and then useth the memory to testifie of the fact as for instance Every murderer is an offender thou art a murderer therefore thou art proved to be an offender Then comes the sentence in the same order Hee that commits murder without repentance shall be damned thou committest murder without repentance and therefore art a damned creature So likewise it proceeds in absolving For evidence it proceeds thus He that hath such and such marks as godly sorrow the love or feare of God c. he is a childe of God but thou hast these marks therefore thou art a childe of God and then it goeth to sentence He that is the childe of God shall bee saved but thou art proved to be the childe of God therefore thou shalt be saved Nor doth it rest in the sentence but immediatly doth it selfe begin the execution for laying hold upon the guilty person it presently buffets him and terrifies him and pricks him at the very heart and gnawes him many times with unspeakable torments and tortures And so contrariwise in the sentence of absolution it proceeds with comfort settleth and quieteth the heart of the absolved and many times makes it able with joy to stand undaunted against all the powers of hell and the world of which more afterwards when I come to intreat of the sorts of conscience Observe by the way the difference between the court of conscience within us and mens courts of Justice without us For in mens courts they proceed secundum allegatae probata according to allegation and proofes but God hath appointed another judgement in the heart of man there God judgeth not according to allegation and proofes but according to conscience and hath associated to every man a notary of his owne and a witnesse of his owne which he produceth out of his very bosome so as man shall bee made to confesse what he hath done though all the world excuse him and shall have comfortable testimony in himselfe though all the world beside accuse him The glory of the power of conscience appeares by the third point and that is the prerogatives and properties of conscience in a man for 1. It keeps court in the heart of a man without limitation of time it will call a man to answere and heare judgement at any time it is not limited to any terms nor can the sentence be delaied it hath power to examine testifie and give sentence at any time of the yeere at pleasure nor will it admit any appeal to any creature 2. It is subject properly only to God no earthly Prince can command the conscience of a man as will more appeare afterwards 3. It keeps continuall residence in the heart of man it is alwaies with him at home and abroad it observeth and watcheth him in all places in the Church at his table in his bed day and night it never leaves him 4. God hath subjected man to the obedience of conscience if it command erroneously if it be in things indifferent as in the case of meats and daies in the Apostles time if the conscience doubted or forbade the use of them which yet in themselves might be used the man was bound to follow his conscience though the conscience erred and so sinned in doubting or forbidding Rom. 14.14.23 5. Yea so much honour doth God give unto the conscience that he suffers his owne most holy Spirit to bring in evidence in the court of conscience for so we read that the Spirit of Adoption doth beare witnesse before our spirits that is before the conscience that wee are the sonnes of God Rom. 8.15 6. It is a great prerogative that God hath granted immortality unto conscience Conscience never dies no not when we die Every mans conscience shall bee found no lier at the day of Judgement in so great request with Christ as that dreadfull Judgement shall be guided according to the evidence and verdict of conscience Rom. 2.15 16. For the fourth point Conscience is not all of a sort in all men some have good consciences and some have ill consciences and both these kindes of consciences must be considered of Conscience considered as good comes to be so either by creation or by renovation By creation Adam had his conscience good but by the first sinne conscience became evill in him and all his posterity so as all men naturally have evill consciences and no men have their consciences good but as they are renewed The difference between a good conscience by creation and renovation is this that by creation conscience was perfectly good from the first moment it was infused till the fall and did discover it self by excusing and comforting alwaies for Adams conscience till his fall could accuse
here rendred a Bishop was a tearme given to watch-men and spies and over-seers of works and sometimes to any sort of Rulers In the Apostles time it seemes the tearme was impropriated and given onely to Ministers that had charge of soules For the Apostles appointing certaine men to looke to the bodies of Christians which they tearmed Deacons they appointed other eminent men to looke to the soules of Christians whom they termed Bishops as appeares Phil. 1.1 Acts 20.28 In the time of the Apostles the terme suffered yet a more strict impropriation and was given to some especiall Ministers that had charge not onely of the people but also of the Clergy and in time in some Churches unto these choice men of the Ministery were added the titles of Barons jurisdiction and power of censures sole power of ordination and the like In this place the Apostle gives the terme of Bishop to Christ as the first and principall Overseer of our soules to whom the charge of their originall doth belong Secondly we must note that Christ is not said to be a Bishop of our soules but the Bishop of our soules which imports that he is such a Bishop as there is no other like unto him That charge that Christ hath of our soules he hath it alone There is no Bishop like to Christ our Bishop for 1. There is no good Bishop but he for he died for the soules he hath charge of and so doe not other Bishops And whereas other Bishops may bee unrebukeable in respect of men sometimes he is unrebukeable in respect of God and men too never any Bishop lived so well or did so much good or loved good men and promoted Gods cause so much as hee 2. No other Bishop can instruct the flocke as he doth For hee can make his people profit because he teacheth inwardly whereas they can teach onely outwardly and hee instructs all his flocke and makes them all to know God from the greatest to the lowest of them which no other Bishop can doe 3. He is the onely Bishop because all other Bishops m● give accounts to him 1. Pet. 5.3 4. Hee is the universall Bishop of all soules other Bishops ●●ve their particular charges or Churches but he hath the charge of all the flockes under heaven all Parishes are within his charge 5. All other Bishops have their ordination from him they have no authority but what they receive from him Acts 20.28 6. Because no other Bishop can take the absolute charge of our soules they are not able to keepe us our soules have many diseases which they cannot cure and are assaulted with many adversaries which they cannot resist 7. Because hee is a heavenly Bishop they are but earthly and divers parts of his office he executes in heaven whereas other Bishops can doe nothing for us but on earth 8. Because hee is the onely Law-maker the onely Law-giver to our soules other Bishops can make no Lawes but by his authority Iam. 4.11 9. Because the other Bishops may require goodnesse in their flocks but cannot make them good he can make all his people righteous he is the Lord and their very righteousnesse Ier. 23.6 10. Other Bishops die and leave their flockes unprovided but hee lives ever and never forsakes his Church but is with them to the end of the world Mat. 28. ult Thirdly who are the charge of Christ Not all that are found in the charges of other Bishops he will not stand to our division of Parishes he counts by Election and righteousnesse all that the Father