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A54583 A learned, pious, and practical commentary, upon the Gospel according to St. Mark wherein the sacred text is logically analyzed; the meaning of the holy Spirit clearly and soundly opened: doctrines naturally raised, strongly confirmed, vindicated from exceptions, and excellent inferences deduced from them: all seeming differences in the history between this and the other evangelists fairly reconciled: many important cases of conscience, judiciously, succinctly, and perspicuously solved. By that laborious and faithful servant of Christ, Mr. George Petter, late Minister of the Gospel at Bread in Sussex. Petter, George. 1661 (1661) Wing P1888; ESTC R220413 2,138,384 918

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is meant of John Baptist who should be the fore-runner of Christ and should come in the Spirit and Power of Elias as is said Luke 1. 17. and as our Saviour himself doth interpret the place after as we shall hear See also Matth. 11. 14. Like to this errour of the Scribes is that of Papists touching the coming of Henoch and Elias three years and an half before the end of the World Grounded upon the false interpretation of that place Rev. 11. 3. Observ 1 Observ 1. That Christians may be well grounded in the true Faith and Doctrine of Christ and yet not able to answer such doubts and difficulties as may arise or be objected by enemies against the Truth As here the Disciples of Christ were grounded in the truth of Christ's Person and Office being throughly perswaded that he was the true Messiah and yet they were not able to answer to the contrary Objections of the Scribes nor to convince or disprove their Errors This is matter of comfort for such as do hold the sound Truth in main matters of Faith and Religion by warrant from the Word of God being able from thence to prove the same though they be not able by reason of their ignorance of some places of Scripture to answer and confute the contrary Doubts Objections which do arise or which are alledged against the Truth by Hereticks and Sectaries as Papists Anabaptists Brownists c. Though it is a matter necessary to Salvation for every Christian to understand and believe the Truth in fundamental points of Faith yet is it not of like necessity for every one to be able to confute the contrary Errours or to answer all contrary Doubts and Objections of others against the Truth Ignorance in the main and fundamentall Truths and positive Doctrines of Faith doth prejudice the Salvation of a Christian but unability to answer and confute all contrary Errours and Objections is not prejudicial to the Salvation of any And yet nevertheless this hinders not but that every Christian should labour for as much knowledge in the Scriptures as is possible that so he may not only hold the Truth but be able also in some measure at least to answer and confute the contrary Errours c. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Disciples being doubtful in this matter and not able to resolve themselves do propound their Doubt unto Christ their Master to be resolved by him not trusting herein to their own Wit Knowledge or Judgment we may hence gather what is fit for us to do in such Questions Doubts or Controversies of Faith and Religion wherein we are not able to resolve our selves viz. To propound them unto others that have more Knowledge and Judgment than our selves and to seek Resolution from them but especially we are to seek to Christ that is to his Word and Ministers Malach. 2. 7. The Priests lips should keep Knowledge and they should seek the Law at his Mouth c. The Disciples used to go to Christ for Resolution in their Doubts in matters of Faith whensoever they could not resolve themselves As Chap. 4. 10. when they could not understand his Parables they went to him in private and asked him the meaning of them So Mat. 24. 3. when they were doubtful about the time of the Destruction of Jerusalem and of Christ's coming and the end of the World they propounded their doubts to Christ So should we in all our doubts seek to Christ that is to his written Word c. withal seek to him by Prayer Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the Scribes being men of great place and Office amongst the Jews did hold and teach this grosse Errour touching the personal coming of Elias we learn that no outward Calling or Office in the Church though never so great doth priviledge or exempt men from Errours in matters of Faith and Religion but such as are of highest Place and Calling in the Church may erre and have erred in matters of Faith So the Scribes and Pharisees though men of great Place and Calling in the Church of the Jews in our Saviour's time yet were tainted with many gross and dangerous Errours in matters of Faith in so much that our Saviour was fain to warn his Disciples to beware of the Leaven of their Errours Ut supra Chap. 8. 15. They erred grosly in their Expositions of the Law as may appear Mat. 7. 5. and Matth. 23. They erred also as grosly in their Opinions of Christ of his Doctrine and Miracles as we have often heard before So also did the High-Priests and chief Priests insomuch as they all conspired together with the other Jews to put Christ to death Joh. 11. 47. Neither is this true onely of those which were open Enemies of Christ but even of the Apostles themselves For although as Apostles in execution of their Office of Preaching and Writing the Books of the New Testament they could not erre being immediately inspired by the Holy Ghost yet in the particular matters of Faith when they were left to themselves and not enlightned or guided by the Holy Ghost they were subject to Errour and did erre grosly As for example In supposing Christ's Kingdom to be earthly accompanied with temporal Glory and Prosperity as appeareth Act. 1. 6. it was the common Errour of all the Apostles So Act. 10. 14. Peter himself erred in a matter of Faith touching the Calling of the Gentiles and touching the abrogating of the ceremonial Law about the distinction of clean and unclean meats And if it were thus with the Apostles how much more with all their Successours c. Hence is it that the most excellent of the ancient Fathers which were of highest place and dignity in the Church had every one their Errours So those of latter times Luther Calvin c. Use 1 Vse 1. To convince the Pride and Arrogancy of the Pope of Rome holding himself to be priviledged from Errour in matters of Faith by vertue of his Office But herein he doth arrogate to himself a Priviledge above all Bishops and Pastors of the Church that ever were before him yea above the Apostles themselves and that without all ground from the Word of God yea contrary to the same Use 2 Vse 2. For admonition to such as are of highest Place and Calling in the Church not to presume too much upon the dignity of their Calling as if this could exempt them from Errour in matters of Faith but be humble-minded and to pray and seek to God continually for the light and direction of his Holy S●irit to lead them into all necessary truth and to preserve them from contrary Errours For otherwise if God leave them to themselves they may fall into as gross and dangerous Errours as any other c. Use 3 Vse 3. This must teach us not to tye our selves to the Judgment or Opinions of men in matters of Faith not to build our Faith and Religion upon men though of never so high
our temptations to us will give strength to us in them and a good issue out of them in due time 1 Cor. 10. 13. Qui dat potestatem tentatori ipse tentato praebet miserecordiam Austin He that gives leave to Satan to tempt us will restrain him that he shall not tempt us above our strength Use 2 Vse 2. Seeing all temptations come to us from God as the first cause Satan being but his Instrument this must teach us not to use any unlawful means to be freed and delivered out of our temptations Onely fly unto God for his help by prayer and wait for his deliverance He onely can set thee free and give an issue Use 3 Vse 3. This shews that it is good for God's Children to be tempted and tryed of Satan for whatsoever God by his special providence appointeth unto them must needs be good for them Indeed the Devil's temptations in themselves are evil because they are entisements unto sin but in respect of God's disposing and ordering of them they may be good and are good unto the faithful because the Lord in mercy turns them unto their good See Rom. 8. 28. Quest Quest How are Satan's temptations good unto us Answ Answ Sundry waies 1. They give us experience of God's love in aiding us in them 2. They serve to humble us in the sense of our own vileness and corrupt nature which is so fit for the Devil to work upon So Paul 2 Cor. 12. 3. They shew us our weakness and insufficiency to resist such temptations 4. They teach us watchfulness against sin which giveth Satan such advantage to tempt us So much of this first Observation Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour Christ went not of his own private motion to be tempted but being driven and effectually moved by the Holy Ghost to go hence learn not wilfully to cast our selves upon dangers troubles or temptations without warrant and calling from God Keep within compass of our Callings and adventure to do nothing but by vertue of a calling from God and then if troubles or trials or dangers befall us we may say we are led and driven into them by God's providence and direction as Christ was led and driven by the Spirit to be tempted of Satan See Paul's example for this Act. 20. 22. He went bound in the Spirit by the motion of the Spirit to Jerusalem there to suffer bonds and afflictions Use Vse This reproveth the rashness and folly of such who willingly bring troubles on themselves by their own negligence or heedlessness by doing such things as they have no calling to do thus they are the procuring causes of their own troubles and so they cannot look for God's protection in them If thou wouldst find confort in any trouble take heed thy self be not the cause of it but see thy self led or driven into it by the providence of God then maist thou have assurance that he will not forsake thee in that trouble which himself hath drawn thee into Observ 3 Observ 3. Although this motion of the Spirit whereby our Saviour was driven into the Wilderness were extraordinary yet we are thus farr to imitate it That as he went not into the Wilderness but by the direction of the Spirit so we must in all our waies yield our selves to be guided by the motions and directions of the Holy Ghost wit●in us Rom. 8. 14. So many as are led by the Spirit they are sons of God Noah went into the Ark and out of it by God's direction so must we in all actions follow the direction of God's Spirit Now this Spirit alwaies directs us according to the rule of the written Word therefore look into that and follow it Let it be as a Lantern to thy feet c. as to David Psal 119. See his example also Psal 27. 8. But I will not insist on this So much of the Author of Christ's driving Now follows the place whither he was driven The Wilderness Observ Observ In that he was led into a solitary Desert to be tempted we may observe That such as separate themselves from humane society and give themselves willingly to live in solitariness they do hereby give great advantage to the Devil to tempt them The Devil delights in forlorn and desolate places as may appear Mar. 5. 5. ●nd there he chooseth especially to tempt men because in being solitary they want those helps and comforts which in society they might have Hence is that Eccless 4. 10. Woe to him that is alone c. It is probable as some think that Eve was first tempted by the Devil when she was alone and apart from her Husband So Paraeus in Gen. 3. 6. and Mr. Perkins Comb. of Christ and Devil Use 1 Vse 1. This condemns the practise of Popish Hermits which forsake humane society and betake themselves to solitary place● under pretence of being more free from Satan's temptations but this is the way to cast themselves upon his temptations Eccles Woe to him that is alone c. Use 2 Vse 2. Take heed how we give our selves too much to solitariness lest we lay our selves open to the Devil's assaults Our Saviour having a special calling to it and knowing himself stronger than the Devil gave him this advantage that he might tempt him in a solitary VVilderness but we having no such calling or strength must not give him the least advantage Let us then frequent the society of the Saints where we may have help against Satan's temptations Mark 1. 13. And he was there in the Wilderness forty dayes tempted of Satan and was with the wild beasts and the Angels ministred unto him Sept. 6. 1618. IN this Verse and the former is laid down the History of Christ's temptations In which I considered three things 1. A preparative to his temptations which was his being driven of the Spirit into the VVilderness Ver. 12. 2. The temptations themselves in the beginning of this 13th Verse 3. The issue or event in the end of this Verse The Angels ministred c. Touching the first thing viz. The Preparation to his temptations I have spoken upon the former Verse Now I come to the temptations themselves with the circumstances of them They are briefly touched by St. Mark in the beginning of this Verse whereas Matthew and Luke set them down more at large but I will speak of them onely so far as our Evangelist giveth occasion In the words consider two things 1. The Temptations themselves in these words tempted of Satan 2. The Circumstances of them 1. The place where he was tempted The Wilderness 2. The continuance of time How long Forty daies 3. The outward state and condition in which our Saviour was during the time of his temptation He was with wild beasts In the Wilderness VVhat wilderness this was we heard it probably shewed upon the former Verse we heard also the Reason why our Saviour yielded himself to be tempted in a desolate wilderness that
