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A09383 A commentarie or exposition, vpon the fiue first chapters of the Epistle to the Galatians: penned by the godly, learned, and iudiciall diuine, Mr. W. Perkins. Now published for the benefit of the Church, and continued with a supplement vpon the sixt chapter, by Rafe Cudworth Bachelour of Diuinitie Perkins, William, 1558-1602.; Cudworth, Ralph, 1617-1688. 1604 (1604) STC 19680; ESTC S114465 595,047 756

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religion in the exercises of faith repentance new obedience Thus did Abraham Gen. 17. and Iosua c. 24. They that doe not first of all consent in Christ cannot consent among themselues Secondly it must be obserued that a familie is the schoole of God in which he will exercise our faith inuocation loue patience long-suffering c. And there is more vertue to be seene in the well ordering of a familie then in the pretended holines of Monkish cloisters Thus we see how we are to maintaine the vnitie of the Spirit in the bond of peace For the better inforcing of this dutie Paul Eph. 4. 4. giues seauen reasons one bodie one spirit one hope of eternall life one Lord one faith one baptisme one father of all It may be said we are at peace what needes all this adoe Ans. The peace of many is peace in drunkennes called good fellowship peace in prophanes and wickednes This is the deuils peace where he beares the sway The peace of which I now speake is in the Lord and in the true worship of God of which read Isa. 2. where men are saide hand in hand to goe vp to the Mountaine of the Lord that they may heare his will and ioyntly obay it 16. Then I say walke in the spirit and ye shall not fullfill the lust of the flesh The scope Here Paul returnes to the first rule v. 13. and shewes the waie how it is to be obserued thus If ye walke in the spirit ye shall not fullfill the lustes of the flesh and when the lusts of the flesh are not fulfilled there shall no occasion be giuen to the flesh by the vse of Christian libertie The words containe two parts a Rule walke in the spirit the benefit that comes by the rule ye shall not fullfill the lustes of the flesh In the rule I consider two things what is the spirit and what is walking The spirit is the gift of regeneration lost by Adam restored by Christ. I say it is a gift and this gift is termed by the name of the spirit because the spirit worketh it immediatly in vs from the father and the sonne Againe I say it is a gift of regeneration to make a distinctiō bewteene it ciuill vertue For there is a gift of regeneration which mortifies corruption and a gift of restraint which serues only to keepe in corruption Of this second kind are all ciuill vertues in naturall and heathen men and not of the first Ioseph is chast and so was Xenocrates Iosephs chastitie is a part of regeneration and proceedes from the spirt here mentioned but the chastitie of Xenocrates is not so proceeding only from the generall prouidence of God and not from the spirit of Sanctification The like I say of all other ciuill vertues More plainly The spirit is a Diuine nature qualitie or cōdition whereby we are made conformable to Christ in righteousnes and holines The spirit hath fiue properties The first that it is a rich and liberall grace of God For it containes in it the seede of all vertues and all necessarie graces of God because it comes in the roome of originall sinne which containes in it the seedes of all vices or sinnes The second is the largenes of it for this spirit is in all the powers of them that are regenerat that is in the mind conscience will affections and in the sensuall appetite 1. Thes 5. 23. And he that is sanctified in on part is sanctified in all Hence it followes that they which haue plentie of illumination without change of affection and life are indeed carnall and not spirituall The third propertie is sinceritie for the grace of God is without falsehood or guile Psal 32. 1. hence ariseth the difference betweene the Godly man and an hypocrite betweene the workes of nature and the workes of grace There are men that in distresse desire the assistance fauour of God and they do it without the spirit of God for they do it deceitfully desiring Gods fauour not for it selfe but in respect of some euill from which they would be deliuered as the Mariners in Ionas and Pharao did Againe there are men that mourne for their sinnes without the spirit of God For there is much falsehood in their mourning because they mourne for sinne in respect of the punishment thereof and not in respect of the offence of God Lastly there are that pretend a loue to God and yet want the spirit for they loue God in respect of his benefits as Saul loued God for a kingdome such loue is mercenarie a worke of nature whereas the loue which is from the spirit makes vs loue God for himselfe The fourth propertie is excellencie for the spirit of grace in Christians is more excellent then the grace of creation in two respects First in respect of the beginning thereof For the spirit is from Christ the second Adam both God and man the grace of creation should haue beene conuayed vnto vs from the first Adam but a meere man if he had stood Secondly in respect of constancie for God gaue to Adam the will to perseuere if he would he giueth further to beleeuers both the wll to perseuere and the deed The fifte propery is liuelines whereby the spirit is effectuall in operation Elihu saith that the spirit compelled him and was in him as a vessell of new wine which must haue a vent Iob 32. 19. Of the operation of the spirit I deliuer three things The first that the spirit workes in and by the word of God which therefore is called the Ministerie of the spirit 2. Cor. 3. 6. The second that the spirit worketh by certaine degrees The first degree and the very first beginning of his diuine operation is to make vs feele in what great neede we stand of Christ to desire to be recōciled and turned vnto God This is the first motion of the spirit in vs and they which want this haue nothing as yet of the grace of God in them The third that the whole worke of the spirit may be reduced to three actions The first is to cast downe euery thing in vs that exalts it selfe against God 2. Cor. 10. as namely to beat downe erronious reason and rebellious affection and to put a man out of heart with his chiefe deligtes and with his owne selfe The second action is to kindle in our hearts a care and desire of reconciliation with God in Christ hence the spirit is called the spirit of grace and supplication Zach. 12. The third action is to write the law in our hearts and that is done by putting a new light of knowledge into the minde and new inclinations into the will and affections Thus much of the Spirit Walking in the spirit is to Order our liues according to the direction and motion of the spirit For as the spirit renewes our nature within so it makes vs to change and renew our actions in three respects First it makes
vs put a further beginning to our actions then nature can afford causing vs to doe them in faith whereby we beleeue that our persons please God in Christ that our worke to be done pleaseth God that the defect of the worke is pardoned Secondly the spirit makes vs doe our actions in a new manner namely in obedience to the written word Thirdly it makes vs put a new end to our actions that is to intend and desire to honour God in the things that we doe For example A man is wronged by his neighbour and nature tells him that he must requite euill with euill yet he resolues to doe otherwise for saith he God in Christ hath forgiuen me many sinnes therefore must I forgiue my neighbour And he remembreth that vengeance is Gods and that he is taught so to aske pardon as he forgiueth others And hereupon he sets himselfe to requite euill with goodnesse This is to liue in the spirit The vse By this rule we see that most of vs faile in our duties For many of vs professing Christ liue not according to the lawes of nature in our common dealings We minde earthly things and therefore we are carnall It is a principle with many that if we keepe the Church obserue the Queenes laws which are indeed to be obserued and auoid open and grosse sinnes we do all that God requires at our hāds Hereupon to walke in the spirit is thought to be a worke of precisenes more then needes And they which deeme it to be a worke of precisenes walke not in the spirit And indeede they which haue receiued the greatest measure of the spirit must say with Paul that they are carnall sould vnder sinne Rom. 7. 14. Secondly this rule telleth vs that we must become spirituall men such as make conscience of euery sinne and doe things lawfull in spirituall manner in faith and obedience and not as carnall men doe them carnally It may be saide that Ministers of the word must be spirituall men I answer if thou whatsoeuer thou art be not spirituall thou hast no part in Christ. Rom. 8. And the rather thou must be spirituall because a naturall man may doe the outward duties of religion in a carnall sort Thirdly we must not iudge any mans estate before God by any one or some few actions either good or badde but by his walking or by the course of his life which if it be carnall it shewes the partie to be carnall if it be spirituall it shewes him to be spirituall The benefit that ariseth by the keeping of the rule followes in these words Ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh Flesh the corruption of nature the roote of all sinnes Lusts inordinate motions in the minde will and affections Thus largely is lust taken in the tenth Commandement which condemneth the first motions to euill Fulfill fulfilling is not a simple doing of euill but the accomplishing of lust with loue pleasure and full consent of will as also perseuerance in euill by adding sinne to sinne A question How farre doth the child of God proceede in the lust of the flesh Answ. He is assaulted by the lusts of the flesh but he doth not accomplish them More plainly there are fiue degrees of lust Suggestion delight consent the acte perseuerance in the acte Suggestion and delight whereby the minde is drawne away are incident to the child of God Consent is not ordinarily and if at any time the child of God consent to the lusts of his flesh it is but in part and against his purpose because he is ouercarried Likewise the acte or execution of lust is not ordinarily and vsually in the child of God if at any time he fall he may say with Paul I doe that which I hate Lastly perseuerance in euill doth not befall the child of God because vpon his fall he recouers himselfe by new repentance In this sense S. Iohn saith He that is borne of God sinnes not 1. Ioh. 3. 9. The vse Hence it followes that the lust of the flesh is in the child of God to the death and consequently they doe not fulfill the law neither can they be iustified thereby as Popish doctrine is Secondly our dutie is not to accomplish the lusts of the flesh but to resist them to the vttermost Rom. 13. 14. Thirdly here is comfort for the seruants of God Some man may say I am vexed and turmoiled with wicked thoughts and desires so as I feare I am not Gods child I answer againe for all this despaire not For if thou hate and detest the lusts that are in thee if thou resist them and wage battell against them if beeing ouertaken at any time thou recouer they selfe by new repentance they shall neuer be laid to thy charge to condemnation Rom. 8. 1. It is here made a prerogatiue of Gods child when the lusts of the flesh are in him not to accomplish them or to liue in subiection to them 17 For the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and they are contrarie one to another so that ye cannot doe the things which ye would These wordes are a reason of the former verse thus If ye walke in the spirit ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh for the flesh and spirit beeing contrarie mutually refist and withstand one another so as ye can neither doe the good not the euill which ye would Paul here sets forth a spirituall combate of which sixe things are to be considered The first is concerning the parties by whome the combat is made namely the flesh and the spirit The flesh signifies the corruption of the whole nature of man and the spirit is the gift of regeneration as hath beene shewed It may be demanded how these twaine beeing but qualities can be said to fight together Ans. The flesh and the spirit are mixed together in the whole man regenerate and in all the powers of the soule of man Fire and water are said to be mixed in compound bodies light and darknes are mixed in the aire at the dawning of the day In a vessell of luke warme water heat and cold are mixed together we cannot saie that the water is in one parte hott and in another cold but the whole quantitie of water is hott in parte and cold in parte Euen so the man regenerate is not in one part flesh in another part spirit but the whole mind is partly flesh and partly spirit and so are the will and affections through out partly spirituall and partly carnall Now vpon this mixture it comes to passe that the powers of the soule are carried and disposed diuerse waies and hereupon followes the combat The second point concernes the meanes whereby this combate is made and that is a two sold Concupiscence expressed in these words the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh The lust of the flesh shewes it selfe in two actions The first is to defile 〈◊〉
two respects 1. Because by faith we apprehend the righteousnesse of Christ and so in him who hath fulfilled the lawe for vs we fulfill it and so establish it 2. because hauing our hearts purified by faith we liue no more according to the flesh but according to the spirit and so by inchoa●e obedience we fulfill the law Lastly in the end in that both the lawe and the gospel tend directly to the manifestation of the glorie of God Yet they differ in 5. things First in the manner of reuealing the lawe before the fall was perfectly known by nature and since the falli● part Rom. 2. 15. The Gospel is not known by nature neither was it euer written in mans heart before or after the fall as Paul saith 1. Cor. 2. 9. Those things which the eie hath not seene nor the eare heard nor the heart of man conceiued are they which God hath prepared for them that loue him therefore the Gospel is called a mysterie Rom. 16. v. 25 26. First because the doctrine of the Gospel was made knowne to men and angels by the reuelation of God Eph. 3. 5. 9. Secondly because there is required a special reuelation worke of gods spirit before a man can yeeld assent vnto it Therefore Paul saith We haue not receiued the spirit of the world but the spirit of God that we might know the things that are giuen to vs of God 1. Cor. 2. 12. Secondly in the subiect or doctrine it selfe and that in two respects First the Law preacheth nothing but absolute iustice to the transgressours thereof the Gospel sheweth how iustice is qualified with mercie from all things from which ye could not be absolued by the Law of Moses by him euery one that beleeueth is iustified Act. 13. 39. Secondly the Law teacheth what manner of men we ought to be and what we ought to doe that we may come to eternall life but shewes not howe we may becom such indeed the Gospel teacheth that by faith in Christ we may be such as the Law requires God hath made him to be sinn● for vs who knewe no sinne that we might be made the righteousnes of God in him 2. Cor. 5. 21. Thirdly in the obiect The law is giuen to the vni●st lawles vngodly prophane 1. Tim. 1. 9 10. that it may shew them their sinnes and the punishment thereby deserued and so may accuse and condemne them the Gospel is to be published and dispensed onely to the penitent which are contrite and broken in heart mourne for their sinnes Math. 11. Esay 57. Luk. 4. IIII. The law promiseth eternall life vpon condition of works Doe this and liue If thou wi●● enter into life keepe the commandements The Gospel promiseth eternall life freely without any condition of works Rom. 4. 5. To him that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted to him for righteousnes Rom. 3. 21 22. The righteousnes of God is made manifest without the law by the faith of Iesus Christ vnto all and vpon all that beleeue V. In the effects The Law is no instrumentall cause of faith repentance or any sauing grace it is the minister of death 2. Cor. 3. 7. causing wrath Rom. 3. 15. But the Gospel causeth life it is the grace of God which bringeth saluation Tit. 2. 11. for this cause Paul calleth the Law a dead or killing letter the Gospel a quickning spirit 2. Cor. 3. Fourthly it may be demāded whether any mā be able to fulfil the Law considering that Paul biddeth vs beare one anothers burdens and so fulfill the Law of Christ Ans. No meere man can perfectly fulfill the Law in this life This conclusion S. Paul prooueth in sundrie of his Epistles specially by these arguments First by the great and generall deprauation of nature which remaineth in part euen in the regenerate stayning their best actions and making them like a menstruous cloath confessing withall that his best workes are not answerable to the law by reason of the remainders of originall corruption Rom. 7. Now perfect fulfilling of the law cannot stand with corruption of nature and transgression in life For a corrupt fountaine cannot send forth sweete waters neither can a corrupt tree beare good fruit Saint Iames saith He that offendeth in one is guiltie of all and the Scripture pronounceth him accursed that abideth not in all things written in the book● of the law to doe them Popish Doctours answer first that originall corruption which they call the fewell of sinne and the first motions to euill preuenting all consent of will are indeede in the regenerate but they are no sinnes properly But it is false which they teach For euery transgression of the law is a sinne as S. Iohn defines it 1. Ioh. 3. 4. but these are transgressions of the tenth commandement for it either forbiddeth these first motions whether they be primò primae or secundò primae as Schoolemen speake or it forbid doth nothing but the motiōs which are with cōsent of wil which were forbidden in the former commandements and so in effect there are but nine commandements the tenth forbidding no speciall sinne Againe Paul teacheth that these motions preuenting all consent of will are formally opposed to the Law I see another law in my members rebelling against the law of my minde Secondly they answer that Paul Rom. 7. speakes not of himselfe but in the person of the vnregenerate according to the opinion of S. Augustine Ans. Augustine indeede was once of that iudgement but he after retracted that opinion as it is manifest out of his booke of Retractations and the 6. booke against Iulian the Pelagian and that for these reasons First because Paul saith To will is present with me and I doe not the good I would and J delight in the law of God concerning the inward man all which are proper to the regenerate and cannot be affirmed of the wicked Secondly because he makes mention of the inward man which is all one with the new man or the new creature which agreeth onely to the regenerate Thirdly because he saith he is ledde captiue to sinne v. 23. whereas the wicked are not drawne to sinne by force against their wills but runne riot of their owne accord into all wickednes as the horse rusheth into the battell Ierem. 8. 6. Lastly in that he cries out in a sense and sorrow for his sinnes O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the bodie of this death v. 24. which can not be the voice of the vnregenerate for they feele not the burden of their sinne nor desire to be eased of it but take delight and pleasure in it His second reason is this such as our knowledge is such is our loue of God and man but our knowledge is onely in part therefore our loue is but in part and so consequently our obedience is but in part therfore there is no perfect fulfilling of
the word stands in three things The first is true and proper interpretation of the Scripture and that by it selfe for Scripture is both the glosse and the text The second is sauorie and wholesome do ctrine gathered out of the Scriptures truly expounded The third is the Application of the said doctrine either to the information of the iudgement or to the reformation of the life This is the preaching that is of power Let all the sonnes of the Prophets thinke vpon these things and studie to be doers of them Furthermore two questions are here resolued The first is whether Images be necessarie in the congregations of the people of God Ans. There are Christian Images and Pictures and they are very necessarie And these Images are Sermons of Christ and the Right administration of the sacraments For in them Christ is described and painted out vnto vs. As for the painted and carued images of the Papists we vtterly detest them as Idols They alleadge that they are lay-mens bookes but Habakuk saith they are doctours of lies Hab. 2. 18. And where the liuely preaching of the word is there is no neede of them And therefore Images were not established in Churches in these West parts till after 700. yeares As long as the church had golden teachers there were no wooden images but when golden teachers did degenerate and become wooden teachers then came both golden and wooden Images It is further said why may not we paint Christ in our churches with colours as with wordes in sermons Ans. The one the Lord alloweth namely the description of Christ in speach But the caruing or painting of images in churches and that for religious vse he condemneth Exod. 20. 6. The second question is Whether there be now in the church of God any sacrifice or oblation of Christ Ans. There is after a sort For there is a liuely representation of the passion of Christ in the Preaching of the word and in the administration of the Lords supper as if Christ were yet in crucifying and as though his blood were now distilling from his hands sides As for the sacrifice of the Masse it is an abomination and a meere mockerie For there the Priest when he saith Accept these gifts c. is become a Mediatour betweene Christ and God and the bodie and blood of Christ is offered in an vnbloodie manner that is blood is offered without blood and the Priest when he hath offered Christ eates vp all that he hath offered Yet for this damnable oblation many stand and the reason is because they are bewitched and inchanted with pretended shewes of Fathers Councells Antiquitie Succession c. Lastly here we learne what is the dutie of all beleeuers namely to behold Christ crucified Cant. 3. 11. O daughters of Sion behold your king But where must we behold him Not in Roodes and Crucifixes after the Popish manner but we must looke on him as he propounds himselfe vnto vs in the word and sacraments For thus is he the true obiect of our faith And how must we behold him by the eye of faith which makes vs both see him feele him as it were crucified in vs. Here note that implicit faith which is to beleeue as the Church beleeues is a blind faith for by it we cannot contemplate and behold Christ. And the common fault is here to be noted whereby men neglect and passe by this contemplation of Christ. There is among vs the euill eye that deuoureth all it seeth there is the adulterous eye but where is the eye of faith to behold Christ where is the force of this eye to be seēe which maketh the thing which it beholdeth to be ours and vs like vnto it We loue to tricke and paint our bodies and some to set fine complexions on their faces and therefore complexions at this day are made a kind of marchandise but away with such vanities If ye loue to be painted I will tell you what ye shall doe The office of the Ministers is to describe and paint out Christ vnto vs let them paint Christ crucified in the heart and set vp his image there and then shalt thou haue a fauourable complexion in the eye both of God and man That this contemplation of Christ by faith may take more place and be the better practised consider the vse of it First by beholding Christ crucified we see our miserie and wickednes For our sinnes are the swords and speares which haue crucified him Zach. 12. 10. Secondly this sight brings vs true and liuely comfort for beholding Christ crucified we see Paradise as it were in the midst of hell we see the handwriting against vs cancelled Coloss. 2. 14. we see the remission of our sinnes written with the heart blood of Christ and sealed with the same Thirdly this sight of Christ makes a vniuersall chaunge of vs. The Camelion takes to it the colours of the things which it seeth and are neere vnto it and the beleeuing heart takes to it the disposition and minde that was in Christ crucified by viewing and beholding of Christ. This sight makes vs mourne and bleede in our hearts for our offences when we consider that Christ was crucified for them and it makes vs loue Christ when we consider the loue of God in Christ crucified Lastly this thing must be a terrour to all the vngodly For they haue no care to behold Christ but by their leud liues they crucifie him and for this cause in the day of iudgement they shall see with heauie hearts Christ to be their iudge whome they haue pearced Reuel 1. 7. Better therefore it is now in the day of grace to behold him with the eye of faith to our comfort then now to despise him and then to behold him to our euerlasting shame with the eye of confusion 2 This onely would I learne of you Receiued ye the Spirit by the workes of the law or by the hearing of faith 3 Are ye so foolish that after ye haue begunne in the spirit ye would now be made perfect by the flesh The sense of the words When Paul saith this would I learne of you he meets with the conceit of the Galatians who thought themselues wise and the effect of his speech is this I haue called you fooles but it may be that you thinke your selues wise and me foolish well let it be so then with all your wisdome teach me and let me learne but one thing and that is by what meanes ye receiued the Spirit Touching the phrase Receiued ye the Spirit three things must be obserued The first that the Spirit sometimes signifies the essentiall spirit of the Father and the Sonne as 1. Cor. 12. 4. There is a diuersitie of gifts but one spirit Sometimes againe it signifies the effects operations or gifts of the spirit as namely when flesh and spirit are opposed as in this text And further when it signifies gifts yet then the presence of the spirit is not excluded
but included The second is that here the Spirit signifies the spirit of adoption Eph. 1. 13. Rom. 8. 16. The third is that to receiue the spirit is not barely to receiue the gifts of the spirit as we are said to haue the sunne in the house when we receiue the beames of the bodie of the sunne beeing in heauen but in this receiuing there are two things One is that the spirit is present in vs the other that the same spirit testifieth his presence by his speciall opera tion and gifts of grace Paul saith Eph. 4. 30. Greeue not the spirit Which is not meant of gifts but of the very person of the spirit And it must be remembred that the effects and gifts of the spirit presuppose the presence of the spirit By workes of the Law we are to vnderstand the doctrine of iustification by the workes of the law By the hearing of faith is meant the doctrine of the Gospel hearing beeing put for the thing heard namely preaching and faith for the doctrine of iustification by faith in Christ crucified For faith signifies not onely the gift whereby we beleeue but also that which is beleeued In the third verse spirit signifies the operation of the spirit whereby the inward man is renewed and made like to God or againe the Exercises of the inward man and flesh signifies outward things or actions that properly pertaine to the outward man as circumcision and such like Thus 2. Cor. 5. 17. flesh and the new creature are opposed And Paul saith Rom. 9. 29. He is a Iew that is a lew within in the spirit hauing the circumcision of the heart To begunne in the spirit is to beginne in godlines and religion inwardly in the exercises of the renewed heart The Resolution In these words is contained the first argu ment whereby Paul prooues the truth of his doctrine It is framed thus If ye receiued the spirit by my doctrine my doctrine is true and ye foolish that adde vnto it iustification by the workes of the law but ye receiued the spirit by my doctrine therefore it is true and ye deale foolishly that haue added to it iustification by workes The maior or first proposition is not expressed but the proofe thereof in the third verse thus it is a point of extreame follie when ye haue begun in the spirit to end in the flesh therfore it is folly in you hauing receiued the spirit by my doctrine to adde any thing vnto it of your owne The vse When Paul saith Let me learne one thing of you he notes the fault of the Galatians and of sundrie others who when they haue attained to a certaine measure of knowledge in Gods word are presently puffed vp with pride and often thinke themselues wiser then their teachers This was the fault of the Corinthians 1. Cor. 8. 10. and of sundrie in our daies who separate wholly from all our congregations presuming to know that which they neuer learned of their teachers That this ouerweening pride may not take place we must ioyne the knowledge of our selues with the knowledge of Gods word and mixe our knowledge with loue For loue edesies and bare knowledge swells the heart Againe here when it is said Receiued ye the spirit that is ye did not receiue the spirit by the workes of the law but by the hearing of faith Here I say we see the difference betweene the law and the Gospel The law doth not minister the spirit vnto vs for it onely shewes our disease and giues vs no remedie The Gospel ministreth the spirit For it shewes what we are to doe and withall the spirit is giuen to make vs doe that which we are inioyned in the Gospel Here also we learne that the preaching of the Gospel is necessarie for all men because it is the Instrument of God to conferre the spirit Whole Peter was yet speaking the spirit of God fell vpon the Gentiles Act. 10. 44. Paul saith his ministerie is the ministerie of the spirit 2. Cor. 4. 5. sauing the ministers and others 1. Tim. 4. 16. And the most learned haue neede of this ordinance of God For suppose they haue knowledge sufficient yet haue they neede of the spirit of God to guide and gouerne them Further let it be obserued what is the scope of all our hearing and teaching namely that we may receiue the spirit of God without which spirit we can doe nothing Moreouer Paul here sets downe an infallible argument whereby we may be assured that the Scripture is the word of God For the scriptures in their right vse which is in reading hearing meditation haue the diuine and supernaturall operation of the spirit ioyned with them to comfort in all distresses and in the very pang of death and to conuert the heart of man making him in respect of righteousnes and holines like vnto God This priuiledge haue the Scriptures Isa. 59. 21. and no word els Lastly let vs here obserue the certen marke of true religion and that is that the preaching thereof conferres the spirit of adoption This doth not the pretended catholike Religion of the Papists it doth not conferre vnto men the spirit to assure them that they are the children of God because it teacheth that we are to be in suspence of our saluation Againe by teaching humane satisfactions merits it ministreth the spirit of pride and presumption as also the spirit of crueltie not of meekenes for they of that religion commonly delight in blood and there haue bin no warres or seditions or rebellions in Europe for many ages but they of the Romish religion haue bin at one ende of them When Paul saith v. 3. Beganne ye in the spirit c. he teacheth a diuine instruction that true godlines and Religion stands in the spirit that is the grace of the heart or in the exercises of the inner man whether we respect the beginning the middle or the accomplishment thereof The kings daughter is all glorious within Psal. 45. 13. True worshippers worship God in the spirit Ioh. 4. 25. Rom. 1. 12. He is a Iew that is a Iew not without but within in the spirit in the circumcision of the heart Rom. 2. 29. Gods seruice and kingdome stands in iustice peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. He that is in Christ must not know him in any carnall respects but be a new creature 2. Cor. 5. 17. Gal. 6. 17. Baptisme is not the washing of the spots of the flesh but the promise that a good conscience makes to God By this doctrine we see the fault of the world which for the most part placeth religion in ceremoniall performance of some outward duties The Iewe vsed to come to God with sacrifices and to draw neere to him with his lippe his heart beeing farre from God The Papist hath turned the Apostolike and Catholike religion into a masse of ceremonies borrowed partly from the Iewes and partly from the Gentiles And
in the law but because we haue faith in vs and by that faith we apprehend the obedience of Christ in fulfilling of the law Obiect VII Rom. 13. 8. Loue is the fulfilling of the law and the regenerate loue their neighbours Ans. If we could loue our neighbour as our selues perfectly we should then fulfill the whole law But our loue is imperfect Obiect UIII He that is borne of God sinnes not 1. Ioh. 3. he that sinnes not fulfills the law Ans. He that is borne of God sinnes not that is he doth not commit sinne or make a practise of sinne He may fall of frailtie yet then he recouers himselfe and doth not keepe a course in sinning This is the meaning of S. Iohn Obiect IX The commandements of God are not grieuous 1. Ioh. 5. Ans. They are not grieuous three waies first in respect of remission because they that beleeue in Christ haue the transgression of the law pardoned Secondly in respect of imputation because Christs obedience in fulfilling the law is imputed to euery beleeuer Thirdly in respect of inchoation For they that beleeue receiue the spirit of God wherby they are inabled to indeauour themselues to obey God in all his commandements Otherwise in respect of our owne personall obedience they are a yoke that no man can beare Obiect X. The workes of God are perfect Deut. 32. 4. Good workes are workes of God therefore they are perfect Ans. Workes that are meerely workes of God which he worketh by himselfe and not by man they are all perfect and thus must the text in Moses be vnderstood Now good works are works of God in vs and withall they are our workes hauing their beginning in the minde and will of man and hence they are defiled For when the first and second cause concurre in a worke the said worke takes vnto it the condition of the second cause Water pure in the fountaine is defiled when it passes by the filthie channell Obiect XI If God haue giuen vs an impossible law he is more cruell then any tyrant Ans. When God first gaue the law he also gaue power to fulfill the law If the law be impossible it is not Gods fault but mans who by his owne fault hath lost this power of keeping the law The ground before named of the double fulfilling of the law one for this life the other for the life to come is false For there is onely one generall and vnchangeable sentence of the law Cursed is euery one that continues not in all things written in the law to doe them I now come to other vses of the former conclusion If the law be impossible then must we seeke for the fulfilling of it forth of our selues in Christ who is the ende of the law for righteousnes to them that beleeue Hence it followes necessarily that our iustification must be by the imputation or application of Christs iustice vnto vs. Because we cannot fulfill the law we must make it a glasse to see our impotencie and what we cannot doe and it must be our schoolemaster to driue vs to Christ. And by our impotencie we must take occasion to make praier to God for his spirit to inable vs to obey the lawes of God Thus come we to be doers of the law and no otherwise Againe it may be demanded considering we cannot fulfill the law how our works can please God Ans. In euery good worke there is something that is Gods and something that is ours alone The defect of the worke is ours alone and that is pardoned to the beleeuer That which is good in the worke is from God and that he approoueth as beeing his owne And thus euery good worke is said to please God Lastly after that we haue begunne to please God in obedience to his lawes considering we fulfill them not all boasting of our goodnes must be laid aside and we must humble our selues vnder the hand of God euen to the death Read the practise of Dauid Psal. 143. 2. and Psal. 130. 3. Iob. 9. 1. 11 And that no man is iustified by the law in the sight of God it is manifest For the iust liueth by faith 12 And the law is not of faith but he that shall doe these things shall liue in them The meaning By the law that is the law not onely ceremoniall but also iudiciall and morall Indeede the occasion of Pauls disputation in this place is taken from Circumcision pertaining to the ceremoniall law but he inlarges his disputation from one part to the whole law For they which thought Ceremonies necessarie to iustification would much more thinke morall duties necessarie And that Paul speakes here of the morall it appeares by the 10. verse where he alleadgeth a sentence that specially appertaines to the morall law Cursedis euery one c. Againe the law may be considered two waies in the iustification of a sinner first as it iustifieth without Christ. Secondly as it iustifieth with Christ and both waies it is excluded from iustification and here specially in the second regard For the intent of the Galatians was to ioyne Christ and the law in the worke of our iustification Before God that is in the iudgement of God before whose iudgement seat we must all appeare and be iudged The iust shall liue by faith The scope of these words is this The Iewes were oppressed by the Babylonians and it was further told them by the Prophet that they should be ledde into captiuitie by the saide Babylonians Now in this distresse of theirs the Lord sets downe the dutie of the faithfull Iewes namely that they must stay themselues by their faith in the Messias and consequently that they shall haue safetie in this life in the middest of all dangers and in the ende haue eternall life And Paul applies this text to his purpose thus Life eternall comes by faith and therefore true righteousnesse before God is by faith For righteousnes is the foundation of life eternall and therefore it is called iustification of life Rom. 5. 17. The law is not of faith The meaning of these words must be gathered by the opposition in the latter part of the verse but he that doth these things shall liue in them And the meaning is this The law doth not prescribe faith in the Messias neither doth it promise life to him that beleeueth in the Messias but to him that doth the things contained in the law In these wordes Paul addes a new argument to the former thus Iustice is by faith the law is not of faith therefore the law is not our iustice Or again thus He that is iustified is iustified by faith the law iustifies no man by faith therefore the law doth not iustifie The conclusion is first in the 11. verse The proposition is expressed and confirmed by the testimonie of the Prophet Habacuk The assumption is in the 12. verse The vse Whē Paul saith No mā is iustified by the law in the sight of God he makes
is whence springs our adoption The answer is plaine in the words from the obedience of the sonne whereby he stood in subiection to the law Here the question of all questions is answered namely what is that thing by which and for which a sinner is iustified before God and saued Ans. The Obedience of the sonne of God made man and made vnder the law for vs. For this is it that frees vs from vnder the law and giues vs the Adoption of sonnes And this alone is it whereby we stand before the Tribunall seat of God which also we are to oppose to the iudgement of God to hell death and condemnation Therefore our common people erre that looke to be saued by their good deedes that is by their good meaning and dealing They thus tread the blood of Christ vnder their owne feete and become Iesuses or Sauiours to themselues Secondly they erre that teach iustification by the essentiall iustice of the Godhead of the sonne for that it is incommunicable and they which are iustified by it are also deified Thirdly the Papist erreth which teacheth iustification partly by remission of sinnes and partly by that which we call inward sanctification which is imperfect and mixed in this life with our corruption and therefore vnfit to absolue and acquit vs before God It may be said what must we doe that we may be iustified and saued by this Obedience of the Mediatour Answ. In the old Testament when a man had sinned he brought a sheepe or an oxe to the doore of the Tabernacle and when the Priest cut the throat of it the partie laid his hand vpon the head of it Exod. 29. 10. And hereby he signified that the beast had done no hurt and that he as a guiltie malefactour had deserued death Now all this was done in figure And it teacheth vs that we miserable sinners must come to God that we must bring our sacrifice with vs namely the lambe of God which is the sonne of God made man made vnder the law that we must present this lambe and the oblation thereof to the father for vs laying our hands on the head of it that is confessing ourguiltinesse and that we haue iustly deserued death and perdition from the presence of God In the last place we must intreat the Lord to accept the blood of the lamb for vs and the whole obedience of the Mediatour Thus shall we be iustified and saued Thou wilt say I will therefore doe this when I am dying I say againe let it be thy daily exercise to the very death Thou wast seauen yeares in learning of thy trade thinke not therfore in an houre or two to worke thy reconciliation with God If thou art many yeares in learning such things as are done by the strength of nature thinke not to attaine to things aboue nature when and howe thou wilt It is a rule receiued of all men that they must blesse themselues now the right way to blesse thy selfe is to plead-guiltie before God and to intreat him to accept the obedience of the Mediatour for thee Uers. 6. Sonnes that is such as inioy the libertie of sonnes Sent forth a speach borrowed from Embassadours which are sent forth with instructiōs what they shal say or do it signifies that the spirit reueales nothing but that which is the will of the father sonne Ioh. 16. 14. Crying making vs to crie Rom. 8. 26. For if the words be taken properly the spirit must pray to it selfe Abba the next word is the exposition Father The sense The father hath sent forth the spirit of his sonne vnto you this spirit sent forth dwels in your hearts dwelling in your hearts it makes you pray to God as to a father● and all this it doth because you are indeed sonnes of God The scope The question is whether beleeuers of the newe Testament be seruants to the law or children Paul answers no and he giues two reasons The first was in the former verses the second in this And it is drawne from the signe thus Yee haue receiued the spirit crying Abba father therefore ye are sonnes indeede In the words I consider fiue things the person sent forth the spirit of the sonne the person sending God the manner of sending the place whither the spirit is sent your hearts the office of the spirit Crying Abba Of the first the spirit of the sonne it is who is sent forth He is so called first because he proceeds by communication of substance or godhead not onely from the father but also from the sonne Secondly because in his manhood he is annointed and filled with the Holy Ghost aboue measure thirdly because by his death he hath merited the giuing and sending of the Holy Ghost vnto vs. Moreouer the spirit of the sonne is here described First he is a person subsisting of himselfe in that he is said to be sent forth secondly he is a diuine person and no creature because he dwels in the hearts of all beleeuers thirdly he proceeds from the father and the sonne from the father because he is sent of him from the sonne because he is the spirit of the sonne The vse By this we learne that the Intercession of Christ is of force with God For he praied for the sending of the spirit and it is accomplished Read Ioh. 14. 16. And it is a superfluous doctrine to teach the Reall presence of the flesh of Christ in the Sacrament For Christ is departed from vs in respect of his manhood because the spirit is sent Ioh. 16. 7. Thirdly that which the spirit inwardly teacheth is the same with that which the sonne hath reuealed by the Ministerie of the Prophets and Apostles because the spirit is the spirit of the sonne Read Ioh. 16. 14. Doctrines then concerning saluation that are beside or contrarie to the Scriptures as a great part of the Romish religion is are not reuealed by the spirit of God but are the fictions of the deuill The person sending is God that is the father in these words God sent forth the spirit of his sonne Where marke the distinction of the persons in Trinitie There is the father the sonne the spirit of the sonne And here remember that this action of sending forth argues not superioritie in the person sending nor inferioritie in the person sent for equals may send each other by common consent but it argues Order and a distinction of persons in respect of their beginning For the father is of none the sonne is of the father and the Holy Ghost is of both and hence it is that he is sent of both The manner of this sending forth was on this sort We may not imagine that in this sending there was any change of place for the Holy Ghost is euery where But he is said to be sent forth when he manifests his presence by his diuine operation or by speciall supernaturall gifts in the hearts of beleeuers as by the