hath given him are his charge and none else The coherence shews they are onely penitent sinners Fourthly the happinesse of such as are under his charge which must needs be great O! It is a great comfort to a poore sinner to know that Christ hath a charge of his soule for he shall be sure that Christ will feed his soule and nourish it up by his Ordinances and will keep him to eternall life and use him with all tendernesse and compassion A bruised Reed he will not breake and the smoaking Flaxe he will not quench The particulars are metaphorically handled before in the consideration of the benefits we receive from Christ as a Shepheard Uses The Uses follow and so First for information and so first we may here take occasion to thinke of the preciousnesse of our soules for as they' are made of better stuffe than all this visible world being spirits and were redeemed with a greater price than would have beene laid downe to redeeme this whole world so it here appeareth because God sets his owne Son to tend our soules which should make us make more reckoning of them and not be so carelesse of them It were an ill bargaine to win the whole world and lose our owne soules Secondly in that he takes charge of our soules it imports that his Kingdome is not of this world and that he leaveth our bodies and outward estates to the charge of the Kings and Rulers of the earth he claimes himselfe chiefly the charge of our soules Thirdly in spirituall things it is imported that we are to be subjected to such as have the over-sight of us onely so far forth as they command us in the Lord and not otherwise Other Bishops have their power subordinate to Christ and must in all things see to it that they doe nothing against Christ. We are subject first and originally to Christ the charge of our soules properly belongs unto him Fourthly we may here see what need our soules have of looking to if they were not in great danger and subject to many diseases and necessities Christ had never taken such a peculiar charge of them Fiftly it imports the abject estate of all grosse offenders for if Christ be the Bishop of soules they cannot belong to his charge For wise and godly men as much as lieth in them cast out notorious offenders and protest against them and therefore will Christ much more cast off and refuse all such servants of the Divell and the World and Antichrist as will not beare his yoke Sixtly it imports that all Bishops must have ordination from him and therefore such as cannot shew their calling from Jesus Christ are plants which he will root out Use 2. Secondly for consolation to all the godly All that have committed their soules to him may rest upon it that he is able to keepe them till the day of his comming 1 Tim. 1.2 They shall never be lost none can take them out of his hand Iohn 10.29 It is the will of God that none of them should be lacking Iohn 6. And therefore they may comfort themselves with those words of the Apostle Nothing shall ever be able to separate us from the love of God Rom. 8. ult Use 3. Thirdly for instruction and so it should teach us to take chiefe care of our soules For from his office we may learne that he accounts our soules to be the chiefe
meant carnall Christians that had turned from Gentilisme and received the profession of Christian religion but yet followed their carnall courses we may then note that the bare change from a false religion to the profession of the true is not sufficient to salvation A man that hath professed a false religion had need of two conversions the one is from his false religion to the true and the other from profanenesse to sincerity in that religion The corne must be fetched from the field into the barne but that is not enough for so is the chaffe but it must then be taken from the barne into the garner To leave Popery and turne Protestant is not in it selfe sufficient unlesse a man turne from the profanenesse that is in the multitude in true Churches to embrace the sincere profession of the Gospel And there is reason for it for in changing from a false religion to a true a man doth but change his profession or his mind at best but he that will be changed effectually must change his heart and whole conversation and become a new creature So that then these words describe a carnall man viz. that he is such a one as doth not obey the word of God By the Word he meanes here the doctrine published by the Prophets and Apostles and now contained in the Scriptures Many Doctrines may be hence observed 1 The Scripture is Gods Word because God thereby doth expresse the sense of his mind as men doe by their words The Scripture is not the word which God the Father begate but is the word which God the Father uttered and is the word which God uttered to us bodily creatures God though he be a Spirit yet doth speake both to spirits and bodies to spirits by a way unknowne to us to bodies he hath spoken many wayes as by signes dreames visions and the like so by printing the sense of his mind in the minds of creatures that could speake and by them uttered in word or writing what he would have knowne Thus he spake by the Patriarks Prophets Christ and the Apostles They that deny that God hath any words either deny that God is as Psal. 14.11 or else that conceive him to be like stockes or stones or beasts as Rom. 1.23 or else thinke he can speake but will not because hee takes no care of humane things as Iob 22.23 These are Atheists 2. The Scripture is called the Word by an excellency because it is the only word we should delight in God since the fall did never speake unto man more exactly than by the Scriptures and we were better heare God talke to us out of the Scriptures than ●eare any man on earth yea or Angell in heaven yea it imports that we should be so devoted to the study of the Scriptures as if we desired to heare no other sound in our eares but that as if all the use of our eares were to heare this Word Let him that hath eares to heare heare 3. This Word of God now in the time of the New Testament belongs to all men in the right application of the true meaning of it Once it was the portionof Iacob and God did not deale so with other Nations to give them his Word but now that the partition wall is broken downe the Gospel is sent to every creature That is here imported in that unbeleeving husbands are blamed for not obeying the Word which should teach all sorts of men to search the Scriptures and ●o heare the Word devoutly and withall know that the comforts terrours and precepts co●●ained in it will take hold upon all sorts of men respectively 4. The Word of God ought to rule all sorts of men That is implied here in that fault is found with these unbeleevers that they obeyed it not It was given of God to that end to instruct reprove and direct men in all their waies 2 Tim. 3.16 17. It is the Canon or rule of mens actions Gal. 6. 16. It is the light and lanthorne God hath given to men it hath divine authority If we will shew any respect to God we must be ruled by the Scripture which is his Word 5. Unregenerate men have no mind to obey the Word and the reason is because they are guided by other rules which a●e false as their owne reason the customes of the world the suggestions of the divell and the like and because too the Word is contrary to their carnall desires and therefore they yeeld themselves to be guided by such rules as are most pleasing to their corrupt natures and besides too the light of the Word is too glorious for his eyes he cannot see into the mysteries contained in it because they are spiritually to be discerned and the naturall man therefore cannot perceive the things of God 6. It is a dangerous thing not to obey the Word of God they are accounted for lost and forlorne men here that doe not obey the Word Men be deceived if they thinke it is a course may be safe for to disobey Gods Word for Gods Word will take hold of them and destroy them and it will judge them at the last day Zech. 1.4 5. 