Luke 1. 35. Again as he was Holy and Pure from Sin in his Conception and Birth so also in his whole Life in that he was perfectly conformable to the Law of God the Rule of Holiness 2. In regard of his Church he is Holy conveying and communicating his Holinesse to the Faithfull sanctifying his Church See 1 Cor. 1. 30. Eph. 5. 25. Use 1 Use 1. Comfort to the Faithful that are lively Members of Christ He will impart his holinesse to them sanctifying them by his Spirit And besides the inherent holiness of his own Person is imputed to them of God upon their believing in his Christ This may comfort them against the manifold impurities and sinfull corruptions which they find and complain of in themselves Use 2 Use 2. Strive to resemble Christ in holinesse labouring for a sanctifyed Heart and Life c. The more holy the more like unto Christ Mark 1. 25 26. And Jesus rebuked him saying Hold thy peace and come out of Him And when the unclean Jan. 3. 1618. Spirit had torn him and cryed with a loud Voyce he came out of him VVEE have heard of the Description of the Person upon whom this Miracle was wrought Now followeth the Miracle it self concerning which two things are recorded by the Evangelist in these two Verses 1. The means freely used by our Saviour in casting out the unclean Spirit viz. The words which he spake to him consisting of two Parts 1. A Reproof 2. An Injunction commanding him to be silent and to go out of the party possessed Ver. 25. The second thing is the effects which the words of our Saviour wrought upon the unclean Spirit causing him 1. To tear the Body of him that was possessed 2. To cry Out 3. To go out of the Party Rebuked him Or sharply Reproved him for confessing him Hold thy peace Or be Dumb or Silent Quest Quest Why doth our Saviour Rebuke him for confessing him and enjoyn him silence Answ Answ 1. Because the Devil was no fit person to professe Christ or his Truth and that because he is the Father of lies and the greatest emeny to Christ and his Truth Therefore our Saviour would not accept of his confession 2. Because he knew the Devil confessed the Truth with an evil intent and purpose and for sinister ends as we have heard before viz. 1. To flatter Christ and to perswade him if it might be to let him alone and not to cast him out 2. To discredit the Truth by his Testimony 3. To perswade the People that our Saviour had some commerce and fellowship with Satan and used his help in working Miracles because he seemed to commend and honour him so much Now our Saviour knowing the Devil's Hypocrisie and deceitfulness in confessing him for such evil ends doth therefore reprove him and command him silence 3. The time of the full manifestation of Christ's glory was not yet come c. It followeth in the words And when the unclean Spirit had torn him That is tortured his Body with much pain either by racking the Members or joynts of it o● by 〈◊〉 it violently from place to place for it is said Luke 4. 35. That he threw him into the midst of them yet withall it is 〈…〉 That he hurt him not that is though he put him to great pain and torture yet he had no power to maim any membe● 〈…〉 of his body but the man remained whole and sound having all the limbs of his Body perfect after the Devils going out of him Quest Quest Why did the Devil thus torture him immediately before his going out Answ Answ To shew how unwilling and loath he was to be dispossessed and cast out therefore he would do all the hurt he could before he went out Therefore also it follows That he cryed out aloud not onely for fear of Christ's Power but also to shew how he was vexed and grieved at this that he must be cast out shewing his unwillingness to leave his Hold. He cryed Out Not that he uttered any words or speech as he did before but onely a confused hideous noyse expressing his fear and grief for that he must be thrown out So much of the sense of the words in these two Verses Observ 1 Observ 1. In that our Saviour would not suffer the unclean Spirit to confesse him we learn That it is good wisdom for us not to hearken to the Devil though he speak that which is true in it self Reas Reas Because Joh. 8. 44. he is a Murtherer from the Beginning and abode not in the Truth because there is no Truth in him when he speaketh a lye then speaketh he of his own for he is a lyar and the Father thereof Though he sometimes utter that which is true in it self yet it is not true as it proceeds from him because he speaketh with a lying false and deceitfull intent and purpose that he may insnare us Matth. 4. 6. The Devil spake truth in alledging Scripture yet because he spake it with a deceitfull and lying intention our Saviour would not hearken to his perswasion Use 1 Use 1. How much more are such to be blamed who give heed to Satan when he speaketh that which is false As for example when he perswades them that it shall be for their good if they will yield to his suggestions that they shall gain much profit and pleasure by it as he perswaded Eve So when he perswades Men that they may come to Heaven without Faith or Repentance or that they may escape Hell though they continue in their sins These things being utterly false in themselve● what folly and madness is it for men to believe the Devil when he speaketh such things If he be not to be hearkened to when he speaks Truth because he speaks it with a lying intention then much lesse should we hearken to him when he speaketh things utterly false in themselves Use 2 Use 2. Have nothing to do with Satan nor give any heed at all to any thing when he speaketh or perswadeth seek not to learn the Truth of Satan c. Whether it be true or false in it self yet still that which he speaketh is false and deceitfull as it comes from him because in every thing that he speaketh he intends our hurt and mischief Gen. 3. 5. When the Devil perswaded Eve that if they would taste of the forbidden Tree they should come to know Good and Evil this was true in some sense but the Devil spake it with a lying and deceitful purpose Therefore it had bin far better for her not to have hearkened to him Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour commandeth the evil Spirit to be silent and to go out and he is forced to obey his command Hence we learn That Christ is Lord over the wicked Angels having absolute Power and Authority over them to over-rule them at his pleasure If he had this Power and Authority over them while he lived on Earth in
make to be reconciled If any of us were sick of such a disease as but one Physitian in the world could cure it what shift and means would we make to have the help of that one Physitian c. See more of this point upon chap. 11. v. 25. So much of those things which were commendable in these Scribes Now from the Consideration of those things which were Evill and discommendable in them we may also observe some points of Instruction Observ 1 Observ 1. In that they do maliciously Interpret the words of our Saviour taking them in the worst sense whereas they might have Interpreted them more favourably we may see that it is one property of malice to take the saying and doings of others in Evill part and to give a hard censure of them without cause Rom. 1. 29. The sin of Malignity or taking things in evill part is joyned with the sin of Malice in the Heathen to shew that they commonly go together Thus the Jews shewed their malice in taking the words of Christ in evill part Joh. 2. 20. See also Mark 3. 22. Vse Use Take heed of this Malicious practise of taking things done or spoken by others in the worst sense It is contrary to Love which thinks not evill 1 Cor. 13. 5. namely without just cause and sufficient ground therefore when things are doubtfully spoken or done make the best of them not the worst We know not with what mind or Intention things are spoken and done by others therefore judge favourably We would not have others take our sayings or doings with the left hand or in the worst sense c. Observ 2 Observ 2. It is no new thing for such as live most Innocently and Uprightly to be falsly accused of crimes whereof they are not Guilty Our Saviour Christ himself though he were most Innocent and free from all spot of sin and though he spake and did all things well yet was often falsly accused sometimes as a Glutton or Drunkard and a friend to Publicans and sinners sometimes as one that wrought Miracles by Belzebub sometimes as a Traytor to Caesar and enemy to the state and sometime as a Blasphemer as we see here And many other example we have of those that being Innocent and upright have been charged with false crimes So Joseph Daniel Stephen Paul c. Use Use Comfort to those that make Conscience of their wayes though they be evill spoken of or evill thought of without cause yea sometimes for well-doing and though wicked men lay false crimes to their charge yet no cause is there for them to be discouraged let them in this case remember the example of Christ himself and many others of the Faithfull who were wrongfully accused being Innocent look not to escape better then these have done The Devill is still like himself that is an accuser of the Brethren and one that stirs up wicked men his Instruments to accuse them and to speak and think evill of them without cause Nos modo id agamus ut nemo de nobis male loqui absque mendacio possit as Hierom saith Epist 14. ad Caelant Let it be our care so to live and carry our selves that no man may be able to speak evill of us without a Lye Observ 3 Observ 3. Lastly Observe here that these Scribes though men of great place and Authority among the Jews being Doctors and expounders of the Law yet do here shew their ignorance and error touching the person of Christ judging of him as of a meer man whence we may gather that no place or calling in the Church can exempt men from Error and ignorance in matters of Faith Joh. 1. 21. the Pharisees erred grosly touching John Baptist thinking that he was either Christ or Eliah And this we see in daily experience that Men of great place and Authority in the Church have their errors and oversights and do discover their ignorance in some things Use 1 Use 1. Therefore men of greatest place in the Church had need aswell as meaner persons to pray unto God for the Guidance of his Spirit to lead them into the Truth and to preserve them from Error for it is not the greatness or excellency of their place or calling that can exempt them from it Use 2 Use 2. This also teacheth us to take heed that we tye not our selves to the Judgment and Opinions of such men as are of great place and Calling in the Church for they are not exempted from Error but are lyable to it aswell as meaner persons therefore examine their Opinions by the Word of God and follow them onely so far as they agree with that 1 Thess 5. 20. Try all things c. Mark 2. 8 9 10 11 12. And immediately when Jesus perceived in his Spirit that they so reasoned within themselves May 9. 1619. He said unto them Why reason ye these things in your Hearts Whether is it easyer to say to the sick of the Palsy Thy Sins be forgiven thee or to say Arise and take up thy Bed and walk But that ye may know that the Son of Man hath power on Earth to forgive Sins He saith to the sick of the Palsy I say unto thee Arise and take up thy Bed and go thy way unto thy House And immediately he arose took up the Bed and went forth before them all insomuch that they were all amazed and Glorified God saying We never saw it on this fashion IN the two former Verses we have heard how the Scribes took exception against our Saviour Christ for pronouncing remission of sins to the sick of the Palsy Now in the 8 and 9. Verses is laid down the answer of our Saviour unto that their Cavill and his confutation of it Where 1. Consider the occasion of his confuting them viz. this that he perceived in his Spirit their reasonings against him c. 2. The Answer and confutation itself In which 1. He reproveth them in those words Why reason ye these things in your hearts 2. He confuteth their Cavill and accusation by proving that he had power and Authority to forgive sins and therefore that he Blasphemed not in pronouncing forgiveness to the sick and this he proveth by a comparison of equalls for he compareth the Act of Forgiving sins with the act of Miraculous curing of the sick of the Palsy shewing that these two are equall in respect of difficulty of performance and therefore if he have power to do the one that is to cure the Palsy Miraculously then also he hath power to do the other that is to forgive sins Now that he hath power to do the former he gives them a reall proof immediately by actuall curing the sick of the Palsy and that miraculously before their faces as we shall see ver 10. c. Perceiving in his Spirit That is By his Divine Nature So Heb. 9. 14. He offred himself by the Eternall Spirit c. so also 1 Pet. 3. 18. He was