represse the good motions of the spirit In this respect Paul saith when I would do good euill is present and the law of the flesh rebelles against the law of the mind Rom. 7. 21. 23. Hereupon the flesh is fitly resembled by the disease called Ephialtes or the mare in which men in their slumber thinke they feele a thing as heauie as a mountaine lying on their brests which they can no waie remoue The second action of the flesh is to bring forth and to fill the mind with wicked cogitations and rebellious inclinations In this respect concupiscence is said to tempt intice and draw away the mind of man Iam. 1. 14. Againe the lust of the spirit hath two other actions The first is to curbe and restraine the flesh Thus Saint Iohn saith that the seed of grace keepes the regenerate that they can not sinne 1. Ioh. 3. 9. The second action of the spirit is to ingender good motions cogitations and inclinations agreeable to the will of God Thus Dauid saith that his raines did teach him in the night season Psal. 16. And the prophet Isai saith thine eare shall heare a voice saying here is the way walke in it when thou ●urnest to the right hand or to the left c. 30. v. 21. And this voice no doubt is not only the voice of such as be teachers but also the inward voice of the spirit of God in vs. And thus by the concurrence of these contrarie actions in one and the same man is this combat made The third point is concerning the cause of this combat in these wordes and these are contrarie one to another The contrarietie of the flesh and the spirit makes the combat And the contrarietie is very great for the spirit is the gift of righteousnes and the flesh standes in a double opposition to it for it is first of all the want of righteousnes and secondly a prones to all vnrighteousnes that is to say not a single but a double priuation or want of the grace or gift of God Hence I gather that man hath no freedome of will in good duties before his conuersion because he is then wholly flesh and wants the spirit of God and the flesh is flat contrarie to the spirit and one contrarie hath no power at all to bring forth the effect of his contrarie And hence it followes that there are no such workes wherby a man may prepare himselfe to his owne iustification for though the mind be inlightned with a general faith yet man before he be iustified is nothing but flesh and flesh beeing in nature opposite to the spirit can make no preparation for the spirit no more then darknes can make preparation for the entrance of light The fourth point is concerning the persons in whome this combate is to be found And they are beleeuers not vnbeleeuers or wicked men such as the Galatians were to whome this combate is said to belong It may be alleaged that naturall men haue a combate in them For they can say I see and approoue that which is good but I doe that which is naught Ans. This combate is betweene the naturall conscience and rebellious affection and it is incident to all men that haue in them any conscience or light of reason But the combate of the flesh and the spirit is of an other kinde for in it the mind is carried against it selfe the will against it selfe and the affections against themselues by reason they are partly spirituall and partly carnall Secondly not all beleeuers haue this combate in them but only such as be of yeares for infants though they haue the seede of grace in them yet do they want the act or exercise thereof and therefore they feele not this combate because it standes in action Thirdly this combate is in the godly for the time of this life only because in death the flesh is abolished and consequently the combate it selfe The fift point is in what things doth this combate shew it selfe Ans. In all the actions of men regenerate which Paul signifies when he saith ye cannot do the things which ye would For example in praier sometime we feele feruent desires and sometime againe deadnes of spirit sometimes faith sometimes doubting This combate is in all the actions of the Godly specially in good actions Thus much Paul teacheth whē he saith I find by the law of God that when I would do good euil is present Rom. 7. 21. And I do not the good which I would but the euill which I would not that do I. v. 19. And that we mistake not it must be remembred that Paul speakes all this of himselfe as beeing regenerate that he speakes it not of this or that action but of the course of his life in which he willed and indeauoured to do that which was good and acceptable to God And that appeares by the very wordes when he saith to will is present with me And I would do good but I do it not Marke further while Paul wills and indeauours to do that which is good if he faile and do amisse he may well say It is not I that do it but the flesh that dwelles in me And vngodly men for the couering of their wickednes if they say as they do that it is their flesh that sinneth and not they the abuse the holy doctrine and example of Paul The last point concernes the effect of the Combate which is to hinder the Godly that they cannot do that which they would and that three waies First it makes them that they cannot sinne that is liue in practise of any one sinne 1. Iohn 3. 9. Secondly if at any time they fall it s●aies and keepes them that they sinne not with full consent of will For they say when they sinne the euill which I hate that do I. Thirdly though in the ordinarie course of their liues they do that which is good yet by reason of this combate they faile in the dooing of it Rom. 7. 18. to wil is present with me but I find no means to fulfil or accomplish that which is good Euen as a sick-man that is in recouerie for his affection thinkes he is able to walke a mile or twaine and yet by reason of faintnes and weakenes is scarce able to walke once or twise about his chamber So the regenerate man for affection inclines to the best things and yet by reason of the flesh failes in the dooing of them Thus much of the combate the vse followes Hence I gather that concupiscence or lust after baptisme in the regenerate is a sinne For the lust of the spirit is the thing that God requireth and approoueth now the lust of the flesh is directly contrarie to it as a defect or priuation thereof and therefore the lust of the flesh is properly a sinne whether consent of will goe with it or no. Againe hence it followes that workes of the regenerate are mixed workes that is good workes indeed yet not perfectly
good but partly euill for such as the cause is such is the effect now the minde and will of man are the cause of his workes and the mind is partly carnall and partly spirituall so also is the will and therefore the workes that proceede from them are partly spirituall in part carnall Vpon this ground it followes that all the workes of regenerate men are sinfull and in the rigour of iustice deserue damnation Obiect Sinne is the transgression of the law good workes are no transgression of the law therefore good workes are no sinnes I answer to the minor The transgression of the law is twofold One which is directly against the law both for matter and manner the second is when that is done which the law requires but not in that manner it should be done And thus good workes become sinfull The dutie which the law requires is done but it is not done perfectly as it ough to be done by reason of the flesh Secondly it is alleaged that good workes are from the spirit of God and that nothing proceeding from the spirit of God is sinne Ans. Things proceeding from the spirit of God alone or from the spirit immediatly are no sinnes now good workes proceed not only from the spirit but also from the mind and will of man as instruments of the spirit And when an effect proceedes from sundrie causes that are subordinate it takes vnto it the nature of the second cause hereupon workes are ●●rtly spirituall and partly carnall as the minde and will of the doer is Thirdly it is alleged that good works please God and that things pleasing God are no sinnes Ans. They please God because the doer is in Christ and so pleaseth God Againe they please not God before or without pardon for they are accepted because God approoues his owne worke in vs pardons the defect thereof Lastly some obiect on this manner No sinnes are to be done good workes are sinnes there-therefore not to be done Ans. They are not simply sinnes but onely by accident For as God commands them they are good and as godly men doe them they are good in part Now the reason holds onely thus That which is sinne so farre forth as it is a sinne or if it be simplie a sinne is not to be done Now then vpon this doctrine it followes that there is no iustification by workes nor no fulfilling of the law for the time of this life Thirdly hence it follows that the grace of God for the time of this life is mixed with his contrarie the corruption of the flesh This mixture the godly feele in themselues to the great griefe of their hearts When they would beleeue their mindes are oppressed with vnbeleefe They see more ignorance in themselues then light of knowledge There are a number amongst vs that say they know as much as all the world can teach them that they doe perfectly beleeue in Christ and euer did that they loue God with all their hearts and did neuer so much as doubt of the mercie of God But these men are voide of the grace of God they are like emptie barrells that make a great sound they neuer knew what is meant by the combate of the flesh and spirit Fourthly we are here to be admonished in all duties of religion to vse industrie and paines by willing striuing and indeuouring to the vttermost to doe that which we ought to doe We must vse asking seeking knocking Matth. 7. 7. we must with Paul vse wrastling in our praiers to God Rom. 15. 30. They that would haue knowledge in the booke of God must doe more then heare a Sermon they must striue against their ignorance and blindnes and laboriously exercise their senses in the discerning of good and euill They that would beleeue must striue against their naturall vnbeleefe and indeauour to beleeue Blessed saith Salomon Prou. 28. is the man that feareth himselfe or inures himselfe to feare Paul saith of himselfe that he laboured and tooke paines to keepe a good conscience Act. 24. 16. Lastly by reason of this combate we are put in minde to vse sobrietie and watchfulnesse ouer our owne corruptions with much and instant praier least we fall into temptation Matth. 26. 41. We should practise these more then we doe for beside the enemies without we haue an enemie within that seekes our perdition 18 And if ye be led by the spirit ye are not vnder the law In the 13. verse Paul propounds a maine rule of good life Giue no occasion to the flesh and for the better keeping of this he giues a second rule v. 16. Walke in the spirit Of this second rule he giues two reasons The first is taken from the contrarietie of the flesh and the spirit v. 17. The second is in these words they that walke according to the spirit are freed from the curse of the law In these words Paul sets downe three things The first is the office of the spirit which is first of all to regenerate and renew all the powers of the soule and secondly to guide and conduct them that are regenerate Psal. 143. 10. In this guidance or conduction there are foure actions of the spirit The first is Preseruation whereby the holy Ghost maintaines the gift of regeneration in them that are regenerate The second is Cooperation whereby the will of God as the first cause workes together with the regenerate will of man as the second cause And without this Cooperation mans will brings forth no good action no more then the tree which is apt to bring forth fruit yeeldes fruit indeede till it haue the presence and cooperation of the Sunne and that in the season of the yeare The third is direction whereby the spirit of God ordereth and establisheth the minde will and affections in good duties 2. Thess. 3. 5. The last is Excitation whereby the spirit stirres and still mooues the will and minde after they are regenerate because for the time of this life the grace of God is hindred and oppressed by the flesh Hereupon after regeneration there must still be new inclining Psal. 119. 36. new drawing Cant. 1. 3. new working of the will and the deede Phil. 2. 13. Hence it follows that beside the antecedent and first grace there is necessarie a subsequent or second grace For we doe not that good which we can doe vnles God by a second grace make vs doe it as he made vs able to doe it by the first grace The second thing is the Office of all true beleeuers and that is to resigne thēselues in subiection to the worke of Gods spirit Now Gods spirit workes in and by the word of God And hereupon this Subiection hath two parts The first is to make triall inquirie and examination what is the good will of God in euery thing Rom. 12. 2. Thus did Dauid Psal. 119. 94. I am thine saue me for I seeke thy commandements The second part is to denie our selues
to forsake wife and children house and land for Christs sake If we haue not the command of our selues in a trifle we may neuer hope for it in waightie matters V. There are dangerous effects of drunkennes First it destroies the bodie For it inflames the blood with an vnnaturall heate and this vnnaturall heate ingenders vnnaturall thirst which ingenders immoderate drinking whence comes dropsies consumptions all cold diseases and death Secondly it hurts the minde for the spirits of the heart and braine beeing the immediate instruments of the soule are by drinking distempered and inflamed and hereupon arise wicked imaginations disordered affections And thus the deuil in the roome of Gods image sets vp his owne image and makes the minde a shoppe of all wickednesse Thirdly the vile imaginations and affections that are in men when they are drunke remaine still in them when they are sober so as beeing sober they are drunke in affection In fauour of drunkennesse it is alleadged that Noahs drunkennes is remembred in scripture but no where condemned Ans. While Moses sets downe the foule effects that followed Noahs drunkennesse he doth indeede condemne it Secondly his example is noted in scripture as a warning to all ages following Thirdly his sinne may be lessened though not excused because he had no experience of wine Obiect II. Ioseph and his brethren did drinke and were drunke together Gen. 43. v. last Ans. The meaning of the text is that they dranke liberally or that they dranke of the best together For the word shakar signifies not onely to be drunke in drinking but also to drinke liberally or to drinke of the best drinke Hag. 1. 6. Obiect III. Learned Phisitians as Rasis Avicenna and others teach that it is greatly for health to be drunke once or twice in a moneth Ans. As learned as they teach the contrarie And we may not doe any euill or sinne against God for any good to our selues Obiect IU It is said to be neighbourhood and good fellowshippe Ans. It is drunken fellowship The right fellowship is in the doctrine of the Apostles praier Sacraments and the workes of mercie Thus much of the works of the flesh Now follows the punishment of thē of which I cōsider three things First a Premonition in these words whereof I tell you before as I also haue told you before Secondly the designment of the punishment in these words shall not inherit the kingdome of God Thirdly the designment of the persons in these words They which doe such things In the Premonition is set downe the office of all Ministers and that is often to forewarne the people of the future iudgements of God for their sinnes Mich. 3. 8. Isa. 58. 1. And this may easily be done For they may know the sinnes of men by experience and the iudgements of God due to euery sinne they may finde in the word of God Againe all people are warned by this often to meditate of the future iudgements of God Thus did Dauid Psal. 119. 120. and Paul who knowing the terrour of the Lord was mooued to doe his dutie 2. Cor. 5. 11. The old world neuer so much as dreamed of gods iudgements before they came vpon them and so they perished Matth. 24. 39. The punishment of these sinnes is not to inherit Gods kingdome Gods kingdome sometime signifies the regiment of God whereby he rules all things in heauen and earth More specially it signifies a state or condition in heauen whereby God and Christ is all things to all the Elect. 1. Cor. 15. 28. And thus it is taken in this place And an entrance or beginning to this happie estate is in this life when men in their consciences and liues are ruled by Gods word and spirit It must here further be obserued that not to inioy the kingdome of God is to be in torment in hell because there are no more but two estates after this life and therefore to be out of heauen is to be in hell The vse I. This must teach vs aboue all things to seeke Gods kingdome and to establish it in our hearts and that we shall doe if we know the will of God and yeeld subiection to it in the duties of repentance faith new obedience II. The kingdome of God comes by inheritance therfore there is no merit of Good workes The persons which are punished are such as are doers and practisers of the works of the flesh Marke the words not such as haue bin doers but such as are doers The word signifies a present and a continued act of doing amisse The vse Here is the difference betweene the godly man and the vngodly The godly man falls into the workes of the flesh and beeing admonished thereof he repents and recouets himselfe he doth not stand in the way of sinners though sometime he enter into it Psal. 1. 1. The vngodly man when he falls lies still in his sinne and heapes sinne vpon sinne and makes a practise of euill I. Warning They which are priuie to themselues of any of the former workes of the flesh must bewaile their offences and vtterly forsake them For if we be found doers of any one worke of the flesh there is no hope of saluation II. Warning They which haue turned vnto God from the works of the flesh must be constant and take heede of going backe least they loose the kingdome of God 22 But the fruit of the Spirit is loue ioy peace long-suffering gentlenes goodnes faith 23 Meeknes temperance against such there is no law For the better obseruing and the more easie vnderstanding of the rule in the 16. v. Walke in the spirit Paul here sets downe a Catalogue of the works of the spirit In the Catalogue I consider three things the propertie of the workes of the spirit in these words The fruit of the spirit the kinds of works and they are nine the benefit that comes by them in these words against such there is no law The fruit of the spirit It is the propertie of the workes of Gods spirit in vs to be called the fruits of the spirit And by this much is signified namely that the Church is the garden of God Cant. 4. 16. that teachers are planters and setters 1. Cor. 3. 9. that beleeuers are trees of righteousnes Isa. 61. 3. that the spirit of God is the sappe and life of them and good workes and vertues are the fruits which they beare In that the works of the spirit are called fruits therof hence it followes that there are no true vertues and good affections without the grace of regeneration The vertues of the heathen how excellent soeuer they seemed to be were but shadowes of vertue and serued onely to restraine the outward man and no further Againe here we see the efficacie of the spirit which makes men fruitful or bearing-trees of righteousnes Psal. 1. 3. yea trees that beare fruit in their old age Psal. 92. 14. Here we haue cause to cast downe our selues For
death yet would a Christian man abstaine from these things because he knowes that they displease Christ and he is gouerned with another spirit to which they are contrarie Also these words are a reason of v. 16. There is no law against them that doe these things therefore walke in the spirit 24 For they that are Christs haue crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts The scope In these words Paul prooues that which he said immediatly before namely that there is no law against spirituall men And of this he giues a double reason One is spirituall men are Christs therefore there is no law against them The second is this that is crucified in spirituall men which the law condemneth namely the flesh with the affections and lusts therefore there is no law to condemne the spirituall man In the words I consider three points The first is What is a Christian Ans. A Christian is one that is Christs saith Paul And he is Christs fiue waies I. by the right of creation And so are all men II. by right of redemption 1. Cor. 6. 19. III. by the free gift and donation of God the father Ioh. 17. 11. this donation is begunne in the eternall Election of God and it is accomplished in our effectuall vocation IV. by propagation For all true beleeuers spring out of the blood of Christ and are of his bone and of his flesh as Eue was of the bone and flesh of Adam V. by our donation in baptisme in which we consecrate our selues to God and to Christ. The vse This must teach vs to resigne our selues to Christ and to suffer him to raigne in our hearts and to take the yoke of the Gospel vpon vs. But alas it is farre otherwise with many of vs. For some liue in the transgression of the very law of nature so farre are they from obseruing the Gospel Others thinke it sufficient to follow the teaching of nature If they worship God in some generall manner if they liue peaceably and hurt no man and meane well as they say then all is well and the doing of further duties is reputed curious precisenes And such persons vsually reduce religion to the practise of nature They will be saued by faith but their faith is nothing els but fidelitie They say they worship God but this worship is nothing els but their good meaning and their good dealing These men are content that Christ shall be theirs but they will not be Christs and suffer him to haue a Lordship ouer them II. If thou be Christs then commend thy soule and life and all that thou hast into the hands of Christ. This was the practise of Dauid Psal. 22. of Christ vpon the crosse of Paul 2. Tim. 1. 12. And this practise is the onely way to obtaine safetie and protection For Christ no doubt will keepe his owne III. Comfort If thou be Christs he will care for thee and nothing shall be wanting vnto thee that is for thy good Ioh. 17. 24. Rom. 8. 33. Therefore remember this lesson Neuer grieue ouermuch neuer care ouermuch neuer reioyce ouermuch in the things of this world If thou werest at thine own disposing and finding it were somewhat but there is one that cares for thee namely Christ. The second point to be considered is what is the flesh Ans. It is the corruption of the whole nature of man For the right conceiuing of this we must make a distinction of three things Mans nature the faculties of nature and the corruption of both which corruption hath two parts the losse of the image of God and a pronnes to all wickednes Moreouer this distinction must be without separation of nature from faculties or of corruption from either so as we may say truly that the nature and the powers of the soule of man are corrupted In the flesh are two things Affections and Lusts. By affections vnderstand inordinate affections which shew themselues and beare sway in carnall men as anger in Cain loue of pleasures more then of God in the men of the last times 2. Tim. 3. 3. immoderate sorrow in Ahab when he could not obtaine Naboths vineyard 1. King 21. 4. Lusts are inordinate and infatiable desires after the things of this world as riches honours pleasures c. of this sort are couetousnes gluttonie pride the lust of the flesh c. The vse By this we see what a Carnall man is namely one that is carried away with some inordinate affection or some inordinate lust Herod did many good things at the aduise and motion of Iohn Baptist whome he reuerenced yet was he a carnall man For he was possessed with an inordinate loue of his brothers wife Iudas a disciple of Christ yet a carnall man because he was carried away with the inordinate lust of couetousnes The third point is touching the office of a Christian man And that is to crucifie the flesh with the affections and lusts For the better conceiuing of this Crucifying must be distinguished It is either the action of Christ or our action Crucifying which is the action of Christ is threefold The first is vpon the crosse where Christ stood in our roome and bare the burden of our sinnes and made an Expiation of them In this respect we are said to be crucified with him Gal. 2. 19. The second is in vs when Christ conuaies the vertue of his death into the hearts of them that are ioyned to him for the causing and effecting of the death of sinne The third is in baptisme whereby Christ seales the two former to them that beleeue Rom. 6. 6. The crucifying which is our action is nothing els but the Imitation of Christ crucified on this manner He was first attached so must we bring our selues into the presence of God He was arraigned so must we set our selues at the barre of Gods iudgement He was accused so must we indite and accuse our selues of our owne sinnes at the barre of Gods iudgement He was condemned and so must we iudge our selues that we be not iudged of the Lord. After iudgement we must proceede to execution of the flesh and that is to vse meanes to crucifie it and they are three The first is by faith to applie to our selues Christ crucified and that is to beleeue not onely that Christ was crucified for vs but that we also were crucified with him Where this faith is sinne shall no more haue domion The second is to beate downe the flesh by the sword of the spirit and that is done by a serious application of the commandements and the threatnings of God to our seuerall affections and lusts The third is to flie the occasions of euery sinne and to cut off the first beginnings of euill The vse This doctrine serues to condemne the drowsie Protestants of our time who professe Christ without making any change in life and conuersation For they are Saints in the Church but in their common dealings they are as worldlings II. Secondly
they are here reprooued that haue many good gifts of God in them and yet neuer proceede to a thorow reformation For they vse to cherish in themselues naughtie affections and damnable lusts There is some one sweete sinne or other that they cannot abide to crucifie III. They also are to be blamed that cannot abide to heare their owne particular sinnes to be noted and reprooued They are vncrucified and vnmortified persons And the word of God is the sword of the spirit that serues to kill and destroy the flesh IV. In afflictions be content and quiet For we ought to crucifie the affections and lusts of our flesh and because we faile in this dutie therefore God himselfe takes the worke in hand and he will crucifie our corruption by his chastisements Further of this dutie of crucifying the flesh there are three points to be considered I. The time when this action must beginne namely in our baptisme or first conuersion Therefore Paul saith they that are Christs haue crucified c. II. What must be crucified Ans. The whole flesh with euery inordinate affection and lust This makes against them that flie and detest some fewe sinnes and runne headlong into others III. What is crucifying Ans. In it are two things the restraint of the exercise of sinne which is in part in ciuill men and the killing of Originall corruption in all the parts and branches thereof And that is done when we doe not onely mourne for our corruptions but also hate and detest them in our selues 25. If we liue in the Spirit let vs also walke in the Spirit In these words is cōtained the last reason of the rule of good life before mentioned in the 16. verse For the vnderstanding whereof two things are to be considered what it is to liue in the Spirit and what to walke in the Spirit Touching the first Life is twofold created or vncreated Vncreated life is the life of God Created is that which pertaineth to the creature And this is either naturall or spirituall Naturall life is led by naturall causes and meanes as by meate drinke cloathing breathing such like Spirituall life is by and from the Spirit Of this there be two degrees The first is when the Spirit of God takes vp his habitation in man and withall gouerneth all the powers of his soule by putting into the minde a new light of knowledge into the will and affections newe motions and inclinations whereby they are made conformable to the will of God The second degree of spirituall life is when the spirit dwelleth in man and gouerneth the powers of the soule and further doth sustaine the bodie immediately without naturall means 1. Cor. 15. 44. It riseth againe a spirituall bodie that is a body liuing in the second degree of spirituall life not beeing sustained by meanes but immediately by the eternall sustentation of the spirit The first of these degrees is in this life the second after this life in and after the last iudgement when body and soule shall be reunited And of the former this place is to be vnderstood To walke in the Spirit is first to sauour the things of the Spirit Rom. 8. 5. 7. And that is to minde wish like desire and affect them or in a word to subiect a mans selfe to the law of God in all the powers and faculties of the soule For the things reuealed in the Lawe are the things of the spirit which spirit must at no hand be seuered from the word Secondly to walke in the path way of righteousnesse without offence either of God or man Psal. 143. 10. Thirdly to walke not stragglingly but orderly by rule by line and by measure For so much the word walke importeth in the originall as if Paul should haue said Let vs whilest we liue in this world not onely indeauour to doe some one or some fewe good actions but in the course of our liues and callings order our selues according to the rule and line of the word of God The vse This text in the first place cuts off the shiftes and excuses of sundrie persons in these daies who professe themselues to be the children of God and yet for their liues are much to be blamed because they lead them not according to the Spirit but according to the flesh And these persons whatsoeuer they say doe indeed and in truth deceiue themselues and are quite destitute of Gods Spirit For if they liued in the Spirit they would also walke in the Spirit It is not an idle spirit in any but it will shew and manifest it selfe in a holy and orderly conuersation You will say If such persons haue not the Spirit of god what other Spirit haue they Ans. If there life be naught they haue an vncleane Spirit dwelling in them and the god of this world hath blinded their eies and makes them that they cannot see the right way wherein they should walke 1. Cor. 4. 4. Againe we learne from hence a true and a pregnant signe whereby to discerne whether any man hath in his heart the spirit of God or no The life of a man will discouer and proclaime to all the world before God men and angels what himselfe is If a man in the course of his life and calling be godly and vertuous leading his life according to the will word of God in an honest and carefull indeauour though he faile in some particulars what euer the world thinkes of him he is the man that is indued with the Spirit of God Lastly this teacheth what is the office of all Christian people namely to walke in the Spirit that is to frame and order the whole course and tenour of their liues according to the line square of Gods word and Spirit A motiue to which dutie may be that fearefull threat pronounced vpon those that turne aside and walke in their owne crooked waies Psal. 125. 5. 26. Let vs not be desirous of vaine-glorie prouoking one another enuying one another The scope From this 26. verse to the 11. verse of the chapter following S. Paul handles the second Rule which he had propounded in the 13. verse of this chapter By loue serue one another In the handling whereof he first laboureth to take away the impediments of Loue and then he sets downe the māner how the rule is to be obserued This 26. verse is a rule the ende whereof is to remooue the impediments of loue In this verse foure points are especially to be considered First what the desire of vaine-glorie is Answ. It is a branch of pride which makes men to referre all they haue or can doe to their owne priuate glorie and aduancement For better vnderstanding whereof consider a little the excuses that men haue for the defence or excuse of this sinne I. Excuse Vaine-glorie in effect is no more but the seeking of mens approbation which may lawfully be done Answ. To seeke the approbatiō of men is no fault so that it be
seedes but seeds are the proper cause of the fruite therefore good works are the proper cause of eternall life not faith only So that as there is a hidden vertue in the seede to bring forth fruit so is there a dignitie in good workes to merit eternall life Ans. First as in a parable so in a similitude whatsoeuer is beside the scope and drift thereof as this their dispute is prooueth nothing The scope of the similitude is this that as he which soweth wheate shall reape wheate so he that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reape life euerlasting and as he that soweth tares shall reape nothing but tares so he that soweth to ●he flesh the cursed seedes of a wicked life shall of the flesh reape nothing but corruption and as he that soweth plentifully either of these shall reape a plentifull haruest of either of them so he that sowes the seede of a godly or wicked life in plentifull manner shall reape a plentifull increase either of miserie or felicitie When the Papists therefore reason thus Seedes are the cause of the fruit and haue in them a hidden vertue whereby they grow and bring forth fruit therefore good works are the proper cause of life and haue a dignitie and excellency in them whereby they are worthie of eternall life they misse of the drift and intent of the Apostle and so conclude nothing Besides this their collection and discourse is contrarie to their own doctrine For they teach that good works are meritorious by merit of condignitie which may be vnderstood 3 waies either in regard of the dignitie of the worke alone or in regard of the promise of God alone and his diuine acceptation or partly in regard of the dignitie and excellencie of the worke partly in regard of the promise of God Now albeit some of them hold that good workes doe merit in respect onely of Gods promise and mercifull acceptation as Scotus Ariminensis Durandus Uega Bunderius Coster and the like others in respect partly of their owne worthines partly of Gods promise and acceptance as Bonaventure Biel Driedo lingius Iansenius Bellarmine c. it beeing the common receiued opinion among the Schoolemen as B 〈…〉 ldius witnesleth yet no●e of them excepting onely Caietan affi●●e that they are meritorious onely in regard of the dignitie of the worke which notwithstanstanding the Rhemists and others labour to prooue out of this similitude vrging the analogie betwixt seede and good workes contrarie to the current and streame of their owne Doctours Thirdly I answer that good workes are seedes yet faith is the roote of these seedes and in that good workes are made the seedes of eternall life it is to be ascribed to Gods mercifull promise not to the merit of the worke for in that we or our workes are worthie of the least blessing it is more of Gods mercie then our merit Fourthly the Apostle sheweth onely who they are that shall inherit eternall life and the order how life is attained but not the cause wherefore it is giuen It will be said not onely the order but the cause is set downe as it may appeare by the antithesis for as sowing to the flesh is the cause of destruction so sowing to the spirit is the cause of eternall life Ans. It is true in the one but not in the other For first sinnes or workes of the flesh are perfectly euill as beeing absolute breaches of the law and deserue infinite punishment because they offend an infinite maiestie whereas workes of the spirit are imperfectly good hauing in them wants and imperfections there beeing in euery good worke a sinne of omission comming short of that perfection that is required in the law they beeing good and perfect as they proceede from the spirit of God imperfect and vicious as they come from vs. Euen as water is pure as it proceedes from the fountaine but troubled as it runneth through a filthie channell or as the writing is imperfect and faultie as it comes from the yong learner but perfect and absolute as it proceedeth from the scriuener which guideth his hand So that if God setting aside mercie should trie them by the touchstone of the word they would be found to be but counterfeit And if he should waigh them in the balance of his iustice they would be found too light Secondly there is a maine difference betwixt the workes of the flesh and the works of the spirit in this very point in that the workes of the flesh are our owne workes and not the works of God in vs and so we deserue eternall death by reason of them they beeing our owne wicked workes whereas good workes proceede not from vs properly seeing we are not sufficient of our selues to thinke any good thing as of our selues 2. Cor. 3. 5. but from the spirit of God who worketh in vs both the will and the deede and are his works in vs therefore beeing not ours we can merit nothing by them at the hands of God Thirdly obserue that it is not said he that soweth to the spirit shall of that which he hath sownercape life euerlasting but shall of the spirit reape life euerlasting Where we see the Apostle attributes nothing to our workes but to the grace of Gods spirit Lastly Rom. 6. 23. the holy Ghost putteth manifest difference betweene the works of the flesh of the spirit in respect of merit when he saith The wages of sinne is death but eternall life is the gift of God He saith not that eternall life is the reward of good workes but the gift of God now in the reward of sinne there is merit presupposed in the gift of eternall life nothing but grace and fauour Obiect II. God giueth eternall life according to the measure and proportion of the worke v. 7. As a man soweth so shall he reape 2. Cor. 9. 6. He that soweth sparingly shall reape sparingly and he that soweth liberally shall reape liberally 1. Cor. 3. 8. Euery one shall receiue his proper wages according to his owne labour Therefore in giuing eternall life he hath no respect of the promise or compact but of the dignitie and efficacie of the worke Ans. Fulnes of glorie called by Schoolemen essentiall glorie is giuen onely for the merits of Christ in the riches of Gods mercie without all respect of workes Accidentall glorie when one hath a greater measure of glorie an other a lesse as when vessels of vnequall quantitie cast into the sea are all filled yet some haue a greater measure of water some a lesse is giuen not without respect of works yet so as that it is not giuen for workes but according to workes they beeing infallible testimonies of their vnfained faith in the merits of Christ. If it be said that eternall life is giuen as a reward meritoriously deserued by good works because it is said Come ye blessed for I was hungrie and ye gaue me meate Matth. 25. I answer it is