2 Thes. 1.8 They are but lost men cast-awaies that care not for Gods Word 7. Nothing is to be reckoned a sin which is not disobedience to the Word That which is not contrary to some Scripture is no transgression and therefore men should take heed of burthening themselves with the vaine feare of sinning when they breake no commandement of God but only unwarranted traditions either on the left hand or the right 8. The constant omission of religious duties and good workes proves a man to be a carnall person as well as the committing of manifest injuries or grosse offences Here the Periphrasis of a carnall person is That he did not doe what the Word required 9. Men that obey not the Word may be won which should be a great comfort to penitent sinners It is true that disobedience clothed with some circumstances or adjuncts is very dangerous as when men have the means and love darknesse rather than light Iohn 3.20 and when men are smitten with remorse and have blessing and cursing set before them and see their sins and feele the axe of Gods Word and yet will on in transgression Deut. 11. 28. Mat. 3 10. or when men are called at the third or sixth or ninth houre and will put off and delay upon pretence of repenting at the eleventh houre Ma. 20. or when men are powerfully convinced and will raile and blaspheme and contradict the Word Acts 13.45 46. 18.6 and when God pursues men with his judgements and they refuse to returne Ier. 5.2 3 or lastly when men despight the spirit of God and sin of malice against the truth Heb. 10. 26 27 28 29 30. 10. The chiefe doctrine is That sound obedience to the Word of God is the Character of a true Christian a marke to distinguish the true
if we knew no more but that it pleased God to have it so it is his will it should be so But yet that it is a wise providence of God so to order it it may appeare in divers things for by continuing the meanes to call his owne Elect thus by degrees the wicked are left without excuse Besides the godly while they looke for the daily discovery of new converts are thereby put to the exercise of many graces and duties as diligence compassion charity a winning conversation meeknesse prayer exhortation and the like And besides the outward peace of the Church is thereby preserved for if it were knowne once that all the Elect in any place were called there would follow such violent opposition from the greater and worser sort as there would be no place of rest for the Church in the world They would all bee of Caines minde if God had declared his testimony on both sides from heaven And therefore at the day of judgement assoone as hee hath parted the Elect and Reprobate and sentenced them hee disposeth so of them as they shall never live together againe And further if all the Elect were gathered at once the world would bee at an end for then Christ would deliver up the kingdome to his father 1 Cor. 15.24 and therefore Ministers should continue painefull in their labours as remembring that they are set to worke for edification of the Church till Christ come againe Eph. 4.12 And though the most of their present hearers have refused the Word of God and are hardened yet they may see cause of constancie because God still supplies their Auditories with new generations that rise up by degrees in the roome of those hardned ones And withall they must thinke that all the yeere is not harvest they are Gods husbandmen and must not thinke much to labour and toile many daies and weekes before they see the fruit of their labours as hoping that in the end God may grant them a comfortable harvest and if Israel should not be gathered yet their reward is with God Thus of the first point imported in this word Also Secondly we may hence gather further that the Apostle would have us to account all that are won to religion to be safe He imples so much in that hee treats about winning of more to them as if hee accounted them safe that were won already And it is true of such as are won to the outward profession of religion that in charity wee are bound to hope the best of each one particularly but for such as are won to sound sanctification the signes whereof were noted before it is certaine of them they can never bee lost which is cleare by these proofes 1 Cor. 1.8 9. Phil. 1.6 Rom. 8. ult 1 Pet. 1.5 Iohn 6. 10.29 30. And it must needs be so for God will not cast off the people whom he hath chosen Psal. 94.14 Rom. 11. And besides Christ lives in the hearts of those that are truely sanctified Gal. 2.20 and Christ can die no more Rom. 6.10 He may as well die at the right hand of his Father as die in the heart of a Christian. And further God hath given us his spirit as the earnest of our eternall salvation sealing to us thereby all the promises he hath made us Eph. 1.14 15. and it is a known principle that whom God loveth he loveth to the end and finally Gods decree is unalterable 2 Tim. 2.29 Ob. This may be true of the most but alas how know I that God will looke so carefully to me in particular I may be lost Sol. Gods promise is universall Not one of them saith the Prophet shall be lacking Ier. 23.4 and God hath charged Christ to see to the keeping of the bodies and soules of every true beleever Iohn 6.39 40. Ob. It is true God will never depart from us but we may depart from him and so perish Sol. The Lords covenant is that neither he will depart from us nor we shall depart from him for hee will put his feare within us to that end Ier. 32.41 Ob. But I feele my selfe so weake and ignorant I cannot hold out Sol. The smoaking flaxe shall not be quenched nor the bruised reed broken Esay 42. Ob. But we are in continuall danger by reason of temptations within and infections of all sorts from without Sol. God is faithfull and will keepe you from evill for all that 2 Thes. 3.3 and Christ hath made intercession to his Father for that very thing that you may be kept from those evills Iohn 17. and God hath put his Spirit within you of purpose to make you keepe his statutes and to hold on your way Ezek. 36.27 Ob. But the Apostle Iohn seemes to say that we may lose what we have wrought 2 Iohn 8. Sol. The words of the Apostle Iohn are these Looke to your selves that we lose not those things which we have wrought but that we receive a full reward Which words may be understood as spoken to such as were hypocrites had but temporary grace not sound sanctification for he saith in the next words He that transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ hath not God They never had God then that lose what they have wrought and so this toucheth not such as are sure now they have God in that they have saving grace Again it is true that the godly may lose what they have wrought when they fall into scandalls or by weakenesse fall from the profession of the truth I say they may lose what they have wrought in those sins first in respect of the praise of men all their former honour may be laid in the dust secondly in respect of the inward sense and comfort of what good they have done and thirdly in respect of the fulnesse of the reward in heaven for their glory may be much lessened by their falls but it doth not therefore follow that they may fall finally away from God for they will recover againe Ob. But we see that Christians of greater gifts than we have fallen away and never recover again but die in their Apostacie as Hymeneus and Philetus did in the Apostles times Sol. The Apostle in that place answers that Gods foundation remaines sure and hath this seale he knoweth who are his which evidently importeth that God did never know them to be his what shewes soever they made amongst men and therefore their fall need not discourage such as are sure by the former markes that they are Gods Object But wee see that the godly themselves doe fall as David and Peter did Sol. First they did recover againe and so were not lost Secondly though they fall they shall not be utterly cast downe for God staies them from falling wholly away though they fall away in some particular act Psal. 37.23 Thirdly in the worst fals of the Saints there is ever still an holy seed of grace and faith and knowledge that abideth in