commit it 2. That it makes them guilty of eternal damnation and the latter of these is a consequent of the former Touching the first Point viz. the nature of this sin it is here set out 1. By the Object of it or the Person against whom it is said to be committed viz. the Holy Ghost 2. By the quality or kind of it that it is said to be a blasphemy Whoso shall blaspheme c. This sin is said to be committed against the Holy Ghost rather then against God the Father or the Sonne not in respect of the Essence or Person of the Holy Ghost for so it is no more against him then against the other two Persons in Trinity but in respect of the special Operation and Work of the Holy Ghost in the hearts of men whereby he doth enlighten them with the knowledg of the Divine Truth of the Word of God and perswade them of the certainty of it This illumination and perswasion being the special and immediate work of the Holy Ghost therefore they that sin against this light and perswasion are said to sin against the Holy Ghost Now touching the quality of the Sin it is said to be a blasphemy and they that commit it are said to blaspheme against the Holy Ghost that is to speak reproachfully against him not because this sin consisteth onely or chiefly in the external uttering of blasphemous words against the light of the Spirit for the sin it self doth chiefly consist in the inward malice of the heart against God and against his Spirit but it is called a Blaspemy 1. Because it is usually if not alwayes joyned with outward blasphemous speeches uttered against the light of the Spirit as we see it was in Scribes and Pharisees here 2. Because this outward blasphemy in words is more apparant to others then the inward malice of the heart against God Now having cleared the sense of the words that we may more fully conceive the na●ure of this sin I will here lay down a brief description of it which may be gathered partly out of this Text and partly out of Hebr. 6. 4. 10. 26. where this sin is spoken of It may therefore be thus described The sin against the Holy Ghost is a voluntary and malitious opposing of the known truth of the Word of God joyned with an universal Apostacy from God In this Description Five things are contained which are as so many steps and degrees of sin all which do concur and meet together in the sin against the Holy Ghost 1. It is an opposing of the truth of the Word of God This opposition is twofold 1. Inward in the Heart by contemning and hating the truth 2. Outward both in word and deed 1. In word by blaspheming and speaking evil of it and against it Whence this sin is called a blasphemy against the Spirit as we heard before 2. In Deed by persecuting the truth and the Professors of it 2. It is an opposition of the known truth So Heb. 10. 26. If we sin willingly after we have received the knowledg of the truth c. And Heb. 6. 4 5. They that commit this sin are such as have first been inlightned and that have tasted of the good word of God And these places shew that the Truth is not onely known but acknowledged and some sweetness tasted in it by those that commit this sin 3. It is a voluntarily opposition of the known truth Heb. 10. 26. If we sin willingly c. 4. It is a malitious or despightful opposing of the known truth Heb. 10. 29. such as commit this sin are said to despite the Spirit of grace that is despitefully and of set malice to abuse and offer wrong to the Spirit and unto the Divine truth of the Word revealed to them by that Spirit And in the same Verse They are said to tread under foot the Sonne of God which argues a malitious opposing against the known Truth of the Gospel concerning Christ And Verse 27. they are called Adversaries that is malitious enemies of God himself and of his truth And Chap. 6. 6. They are said to Crucifie the Sonne of God afresh and to put him to open shame All this shews that in the sin against the Holy Ghost there is alwayes a despiteful and malitious opposing of the truth that is known 5. It is joyned with an Universal Apostacy c. See Heb. 6. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now by the foresaid Description of this Sin it is distinguished from some other Sins which seem to have affinity with it As 1. From sins against knowledg which Gods Elect Children may and do often fall into as David and Peter 2. From malitious persecuting of the Truth which may be done of Ignorance as by Paul before his Conversion as we see 1 Tim. 1. 13. 3. From that denyal of Christ or of his Truth which is caused by fear of death or of some other danger and which is yielded unto through Infirmity as we see in Peter denying Christ of infirmity for fear of death which he was in danger of if he had openly confessed him But in the Sin against the Holy Ghost there is a voluntary and wilfull denying of Christ and of the Truth 4. From sins of presumption of which there are two kinds or degrees The first when one goeth on in known sin presuming upon Gods mercy and perswading himself that he may repent when he will See Deut. 29. 19. I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of my heart c. This is the sin of most men and great number are guilty of it who yet never come so far as to commit the sin against the Holy Ghost The second kind of presumptuous sins is when a man sinneth wilfully in contempt of the Law of God making slight of it This is called a sin with an high hand Numb 15. 30. which was to be punished with death See an example in Manasseh 2 Chrom 33. 6. And though this be a fearful sin and such as cometh near to the sin against the Holy Ghost yet it is not the sin against the Holy Ghost for this is when one doth not onely sin wilfully and contemptuously but also of set malice and spight against God and his Truth 5. And lastly by the foresaid description the Sin against the Holy Ghost is distinguished from infidelity and impenitency which may be for a time in Gods Elect who cannot commit the Sin against the Holy Ghost as we shall see afterwards yea further by the foresaid description it is distinguished from final unbelief and impenitency which all the Reprobates are guilty of and yet they do not all fall into the Sin against the Holy Ghost for many Reprobates are damned which never commit this Sin Besides if finall unbelief or finall impenitency were the Sin against the Holy Ghost then none could be guilty of this Sin untill their death and so that caveat of Saint John should be in vain
Hearers resembled by the second sort of ground which is the stony ground and these go beyond the former sort for they onely heard and understood it in their minds but these are also affected in heart with the Doctrine in some degree and measure receiving it with gladness but yet because it doth not throughly and effectually enter into their hearts so as to be truly rooted in them therefore they do not hold out in their good affection to the Word but in time of trouble and Persecution arising for the Word do revolt and fall away from their first Profession And this sort of hearers may be called the inconstant or temporary hearers because though they begin well in shewing some affection to the Word for a time yet they continue not therein And these are fitly compared to stony ground where seed is sowen and that chiefly in two respects 1. As stony ground hath some little earth or mould in which the seed sowen taketh some shallow rooting and therefore springeth up quickly so these Hearers though their hearts be very stony and much hardned in sin yet not so hard but there is some degree of goodness in them and some softness and pliableness to the Word which maketh them to be in some measure affected with hearing it and to give it some shallow entrance and that very soon upon the hearing of it 2. As seed sown in stony ground though it have some shallow rooting and do suddenly spring up and make a good shew a while yet being not rooted deep enough is not able long to endure the heat of the Sun but is at length scorched and withereth So these temporary hearers though they give the Word some shallow entrance into their Hearts at first being affected with it and do for a while make a fair shew of profiting by it and of giving true entertainment to it yet because the Word is not rooted deep enough in their Hearts they are not able to indure the heat of Persecution stirred up for the Word but are offended thereat and fall away from their first Affection But to come unto the words of the Text more nearly In them is contained a Description of these temporary Hearers 1. By the things which are commendable and good in them 1. They hear the Word 2. They receive it 3. They receive it with gladness 4. They immediately receive it with gladness 2. They are described by those things which are discommendable and wherein they fail Vers 17. 1. They have no root in themselves 2. They indure but for a time And this latter is proved by the event or issue which falleth out afterward viz. That when trouble ariseth for the Word's sake immediately they are offended Which are sowen on stony ground That is those hearers of the Word who are resembled by the stony ground where seed is sown Immediately So soon as they have heard it Receive it Not onely into their minds and understandings as the former sort of hearers did but into their hearts and Affections in some degree believing the truth of it loving it and rejoycing in it in some measure and for a time Luk. 8. 13. For a while they believe With gladnesse Rejoycing in the Doctrine delivered when they hear and understand the same So much of the Words Observ Observ Here we see that unprofitable Hearers of the Word may go very far in many properties and duties of the profitable hearer and yet be still unprofitable 1. They may be outward hearers for so are all the three sorts of unprofitable Hearers 2. They may understand and conceive the Doctrine taught as the first sort of hearers do as we have before shewed 3. They may in some degree give it entrance into their Hearts by believing it and giving assent to the truth of it and making some kind of Application of it to themselves Luke 8. 13. they are said to believe for a while So Simon Magus Act. 8. 13. believed the Doctrine o● Philip they may also be affected in heart with some kind of Love and desire to the Word and with a kind of delight and joy in it So it is here said that these temporary hearers so soon as they have heard do immediately receive the Word with gladness So Mark 6. 20. Herod heard John Baptist gladly And Joh. 5. 35. The Jews for a season were willing to rejoyce in the light of John's Doctrine Hebr. 6. 5. a Reprobate may taste the good Word of God that is feel some kind of sweetness and delight in it 4. He may do this speedily at the first hearing of the Word c. Object Object Most excellent Promises are made in Scripture to such as are in heart affected with joy and delight in the Word Prov. 2. 10. When Wisedome entreth into thy Heart and Knowledg delighteth thy Soul Discretion shall preserve thee Understanding shall keep thee Psal 1. 2. Blessed are such as delight in the Law of God Psal 112. 1. Blessed is the man that delighteth greatly in Gods Commandments Answ Answ Understand these places not of every kind of joy or delight in the Word of God for Herod rejoyced in the Word and yet was not blessed but of a true sound and sincere joy and delight in it But of the sincerity of this joy in the Word and of other sound affections to it and how they differ from counterfeit I shall speak more in the uses of this point unto which now I come Vse 1 Use 1. This being so that unprofitable hearers may go so far in doing many good things and yet be still unprofitable Hence we may gather further that one may go very far in the Profession of Christianity and outward practice of it be almost a Christian with Agrippa and yet be no sound Christian He may go far in a shew of Religion and yet be without the power of Godliness in heart He may come near unto saving Grace and yet never be partaker of it in a word he may be near the Kingdome of Heaven and yet never enter into it See Hebr. 6. 4. how far Reprobates may go in Christianity They may be enlightned and taste of the Heavenly gift and be partakers of the Holy Ghost that is of many excellent gifts of the Spirit they may also taste the good Word of God and the powers of the World to come and yet for all this be in a damnable estate The truth is men may go so far in a shew of Christianity as not onely to deceive others by perswading them to think them better then indeed they are but also to deceive their own hearts being falsly perswaded that they are good Christians when it is nothing so Let this move every one to take heed of deceiving others and himself by a shew of Religion and by a false perswasion that he is in state of saving Grace when he is not so and let it move all to labour for the power of Religion in their hearts and for sound