teach otherwise then I haue taught you neither I nor they must be beleeued but be accursed Againe put the case that an angell from heauen should come and preach otherwise then Paul preached to the Galatians who must be beleeued Paul or the Angel the answer is not the Angell but Paul and the angel must be accursed And the reason is because Paul in preaching and writing did represent the authoritie of God and God puts his owne authoritie into the word which he vttered and he was assisted by the extraordinarie immediate and infallible assistance of Gods spirit From this supposition sundrie things may be learned The first that the word preached and written by Paul is as certen as if it had bin written by God himselfe immediately It may be obiected that Paul saith 1. Cor. 7. 12. To the remnant I speake not the Lord. I answer Paul saith I not the Lord not because he was deceiued in his aduise for he spake by the spirit of God c. 7. v. 40. but because he gaue counsell in a case of marriage whereof the Lord had made no expresse lawe The meaning then is this I speake by collection from the lawe of God and not the Lord by any particular and expresse lawe Secondly it appeares hence that the articles of faith or the doctrine of the Gospell is in excellencie and authoritie aboue all men and angeis And hence it followes that the Church and Councels cannot authorize the word of God in the minde conscience of any man For the inferiour and dependent authoritie addes nothing to that which is the principall and superior authoritie Therefore the opinion of the Papist is false that we cannot knowe the scripture to be the word of God but by the testimony of the Church as though the letter of a Prince could not be knowne to be so without the testimonie of the subiects The principall authoritie is sufficient in it selfe to authorize it selfe without externall testimonie Thirdly since the daies of the Apostles sundrie doctrines haue bin receiued and beleeued touching intercession of Saints praier to the dead and for the dead Purgatorie and such like and these doctrines haue bin confirmed by sundrie revelations And here we learne what to iudge both of the doctrines and of the reuelations namely that they are accursed because the doctrines are beside the written word and the reuelations tend to ratifie and confirme them Lastly hence we learne what to thinke of the writings of Papists and Schoolemen whereof some are called Seraphicall cherubicall or Angelicall doctors They broch and maintaine sundrie things beside that which the Apostles preached wrote as iustification by workes and a mixture of the lawe and the Gospell they giue too little to grace and too much to mans will In this regard Paul hath giuen the sentence that they are accursed For this cause students of diuinitie are warily to read them with praier that they be not led into temptation and they are to vse them onely in the last place And they are greatly to be blamed that preferre them almost aboue all writers they shewe that they haue little loue of the Gospell in their hearts 9 As we said before so say I now againe if any man preach vnto you otherwise then ye haue receiued let him be accursed In these words Paul repeates againe that which he said before and the repetition is not in vaine but for three weightie causes the first is to signifie that he had spoken not rashly but aduisedly whatsoeuer he had said before the second is that the point deliuered is an infallible truth of God the third is to put the Galatians and vs in minde that we are to obserue and remember that which he hath said as the foundation of our religion namely that the doctrine of the Apostles is the onely infallible truth of God against which we may not listen to Fathers Councels or to the very Angels of God If this had bin remembred and obserued the Gospel had continued in his puritie after the daies of the Apostles In this verse one thing is to be obserued Before Paul saide they are accursed which teach otherwise then he had taught here he saith they are accursed which teach otherwise then the Galatians had receiued Whereby it appeares that as Paul preached the Gospel of Christ so the Galatians receiued it And they receiued it first in that they had care to know it secondly in that they gaue the assent of faith vnto it as to a truth against which the very Angels could take no exception And for this also are the Thessalonians commended that the Gospel was to them in power and much assurance The great fault of our times is that where as the Gospel is preached it is not accordingly receiued Many haue no care to know it and they which know it giue not vnto it the assent of faith but onely hold it in opinion And this is the cause that there is so small fruit of the Gospel This sinne will at length haue his punishment The places that are not seasoned by the waters of the Sanctuarie are turned to saltpits Ezech. 47. v. 11. 10 For now whether preach I men or God or seeke I to please men for if I should yet please men I were not the seruant of Christ. The interrogations in this place doe I preach and doe I please are in stead of earnest negations I doe not preach I doe not please And when he saith doe I now preach men or God his meaning is this Heretofore I haue preached the Traditions of men but now beeing an Apostle I preach not the doctrine of men but of God And when he saith doe I seeke to please men his meaning is this I doe not make this the scope of my mini sterie to frame and temper my doctrine so as it may be sutable and pleasing to the affections of men For otherwise we are to please men in that which is good and for their good 1. Cor. 10. 33. Rom. 15. 2. This verse containes a double reason of his former speach and of the repitition thereof The first is this Though heretofore I taught the Traditions of men yet now I teach the word not of men but of God and therefore I accurse them that teach otherwise The second is framed thus If I should yet please men I were not the seruant of God but I am the seruant of God therefore I seeke not to please men but if neede shal be I will denounce curses against them Here first we see the proper matter of the Ministerie which is not the word or doctrine of man but of God By this the Ministers of the Gospel are taught to handle their doctrine with modestie and humilitie without ostentation with reuerence and with a consideration of the maiestie of God whose the doctrine is which they vtter that God may be glorified 1. Pet. 4. 11. Secondly the hearers in hearing are to know that they haue to
deale with God and that they are to receiue the doctrine taught not as the word of man but as the very word of God as the Thessalonians did 1. Thess. 2. 13. The want of this consideration is the cause that some contemne the ministerie of the word and others are not touched and mooued in hearing Againe here is set downe the right manner of dispensing the word which must not be for the pleasing of men but of God Hence it appeares that Ministers of the Gospel must not be men-plea 〈…〉 nor applie and fashion their doctrine to the affections humours and dispositions of men but keepe a good conscience and doe their office The Lord tells Ieremie he must not turne to the people but the people must turne to him Ierem. 15. 19. Thus God shal be with them and they shal bring forth much fruit And the people must know it to be a good thing for them not to be pleased alwaies by their Ministers The ministerie of the word must be as a sacrificing knife to kill and mortifie the old Adam in vs that we may liue vnto God A sicke man must not alwaies haue his minde but he must often be crossed and restrained of his desire and so must we that are sicke in our soules in respect of our sinnes It is a fault therefore of men that desire to be pleased to haue matters smoothed ouer of their teachers This is Dauids balme which he wisheth may neuer be wanting to his head Psal. 141. 5. The ende of this verse sets downe a memorable sentence That if we seeke to please men we cannot be the seruants of God Hence I gather that our nature is full of rebellion and enmitie against God because they which please men cannot please God Againe here is set downe what is the hurt that comes by pride and ambition It keepes men that they cannot be the seruants of Christ. Ye beleeue not saith Christ because ye seeke glorie one of another Ioh. 5. 44. Ambition so fills the minde with vanitie and the heart with worldly desires that it cannot thinke or desire to please God Wherefore he that would be a faithfull Minister of the Gospel must denie the pride of his heart and be emptied of ambition and set himselfe wholly to seeke the glorie of God in his calling And generally he that would be a faithfull seruant of Christ must set God before him as a Iudge and consider that he hath to deale with God and he must turne his minde and senses from the world and all things therein to God and seeke aboue all things to approoue his thoughts desires affections and all his doings vnto him Lastly the profession of the seruant of God is here to be obserued in the example of Paul who saith Doe I now preach men and doe I yet please men as if he had said I haue done thus and thus I haue preached the Traditions of man heretofore and I haue pleased man in persequnting the Church of God but I doe not so still neither will I. And he that can say the like with good conscience I haue sinned thus and thus heretofore but now I doe not neither will I sinne as I haue done is indeede the seruant of God v. 11. Now I certifie you brethren that the Gospel which was preached by me was not after man The meaning is this that it may the better appeare that I haue iustly accursed them which teach any other Gospel and iustly reprooued you for receiuing it I giue you to vnderstand that the Gospel which I preached was not after man that is not deuised by man or preached of me by mans authoritie but it was from God and preached by the authoritie of God And this sense appeares by v. 10 and 12. In these words is laid downe the reason of the conclusion or the assumption of the principall argument which was on this manner If I be called to teach and that immediatly of God and my doctrine be true then ye ought not to haue reuolted from the Gospel which I preached but I was called to teach immediatly of God and my doctrine is true The first part of this assumption is here set downe and handled to the ende of the second chapter and the conclusion as we haue heard was set downe in the premises Hence two maine points of doctrine that are of great consequent may be gathered The first is this It is a thing most necessarie that men should be assured and certified that the doctrine of the Gospel and the Scripture is not of man but of God This is the first thing which Paul stands vpon in this Epistle It may be demanded how this assurance may be obtained I answer thus For the setling of our consciences that Scripture is the word of God there be two testimonies One is the Euidence of Gods spirit imprinted and expressed in the Scriptures and this is an excellencie of the word of God aboue all words and writings of men and Angels and containes 13. points The first is the puritie of the law of Moses whereas the lawes of men haue their imperfections The second i● that the Scripture setteth downe the true cause of all miserie namely sinne and the perfect remedie namely the death of Christ. The third is the Antiquitie of Scripture in that it fets downe an historie from the beginning of the world The 4. is prophecies of things in sundrie bookes of Scripture which none could possibly foretell but God The 5. is the confirmation of the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles by miracles that is works done aboue and contrarie to the strength of nature which none can doe but God The 6. is the consent of all the scripture with themselues whereas the writings of men are often at iarre with themselues The 7. is the confession of enemies as namely of heretickes who in oppugning of scriptures alleadge scriptures and thereby confesse the trueth thereof The 8. is an vnspeakable detestation that Sathan and all wicked men beare to the doctrine of scripture The 9. is the protection and preseruation of it from the beginning to this houre by a speciall prouidence of God The 10. is the constant confession of Martyrs that haue shedde their blood for the Gospell of Christ. The 11. is that fearefull punishments and iudgements haue befallen them that haue oppugned the word of God The 12. is holinesse of them that professe the Gospell The last is the effect and operation of the word for it is an instrument of God in the right vse whereof we receiue the testimonie of the spirit of our adoption and are conuerted vnto God And yet neuerthelesse the word which conuerteth is contrarie to the wicked nature of man The second testimonie is from the Prophets and Apostles who were Embassadours of God extraordinarily to represent his authoritie vnto his Church and the pen-men of the holy Ghost to set downe the true and proper word of God And the Apostles aboue
is this Commonly men liue as it were without the lawe and thinke it sufficient if they doe not grossely offend not considering that the lawe of God is a lawe to our thoughtes and affections and all the circumstances of our actions That we may hereafter make good proceedings in our religion we must remember 3. caueats One that we must indeuour to see and feele in our selues the smalenes of our faith repentance feare of God c. And the great masse of corruptions that is in vs. Thus with the beggar we shall be alwaies peecing and mending our garment The second that as trauellers we must forget things past and goe on to doe more good Psal 3. 14. The third that we must set before vs the crowne of eternall glorie seeke to apprehend it 1. Tim. 6. 11. thus did Moses Heb. 11. In Pauls profiting two things must be considered the measure and the thing in which he profited The measure in that he profited aboue many others Hence we learne that in matters of religion there should be an holy Emulation and contention among vs and our fault is that we contend who shall haue the most riches and honour or goe in the finest apparell and striue not to goe one beyond another in good things Againe Pauls modestie must here be obserued He doth not say that he profited more then all but more then many and he saith not more then his superiors but more then his equalls for time and he saith not more then all the world but more then they of his owne nation This modestie of his must be learned of vs for it is the ornament of our faith and therefore must be ioyned with our faith The matter or the thing in which Paul profited is that he was aboundantly zealous for the traditions of the fathers Here I consider three points I. What zeale is Answ. It is a certen feruencie of spirit arising of a mixture of loue and anger causing men earnestly to maintaine the worship of God and all things pertaining thereto and moouing them to griefe and anger when God is any way dishonoured II. For what is Paul zealous Answer For the outward obseruation of the law and withall for Pharisicall vnwritten Traditions which therefore he cals the Traditions of his fathers III. What is the fault of his zeale for he condemnes it in himselfe Answer He had the zeale of God but not according to knowledge For his zeale was against the word in that it tended to maintaine vnwritten Traditions and iustification by the workes of the lawe out of Christ Rom. 10. 2. Hence we learne sundrie things For that which Paul did in his religion are we to doe in the profession of the Gospell First we are to addict and set our selues earnestly to maintaine the trueth and the practise of the Gospel Christ was euen consumed with the zeale of Gods house Ioh. 2. The angell of the Church of Laodicea is blamed because he is neither hotte nor cold Rev. 3. He is accursed of God that doeth the worke of God negligently Ierem. 48. Secondly we are to be angrie in our selues and grieued when God is dishonoured and his word disobeyed When the Israelites worshipped the golden calfe Moses in holy anger brust the tables of stone Dauid wept and Paul was humbled for the sinnes of other men Psal. 119. 136. 2. Cor. 12. 21. Thirdly we are here taught not to giue libertie to the best of our naturall affections as to zeale but to mortifie them and to rule them by the word Numb 15. 39. otherwise they will cause vs to runne out of order like wild beasts as here we see in Paul Lastly let it be obserued that Paul here condemnes zeale for the maintenance of vnwritten Traditions And let the Papists consider this 15. But when it pleased God which had seperated me from my mothers wombe and called me by his grace 16. To reueale his sonne in me or to me that I should preach him among the Gentiles immediately I communicated not with flesh and blood 17. Neither came I to Hierusalem to them which were Apostles before me but I went into Arabia and turned againe to Damascus Paul before prooued that he learned not the Gospell of any man before his conuersion here he further prooues that he learned it of no man after his conuersion And the substance of his reason is this because immediately vpon his conuersion he conferred with no man but went and preached in Arabia and Damascus In the words I consider foure things First the causes of Pauls conuersion And here he sets down three degrees of causes depending one vpon another The first is the good pleasure of God whereby he doth whatsoeuer he will in heauen earth in these words when it pleased The second is his seperation from the wombe which is an acte of Gods counsell whereby he sets men apart to be members of Christ and to be his seruants in this or that office This separation is said to be from the wombe not because it began then for it was appointed by God before all times euen from eternitie as all his counsels are But the H. Ghost hereby signifies that all our goodnesse and all our dexteritie to this or that office is meerely from God because we are sanctified dedicated and set apart in the Counsell of God from all eternitie and therefore from the wombe or from our first conception and beginning The third cause is vocation by grace the accomplishment of both the former in the time which God hath appointed The second thing is the manner of forme of Pauls vocation in these words to reueale his sonne to me The third is the end of his vocation to preach Christ among the Gentiles The last is his obedience to the calling of God in the 16. and 17. verses To begin with the efficient causes of Pauls conuersion here we see the order and dependance of causes in the conuersion and saluation of euery sinner The beginning of our saluation is in the good pleasure of God then followes separation or election to eternall life then vocation by the word and spirit then obedience to the calling of god after obedience euerlasting life This order Paul here sets down and the consideratiō of it is of great vse Hence it appeares to be a doctrine erronious which beginnes our saluation in the preuision of mans faith and good workes For in Paul order workes haue the last place And it must be Gods pleasure that man shall doe a good worke before he can doe it And if seperation to eternall life should be according to faith or workes then we should make seperation of our selues as well as God And vocation is not for workes but that we might doe good workes Eph. 1. 4. Secondly by this order it appeares that the saluation of them that beleeue is more sure then the whole frame of heauen and earth because it is founded in the vocation of God which is
any occasion were offe●ed it is to be feared that many of vs would be easily mooued to returne to our old prophanenesse and to the superstition of poperie But for the staying and the better establishing of our mindes let vs alwaies remember that they shall perish who withdraw themselues from their faith profession and obedience which they owe vnto God Heb. 10. 38. Psal. 73. 27. Againe here it must be obserued that Paul in describing the sinne expresseth two actions his eating with the Gentiles and his seperation from them the first good and the latter euill The beginning of his action was good but the end of it was naught The reason is this the man regenerate is partly flesh and partly spirit and hereupon it is that when we will that which is good we cannot accomplish it and euill is present with vs. The child of God is like a lame man that goes the right way but yet halts at euery step Abrahā Sara desire ishue that is from the spirit but they desire ishue by Agar their handmaid that is from the flesh Rebecca seekes the blessing for Iacob that is a worke of the spirit but shee seekes it by lying that is from the flesh Peter eates with the Gentiles that is from Christian libertie he after seperates himselfe that is from corruption Thus we see that the best workes are imperfect mixed with corruption and that for the best workes we must humble our selues and seeke pardon not in respect of the goodnesse of the worke but in respect of the defect thereof It may be demanded how the acte of Peter should be a sin considering he did onely abstaine from certaine meates that he might auoide the offence of certen Iewes Answer The fact of Peter considered by it selfe is not a sinne for Paul did the like in playing the Iewe but the circumstances make it a sinne For first of all Peter doth not onely abstaine from meates forbidden by the ceremoniall lawe but also he withdrawes himselfe from the companie of the Gentiles and keepes company apart with the Iewes Secondly he abstaines not among the Iewes at Ierusalem but at ●n●●●ch among the Gentiles where a little before he had openly done the contrarie in vsing his Christian libertie Thirdly he vsed this abstinence when certen Iewes c●m from Ierusalem to search out the libertie of the Gentiles Fourthly while Peter seekes to auoid the small offence of some Iewes he incurres a greater offence of all the Gentiles Lastly this acte of Peter did tend to the ouerthrowing of Pauls Ministerie and the suppressing of the truth of the Gospel Thus then the act of Peter becomes vnlawfull that was otherwise lawefull beeing simply considered by it selfe Here it may be demanded what Peter should haue done Ans. He shoul haue openly withstood the Iewes that came from Ierusalem as Paul withstood them that vrged the circumcision of Titus Or againe before he had plaid the Iew he should haue aduertised the Gentiles that for a time he was to yeeld to the infirmitie of some Iewes In Peters example we are taught that we must not offend God though all the world be offended Lesse offences must giue place when the great offence is at hand that is when god is dishonoured and the very least part of his trueth is suppressed The third point to be con●idered is the cause of the sinne of Peter and that was the feare of the offence of the Iewes Here two questions are to be handled The first how Peters feare should be a sinne Ans. There is a naturall feare created by God and placed in the heart of man This feare of it selfe is good Neuerthelesse by the corruption of nature it becomes euill And it is made euill two waies One is when men feare without cause as when the disciples feare Christ walking vpon the sea and feare drowning when Christ was in the ship with thē The other is whē there is no measure in feare As whē men so feare the creature that they neglect their dutie to God This was Peters feare and it was a sinne in him For God is to be feared simply because he is Lord of bodie and soule and can destroy both and he is to be feared for himselfe whereas euery creature is to be feared in part onely and for God Rom. 13. 3. 4. By this we are taught daily to inure our selues in our hearts to feare God aboue all things The second question is how Peter could haue the feare of God considering he feared men more then God at the least in this one action Ans. There are three kinds of feare One is without all sinne this was in Adam and in Christ. The second is altogether sinnefull in the wicked and vngodly because it is seuered from faith and obedience as when there is a feare of men without the feare of God The third is a mixed feare in them that are regenerate in whome the feare of God is ioyned with the corrupt feare of man And in this mixture otherwhiles the one preuailes otherwhiles the other And this feare was in Peter in whome at this time the carnall feare of man preuailed against the true feare of God Paul notes feare to be the cause of Peters sinne that he may thereby signifie vnto vs what kind of sinne it was namely a sinne not of malice but of infirmitie A sinne of infirmitie is when there is a purpose in the heart not to sinne and yet for all this the sinne is committed by reason the will is ouercarried by temptation or by violence of affection as by feare anger lust Thus Peter sinned And let it be remembred that to sinne of infirmitie i● properly incident to such as be regenerate as Peter was Euery wicked man makes his sinne his infirmitie fornication is the infirmitie of the ●ornicatour drunkennes the infirmitie of the drunkard c. but it is false which they say For they sinne with all their hearts when they sinne The fourth and last point is the Effect of Peters sinne in drawing the Iewes and Barnabas to the like dissimulation Here we see the contagion of euill example And hence we learne that Minis●ers of the word must of necessitie ioyne with good doctrine the Example of good life For first of all it is the exp●es●e commandement of God 1. Pet. 5. 3. Be patternes of the flocke 1. Tim. 4. 12. Be an ensample in word conuersion loue spirit faith puritie Phil. 4. 8. What ye haue seene in me that doe Math. 5. 16. Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works Secōdly practise in the Minister is a part of his teaching For the multitude doe not ma●ke so much what men say as what men doe Herod did many things not because Iohn the Baptist was a good Minister but because he was a good man Mark 6. 20. Thirdly Ministers haue not the presence protection of God vnlesse their liues be vertuous and godly If thou turne thou shalt
seeke deliuerance This conformitie with Christ in his passion is an infallible worke and token of the child of God and a signe that we are crucified with Christ. Againe here we are to take notice of the false faith of many men They can be content to beleeue that Christ was crucified for them but there they make a pause for they doe not beleeue that they are crucified with Christ. Their faith therefore is but halfe a faith and their profession is according For they haue the forme of godlines without the power thereof They thinke that they beleeue the Articles of faith aright but they are deceiued For to beleeue in Christ crucified is not onely to beleeue that he was crucified but also to beleeue that I am crucified with him And this is to know Christ crucified Lastly here we are to consider the abomination of the Church of Rome For it most abuseth that which is the greatest treasure in the world namely Christ crucified For they make a very Idol of him in that they worship him in at and before painted and carued Crucifixes For there is no such Christ in heauen or in earth that wil be present when we pray and heare vs at Crucifixes Againe they giue Latria diuine honour to deuised and framed crucifixes and thus they robbe Christ of his honour Thus much of our Communion with Christ in his passion now followes the second part of preparation namely Abnegation J liue yet not I any more that is I liue a spirituall life yet not as I as a naturall man For in that regard I carrie my selfe as a man crucified or after the manner of a dead man suffering nothing that is in me by nature to raigne in me that Christ alone may liue and raigne in me Here is a notable dutie to be learned we beeing crucified with Christ must carrie our selues as men crucified and that in three respects First in respect of corruption of sinnefull nature For in regard of our sinnes we are to esteeme our selues vnworthie of meat drinke sleepe breathing yea we are to esteeme ourselues to be as vile as any of the creatures vpon earth and we are to denie vngodlines and worldly lusts not suffering any of them to raigne ouer vs. Secondly we must carrie our selues as dead men in respect of the good things that belong to nature as honours riches pleasures friends all which in respect of preparation of minde we must daily forsake for Christs sake not suffering any of them to take place in our hearts Lastly we must be as dead men in respect of our owne reason and will and we must tread them vnder foote making Gods will our wisdome and will and giuing it lordship and dominion ouer vs our owne wills in the meane season lying dead in vs. Thus are we to carrie our selues as dead men and we are to be carefull of it that God may haue pleasure in vs we must forget our owne people and our fathers house Psal. 45. 10. That we may buy the pearle we must sell all we haue our wills our affections and the dearest things in the world He that would liue when he is dead must die while he is aliue and we must now lay out our selues as dead persons Corruption of nature reason and will must be dead in vs that Christ alone may liue and raigne in vs. The third point concerning spirituall life is touching the Originall and well-spring thereof in these words That Christ may raigne in me For the better conceiuing whereof three points are to be obserued The first that Christ is not onely the Author with the father the H. Ghost but also the Roote of life hauing life in himselfe that he may conuaie it to all that beleeue in him He is the true vine and we are the branches Ioh. 15. 1. he is an appointed head to his Church Eph. 1. 22. he is the prince of life Act. 3. 15. he is a quickning spirit 1. Cor. 15. 45. And in this regard is he said to liue in vs namely as a roote in the branch or as the head in the members The second point is that there must be an Vnion with Christ before we can receiue life from him and he liue in vs. If ye abide in me and I in you ye shall bring forth much fruit Ioh. 15. 4. We must be grafted with him before we can be conformable to his death and resurrection Rom. 6. 5. And againe we must be taken out of the wild oliue and set in the true oliue Rom. 11. 24. Thus much Paul signifieth when he saith Christ liues in me Of this coniunction two things must be noted The first that it is a substantiall vnion in that the person of him that beleeueth is vnited to the person of Christ. For we must eate the flesh of Christ and drinke his blood before we can haue life abiding in vs Ioh. 6. 53. and our bodies are members of Christ. 1. Cor. 6. 15. Againe this Vnion is spirituall because it is made by the bond of one spirit 1. Cor. 12. 13. By one spirit we are baptised into one bodie And no man is to maruaile that we on earth should be ioyned to Christ in heauen By ciuill contract man and wife are one flesh though distant many miles asunder why then may not we be ioyned to Christ by vertue of the couenant of grace considering no distance of place can hinder the beeing of the spirit of Christ in vs. The third point is that after this vnion with Christ he must further communicate himselfe vnto vs before we can liue by him and he in vs. To this purpose S. Iohn saith that God hath giuen vs life that this life is in the sonne that he which hath the sonne hath life 1. Ioh. 5. 12. For the conceiuing of this truth two questions may be demanded One in what order Christ giues himselfe vnto vs Ans. Christ first of all giues his flesh and blood that is himselfe and then secondly his gifts namely the efficacie and merit of his death The institution of the Lords Supper sheweth plainly that we are not partakers of the benefits of Christ vnlesse first of all Christ himselfe be giuen vnto vs. The second question is how Christ can be said to liue in vs Ans. He is not in vs in respect of locall presence but by the supernaturall and speciall operation of his spirit 1. Cor. 6. 17. The operation of the spirit is threefold The first is when God imputes the righteousnes of Christ to them that beleeue and withall giues the Right of eternall life and the Earnest of this right namely the first fruits of the spirit Hereupon iustification is called the Iustification of life Rom. 5. The second is Viuification by the vertue of the resurrection of Christ. Phil. 3. 10. And this vertue is the power of the Godhead of Christ or the power of the spirit raising vs to newnes of life as it raised Christ from the death
of sinne And by this power Christ is said to liue in them that beleeue The third is the Resurrection of the dead bodie to euerlasting glorie in the day of iudgement Rom. 8. 11. Thus then the meaning of the words is euident that Christ as a roote or head liues in them that are vnited to him and that by the operation of his spirit causing them to die vnto their sinnes and to liue vnto God And againe it must be remembred that Paul speakes this not priuately of himselfe but generally in the name of all beleeuers For he saith 2. Cor. 13. 5. Know ye not that Christ is in you except ye be reprobates The vse Hence it followes that they which are true beleeuers cannot make a practise of sinne and againe that they sinne not with the full consent or swinge of their wills Because Christ liues in them and restraines the will in part When they sinne therefore they sinne not of malice but of ignorance or infirmitie Secondly the true beleeuer cannot wholly fall away from grace because the life of Christ cannot be abolished As Christ died but once and for euer after liues to God so they that are in Christ die once to sinne and liue eternally to God Rom. 6. 10. The vertue and power of God that was shewed in raising Christ to life is likewise shewed in quickning them that doe beleeue Eph. 1. 19. He therfore that is made aliue to God dies no more but remaines aliue as Christ doth Thirdly they which are true beleeuers are a free and voluntarie people obeying God as if there were no law to compell them For they haue Christ to liue in them Read Psal. 110. 2. The spirit of life that is in Christ is also in them and that is their law Rom. 8. 2. It is the propertie of the child of God to obey God as it is the nature and qualitie of the fire to burne when matter is put to it It may here be demanded how we may know that Christ liues in vs Ans. By the spirit of God 1. Ioh. 3. 24. And the spirit is knowne by the motions and operations thereof The first whereof is a Purpose to obey God according to all his commandements that concerne vs with an inclination of our hearts to the said commandements Paul saith he was sold vnder sinne and yet withall he addes that he delighted in the law of God according to the inward man Rom. 7. 23. He that loues God and keepes his commaundements hath the father and the sonne dwelling in him Ioh. 14. 23. Let this be obserued Pharaoh when Gods hand was vpon him confessed he was a sinner and his people and requested Moses and Aaron to let the people goe But after God had withdrawne his hand he returned to his old course The like doe sicke men they make promise to amend their liues and they request their friends to pray for them but when they are recouered they forget all their faire promises The reason is this There is conscience in them and by it they know themselues to be miserable sinners but they want this purpose to obey God and the inclination to his laws and therefore indeede they hate not their sinnes but rather the commandement of God The second operation and signe of the spirit is a mind and disposition like to the mind and disposition of Christ which is to doe the will of God to seeke his glorie and to applie himselfe to the good of men in all duties of loue The third and last to omit many is to loue Christ for himselfe and to loue them that loue Christ and that because they loue Christ. This is a true signe that we haue passed from death to life 1. Ioh. 3. 14. It may here be said how can Christ be said to liue in vs considering we are laden with afflictions and miseries Where Christ liues there is no miserie Ans. In the middest of all miseries the life of Christ doth most appeare Where naturall life decaies there spirituall life takes place 2. Cor. 4. 10. I beare in my bodie the mortification of our Lord Iesus that the life of Iesus may be made manifest in me Gods power is made manifest in weaknes 2. Cor. 12. Againe it may be said if Christ liued in vs we should not feele so many corruptions as we doe Ans. The life of Christ is conueyed vnto vs by little and little God hauing wounded and slaine vs first bindes vs vp then he revives vs and the third day he raiseth vs vp Hos. 6. 1. Againe nature feeles not nature nor corruption feeles corruption but grace therefore it is the life of Christ in vs that makes vs feele the masse and bodie of corruption Furthermore here we are to take notice of the common sinne of our daies Men will not suffer Christ to liue in them and to rule ouer them It is reputed a small matter but it is a grieuous offence The Gentiles say Let vs breake their bands and cast their cords from vs. Psal. 2. 2. And it is was the sinne of the Iewes to say We will not haue this man to raigne ouer vs Luc. 19. 14. And therefore Christ saith bring them hither and slay them before me Lastly here we learne our dutie and that is so to liue that we may be able to say with good conscience that Christ liues in vs we must seeke his kingdome aboue all things and take his yoke on vs. It will be said what must we doe that Christ may liue in vs Ans. We must vse the meanes appointed meditation of the word prayer sacraments and withall we must spiritually eate the flesh of Christ and drinke his blood Ioh. 6. 57. And that we may eate him we must haue a stomacke in our soules like the stomacke of our bodies and we must hunger and thirst after Christ and therefore we must feele our owne sinnes and our spirituall pouertie and haue an earnest lust and appetite after Christ as after meat and drinke When Sisera was pursued by the armie of the Israelites he cried to Iael and said Giue me drinke I die for thirst Iudg. 4. 19. euen so we beeing pursued by the sentence of the law by the terrours of hell death and condemnation must flie to the throne of grace and crie out saying Giue me of the tree of life giue me of the water of life I perish for thirst Then shall our wretched soules be quickned and reuiued to euerlasting life Math. 5. 6. Rev. 21. 6. In the fourth place here is set downe the Meanes of spirituall life in these words And in that I now liue in the flesh I liue by the faith of the sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me And that the doctrine may the better appeare I will stand a while to shew the meaning of them By flesh is ment the mortall bodie or the fraile condition of this temporall life Heb. 5. 7. and 1. Pet. 4. 2. And
pray for this gift at Gods hand For power to suffer is the gift of God Phil. 1. 29. and we must obserue the commandement of God not to feare the terrours of men Reu. 2. 10. 1. Pet. 3. 14. And for this cause we must as Peter saith sanctifie God in our hearts beeing assured by our faith of the presence protection and prouidence of God When Paul saith Haue ye suffered so many things he shewes that we must endure manifold miseries in this life Iacob said to Pharao his daies were few and euill Many are the afflictions of the righteous Psal. 34. 20. Christ saith Take vp thy crosse euery day Luk. 9. 23. and thereby he signifies that euery new day that comes ouer our heads we must looke for a new crosse And for this cause it is not enough to be patient for a fit but we must shew all patience and long suffering and that with ioyfulnes Col. 1. 11. When Paul saith Haue ye suffered so many things in vaine he signifies that our sufferings are of great vse vnlesse our sinnes be the hindrance It may then be demanded what is the vse of our sufferings The Papists answer that in our baptisme or first conuersion Christ sufferings doe all abolish the whole fault and punishment but if we sinne after our conuersion then they say Christs sufferings abolish the fault and the eternall punishment and our owne sufferings abolish the temporall punishment But this doctrine leslens and obscures the mercie of God and it must be obserued that Paul holds all their sufferings to be in vaine that seeke remission of sinnes or iustification in any thing out of Christ. Now we for our parts make fiue other vses of our sufferings First they serue for triall of men that it may appeare what is hidden in their hearts Deut. 8. 2. Secondly they serue for the correction of things amisse in vs. 1. Cor. 11. 23. Thirdly they serue as documents and warnings to others specially in publike persons thus Dauid suffers many things after repentance for his murther and adulterie Fourthly they are markes of adoption if we be content to obey God in them Heb. 12. 7. Lastly they are the troaden and beaten way to the kingdom of heauen Act. 14. 23. When Paul saith If they be in vaine we are to obserue his moderation He reprooues and terrifies the Galatians yet so as he is carefull to preserue the hope of mercie in them and the hope of their amendment in himselfe The like hath bin the practise of the Prophets Ionas preacheth yet fourtie daies and Niniuie shall be destroied but withall he addes It may be the Lord will repent and turne from his fierce wrath Ion. 3. 9. Peter saith to Simon Magus Thou art in the gall of bitternes but withall he addes Pray God that the thought of thy heart may be forgiuen thee Act. 8. 21. See the like Ioel 2. 14. and Amos 5. 15. And thus are Ministers of the Gospel to delay and qualifie their reproofes and censures 5 He therefore that ministreth to you the spirit and worketh miracles among you doth he it by the works of the law or by the hearing of faith These words are a repetition of the second verse whence the exposition must be fetched The words and worketh miracles among you are added and they carrie this meaning That God gaue to the Galatians not onely the spirit of adoption but also other extraordinarie gifts of the spirit as to speake with strange tongues to cure diseases and such like Repetitions in Scripture are not idle but of great vse and signifie vnto vs the necessitie of the thing repeated and the infallible certentie of it The substance therefore of this verse must carefully be remembred and that is this Ye receiued the spirit by my doctrine therefore it is true and of God The argument is of great vse For by it we come to an infallible assurance of the Certentie of the Scriptures and of true religion deriued thence The Galatians are now reuolted from Pauls doctrine and they erre in the foundation and yet Paul saith in the time present He that ministreth the spirit vnto you Hence it appeares that falls of infirmitie in the child of God doe not vtterly extinguish the spirit but onely grieue or make sadde the spirit Againe Paul here teacheth that God is the onely and proper author of miracles For he that ministreth the spirit worketh miracles namely God A miracle is a worke aboue the strength of nature● therefore it can be effected of none but the author of nature It may be obiected the Apostles Prophets and others had a gift to worke miracles Iosua commanded the sunne to stand Ios. 10. 12. and Elias commanded fire to come downe from heauen 2. king 1. Ans. God neuer gaue to any man power to worke and effect a miracle either mediately or immediately The gift was the faith of miracles The faith was grounded vpon reuelation and the reuelation was that God himselfe would worke such or such a miracle when they praied commanded or imposed hands Men therefore properly are but the mouth of God and messengers to signifie what he will doe Againe it may be obiected that the deuill can worke miracles Ans. He can worke a wonder or things extraordinarie in respect of the ordinarie course of nature Thus he caused fire to fall from heauen and he caused vlcers to arise in the bodie of Iob and that true vlcers And this he did by the force of nature better knowne to him then all the world But as for a true miracle that exceedes the strength of nature he cannot possibly doe it no not Christ himselfe as man though he be exalted aboue all men and angels By this we see that they are deceiued who thinke that the deuill can make raine thunder and lightning Indeede when the matter of raine and thunder is prepared by God he can hasten it and make it more terrible but raine and thunder he cannot make for that is indeede as much as any miracle Againe it is a falsehood to thinke that Alchimists are able to turne baser mettals into gold For it is a worke of creation to turne a creature of one kind into a creature of an other kind It is also as foolish to imagine that witches by the power of the deuill are able to turne themselues into catts and other creatures None can doe this but God that made the creature Here againe we see the vse of miracles that is to confirme doctrine in the Apostolike Churches That their vse is further to confirme doctrine euen at this day it cannot be prooued Lastly here in the Galatians we see what an easie thing it is to fall from God from our faith and allegiance to him They were taught by Paul they had receiued the spirit of adoption they were enabled to worke miracles and yet for all this they fall away to an other Gospel They must be a looking glasse to vs. In peace we