or contempt of others or hath the appearance of such evill in the judgement of others Esay 3. 1 Thes. 5. 8. When it becommeth not good workes or hindereth them 1 Tim. 2.9 as when men restraine mercie to the poore or oppresse their Tenants or defraud other men onely to mainetaine themselves or theirs in outward pompe and gallantnesse of apparell This is the horrible sin of the Gentry in many places of this kingdome 9. When it is condemned and reproved by godly Ministers that are both wise and learned for their testimony ought to be received 2 Thess. 1.10 and it is a vile sinne to vexe them and grieve them by our obstinacie yea though they were not able to make so full demonstration yet when they reprove such things out of a spirituall jealousie and feare they corrupt their hearers they ought to be heard Heb. 13.18 1 Cor. 11.2.3 10. When the time that might be profitably spent is consumed by the tedious curiositie of dressing Ephes. 5.16 as it is with those that have not time for God● worship in private or cannot come time enough to the Church or neglect their calling by being so long in dressing 11. When it dishonours the body of a man Col. 2. ult as when it is slovenly or sluttish or is taken up of meere singularitie and affectation of the praise of mortification and tends to restraine Christian libertie in others For no pretence may uncomely apparell be used for 1 Tim. 2.9 it is required that the apparell of women be comely for so the originall word signifies But especially uncomely apparell is then most vile when it is worne with a purpose to deceive as the Prophet complained of such as weare a ro●gh garment to deceive 12. The puritie of a Christian life should avoide all dressings or fashions which had their originall from infamous persons such as are the fashions of Whores or debauched creatures and such a beginning it is said commonly Yellow starch had What fellowship betweene light and darknesse righteousnesse and unrighteousnesse Christ and Belial If we would have God to love us we must separate and come out from amongst them and touch no uncleane thing 13. When such apparell is worne as is contrary to the wholesome lawes of men for we are bound to submit our selves to every ordinance of man for Gods sake 1 Pet. 2.13 14. Lastly when the partie that useth such apparell or dressing is condemned in himselfe and hath his owne conscience accusing or disliking it or is no● fully assured that he doth not sin Whatsoever is not of Faith in those things is sin Rom. 14. Verse 4. But let it be the hidden man of the heart c. HItherto of that adorning they should not be curious or costly in Now in this verse he shewes in the affirmative what apparell or dressing they s●ould be carefull of and that is the adorning of their soules and the apparelling of the inward man In the words three things may be noted 1. What must be apparelled viz. the hidden man of the heart 2. With what it must be adorned which he shewes both in generall and in particular in generall it must be with incorruptible things in particular it must be with a meeke and quiet spirit 3. The reason viz. because such apparell is very rich in Gods account The fir●● thing then is what must be apparelled viz. the man of the heart The man of the heart This is a kind of speaking not used in any place of Scriptu●e but this onely this Apostle onely useth this kinde of expressing himselfe Now concerning the man of the heart I would consider of sixe things 1. What he is 2. Whence he is or his originall 3. In what he excels the outward man 4. What condition he is in by nature 5. H●w he may be mended or made better 6. How we may know when the man of the heart is right ●or the first by the man of the heart hee meanes the same the Apostle Paul●oth ●oth by the inward man 2 Cor. 4.16 and the inward man is the soule or he●rt of man Thus ●e speakes of a Jew that is outward and a Jew that is in●ar● Rom. 2.28 29. Now the heart is and may well be called the man for divers reasons 1. In respect of definition For the definition of a man agrees to the heart of man though there were no body for God was the God of Abraham and Abraham was and was a living man many hundred yeeres after his body was in the grave Mat. 22. And hence it is that unto the soule or heart of man in Scriptures is attributed all things that the outward man can doe as life Psal. 22.27 language Eccles. 9.1 Psal. 14.1 36.1 praying to God Psal. 37.4 receiving messages from God as when the Prophet is bidden to speake to the heart of Jerusalem Esay 40. serving of God c. 2. In respect of dominion The heart is the man because it disposeth the way of man Pro. 16.9 and ruleth the outward man for out of the aboundance of the heart the mouth speaketh And therefore Solomon saith that from the heart comes life Pro. 4.23 3. In respect of acceptation The heart is that which God especially respects in man it is the heart he lookes upon 1 Sam. 17.7 He tries the heart and as Solomon saith He weighes the hearts of the children of men Pro. 21.2 and he will be served with our hearts Iosh. 24.14 and in all holy duties it is with us in Gods account according as he seeth the heart 1 Kings 8.39 so he requires the heart in repenting 1 Sam. 7.3 in praying 2 Tim. 2.22 Hos. 7.14 in hearing the Word Luke 8. and so in every good duty Thus of the first point For the second The man of the heart hath his originall from God himselfe He is the Father of Spirits Heb. 12.8 and it was his especiall glory to forme and fashion the heart in man as divers Scriptures shew Zech. 12.1 Psal. 33.15 and is therefore called the God of the heart Psal. 37. For the third The man of the heart excells the outward man exceedingly and that both in substance and in priviledges As for substance in the outward man we agree with beasts but in the inward man we agree with Angels in as much as the man of the heart consists of a spirituall and immateriall essence as well as the Angels And as in substance so in properties there is great difference for first the man of the heart is hidden it can be and doe all his worke and yet be invisible God himselfe hath variety of conversation with the man of the heart that no creature else knowes Secondly he is free and subject only to the God of his heart properly No man can come at or governe or command the heart of man Thirdly he is properly the seat of Gods image Wee are not properly like God in our bodies because God hath no body but in