useth all means to hinder us from it so let us use all means to get it Especially these 1. Search the Scriptures which testifie of Christ Joh. 5. 39. 2. Come diligently to the publike Ministery of the Word by which Christ is plainly described and set forth to us as the Apostle sheweth Gal. 3. 1. 3. Pray unto God to reveal unto us the true and saving knowledg of his Son Christ Jesus As none knoweth the Father but the Son and he to whom the Son revealeth him Matth. 11. 27. So no man knoweth the Son but the Father and he to whom the Father will reveal him And here we must remember not to rest onely in a bare historical and general knowledg of the Person and Offices of Christ which wicked men and devils have but labour for an effectual knowledg of faith applying him and his benefits to our selves c. Vse 2 Use 2. See whose Instruments they are and by whom set awork who any way hinder others from the sound knowledg of Christ or to hold them in errours touching his Person or Office even the Devil's Instruments and Factors they are in this Such are the Papists who barr the common people from reading the Scriptures which testifie of Christ And whosoever they be among us that any way discourage others from reading the Scriptures or from frequenting the Word preached that they may learn Christ aright Observ 2 Observ 2. In that here is mention of so many different Opinions of Christ and yet all false and erroneous We may hence gather That howsoever there is but one truth in all matters of Religion which are questionable yet there are manifold errours by which men may swerve from the truth There is but one right way of truth laid out in the Word of God but there are many crooked and by-paths found out by Satan by which he leads men into errours heresie and false opinions There is but one true Faith and Religion which is from God but many false and counterfeit kinds of faith and religion in which Satan laboureth to hold men as at this day the Religion of the Turks Jews Papists Anabaptists c. all false Religions and in the mean time there is but one true Faith and Religion of Christ which we profess and know to be the truth Use Use See then how careful we had need be to know and learn the sound truth in all matters needful to salvation and to hold it fast when we have learned it to buy the truth and not to sell it again as Solomon speaketh Prov. 23. 23. we must be very careful hereof because there being but one Truth and manifold Errours and false Opinions in matters of Religion it must needs be a matter of much difficulty to search out and hold that one truth amidst so many errours and to walk with a right foot in that one true way not turning to the right or left seeing there are so many crooked paths to turn us out of it If a man be to travel a Way that hath many turnings he will be the more fearful of losing his way and the more careful to keep in it and to be still enquiring of such as know it So in matters of Religion there being but one true and right way we must be the more careful to know it and to walk in it To this end we must be diligent in searching the Scriptures in which the Lord hath plainly revealed all truths needful to salvation and pray unto God that he will by his good Spirit lead us into those truths Observ 3 Observ 3. Further in that not only Herod himself but the Jews also which lived under his Jurisdiction in Galilee did hold such grosse and absurd Opinions of Christ we may Observe That such as depart from the Word of God do usually run into grosse and absurd Errours in matters of Religion This was the cause that these Galilean Jews under Herod did run into these gross errours touching Christ that they did not keep themselves to the doctrine of the Prophets which had plainly foretold both the time and manner of the Messiah's coming therefore if they had kept them to those Prophecies they could not have erred so grosly touching Christ but they forsook those Prophecies at least the true sense and meaning of them and followed their own unwritten Traditions and hence grew those absurd opinions which they held So Mark 7. 8. our Saviour sheweth this to be the cause of the gross Errours of the Scribes and Pharisees both in judgment and practise because they laid aside the Commandment of God and held the Traditions of men as washing of pots and cups c. So Jer. 8. 9. They have rejected the Word of the Lord and what wisdom is in them As if he should say There can be no true wisdome or sound knowledg and judgment in them but they must needs run into foolish and absurd errours This also was the cause of the absurd Errours which the Sadduces held that they did not keep themselves to the Scriptures Matth. 22. 29. Ye do erre saith our Saviour to them not knowing the Scriptures c. See Act. 23. 8. And what is the cause of the many grosse and absurd errours of the Papists at this day but even this That they keep not to the written Word but lean rather to their unwritten Traditions Popes Decrees Testimonies of Fathers Councels c. So What led the Popish Schoolmen into such absurd Errours but the leaving of the Scriptures and giving themselves too much to the study of Philosophy Reas 1 Reasons of this Doctrine 1. The written Word of God is the only sure and perfect Rule of all truth in matters of Religion and the touchstone to try it by It is the Word of Truth containing in it nothing but truth without all mixture of errours yea it is truth it self Joh. 17. 17. neither is any word or doctrine or Opinion of man true but that which is consonant to this Word of God therefore to leave the Rule and Direction of this Word must needs be the way to all absurd and gross Errours Reas 2 Reas 2. It is just with God thus to punish the contempt of his Word in those that forsake the Rule of it by giving them over to gross Errours 2 Thess 2. 10. Because they received not the love of the truth For this cause God shall send them strong delusion that they should believe a lye Vse Use If we would not be given over justly of God to gross and absurd Errours in matters of Religion beware of leaving the Rule and Touchstone of Truth which is the written Word of God beware of contemning it and of neglecting to read it and meditate in it daily and to hear it preached by God's Ministers This neglect and contempt of the written Word is the ready way to all errours and even those that are most gross and dangerous Hence come ten thousand evils or mischiefs sayes
for so the words may be translated See Scultet Observat in Matth. Cap. 48. Now although this Reprehension of Peter thus given by him to Christ did proceed from a good intent and meaning and partly from his love and good will to Christ his Master as there is no doubt being loath and unwilling to hear of Christ's Death and Sufferings yet neverthelesse in this Action of reproving Christ he did greatly sin and offend as is plain by that sharp and severe reproof which our Saviour gives him for it in the Verse following Quest Quest How or wherein did Peter offend in this reproving of Christ Answ Answ 1. In taking upon him to blame or find fault with Christ himself whom he had so newly confessed to be the Son of God whence he should have concluded That he that was the Son of God could not erre or be faulty either in doing or speaking any thing amisse Therefore in that he did not stick to blame and charge Christ as faulty this was great rashnesse folly and presumption in him He should rather have further questioned with Christ touching that which he doubted of or he should have dealt with him by way of humble intreaty and not by way of reproof 2. In opposing his own Opinion and Judgment against the expresse words of Christ For whereas he had directly affirmed that he wa● to suffer many things yea that he must Suffer c. notwithstanding all this Peter sticks not to affirm the contrary This shall not be unto thee whereas he should have rested absolutely in the bare words of Christ This savoured of naturall pride c. 3. In giving perverse and evil Counsell ●o our Saviour perswading Him not to Do and Suffer that which he had affirmed that He ought to Do and Suffer viz. To go up to Jerusalme c. Such Counsell as if it had been imbraced the work of our Redemption had been hindred Quest Quest What were the Causes of this grosse fault and sin of Peter Answ Answ 1. His ignorance in the Mystery of Christ's Death and Sufferings and of the causes and reasons thereof For although Christ had now plainly told him and the rest of the Disciples that He must Dye and Suffer yet Peter neither could nor did yet conceive how it could stand with the truth of Christ's God-head and excellency of his Person to Dye and Suffer so many and grievous things 2. Another cause was that grosse Errour of the Jews then holden with which the Apostles also were tainted That the Messiah should have an Earthly Kingdom accompanyed with outward Glory and Prosperity which therefore Peter could not see how it could stand with that great abasement by Dying and Suffering which our Saviour foretold them of See Matth. 20. 21. in the sons of Zebedee And Acts 1. 6. 3. A naturall loathness and unwillingness which was in Peter as also in the other Disciples to hear of the Crosse and Afflictions which they might well think would be occasioned to them by the Death and Sufferings of Christ their Master 4. Too much carnall love and desire of Christ's bodily presence which made him loath to hear of his being taken away by Death c. Observ 1 Observ 1. That the best Saints of God in this Life are tainted with sinfull Infirmities and Corruptions with many and great Corruptions Peter himself an Apostle of Christ yea one of the most eminent Apostles for Zeal and other Graces yet how many and great Corruptions did he discover in this one Action of reproving Christ at this time See this Point handled before Chap. 3. Ver. 31. Quest Quest Why doth the Lord suffer such corruptions to remain in his Saints and Children after their effectuall Calling Answ Answ For these Reasons 1. To humble them in the sense and feeling of these corruptions and to keep them from being puffed up with Pride in respect of the Graces in them 2 Cor. 12. 7. Lest he should be exalted above measure by Revelations a Thorn was given him in the Flesh c. 2. That they may have matter in themselves with which to be continually exercised in fighting and striving against their corruptions and infirmities 3. To wean them from the love of this World and of this present life and to stir up in them a longing after the life to come in which they shall be perfectly sanctified and freed from this body of sinfull Corruption Rom. 7. 24. O wretched man Who shall deliver me c Observ 2 Observ 2. That Ignorance in some main Points and Doctrines of Faith for a time may stand with sanctifying Grace in such as are effectually called or that such as are effectually called and sanctified may for a time be ignorant in some main and principal Doctrines of Faith and Christian Religion As here Peter though a chosen and sanctified Apostle yet was ignorant of the Doctrine of Christ's Death and Passion as appeareth by his blaming of Christ for affirming that he must dy and suffer So likewise the other Apostles were ignorant of this Doctrine and of his Resurrection and so continued long time after this as may appear Luke 18. 34. yea till the very time of the fulfilling of them as we have heard before See more of this before Chap. 4. 10. and afterward Chap. 9. 10. and Joh. 20. 9. Vse Use Comfort to such Christians as are yet but weak in Knowledge so that their hearts be upright and that they make conscience of practising those things they do already know God will in due time reveal to them a greater light of Knowledge in all Points and Doctrines needful to Salvation He will by his sanctifying Spirit lead them into all necessary truth so that they conscionably use the means to grow in Knowledge The Apostles themselves were for a time ignorant of sundry main Doctrines of Faith but afterward they were clearly revealed to them Observ 3 Observ 3. ●n that Peter took our Saviour aside to reprove him thereby shewing a reverent respect to his Person although he otherwise greatly offended in the Reproof it self this is commendable in him And hence we may learn how to carry our selves if at any time we be to give a Christian Admonition to our Superiours viz. to do it with due respect and reverence to the Person in regard of his preheminence above us 1 Tim. 5. 1. Rebuke not an Elder but entreat him as a Father c. Though we may admonish a Superiour of a fault in some Cases yet not in the same manner as we do an inferiour or equal but with a reverent regard to his place and dignity we are in this case to minister such an admonition in such manner and with such Circumstances as may stand with the dignity and place of the Person admonished Mark 8. 33. But when He had turned about c. Aug. 28. 1625. IN the end of the former Verse ye heard of Peter's carriage toward our Saviour upon the hearing of that Prophecy
this matter of founder judgment and did see the truth more clearly than the Apostles themselves whence observe that sometimes men of meaner gifts and place in the Church may see the truth and judg better in matters of Religion then those of greater gifts and place Joh. 3. 8. As the Wind bloweth where it listeth c. So doth the Lord give his Spirit of illumination when and to whom he pleaseth to open their eyes to see the truth in matters of Religion Luke 10. 21. I thank thee O Father c. that thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto Babes c. Joh. 7. 48. The common people saw Christ to be the Messiah and believed in him when the Pharisees and Rulers did ●ot Vse Vse This must teach us not to contemn the Judgment of the meanest Christian in matters of Religion but to hearken to it and be ruled by it so far as it is agreeable to the Word of God Observ 3 Observ 3. This reproof of the Disciples could not chuse but be a great tryall to the Parents of these little Children and a means to discourage and hinder them if they would be hindered in this good work of bringing their Children to Christ in that their commendable practice was thus blamed and condemned by such as were so near unto Christ This may teach us that we are to look for discouragements at the hands of others in good duties yea sometimes at the hands of such as are of eminent place and authority in the Church who should rather encourage and further us in such duties Cant. 5. 7. when the Church had lost the comfortable presence of Christ for a time and did thereupon carefully and diligently seek after him to find him again it is said the watchmen of the City which are the Ministers of the Church who should have helped her to find Christ meeting with her did smite and wound her and take away her vail Thi● being so it shews what need there is for us to be armed before-hand with courage and resolution in practice of good duties lest otherwise we be daunted therein if we meet with discouragements and opposition from others especially from such as are of any eminent place in the Church for we shall find this to be no small tryall therefore great need have we to prepare for it that we may bear and go through it and not be discouraged thereby or hindered in well-doing A man that is wife for the World if he undertake some matter which he thinks will be greatly for his benefit and do suspect that some or other will go about to oppose or hinder him he will arm himself before-hand with a resolution not to be discouraged c. So should we c. Mark 10. 