written in tables of stone is the law the same law of Moses written in the hearts of men by the holy Ghost is the Gospel But I say againe that the law written in our hearts is still the law of Moses And this ouersight in mistaking the distinction of the Law and the Gospel is and hath bin the ruine of the gospel We must here further obserue that beleeuing and doing are opposed in the article of our iustification In our good conuersation they agree faith goes before and doing followes but in the worke of our iustification they are as fire and water Hence I gather that to the iustification of a sinner there is required a speciall and an applying faith for generall faith is numbred among the works of the law and the deuills haue it This kind of beleeuing therefore and doing are not opposite Againe hence I gather that works of faith and grace are quite excluded from iustification because the opposition doth not stand betweene beleeuing and the works of nature but simply betweene beleeuing and doing Lastly it may be demaunded why the Lord saith He that doth the things of the law shall liue considering no man since the fall can doe the things of the law Ans. The Lord since mans fall repeates the law in his old tenour not to mocke men but for other waightie causes The first is to teach vs that the law is of a constant and vnchangeable nature The second is to aduertise vs of our weaknes and to shew vs what we cannot doe The third is to put vs in minde that we must still humble our selues vnder the hand of God after we haue begunne by grace to obey the law because euen then we come farre short in doing the things which the law requires at our hands 13 Christ hath redeemed vs from the curse of the law when he was made a curfe for vs for it is written Cursed is euery one that hangeth on the tree 14 That the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles through Christ Iesus that we might receiue the promise of the spirit by faith Paul hauing prooued the truth of his doctrine by sundrie arguments in the former part of this chapter he here answereth an obiection the occasion whereof is from the 10. verse It may be framed on this manner If they be accused that continue not in all things written in the law to doe them then all men are accursed and the Gentiles are not partakers of the blessing of Abraham as you haue said Answer is here made that to them that beleeue there is full redemption from the curse of the law And Paul for the better inlightning of his answer here makes a description of our redemption by foure arguments The first is the author Christ hath redeemed vs from the curse of the law The second is the forme or manner of our Redemption in these words When he was made a curse for vs. And this forme is further declared by the signe in these words for it is written Cursed is euery one that hangeth on the tree The third argument is in the end in these words that the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles The last is also an other ende that we might receiue the promise of the spirit Touching the Author in these words Christ hath redeemed vs from the curse of the law sundrie things may be learned First of all comparing these words with the 10. verse or comparing the answer and the obiection together we see and are to obserue that the threatnings of the law are to be vnderstood with an exception from the Gospel All are cursed saith the law that doe not continue to doe all things written therein Except they haue pardon and be redeemed by Christ saith the Gospel And thus are all curses of the law to be conceiued with a limitation or qualification from the Gospel Againe in that Christ hath redeemed vs from the curse of the law here is our comfort that neither hell nor death nor Satā hath any right or power ouer vs so be it we do vnfainedly beleeue in Christ. For we are bought with a price And for this cause we must be admonished not to feare any euill ouermuch as the reuilings and curses of euill tongues withcraft the plague pestilence famine the sword or death For the curse which makes all these and many other things hurtfull vnto vs is remooued from them that are in Christ. And therefore all immoderate feare should be restrained Thirdly our dutie is to glorifie God and Christ who hath redeemed vs and that both in bodie and soule The redeemed must liue according to the will of their redeemer 1. Cor. 6. 20. This is all the thankfulnes that we can shew to our Redeemer for his mercie Lastly here an obiection made by some may be answered If say they we were redeemed by Christ beeing captiues to the deuill the price of our Redemption was paid to him and not to God Ans. We were captiues properly to the iustice of God in the law to the order whereof we stand subiect and by this meanes we are captiues to the curse of the law and consequently to the deuill who is the minister of God for the Execution of the said curse And beeing captiues to the deuill no otherwise then as he is the minister of God for the inf●●cting of punishment the price must not be paid to him but to God who is the principall and hath a soueraigntie ouer him and vs. I come now to the forme of our Redemption Who was made a curse for vs. For the better vnderstanding of these words foure points are to be handled The first is what is this curse Ans. A double death the first of the bodie the second of the soule The first is the separation of the bodie and soule The second is the separation of the whole man from God not in respect of his vniuersall power and presence for the very damned haue their moouing and beeing from him but in respect of his fauour and speciall loue whereby God ceaseth to be their God And this is death indeede whereof the first is but a shadow and this is the curse of the law The second point is How Christ was a curse or accursed who is the fountaine of blessednes Ans. He is not so by nature for he is the naturall sonne of God nor by his owne fault for he is the vnspotted lambe of God but by voluntarie dispensation and therefore Paul saith he was made a curse And he was made a curse first because he was set a part in the eternall counsell of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost to be our redeemer and consequently to be a curse In this regard the father is said to haue sealed him Ioh. 6. 27. and he is said againe to be prcordained before all worlds 1. Pet. 1. 20. and giuen according to the counsell and foreknowledge of God Act. 3. 22. Secondly he was made a curse
because a secret Atheisme makes them say in their hearts There is no Christ there is no curse that was indured by Christ. Clense your hearts of this hidden Atheisme and looke that inwardly in your spirits you die vnto your sinnes and liue to God In that Christ was obedient to his Father in bearing the curse of the law we are taught in all things to subiect our selues to the will of God Our obedience must not onely be in doing this or that but also in suffering the miseries ●●d on us to the death this is the best obedience of all and the truest marke of Gods child to obey in our sufferings Moreouer that Christ was accursed it is confirmed by the sentence and decree of God Cursed is euery one that hangeth on the tree Deut. 21. 23. The ground of this sentence is the sinne of the malefactour for whome God curseth he curseth for his offence And here it may be demanded why he that is stoned to death is not likewise accursed Ans. He also is accursed but there are speciall reasons why the man hanged on the tree is cursed First among the Iewes they which were hanged were most grieuous malefactours as blasphemers and idolatours and there punishment was accordingly most grieuous Secondly hanging as among all nations so among the Iewes was a most odious and infamous death Thirdly God did foresee that the Messias should die on the crosse and therefore he accursed this kind of death If it be saide that there was no fault or offence in Christ and therefore he could not be accursed I answer that he became sinne for vs in that our sinne was applied and imputed to him It may be further obiected that the theefe which repented was not accursed though he were hanged on the tree Ans. As a theefe he was accursed as he was a theefe and repented the curse was remooued For the law in the curses thereof giues place to the Gospel iudgement yeelds to mercie and the Gospel puts an exception to the law The vse If the malefactour hanged be accursed and defile the earth how vile and accursed is the liuing malefactour the blasphemer adulterer murtherer c. who hath entred no degree of punishment Let this be considered to terrifie offenders Againe let vs consider the scope of this law Because he that hangs on the tree is accursed therefore saith the law of God he must be taken downe and buried Marke the equity of this law and that is that things euill and accursed are to be remooued from the eye and sense of man This charge the Lord giues of lesse matters namely of sights vndecent and vnseemely Deut. 23. 15. Againe we are commanded not so much as to name fornication vncleannes couetousnes resting foolish talking c. Eph. 5. 3. Here we are to be put in minde that the Plaies commonly in vse ate to be banished out of all Christian societies For they doe nothing els but reuiue and represent the vile and wicked fashions of the world and the misdemeanour of men which are things accursed and therefore to be buried and not once to be spoken of Againe all euill in our example whether in word or in deede must be buried as much as may be for it defileth and is accursed Here it may be demanded how this law of God he is accursed therefore let him be taken downe and buried standes with the order vsed in this and other countries in which men are hanged in chaines for the terrour of the world Ans. Iudiciall lawes if they haue in them morall equitie and serue directly to fense in the precepts of the Decalogue are perpetuall and bind all men els not As for the iudiciall determinations of this or that manner of punishment they concerne vs not but God hath left euery nation free though not in respect of punishment yet in respect of the manner and order thereof The third point whereby our redemption is described is the ende thereof that the blessing of Abraham that is righteousnes and life euerlasting may come vpon the Gentiles Here two things are to be considered The first is whence comes the benediction of Abraham Ans. From the cursed death of Christ. For thus are the words He was made a curse for vs that the b●●ediction of Abraham might come on the Gentiles Marke here how God workes one contrerie by the other In the creation he made something not of something but of nothing he called light out of darknes he kills and then makes aliue Hos. 6. he sends men to heauen by the gates of hell he gaue sight by a temper of spittle and clay a fit meanes to put out sight In the worke of our redemption he giues life not by life but by death and the blessing by the curse This shewes the wisdome and power of God and it teacheth vs in the worke of our conuersion and saluation not to goe by sense and feeling because God can and doth worke one contrarie in and by the other The second point is where this benediction of Abraham is to be found Ans. The text say It is extant in Christ Iesus who is as it were the storehouse of Gods blessing and the dispenser of it to all nations In him are hid all treasures of wisdome and knowledge Col. 2. God and the Lambe are all things to all the Elect in the kingdome of heauen Reu. 21. Here we see the right way to become rich and that is aboue all things to seeke to be true and liuely members of Christ for if he be ours we can want nothing Rom. 8. 32. Matth. 6. 33. Psal. 34. 10. This is a most sure way to procure vnto vs all good things that he sees to be necessarie for vs. For Christ is the storehouse of the benediction of Abraham Againe this must teach them that beleeue in Christ to be content in any estate be it better or worse for true riches is the blessing of God and this blessing is in Christ. This is the truth if we could discerne of things that differ Thirdly in our pouertie and in the middest of all our wants and losses we must comfort our selues For though we leese neuer so much yet we retaine the principall and that is Christ who is the benediction of Abraham The fourth point is an other end of our Redemption That we might receiue the promise of the spirit by faith For the better vnderstanding of this foure questions may be demanded The first is what is meant by the promise Ans. The promise of God made in the old Testament that he would powre out his spirit vpon all flesh Isa. 44. 3. and Ioel 2. 28. And h 〈…〉 saide that this promise is fulfilled to the nations whē they beleeue Marke here how the promises of God lie as void dead and of none effect till the particular time of their accomplishment God promiseth Iacob that his posteritie shall be a great nation after 430 yeares for which time they remaine
seemes there was more time betweene the promise and the law Ans. The meaning of Moses in this place is thus much that the dwelling of the children of Israel while they dwelt as pilgrims was for the space of 430 yeares and that in ●art of this time they dwelt in Egypt as strangers The words may thus be translated The dwelling or Peregrination of the children of Israel in which they dwelt in Egrpt was 430 yeares And this peregrination beginnes in the calling of Abraham and endes at the giuing of the law In Pauls example we see what it is to search the Scriptures not onely to consider the scope of whole bookes and the parts thereof but to ponder and waigh euery sentence and euery part of euery sentence and euery circumstance of time place person This is the right forme of the studie of diuinitie to be vsed of the sonnes of the Prophets The second reason vsed by Paul is in the 18. v. it may be framed thus If the law abolish the promise then the inheritance must come by the law but that cannot be He prooues it thus If the inheritance of life eternall be by the law it is no more by the promise but it is by the promise because God gaue it vnto Abraham freely by promise therefore it comes not by the law The opposition betweene the law and the promise shewes that Paul in this Epistle speakes not onely of the ceremoniall but also of the morall For the greatest opposition is betweene the morall law and the free promise of God Let vs againe marke here the difference betweene the law and the Gospel The law promiseth life but to the worker for his works or vpon condition of obedience The Gospel called by Paul the promise offers and giues life freely without the condition of any worke and requires nothing but the receiuing of that which is offered It may be obiected that the Gospel promiseth life vpon the condition of our faith Ans. The Gospel hath in it no morall condition of any thing to be done of vs. Indeede faith is mentioned after the forme and manner of a condition but in truth it is the free gift of God as well as life eternall and it is to be considered not as a worke done of vs but as an instrument to receiue things promised This difference of the law and the Gospel must be kept as a treasure for it is the ground of many worthie conclusions in true religion And the ignorance of this point in the Church of Rome hath bin the decay of religion specially in the article of Iustification Thirdly we must here obserue the opposition betweene the Law and the free promise of God in iustification of a sinner For if life come by the law it comes not by the promise saith Paul And Rom. 4. 14. If they which are of the law are heires the promise is of none effect By this we see the Church of Rome ouerturnes and abrogates the free promise of God For they of that Church teach that the first iustification is by meere mercie and that the second is by the workes of the law But the law and the promise cannot be mixed together more then fire and water the law ioyned with the free promise disanulls the said promise Lastly in that Paul saith God gaue and freely bestowed the inheritance by the promise it must be considered that this Giuing is no priuate but a publike donation For Abraham must be considered as a publike person and that which was giuen to him was in him giuen to all that should beleeue as he did Art thou then a true beleeuer doest thou truly turne vnto God here is thy comfort the inheritance of eternall life is as surely thine as it was Abrahams when he beleeued For thou art partaker of the same promise with him and when God gaue him life he gaue thee also life in him Againe persons backward and carelesse must be stirred vp with all diligence to vse all good meanes that they may beleeue truly in Christ and truly turne to God For so soone as they beginne to beleeue and to turne vnto God they are entred into the condition of Abraham and if they continue they shall sit downe with Abraham Isaac and Iacob in the kingdome of heauen and after this life they shall rest in the bosome of Abraham For that which was done to Abraham shall be done to all that walke in his steppes 19 Wherefore then serues the law it was added because of transgressions vntill the seede was come to which the promise was made and it was ordained by Angels in the hand of a Mediatour 20 Now a Mediatour is not of one but God is one Paul hath prooued before that the law doth not abolish the promise his last reason was because then the inheritance should be by the law which cannot be Against this reason in the 19 and 20 verses there is an obiection made and answered The obiection is this If life and iustice come not by the law the law then is in vaine And this obiection is expressed by way of interrogation Wherefore then serues the law The answer is in the next words It is added for transgressions that is for the reuealing of sinne and the punishment thereof and for the conuincing of men touching their sinnes Rom. 3. 19 20. Moreouer Paul sets downe the time or continuance of this vse of the law when he saith till the seede came to which the promise was made that is till Christ come and accomplish the worke of mans redemption Here two questions may be demanded The first is whether the law serue to reueale sinne after the cōming of Christ For Paul saith it is added for transgressions till Christ. Ans. The law serues to reueale sinne euen to the end of the world yet in respect of the legall or Mosaicall manner of reuealing sinne it is added but till Christ. For the law before Christ did conuince men of sinne not onely by precepts and threatnings but also by Rites and Ceremonies For Iewish washings and sacrifices were reall confessions of sinne And they were an handwriting against vs as Paul saith And this manner of reuealing sinne ended in the death of Christ. Col. 2. 14. Againe the Ministerie of condemnation which was in force till Christ at his comming is turned into the Ministerie of the spirit and of grace 2. Cor. 3. 11. For vnder the law there was plētifull reuelation of sinne with darke and small reuelation of grace but at the comming of Christ men saw heauen opened and there was a plentifull reuelation of sinne with a more plētifull reuelation of grace and mercie And in this respect also the law is said to be till Christ. The second question is whether the seede of Abraham were before Christ or no Ans. All that followed the steppes of Abrahams faith before Christ were his seede Yet were they not that seede that is the principall seede who is Christ who is the seede
are of minde that all Iudiciall lawes are abrogated and some are of contrarie mind that all Commonwealths are to be gouerned by them But they are both deceiued and the meane betweene both is the truth Know then that of Iudiciall lawes of Moses some are abrogated some are not Such lawes as are meerely Iudiciall that is iudiciall and not morall and doe particularly concerne the nation of the Iewes the land of Canaan the times before Christ the things of the old Testament are abrogated Of this kind is the law that commands the brother to raise vp seede to his brother Deut. 25. 5. The law of Tenths is partly ceremoniall and partly iudiciall and specially concernes the land of Canaan For as countries are richer or poorer then Canaan so must their allowance to the Ministerie be more or lesse The seuenths the eights the ninths the eleuenths the twelfths and not the tenths And the allowance of Tenths stands not in force in this other Commonwealths by the Iudiciall law of God but by positiue laws of countries For if it did then Ministers should not meddle with their Tenths either for the gathering or for the disposing of them but they should be brought into storehouses by certaine ouerseers and they should dispose of them according to the neede of euery Minister 2. Chron. 31. Malac. 3. The law that the theefe must either restore fourefold or be a bondman concernes Canaan and those countries In Europe specially in the Northerne and Westerne parts a straighter law is required For the people are much giuen to idlenes and consequently to robbing and they are of fierce disposition and therefore with theft ioyne violence and disturbance of the common peace And for this cause excepting in some cases theft is punished with death And this must not seeme hard For euen the Iewes when the theft was aggrauated with other circumstances might punish it with death 2. Sam. 12. 6. And it is in the power of the Magistrate when sinnes are increased to increase the punishment Now Iudiciall lawes that are in foundation and substance morall are not abrogated but are perpetuall For the better discerning of them I giue two notes The first is this If a Iudiciall law serue directly and immediatly to guard and fense any one of the ten Commandements in the maine scope and ende thereof it is morall in equitie and perpetuall because the end and vse of it is perpetuall I will giue sundrie examples It is the law of God that he of the Israelites that shall intise them to goe and worship other gods shall be put to death Deut. 13. 6. This law serues to maintaine and vphold the first commandement the ende whereof is to inioyne vs to take the true God for our God and this ende is most necessarie both for Gods glorie and for the saluation of men and therefore whatsoeuer thing or person ouerturneth or abolisheth this ende it must be cut off from the societie of men Here note by the way that they which haue bin borne baptised and brought vp among vs and yet afterward become Masse-priests and seeke malitiously and obstinately without ceasing to seduce our people deserue in this respect to be put to death Example 2. Thou shalt not suffer a witch to liue Exod. 22. 18. This law againe is a fense to the first commandement For Witches renounce God and humane societie and therefore are worthely cut off though they doe no hurt euen because they make a league with the deuill Example 3. He that blasphemeth the name of God shall be put to death Leuit. 24. 16. Vnderstand this law of manifest and notorious blasphemies that pearce through God as the words import and then it is a maine fense to the third commandement For Gods name may in no wise be abused and troad vnder foote and therefore blasphemers pearcing God are to be cut off This is the very law of Nature as appeares by Nabuchadnezzar who gaue in commandement to his people that whosoeuer blasphemed the name of the true God should be put to death Dan. 3. 29. Here note that manifest and conuicted Atheists if they be put to death haue but their deserts Example 4. He that curseth father or mother shall die the death Leuit. 4. 9. This law is a necessarie fense to the fifth commandement and vpholds the honour that is due to parents Examples 5. He that smites a man that he die shal die the death Exod. 21. 12. To this law there is no exception made but one and that is when a man is killed at vnawares And it is for his equitie perpetuall For it is a maine and direct fense to the sixth commandement Consider an other reason Num. 35. 33. The whole land saith the Lord shall be defiled with blood till his blood be shed that killeth a man Example 6. The adulterer the adulteresse shal both be put to death Leuit. 20. This Iudiciall serues to vphold and maintaine chastitie which is the ende of the seuenth commandement Marke withall the reasons Leuit. 20. 22 23. Least the land spne you out and for these things that is for suffering this and other sinnes vnpunished the Gentiles were cast out It may be said that Christ did not condemne the woman to death which was taken in adulterie Ans. He came to be a Mediatour and not a Iudge or Magistrate It is alleadged that Dauid was not put to death for adulterie Ans. He was the highest in the kingdome there was none to iudge him Againe it may be saide that if adulterie be death then innumerable persons must die Ans. We must doe that which we finde to be the will of God and the euents of things must be left to God The second note whereby we may discerne a iudiciall law to be morall for his equitie is this If it follow necessarily and immediatly from the light principles and conclusions of nature For example Deut. 22. 5. The man shall not put on the things that appertaine to the woman nor the woman the things that appertaine to the man This law is more then Iudiciall for it is a Rule of common honestie practised in those countries by the light of nature where the written law was neuer knowne And things good and honest which nature teacheth are morall and must be done This is Pauls rule Doth not nature teach this 1. Cor. 11. 14. This I speake not to censure and condemne the lawes of this or any other commonwealth but onely to shew how farre Iudiciall lawes haue moralitie in them and stand in force The third question is what is our guide now in the time of the new Testament seeing the Regiment and law of Moses is abrogated Ans. The outward guide is the Doctrine of the morall law and of the Gospel It is therefore called the rodde and the staffe of God Psal. 23. and the rodde of his mouth Isa. 11. 4. The inward guide is the spirit of God writing the lawes of God in our hearts and
baptisme that are retained in the Papacie pertaine not to the Papacie but to another hidden Church which by these and other meanes is gathered out of the middest of Romish Babylon And therefore baptisme is rather a signe of this then of the Romish Church Againe we must be warned to take heede that we deceiue not our selues thinking it a sufficient matter that we haue bin baptised For except Christ inwardly wash vs by his spirit we haue no part in him Ioh. 13. 8. Circumcision saith Paul auaileth not vnles thou be a doer of the law Ro. 2. 25. Baptisme indeed saueth 1. Pet. 3. 21. but that is not the baptisme of water but the stipulation of a good conscience by the resurrection of Christ. The outward baptisme without the inward is not the marke of Gods child but the marke of the foole that makes a vow and afterward breakes it Eccles. 5. 3. Moreouer baptisme is not onely a signe of our adoption but also a seale thereof and a meanes to conuaie it vnto vs and for the better vnderstanding of this point and for a further clearing of the 27. verse I will speake of the whole nature of baptisme That which is to be deliuered I reduce to eight heads I. the name of baptisme and the phrases II. the matter III. the forme IV. the ende V. the efficacie of baptisme VI. the necessitie thereof VII the circumstances VIII the vse Touching the name Baptisme is taken sixe waies First it signifies the superstitious washings of the Pharisies who boūd themselues to the baptismes or washings of cuppes and potts Mar. 7. 4. Second 〈…〉 it signifies the washings appointed by God in the Ceremoniall law Hebr. 9. 10. Thirdly it signifies that washing by water which serues to seale the couenant of the new Testament Math. 28. 19. Fourthly it signifies by a metaphor any grieuous crosse or calamitie Thus the passion of Christ is called his baptisme Luk. 12. 50. Fiftly it signifies the bestowing of extraordinarie gifts of the holy Ghost and that by imposition of hands of the Apostles Act. 1. 5. and 11. 16. Lastly it signifies the whole Ecclesiasticall Ministerie Thus Apollos is saide to teach the way of the Lord knowing nothing but the baptisme that is the doctrine of Iohn Act. 18. 25. In the third sense is baptisme taken in this place when Paul saith Ye are all baptised into Christ. The phrases vsed in Scripture of baptisme are strange in reason and therefore they are to be explaned Here it is said Ye that are baptised into Christ put on Christ. The reason of this speach is threefold The first is this the washing of the bodie with water is an outward signe to represent to our eies and minde the inward washing and our vnion or coniunction with Christ therefore they that are baptised are said to put on Christ. The second reason is because the washing by water seales vnto vs our inward ingrafting into Christ for as certenly as the bodie is washed with water so certenly are they that beleeue ingrafted into Christ. The third reason of the speach is because baptisme is after a sort an instrument whereby our insition into Christ and fellowship with him is effected For in the right and lawfull vse of baptisme God according to his owne promise ingrafts them into Christ that beleeue and the inward washing is conferred with the outward washing For these causes they that are washed with water in baptisme are said to put on Christ. In the same manner must other phrases be vnderstood as when it is said that baptisme saueth 1. Pet. 3. 21. that men must be baptised for the remission of sinnes Act. 22. 6. that we are buried by baptisme into the death of Christ. Rom. 6. 3. The second point concernes the Matter of baptisme Here I consider three things the signe the thing signified the Analogie of both The signe is partly the element of water Act. 8. 36. and partly the Rite by diuine institution appertaining to the element which is the sacramentall vse of it in washing of the bodie and these two water and externall washing of the bodie are the full and complete signe of baptis 〈…〉 e. Here a question may be made Whether washing of the bodie in baptisme must be by dipping or by sprinkling Ans. In hot countries and in the baptisme of men of yeares dipping was vsed and that by the Apostl 〈…〉 and to this Paul alludes Rom. 6. 3. and dipping doth more fully represent our spirituall washing then sprinkling Neuerthelesse in cold coūtries and in the baptisme of infants new borne sprinkling is to be vsed and not dipping in respect of their health and life For the Rule is Necessitie and charitie dispense with the Ceremoniall law Vpon this ground Dauid did eate the shewbread circumcision was not alwaies the eight day as appeares by the Israe lites in the wildernes and for the same cause in these countries dipping may be omitted though otherwise a sacramentall rite And it must be remembred that baptising signifies not onely that washing which is by diuing of the bodie but also that which is by sprinkling The thing signified or the substance of baptisme is Christ himselfe our Mediatour as he gaue himselfe to wash cleanse vs. Thus Paul saith that he cleanse●th his Church by the washing of water Eph. 5. 6. The Analogie or proportion of both is on this manner Water resembles Christ crucified with all his merits S. Iohn saith The blood of Christ cleanseth vs from all our sinnes 1. Ioh. 1. 7. that is the merit and efficacie of Christ crucified freeth vs from our sinnes and from the guilt and punishment thereof Externall washing of the bodie resembles inward washing by the spirit which stands in iustification and sanctification 1. Cor. 6. 11. Tit. 3. 5. The dipping of the bodie signifies mortification or fellowship with Christ in his death the staying vnder the water signifies the buriall of sinne and the comming out of the water the resurrection from sinne to newnes of life Rom. 6. 3 4. The third point concernes the Forme of baptisme Math. 28. 19. Goe teach all nations baptizing them into the Name of the Father c. I explaine the words thus Marke first it is faide Teach them that is make them my disciples by calling them to beleeue and to repent Here we are to consider the Order which god obserues in making with man the couenant in baptisme First of all he calls men by his word and commands thē to beleeue and repent when they beginne to beleeue and repent then in the second place God makes his promise of mercie and forgiuenes and thirdly he seales his promise by baptisme This diuine Order Christ signifieth when he saith make them disciples and 〈…〉 as alwaies obserued of God Before he made any couenant with Abraham and before he sealed it by Circumcision he saith to him Walke before me and be vpright Gen. 17. 1. and of his seede he saith they must-first doe
them that beleeue And that is to be children of Abraham and heires of all the blessings of God And therefore learne here one golden lesson namely that the basest person that is if he beleeue in Christ is in the place of Abraham and succeeds him in the inheritance of the kingdom of heauen Some man may say O this is excellent comfort if I might know that I were in the case of Abraham Answ. Thou maist know it certenly if thou wilt doe as Abraham did namely follow the calling of God and obey the Gospel that is subiect thy heart to the commandements of God which bidde thee repent and beleeue in Christ for then all the good things reuealed in the Gospel shall be thine The vse Beleeuers in this world must be content with any estate that God shall lay vpon them For they are heires with Abraham of heàuen and earth In this regard Abraham was content to forsake his countrie and his fathers house and as a pilgrime to dwell in tents to the death Heb. 11. 8 9. Secondly they that beleeue in Christ must moderate their worldly cares and not liue as drudges of the world For they are heires of God and haue a title or right to all good things promised in the couenant Therefore they shall neuer want any good thing that is needfull for them He that hath made them heires will carefully prouide for them Therefore our care must be to doe the duties that belong vnto vs and all other cares we must cast vpon God They in this world that are borne to land and liuing are content to liue sparingly and oftentimes very barely with a little vpon hope of further inlargement after the decease of some friends Lastly our speciall care must be for heauen For the things of this world are but trifles in respect The citie of God in heauen is thy portion or childs part Seeke for the assurance of that aboue all things Thus did Abraham Heb. 11. 15 16. CHAP. IIII. 1 And I say that the heire as long as he is a child differeth nothing frō a seruant though he be Lord of all 2 But is vnder tutors gouernors till the time appointed of the father 3 Euen so we when we were children were in bondage vnder the rudiments of the world 4 But when the fulnesse of time was come God sent forth his sonne made of a woman and made vnder the law 5 That he might redeeme them that were vnder the lawe that we might receiue the adoption of sonns 6 And because ye are sonnes God hath sent forth the spirit of his sonne into your hearts which crieth Abba father 7 Wherefore thou art no more a seruant but a sonne and if thou be a sonne thou art also an heire of God through Christ. THese words depend on the former chapter as an answer to an obiection which may be framed on this manner Paul thou saiest that the Iewes before Christ were vnder the law as vnder a schoolemaster c. 3. v. 24. and that we are free from the same schoolemaster v. 25. beeing children of God and heires by Christ v. 29 but we for our parts thinke our selues seruants vnder the law as well as the ancient Iewes and that they are as well children of God as we To this obiection Paul makes answer in these 7. verses as the very first words import And I say that is whatsoeuer you suppose I say thus And then he propounds the reason of his answer which may be framed thus If the time of our bondage be ended and the full time of our libertie come then are we sonnes and not seruants but the time of our bondage is ended and the full time of our libertie is come therefore we are not seruants but sonnes The maior is omitted because it is manifest The minor is in the sixe first verses the conclusion is expressed in the 7. verse Againe the minor the time of our bondage is ended and the time of our libertie is come is first of all declared by a similitude and then confirmed The similitude is borrowed from the Ciuill law and it may be framed thus Heires in their minoritie liue in subiection to Tutors and gouernours but when they are of riper yeares at the appointment of their parents they are at their owne libertie Euen so the people of God before Christ were in their infancie vnder the law as vnder a Tutor but when the fulnes of time was come which God had appointed they entred into the fruition of their libertie The first part of the similitude is expressed in the 2. first verses and the second in the 3. and 4. Againe the minor is confirmed by two reasons The first is this Your libertie is procured by Christ therefore the time of your libertie is come This reason is in the 4. and 5. verses The second reason is taken from the signe You haue receiued the spirit of adoption therefore the time of your libertie is come v. 6. Of these points in order First where he signifies that the father hath authoritie to dispose of his child This is the law of nature and the law of nations Paul saith Col. 3. 20. that children must obay their parents in all things When the deuill had obtained libertie to afflict Iob in all things that belonged to him saue his person he destroied his children Iob 1. 12. 18. And this shewes that the children in respect of their bodies are the goods of their parents In this respect the Iewes were permitted to sell their children Exod. 21. 7. And so sacred a thing was the authoritie of the parent that he which rebelliously despised the same was put to death Deu. 21. 21. This authoritie shewes it selfe specially in two things in the marriage and in the calling of the child In the marriage of the child the parent is the principall agent and the disposer thereof Deuter. 7. 3. Exod. 34. 16. 1. Cor. 7. 38. Where obserue that the commandement touching the marriage of the child is giuen not to the child but to the parent and the parent hath authoritie by the saide commaundement to giue and bestow his child and to take wiues to his sonnes Thus Abraham tooke a wife for Isaac and Isaac suffered himselfe to be disposed at the appointment of his father For a more full declaration of this authoritie I propound these three questions The first is whether the father may command his childe to marrie Ans. Presuppose two things one that the commandement is without compulsion the second that the father knowes what is for the good of the child then I answer that he may command his child to marrie and to marrie a person thus or thus qualified Thus Isaac commanded Iacob to marrie in the house of Laban Gen. 28. 1 2. and Iacob obaied Now whether a father may command his child to marrie this or that person I doubt and therefore suspend The second question is whether parents may make voide the contract secretly
because they are not ioyned with a change and conuersion of heart and life Thirdly our desires are to be directed vnto God with importunitie and instancie For the spirit makes vs crie Abba Father that is My father and thy father God requires this importunitie of vs. Luk. 18. 1. It is practised by Dauid Psal. 69. 4. by the woman of Canaan Matth. 15. We must doe as Iacob did wrastle with God and giue him no rest till he fulfil the desires of our hearts and giue vs the blessing And our constant desires and groanes to heauen for mercie shall neuer be in vaine For if we aske any thing according to his will he heareth vs indeede 1. Ioh. 5. 14. Verse 7. These words are the conclusion of the former doctrine of Paul The time of our libertie is come in that your libertie is procured and purchased by Christ and ye haue receiued the spirit of sonnes crying Abba therefore ye are not seruants to the lawe but sonnes of God And from this conclusion Paul deriues a second which is the summe and substance of the whole disputation from the beginning of the third chapter to this place namely that they which are sonnes are also heires not by the lawe and the works thereof but by Christ. This verse is a repetition of the 26. 29. verses of the third chapter therfore I will not stand any lōger in the hādling of it One thing is to be obserued namely the change of the number Paul said before ye are sonnes here he saith thou art a sonne And this he doth to teach vs that they which turne to God beleeue in Christ must be assured that they are the sonnes and heires of God Paul hath set downe immediately before the infallible signe whereby a man may knowe himselfe to be the childe of God therefore in the next words he saith therefore thou art the sonne of God Saint Iohn saith these things we write vnto you that beleeue that ye may know that ye haue life euer lasting 1. Ioh. 5. 13. Thus must euery beleeuer apply the Gospell and the benefits thereof to himselfe The meditation of this point serues greatly to sweeten all crosses vnto vs for if we know that we be Gods children that is comfort enough and we may then assure our selues that in euery crosse God comes vnto vs as a father Again this meditation works a contentation in euery losse For if thou be the childe of god thou canst haue no great losse For all things are thine thou Christs and Christ Gods 1. Cor. 3. 22. Lastly this meditation must stirre vp in vs a care to lead a heauenly and spirituall life 1. Ioh. 3. 3. that we may be like our eldest brother Christ Iesus v. 8. But euen then when yee knew not God ye did seruice vnto them which by nature are not Gods v. 9. But nowe seeing ye know God or rather are known of God how turne ye againe vnto impotent and beggarly rudiments whereunto as from the beginning ye will be in bondage againe v. 10. Yee obserue daies and moneths and times and yeares v. 11. I am in feare of you least I haue bestowed labour on you in vaine Here Paul returnes againe to the principall conclusion of the whole Epistle which is on this manner If I Paul be called to teach and my doctrine be true ye haue done euill to reuolt from it to another Gospel but I am called to teach and my doctrine is true this Paul prooued in the first second and third chapters Therefore ye haue done euill to reuolt from my doctrine This conclusion he propounded before and here againe he repeates it and withall amplifies it two waies First by setting downe the particular matter of the reuolt and Apostacie of the Galatians v. 9 10. ye returne to impotent rudiments ye obserue daies and times Secondly he sets downe the greatnesse of their reuolt first by comparison thus Once ye serued false gods but there is some excuse of that offence because ye did not know God but that ye haue returned to the Rudiments of the world there is no excuse of it for ye then knewe god or rather were known of god Againe he sets forth the greatnesse of their reuolt by the effect v. 11. It makes me feare least I haue lost my labour among you Here Paul sets downe a threefold estate of the Galatians their estate in Gentilisme before their conuersion their estate in their conuersion and their estate in the Apostasie Their estate in Gentilisme stands in two things Ignorance of God then ye knew not God Idolatrie or superstition ye serued them which are not Gods by nature Touching their ignorance of God it may be demaunded how they can be said not to know God whereas Paul saith that which may be known of God is made manifest vnto the Gentiles Rom. 1. 20. and that God did not leaue himselfe without witnesse Act. 14. 17. Answ. Knowledge of God is twofold Naturall or reuealed knowledge Naturall is that which all men haue in their minds by the light of nature which also they may gather by the view and obseruation of the creatures This knowledge hath two properties The first it is imperfect because by it we know some fewe and generall things of God as namely that there is a God and that he is to be worshipped c. In this respect this knowledge is like the ruines of a princely pallace Againe it is weake because it serues onely to cut off excuse and it is not sufficient to direct vs in the worship of God Nay when by it we beginne to set downe the worship of God we then runne headlong into superstition and vanitie Reuealed knowledge is that which is set downe in the written word whereby we may knowe what God is in himselfe and what he is to vs namely a father in Christ giuing pardon of sinne and life euerlasting This knowledge the Gentiles altogether want nay by reason of the blindenes and impotencie of their minds they iudge it foolishnesse Thus then in effect though the Gentiles by nature know some things of God yet doe they not knowe God as he will be known of vs. Againe it may be demaunded whether this ignorance be a sinne in the Galatians Answ. Yea. For all men are bound to know God by the first commandement And this ignorance is a want of the image of God in the minde Col. 3. 10. And euery defect of the image of God is a branch of originali sinne And vengeance is the punishment of this sinne 2. Thess. 1. 8. It may be obiected that Paul here excuseth the Galatians by their ignorance Answ. It excuseth à tanto non à toto that is the degree and measure of the sinne and not the sinne it selfe Luk. 12. 48. Againe it may be said that this their ignorance is inuincible because as the Gentiles doe not know God so they cannot know him Ans. That they cannot know him it is not Gods