Parliament for the holding of their lands they think they have a sure tenure yet many Acts of Parliament may be repealed but the Acts of Gods councell are like himselfe immutable The godly they are predestinate to adoption Secondly they have not only Gods promise for their inheritance but Gods oath that by two immutable things the heires of promise might have aboundant consolation as the Apostle shewes Heb. 6.17 18. Thirdly to make all sure God hath put his spirit within them as the seale and earnest of their inheritance Eph. 1.13 14. The Use may be 1. For information and so first to shew the great goodnesse of God to man that not only requires and gives holinesse but adds also blessednesse to his servants In justification and sanctification he gives to men those good things they call bona virtutis the good things of vertue and inadoption he gives those good things they call bona conditionis the good things of condition even blessednesse and true happinesse whom God makes holy he will make happy also Secondly it manifestly shewes that we hold all our happinesse not by merit but by grace For adopted children cannot plead merit but must acknowledge all of gift as will more appeare when we come to speak of the cause of inheriting viz grace 2. For instruction and so The first impression this Doctrine should worke upon us should be a desire to be such as may obtaine the right of adoption of sons for flesh and bloud cannot inherit 1 Cor. 15.50 So long as wee are carnall and unregenerate men we neither are nor are to be called the heires of God The unrighteous that is such as live in grosse sins and doe the workes of the flesh are expressely and peremptorily excluded from the benefit of adoption 1 Cor. 6.9 ●0 Gal. 5.21 None but such as are effectually called and borne of God are capable of this grace Heb. 9.16 Iohn 1.13 And in particular we must have a true justifying faith Iohn 1.12 For as was shewed before we come to the right of Sons only as we are ingrafted into Christ upon whom all the inheritance is originally and fundamentally conferred and into Christ we cannot get but by faith And further we must looke to the sound mortification of the deeds of the flesh Rom. 8.13 and know that none can inherit but such as overcome the power of their corruptions and are not in bondage to any sin Rev. 21.7 And more specially God requires in all such as will be his sons that they be such as are not in bondage to the passions and perturbations of the heart for he hath promised that the meeke shall inherit Mat. 5.5 Thirdly we must forsake all needlesse society and familiarity with the wicked of the world if we will be Gods sons and daughters and resolutely refuse to be corrupted with the sins of the times as the Apostle she●es at large 2 Cor. 6.17 18. Fourthly we must be such as are described Esay 56.4 5 6. We must make conscience to keep Gods Sabbaths and chuse the thing will please God being more desirous to please God in all things than naturall children are to please their earthly parents and take hold of Gods Covenant as resting upon this preferment and the promises of it as our sufficient happinesse And that we may be the more established in the knowledge of our adoption it will be good for us to trie our selves by the signes of such as are Gods adopted children 1. Such as are Gods children by adoption have this marke they are made like unto God their father in holinesse in some truth of resemblance 1 Pet. 1. 15. and this they shew two wayes first by purifying themselves and sound humbling of their soules for their sins that deface the image of God in them as Saint Iohn saith Every one that hath this hope purifieth himselfe as he is pure 1 Iohn 3.2 3. Secondly by imploying himselfe constantly in doing righteousnesse for hereby the children of God are knowne from the children of the Divell 1 Iohn 3.10 2. In the last recited place you may discerne another signe of a sonne and heire to God and that is the love of the godly as his brethren and fellow heires He that loveth not the brethren is of the Divell not of God 1 Iohn 3.10 3. The gift of prayer is a signe of adoption and that we have received the spirit of adoption Rom. 8.15 16. By the gift of prayer I meane not the skill to utter words to God in a good forme of words and variously but the gift to speake to God in prayer both with confidence in God as in a Father and with the affections of prayer which the phrase of crying Abba Father imports 4. A child of God discovers his adoption by the maner of doing good duties he doth serve God not with servile respect but with filiall affection he loves to be Gods servant as may be gathered Esay 56.6 5. To love them that hate us and blesse them that curse us and doe good to them that persecute us is a signe that we are children to God as our heavenly Father Luke 6.35 Mat. 5. The second impression that this glory of adoption should make upon our hearts should be to stir us up to carry our selves in this world as becomes the children and heires to such a Father as God is And so in generall it should wonderfully fire us to all possible care to be holy as he is holy and to expresse more to the life the Image of Gods grace and holinesse 1 Pet. 1.14 15. and that in all maner of conversation striving to carry our selves as the sons of God without rebuke in the midst of this froward and wicked world all sorts of the men of the world being so ready to reproach such as are Gods people that if they will speake evill it may be only for our good conversation in Christ Phil 2.15 16. And in particular we are charged in Scripture with certaine speciall and choice things that doe greatly adorne and grace the life of a child of God that is an heire of heaven if we be Gods heires and he be our Father 1. We should be Peace-makers for our Father is the God of peace and this will force men to call us the sons of God Mat. 5.10 2. We must not render reviling for reviling but rather blesse seeing we are heires of blessing as the Apostle urgeth it ver 9. 3. We should live without care as knowing that we have a heavenly Father that careth for us Mat. 6.32 And seeing we are heires of a better world we should not love this world nor set our hearts upon such meane thing● as this world can afford 1 Iohn 2.15 4. If we be Gods sons we should be willing to submit our selves to his correction If we yeeld that power to the father of our bodies how much more to the Father of our spirits Heb. 12.9 But especially take
and religiously in this present world Tit. 2.11 12. Thus of the third point viz. the cause of inheriting The maner followes viz. They inherit together Together The godly are heires together their inheritance lies all together Which may appeare by reckoning up the particular priviledges of the godly in which they all meet and are joynt heires and fellow heires as the Apostle calls them Rom. 8.17 Eph. 3.6 Christians hold their inheritance in Gavelkind I thinke that is the terme the Lawyers give for that tenure where all the brethren have the same inheritance divided amongst them and all alike heires And as they are so in the matter they inherit so in the manner of comming to their right for they are all the children of God and children by adoption and not by naturall generation so Christ only is Gods heire Now that it may distinctly appeare that they are heires together I will number some particulars as 1. They have all the same Father Eph. 4.6 who is in them all 2. They are all of the same body viz. members of the mysticall bodie of Christ Eph. 3.6 3. They have all one spirit Eph. 4.3 4. 4. They weare all the same apparell being cloathed with the same righteousnesse of Christ Gal. 3.27 28. 5. They weare all the same livery and badge of distinction they have all one Baptisme Eph. 4.6 6. They are all fed with the same commons at the Lords Table the bread is the communion of the body of Christ and so the wine of his bloud I say communion because all partake of it 1 Cor. 10.16 17. 7. They have all the same gifts for though in outward administrations and callings there be difference and in naturall endowments and in common graces yet in the gifts of saving grace they have all a part of all gifts and differ onely in the measure as they have but one faith and one hope and so in all other saving graces Ephes. 4.4 5. 1 Cor. 12. Ephes. 5.7 Rom. 12. 