14. But when Jesus saw it c. May 11 1628. OF the fact of those that brought their little Children to Christ to be blessed or prayed for we have heard as also of the fact of Christ's Disciples blaming or reproving such as brought them Now follows the carriage of our Saviour in this case both toward his Disciples and toward the little Children Touching his carriage towards his Disciples two things are set down 1. That when he saw it He was much displeased 2. That he shewed his displeasure by his words uttered to them willing or commanding them to suffer little Children to come unto him and not to forbid them yielding a reason hereof because Of such is the Kingdome of God Of the first He was much displeased Or had indignation at the fact of the Disciples in reproving such as brought the Children to him The cause of his great displeasure was the greatnesse of the fault and offence of the Disciples in this rash and unadvised action of blaming those that brought the Children to Christ whereby they did as much as lay in them both hinder the good of the Children depriving them of the benefit of Christ's blessing and Prayers and also discourage the Parents in that good work of charity and mercy to their Children An● this fault of the Disciples was also the greater because our Saviour not long before testified his love to little Children by calling such a one to him taking it in his arms and setting it in the midst of them as a pattern of humility as we heard chap. 9. 36. Observ 1 Observ 1. That it is lawfull and fit for us to be offended and displeased at the sins of others whereby they dishonour God This is a good and holy kind of anger or indignation which was in our Saviour Christ as we see here and chap. 3. 5. He looked angerly upon the Scribes and Pharisees c. It hath also been in other the best Saints of God and is commended in them in Scripture In Moses Exod. 32. 19. when he saw the Israelites dishonour God by the Idolatrous Calf his anger waxed hot c. In Nehemiah chap. 5. 6. when he heard the cry of the poor c. In Paul Act. 17. 16. his spirit stirred within him c. Ephes 4. 26. Be angry and sin not To be understood of this lawfull and holy anger conceived against the sins or others c. Reason Reas This kind of displeasure or indignation against the sins of others is a part of that zeal for Gods glory which is required to be in us for zeal is a mixt affection consisting partly of grief for the sins of others as in David Psal 119. 136. Rivers of waters run down my eyes c. and partly of indignation or displeasure against others sins Use 1 Use 1. To condemn the want of this holy affection of anger and displeasure against the sins of others in many Christians yea in the most There is much carnall and sinfull anger in them but little or no holy indignation against sin when they see or heart that God is dishonoured by the sins of others as by swearing drunkennesse profanation of the Lords Day c. their spirits are not stirred in them If themselves be wronged or abused never so little they can soon be moved to displeasure yea they can be hot as fire in their own cause when the matter toucheth themselves but in the cause of God they are cold as Ice not affected with it they take it not to heart which shews want of love to God and of true zeal for his Glory And if ever there were cause to complain of this want surely now in these evill and declining times For who is there now almost to be found like unto Elias zealous for the Lord of Hosts c. Vse 2 Vse 2. To stir us up to labour for this good and holy kind of anger or displeasure against the sins of others which was in our Saviour Christ and hath been in other the best Saints of God and seeing it is a part of that holy and Religious zeal for Gods glory which ought to be in us and must be in
A Learned Pious and Practical COMMENTARY Upon the GOSPEL According to St. MARK WHEREIN The Sacred Text is Logically Analysed The meaning of the holy Spirit clearly and soundly opened Doctrines naturally raised strongly confirmed vindicated from Exceptions and excellent Inferences deduced from them All seeming Differences in the History between this and the other Evangelists fairly reconciled Many important Cases of Conscience Judiciously Succinctly and Perspicuously solved By that Laborious and Faithful Servant of Christ Mr. George Petter late Minister of the Gospel at Bread in Sussex Luke 24. 32. Did not our heart burn within us c. while he opened to us the Scriptures 2 Tim. 4. 11. Take Mark and bring him with thee For he is profitable to me for the Ministry Non potuit latere Marcum quid scriberet Nec enim inexpers erat lectionis qui ab infantiâ divinis literis imbutus exercitatus erat in lege maximè cum Apostolos sit secutus Augustin Operum Tom. 4. in part 2. Questionum ex Novo Testamento Col. 738. Edit Basil 1569. Habebat Paulus Titum interpretem Sicut Beatus Petrus Marcum Cujus Evangelium Petro narrante illo scribente compositum est Hieronym Hedibiae quaest 11. part 154. Tom. 3. Edit Lugdun 1530. LONDON Printed by J. Streater and are to be sold by George Saw-bridge at the Bible on Ludgate-Hill MDCLXI THE Preface to the Pious Reader THE Four Evangelists are by some compared to four stately white Horses drawing the Triumphant Chariot of the Gospel wherein the Lord Jesus rides gloriously in his Imperial Seat throughout the World Others refer them as Mystical Jerom in praef ad Comment in Math. Anti-Types to the four Cherubims in Solomon's Temple or the four living Creatures in the Visions of Ezekiel supporting the Throne of the Divine Majesty with their Wings lifted up on high Each of which Cherubims had four Heads or Faces That which had the face of a Lion the Ancients say did represent our holy Evangelist St. Mark Because the first thing that we read of in the beginning of his heavenly Gospel is as it were the roaring Voice of a Lion in the Desarts The Voice of one crying in the Mark 1. 3. Wilderness Prepare ye the way of the Lord make his paths streight This blessed Man is reported to have been born in the Land of Judaea possibly at Jerusalem the Head City if that be true which some conceive that the Disciples were met secretly at the House of his Mother Mary when Act. 12. 12. Peter was let out of Prison by the Angel For the Text tells us expresly that he came to the House of Mary the Mother of John whose Sirname was Mark. He was Nephew to Barnabas if that be the same Person of whom the Apostle Paul writes in his Epistle to the Colossians Some have Col. 4. 10 conceited that he was the Son of Peter the Apostle because he styles him 1 Pet. 5. 13. so in his Epistle to the dispersed Jews But I rather understand it according to Oecumenius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That he was his Son begotten in the Faith as Paul calls Timothy other-where I know Carion takes him to be Peter's Carion p. 589. Sister's Son and so pro more Gentis according to the rate of the Hebrews speaking of their Kindred called his Son Others deem him to be so called because of his Youth and his continual Attendance to and Assistance of Peter in the Ministry of the Gospel For by Irenaeus he is called The Iren. haeres lib. 3. c. 1. Disciple and Interpreter of Peter committing those things to writing which he received from the Dictate of Peter Jerom relates concerning him Ib. supra that he was the first Bishop of the Church of God at Alexandria in Aegypt and acquaints us moreover that it was the Tradition in his time That he did not see the Lord our Saviour in the Flesh yet that what he compiled he received from Peter's own Mouth and hath compendiously recited the History of our Lord exactly according with the Divine Truth though not in all Points in precise Order of time The same learned Father in his Catalogue of Ecclesiastical Writers translated into Greek by Sophronius observes further That St. Mark wrote this Evangelical Treatise in Italy even at Rome it self at the request of the Brethren Others say at the desire and by the direction and inditing of Peter if so as most probable then I question whether it were written at Rome For it is greatly controverted and more likely on the Negative that Peter never was at Rome whatsoever the old and bold Lyars of the Popish strain do assert But however it appears from Evidences of great Antiquity that it was approved by Peter and by his Apostolick Authority set forth to be read in the Churches of Christ as Clemens cited by Jerom in the sixth Book of his Hypotyposis hath written Papias also the Bishop of Hierapolis in Syria who lived very anciently and was the Auditor and Disciple of St. John the beloved Disciple doth make a notable mention of this Sacred Author And Philo Judaeus seeing the Order of the Church by him erected in Aegypt what time he went Embassadour to the Emperour in the behalf of his Country-men the Jews highly commended the great Charity Community Holiness and Continency of the lives of St. Mark 's Disciples It is reported by Epiphanius truly in general a grave Author but yet it is to be feared in those Collections of Haeresies and other matters that he over-ruled his Pen too much by common fame that our holy Evangelist was one of those Disciples who not understanding the Mystery of eating the Flesh of Christ fell from him and walked no more with him Joh. 6. 66 but afterwards repenting became a Proselyte to the Gospel This Story is taken up by Baronius and other sequacious Pens whereas there be Casaub in Exerc. 15 in Baron many and those of high Repute and Antiquity who assert that our Holy Man never saw our Lord walking in the Vally of his Incarnation Eutychius in his short recital of the Foundation of the Alexandrian Eutych Edit Seld●n Church tells us several Stories of this Person upon what a strange occasion he was instrumental by a miraculous Cure of the Finger of one Ananias a Sutor of that City towards the Conversion of him to the Faith and afterwards he did constitute him the first Patriarch of that Seat The main of which Story being crept into the Fabulous Legends I leave to the Childish Affectors of Jacobus de Voragine and such kind of tremendous Lyars and Impostors to be asserted and proved Out of more serious and grave Relators it appears that this Holy Man dyed in the eighth Hieron Euseb l. 2. c. 24. Hist Eccles Dorotheus Year of Nero and the 63d after our Lord's Birth and was buried at Alexandria Some say he was crowned with
beginning of the solemn publishing of the doctine of the Gospel or The preaching of the Gospel began first in the ministery and preaching of John Gospel of Jesus Christ It is so called in two respects chiefly 1. Because Christ Jesus as he is God is the Authour of this Doctrine 2. Because 〈…〉 principal subject and matter of this doctrine The Son of God Christ is 〈…〉 God not in respect of Creation as Adam and the Angels nor of Adoption as the faithfull but in respect of eternal generation in that he was begotten of God the Father Now this begetting was by communicating the whole Divine essence of the Father unto him from all eternity after an unspeakable manner Note that Christ is begotten of the Father not as he is God if we speak properly but as he is the Son for he is God of himself as well as the Father but his person is from the Father The Godhead of the Son was not begotten of the Godhead of the Father but the person of the Son was begotten of the person of the Father or thus He hath the beginning of his person from the Father but not the beginning of his essence and nature So much for the sense of the words which being thus explained we may consider these two things in them 1. The Prerogative of John Baptist his Ministery or preaching in that it was the beginning or first publishing of the Gospel 2. A description of the doctrine of the Gospel 1. By the name given it The Gospel 2. By the Authour and Matter of it Christ Jesus who is also set forth to us further by a special title or attribute the Son of God Now let us see what matter of Instruction may be gathered from this Verse Obser 1 First From this that the ministery of John is called the beginning of the Gospel That John Baptist was the first preacher and publisher of the doctrine of the Gospel it was his priviledge to be the first preacher of Christ and of the doctrine of salvation by Christ. See Luke 16. 16. Math. 11. 13. All the Prophets and the Law prophesyed unto John Though Moses and the Prophets spake more obscurely of Christ and of salvation by him yet none preached this doctrine so plainly and evidently before the time of John Baptist He was the first plain and express preacher of the Gospel in respect of which honour done unto him he is said in the 11. Verse of that Chapter to be the greatest of those that were begotten of Women before his time that is greater then any of the Prophets of the Old Testament which is to be understood not in respect of his person simply but in regard of this prerogative of his office and ministry that it was the first beginning of the plain preaching of the Gospel Use See our happiness who live in these times since the Gospel hath been thus clearly taught by John Baptist the first publisher of it yea not onely by him but by Christ himself also who followed John and by the Apostles and Ministers of Christ who have followed since Eph. 3. 5. The mystery of Christ in other Ages was not opened unto the Sons of Men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit They that lived before John Baptist had the Gospel darkly preached in the Sermons of Moses and the Prophets which were but as a candle shining in a dark place 2 Pet. 1. 