our selues on Christ by faith Fourthly the law was written in tables of stone the Gospel in the fleshie tables of our heart Ier. 31. 33. 2. Cor. 3. 3. Fiftly the law was in nature by creation the Gospel is aboue nature and was reuealed after the fall Sixtly the law hath Moses for the mediatour Deut. 5. 27. but Christ is the mediatour of the new testament Heb. 8. 6. Lastly the law was dedicated by the blood of beasts Exod. 24. 5. the new Test by the blood of Christ. Heb. 9. 12. Here then falls to the ground a maine pillar in Popish religion which is that the law of Moses and the Gospel are all one law for substance and that the difference lies in this that the law of Moses is darke and imperfect and the Gospel or the law of Christ more perfect because he hath as they say added Counsells to precepts Againe the law they say without the spirit is the law properly and with the spirit it is the Gospel But all this is false which they teach For the two Testaments the law and the Gospel are two in nature substance or kind and the difference lies not in the presence or absence of the spirit And whereas the Papists make two iustifications the first meerely by grace the second by workes besides the two Testaments they must establish a third Testament compounded of both and it must be partly legall and partly Euangelicall otherwise the twofold iustification cannot stand For the law propounds onely one way of iustification and the Gospel a second The doctrine therefore that propounds both is compounded of both God did not approoue the polygamie of Abraham yet doth he vse it to signifie the greatest mysterie of our religion Here we see a great point of the diuine prouidence of God who ordereth and vseth well the things which he doth not approoue This is the foundation of our patience and a meanes of true comfort Ioseph thus comforts himselfe and his brethren that God ordered and disposed their bad enterprise to his and their good Gen. 45. 6 7. Here againe Paul sets downe two properties of the Testament of workes or of the law The first is that it came from mount Sina And here lies the difference betweene the law and the Gospel the law is from Sina the gospel from Sion or Ierusalem For there it was first to be preached and thence conueied to all nations Mich. 4. 1. Ezech. 47. 1. The second propertie of the law is that it gendreth to bondage because it maketh them bond men that looke to be saued and iustified thereby And this it doth by reuealing sinne and the punishment thereof which is euerlasting death and by conuincing all men of their sinnes and of their deserued condemnation In this respect it is called the ministerie of death 2. Cor. 3. 6. and Paul saith that after he knew his sins by the lawe he died and the lawe was the meanes of death vnto him Rom. 7. 10. Here is another difference between the law and the Gospel The lawe genders to bondage the Gospell genders to life For it is an instrument of the spirit for the beginning and confirming of our regeneration and saluation and so is not the law which is no cause but only an occasion of the grace of God in vs. Where as Ierusalem that now is is said to be in bondage as Sina and Hagar It is to be obserued that there is no Church in the world nor people which is not subiect to Apostasie For God had made great and large promises to Ierusalem Psal. 122. and 132. and yet for all this Ierusalem by refusing Christ and by establishing the iustice of the lawe is comne into bondage and depriues herselfe of the inheritance of eternall life Therefore it is a falshood which the Papists teach that the infallible assistance of the spirit is tyed to the Chaire and Consistorie of the Pope so as he and consequently the Church of Rome cannot erre Here againe we see what may be the future condition of England For it may be said of it hereafter England that now is is not that which it hath bin namely a maintainer of the Gospell of Christ. Therefore we must not be high minded but feare and now take heed of the first beginning of apostasie The holy Ghost Heb. 3. 12 13. set down the degrees thereof and they are fiue in number The first is the deceit of sinne the second is the hardening of the heart after men are deceiued by sinne the third is an euill heart which growes vpon hardnesse of heart the fourth is vnbeleefe whereby the word of God is called in question and the trueth thereof and after vnbeleefe followes a departure from God and Christ. That this may not be we must carefully avoid all the deceits of sinne as namely couetousnes ambition lust c. Againe as Agar figures the lawe so doth Ismael all iusticiaries that looke to be saued by the law Here then we see the condition of the world the greatest part whereof are Ismalites For the Turke and the Iewe looke at this day to be faued by their workes The Papist ascribes his conuersion not wholly to grace but partely to grace and partly to nature or the strength of mans will helped by grace And thus are they borne after the flesh as Ismael was And our common people though in shew they professe reformed religion yet indeed a great part of them are Ismaelites For they looke to be saued by their good seruing of God and by their good deeds and they little thinke on Christ and his merits And thus they depriue themselues of all title to eternall life Therefore it stands them in hand to condemne nature and the strength thereof and to renounce their owne workes and to rest onely on the promise of mercie for eternall saluation thus shall they be the children of the promise and heires of God Lastly in that Ierusalem is in bondage like Agar or mount Sina we see how vaine are the pilgrimages to the holy land how needlesse were the warres made for the recouery thereof 26. But Ierusalem which is aboue is free which is the mother of vs all Here Paul shewes what is figured by Sara namely the new Ierusalem which is the Catholike Church Heb. 12. 22 23. Reuel 21. 2. And it is here so tearmed because Ierusalem was a type thereof in sixe respects First God chose Ierusalem aboue all other places to dwell in Psal. 132. 13. And the Catholike Church is the companie of predestinate chosen to be a particular people to God Secondly Ierusalem is a citie compact in it selfe by reason of the bond of loue and order among the citizens Psal. 122. 3. In like sort the members of the Catholike Church are linked togither by the bond of one spirit Thirdly in Ierusalem was the sanctuarie a place of Gods presence and of his worship where also the promise of the seed of the woman was preserued
least we surfet Yet in spirituall ioyes the measure is to reioice without measure if we be rauished with ioy in Christ that we crie againe it is the best of all 28. Therefore brethren we are after the manner of Isaac children of the promise Here Paul shewes that as Sara figured the catholike church so Isaac was a figure of all true beleeuers the children of God Therefore or thus And we brethren We not onely the Iewes but also beleeuing Gentiles Promise the promise made to Abraham I will be thy God and the God of thy seed or the promise made to the church that beeing barren shee shall beare many children Children of promise beleeuers are so called not because they beleeue the promise though that be a truth but because they are made children of God by the vertue of Gods promise For thus was Isaac the child of promise in that he was borne to Abraham not by the strength of nature but by Gods promise And Paul opposeth the children of the promise to the children of the flesh which were borne by naturall strength Rom. 9. 8. Hence it followes that the meere grace of God is the cause of our election and adoption and not any thing in vs. For the promise of God makes vs Gods children and the promise is of the meere grace of God and therefore we are Gods children by the meere grace of God For the cause of the cause is the cause of the thing caused Therefore Paul saith that the Ephesians were predestinate to adoption Eph. 1. 5. And he saith the 7000 that neuer bowed knee to Baal were reserued by the election of grace Rom. 11. 5. And it is a false Position to teach that Election and adoption are according to Gods foreknowledge of our faith and obedience For thus shall we Elect our selues and be children not of Gods promise but of our own freewill and faith Moreouer God foresees our future faith and obedience because he first decreed to giue the grace of faith vnto vs because the foreknowledge of things which are to come to passe depends vpon a precedent will in God Marke further the children of God are called the children of the promise and this promise is absolute and effectual Here a question may be resolued and that it whether the child of God in his conuersion haue a libertie and power to resist the inward calling of God Answ. No. The absolute will of God cannot be resisted nowe the promise whereby men are made the children of God is the absolute will of God Againe with this promise is ioyned the infinite power of God which without all resistance brings that to passe which God hath promised For he makes men to doe that which he commands Ezec. 36. 26. he giues the will and the deede Phil. 2. 13. so as men effectually called cannot but come Ioh. 6. 45. It may be saide that this is to abolish all freedome of will Ans. It sufficeth to the libertie of the will that it be free from compulsion for constraint takes away the libertie of the will and not necessitie Secondly the determination of mans will by the will of God is the libertie of the will and not the bondage thereof for this is perfect libertie when mans wil is conformable to the will of God 29 But as he which was borne according to the flesh persecuted him that was borne after the spirit so is it now These wordes are an answer to an Obiection on this manner We are hated of the Iewes and therefore we are not the children of promise The answer is two fold One in this verse thus No maruell this is the old fashion it was thus in Abrahams familie For Ismael borne after the flesh persecuted Isaac borne after the spirit and so it is at this day Obserue that there is a perpetuall enmitie and opposition betweene true beleeuers and hypocrites God put enmitie betweene the seede of the serpent and the seede of the woman Gen. 13. 15. The world hates them that are chosen out of the world Ioh. 15. 19. Carnall men cannot abide that their opinions and doings should be iudged and condemned of others Ioh. 3. 20. And hence comes the opposition that is betweene beleeuers and hypocrites who cannot abide such as are not like themselues This hatred and opposition shewes it selfe in persecution of which three things are to be considered The first is who persecutes Ans. Carnall Ismaelites such as are of the same religion and familie with Isaac Thus the Iewes persecuted their owne Prophets and the Thessalonians were persecuted of their own prophets 1. Thes. 2. 14. Thus Priests and Iesuits that haue bin hertofore borne baptised brought vp among vs are the causes of many seditions conspiracies and seeke the subue●sion of Church and land The second is who are persecuted Ans. Spirituall men the children of the promise They suffer wrong but they doe none In the mount of the Lord there is no hurt done Isa. 11. 9. they turne their speares and swords into mattocks and sithes Isa. 2. 4. And they which doe no wrong but are content to suffer wrong and that for a good cause are in this respect blessed Matth. 5. 10. The third point is touching the kind of persecution and that was skorning or mocking Gen. 21. 9. It may be demanded how mocking can be persecution Ans. Mocking and derision which riseth of the hatred and contempt of our brother is a degree of murder He which saith Raca to his brother is guiltie of a Councell Matth. 5. 22. Here Raca signifieth all signes and gestures that expresse contempt as snuffing tushing iering gerning c. Cain is rebuked of God euen for the casting downe of his countenance Gen. 4. 6. Againe the mocking wherewith Ismael mocked Isaac proceeded from a contemp and hatred of the grace of God in Isaac which Paul notes when he saith that he was persecuted which was borne after the spirit This hatred of Gods grace in men is the beginning of all persecution and the deriding of the grace of God is as much as the spoiling of our goods and the seeking of our liues Thus Cain hated his brother by reason of the grace of God because his deedes were good 1. Ioh. 3. 12. A great part of the sufferings of Christ stood in this that he was mocked for his confidence in God Psal. 22. 8. Matt. 27. 43. The children of Bethel mocke Elizeus first for his person calling him bald pate secondly for the fauour of God shewed vpon Elias his master in saying Ascend bald ●ate that is ascend not to Bethel but ascend to heauen as Elias did And this prophane skorning he cursed in the name of God 2. King 2. 23. The like skorning is vsed among vs at this day For the practise of that religion which stands by the law of God and the good lawes of this land is nicknamed with tearmes of precis●nes and puritie A thing much to be lamented for this bewraies
it pertaines to the conscience The vse indeede of our libertie is in outward things as meate drinke apparell c. but the libertie it selfe is in the conscience And thus it differs from ciuill libertie which stands in the moouing of the bodie in the choise of bodily actions and in the free vse of our goods Christian libertie hath two parts a Deliuerance from miserie and Freedome in good things Deliuerance hath foure parts The first is a Deliuerance from the curse of the law for the breach thereof Rom. 8. 1. There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ. And this comes to passe because there is a translation made of the curse from our persons to the person of Christ. Gal. 3. 13. The second deliuerance is from the obligation of the law whereby it binds vs to bring perfect righteousnes in our owne persons for the attainment of euerlasting life according to the tenour thereof Doe this and liue And this deliuerance is procured because there is a translation made of the fulfilling of the law from our persons to the person of our Sauiour Christ. From these two deliuerances ariseth the Pacification of the conscience partly for our Iustification and partly for our conuersation Touching iustification A sinner in his humiliation and conuersion hath by this doctrine a Libertie without respect to his owne workes or to his owne fulfilling of the law to rest on the meere mercie of God for the forgiuenes of his sinnes and the saluation of his soule and to appeale from the throne of diuine iustice to the throne of grace and to oppose the merit of Christ against the wrath and iudgement of God And this hath bin alwaies the helpe of the godly in their distresse Read 2. Chron. 33. 12. Ezra 9. Dan. 9. Psal. 32. 31. 130. 143. Consider the example of the Publican and the Prodigall sonne who condemne themselues and make their appeale to the court of mercie and grace Here some man may say how shall I know that I am freed from the rigour of the law and from the curse thereof Ans. Thou must first set thy selfe at the barre of Gods iudgement and there must thou arraigne accuse and condemne thy selfe this done thou must vse thy libertie and make thine appeale to Gods mercie and grace for pardon by asking seeking knocking and thus at length shalt thou be resolued touching thy deliuerance Moreouer touching conuersation our consciences are setled thus In that we are freed from the Rigour of the law God in mercie accepts the will and indeauour to beleeue repent and obay for faith repentance and obedience He spares them that feare him as a father spares his child when he indeauours to doe that which he can Mal. 3. 17. The law requires perfect obedience at our hands yet God of his mercie lookes more at the will to obay then the perfection of obedience This must be a stay to our mindes when we see more corruption then grace in our selues and our obedience tainted with many spots of disobedience The third Deliuerance is from the obseruation of the Ceremoniall law of Moses Col. 2. 16. And hence ariseth an other deliuerance from the bondage of humane Traditions as Paul saith If yee be dead with Christ from the Elements of the world why are ye burdened with traditions Col. 2. 20. The fourth Deliuerance is from vnder the tyrannie and dominion of sinne Rom. 6. 14. Let not sinne haue dominion ouer you For ye are not vnder the law but vnder grace In the first tonuersion of a sinner Originall sinne receiues his deadly wound and the dominion thereof is diminished according to the measure of grace receiued The second part of Christian libertie is a Freedome in good things and it is fourefold The first is a freedome in the voluntarie seruice of God Luk. 1. 74. We are deliuered from our enemies that we may serue God in righteousnes and holines before him all the daies of our liues without feare Paul saith that the law is not giuen to the righteous man 1. Tim. 1. 9. because he is a law to himselfe and freely does good duties as if there were no law to bind him The cause of this freedome is the Gift and donation of the free spirit of God Therefore Dauid praies Stablish me with thy free spirit Psal. 5. 1. And Paul saith Where the spirit is there is libertie 2. Cor. 3. 17. And The spirit of life which is in Christ is a Law to vs and frees vs from the power of sinne and death Rom. 8. 2. It may be obiected that this freedome in the voluntarie seruice of God is bondage For Christ saith Matth. 11. 29. Take my yoke vpon you And we are as straightly bound to the obedience of the law of God as Adam was by creation nay more straightly by reason of our redemption by Christ. Ans. The more we are bound to obedience the freer we are because the seruice of God is not bondage but perfect libertie The second freedome is in the free vse of all the creatures of God Tit. 1. 15. To the pure all things are pure Rom. 14. 14. And the reason is because the dominion ouer the creatures lost by Adam is restored by Christ. 1. Cor. 3. 22. And hence it is that Paul calls the forbidding of marriage and of meates with obligation of conscience a doctrine of deuills 1. Tim. 4. 1. The third freedome is a Libertie to come vnto God the father in the name of Christ and in praier to be heard Rom. 5. 2. Eph. 3. 12. Whereas according to our naturall condition our sinnes are a wall of partition betweene vs and God and cause vs to flie from the presence of God and though we crie vnto God and fill heauen and earth with our cries so long as we are in our sinnes we are not heard of him The fourth freedome is a Libertie to enter into heauen in the day of our death Christ by his blood hauing made a way Heb. 10. 19. Thus we see what Christian libertie is The vse followes The Anabaptists gather hence that among Christians there must be Magistrates they must haue power to make lawes beside the lawes of God but this power they haue not because Christians haue a free vse of all the creatures of God by Christian libertie Ans. We must distinguish betweene the libertie it selfe and the vse of it And the Magistrates authoritie deales not with the libertie which is in the conscience but with the vse of it and he doth neither diminish nor abolish the vse of any of the creatures but restraines the abuse and moderates the ouer common vse for the common good Thus Magistracie and Christian libertie may stand together and the rather because libertie is in conscience and the Magistrates authoritie pertaines to the bodie Here is further comfort for all the godly for euen by Christian libertie their consciences are exempted from the power of all creatures men and Angels 1. Cor. 7.
in respect of iustification as Paul shewes at large in this Epistle and yet the Popish doctrine is that we are to be iustified by the workes of the law Againe Christian libertie frees our consciences from the Traditions of men Col. 2. 20. and yet the Popish religion bindes vs in conscience to the Traditions of men nay it is nothing els but an heape of traditions Here two things are to be considered the manner of standing and the time The manner is signified in the very words For to stand fast is to hold and maintaine our libertie with courage and constancie whatsoeuer comes of it as the soldier keepes his standing though it cost him his life We are readie to defend the libertie of our countrie euen with the hazard of our liues much more then are we to defend Christian libertie with the losse of all that we inioy sinne must be resisted euen vnto blood Hebr. 12. 4. If men be fearefull they must pray to God for the spirit of boldnes and courage and if God vouchsafe not this gift when opportunitie is offered they may withdraw themselues and by flying preserue their libertie The time of standing is the euill day that is the day of triall Eph. 6. 13. And then to stand fast is a matter of great difficultie And for this cause we are before hand to prepare our selues by obseruing these rules following First we must labour that religion be not onely in mind and memorie but also be rooted in the affection of our hearts so as we loue it reioyce in it and esteeme it aboue all things Secondly we must not onely be hearers of the word of God but also doers of it in the exercises of faith repentance new obedience Thirdly we must ioyne with our religion the soundnes of good conscience for if conscience faile we cannot be sound in our religion Lastly we must pray to God with all manner of praier and supplication for all things needefull Eph. 6. 18. 2 Behold I Paul say vnto you that if ye be circumcised Christ shal profit you nothing These words are a reason of the former conclusion thus If ye be circumcised and goe backe from your Christian profession Christ shall profit you nothing therefore stand fast In the words I consider a sentence and the proofe of it The sentence If ye be circumcised c. the proofe J Paul say vnto you For the better vnderstanding of the sentence Circumcision must here be considered according to the circumstance of time three waies Before Christ it was a sacrament and a seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4. 11. after the death of Christ till the destruction of the temple it was a dead ceremonie yet sometime vsed as a thing indifferent After the destruction of the Temple when the Church of the new Testament was planted among the Gentiles it was a deadly ceremonie and ceased to be indifferent and in this last respect Paul saith If ye be circumcised c. Againe circumcision must be considered according to the opinion which the false Apostles had of it now they put their confidence in it and made it a meritorious cause of their saluation and ioyned it with Christ. The words therefore carrie this sense If ye will be circumcised with this opinion that circumcision shall be vnto you a meritorious cause of your saluation Christ shall profit you nothing The vse Hence it followes that the doctrine of iustification by works is an errour ouerturning the foundation of religion which whosoeuer obstinately maintaineth cannot be saued It will be said this is true of ceremoniall works but not of morall works Ans. Yea euen of morall For that which Paul saith here of circumcision he speakes generally of the whole law vers 4. Ye are abolished from Christ whosoeuer are iustified by the law And circumcision must be considered as an obligation to the obedience of the whole law Againe it may be said this is true of the works of nature but not of works of grace Ans. Yea euen of workes of grace for the Galatians were regenerate and therfore looked not to be iustified saued by the workes of nature but by workes of grace Secondly hence we gather that to adde any thing to the passion as a meritorious cause of our iustification and saluation is to make Christ vnprofitable For he must be a perfect Sauiour or no Sauiour he admits neither partner nor deputie in the worke of our redemption And the grace of God admits no mixture or composition with any thing that is of vs. Grace is no grace vnlesse it be freely giuen euery way Therefore the Popish religiō is a damnable religion because with the merit satisfactiō of Christ it ioyns humane merits satisfactions in the case of our iustification It may be alleadged that the Popish religion maintaines all the articles concerning Christ as we doe Ans. It doth so in word but withall it addes to the foresaid articles the doctrine of humane merits and satisfactions which make voide the death of Christ. Againe Papists alleadge that it is the glorie of Christ that he merits for vs and withall makes vs to merit for our selues as it is the glorie of an Emperour to make other kings vnder him Ans. It is not the glorie of the Emperour to make kings as partners with him in his kingdome And workes set vp as meritorious causes of saluation dishonour Christ for they make him vnprofitable as Paul here teacheth Popish religion therefore is in no wise in any place to be tollerated where it may be abolished but it is to be wished that it were banished forth of towne and countrey and students are to be warned with great circumspection to read Popish writers For no good can be looked for of that religion that makes Christ vnprofitable Lastly we are here taught to content our selues with Christ alone and with his works merits and satisfactions For in him we are complete Col. 2. 10. The confirmation of the sentence followeth I Paul say it therfore it is so This kind of reasoning may not seeme strange for the Apostles in writing and preaching had the diuine and infallible assistance of the spirit so as they could not erre This must be held as a Principle in religion and beeing denied there is no certentie of the Bible 3 For I testifie againe to euery man that is circumcised that he is bound to keepe the whole law 4 Ye are abolished from Christ whosoeuer are iustified by the law ye are fallen from grace The meaning Paul saith I testifie againe because he hath spoken thus much in effect before Gal. 3. 10. That is circumcised who is of opinion of the false Apostles that will be circumcised and looke for iustification thereby Bound to the whole law that is to the whole ceremoniall law to the iudiciall law and to the whole morall law And further bound in respect of iustification and life to doe all things in the law For he that
ariseth a distinction of the calling of god sometime it is operatiue because God signifies and withall workes his will in the Elect sometimes againe in respect of others it is only significatiue when God reueales his will to men but spares to worke it for iust causes knowne to himselfe The third point is what is the calling to libertie Ans. An action of God translating men from the kingdome of darknes to his owne kingdome It hath 2. parts inuitement and admission Inuitement is when God offers remission of sinnes life euerlasting to them that beleeue outwardly by the preaching of the Gospell inwardly by the inspiration of heauenly desires Admission is when men are entred into the kingdome of grace and it is either outward or inward Outward admission is made in baptisme Inward admission is when men are taken out of olde Adam and by faith ingrafted into Christ for by this ins●tion into Christ men are made reall members of gods kingdome The last question is why Paul mentions the calling to libertie in this place Ans. It is the ground of all comfort by it Paul comforts the Corinthians 1. Cor. 1. 9. Againe it is the ground of good life Therefore Peter saith be ye holy as he that hath called you is holy 1. Pet. 1. 15. And Paul walke worthie the calling wherewith he hath called you Eph. 4. 1. If the calling of god doe not mooue vs to amendement of life nothing will doe it We in England haue heard the calling of god more then 40. yeares and yet very few of vs are mooued to change and amend our liues This shewes our Atheisme and vnbeleefe here is almost nothing but heauing shouing and lifting for the world Some are held captiues of their couetousnes some of their pride some of their damnable and fleshly lusts and all this shewes that few or none so much as dreame of a calling to spirituall libertie The first Rule followes Only vse not your libertie as an occasion to the flesh The sense Flesh hereby the Papists vnderstand Sensualitie or carnall appetites but hereby is ment the corruption of all the powers of the soule euen of reason and conscience Paul saith that the wisdom or vnderstanding of the flesh is emnity to God Rom. 8. 7. fleshlines therefore pertaines to the vnderstanding Againe he saith of some that they are puffed vp in the mind of the flesh Col. 2. 18. and he willes the Ephesians to be renewed in the spirit of their minds Eph. 4. 23. The meaning then of the rule is this vse not the benefit of spirituall libertie as an occasion to the flesh to liue according to the flesh Here I consider three things what is the abuse of libertie where is this abuse to be found and what is the right vse thereof The first question is what is the abuse of Christian libertie Ans. To vse it as an occasion of fleshly and carnall libertie that is done 3. waies The first is when men make more things indifferent thē god euer made Thus the Corinthians vsed fornication as a thing indifferent 1. Cor. 6. To many in these daies drunkennes and surfetting is but a thing indifferent Men vse not to distinguish a thing indifferent and the vse of it but they commonly thinke that if the thing be indifferent in it selfe then also the vse of it is indifferent Thus all abuses of meat drinke apparrell all rioting and gaming dicing and carding c. are excused by the names of things indifferent Secondly our libertie is abused by an immoderate vse of the gifts of god The vse of them is immoderate 3. waies first in respect of time as when Diues fared deliciously and was arraied in rich attire euery day Thus many gentlemen and others offend when they turne recreation into an occupation Secondly the gifts of god are immoderatly vsed in respect of themselues as when men Exceed in eating and drinking as the prophet saith Deut. 29. 19. adding drunkennes to thirst Thirdly in respect of the callings and conditions of men for euery man is to vse the gifts of God according to his place and condition They then offend that beeing but meane persons liuing by trades yet for their diet and apparrel are as great gentlemen gentlewomen Thirdly liberty is abused when the blessings of God are made instruments and as it were flagges and banners to display our riot vanitie ostentation pride for this cause sundry things whereof some are indifferent in themselues are condemned Isai 3. 16. The second question is where is this abuse Ans. Euen among vs in England It is the fashion of men to take vnto themselues a Toleration of sinning some vpon the pacience of God others vpon the doctrine of the gratious Election of God saying that they will liue as they list because if they be Elected to saluation they shall certenly be saued whatsoeuer they doe And some there be that take occasion to continue in their sinnes vpon the mercy of God in the death and passion of Christ. A certen dweller in this towne of Cambridge made awaie himselfe In his bosome was found a writing to this effect that God did shew mercie on great grecuous and desperate sinners and therefore he said that he hoped of mercy though he hanged himselfe Of this mind are many ignorant persons who perseuering in their sinnes yet perswade themselues of mercy because they haue heard that Christ died for mankind And thus the death of Christ is as it were a licence or letters patents to commit sinne Againe great is the abuse of meat drinke and apparell To Elias there came an Angell and said arise and eate 1. King 19. 7. but to the men of our daies there had need come an Angell and saie cease to eate cease to drinke cease to game The third questiō is what is the right vse of Christian libertie Ans. It stands in 2. things first of all we our selues must be renewed and sanctified To the pure all things are pure Tit. 1. 15. The person must first please God before the action can please him The second is that beside the lawfull vse of the creatures we must haue a spirituall holy vse of thē The lawfull vse of the creature I call the politick vse therof cōmonly allowed takē vp among men The spirituall vse is whereby we receiue vse the creature as from the hand of god the father in Christ according to his will and word And the Godly are not to seperate the one vse from the other but are bound by vertue of the 3 commandement to take vp an holy vse of euery gift of God When Noe came out of the Arke so● soone as he sett foote vpon the earth he built an altar offered sacrifice and called on the name of God not only for this end to worship god but also to sanctifie the earth and all the creatures of God vnto his vse The like did Abraham when he come into the land of Canaan And
the most of vs are barren trees that beare no fruit but the bad fruits of the flesh and therefore we may iustly feare the curse that God laid vpon the figgetree Luk. 13. 7. and looke euery day to be stocked vp Matth. 3. 16. Againe good workes are made acceptable to God euen by his grace and therefore they are called the fruits of the spirit and hence it is that they are acceptable to God Rom. 15. 16. We that are by nature wild branches must be taken out of old Adam and set into Christ and after our inscition draw a new sappe and life from Christ namely his spirit and then our actions shall be fruits of the spirit and consequently acceptable to God Lastly hence it followes that free will of it selfe is like a dead or rotten peece of wood and that it beares no fruit but as it is quickned by the spirit Ioh. 15. 5. Thus much of the propertie now follow the kindes of the workes of the spirit Loue It may be demaunded how it is a fruit of the spirit Ans. First the spirit of God workes faith then regeneration then loue 1. Tim. 1. 5. Loue follows faith because we must know first that we are loued of God before we can loue God 1. Ioh. 4. 19. And loue follows regeneration because till the will and affections be changed there is no place for loue The Papists then erre who teach that the first act of loue that is the inclination to loue God and man aright is in nature and that the second act namely the exercise of loue is from the spirit Againe they erre in that they teach that Charitie or loue is the formall righteousnes of a Christian. For it is a fruit that follows regeneration The loue here mentioned is either of God or of man The loue of God is an holy affection whereby we loue God in Christ for himselfe There are three speciall signes whereby it is discerned I. a desire of fellowship with God and Christ and the holy spirit and therefore to be much and frequent in the vse of the word and praier because in the word God speaks to vs and in praier we speake to him II. To loue the word of God aboue all earthly treasure and to tread our owne wills vnder foote and to desire that Gods wil may be preferred in all things 1. Ioh. 2. 5. There are many houses among vs where the cards and tables are walking but the Bible is seldome or neuer seene And this argues the want of loue III. The loue of them that loue God and Christ. The loue of our neighbour is to loue him simply in and for the Lord and for no other by-respect The signe of this loue is to loue not in word but indeede And this is to loue indeede to shew loue and to do good when we are wronged and abused to them that wrong vs and abuse vs. Ioy Ioy is twofold ioy of glorie after this life and the ioy of grace in this life and it stands in three things The first is to reioyce in the true acknowledgement of God that he is our god and reconciled to vs in Christ. The second is to reioyce in the worke of our regeneration The third is to reioyce in the hope of eternall glorie This ioy of grace hath a double fruit First it moderates all our sorrows and makes vs reioyce in the middest of our afflictions 1. Thess. 5. 16. Secondly it causeth men to reioyce at the good of their neighbours Rom. 12. 15. And this ioy is here meant specially For ioy is here opposed to enuie and emulations This fruit shewes that we are most of vs bad trees For the ioyes of the world be for the most part in iniquitie and in the workes of the flesh And it is our common sinne not to reioice but to pine away with griefe as Cain did when we see Gods blessing vpon our brother Peace It is a care and desire to maintaine concord as much as may be if it lie in vs. Rom. 12. 18. It is an excellent vertue For the kingddome of God stands partly in peace Rom. 14. 17. For the maintenance of peace obserue two rules I. Neither take offence nor giue offence Abraham chose rather to lose his right then to offend Lot Gen. 13. and so did Christ. Matth. 17. 27. II. Seeke to edifie one another either doe good or take good Rom. 14. 19. Long-suffering is to moderate our anger and desire of reuenge when many and great wrongs are done to vs. It is an excellent fruit but it takes very hardly in these parts For our manner is a word and a blow a word and a stabb a word and a writte Set and sow this plant in the forrowes of your hearts that the weede of reuenge ouergrow it not vse these remedies I. Gods commandement forbids rash anger Iam. 1. 19. for it is a degree of murder II. The example of God who is slow to anger and of Christ who is meeke and lowly Math. 11. III. All wrongs done to vs by men come by Gods prouidence to which we are to subiect our selues IV. The goodnesse of God who forgiues more to vs then we can forgiue V. There is danger of Gods anger For vnlesse we forgiue we are not forgiuen And we craue forgiuenesse as we forgiue VI. It is the dutie of loue to suffer and beare 1. Cor. 13. VII It is a point of iniustice to reuenge our selues for then we take to our selues the honour of God and against all equitie we are both the parties and iudge and witnesse and all VIII We are often ignorant of the mindes of men in their actions and of the true circumstances thereof and so may easily be deceiued Obiect I. Anger is a sudden affection therefore it cannot be ruled Ans. Meanes are to be vsed before hand when we are quiet then shall we better restraine it Obiect II. It is hard for flesh and blood to doe this Ans. We are more then flesh and blood For we haue the spirit of God els we are but hypocrites Gentlenesse Gentlenesse is to giue good speech and to shew good countenances euen to them that wrong vs and abuse vs without any minde or desire to reuenge Rom. 12. 14. Eph. 4. 32. The curtesie of the world in the cappe and the knee and all the complements of humanitie is commonly seuered from good affection and it is often the maske of enmitie and therefore it is but a worke of the flesh Right curtesie is with an honest heart to blesse when we are wronged Goodnesse It is a vertue whereby we communicate to others the good things that are in vs for their good and benefit It is prescribed by Paul in other tearmes when he saith Communicating to the necessities of the Saints Rom. 12. 13. Question I. What are we to communicate Answ. The gifts of our minde our temporall goods yea our liues too if neede be 1. Ioh. 3. 16. Question II. Why