8. They have all the same promises Eph. 3.6 9. They have all the same or the like attendants viz. the Angels of heaven Heb. 1.13 10. They are governed by the same lawes have all one Lord Eph. 4.5 and have all the same way to heaven which is by Christ and have all interest in the Teachers of the Word of Christ their Lord 1 Cor. 3.22 11. They shall have all the same glory after this life for the inheritance of them all is immortall and undefiled and without end 1 Pet. 1.4 12. They shall hold their glory in the same place after this life viz. in heaven 1 Pet. 1.4 The Use of this should be greatly for the comfort of weake and poore Christians for though they differ from other men in outward calling or the measure of gifts yet they are in the substance of the inheritance provided for as well as the greatest Kings or Prophets or Apostles And besides it should teach the brethren of higher degree to carry themselves with all humility towards their poore brethren and it should teach all Christians to love as brethren to be courteous and tender hearted one towards another as followes in the next verse of this Chapter Thus of the fourth point 5. The fift point is concerning the persons that doe inherit and so the coherence shewes That both sexes are capable of inheriting women as well as men wives as well as husbands God is no respecter of persons but in all conditions of people such as feare him and believe in Christ and worke righteousnesse are accepted and adopted of him as these places shew Act. 10.35 Gal. 3.28 Col. 3.11 And this should teach all Christians not to have the glorious faith of Christ in respect of persons Iam. 2.1 2. And in particular such husbands as have religious wives should make the more account of them though God hath made them inferiour to them in outward condition yet he hath made them equall in the inheritance of life Lest praier be interrupted Hitherto of the second reason to perswade husbands to make conscience of their dutie towards their wives The third reason is taken from the ill effect if it be not done and that is that Gods service and in particular praier will be hindred and that divers waies First if he dwell not with her praier in the family is like to be omitted it being his worke as the head of the family to performe that duty and to see that his houshold serve God with him Josh. 24.14 And if he carrie not himselfe as a man of knowledge there may arise such discord amongst them that they will have no minde either to pray together or one for another at least their passions will tempt them many times to omit prayer and if he give not honour but despise her he will have no heart to pray for her whom he contemnes There are many observations to be gathered out of these words as Doct. 1. Prayer is a part of Gods service that is necessarily required and not left arbitrary for men to doe or not to doe it Psal. 105.1 1 Thess. 5.17 Mat. 7.7 Rom. 12.12 Eph. 6.18 Col. 4.2 Doct. 2. The exercise of prayer is not only a part of Gods service but it is an excellent part a chiefe part that which much excels Which may appeare first by the nature of it It is an exercise in which a mortall creature talkes with the immortall Creator Secondly by the antiquitie of it It is an exercise that godly men have betaken themselves to with great devotion from the first times of the world Gen. 4.26 21.33 Thirdly by the efficient cause of it God poures out his owne Spirit upon his people of purpose to make them able to pray and therefore is called The Spirit of prayer Zech. 12.11 Ioel 2.28 Rom. 8.26 Fourthly because they are things so precious as Christ takes them and presents them to God covering our imperfections and making them acceptable Rev. 8.3 Fiftly by the great priviledges this exercise enjoyes For first God is greatly delighted in it Pro. 15.8 and therefore one of his titles is that he is a God that heareth prayer Psal. 65.1 and heares with great attention his eares are open Psal. 34.15 and will not despise prayer for the infirmities of his servants Psal. 102.17 nor reproach them Iames 1.5 Secondly any man of any condition that hath an honest heart may be regarded with God in prayer Marke 7.7 Luke 11.10 Thirdly whatsoever is asked is obtained which is an unspeakable benefit Marke 11.24 Psal. 85.5 Lastly God hath promised salvation to all them that call upon his name Ioel 2. ult And this point should be a great encouragement to all true Christians to be much in prayer and to resist all dulnesse in themselves or temptations and objections against the exercise of prayer Doct. 3. Prayer is a dutie required of private Christians as well as of learned men or Ministers Husbands and wives are supposed to practise
and disagreements and faults in the carriage or judgements of Christians in their living together The earnestnesse of the Apostle in heaping up these directions imports that he discerned many things amisse which was not only true of the Churches of Corinth and Galatia and Thessaloni●a but even of the Church of Philippi which St. Paul most commends And the like we may find in the estate of the seven Churches of Asia if we mark what is said to them by S. Iohn in his Revelation Yea there was not perfect agreement at all times amongst the Pillars of the first Christian Churches Paul and Barnabas were at variance Acts●5 ●5 ●9 and Paul and Peter did openly disagree Gal. 2. The reason is because in this life we know but in part and are sanctified but in part 1 Cor. 13. The Use should be first to teach us not to be offended or scandalized at the differences of opinion that breake out in all the Churches of Christ every where in our times Wee must pray the God of peace to give us peace and know that it hath alwaies beene so and therefore it should not hinder us from embracing the known truth Secondly this should the more enflame our desires after heaven and make us the more willing to die because there will never be perfect holinesse and agreement till we come to heaven then we shall be holy as God is holy and know as we are known and charity will be perfect for ever And besides this should teach us with the more patience to instruct and waite for the amendment of such as are contrary minded and not strive over violently or passionately with them 2 Tim. 2.25 Lastly if Christians can agree no better and have such defects then wee should never wonder overmuch at the monstrous abominations in opinion or life that are found amongst the wicked of the world and in false Churches A second doctrine I observe from hence is That we ought to be rightly ord●red in our minds as well as any other part of our soules or lives Yea the minde is to be looked to in the first place Hence it is that in our regeneration our mindes are especially renewed Rom. 12.2 and God requires to be served with our minds Mat. 22.37 Yea as God is an eternall mind so the service of the mind is most proper for God And besides our mindes give lawes to our lives and therefore if the mind be not good the life must needs be evill The happinesse of the whole man depends upon the mind and therefore the Apostle reckons the impuritie of the mind and conscience to be the worst impurity can befall a man Tit. 1.15 and the same Apostle makes it a signe of a man whose end is damnation to have his mind taken up and wholly bent to earthly things Phil. 3.19 This point may serve first to shew the wofull estate of such persons as have ill and unsound minds And the mind is unsound when it is corrupt or putrefied with ill opinions concerning either faith or manners 2 Tim. 3.8 1 Cor. 11.3 and when it is blinded with ignorance 2 Cor. 4.3 4. for without knowledge the mind cannot be good Pro. 19.2 and it is a divellish mischiefe to have darknesse in our mindes as that place in the Corinthians shewes The minde is also unsound and in wof●ll ●aking when it is taken up with vile thoughts and contemplative wickednesse Rom. 1.21 Eph. 4.17 and when men have double mindes Iames 4.7 or wavering mindes Iames 1.7 And therefore one of the highest curses God inflicts upon men with whom he is angry is to plague them in their mindes either with a reprobate mind Rom. 1.28 or with a desperate minde Secondly this Doctrine shewes what harmfull creatures deceivers of mindes are they doe more mischiefe than such as deceive men in their estates or poison mens bodies Tit. 1.10 Thirdly this should teach all carefull Christians to gird up the loynes of their mindes 1 Pet. 1.13 and to labour to get a sound minde 2 Tim. 1.7 and in particular to get the unitie of minde which the Apostle here requires And so I come to the third point The third Doctrine then which I observe out of these words is That all true Christians are bound in a speciall maner to strive to be all of one mind which in this place is meant of unity and agreement in judgement and matter of beliefe in the points of Religion This is urged in divers Scriptures as 1 Cor. 1.10 2 Cor. 13.11 Phil. 2.2 Rom 15.5 and this was the great glorie of the first Christian Church that all the multitude were of one heart and one soule Acts 4.32 There are many reasons to perswade us hereunto 1. From the nature of this agreement It is as it were one of the bonds of the mysticall union for though it be not the principall one for that is the Spirit of Christ yet it is a speciall one it is like the veines and sinewes which tye the bodie together to breake this unitie is to cut asunder the very veines and sinewes of the mysticall bodie of Christ 1 Cor. 1.10 2 From the equitie and comelinesse of it We have but one Father one Baptisme one Spirit one Hope and therefore should have but one Faith Eph. 4.3 4 5. 