19. But we now have the Gospel plainly and clearly taught in the Sermons of John Baptist the first that ever preached Christ directly and plainly and not onely in his Sermons but in the Sermons of Christ himself and his Apostles This is our great priviledge and happiness that now there is a clearer manifestation of the Gospel than ever was before John Baptist's time so that we may come now to a clearer knowledge and discerning of Christ than they could possibly attain to who lived in the times of the Old Testament This must stir us up unto true thankfulnesse to God for this his mercy to us that live in this Age of the World since the first publishing of the Gospel in such clear manner and withall it must move us to open our eyes to look upon this clear light of the Gospel which now hath long shined ever since John Baptist's time and beware that we shut them not against it as many do which continue still in grosse ignorance of the doctrine of Christ notwithstanding it hath now been so long time most clearly published But let us remember that speech of our Saviour Joh. 3. 19. This is the condemnation that light came into the World and men loved darknesse rather than light c. Take heed how thou continue and live in ignorance of the Golpel in these times wherein so clear a light of it shineth for as Paul saith to the Corinthians if our Gospel be now hid it is hid to those that perish c. 2 Cor. 4. 4. So much of the prerogative of Johns Ministery Now followeth the description of the doctrine of the Gospel his verbis The Gospel of Jesus Christ. Obser From the nature of the word Gospel signifying good tydings we may observe the excellency of this doctrine of the Gospel It is such a doctrine as containeth the most gladsome tydings and message that ever was sent from God unto mankind Namely the tydings of salvation by Jesus Christ therefore called the Gospel of our salvation Eph. 1. 13. To this purpose is that prophesie of Christ Esay 61. 1. that the Lord anointed him and sent him to preach good tydings unto the poor by which good tydings is meant nothing else but the doctrine of the Gospel and comfortable promises of it So Rom. 10. 15. How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tydings of good things So Luke 2. 10. The Angel preaching Christ to the Shepherds tells them that he brings them good tydings of great joy that shall be to all People All which places shew the excellency of the doctrine of the Gospel contained in it and such happy and joyfull tydings concerning our reconciliation with God and salvation by Jesus Christ for what news or tydings can be more excellent and blessed than the tydings of forgiveness of sins peace with God and eternal salvation of our souls Use 1 To stir us up to a love and liking of this doctrine and to cause us with all readiness to embrace believe and obey it in our hearts and lives How gladly do we entertain good news touching our Body Goods Friends or outward Estate how welcome is it to us See Prov. 25. 25. And shall not this blessed tydings of the salvation of our souls by Christ which is brought to us in the Gospel be much more welcome to us Is not the news of Liberty welcome to the Prisoner the news of a pardon from the Prince welcome to the condemned Malefactor And
not up the way of Christ and barr him out of thy heart for he will not come or enter into a heart full fraught with sinfull Lusts purge out these therefore that thy heart may be fit to entertain Christ Labour also for true Faith in Christ that by it thou mayst be fitted to receive Him and that He may come to dwell in thee Do not think that ever Christ will come into thy heart to dwell there or that thou canst ever be fit to receive Him if thou be not carefull of preparing thy self to entertain Him Will any earthly Prince go to take up his lodging in such a House or City where he knows there will be no preparation for his entertainment Surely no more will Christ come to lodge in that heart that is not made ready to receive him Mark 1. 4. John did baptize in the Wilderness and preach the baptism of Repentance for the remission of sins June 28. 1618. IN the two former Verses we have heard of the ground and warrant of John Baptist his Calling to the Ministry in that it was foretold by two of the Prophets Malachi and Esay Now followeth the second thing laid down by St. Mark touching the Ministery of John Baptist viz. the Execution of his Ministery and Office And this is ●aid 〈◊〉 in the several parts of it which are two The I. is his Baptizing The II. is his Preaching Touching the I. We have to consider 1. The Ministeriall Duty it 〈◊〉 which is Baptizing 2. The Circumstance of the place In the Wilderness John did Baptize That is he did administer to the People the Sacrament of Baptism The word doth properly signifie to wash with Water or to dipp into Water as Mark 7. 4. But here it is peculiarly applyed to the administration of the Sacrament of Baptism to signifie that solemn Sacramental washing Now for the more full clearing of these words I will here take occasion to speak something in general touching this Sacrament of Baptism And concerning it I shall speak of these five points chiefly 1. Shew what Baptism is 2. Of the Matter of it 3. Of the outward Form of it 4. Of the Efficacy of it 5. Of the Necessity of it Touching the first Point VVhat is Baptism A. It is that Sacrament wherein by the outward washing of Water our engraffing into Christ and our first entrance into the State of Grace is represented and sealed to us This Description puts difference between Baptism and the Lord's Supper for this that is the Lord's Supper doth seal to us our growth in Christ and our continuall nourishing and strengthening in Grace but Baptism serveth to seal unto us our first entrance into Grace and engraffing into Christ therefore it is called The washing of the new Birth and the putting on of Christ Gal. 3. 27. And hence is it that we receive Baptism but once but the Lords Supper often Touching the second Point Namely the matter and parts of this Sacrament The parts of it are two The outward signes and the spirituall matters signified by them The outward signes in Baptism are two The first is the Element of Water The second is the Rite or Sacramentall action that is used about the Water which is the washing or sprinkling of the Party that is baptized with it The things signified in Baptism are these The Element of Water doth signifie and represent two things unto us 1. The blood of Christ that is the Merits and Vertue of Christ's sufferings 2. The spirit of Christ and the powerfull operation of it Joh. 3. 6. The outward washing with water doth signifie unto us the inward washing of Regeneration or new Birth under which is comprehended both our justification and sanctification our justification wherein the guilt of sin is purged by the blood of Christ 1 Joh. 1. 7. and our sanctification wherein the corruption of sin is so purged away and so mortified by the spirit of Christ that it raign not in us See for all this 1 Cor. 6. 11. and Tit. 3. 5. See the excellency of this Sacrament sealing such excellent things to us contemn it not Parents present your children to it in due time The third thing to be spoken of is the outward form or manner of Administring the Sacrament of Baptism and this is prescribed by our Saviour Christ Math. 28. 19. Go teach all Nations Baptizing them in the Name of the Father c. Quest VVhat is it to be baptized in the name of the Trinity Ans This implyeth three things 1. To be baptized by the VVill and Commandment of the three Persons in Trinity So much this phrase sometimes implyeth as Mat. 18. 20. Where two or three are gathered together in my Name c. 2. To be baptized with invocation and calling upon the Name of the true God who is one Essence in three Persons So Col. 3. 17. Whatsoever ye do do all in the Name of the Lord Jesus c. 3. To be baptized in token that we yield and give our selves up unto the true God as his Children and Servants to have his Name called over us and to do his VVill in our lives See 1 Cor. 1. 13. See what we profess at our Baptism viz. to give up our selves as Servants to the true God renouncing the service of Satan c. This therefore we must practise c. The 4. Point is touching the efficacy of Baptism Quest Whether it be effectuall to work Grace and Regeneration Answ Not of it self by any natural force in the outward element of Water or in the outward washing but only by the power operation of the Holy Ghost accompanying the outward Sacrament in the right use of it Joh. 3. 5. Except a man be born of Water and of the Spirit c. It is Christ alone that baptizeth with the Holy Ghost and with fire c. Ver. 8. of this Chap. The outward Sacrament of Baptism therefore to speak properly doth not confer or work Grace but it is onely a Mean and Instrument by which the Holy Ghost doth work Grace Use 1 This confutes the Papists who teach that the outward act of Baptism ex opere operato doth confer Grace See Rhem. on Joh. 3. 5. But this cannot be for these Reasons 1. This were to tye the grace of God and the special work of his Spirit unto the outward element of Water and outward action of the Minister contrary to that of our Saviour to Nicodemus Joh. 3. The wind bloweth where it listeth c. 2. Then every one that is baptized should be regenerate and consequently saved the contrary whereof appeareth in Simon Magus 3. To work Grace or Regeneration where it was not before is as great a work yea greater than to create something of nothing Now this is proper to God onely so is that also Regeneration is a new Creation and therefore both these have one Author even God himself Object 1 Pet. 3. 21. Baptism saveth us c.
some sort partake in that honour in that they are his Brethren So it is with all faithful Christians Christ Jesus their eldest Brother being advanced to great Dignity they all do in some degree partake with him in his honour and dignity in that they are his Brethren See then the Dignity of good Christians well may such be called the excellent of the earth Psal 16. 3. What though thou be scorned reproached despised in the World Let this comfort thee If thou be a Believer in Christ thou hast honour enough in that Christ Jesus the Son of God who is more excellent than the Angels is thy eldest Brother thy Husband thy Head Use 3 Vse 3. See how honourable a thing it is to be a Professor of Christ and of his Religion and Gospel If it be an honour to bear the cognisance or to wear the cloath of some Noble man or Prince How much greater Dignity is it to bear the name of Christ being baptized into it and to make Profession of his Word Be not then ashamed of this Profession before men See Luke 9. 26. Imitate the Martyrs in professing and confessing Christ and his Truth boldly even to the Death Vse 4 Vse 4. Seeing Christ is so worthy a Person let us accompt it our honour to serve him it is an honour to do service to an earthly Prince Let us esteem it our greatest honour that we are admitted of Christ Jesus the King of Kings to do him service to hear his Word to pray to him to praise his name c. Rejoice and glory in this that thou art called to perform these excellent services to Christ and shew thy readiness to perform them upon all occasions Think how unworthy thou art to perform such great and excellent services as these are unto Christ seeing John Baptist thought himself unworthy of so mean a service as to unloose the latchet of Christ's shoo So Luke 7. The woman wiped Christ's feet with the haire of her head John counted this an honourable service How much more honourable a service is it to hear the Word of Christ preached to thee to speak to him in Prayer to partake in his Sacrament c. Wouldst thou be willing to unloose Christ's shoo if he were now on earth Oh be much more forward to hear him speak to thee out of his Word and to speak to him by thy Prayers to relieve and help his poor Saints c. These are farr more acceptable services to Christ than the unloosing of his shoo Obser 2 Obser 4. I am not worthy c. Here further we learn by the example of John's humility that the Servants of Christ especially his Ministers such as John was must carry a mean opinion and conceipt of themselves and of their own gifts though never so excellent John was a man of extraordinary parts and gifts for it is said Luke 1. 17. that he should go before Christ in the spirit and power of Eliah and yet we see here how he doth abase himself in his own opinion thinking himself unworthy to do the meanest service unto Christ. Thus it must be with all the Servants of Christ they must be low in their own eyes and think humbly of themselves Christ himself teacheth this lesson in special to all his Disciples and Servants Mat. 11. 29. Learn of me that I am lowly in heart c. The same is taught by the Apostle Ephes 4. 2. Col. 3. 12. Especially Ministers of Christ must be humble-minded See the Example of Paul 1 Cor. 15. 9. I am the least of the Apostles not worthy to be called an Apostle c. Use 1 Use 1. This condemns the Pride and haughriness of such Ministers or others who are lifted up so high in a conceipt of their own gifts and good parts thinking themselve to be something in themselves like that proud Pharisee Luke 18. who stood so much upon his own goodness and righteousness But remember that Gal. 6. 3. If any seem to be something when he is nothing he deceiveth himself in his own imagination The fuller the Vessel is of Aire the emptier of good Wine it is So a Christian the fuller he is with self-conceipt of his own goodness holiness c. the more empty he is of Grace and Goodness Vse 2 Use 2. If we would shew our selves to be Christ's Servants labour for true humility and lowliness of mind especially we that are Ministers we must be patterns of humility to others learn this of him our Master Seek lowliness as it is said Zeph. 2. 3. Labour more and more for a sense of our unworthiness of the least of God's favours as Jacob Gen. 32. 10. Mark 1. 8. I indeed have baptized you with water but He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost August 2. 