feete lest that which is halting be turned out of the way Hebr. 12. 13. For as those that wrastle and t●e masteries looke warily to themselues lest they be supplanted by their aduersaries so ought we much more considering we wrastle not against flesh and blood but against principalities and powers Eph. 6. 12. Againe whereas it is said if a man he ouertaken by any sinne he teacheth that no man is exempted from falling or being ouertaken and supplanted by sinne for he speakes indefinitely if a man as S. Iohn doth if any man sinne we haue an aduocate 1. Ioh. 2. 1. This makes against the Catharists or Puritanes who auouch they neither haue sinne nor can sinne because they be trees of righteousnes and a good tree cannot bring forth euill fruit Further hence I gather that pardon and restitution is not to be denied to them that fall after their conuersion as though there were no place for repentance or hope of saluation For Paul would haue such to be restored as are ouertaken by any sinne except they be incorrigible and incurable Therefore the Nouatians doe erre in teaching that sinnes committed after a mans conuersion are vnpardonable cōsidering there is hope in store for great and hainous sinners For though a man in persecution denie Christ and renounce his religion yet he may be restored and repent as Peter did Luk. 22. 32. for that saying of Christ Whosoeuer shall denie me before men him will I denie before my father which is in heauen Matth. 10. 33. is meant onely of a totall and finall deniall Though a man be a grieuous Idolater a forcerer and giuen to witchcraft yet he may be restored and find mercie as Manasses did 2. Chron. 33. Though a man be defiled and polluted with sinnes against nature yet he may be clensed and washed from them Some among the Corinthians were fornicators adulterers wantons buggerers but yet were washed sanctified iustified 1. Cor. 6. 9. 11. It may be saide that it is impossible that they which once haue beene inlightned and tasted of the heauenly gift c. if they fall away should be renued againe by repentance Heb. 6. 4 5 6. Ans. That text is to be vnderstood of a vniuersall totall and finall Apostasie And that text Hebr. 10. 26. If we sinne willingly after that we haue receiued the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sinne is to be vnderstood of a wilfull and malitious renouncing of the knowne truth as the circumstances of the place and collation of it with others doe manifestly euict Againe if all sinne committed voluntarily and willingly were simply inexpiable euery mans case were damnable And though the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifie willingly as Aristotle takes it Eth. l. 3. c. 2. yet sometime it signifieth spitefully and malitiously as it is vsed by the Seuentie Exod. 21. 13 14. Obiect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or delicta may be restored not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or peccata Ans. They are vsed indifferently one for the other as might be shewed if it were needfull But it is a confessed truth auouched by Anselme and others vpon this text Lastly whereas the Apostle speaketh indefinitly if any man be nertaken restore him I gather that the gifts and graces of God bestowed vpon vs ought to be vsed in restoring those that are fallen without respect of persons for herein spirituall men are debters to the wise and foolish as the Apostle saith of himselfe Rom. 1. 14. The third thing to be considered is the persons that are to restore their brethren laid downe in these words yee that are spirituall Spirituall men are opposed to carnall as 1. Cor. 3. 1. I could not speake vnto you brethren as vnto spirituall men but as vnto carnall and to naturall men 1. Cor. 2. 14 15. The naturall man perceiueth not the things of the spirit of God but he that is spirituall discerneth all things Now carnall and naturall men are of two sorts either they are such as are altogether fleshly destitute of grace and godlines beeing in their pure or rather corrupt naturalls of whome S. Paul saith They that are of the flesh sauour the things of the flesh Rom. 8. 5. and verse the 8. They that are in the flesh cānot please God Or such as are regenerate yet are weak as being but babes in Christ the flesh being far stronger in thē then the spirit such were most in the Church of Corinth for Paul saith he could not speake vnto them as vnto spirituall men but as vnto carnall 1. Cor. 3. 1. for yet ye are carnall for when there is among you enuying are ye not carnall vers 4. So spirituall men opposed to carnall are of two sorts First those that haue receiued the spirit of regeneration doe begin to sauour the things of the spirit Rom. 8. Secondly those that haue receiued a greater portion of the spirit and a greater measure of spirituall graces of whome Paul speakes 1. Cor. 14. 37. If any man thinke himselfe to be a prophet or spirituall Of the latter the words are to be vnderstood by thē he meaneth those whome he called perfect men Philip. 3. 13. Ebr. 5. 4 Now spirituall men are more fit to restore those that are fallen then any other First because they are lesse tainted with sinne then others and so may more freely reprooue Secondly because they haue more knowledge and loue both knowing how to restore and willing to doe it with greater compassion and fellow feeling He that must speak in season a word to the wearie must haue a tongue of the learned Isay 50. 4. When Peter is conuerted he must strengthen his brethren Luk. 22. 32. Hence it followes the more excellent giftes any man hath receiued the more he is bound to be seruiceable vnto others For if spirituall men must restore them that are fallen the more a man is indued with spirituall graces the more he ought to restore For the Apostle saith As euery man hath receiued a gift so let him minister it vnto others 1. Pet. 4. 10. This duty was practised by our Sauiour Christ Ioh. 13. 12. And it meetes with the sinne of many who hauing receiued great gifts and graces of the spirit are so farre from restoring those that sin against them that they scorne and disdaine to speake vnto thē for if they be at variance with any the common saying is I am as good a man as he why should I goe to him let him come to me c. These men are farre vnlike Abraham who though he exceeded Lot as wel in outward gifts as inward graces yet stood not vpon his priuiledge but was the first man in making the league of vnitie Gen. 13. 8. Further in that spirituall men must restore their brethren we learne that we haue not the gifts of God bestowed vpon vs for our selues alone but for the good of others the possession of them belongs to vs the vse of them to
highest heauen and made them fall like thunderbolts into the lowest hell To man for as Dauid saith it is like a gri●●ous burden too heauie for him to beare Psal. 38. 4. To God for the hypocriticall and ceremoniall seruice of the Iewes was such a burden vnto him that he was wearie to beare it Isa. 1. 14. Behold I am pressed vnder you a● a cart is pressed that is full of sheaues Amos 2. 13. To the creatures who groane vnder this burden beeing by mans sinne subiect to vanitie and corruption Rom. 8. 20 21. Hence it followeth then that those which feele not the waight burden of their sinnes are dead being aliue as Paul speaks in another case 1. Tim. 5. 6. Thirdly we are not to wonder that sinne beeing so heauie a burden should be made so light a matter by carnall men for it is a spirituall burden and therefore no maruell though it be not ●elt of them that are all flesh and no spirit Fourthly this shewes that the more a man doth feele the burden of his sinnes the greater measure of grace and spirituall life he hath and the lesse he feeleth it the more he is to suspect himselfe that the graces of God doe wane and decay in him For corruption is not felt by corruption but by grace therfore the more a man doth feele the burden of his owne corruption● the more grace he hath Fiftly by this we see that the greatest part of the world are dead in their sinnes in that they haue no sense nor feeling of this heauie burden There is indeede great crying out of the stone in the reynes because it is felt to be a great ●orment to the bodie but there is little or no complaining of the stone in the heart because men want spirituall life and sense to discerne it All men can take pittie vpon a beast if he lie vnder his burden and will be readie to helpe him vp againe But all haue not the like sight and sense of the spirituall burden of sinne not sympathy of the miserie of their brethren groaning vnder it Sixtly whereas Paul saith Euery man must beare his owne burden he meeteth with the prophanenesse and Atheisme of our time when men make a mocke at the day of iudgement the strict account that euery man is to giue for himselfe The Iewes were woont to ●east at the threatnings of God denounced by the Prophets and to call the visions of the Prophets o●us Iehouae the burden of the Lord in a merriment vsing it a● a by-word Ierem. 23. 34 36 38. Thereby signifying that the threats of God were but vaine bugs or scarre-crowes which might perhaps terrifie children but could not hart them The like prophanenesse infidelitie atheisme hath crept into the mindes of many who otherwise pro●esse the Gospel which they testifie by their speeches in saying they are sure sinne is nothing so ougly hell is not halfe so hotte nor the deuill hal●e so blacke as preachers say they are or if they be they are sure they shall not goe loaden alone with the burden of their sinns but shall haue cōpany shall perhaps abide the brunt as well as their fellows But alas they know not that the burdē of sinne is intollerable that it will eternally presse thē down to the gul●e of hell that they shall neuer be able to be ridde or eased of it Seuenthly we are here admonished to take heede of euery sinne for there is no sinne so small but hath his waight and such a waight as will presse downe to the bottomlesse pit Ro. 6. 23. And though some be greater then others and sinke a mā deeper into condemnation yet many small sinnes will as easily condemne as a few great Like as sands though but small in quantitie yet beeing many in number will as soone sinke the ship as if it were laden with the greatest burden Eightly seeing the guilt and punishment of sinne is so heauie a burden we are to ease and disburden our selues thereof And that we may doe this we must labour to feele the intollerable waight of it pressing and oppressing the conscience Therefore as those who in their sleepe are troubled with the Ephialtes or mare feeling as it were a great mountaine lying vpon them and pressing them down would giue all the world the waight might be remooued So we feeling the waight and burden of our sinnes are to labour to be disburdened and eased thereof this we shall doe by our repentāce toward God and faith in Christ. Math. 11. 28. Come vnto me all ye that are wearie and laden and I will ease you ver 6. Let him that is taught in the word make him that hath taught him partaker of all his goods In these words the Apostle laieth downe an other rule touching the maintenance of the ministerie and competencie of allowance for the ministers of the word for it seemeth that the ministrie among the Galatians was at that time much neglected at least not so respected as it ought In handling of the rule I will first shewe the meaning of the words secondly the reasons of the rule thirdly the obiections against it lastly the doctrine and vses that are to be gathered from it The meaning Let him that is taught The word translated taught signifieth him that is catechized or taught familiarly by word of mouth or liuely voice as when children are taught the first principles of religion But here it hath a larger signification as Oecumenius hath well obserued for him that is any way taught and instructed whether it be in the first principles and rudiments or in points of greater difficultie whether plainely and familiarly as catechizers vse to doe or more profoundly for the instruction of the learned Taught in the word What needes this addition may some say is there any catechizing without the word Answ. The Apostle addeth in the word to shew that he meaneth not so much the doctrine of Christian religion contained in the scriptures as the doctrine of the Gospel which by an exoche or peculiar excellencie is called the word Act. 16. 6. They were forbidden of the holy Ghost to preach the word in Asia which is expounded v. 10. to be the preaching of the Gospel Thus it is vsed Act. 14. 25. when they had preached the word in Perga Mark 4. 14. The sower soweth the word And so in sundrie other places And it is further called the word of the kingdome Matth. 13. 19. because it teacheth what is the kingdom of grace and glorie and because it beeing beleeued or as the Apostle speakes beeing mingled with faith in our hearts doth make vs freedenizens of the kingdome of grace in this life and doth aduance vs to the kingdom of glorie in the life to come Secondly it is called the word of God because he is the author of it and no creature man or angel 1. Thess. 3. 13. Thirdly the word of saluation Act. 13. 26. because
insatiable and therefore it is euill spent that is bestowed vpon them some of them need not and therfore we neede not to giue and why doe not those that are needie follow Pauls example who laboured with his hands and got his liuing by making of tents because he would not be chargeable vnto any or why doe they not lead a single life as in former times they did that so they may be lesse burdensome to the Church and more beneficial to their brethren Besides all this God hath promised he will be the portion and inheritance of the Leuites and therefore we neede not be so hastie to share with them in all our goods To these and all other vaine and friuolous excuses of the same kind made by worldlings of corrupted minds the Apostle answereth in these words Be not deceiued God is not mocked as if he should say I know right well you are very cunning in seeking out shifts and pretending reasons to excuse your faults and to exempt your selues from the preformance of the former duty and so to couer the cursed couetuousnes of your harts with colorable excuses But be not deceiued brethren they are but figg leaues you do but danse in a nette you cannot bleare the all-seeing eyes of God howsoeuer these reasons may perswade you go for currant with men yet they are but counterfaite in gods ostimate with whome you haue to deale who is not mocked nor cannot be deceiued nor will not be deluded with such vaine excuses therefore take heed lest in going about to deceiue them you deceiue your selues for looke how you deale with them God will deale with you with what measure you mete vnto them the same he will measure to you againe for as you sovve so shall you reape So that in these words the Apostle doth summarily comprise these three things First a disswasion from this their vaine reasoning and wicked practise laid downe by way of preuention Be not deceiued Secondly a reason of the dehortation shewing that these their excuses are but friuolous and vaine God is not mocked Thirdly a confirmation or proofe of his former reason for whatsoeuer a man soweth that shall be reape The disswasion is laid downe in these words Be not deceiued The like phrase of speech we haue in sundry other places as in that aduertisement which Hezekiah giueth the Leuites 2. Chron. 29. 11. Now my sonnes be not deceiued And Paul the Corinthians 1. Cor. 6. 9. be not deceiued neither fornicators c. 1. Cor. 15. 33. be not deceiued euill speeches corrupt good manners Now men erre and are deceiued sundry waies both in diuine and humane things which appertaine not to this place Touching the deceit here mentioned we are to know that a man may be deceiued and that by himselfe two waies First through ignorance in iudging that to be no finne which is a sinne as when a man is perswaded that God is to be worshipped in an image that when he persecutes the saints of God he doth God good seruice Secondly when men are so wickedly willfull that they wittingly deceiue themselues in thinking they can deceiue god himselfe and so cunningly handle the matter that he shall not know their words nor see their works nor vnderstand their thoughts that whether they do good or euill giue to the ministery or not liue according to the flesh or according to the spirit it is all one seeing he considereth it not and so promise to themselues impunity though they ●inne willingly as Eue did in putting a peraduenture where Gods threat was peremptorie Both these sorts of deceit are here vnderstood specially the latter Use. Hence we may obserue the deceitfulnes of sinne which maketh men thinke all is well with them and that there is no danger c. when the case is farre otherwise This shewes that the heart of man is deceitfull aboue measure as the Prophet saith who can finde it out or who can sound the depth of the deceit of his owne heart or who knows the infinite windings and turnings which are in this intricate Labyrinth Now this commeth to passe partly by reason of originall corruption which the Apostle saith is deceitfull Hebr. 3. 13. Take heede lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulnes of sinne partly by reason of long custome in sinne whereby the heart is inured to deceit Psal. 32. 2. Blessed is the man in whose spirit there is no guile For from this double ground it commeth to passe that men are so wittie in defrauding the Ministers of their due in cutting them short of their allowance in embezeling and purloining from them what they can and so ingenious in inuenting probable reasons and plausible arguments to deceiue themselues withall in accounting all to be gained that is thus gotten This teacheth vs first of all to pray instantly that God would open our eyes that we may see our hidden corruptions and that he would annoint them with the eye-salue of his spirit that we may clearely see and rightly discerne of things that differ considering that sinne doth often apparell it selfe with the cloake of vertue Secondly we are to suspect our selues of our secret sinnes and to aggraua●e our knowne sinnes by all circumstances seeing we may so easily deceiue our selues in flattering our selues to be cleare of this or that sinne or at least not to be so grieuous sinners as in truth we are Thirdly that it is the dutie of the Minister to warne the people to take heed that they be not deceiued as Paul doth Eph. 5. 6. Let no man deceiue you with vaine words for for such things-commeth the wrath of God vpon the children of disobedience Againe hence I gather that in the prime of the Church in the Apostles daies when the Church of the New Testament was but in founding the ministerie was in contempt and as it may appeare out of other places the ministers were not onely neglected or contemned but reuiled persecuted accounted as the fi●th of the world and the of-skouring of all things 2. Cor. 4. 13. or where they were better intreated they were but abused scorned reputed brain sicke fellowes as the Prophet was 2 King 9. 1● and Paul Act. 26. 24. This hath beene and is the account which the world maketh of the ministers of God which must be so farre from discouraging vs that it should minister rather matter of ioy vnto vs in that we are conformable by this meanes to Christ our head who was not onely neglected of all not hauing where to rest his head Luk. 9. 58. but laughed to skorne accounted a pot-companion a drunkard and a glutton a sorcerer one that had a deuill and was madde Ioh. 10. 20. For if we suffer with him we shall be glorified with him Rom. 8. 17. Thus much of the dehortation the reason followes to be considered in the second place in these wordes God is not mocked where the Apostle shewes that their excuses are but vaine
he had to liue in the world could not be plentifull in good workes thereby to giue sufficient testimonie of their vnfained faith yet God accepteth a man according to that which he hath and not according to that which he hath not accepting the will for the deede as he accepted the willingnes of Abraham to sacrifice his sonne as though he had sacrificed him indeede Gen. 22. VI. Obiect God doth not proportionate the reward to the worke because he doth reward works which are finite temporall with infinite and eternall punishment Ans. Sinne beeing considered in respect of the act as it is a transient action is finite But in a threefold confideration it is infinite First in respect of the obiect against whome it is committed for beeing the offence of an infinite Maiestie it doth deserue infinite punishment for if he that clippes the Kings coyne or defaceth the Kings armes or counterfaitet● the broad seale of England or the Princes priuie seale ought to die as a traytour because this disgrace tendeth to the person of the Prince much more ought he that violates the law of God die the first and second death seeing the breach thereof doth not onely tend to the defacing of his owne image in vs but to the person of God himselfe who in euery sinne is contemned and dishonoured Secondly sinne is infinite in respect of the subiect For seeing that the soule is immortall and that the guilt of sinne and the blot together doe staine the soule as the crim●in or ska●let die the silke or the wooll and can no more be seuered from the soule then spots from the Leopard it remaineth that sinne is infinite in durance and so deserueth eternall punishment Thirdly it is infinite in respect of the minde desire and intent of the sinner whose desire is still to walke on in his sinnes and except God should cut off the line of his life neuer to giue ouer sinning but to runne on in infinitum committing of sinne euen with greedinesse Thus hauing the meaning of the words let vs come to the doctrine and vse There be two principall reasons which hinder men from beeing beneficiall and liberall to the Ministerie The first is because they thinke all is lost that is bestowed that way The second is because they are afraid lest themselues should want To both which the Apostle makes answer in this place comparing our beneficence in the vpholding maintaining countenancing of the Ministerie to seede to teach vs that as the husbandman doth sow his corne in the ground neuer fearing the losse thereof but hoping for a greater increase not doubting his owne want but assuring himselfe of greater plentie So we in sowing the seedes of good works must neuer dreame of losse or cost considering the more we sowe the more we shall reape we must neuer feare want seeing we shall receiue an hundred fold Mark 10. 30. If men could be perswaded of this that the time of this life is the seede time that the last iudgement is the haruest and that as certenly as the husbandman which sowes his seede lookes for increase so we for our good workes a recompence to the full O how fruitfull should we be how plentifull how full of good works But the cursed roote of infidelitie which is in euery man by nature doth drie vp the sappe of all Gods graces in vs and make vs either bad or barren trees either to bring forth sowre fruits of sinne or no fruit at all but to become vnprofitable both to our selues and others For the reason why men are so cold in their liberalitie so fruitlesse so vnprofitable is because they doe not beleeue the promises of God that he is true of his word that whatsoeuer they giue to the poore or the Ministers of his word they lend vnto the Lord and whatsoeuer they lay out the Lord will restore to them againe Prou. 19. 17. For if they were as wel perswaded of a recompence at the last day as the husbandman is of a haruest they would be more frequent in duties of charitie and more plentifull in good workes then commonly they be Further let it be obserued that though these words be but generally expoūded in the verse folowing where the Apostle saith He that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reape corruption ●e that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reap life euerlasting yet are they more particularly and distinctly set downe elswhere in Scripture as 2. Cor. 9 6. He that soweth sparingly shall reape sparingly and he that soweth liberally shall reape liberally that is the haruest shall not onely be answerable to the seede and the reward to the worke but greater or lesse according to the quantitie and qualitie of the worke For euery man shall receiue his reward according to his proper labour 1. Cor. 3. 8. For the more the husbandman sowes the more he doth vsually reape except God blow vpon it in cursing the land as he did the Israelites who sowed much and gathered but little and the lesse he sows the lesse shall his croppe be Euen so the more plentifull we are in sowing the seedes of good workes the more we shall reape and the more sparing we are the lesse shall our haruest be Hence I gather First that there are seuerall degrees of punishmentsin Hell according to the greatnes and smalnes of sinnes for some sinnes are but as mo●es others as beames Matth. 7. 4. some as gnats others as camells Matth. 23. 24. and therefore some shall be beaten with many stripes some with few and it shall be easier for them of Sodo● and Gomortha at the day of iudgement then for them of Capernaum Secondly that there are sundrie degrees of glorie and felicitie in heauen proportionall to mens works for all men doe not sow alike neither are their workes equall but haue sund●●e degrees of goodnes in them and therefore there are answerable degrees of glorie wherewith they are to be crowned This truth is taught elsewhere more plainly as Dan. 12. 3. They that be wise shall shine as the brightnes of the firmament and they that turne many to righteousnes shall shine as the starres for euermore Therefore as there is a greater brightnes in the starre then in the firmament so there shall be greater glorie in one then in another 1. Cor. 3. 8. Euery man shall receiue his reward according to his owne labour therefore seeing all mens labours are not alike their reward shall not be alike This is further confirmed by the parable of the talents Luk. 19. where the master of the seruants doth proportionate his wages to their worke making him that had gained with his talent fiue talents ruler ouer fiue cities him that had gained te● ruler ouer tenne And whereas it may be said that all the labourers in the vineyard receiued an equall reward namely a pennie as well as those that wrought but an houre or those that bare the burden and heate of the
I come quickly and my reward is with me to giue to euery one as his works shall be Apoc. 22. 12. Besides it meeteth with the practise of those men which sowe nothing but cock●e and yet expect a croppe of wheates or nothing but darnell and yet looke to reape a barly haruest that is such as sowe nothing but the cursed seeds of a damnable life and yet looke to reape the haruest of eternall life for as a man soweth so shall he reape such as he brueth such shall he drinke Euery one shall eate the fruit of his owne waies and be filled with his owne deuises Prou. 1. 31. It doeth further detect the follie of those which fraught the shippe of their soule with nothing but faith resting in carnall presumption vpon a vaine opinion of faith and neuer caring for good workes against whome Saint Iames writeth chap. 2. v. 14. What auaileth it though a man say he hath faith when he hath no workes can the faith saue him 20. Wilt thou vnderstand O thou vaine man that faith which is without workes is dead We must therefore sowe the seedes of good workes in this life if after this life we looke to reape the haruest of eternall life giue all diligence by good workes to make our calling and election sure that as it is sure in it selfe in Gods vnchangeable decree 2. Tim. 2. 19. so we may make it sure to vs. 2. Pet. 1. 10. and so lay vp in store a good foundation against the time to come that we may obtaine eternall life 2. Tim. 6. 19. Lastly it crosseth the wicked conceipt and imagination of those men that sing a requiem to their soules in promising to themselues an impunitie from sinne and an immunitie from all the iudgements of God notwithstanding they goe on in their bad practises and all because God doth not presently take vengeance on them for their sinnes For they do not consider that their sinnes are as seedes which must haue a time to growe in before they come to maturitie but beeing once ripe and full-eared let them assure themselues God will cut them downe with the sickle of his iudgements as we read Gen. 15. 16. They remember not what the Lord saith by Ieremie that he will not wearie himselfe with following after these wild asses vsed to the wildernesse which snuffe vp the winde by occasion at their pleasure and none can turne them backe but will seeke for them and finde them in their moneths that is when their iniquitie shall be at the full the Lord will meete with them 8. For he that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reape corruption but he that soweth to the spirit shall of the spirit reape life euerlasting Here Saint Paul specifieth that in particular which before he had deliuered in generall vz. what he meant by sowing and reaping And this he doth by a distribution or enumeration of the kindes of sowing and reaping she wing that there are two sorts of seeds which men sow in this life good and euill Two kinds of sowers spirituall men and carnall men Two sorts of ground in which this seede is sowne the flesh and the spirit Two sorts of haruests which men are to reape according to the seede corruption and life as Paul saith If ye liue after the flesh ye shall die but if ye mortifie the deedes of the bodie by the spirit ye shall liue Rom. 8. 13. These two sorts of haruests beeing answerable to the seede corruption and death beeing the haruest of the seede sowne to the flesh life and immortalitie of that to the spirit Tacianus the hereticke and author of the sect of the Encratites doth gather from this and the like places that marriage is in it selfe simply euill because it is a sowing to the flesh To him we may adioyne the Popes holinesse Syricius who reasoneth after the same manner to prooue that Priestes ought not to marrie because saith he they that are in the flesh cannot please God Rom. 8. 8. where he condemneth all marriages as vncleane both in the Cleargie and the Laitie Distinct. 82. Vnderstanding as though Paul should speake properly of seed and of the flesh But worthely was Tacianus his opinion confuted and he condemned for an hereticke for the Apostle speaketh not of the workes of nature but of corrupt nature which ouerturneth the diuine order which God set in nature in the creation Besides the Apostolike writer saith that marriage is honourable among all men not the first onely but also the second third c. and among Cleargie men as well as others and therefore the marriage bed beeing vndefiled that is beeing vsed in holy manner is no sowing to the flesh but to the spirit as Popish doctours are enforced to confesse Lastly Paul saith not He that soweth to the flesh shall of the flesh reape corruption but he that soweth to his flesh c. Now no man except he be worse then a bruit beast doth abuse himselfe by sowing to his owne flesh as Ierome saith vpon this place Others by sowing to the flesh and spirit vnderstand the following after the fruites of the flesh and of the spirit mentioned in the former chapter vers 19. 22. But this exposition cannot stand in this place because the illatiue particle for in the beginning of the verse sheweth euidently that these wordes depend vpon the former as an exegesis or exposition thereof where Paul spake not generally of all but particularly of those workes which serue directly to vphold the ministerie By sowing to the flesh therefore the Apostle meaneth nothing else but to liue in the flesh to walke in it to take pleasure in it to followe the desires of it and to fulfill the lusts thereof More plainely it is wholly to giue and add ct a mans selfe to the pleasures profits honours and preferments of this life and to spend himselfe his strength and wit in compassing of them hauing little or no respect of the life to come howe he may compasse the rich purchasse of the kingdom of heauen which who so doeth shall reape nothing at the haruest but corruption that is shall haue for his reward eternall death vnderstanding by corruption the corruption of good qualities not of the substance On the contrary to sowe to the spirit is to liue in the spirit and to walke according to the spirit and to mortifie the deeds of the flesh by the spirit to doe those things which otherwise we would neuer doe if we were not mooued and ledde by the spirit as to bestowe a mans goods his labour and trauell his strength his wit and all in those things that may further true religion and pietie with relation to eternall life which whosoeuer doth shall reape life euerlasting as a iust recompence of his worke according to the mercifull promise of God Here sundrie obiections are to be answered for the clearing of this text First the papists reason thus Workes are
whether vpon compact or otherwise for the Scripture maketh mention of reward where there are no precedent workes as Gen. 15. 1. Feare not Abram I am thine exceeding great reward that is thy full content and happinesse Psal. 127. 3. The fruit of the wombe is a reward that is a blessing and a free gift of God In this sense I grant eternall life is a reward Yet it is no proper reward but so called by a catachresis which yet is not an intollerable catachresis as Bellarm. either ignorantly or malitiously affirmeth but easie and familiar for in the phrase of the Scripture eternall life is called a reward in a generall signification when it is vsed absolutely and not relatiuely to signifie the heele or ende of any thing and so the Hebrewe word which signifieth a heele signifieth also a reward because it is giuen when the worke is ended And eternall life hath this resemblance with a reward in that it is giuen at the end of a mans life after that his trauell and warfare is ended Thus the Greeke words which signifie a reward and an ende are vsed indifferently one for the other 1. Pet. 1. 9. Receiuing the end of your faith the saluation of your soules that is as Beza hath fitly translated it the reward of your faith for to translate it the ende of your faith cannot agree to the word receiuing for we receiue not an ende but a reward Thus reward signifieth a free gift or free remuneration as when the master giueth his feruant something for his faithfull seruice though done vpon dutie when as he oweth him not thanks much lesse reward Luk. 17. 9. Doth he thanke hat seruant because he did that which was commanded vnto him I trowe not Thus God giueth vs eternall life not because he is bound in iustice so to doe for he oweth vs neither reward nor thanks for our labour because when we haue done what we can we haue but done our dutie v. 10. but because his goodnesse and mercifull promise made thereupon doth excite him thereunto And yet eternall life is called a reward because it doth as certainly follow good works as though it were due And good workes are mentioned in the promise because they are tokens that the workers is in Christ for whose merit the promise shall be accomplished And it is further called the reward or fruit of our faith as here the haruest because it is the way and meanes of obtaining it II. Eternall life is called a reward of good workes not causally as procured by them but consequently as following them For abeit it be giuen properly for the merit of Christ apprehended by faith yet it is giuen consequently as a recompence of our labours as an inheritance is giuen to the heire not for any duty or seruice but because he is the heire yet by consequent it is giuen in recompence of his obedience He that forsakes father mother shall receiue a hundred fold more in this life and in the world to come eternall life Mark 10. 29 30. III. Reward doth not alway presuppose debt but is often free for whereas it is said Math. 5. 46. If you loue them that loue you what reward shall ye haue It is thus in Luk. 6. 34. What thāk shall ye haue by which we see that reward doth not alway signifie due debt but thankefull remembrance and gratious acceptance IV. Coloss. 3. 24. Eternall life is called the reward of inheritance whereby is signified that it is not giuen for our workes but because we are the sonnes of God by adoption Bellarmine answers that it may be both a reward an inheruāce a reward because it is giuen to labourers vpon compact an inheritance because it is giuen to none but those that are children But the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated reward signifieth a gift freely giuen without respect of desert it beeing all one with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Bafil teacheth vpon the 7. psalme V. The Scripture teacheth that God giueth rewards foure waies First he giueth reward of due debt in respect of merit thus he giueth eternall life as a reward due not to our merits but to the merits of Christ for none can merit at the hands of God but he which is God Secondly he giues a reward in respect of his free and mercifull promise and thus he rewards onely beleeuers Thirdly he giueth rewards to hypocrites infidels heathen c. beeing neither bound by his owne promise nor by their merit whē they performe the outward works of the lawe and lead a ciuill life conformable thereto as when Ahab humbled himselfe before the Lord 1. King 21. And this God doth to the end he may preserue humane societie and cōcommon honestie and that he may testifie what he approoueth and what he disliketh Lastly he giueth good successe in interprises and attempts according to his owne decree and the order of diuine prouidence which metaphorically is called a reward Ezek. 29. v. 19. 20. because it hath a similitude thereunto as when wicked men through ignorance doe that wickedly which he hath iustly decreed shall come to passe suffering them to fill their houses with the spoyle of the poore which they haue for their work as a man hath wages for his honest labour Thus the spoyle of Iudea is called the hire or reward giuen to Tiglath Pelassat for his Syrian warre Isay 7. 20. and thus the spoyle of Egypt is said to be wages giuen Nhebuchodonosar for his seruice against Tyrus Further let vs here obserue the different manner of speech which the Apostle vseth in speaking of the flesh and of the spirit Of the former he saith He that soweth to his flesh c. Of the latter He that soweth to the spirit not to his spirit by which is signified that what good so euer a man doth in beeing beneficiall to the ministery in furthering the Gospel c. he doth it not by any goodnes that is in himselfe but by the spirit of god who in euery good motion workes in vs the will and in euery good action the deed Philip. 2. 13. therefore no man ought to flatter himselfe in this respect or to think highly of himselfe as though he had attained an extraordinary measure of sanctification either for affecting or effecting any thing that is good seeing whatsoeuer good thing is in vs is the gift of God as Ierome saith On the contrary what euill soeuer a man doth he doth it of himselfe God beeing neither the author the furtherer nor the abetter thereof Againe we hence learne that all vnregenerate persons are sowers to the flesh because that before their conuersion they do nothing but those things that are pleasing to the flesh so that dying in that estate they can reape nothing but corruption therefore it hence followeth that Philosophers heathen and all meere ciuill and naturall men being such as neuer sowed to the spirit shall
reape nothing but corruption death and condemnation contrary to the opinion of some ancient and moderne writers Further obserue here that though there be some that are Neuters in religion luke warme gospellers halting betweene two opinions such as are neither fish nor flesh yet in morall duties there are no Neuters nor mediators for all men are ranged into one of these two ranks either they are sowers to the flesh or to the spirit Here also we see who are true worldlings indeede to wit such as mind earthly things in spending themselues their strēgth and witts vpon the world hauing all their care for it and all their comfort in it in the meane time hauing little or no tast of the ioyes of the world to come because they make their Paradise here vpon earth and neuer looke for any heauen after this life As also who are spirituall men namely such as walke in the spirit who though they liue in the world in these houses of clay yet are not of the world because they set not their affections vpon it but haue their conuersation in heauen where Christ sitteth at Gods right hand This serues first of all to discouer vnto vs our owne estate whether we be indeede carnall or spirituall for if we sow to the flesh that is be alway poring and digging in the earth with the mole setting our affections vpon it not referring the blessings of God to his glorie and the furtherance of the Gospel but to serue our own corrupt desires we are fleshly minded though we pretend this and that and protest neuer so much and continuing in this estate we can expect nothing but the haruest of death and condemnation Whereas on the contrarie side if we sauour the things of the spirit by setting our affections vpon them and seeking those things that are aboue eftsoones lifting vp our hearts by secret groanes and ejaculations for the enioying of them we are spirituall men and shall vndoubtedly in due time reape the haruest of eternall life Secondly this bewraies the paucitie of spirituall men euen where the Gospel is professed and how the world swarmes with multitudes of carnall and fleshly minded men For as in former times before the flood they ate they dranke they bought they sold they planted they built that is wholly addicted and deuoted themselues to these things So in these latter daies which our Sauiour Christ prophecied should be a counterpaine of the former the multitude generally in euery place doe wholly employ and spend themselues in thinking in affecting in talking in seeking in following of worldly things seldome God knowes or neuer minding the kingdome of God or the righteousnes thereof nor practising the Apostles rule so to vse the world as though they vsed it not 1. Cor. 7. 31. Againe here we see how the wisdome of God is counted follie among worldly wise men and how the wisdome of the world is foolishnes before God For if a man sow to the spirit in not following blind reason nor corrupted affection nor fashioning himselfe to the guise of the world nor seeking his owne good so much as the good of others but denying himselfe forsaking all in his affection for the Gospel of Christ and contemning this temporal trash in regard of the heauenly treasure he is accounted in the world but a foole whereas God accounts him truly wise for he is the wise merchant man who hauing found a pearle of great price went and sold all that he had and bought it Matth. 13. 46. For the lesse he laieth vp for himselfe vpon earth the more he treasureth vp for himselfe in heauen and though he seeme to sowe vpon the waters yet after many daies he shall finde it againe Whereas they that minde nothing but the world in sowing to the flesh are reputed wise and prouident men when as God accounts them starke fooles Thou Foole this night shall they fetch away thy soule and thē whose shall those things be which thou hast prouided and then it followeth So is he that gathereth riches to himselfe and is not rich in God For the more they treasure vp riches the more they treasure vp to themselues wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2. 5. and fatte themselues against the day of slaughter Iam. 5. 5. Lastly we are here warned to take heede of the Deuills sophistrie It is a notable policie one of the cunningest stratagemes the Deuill hath in good things commanded to seuer the meanes from the ende and in euill things forbidden to seuer the ende from the meanes He laboureth to seuer the means from the ende by perswading a man that he may come to the ende though he neuer vse the meanes that he may reape eternall life though he neuer sow the seedes of the spirit in this life But we must know that as he which runneth not at all can neuer gaine the garland he which laboureth not in the vinyard the labourers wages he that neuer sowes can neuer reape So he that runneth not in the race of Christianitie shall neuer attaine the crowne of happines and felicitie he that laboureth not in the Lords vineyard the recompence of reward he that in this life soweth not to the spirit shall neuer after this life reape life euerlasting For we may not dreame of a good haruest without a good seede time of sowing nothing to reape something or sowing tares to reape wheate Againe he seuereth the end from the meanes by perswading men that they may vse the meanes and neuer come to the end that though they sow to the flesh yet they shall not reape corruption Thus he perswaded Eue that though shee did eate of the forbidden fruit yet shee should not die the death nay shee should not die at all but her eyes should be opened and she should be as God himselfe knowing good and euill But we are to be vndoubtedly resolued of this that God hath linked with an yron chain the pleasure of sinne and the punishment thereof that as he that follows a riuer must needes at length come to the Sea so he that followes the course and streame of his sinnes must needes come at the length to the gulfe of eternall destruction 9 Let vs not therefore be wearie of well doing for in due season we shall reape if we faint not In these words the Apostle expounds the fift generall rule appertaining to all sorts of men and in it he ascendeth from the hypothesis to the thesis that is from the particular to the generall shewing that we ought not to faint in any good course either in doing good to them that labour amongst vs and are ouer vs in the Lord and admonish vs nor yet in beeing beneficiall vnto others And this verse dependeth vpon the former as the word therefore doth implie by way of necessarie illation and consequence for seeing that they which continue in well doing in sowing to the spirit shall of the spirit reape life euerlasting v. 8.