3 From the good effects of this unitie for first it will make us the fitter to prayse God and doe him service with the greater encouragement and comfort as we may see Rom. 15.5 Secondly it will make us ever eat our meat with more gladnesse and singlenesse and quietnesse of heart Act. 2.46 Thirdly it will winne us the more favour and honour amongst the people as wee reade in the example of those first Christians Act. 2.47 yea in the end of that verse wee may gather that it is a great advantage for the conversion of others when they see us agree so well together and further it will bee a singular joy to our Teachers to see us agree and be all of one minde and to serve God with one shoulder as the Prophet speaketh Zeph. 3.9 so Phil. 2.2 Yea it will bee a signe to us that wee are true Christians and have found true comfort in Christ and in brotherly love and that we have fellowship by the Spirit in the bodie of Christ and that we have right bowels and mercie unto others Phil. 2.1 2. 4 From the ill effects of dissenting Two of them may be gathered from the coherence in this place for first it is implyed That if Christians agree not in opinions they will hardly practise the foure other vertues here named towards the persons with whom they dissent they will not love them as brethren heartily nor bee so pitifull to them in distresse nor so mercifull to helpe them if they be in need nor so courteous and kinde to them Secondly if this first rule be transgressed it is very probable they will bring trouble upon themselves and that either
thereof 235 236 Signes ibid. c. Guile Vide Deceit Hypocrisie The words acceptation 205 Why and how to be avoided 206 The miserie of Guilefull persons ibid. Of secret Guile 207 Signes of a man without Guile 209 Guile in words many wayes so in Hypocrisie 525 H HArdnesse Hardnesse of heart seemed to be f●lt more after assurance than before 113 Healing Wherein Christs Healing excels for our comfort 550 That we are all healed by Christs stripes 551 What we must doe to be healed by Christ 550 The bodies of all men by nature need Healing 552 Christ is a Physician as well for the body as the soule 553 Rules for such as desire to Heale their bodily griefes 554 Heart Adorned with eight graces maketh it acceptable to God 17 Eleven things in which a sanctified Heart rejoyceth ibid. Three speciall signes of a new Heart 415 What the hid man of the Heart is 607 Wherein it excells the outward man 608 By what meanes it may be mended 609 How to know when it is right ibid. Eight things to be done for getting a cleane heart 175 How our Hearts are purified in obeying the truth 176 Heaven Where and what wi●● its excellencie above all other pl●●●s 41 The glory of Heaven ●●ll●d grace in three respects 110 111 Heavinesse Foure sorts of Heavinesse 56 Heires How godly men become Heires 645 How they must behave themselves 648 Godly men and women are Heires together many wayes 688 Holy Ghost The Spirit why called the Holy Ghost 93 He is a Person distinct from Father and Son 94 Whether its mission doth signifie any inequalitie 95 Holinesse Foure sorts of Holinesse 122 God Holy three wayes ibid. Helpes with motives thereto 123 Christians are Holy many wayes 322 Rules for the right ordering of a Holy conversation 323 Inward Holinesse wherein it consists 174 175 Honest. Honestie What it signifies 388 Sixe things which make and manifest an Honest conversation 389 An Honest conversation is the way either to convince or convert the Gentiles 392 Honour How Christ is an Honour to us 292 By what wayes we may expresse our Honour to men 477 How we must honour the King 483 Hony The Word for sweetnesse compared to Hony 240 The excellent uses of it ibid. Hope The differences betweene a living and a dead Hope 36 Nine wayes to shew our Hope 108 Five things to be done to get assured Hope 108 109 The difference betweene Faith and Hope 160 161 Houshold Housholders Vide Familie Humble Humblenesse Humblenesse of mind hath sixe things in it 16 Humblenesse is shewed in three things 330 Husband For Husband and Wife to live together quietly there are sixteen motives 576 Five speciall causes of disorder betweene man and wife 577 Motives to make Husbands carefull of their duties 633 Their cohabitation 634 In what cases they may be absent 635 He must dwell with her in knowledge 637 How they honour their wives 641 Hypocrisie How many wayes men commit it 210 Motives against it with effects of it ibid. c. Excellent uses hereof 211 The sorts of Hypocrisie that we are most in danger of 212 Preservatives against it ibid. Hypocrites How an open Hypocrite may be discerned 213 What makes an Hypocrite and how a man may know himselfe not to be one ibid. c. Hypocrites in bondage whilst they seeme Freemen 471 Eight things for the discoverie of Hypocrites 177 I IGnorance The unregenerate charged with Ignorance 116 Signes of their Ignorance 117 How different from the Ignorance of the godly ibid. It is hatefull to be Ignorant in spirituall things 457 A hard thing to cure Ignorance 463 464 Imitation We must imitate God 118 Five things in which we are not to imitate Christ 328 Immortalitie Foure degrees of it 186 Incorruptible Seven things which are Incorruptible 611 Incorruptible things doe wonderfully adorne 612 Grace begotten in the hearts of the godly is Incorruptible in divers respects 188 Indifferent Things ●Indifferent in matters of religion though som●times inconvenient may be commanded and must be obeyed 434 Pretended inconveniences by humane lawes surveyed 435 About taking and giving of scandall at humane ceremonies 436 How Christian libertie is made a cloake of maliciousnesse in things indifferent 472 In thongs indifferent there be cases wherein Christian libertie is vilely abused ibid. Inheritance How the Saints inheritance is incorruptible even in foure respects 39 Undefiled in five respects ibid. Inventions Whether any Inventions of men may be obeyed 433 A catalogue of such Inventions as were used for religious ends without any commandement 434 Joy A Christian life is a joyfull life manifested in nine things 54 Gods servants may joy nine wayes ibid. How that their joy is preserved 55 How full his joy may be in earthly things 56 Six● kinds of joy 72 Five kinds of divelish joy ibid. Eight signes of discerning the joy of the holy Ghost from all other joyes 73 Whether the joyes of the holy Ghost be felt of every Christian 74 What we must do to get the joy of God ib. How to preserve that joy ibid. The differences betweene joy temporarie and true joy 188 Judge God is a terrible Iudge to the wicked 529 He judgeth righteously 530 Judgement The day of judgement why called The last day 52 Why deferred ibid. Why the Day of judgement is called The Revelation of Iesus Christ 111 Of the last