1618. IN the former verse John Baptist shewed the Dignity of Christ's Person in comparison of his own Person extolling Christ as one mightier than himself and abasing himself as unworthy to do the least service unto him Now in this Verse he setteth forth the Dignity or Excellency of Christ's Office in comparison of his own Office which he executed in and about the Sacrament of Baptism Where he sheweth First The meanness of his own Office in that he onely baptized with Water externally 2ly The excellency and pre-eminence of Christ's Office in that he should baptize them inwardly with the Holy Ghost I have baptized you with Water John's purpose here is not to compare his outward Baptism with the outward Baptism of Christ administred either by himself or his Apostles for as for himself he never baptized any Joh. 4. 2. And as for the Baptism which he commanded his Apostles to administer here is no mention at all of it in this Text neither have the words of this Verse any relation to it But the purpose of John is to compare his Office or Ministry in Baptism with the Office and work of Christ in or about Baptism in that his own Office is to wash the Body with Water but the work of Christ is to cleanse the Soul by the Holy Ghost But he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost that is by the divine operation and vertue of his Holy Spirit he shall purge your souls and consciences from sin Now from this place the Papists would gather a substantial difference between the Baptism of John and the Baptism of Christ which he commanded his Apostles afterwards to administer For they say that John's Baptism did not remit sins nor was comparable to Christ's Baptism that is the Baptism of the Apostles instituted by Christ but it was onely a preparative to the Baptism of Christ by which alone Grace and Forgiveness of sins was conferred actually See the Rhemists on Matth. 3. 11. and on Mar. 1. 4. But this their Collection is easily confuted For first It is against the scope of the words which is not to shew any substantial difference between the outward Baptism administred by
John and that which was after administred by Christ's Apostles but only to shew a difference between the Office and Function of John in giving the outward Sacrament and between the Office or work of Christ in giving the Spirit by means of the outward Baptism The words imply not two distinct Baptisms but only two distinct actions or works about and in the same Baptism the one of John washing the Body with Water the other of Christ cleansing the Soul by his Spirit 2. If John's Baptism was onely a preparative to the Baptism of the Apostles and not effectual to work Grace as theirs was then it will follow that John's Baptism was an idle and vain Ceremony and a dead sign void of life and vertue which were most absurd to grant 3. If John's Baptism differed in substance from the Apostles Baptism then it will follow That Christ being baptized of John did not partake in the same Baptism wherewith we are baptized and so consequently that he did not sanctifie our Baptism in his flesh But to leave this absurd collection of the Papists and to come to the matter of Instruction which this Verse affordeth Observ 1 Observ 1. Though Ministers of the Word have power to give the outward Sacraments yet Christ alone by his Spirit makes them effectual to convey grace to the Receivers This is true of both Sacraments Touching Baptism It seems to be confirmed by that place 1 Cor. 3. 6. where Paul saith That himself Planted and Apollo Watered but God gave the Increase Now by Planting some understand the Planting of the Doctrine of the Gospel by Preaching and by Watering the admistring of Baptism and this sense I take it may stand at least the Apostle seems to allude to Baptism To the same purpose is that 1 Cor. 6. 11. Ye are Washed ye are Sanctified ye are justified in the Name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God Now in those words the Apostle alludeth to the Sacrament of Baptism and to the washing used there and he sheweth That the outward cleansing of the soul signified by that outward washing is wrought in the name of Christ that is by the power of Christ and by the spirit of God Therefore also Math. 28. ult Our Saviour Christ giving Commission to his Apostles to baptize he doth promise the presence and assistance of his spirit with them unto the World's end thereby to make that outward Sacrament which should be administred by them effectuall to those that should receive it which shews That although Ministers of the Word have this power to give the outward Baptism yet it is Christ himself that by his spirit maketh it effectuall to such as receive it The same is true of the Sacrament which is the Lord's Supper for although the Minister hath power to give the outward Elements of Bread and Wine to the Communicants yet it is Christ alone that can and doth by the inward work of his spirit make the Sacraments effectuall for the nourishing and strengthening of Faith in such as receive it This is also true of preaching the Word The Minister only teacheth the ear only Christ teacheth the heart The Reason of this Doctrine is To conferr or work grace where it was not before is a supernaturall work which is impossible for any Man or Angel to work and is peculiar onely to God himself and to Christ Jesus who is both God and Man Use 1 Vse 1. See then by this That it is not enough for Ministers to administer the outward Sacraments to the People but they must also offer their Prayers unto Christ in behalf of them that He may Joyn the inward work of his Spirit with the outward use of the Sacraments thereby to make them effectuall to work and increase grace in those that receive them And this Duty of praying for our People is to be performed not onely in Publick but in Private on all occasions See the example of Samuel 1 Sam. 12. 23. and of Paul often professing this That he remembred the Churches in his prayers without ceasing Use 2 Vse 2. This must teach us not to rest in the outward work done by the Minister in administring of the Sacraments but labour further to feel the inward operation and working of the Spirit which may make them effectuall to us Seek unto Christ by prayer for his spirit which may Baptize thee inwardly in heart and soul cleansing thee from sin as the water cleanseth thy body ●utwardly What shall it profit thee to be baptized in Body and to ●e unb●ptized in Heart and Soul Rom. 2. ult He is a Jew which is one inwardly and Circumcision is that of the heart in the Spirit and not in the Letter Whose praise is not of Men but of God So also in the other Sacrament of the Lord's Supper rest not in the outward action of the Minister giving thee bread and wine to eat and drink but seek to Christ in prayer for his Spirit which may give vertue and efficacy to the outward Sacrament for nourishing and strengthening of thy Faith Observ 2 Observ 2. Johns outward washing with Water is here joyned with Christ's inward Baptizing with the Spirit Yea it is set before it and named in the first place I have baptized you with Water but he shall baptize with the Holy Ghost Hence we may gather that howsoever the outward work done by the Minister in the Sacraments cannot of it self give grace as we have heard Yet ordinarily grace is not wrought without the outward Sacraments therefore we find the outward washing in Baptism joyned with the inward work of the Spirit as Joh. 3. 5. and Tit. 3. 5. to shew that usually Cod doth annex and tye his spirit and grace so far to the outward Baptism that without it he doth not ordinarily give the inward Baptism of his spirit to any He may and doth sometimes extraordinarily work the grace of Regeneration in such as are never Baptized as in those Infants which belong to God's Election and yet dye before they can be baptized but ordinarily it is otherwise Without planting and watering usually nothing groweth c. Use Vse See then that although the outward Sacraments be not sufficient of themselves to work grace they are not to be neglected but to be duly and conscionably used as speciall Ordinances of God to work and increase grace in us We are therefore to submit unto the use of them and not to contemn or neglect them Parents then are here to be admonished to present their Children in due time to Baptism not deferring it too long because ordinarily none are Regenerate but such as are Baptized c. Though John knew his outward Baptizing could do no good without Christ's inward clearsing of the soul by his spirit yet did he not forbear or neglect to Baptize such as came unto him to teach us that we ought not to neglect this Sacrament but to desire it for our Children in due time
of the Holy Ghost it was onely a symbolical sight So also he is said to have descended on Christ not in respect of his Essence which filleth all places and so cannot be said to descend or ascend properly but in regard of the visible Descending of the Dove which was a sign and representation of the presence of the Spirit Like a Dove Whether it were really a Dove or onely the appearance of one is needless to be enquired of Some think it was onely the outward representation and appearance of a Dove yet such as was sensible to the eyes of the beholders Others think it was the reall Body and Substance of a Dove So Junius Analy And Mr. Philipps See Luke 3. 22. Here are two questions further to be answered Quest 1 Quest 1. Wherefore the Holy Ghost came down upon our Saviour Christ at this time in such Visible manner Answ Answ 1. To assure John Baptist that it was Christ which should baptize with the Holy Ghost See John 1. 33. 2. To shew that Christ was now furnished with all perfection of gifts of the Spirit requisite for the discharging of his publick Office which now he was called to undertake according to that Prophesie Esay 61. 1. Object Object He was before indued with a great measure of this Spirit even from his childhood as we see Luke 2. 40. The Child grew and waxed strong in Spirit filled with Wisdom c. What need was there then for the Spirit thus to come down upon him at this time Answ Answ Though he had the Spirit before in great measure yet now it was manifested That he was furnished with a far greater measure of it then ever before Quest 2 Quest 2. Why did the Holy Ghost descend upon Christ rather in the shape of a Dove then in any other shape Answ Answ Though we are not to be curious in this question yet it is very probable That the Holy Ghost made choyce of this shape to this end chiefly That he might shew unto us what kind of person our Saviour Christ should be upon whom this Dove descended Namely such a one as should in Nature and Properties resemble the Dove concerning which I shall speak more particularly when I come to handle the Doctrine that ariseth from those words Thus far of the meaning of the words of this Verse The words of the 11 Ver. shall be opened when I come to handle them Now to the Observations Observ And straight way coming out c. Observ See here that our Saviour Christ being baptized doth not stay long delaying the time but doth speedily come up out of the River Jordan where he was baptized thereby shewing his readiness and forwardness to enter upon the execution of his publick Ministeriall Office unto which he was now called Whence we may learn That when the Lord calls us unto any speciall Office or to the performance of any speciall service unto him We ought without delay readily to undertake it and to yield to his Calling Example Gal. 1. 16. So also David Psal 119. 60. I made haste and delayed not to keep thy Commandements Math. 4. The Apostles being called of Christ followed him immediately Vse Vse This reproveth such as being called of God to do him any service do delay the time and too long put off the Duties enjoyned them Such Ministers as being called to that Holy Function do deferr the execution of those Duties which belong to their Calling Also such private Christians as being called to the performance of speciall services unto God as prayer publick and private hearing of the Word reading of it receiving Sacraments c. Yet they deferr these Duties from Day to Day omitting the good opportunities offered for the performance of them So much of the first immediate consequent of the Baptism of Christ His speedy coming up out of the Water I proceed now to the second consequent Namely the solemn installing of him in his publick Office declared and confirmed 1. By certain miraculous signes shewed from Heaven 2. By the Word and Testimony of God the Father uttered from Heaven Observ Observ Generall We see here that before our Saviour Christ taketh on him the execution of his publick Office He is first authorized to it from Heaven by miraculous signes shewed from thence and also by the immediate Word and Testimony of God the Father uttered from thence which shewes that he did not of himself without a calling take upon him his Office but he was called unto it and his calling was confirmed to him from Heaven at this time of his Baptism for to this end was all this done which the Evangelist here mentioneth to this end were the Heavens opened to this end came the Holy Ghost down and to this end was that Voyce of God the Father uttered from Heaven Ver. 11. Even to shew and declare unto Us That Christ Jesus was called from Heaven and appointed of God the Father to the Office of a Mediatour and Doctor of his Church before he took upon him the publick execution of it So Heb. 5. 5. Now this serveth for our Instruction to teach us That We ought not to thrust our selves into any Office Function Calling or Action without warrant from God We must first know our selves to be appointed and deputed unto it of God We must have our Calling confirmed to us from Heaven as Christ had Not that We must look for such an extraordinary and miraculous Calling as this of our Saviour's was but we must have an ordinary Calling to that Office Function and Action which we undertake Quest Quest How to know that we have an ordinary lawfull Calling to undertake this or that Function or Action Answ Answ There are three things chiefly requisite to make our Calling lawfull 1. That the Action or Office which we undertake be in it self lawful and warrantable by the Word of God 2. That We be furnished of God with sufficiency of gifts for discharge of it 3. That We enter into it by good and lawfull means Reas Reas Why is it necessary that we have a Calling from God before we undertake any Office Function or Action Reas 1 Reas 1. Rom. 14. ult Whatsoever is not of Faith is Sin that is whatsoever is so done as that in doing it a man is not perswaded certainly that he pleaseth God it is a Sin to Him Now whatsoever we do without warrant of a Calling from God we cannot in doing it be assured that we please God therefore it must needs be sin Reas 2 Reas 2. If we have not a calling from God to do those things which we do we cannot with any comfort go on constantly in performance of them but we must needs be discouraged when we meet with difficulties and oppositions Contrà Jer. 26. and the rest of the Prophets Reas 3. Unlesse vve knovv our selves called of God to this or that Office or Function vvhich vve enter upon vve cannot expect the blessing of God upon