therefore no man ought to be wearie of well doing It consisteth of two parts of a rule or precept in the former part of the verse Let vs not therefore be wearie of well doing and a reason of the rule or a motiue to incite vs to the performance thereof in the latter part for in due season we shall reape if we faint not In the rule the Apostle speakes that plainely which in the former verses he had deliuered more obscurely for here he expounds himselfe what he meant by sowing to the spirit namely doing of good or as it is in the next verse doeing of good vnto all which may also appeare by that which followeth we shall reape if we faint not that is we shall reape the fruit of that which we haue sowne to the spirit if we faint not therefore to sow to the spirit is nothing els but to doe good Now by well doing the Apostle meaneth not onely the outward worke whereby our neighbour is furthered helped relieued but the doing of it also in a good manner and to a good ende so as it may be a good worke indeede not onely profitable to our neighbours and comfortable to our selues but acceptable to God This is a most necessarie precept for most men are soone wearie of a good course like to these Galatians who beganne in the spirit but beeing wearie of that walke turned aside and made an ende in the flesh Gal. 3. 3. Like Ephraim and Iudah whose goodnes was as a morning cloud and as the morning dowe which vanisheth away Hos. 6. 4. This wearisomnes in well doing hath seased vpon the most euen vpon all drowsie professours which are the greatest part as may appeare by this in that some if they be held but a quarter of an houre too long or aboue their ordinarie time are extreamely wearie of hearing the word And as for duties of mercie and liberalitie putting vp iniuries and tolerating wrongs they are readie to make an ende as soone as they begin And as for Prayer and thanksgiuing and other parts of the worship of God most men say in their hearts with the old Iewes what profit is it that we keepe his commandements and that we walke humbly before the Lord of hosts Malach. 3. 14. nay they count it a wearines vnto them and snuffe thereat Malach. 1. 13. Hence it is that the Holy Ghost is so frequent in stirring vs vp to the performance of all good duties with alacritie and chearefulnes and so often in rousing vs from that drowsines and deadnes wherewith we are ouerwhelmed Luk. 18. 1. Our Sauiour Christ propounds a parable to this ende to teach vs that we ought alwaies to pray and not to waxe faint Eph. 3. 13. I desire saith Paul that ye faint not at my tribulations 2. Thess. 3. 13. And ye brethren be not wearie in well doing And so in this place Let vs not therefore be wearie of well doing Nowe the reasons which make men so wearie of wel doing are in generall these three First the strength of the flesh which euen in the regenerate is like the great gyant Goliah in comparison of poore Dauid Secondly the weakenesse of the spirit and spirituall graces Thirdly the outward occurrences and impediments of this life In speciall they be these First men by nature are wolues one to another Esay 11. v. 6. and so they continue til this woluish nature be mortified and renued by grace beeing so farre from helping furthering releeuing tollerating one another or performing any other dutie of loue that contrarily they are readie to bite and deuoure one another Gal. 5. 15. Secondly oftentimes it commeth to passe that other mens coldnesse doth coole our zeale their backewardnesse slacketh our forwardnesse Thirdly many thinke it a disgrace and disparagement vnto them to stoope so lowe as to become seruiceable vnto their inferiours Fourthly there are many things which discourage vs from well doing either the partie is vnknowne vnto vs as Dauid was to Naball for which cause he would not releiue him in his necessitie or eise seemeth vnworthy of our helpe being such as through rior harlots lewd company hath brought himselfe to miserie and beggerie Or such as reward vs euill for good hatred for our good will or such as are querulous alwaies complaining though neuer so well dealt withall all which make men cold in the duties of loue Fiftly some there be which faine dangers and cast perils which hinder them from doing the good they should The slothfull person saith a lyon is in the way c. Lastly the manifold occasions and affaires of this life doe so distract the minde as that a man is soone wearied yea in the best things Besides many see no reason why they should spend themselues in doing good vnto others Now to all these obstacles and pul-backs we are to oppose the Apostles precept Let vs not be wearie of well doing For verely if the consideration of these small occasions and rubbes that lie in our way daunt and dismay vs and so stoppe our course we shall neuer be plentifull in good workes we may happly put our hand to the plowe but a thousand to one we shall looke backe againe with Lots wife cast a long looke toward Sodom and with the Israelites in our hearts turne againe into Egypt For as he that obserueth the winde shall not sowe and as he that regardeth the cloudes shall neuer reape Eccles. 11. 4. So he that regardeth the ingratitude of some the euill example of others the manifold distractions and occurrences of this life and shall cast perils in carnall wisdome of this and that trouble or inconuenience that may ensue shall neuer doe his dutie as he ought And assuredly he that fainteth in a good course and giueth it ouer before he come to the ende is like vnto the slothfull husbandman who hauing plowed and tilled and in part sowed his ground giueth ouer before he haue finished it and so either the parching heate doth wither it or the nipping colde doth kill it or the foules of the aire deuoure it Now most men are sicke of this disease which shewes the greatnes of our corruptions and that the best Christians haue a huge masse or lumpe of sinne in them and but a sparke of grace in that they are seldome or neuer wearie in scraping together of riches in following their pleasures in pursuing honours and hunting after preferments and yet are quickly wearie in duties of pietie iustice and mercie albeit they haue an vnspeakable reward annexed vnto them Well whatsoeuer the corrupt practises of men be let vs learne our dutie to goe forward without wearinesse nay to do good with chearefulnesse as Paul saith of himselfe Philip. 3. forgetting that which is behind and indeauouring himselfe to that which is before Let vs consider that it is the propertie of a liberall minde to deuise of liberall things and to continue his liberality Esay 32. 8. Neither is this
flesh and had their senses restored so when the spirit of God like the fauonian winde bloweth vpon vs it reuiueth vs againe giuing vs a new life new senses a new heart new wills and affections for all old things passe away and all things become new 2. Cor. 5. 17. For it openeth the eyes of our vnderstanding making vs discerne of things that differ Eph 1. 18. Philip. 1. 10. it boareth a new eare of obedience in vs Psal. 40. 6. and giueth vs a new tast not to sauour the things of the flesh but of the spirit Rom. 8. 5. Further this serues to detect the naturall Poperie of the multitude and of our owne hearts when we perswade our selues though falsely that though we goe on in our sinnes yet that we can repent when we list When as the Prophet saith O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe and Paul saith that it is as great a worke to create a new heart as to create a new world for regeneration is a new creation 2. Cor. 5. 17. Augustine saith well He that will grant pardon to him that repents will not alway giue repentance to him that sinnes Againe in the sense that Paul calleth the image of God a new creature or the new man and corruption the old man we graunt that our religion is new and Popish religion is old For as the new men is the restored image of God in which Adam was first created though afterwards defaced by his owne inuentions Eccles. 7. 31. So our religion is the restored or reformed doctrine first taught by the Apostles which afterward was corrupted by mens deuices Albeit in Tertullians sense ours is the old religion and theirs the new as the image of God is the old man and corruption the new Vse If we be not changed in our liues but remyane old Adams still euen the same men we were before in minding willing affecting earthly things and fashioning our selues to the guise of the world we are no new creatures though we promise and protest neuer so much we are but hypoc●●tes deceauing others and our selues also For where this new creature is there is a change in all the faculties and powers of soule and body the mind is not set vpon the world but mindeth heauenly things the will affections and conuersation of the whole man is in heauen Philip. 3. 20. For the spirit of regeneration is like the leauen which a woman tooke and bid in 3. pecks of meale till all was leauened for after the same manner by a secret operation it altereth the mind will affections If any be in Christ saith the Apostle he is a new creature old things are passed away behold all things are become newe If therefore we be new creatures why lead we not a new life if we be changed in affection why are we not changed in conuersation But by this we may perceiue that all which are christians in profession are not christians in conuersation all that are washed with the outward Element of water are not washed with the inward baptisme the lauer of regeneratiō as first those that are as good fellowes that is as badde as euer they were before and make no consciēce of sinne Secondly such as are no more but ciuill honest men like those honest women which raysed persecution against Paul and Barnabas and expelled them out of their coasts Act. 13. 50. Thirdly worldly wise men which sauour of nothing but the world Lastly such as haue some loue and liking of the word and are in some sort outwardly conformable thereunto hauing some legall sorrow for sinne arising from legall terrors but haue no thorowe change nor renouation Lastly we may not maruell if the world hate maligne those that are new-creatures seeing they neither mind nor affect the same things For there can be no true loue where there is contrarietie of iudgements wills affections which hath beene is and wil be betwixt those that are borne of the flesh and those that are borne of God Gen. 3. 15. v. 16. And as many as walke according to this rule peace shall be vpon them and mercy and vpon the Israel of God Here Paul commends this glorying in the crosse of Christ and studie of pietie in becomming a new creature as the onely rule of faith and manners which all teachers and heare●s were to obserue and follow Enforcing the keeping and obseruing of this double dutie by the fruit and benefit that comes thereby specified here by peace and mercy In the words two things are generally to be considered First the duty of walking in these words As many as walke according to this rule Secondly the reason of motiue to the practize thereof in these Peace shall be vpon them and mercy which is amplified by the generalitie thereof that is shall light vpon as many as walke according thereto and vpon the Israel of God The dutie is that we walke according to this canon or rule the word translated walke signifieth not simply to walke but to walke warily and circumspectly as it is expounded Eph. 5. 15. or to walke by rule in order and measure without treading aside but making straight steps to our feete Hebr. 12. 13. Pauls rule which we must walke by is faith in Christ called here glorying in the crosse of Christ repentance towards God called regeneration or the new creature which is rightly called a ●●le of faith and manners of things to be beleeued and practised because by it all doctrines and actions are to be examined nay the Scripture is therefore called Canonicall because it se●tes downe an exposition of this rule there beeing nothing from the first chap. in Gen. to the last words in the Apoeal which aimeth not at one of these two either repentance towars God or faith in Christ Here all ministers are taught what rule to follow in preaching the word or building the church of God namely faith repentance the doctrine of the crosse and conuersion or the new creature And all ●earers according to what rule to order their liues and actions For this metaphor of walking and that by a rule or line shewes that we are trauellers or pilgrimmes that this world is a strange countrey that we are to goe to another that the world is an endles labyrinth in which we shall for euer lose our selues except we be guided by this rule And here we see that there is a certen rule for the regulating of all things apertaning to faith and manners though we cannot apply it nor vse it as we should The fault is in vs not in the rule Whereas Paul saith as many as walke according to this rule he shews that Christians haue but on onely rule which they are to follow and according to which they must frame their liues for the Apostle exhortes vs that we all proceede by on rule Phil. 3. 16. Therefore the Papists doe notoriously offend not only in
wresting preuerting and breaking this rule but in making other new Lesbian rules which they prescribe as necessarie to be followed as the rule of S. Francis of S. Dominick S. Austen S. Ierome c. holding on mans baptisme better then another on mans profession holier then another on mans rule perfecter then another following any rule rather then Christs and so diuide his sea●●les coate And that these sundry rules of Monks are vaine and wicked it may appeare First because they agree not with this rule of Paul they beeing many it but on it directing and leading to Christ they leading to by paths obscuring the merit of Christ and prescribing many things partly friuolous partly impious contrary to faith and good life Secondly in that they agree not among themselues euery sect hauing his own proper orders and contending their owne to be better holier perfecter then the rest Thirdly in that they diuide into diuerse sects those that ought to be all on in Christ for which cause Paul calles the Corinthians carnall in houlding some of Paul others of Apollos 1. Cor. 3. 4. For how can they be spirituall who in speech action habitte and attire profession and conuersation professe nothing but shisme and dissention Ierome against the Luciferians saith Sieubi audieris ●os qui dicuntur Christi non a Domino lesu Christ● sed à quoquam alio nuncupari puta Marciònitas Valentinianos Montenses Campates scito non ●cclesiam Christi sed Antichristi esse Synagogam that is whersoeuer thou shalt heare those that are called Christians not to haue their name from our Lord Iesus Christ but from some other as Marcionites Valentinians Montenses Campates knowe thus much that they are not the church of Christ but the Synagogue of Antichrist Nay further solitary life in leauing the society of men and sequest●ing themselues from all company which is the grownd and generall practize of Monkish E●emites for Coenobites to speake p●operly are no Monks as the word teacheth is against the very light of nature it selfe First because it is naturall for men to liue together nay it is the ground of the family the church and common-wealth There was neuer nation so barbarous or sauage but endeauoured to liue together by associating themselues in cities townes villages caues woods tents or some other way according to the custome of the countrey which generall practise of all argues the impression of nature in all Secondly speach is giuen men for this end that they might conuerse together for it were little or nothing auaileable if men should liue alone and conuerse withnone Thirdly sundry vertues bestowed vpon men as iustice fortitude loue and frendship should be giuen in vaine if men should liue solitary sequestred from all company Fourthly mans imbecillity argues thus much for whereas all other creatures are armed by nature as the Bull with hornes the Boare with tuskes other with teeth fethers swiftnes c. man is borne feeble and naked not able to prouide or defend himselfe but only by helpe of others which is an argument that he is borne to liue in ciuill society and to be holpen by others Lastly man is borne to doe good to himselfe and others in some estate and calling 1. Cor. 7. But he that liueth alone can doe no good to others nor receiue good from them For whereas they plead for themselues that they leaue their particular callings and betake themselus to Armetages that so they may renounce the world I answer that to renounce the world is not to leaue their places and callings whereunto God hath caled them but to renounce the corruption that is in the world through lust 2. Pet. 1. 4. These and the like reasons made the Philosopher to say that he which left the societie of men and betooke himselfe to a solitary life was either a God or a beast By this we may see what Lesbian rules they follow and how that which they account the highest degree of perfection is in truth the depth of abomination that it hath beene the cause of much wickednes as of idlenes hypocrisie whoredome so domitry besides the cruell murthering of many poore innocents Therefore let neither their hypocrisie nor the churches pretended authoritie nor the long receiued custom any thing mooue vs but that leauing them we follow the rule of Paul in this place for they that walke according to it peace shall be vpon them and mercie By peace we are to vnderstand outward peace as prosperitie and good successe in all things we goe about For whatsoeuer they doe shall prosper Psal. 1. 3. And peace with the creatures as first with the good Angels Colos● 1. 20. who are ministring spirits sent forth to minister for their sakes that shal be heires of saluation Ebr. 1. 14. pitching their tents about them Psal. 34. 7. and bearing them in their hands as the nourse her child Psal. 91. 12. Secondly with the godly The Prophet saith that in the kingdome of Christ the wolfe shall dwell with the lambe the leopard shall lie with the kidde c. that is men of fierce sauage and woluish natures shal be so changed by grace as that they shall liue peaceably and louingly together Thirdly with the wicked their enemies partly because they seeke to liue in peace as Dauid saith of himselfe I labour for peace Psal. 120. 7. partly because God so inclines their hearts as that they are peaceable Lastly with the beast of the field and all the creatures The Lord promiseth to make a couenant with the wild beasts and foules of the heauen in behalfe of his people that they may sleepe safely Hos. 2. 18. But the peace which is principally meant in this place is peace of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding Phil. 4. 7. Which is peace with God beeing reconciled and at one with him Rom. 5. 1. Beeing iustified by faith we haue peace with God And peace with our selues which is three fold as it is opposed to a threefold dissention in man The first is when the will and affections renewed by grace are obedient to the minde enlightened by the spirit and at peace therewith opposed to the dissention that is betwixt rebellious affections and naturall reason The second is when grace though strongly assailed giueth corruption the foile whereupon followeth the calming and quieting of the mind opposed to the combate betweene the flesh and the spirit The third is when the conscience perswaded of remission of sinnes and reconciliation with God ceaseth to accuse and terrifie and beginnes to excuse and comfort vs opposed to the conflicts that a distressed conscience hath with legall terrours and the anger of God By mercy which is the cause of this peace are vnderstood all spirituall blessings which flow vnto vs from the loue and fauour of God in Christ as remission of sinnes iustification sanctification and eternall life it selfe The words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vpon them haue great emphasis signifying that these blessings
come downe from heauen and light vpon them that follow this rule and that they cannot he hindered by the mallice of men Let the Pope then anathematize curse and excommunicate vs both Prince and people because we tread not in the steps of his faith but of the faith of our father Abraham and walke not according to his rule but according to this rule of the Apostle for we need not feare his thunderbolts nor curses seeing the causelesse curse shall neuer come Pro. 26. 2. for what though he curse if God doe blesse It was the thing that comforted Dauid beeing cursed of his enemies in that though they did curse yet God would blesse Psal. 109. 28. and let vs comfort our selues in this that he will curse them that curse his people Gen. 12. 3. Againe if peace and mercy shall be vpon them that walke according to this rule then wrath and indignation shall light vpon those that follow any other rule or deuise any other way or set downe any other meanes of saluation besides or contrary to this False therefore is the opinion of Pucksius that if a man lead an outward ciuil life he may be saued in any religion the Iewe in his Iudaisme the Turke in his Mahometisme the Heathen in his Paganisme For they that walke not in this way according to this rule doe but weary themselues in endlesse Labyrinths and so walking without line or rule in their crooked wayes shall be led with workers of iniquitie whenas peace shall be vpon Israel Psal. 125. 5. Other vses are made of mercy and peace Pag. 11. and 12. to which places I referre the reader The Apostle addeth that peace and mercy shal be vpon all them that walke according to this rule and vpon the Israel of God There is a doble Israell mentioned by Paul Israell according to the flesh 1. Cor. 10. 18. and the Israell of God as there is a twofold Iewe one outward in the flesh another inward in the spirit Rom. 2. 28 29. By the Israell of God the Apostle meaneth all such as are like to Nathaniell who was a true Israelite in whome there was no guile Ioh. 1. 47. whether they be the faithfull Gentiles or beleeuing Iewes And he makes mention of the Israell of God partly by reason of the aduersaries who bragged so much of their father Abraham and that they were the only true Israelites and yet were noe Israelites because they troade not in the steps of the faith of Abraham partly for the weake conuerts who thought it a hard thing to be seuered from the society of those to whome the promises were made partly for vs Gentiles that we might know that all are not Israell which are of Israell Rom. 9. 6. but that all they which are of faith are blessed with faithfull Abraham Gal. 3. 9. seeing that God is no accepter of persons Act. 10. 34. v. 17. From hence forth let no man put me to busines for I beare in my body the markes of the Lord Iesus Here the Apostle laies downe his last admonition preuenting an obiection that might be made by the false Apostles or the Galatians For whereas it might be said that Paul sought himselfe and the world shunned persecution and therefore ioyned circumcision to Christ to please the Iewes and followed not his owne rule v. 16. he takes away this obiection with great authoritie when he saith from hence forth let no man put me to busines And withall he addes a reason of it for I beare in my bodie the markes of the Lord Iesus as if he should saie The bonds the imprisonments the stripes wounds and scarres in my bodie doe sufficiently testifie my fidelitie in my ministerie for if I had preached circumcision I should not haue suffered persecution The words may be and are taken in a doble sense First thus The false Apost and you Galatians by their instigation haue beene troblesome vnto me by false accusations and scanderous imputations as that I taught circumcision and the obseruatiō of the ceremoniall Lawe as a thing necessarie to saluation and so you haue made a reuolt from my doctrine by that meanes haue dobled and tripled my labour and paines among you But from hence forth cease to be troblesome vnto me you may take experiment and proofe from me the marks that I beare in my body doe sufficiently witnesse and seale the truth of my doctrine and my fidelitie in myne Apostleship as also whose disciple I am Moses or Christs and what rule I follow Iudaisme or Christianisme Secondly they cary this sense I haue sayd that they which walke according to this rule in glorying onely in the crosse of Christ peace shall be vpon them and mercy and vpon the Israel of God And I say againe and againe that we ought to striue and contend for it to obserue keepe it as a thing most necessarie to saluation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as for othings not necessary to saluation as circumcision c. Let no man troble me in the execution of mine Apostolicall function or hinder the course of the Gospell by vrging any other doctrine or ceremony contrary or diuerse from this as necessary to saluation This one thing is necessarie other things are needles and fruitles in comparison therefore neither I nor the church of God ought to be trobled with them This latter sense I take to be more ageeable to the text Some make the sense to be this I haue had many trobles and conflicts and haue many markes and scarres in my body inflicted by persecutours therfore be no more troblesome vnto me for it were to much to add wormewood to my gale affliction to affliction Here we se the condition of the Apostle and the estate of all faithfull ministers that it is full of troble and molestations For as they are accounted men of turbulent spirits disquieters of the state as Elias was 1. King 21. and Ieremie chap. 15. 18. and Paul Act. 16. 20. 21. 28. So they are most trobled with factious opposers and false teachers who labour to bring into the church things partly needles and superfluous partly hurtfull pernicious Thus the false Apost trobled the pastors and church of Galatia Gal. 5. 10. and the churches of Antiochia Syria Cilicia Act 15. 24. Secondly consider how that the most and greatest trobles of the church haue beene for matter● not of substance but of circumstance partly not necessarie partly contrarie to the rule which notwithstanding haue bee vrged with fire and fagot as things most necessarie Lastly he that stands forth for the defence of Gods truth as Paul did and all Ministers ought to doe must let goe all circumstances and looke to the substance Not with Martha to trouble himselfe about many needelesse things when as one thing onely is necessarie The reason followeth in these words For I beare in my bodie the markes of the Lord Iesus The word in the Originall translated markes doth properly
with a hot yron but by drinking whoring rioting c. get the markes of Bacchus and Venus in their bodies For if these be the markes of Christ those must needes be the marks of Satan Lastly hence we are taught a speciall dutie and that is to suffer bodily affliction in the profession of the truth though bonds and imprisonment abide vs in all places not to passe for them so that we may fulfill our course with ioy according to Pauls example both here and Act. 20. 24. as also his commandement to Timothie Suffer affliction as a good souldier of Iesus Christ. 2. Tim. 2. 3. The reasons are these First by suffering bodely affliction we are made conformable vnto Christ and fulfill the rest of the afflictions of Christ in our flesh Coloss. 1. 24. Secondly they teach vs to haue a sympathie and fellow feeling of the miseries of our brethren to remember those that are in bonds as though we were bound with them and those that are in affliction as though we also were afflicted in the bodie Ebr 13. 3. Thirdly our patient induring of affliction doth not onely serue as a president and example to others to suffer patiently but also is a notable meanes to confirme them in the truth 2. Cor. 1. 6. Philip. 1. 14. Lastly they serue to scoure vs that are earthly vessels from the rust and filth of sinne that cleaues so fast vnto our nature 18. Brethren the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ be with your spirit Amen Here the Apostle concludes his epistle with his vsuall farewell commending the Galatians to the grace of God wishing vnto them all things appertaining to spirituall life godlines 1. Pet. 1. 3. which he signifieth here by grace There is a twofold grace mentioned in Scripture Grace which makes a man gratious or acceptable to God gratia gratum faciens and grace which is freely giuen gratia gratis data Gratia gratum faciens is the fauour and loue of God whereby he is well pleased with his elect in Christ and this grace is in God himselfe and noe qualitie infused or inherent in vs and it is truly called the first grace as beeing the cause of all other subsequent graces Gratia gratis data is the free gift of God bestowed vpon men whether naturall or supernaturall naturall eyther in the state of innocencie before the fall as originall iustice c. or in the state of Apostasie since the fall as the gift of illumination Ioh. 1. 9. and such like Supernatural eyther common gifts as the gift of miracles prophecying tongues c. or sauing graces as the grace of election effectuall vocation iustification adoption glorification c. all which are called the second grace because they flow from the first as the streame from the fountaine Thus Paul distinguisheth them Rom. 5. 15. calling the former the grace of God the latter the gift by grace Nowe grace in this place is not to be restrained onely to the benefit of our redemption as it is 2. Cor. 13. 13. where the grace of Christ is distinguished from the loue of God and communion of the H. Ghost but to be vnderstood of the fauour loue of God which is the first grace and of the sauing grace of regeneration which is the second grace or the gift by grace And it is called the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ first because he is the fountaine of it Ioh. 1. 16. of his fullnes all we haue receiued and grace for grace Secondly because he is the conduit or pipe by which it is conuaied vnto vs. Ioh. 1. 17. Grace and truth came by Iesus Christ for he is our propitiator by whome alone we receiue grace that is the fauour of God and reconciliation for grace that is for the fauour and loue which God the father bare vnto his sonne we beeing accepted of God and beloued in his beloued Eph. 1. 6. Christ is further called our Lord in fiue respects First by right of creation Ioh. 1. 3. All things were made by him Secondly by right of inheritance Hebr. 1. 2. He is made hoyre of all things Psal. 2. 8. I will giue thee the Heathen for thine inheritance and the endes of the earth for thy possession Thirdly by right of redemption 1. Cor. 6. 20. Ye are bought with a price which is neither siluer nor gold but the pretious blood of Christ. 1. Pet. 1. 18 19. and this he performed by a double right namely by right of proprietie as a King redeemes his subiects the master his seruants or by right of affinitie as the father may redeeme the sonne one brother an other and one kinsman an other Fourthly by right of conquest Luk. 11. 21. When a strong man armed keepeth his palace c. but when a stronger then he commeth vpon him and ouercommeth him he taketh from him all his armour wherein he trusted and diuideth the spoile Lastly by right of contract and marriage Hos. 2. 16. Thou shalt call me Ishi and shalt not call me Baali and v. 19. I will marrie thee vnto me for euer in righteousnes iudgement mercy and compassion I will marrie the vnto me in faithfulnes and thou shalt know the Lord. The Apostle proceeds and saith the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ be with your spirits For the better vnderstanding of which phrase we are to know that Man consisteth of two essentiall parts of soule and bodie Eccles. 12. 7. Dust that is the bodie returnes to the earth whence it was taken and the spirit returns to God that gaue it Albeit the Apostle els where deuideth man into three parts spirit soule and bodie when he praieth for the Thessalonians that their whole spirit and soule and body may be kept blameles vnto the comming of Christ. Where he subdiuideth the soule into two parts into reason or vnderstanding which he calleth the spirit will or affection which he tearmeth by the common name agreeing to both the soule God hauing giuen reason to see and will to seeke after that which is good that reason hauing eyes might guide the will that is blinde and goe before that it might follow So that the spirit and soule are not two seuerall substances but one and the same euen as the bodie and the flesh are one bodie and yet are they distinguished for doctrine sake Heb. 4 12. the word of God is said to enter through euen to the diuiding a sunder of the soule and the spirit and Eph. 4. 17. 18. the Apostle distinguisheth the soule into three Faculties the mind cogitation heart when he saith the Gentiles walked in the vanitie of their minds and had their cogitations darkened because of the hardnes of their hearts by minde meaning the hegemonicall part or vnderstanding by cogitation the inward senses as memorie phantasie c. and by heart the affections Now by spirit in this place is not ment the vnderstanding alone or the soule alone but by a synechdoche the whole man is
be assured that the Scripture is the word of God 31. 33 2 How wee may be assured that the calling of our Pastours is from God 33. 36 3 Of Phariseisme 41. 18 4 Of preuenting and cooperating grace in mans conuersion 51. 9 5 Of a Lye and whether it be alwaies a sinne 62. 22 6 Of the forme and vse of an Oath 65. 14 7 Whether faith may be lost 69. 25 8 Of Satisfaction or restitution 99. 20 9 Of the distinction of Iewes and Gentiles 114. 2 10 Of Iustification at large 116. 6 11 Of Christs Obedience 119. 12 12 Of iustifying faith and apprehension 124. 35 13 How to liue wisely godly iustly sundrie rules 138. 32 14 How Christ liueth in vs and how it may be knowne 145. 15 15 How we liue by faith 149. 24 16 Of Iudging 156. 1 17 Of witchcraft and what a witch is 158. 2. 429. 431 18 Of imputation and imputed righteousnes 175. 16 19 Of the curse of the Law 184. 2 20 That no man can perfectly fulfill the law in this life 186. 35 and 499. 17. 21 The difference betweene the Law and the Gospel 194. 35 22 How Christ became a curse for vs 198. 19 23 Whether all Couenan●s are to be kept and how farre forth 208. 7 c. 24 Of the Judiciall ●aw 230. 27 25 Of Baptisme at large 243. 32 26 Of the Parents authoritie in appointing his childs marriage calling 274. 27 27 Of the mysterie of the Fathers sending the Sonne 279. 5 28 How Christ was subiect to the Law 286. 5 29 Of the obseruation of daies 314. 4 30 Of good Ielousie 331. 23 31 Of Polygamie 342. 9 32 Where our mother the Church is to be found ten motiues answered 352. 25 33 Of spirituall bondage 364. 39 34 Of Christian Libertie 366. 12 35 Of Imprecation or cursing 396. 29 36 Of the right vse and abuse of Christian Libertie 400. 12 37 Of brotherly Loue. 403. 11 38 Of Christian peace and concord 408. 14 39 Of the spirit and walking therein 411. 20 40 Of the combate of the flesh and the spirit 415. 38 41 Of Idolatrie 427. 22 42 Of Heresie 432. 21 43 Of Enmitie 435. 3 44 Of Murther 438. 7 45 Of Drunkennes and gluttonie 439. 11 46 Of Long-suffering 445. 2 47 Of Goodnesse 445. 38 48 Of Temperance 448. 3 49 Of Uaine-glorie 454. 35 50 Of Christian reproofe at large 469. 31. c. 51 Wherein the Law and Gospel agree and differ 497. 24 52 Of Merit of workes 594. 31 53 Of the kindes of goodnesse and rules to be obserued therein 588. 1. c. 54 Of obseruing of times 600. 10 55 Whether it be lawfull to compell men to embrace true religion 614. 5 56 Of Inscriptions of Epistles and post-scripts at large 655. 4 A Table of all those places of Scripture which are briefly expounded in this Commentarie Genesis Chap. vers Pag. lin 15 13 213 22 17 1 188 36 17 14 257 3 43 22 440 28 Exodus 4 28 258 3 12 40 213 29 29 10 292 34 Deuteronomie 30 6 188 16 32 4 190 25 I. Kings 15 5 189 9 II. Kings 2 23 362 30 23 25 188 18 II. Chron. 21 2 270 17 Psalmes 40 6 131 33 69 28 378 38 106 31 176 17 139 21 435 6 Proverbs 24 16 105 4 Isai. 64 24 298 4 Ezechiel 33 13 551 25 Matthew 5 22 156 25 5 22 362 14 7 6 472 10 6 10 189 26 10 8 537 10 13 57 5●0 14 25 35 568 12 28 19 245 34 Marke 9 24 127 5 Luke 1 6 189 11 14 26 435 11 Iohn 3 5 257 10 4 37 551 7 6 45 539 24 13 34 35 494 15     496 13 17 12 630 8 Roman 7 18 189 32 8 4 189 40 8 5 205 39 11 32 225 10 13 5 369 22 13 14 267 4 16 18 25 10 16 17 475 16 I. Cor. Chap. vers Pag. lin 5 4 475 31 7 12 5 12 10 8 525 10 II. Cor. 5 17 380 2 5 19 225 7 13 12 475 34 Philip. 2 3 511 6 3 15 188 36 Coloss. 2 8 434 20 3 17 247 26 I. Tim. 1 5 402 39 2 4 270 8 1 9 368 7 5 12 424 15 5 20 485 32 Titus 3 10 487 3 Hebr. 6 4 5 6 462 25 6 6 250 34 10 19 122 1 10 26 462 27 13 17 521 1 Iames. 2 10 377 32 2 24 385 1 2 26 383 39 I. Iohn 3 9 190 10 5 3 190 16 Apocal. 18 6 552 26 21 27 630 3 An exact Table of all particulars contained in this Commentarie The first figure shewes the page the second the line A THe blessing of Abraham came from the cursed death of Christ. 203. 20 Children of Abraham are of two sortes 177. 30 All beleeuers are children of Abraham three waies 177. 33 VVe must doe three things to walk in the steppes of Abrahams faith 178. 20. Of Gods not Accepting the person of man 90. 18 Who are to be Accursed 25. 35 How the church should accurse any man and in what order 26. 2 Admission into the kingdome of grace is either outward or inward 399. 18 Of Adoption 291. 25 In the grace of Adoption there be two acts of God 236. 33 The foundation of our Adoption 264. 35. Adulterie to be punished with death 233. 34 what Adulterie is and how great a sinne 424. 6 Of flying adultery and fornication 426. 6 Two speciall occasions of Adulterie and fornication 427. 4 In that Adulterie fornication c. are workes of the flesh we are taught three things 426. 29 Inordinate affections what 450. 28 Bodilie Affliction to be suffered ioyfully for the profession of the truth 651. 9 Agar figures Ierusalem two waies 345. 20 All put for many 181. 37 Anathema what it is 25. 31 Anger whether any lawfull and when a sinne and the remedie of it 436. 22 Remedies against Anger Obiections answered 445. 8 Apostasie hath fiue degrees 349. 24 What it is to be an Apostle 1. 37 Apostolike authoritie ceased with the Apostles 5. 18 The Apostles doctrine gods immediate word 5. 3 What is the office of an Apostle 68. 5. Application of Christ and his benefits is to be made by certain degrees 371. 30 Apprehension of Christ stands in two things 125. 4 Three grounds of Apprehension 125. 23. Two degrees of Apprehension 126. 25. Arabia where situate 57. 22 Authority of Scripture se Scriptures B Three markes of inward Baptisme 241. 40 Baptisme in the church of Roome no signe of the true church 243. 3. Baptisme taken six waies 243. 37 In the couenant of Baptisme Gods actions are two mans one 248. 2 The endes of Baptisme are foure 249. 11. The efficacy of Baptisme 249. 21 Arguments of Papists Aswered 250. 14. Baptisme doth not abolish originall sinne 251. 20 How baptisme conferres grace 253. 17 Of the necesitie of Baptisme 256. 22. Foure questions of the person that must administer Baptime 257. 30 The grounds of infants Baptisme 260.