judgement and the certainty thereof 128 All must appeare at the day of judgement 129 We shall be judged according to our workes iibid How infants can be judged according to their workes 130 Iudgements inflicted on some particular offenders belong to all for divers reasons 301 K KIll Repentance for sin doth in divers respects kill a man 538 Kings Differences betweene spirituall and earthly Kings 319 Christians should live like Kings 320 King is a note of the highest dignitie on earth 440 The originall of Kings 441 The excellencie of Kings above others 442 Many encouragements to Subjects to beare Kings superioritie ibid. Kings must be honoured first in heart secondly in word thirdly in worke 483 Kin Vide Generation Onely good Christians are of the best kin 317 The uses of it ibid. They are of Royall kin and that in many respects 318 629 Knowledge The excellencie of divine Knowledge in many respects 637 It is required of all sorts of men 638 It is given for use and practice ibid. It ought to have a commanding power ibid. Meanes to give power to our knowledge ibid. c. It makes an impression in every mans life 639 In it men should excell women ibid. What it is for the husband to dwell with the wife in knowledge 640 Knowledge must have three properties and effects of it 652 653 L LAmb. Christ a Lamb in sixe respects 147 The Lambes in the ceremoniall law types of Christ ibid. c. The uses of it 148 Libertie Vide Freedome Christian Libertie is a great gift bestowed by Christ 466 A man may use his Libertie as a
the contrary ibid. c. In what cases we may not be of one mind with the Church of Rome 678 W WArre Warfare Vide Fight The Christian condition is military 42 He must keepe a fivefold garison 43 Foure kinds of Warre against the soule 384 The flesh warres against the soule five wayes ibid. Why God doth suffer this Ware 385 Our armour in this Warre what 386 How we may get victorie in this Warre 387 Weake Priviledges of Weake Christians 229 Encouragement for Weake Christians 237 Well-doing Well-doing is the best way to stop the 〈◊〉 of wicked man ●65 Excellent uses of it ibid. How we are said to doe well 639 631 Reasons why we ought alwayes to be Well-doing 631 Whisperers Vide Bac●biters 216 217 Wicked Wickednesse What Wicked men in particular are not under mercie 354 God doth oft suffer his children to live among Wicked men 391 In what case we may converse with wickedmen 392 Wife Sixteene motives for Husbands and Wives to live together quietly in marriage 576 Five speciall causes of disorder betweene Husband and Wife 577 Why the Apostle is so large in setting down the Wives duty 579 Eight reasons of the Wives subjection 581 In what 582 How and in what cases not ibid. Particular sins of the Wife in case of subjection 583 What meanes a Wife must use to win her Husband 595 596 Chastity in marriage is specially charged on the Wife 596 How chaste wife may be discerned 597 Wherein Wives should shew their feare to their Husbands 601 602 What is a Wives best ornament 627 Obedience and reverence are a Wives ornaments 628 Will. The Will of God is first Personall secondly Essentiall First Legall secondly Evangelicall 451 Gods Word is his Will in two respects 452 The Will is the rule of our actions 452 Whether a Christian can exactly doe Gods Will 453 Winne Divers kinds of Winning 590 What a Minister must doe to win soules 591 To be won what it 〈◊〉 ibid. Why all are not won at once 592 By what meanes we may win wicked men in our conversation 594 Wise Wisedome Why many Wise men are rather confounders than founders in grace and goodnesse 296 How the ignorant may herein notwithstanding be supported 297 Five waye 's we should shew forth the Wisdome of Christ 329 What this Wisedome must not have in is ibid. Woman In what things a Woman is more fraile than man 643 Word How powerfull 55 Vide Scripture How many wayes sin hinders the growth of the Word 200 How to be desired 221 How our affections to it may be discerned 222 Other signes of it ibid. c. Impediments thereof both externall and internall 223 224 Meanes to get desire to it 225 How to preserve our desires to it 226 Foure motives of getting it 227 How farre wicked men may desire the Word 230 The sweetnesse of the Word 240 Rules for applying the Word aright 288 When and how a man is said to be offended at the Word 310 The Word must be the warrant for all our actions 422 Its praise 189 The only outward meanes to beget the seed of grace in us 190 Eight things needfull in us to heare the Word of God as the Word of God ibid. How the Word is said to live 191 Sixe wayes to shew the life of the Word in our conversation ibid. c. Gods Word should be our maine care 199 The power of the Word Preached 200 Workes How men shall be judged according to their Workes 129 130 How infants 130 How poore men 131 Manifold distinctions of Gods works 148 How wonderfull Gods Workes are 274 The uses of it 275 To be a Worker of iniquity signifies three things 397 Wherein Workes are good 398 Rules to be observed in doing good Works 399 400 The divers kinds of good Works 400 401 How any man that is not absolutely good can be said to doe good Workes 401 402 What Workes are good for 402 How a man may lose his Workes 403 What Works may and ought to bee shewed 404 We should by good workes silence the wicked 454 World Contempt of the World shewed in foure things 331 Worship Actions about Gods Worship of two sorts 432 433 Many defects in Gods Worship 548 Wrongs Reasons against righting Wrongs by our owne private revenge 498 We may not in some cases resist but endure Wrongs ibid. To suffer Wrongs is profitable ibid. Places of Scripture herein expounded occasionally GEnesis 10. ver 9. p. 428 Exodus 26. ver 8. p. 98 Leviticus 14. à ver 4. ad 32. p. 165 ad 173. Cap. 16. ver 12 13 17 p. 26 Numbers 19. à ver 1 2. ad 7. p. 23. Psalme 19. ver 10. p. 240 Psalme 119. ver 103. ibid. Psalme 145. ver 8 9. p. 32 Proverbs 15. ver 30. p. 447 448 Proverbs 22. ver 1. p. 447 Esay 53. ver 7. ibid. Jeremiah 11. ver 19. ibid. Matthew 16. ver 18. p. 250 John 1. ver 29. 36. 147 Acts 5. ver 10 28 29. p. 435 Acts 17. ver 30. p. 127 Romans 2. ver 10. p. 449 Romans 12. ver 3. p. 104 2 Cor. 2. ver 14 15. p. 241 Ephesians 4. ver 17 18. p. 458 1 Thess. 5. ver 15. p. 686 Hebrewes 4. ver 12. p. 55 Hebrewes 12. ver 9. p. 374 2 Epist. Johan ver 8. p. 593 FINIS Verse 1. PETER an Apostle of Iesus Chr to the strangers scattred throughout Pontus Galatia Capadocia Asia Bithinia Verse 2. Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father through sanctification of the spirit unto obedience and sprinckling of the blood of Iesus Christ Grace unto you and peace be multiplied Verse 3. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which according to his aboundant me●cy hath begotten us a●aine unto a lively hope by the resurrecti●n of Jesus Christ from the dead Verse 4. To an inhe●●●ance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you Verse 5. Who are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last time Verse 6. Wherein yee greatly rejoice though now for a season if neede be you are in heavinesse through manifold tentations Verse 7. That the tryall of your faith being much more precious then of gold that perisheth though it be tryed by the fire might be sound unto praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. Verse 8 Whom having not seene yee love in whom though now yee see him not yet beleeving yee rejoyce with joy unspeakable and full of glory Verse 9. Receiving the end of your faith even the salvation of your soules Verse 10. Of which salvation the Prophets have inquired and searched diligently who prophesied of the grace that should come unto you Verse 11. Searching what or what manner of time the spirit of Christ which was in them did signifie when it testified before hand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow Ver 12. Vnto whom