must doe two things 194. 5 A particular or speciall faith hath 3 acts or effects 239. 22 Arguments of the Papists against special faith answered 239. 30 Euery grieuous fall doth not abolish the fauour of God 237. 13 Of the faith of Infants 261. 15 What faith towardes God is 446. 31. Reasōs to proue that the faith of the most is but false fained 446. 35 Faith workes by loue beeing the cause of loue and loue the fruit of faith 383. 13 In faith two things 385. 24 Faith towardes men standes in two particulars 447. 12 Reasons to mooue vs to maintaine faith truth among men 447. 25 By faith we doe not abrogate but establish the law vide Law The dutie of gouernours of families 410. 24 God is called a father in two respects 336. 13 Or the Fathers sending his Sonne vide God No man exempted from falling 461. 37. Fainting twofold 585. 7 Spirituall fainting twofold 585. 12 Faults of Churches be of two sorts 8. 18. Of naturall feare how it is good and how euill 108. 4 Three kinds of feare 108. 20 Figures and Allegories vsed in scripture 346. 16 Of the spirituall combate betwixt the flesh and the spirit vid. Combate How the flesh and spirit fight together 416. 4 The lust of the flesh hath two actions 416. 21 A treatise of the works of the flesh where is handled the condition the kinds and the punishments thereof 423. 22 Flesh signifies more then sensualitie 433. 15 What the flesh is 450. 18 In the flesh are two things Affections and lusts 450. 27 Meanes to crucifie the flesh 451. 26 For signifies not alwaies a cause but any Argument 568. 14 The foreknowledge of God vide God Fornication what it is 424. ●4 Against tolleration of fornication 425. 12. To flie adulterie and fornication 426. 6. Two speciall occasions of them 427 4. Freedome in good things fourefold 368. 3 G The Galatians reuolt 8. 10 What the churches of Galatia were 9. 28 How the Galatians receiued the gospel 28. 30 To Gentilize what it is 112. 5 Gentlenes what 445. 29 The gifts of God are inordinately vsed three waies vide Inordinate The more excellent gifts any hath receiued the more he is bound to be seruiceable to others 463. 39 The glorie of heauen twofold Essentiall and Accidentall 556. 23 To Glorie implies three things 625. 13. Two Grounds of glorying one in God another in himselfe 517. 12. Howe they differ and howe wee may doe both ibid. Obiections against glorying and reioycing in our selues 517. 30 How glorying in a mans selfe doth differ from vaine glorie which is a branch of pride 517. 30 Foure rules to bee obserued that we may glory in the Testimonie of a good Conference 518. 15 Lessons to be learned from this that we are to glorie in the Testimonie of a good conference 518. 31 Glorying when it is good and when euill 625. Glorying good or euill ibid. 27 Euill glorying is vaine glorying in three respects ibid. 23. Wherein we ought not to glorie ibid. 35. neither in wisdome strength riches honour nor pleasures ibid. Glorying in outward things not only vaine but impious Foure reasons 627. 40 There is a two fould lawfull bosting or glorying one before god another before man 628. 29 Obiections for Boasting answered 628. 16. Vnlawfull glorying when it is 629. 17. Glorying in wickednes three waies 629. 30. Reasons why Paul did Glorie rather in Christs death then in his resurrection 631. 21 The Papists wicked Glorying in the crosse vide crosse Gluttony what it is 439. 16 False Goddes are set vp two waies 304. 16 How God is to be acknowledged and worshipped 12. 15 Gods foreknowledge is not seuered from his will 108. 12 In what order the foreknowledge of God stands to his will 180. 25 God is called a father in two respects 236. 13 How God is said to repent 220. 19 A child of God two waies 236. 26 A treatise of God sending his sonne 279. 5. God knoweth exactly all our actions 549. 26 How the godly mans sinnes doe not condemne him in the latter Iudgment three resons 551. 27 The godly reape not that they sow therefore there is another life 552. 11. Seuen rules to liue godlily 139. 10 What a man must doe to be assured that he is Gods child 297. 14 Why affliction is the portion of the godly two reasons 620. 28 Vses of this that the godly are persecuted and afflicted 621. 15 Good things are commonly done in euill manner 330. 5 How they may be well done three rules 330. 21 The Godly faile in the manner of dooing good 344. 1 The dutie of dooing good declared by sundry arguments 588. 1 Dooing of good standeth in three things 588. 4 Rules to be obserued in dooing good 590. 34 We are not allwaies to imitate God in good and euill for three causes 591. 34 God is the generall good we the particular 591. 40 To the nature of the generall good three things appertaine 595. 4 Reasons why we are to doe good to all men 593. 9 How we are to doe good especially to the houshold of faith 594. 20 Reasons to doe good especially to the faithfull 594. 35 The order to be obserued in dooing of good to others 596. 23 There is no possibilitie of dooing good after this life 601. 37 Goodnes what it is 445. 38. Goodnes respects either the bodie or the mind and stands in foure actions 446. 9 Goodnes three fould preseruing vniting communicatiue 589 Communicatiue Goodnes hath 4. degrees 589. 29 What is vnderstood by God 531. 24 A felicitie to receiue the doctrine of the Gospell and what benefits come thereby 326. 27 The law and Gospell not on in substance of doctrine 378. 9 The Gospell must be preached rather then the law for two causes 54. 1. It must be preached to the Gentiles for two causes 54. 38 There is but one Gospel and one way of saluation 21. 31 Popish religion subuertes the Gospel of Christ. 23. 15 The doctrine of the Gospel called the truth for two causes 159. 20 The antiquitie of the Gospel 181. 19. How it differs from the lawe Vide Lawe The Gospel was not reueiled to the world till after the comming of Christ. 228. 11 Persecution and the preaching of Gospel goe hand in hand 620. 20. The Gospel is no new law 497. 23. In what the lawe and Gospel agree 497. 24 They differ in fiue things 498. 9 Why the Gospel is called a misterie 498. 16 The doctrine of the Gospel called by an excellencie the word also the word of the kingdome of God of saluation of life 530. 36. Our saluation placed alone in grace 654. 15. A child by Grace three waies 236 28. Uide Child The knowledge of the true God stands in sixe points 248. 20 What is ment by Grace 10. 5 The causes of grace be the father Christ and how they are distinct in regard of the manner of working 10. 38 Grace in god is the
and Iudiciall law 230. 231 And how farr forth they are all abrogated ibid. Two notes whereby a Iudiciall Law may be discerned to be Morall 232. 30. What is our guid the Lawe beeing abrogated vide guide The Law cōsidered 2. waies 288. 22 The Law is a yoke 3. waies 288. 28 A treatise of beeing vnder the Lawe and redemption from it 288. 20 Our libertie by Christ frees vs from the Lawe three waies 272. 8 The fulfilling of the lawe in this life is imperfect 377. 4 The true difference betweene the lawe and the Gospell in 7. things 347. 23. The false difference confuted 348. 1 How the whole lawe is fulfilled in the loue of our neighbour ' 405. 15 Transgression of the Law twofould 419. 19. Wherein the law and the Gospell agree vide Gospell By our faith we doe not abrogate the lawe but establish it in two respects 498. 1 Wherein the lawe and Gospel differ vide Gospel No man in this life can fulfil the law prooued by foure Arguments 499. 17. The Lawe is said to be fulfilled three waies 503. 35 Fulfilling of the lawe taken two waies 504. 5 League with the Deuill twofould 429. 20. The lawe hath a three fould vse though it cannot be fulfilled 504. 18. Why men are so cold in liberalie 555. 9. 5. Rules for the vse of liberty 402. 2 Christian libertie abused 3. waies 400. 17. What is the abuse of liberty where it is to be found and what is the right vse of it 400. 12 Fiue degrees in the way and order vsed in procuring our libertie by Christ. 278. 35 A treatise of libertie by grace 366. 1● What is the authoritie of it the persons to whome it belongeth and our dutie touching this libertie ib. Of the parts of christian libertie 366. ●4 Magistracie and Christian libertie may stand together 369. 5 Christ procures libertie by two meanes 370. 29 Popish religion is flatt against Christian libertie and that two waies 372. 7. Our libertie frees vs from the Lawe three waies 372. 8. Our life ought to be a pilgrimage 351. 16. There is a naturall and spirituall life 138. 20. There are 3. degrees of life 140. 24 The spirituall life standes especially in three things 149. 26 Life is created or vncreated created is naturall or spirituall 452. 35 Two degrees of spirituall life 453. 1 In what sense life eternal is a reward 570 11. What resemblance it hath with a reward ibid. 20 Of our limitations of Opinion and affection 353. 23. Long suffering what and the mane● to vse it 445. 2 Selfe-loue vide Ouerweening Of louing our Neighbour vide Neighbour Of mutuall loue betweene Pastor People 320. 27 How faith workes by loue 383. 13 The vse of loue though it doe not iustifie 385. 13 What the loue of our Neighbour is 403. 12. What is the vse of Loue. 403. 29 Sixe sortes of men liue in the breach of the rules of Loue. 404. 1 How loue is a fruite of the spirit 443. 27. Loue followes faith and regeneration therefore the first act of loue is not by nature as the Papists teach 443. 29 The loue of God what 443. 40 Three especiall signes whereby it is discerned 444. 1 The Loue of our Neighbour what ibid. 12. Why the Loue of our brother is called the loue of Christ rather then of nature of God or of Moses 494. 8 The grounds of Loue three 593. 12 The Loue of our Brethren greater or lesser two waies 597. 15 How we must loue all men alike how we may not ibid. 18 How farr doth the child of God proceede in the lustes of the flesh 414. 33. Fiue degrees of lusts 414. 36 The lusts of the flesh hath two actions vide Flesh The lusts of the spirit hath two vide spirit Lust after Baptisme in the regenerate is a sinne 419. 2 Lusts what 450. 33 What a lye is and whether a sinne or no 62. 23. 64. 10 Difference betweene a lye and a Parable 63. 7 And betweene a lye and the concealement of a thing 63. 13 Betweene Lying fayning 63. 26 Reasons against lying 447. 26 M Whether Magistrates be necessarie in the societies of Christians 268. 23. Magistracie and Christian libertie may stand together vide libertie How the lawe of the Magistrate makes an indifferent thing to be necessarie 369. 37 Mariage what it is 341. 40 Mariage noe sowing to the Flesh as Tacianus the Heretique and Syritius the Pope would haue it but to the spirit 563. 19 By Markes what is signified 648. 9 Markes of Christ of two sortes ibid. 20. Visible or inuisible Outwart or inward typicall or reall ibid. 34 Reall markes double either in his natural body or mysticall 649. 1 How the markes in his natural body doe differ from those in his mististicall body ibid 19 VVhat vse to be made of Pauls markes 650. 2 The makes of the Fratres flagellantes to be derided ibid. 25 Legaces giuen to the maintenance of the Masse may be applied to the maintenance of the true worship of God 208. 9 The difference of Meekenes and long suffering 448. 1 VVhat meekenes is 464. 30. 465. 29. The effects of it ibid. 34 Motiues to Meekenes 465. 10 How there is but one Mediator 217. 32. How Moses was a Mediatour 219. 23. How we are to put affiance in men 392. 32. VVe serue God in seruing of men 406. 5. How men are nothing of thēselues 506. 1. 25. Men naturally thinke too well of themselues 507. 8 How we are to please men and how not 515. 32 Herein sixe cautions to be vsed 516. 3. Gods mercie great to sinners 49. 26 It hath a double effect in vs. ibid. 33 It is much abused and how 40 By mercy what is vnderstood 645. 7. All Merits and satisfactions for sinnes are to be reduced to the person of Christ and if there be no humane satisfactions nor meritorious workes 14. 24 Merit of condignitie may be vnderstood three waies 565. 16 VVhat Papists hould merit of good workes in regard only of Gods promise and diuine acceptation and what in respect partly of their owne worthines partly of Gods acceptance and what onely in regard of the dignitie of the worke 565. 20 Ministers must deliuer nothing of their owne 6. 10 Ministers which are to be teachers must first be taught 38. 3 They must be taught by men where reuelation is wanting 38. 22 Ministers are pillers and how with the vse of it 97. 1 Ministers of the word must of necessitie ioyne with good doctrine the example of good life 109. 5 What kind of men Ministers ought to be 318. 16 Ministers duty specially to reprooue 477. 37 Ministerie is painfull like the trauaile of a woman 334. 12 The dignitie of the Ministerie 334. 26. Ministers must temper their giftes to their hearers 338. 37 Ministers subiect to slanders 394. 37. Whether a Minister may not conceale the truth some time 395. 31 Ministers liues should be reall Sermons 623. 30
infirmitie is 108. 32. Sinnes be of two sorts 224. 27 Difference betweene the godly and vngodly in sinning 443. 3 Originall sinne hath two parts 365. 5. A common fashion to extenuate sinne 389. 56 We must resist euery particular sin 390. 25. It is the nature of sinne to set all things out of order 460. 4 God rewardeth sinnes in the same manner according to the nature of sinne 557. 558. Sinne driues men beside themselues 460. 8. Sinners must not delay their repentance ibid. 21 Sinnes committed after a mans conuersion are pardonable 462. 4. 5. In euery knowne sinne we are wrōged 473. 33 Sinne a burden to whome vide Burden Sinne a spirituall burden 528. 27 How we may be cased of the burden of sinne 529. 36 How sinne is finite and how infinite 554. 2 3 4. Solitarie and Monastick life against the light of nature 643. 13 Why the second person is called Sonne 280. 1 Whether the Sonne be God 280. 14. Two kinds of sorrow 137. 39 A point of great skill to bring a soule in order and frame againe 460. 29. Three things to be considered in the soule the substance the faculties and the qualities 637. 10 What is meant by vvhat soeuer a man sowes that shall he reape 550. 10. Sowing what it signifies in the scripture 550. 20 Obiections against this prouerbiall speech whatsoeuer a man sowes that shall he reape 550. 551. The distinction of sowing to the flesh and to our flesh 553. 36 By sowing to the flesh what is ment 564. 1. 10. To sow to the spirit what it is ibid. 20. The Spirit hath fiue properties 418. 38. What is the spirit a treatise 411. 21. 35. All exercises of Christian religion are to be in the spirit 381. 29 The operation of the spirit is threefold 146. What the Spirit signifies 163. 35 what is meant by the giuing or sending of the spirit 204. 35 In what order the spirit is giuen 205. 3. we receiue the spirit for sixe endes ibid. 20. why the holy Ghost is called the spirit of the sonne 293. 39 The manner how the holy Ghost is sent 294. 35 Foure works in the spirit in causing beleeuers to crie Abba father 295. 32. The spirit of grace in Christians is more excellent then that of creation in two respects 412. 27 Of the operation of the spirit 412. 39. The whole worke of the spirit may be reduced to factions 413. 8 The spirit makes vs change and renew our actions in three respects 413. 21. The lust of the spirit hath two actions 416. 32 The office of the spirit is first to regenerate secondly to guide the regenerate 421. 14. 16 In this guidance there are foure actions of the spirit ibid. Subiection to the worke of Gods spirit hath two parts 422. 1 The propertie of the workes of the spirit a treatise 442. 33 The efficacie of the spirit 443. 6 What it is to liue and walke in the spirit 452. 453 A signe whereby to know whether a man hath in his heart the spirit of God or no. 454 4 Spirituall men opposed to carnall are of two sorts 463. 24 Spirituall men are more fitte to restore those that are fallen then any other 463. 31 Diuers good and euill things are tearmed by the name of spirit 466. 5. Two kinds of spyings 85. 6 Of standing fast in libertie the manner and time of it 372. 17 Two kinds of subiection 269. 11 Subiection to the spirit hath two parts vide Spirit Succession is of three sorts 35. 3 The successours of the first preachers had an ordinarie calling 35. 17. Fiue vses of our sufferings 170. 10 T A propertie of false teachers is to vrge earnestly their owne ceremonies vpon others 617. 20 A propertie of false teachers to teach false doctrine for auoiding of persecution 618. 26 The essentiall difference betweene true and false teachers 619. 24 Another propertie of false teachers to compell others to obserue that which they themselues will not obserue 622. 18 Another note of false teachers to pretend religion to cloake their wickednes 623. 36 The propertie of false teachers is to set a faire show vpon the matter 611. 14. Temperance what foure rules for the practising of it 448. 3 By what law Tēths are due 232. 3 10 Of what value the testimonie of the Church is 33. 4 There must be a christian toleration one of another for the maintenance of church peace 409. 16 In what it stands ibid. 17 To what end it serues 409. 32 Whether there may not be a tolleration for Popery 409. 37 Vnwritten Traditions tendered as a part of gods word are abominations 24. 29 The church is troubled three waies 391. 33. Reasons to mooue men to speake deale truly 447. 26 The time of all euents determined by God 49. 2 Due time how it may be vnderstood 582. 13 We must make a holy profitable vse of time 598. 1 We must redeeme the time lost in three respects ibid. 37 Obseruations of times which be forbidden 600. 6 The kindes of vnlawfull obseruation of time either Iewish or Heathnish and wherein they consist 600. 11 Lawfull obseruation of time twofold diuine or humane 601. 4 Humane obseruation of time threefold 601. 5 V What the desire of vaine glorie is 454. 33 Excuses hereof taken away ibid. 38 They that haue receiued good gifts of God are many times most vaineglorious 455. 38 Remedies of pride and vaineglorie 456. 20. What vncleanes is 425. 21 Of our vnion with Christ. 145. 23 264. 39. Substantiall and spirituall 264. 30 In what respect they are said to be one with Christ 265. 1 Vnitie is not an infallible inseperable marke of the church 407. 18 Though men were not commanded to vow yet the matter and forme of vowes was commanded 60. 5 W What wantonnes is 425. 28 Reasons both in general and speciall that make men wearie of well doing 576. 38 How farre forth the will worketh in the receiuing of grace 11. 16 The absolute will of God cannot be resisted 360. 36 The determination of mans will by the will of god doth not abolish all freedome of will 361. 4 Man hath no freedome of will in good duties before his conuersion 417. 13 What witchcrafteis a treatise of the ground and kindes of it 429. 16 What is a witch 430. 38 Signes that serue to discouer a witch 431. 29. False and vncertaine signes 342. 1 Wiues among the Iewes of two sorts 343. 23 The word is the cause and obiect of our faith 6. 32 The word of God is the matter of the ministerie and how it is to be taught heard 29. 30 35 It depends not vpon the authoritie of the church 56. 11 But vpon it selfe 77. 18 The word must be dispensed in the infirmitie of mans flesh for diuerse causes vide preach Labourers in the word may lawfully take wages though they haue sufficient of their owne to maintaine themselues 543. 18 There be no meritorious workes to
preparemen to their iustification 11. 13. How our workes are said to please God 191. 19 The workes of the regenerate are mixed and sinnefull and in the rigour of iustice deserue damnatiō ergo no iustification by workes 515. 9. The benefit of approouing of our workes 515. 9 How we may aprooue our workes three rules 515. 16 Whether we may not approoue our workes or actions to men and if we may how farre forth 515. 29 Infants haue no good workes 553. 8. Gods reward shall be according to the quantitie and qualitie of the workes and what may be gathered from thence 555. 25 How Lazarus and the theife on the crosse had good works 553. 27 Workes and laboures of men may differ three waies and what they be 556. 37 Vses that God rewardeth men according to their workes 559. 560 561. 562. Workes though they be seedes yet are they no causes of eternall life 564. 565. 31. That workes are seedes of eternall life it is gods mercie and not the merit of the workes 565. 35 Workes of the flesh perfectly euill and why 566. 5 Good works perfect as they are of god imperfect as they are of mē 566. 12. Reasons why the workes of the spirit are not the cause of eternall life as well as badd workes are the cause of eternall destruction 566. tota pag. Obiections of the Papists to prooue workes the causes of eternall life answered Beginning at pag. 561 line 31. vsque ad pag. 572. Workes no cause of our reward but the measure 568. 2 Good workes make a man knowne to be iust but faith m 〈…〉 him iust 567. 32 Good workes are causes of eternall life not as meriting but as the kings high way 568. 25 How life eternall is promised to good workes how not 569. 6 The promise of reward vpon condition of performing the worke maketh not a meritorious worke 569. 29. Reward not due to workes of regeneration vpon compacte and promise the reasons why 569. 20. Good workes merit not eternall life though it be a reward of them page 569. in fine and page 570. 571. How life eternall is called a reward of good works 570. 11. 571. 5 That we may incite our selues to the dooing of good workes from the consideration of our heauenly reward sundrie reasons 579. 29. In dooing good workes we may respect the reward but not onely nor principally 581. 31 What should most of all mooue vs to doe good workes 581. 32 The loue of the world and of the truth cannot stand together 619 33. What is meant by the world and what it is to be taken out of the world 13. 37 Y Two kindes of yeelding 87. 18 Z Zeale what it is 45. 20 FINIS 2. Tim. 3. 16. 2. Pet. 1. 20. 1. Tim. 6. 20. Eph. 6. 17. Esa. 8. 20. Ioh. 5. 9. Mal. 1 2. Deut 6 8. Hugo de S. Vi●t de Script Scriptor ●●cris l●● 1. c. 1. Deut. 4. 2. Matth 5. 13. Psal 19. 10. Psal 119. 98. c. 2 Tim. 3. 15. Act. 2. 〈◊〉 Iam 1 21. Ier. 2. 13. Ferdinaud Vellosill Epis. Luc. in praef in aduer Schol. Theol Nec Script nec Doctores vel a limino solutaste Laert. de vit Philos. lib. 1. in Thal. Epist. ad Leander 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sleidan lib. 6. Coster Enchir. controvers c 1. Socrat. lib. 7. cap. 32. Sixt. Senens in praefat in Bib. 1. Tim. 1 4. Sixt Sen. Bibl. lib. 4. Tetrus Ximenes Episc. Cauriens a. Cor. 3. Non tam Commentarios quam indicie 〈…〉 lorum Hieron proam in 1. 〈…〉 m Esai 2. Tim. 3. 16. Symbolica Theologia 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 argumentatiua Thom. 1. Cor. 1 ●3 Volusian ad Nicol. 2. 2. Pet. 3 16. Eccles. 〈◊〉 6. 2. Sam. 〈◊〉 30. Eph. 3. 4. o In his Prophetica Gal. 6. 〈◊〉 Phil●m v. ●8 Ioh 5. 35. Ioh. 2. 3● Rom. 1. 5. Act. 13. 33. Rom. 10. 14. 1. Cor. 16. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apoc. 5. 10. Math. 9. 38. Eph. 4. 11. Act. 20. 28. Psal. 105. 15. Rom. 8. 28. Rom. 〈◊〉 Lev. 10. 1. 2. Reg. 16. 11. Rev. 2. 24. Deut. 22. 9. 2. Tim. 4. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 o Praeter quam Contra Petilian l. 3 c. 6. o Non aliud quid amp 〈…〉 us Debono viduitatis c. 1. Math. 5. 48. Iob. 13. 15. v. 26. Term 25 de verbi Apest. Theodoret. bist lib. 4. c. 16. Luk. 10. 16. o I learned nothing or I was not taught o ' Simulatè non verè Matth. 11. 1● Luk. 10. 18. 〈◊〉 Cor. 10. 4. Homil. 2. in Act 〈◊〉 Ioh. 3. 9. Germ. ad mil. Temp. c. 11. Epist 190. o Cr●dere Fac 〈…〉 Aug. de ●●pt concup l. 1. c 33. ad Bon. l. 〈◊〉 c. ●3 o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thom. Summ. p. 〈◊〉 q 62. art 4. Bellar. de Sact. l. 2. c. 11. De consid ad Eugen. Vxor materfamilias Vxor Vsuaria o ●us●in in q●●st Act. 12. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Traef lib. 8. de bello Gall. Sanos homines à scribendo d●terruit 〈…〉 c. ad Bru●ū Sue●on in C●s. cap. 56. Michael de Montaign in his Estayes the 5 6 7 8. Ethic. lib. 4. c. 3. 1. Macchab. 1. 60. Confess lib. 8. cap. 12. Act. 8. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Anchorat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist. Rhet. ad Th●●d lib. 〈◊〉 c●p 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O 〈…〉 Hierom in hunc loc●m Gen 49. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 4. 9. Philip. 2. 4. de verb. dom ●orm 16. Muff●t Aut●umus a●t ●uimus vel po 〈…〉 es●e quod hi●●st 2. Tim. 4. 2. De verb. Dom. se 〈…〉 16. v. 15. Me 〈…〉 s est v● pe●eat●nus q 〈…〉 m 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ero● Act. 24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 17 Rom 14. 1. and 15. 1. Prou. 19. 11. 〈◊〉 Po● ●5 Duro con duro no● fa bon 〈…〉 o. August ser● 21. de verbi Apost 〈◊〉 hun● locu●●x August 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 13. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophylactus Sic Hugo de S. Victor lio quast in Epist. ad Rom q. 308. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●omes 〈◊〉 Rom. 7. 23. Exod. 20 Deut. ●8 Deut 13 Rom. 8. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damaseenus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plutarch in Alexandro Phil. 2. 3. Phil. 2. 10. v. 11. Psal. 8. 4. o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Math. 5. 16. Rom. 12. 17. Ioh. 5. 41. o 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 24. 26. Onus rationis ●●dden ●ae●onus inf●●mitatis participandae August contra ●cript Petil. lib. 3. Beda Lumbard i● hunc ●ocum Hugo d● S. Victor in 〈◊〉 qu●st 58. In se●●inali principio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Decima●io ●x●rci●●s 2. Cor. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