us nor his protection over us in the discharge of it See Psal 91. 11. Use Use This reproveth such as rashly adventure upon the undertaking of such Callings Offices and Actions for the vvhich they have no vvarrant from God and from his VVord Some take upon them such Callings as are in themselves unlavvfull and sinfull Others take upon them lavvfull Offices yet by unlavvfull means or else vvithout sufficiency of gifts for discharge of them Hovv can such go on with courage and constancy in discharge of their Duties or expect any blessing or protection from God in those things vvhich they undertake seeing they have no assurance in their consciences that God hath called them thereunto So much of the generall Point Novv I come to those Points of Instruction vvhich do more particularly arise from the VVords Observ 1 Observ 1. From the first miraculous Sign shevved at the Baptism of Christ namely The visible opening of the Heavens upon him or unto him for so it is said Math. 3. 16. Hence vve may gather That our Saviour Christ even vvhilst he lived on Earth in the state of his humiliation vvas nevertheless a Person of great Honour Glory and Majesty This vvas shevved by the very opening of the Heavens upon him this shevved the Glory and Majesty of Christ's Person in that the very Heavens did a kind of Homage and Reverence unto him in that they vvere divided and cut in sunder as it vvere over his head at this time of his Baptism The reason of this Glory and Majesty of Christ's Person living on Earth is this because he vvas even then not a meer Man but God and Man even the Son of God incarnate Novv if he vvere a Person of such divine Glory and Majesty vvhilst he lived in the form of a servant upon Earth hovv much greater Glory and Majesty hath he novv obtained being advanced to God's right hand in the Heavens But of this excellency of Christ's Person vve heard before Ver. 7. Observ 2 Observ 2. VVhen our Saviour Christ vvas called to take upon him his publick Office the Holy Ghost cometh dovvn upon him in miraculous manner to shevv that he vvas novv furnished vvith all sufficiency of spirituall gifts and graces requisite for the discharge of that Office Hence vve learn this That vvhomsoever God calleth to any Office or Function those he furnisheth and inableth vvith gifts sufficient for discharge of that Office and Calling to vvhich he appointeth them This is true of publick and private Offices and Callings 1. Of publick Whomsoever God calls to the Office of civil Magistracy in the Commonwealth those he indueth with the Spirit of Wisdom and Courage fit for that Calling Examples of this we have in Moses Joshua Saul 1 Sam. 10. 9. Solomon c. So also those that are called of God to the Office of the Ministery they are furnished of God with gifts of the Spirit answerable to that Calling as the gift of Knowledge Utterance c. This we see in the calling of the Prophets as Jer. 1. 9. The Lord touched his mouth and said unto him Behold I have put my words into thy mouth So also Ezek. 2. The Lord incouraged him and put his Spirit into him when he called him to Prophesie So when the Apostles were called to Preach the Gospel the Holy Ghost was sent upon them Acts 2. 2. This also is true of more private Callings as the callings of 〈◊〉 and Masters of Families that those whom God appointeth unto these Callings and Places he doth also qualifie them with such gifts as are fit for the discharge of them else they cannot be said to be called of God to such Offices if they be not in some measure qualified with gifts fitting for them Vse 1 Vse 1. This convinceth many to be wrongfull Usurpers of those Offices and Callings wherein they live and that they were never called of God unto them because they are not qualified with gifts sitting for such Callings How many Ministers are there which live in that Calling and yet want ability or willingness to teach the Word How many Magistrates and Governours in the Commonwealth that want Wisdom Courage and Zeal for God's glory How many Parents and Masters of Families that are not able to Govern their Families aright not able to Catechize their Children and Servants c. Let all such know That God never called them to those Places and Offices for the discharge of which he hath not qualified them with some sufficiency of gifts Use 2 Vse 2. If we would be assured That God hath called us to those Places and Callings wherein we live let us labour to see and know our selves to be qualified with gifts answerable to them else never presume that God hath called thee to undertake any Office or Function Publick or Private if he have not furnished thee with some measure of sufficiency and ability to discharge that place in which thou livest Observ 3 Observ 3. From the manner of the Holy Ghost's descending upon our Saviour Christ in that it was in the shape of Dove to shew what kind of person Christ should be and how qualified by the Spirit namely likely unto the Dove Hence we may gather That Christ Jesus is such a Saviour as doth in nature disposition and properties fitly resemble the Dove For the clearing of this We must shew what are the speciall properties of a Dove that so we may see how our Saviour Christ is qualified with such vertues as are resembled in the Dove 1. The Dove is an ignorant and harmless Creature Math. 10. 16. Be harmlesse as Doves So our Saviour Christ was most innocent and harmless Yea He was pure from all spot of sin both in his Conception and Birth as also in his Life Heb. 7. 26. Such an High Priest became us who is Holy Harmless Undefiled separate from sinners c. 2. The Dove is a loving and tender-hearted Bird. Aristotle commends them for chast loving each other Histor Animal l. 9. c. 7. And some write that the Dove is very loving to her young Ones and carefull to cherish them So Christ is a most loving Saviour to us so greatly loving us that he laid down his Life for us Ephes 3. 19. The love of Christ passeth knowledge 3. The Dove is a meek and gentle Creature some write of it that it hath no gall and hence is that Proverb in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Calepin So Christ Jesus is to us a meek and gentle Saviour Math. 11. Learn of me that I am meek c. So the Apostle saith I beseech you by the meekness and gentlenesse of Christ c. Use 1 Vse 1. This is matter of singular comfort to the faithful Members of Christ for Christ being innocent and harmless like the Dove yea pure from all spot of sin this his purity and holiness is imputed to so many as truly believe in him and by it they are accepted as holy and pure through
c. 2. It signifieth the Kingdom of Glory in Heaven after this life ended 1 Cor. 6. 9. The unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God and Joh. 3. 3. 3. It is put for the visible Church on Earth in which are both good Christians and Hypocrites as Matth. 13. 47. Like a Draw-net c. 4. For the Preaching of the Gospel Matth. 21. 43. The Kingdom of God shall be taken from you c. 5. For the spiritual Regiment and Government of the Church exercised by the Messiah after his coming in the Flesh and in this sense it is to be taken here So the meaning is That the Messiah being exhibited and come in the Flesh hath now begun to exercise his spiritual Government and Kingdom amongst men called the Kingdom of God because it is assigned unto Christ of God Quest 1 Quest 1. Did not Christ exercise a spiritual Regiment in and over the Church before the time of his coming in the Flesh Answ Answ Yes But not so manifestly and clearly nor in such conspicuous manner as he did after his Incarnation Kingdom of God The full and clear manifestation of the spiritual Kingdom of the Messiah Is at hand To be shortly accomplished Quest 2 Quest 2. Wherein stands this spiritual Regiment which Christ exerciseth Answ Answ In sundry things chiefly in these 1. In calling and gathering his Elect out of the World causing them to become his subjects Mat. 23. 37. O Jerusalem how often would I have gathered thee c. See also Joh. 15. 19. 2. In overthrowing and destroying the contrary Power and Kingdom of Sin and Satan in his Elect. 3. In conferring on them all saving graces of his Holy Spirit 4. In guiding and directing them in the whole course of their lives 5. In bringing them to be partakers of eternal life c. Quest 3 Quest 3. How or by what means doth he exercise this spiritual Government Answ Answ By a twofold means 1. Outwardly by the Ministry of his Word which is therefore called the Word of the Kingdom as we heard before 2. Inwardly by the power and efficacy of his Spirit Rom. 8. 14. So much of the sense of the words Now to come unto the Instructions to be gathered from them Observ 1 Observ 1. The time is fulfilled that is the full time appointed of God for the coming of the Messiah and for the manifestation of his Kingdom this time is accomplished in that the Messiah is now already come in the Flesh hence gather that God hath appointed a certain time for the fulfilling of all those things which himself hath purposed in his eternal counsel to do or which he hath promised in his Word and in that due time they are and shall be all accomplished God purposed from Everlasting and promised to our first Parents after their fall to send the Messiah and he appointed a certain time for the sending of him and when that time was expired he sent him accordingly So 1 Pet. 1. 20. This is true of all other purposes and promises of God there is a certain time appointed of God for the fulfilling of them and when that time is come they are alwayes fulfilled Eccles 3. 1. To every thing there is a season c. Hab. 2. 3. The Vision is yet for an appointed time c. The Lord appointed a time for the deliverance of the Israelites out of Aegypt and when that time was come the self same day they departed c. as it is said Exod. 12. 41. So the Lord appointed a time for the return of the Jews from Captivity namely after seventy years and at the end of that time Cyrus gave them leave to return Use 1 Use 1. Prescribe no time unto God for the accomplishing of any thing which we desire for our selves or for God's Church but wait untill the time appointed of God himself for the enjoying of every Blessing or good thing which he hath promised in his Word Rest upon his Word for it and be content to waite till the time be fulfilled which God hath set for the accomplishment of it knowing that to be the fittest time which the Lord himself hath determined Remember this in times of trouble and distress though God defer our deliverance yet faint not neither cast away our hope patience and confidence in God but wait still for a happy Issue at the time appointed of God In the mean time live by Faith Hab. 2. remembring that it is one property of Faith not to make haste Isa 28. The Husbandman waiteth long for the fruits of the Earth so let us wait patiently on the Lord for the accomplishment of his Promises and beware of using any unlawful means to bring any thing to pass which we desire or God hath promised Vse 2 Vse 2. To strengthen our Faith to believe and certainly to hope for the Resurrection of our bodies after death and for eternal life in Heaven God having promised these things he hath also appointed a time wherein he will fulfil them c. Observ 2 Observ 2. Christ came in the Flesh at the time foretold by the Prophets Gal. 4. 4. when the Sceprer was gone from the Jews to the Romans and toward the end of Daniel's seventy weeks c. in the last Age of the World Use Use Therefore he is the true Messiah Seek Salvation in him onely Mark 1. 15. And saying The time is fulfilled and the Kingdom of God is at hand c. Octob. 11. 1618. THe third Observation The Kingdom of God is at hand that is the spiritual Kingdom and Government of Christ the Messiah is now begun shortly to be manifested more clearly and plainly than heretofore Doctr. Doctr. Hence then observe this That the spiritual Regiment and Kingdom of Christ was more clearly and evidently to be manifested after his coming in the Flesh than it was before He was then to administer the same in more conspicuous and glorious manner than ever he did before his Incarnation This was foretold by the Prophets Isa 9. 7. and Jer. 23. 5. And it is now and hath been long accomplished since the coming of Christ in the Flesh Quest Quest Wherein stands this so evident manifestation of Christ's Kingdom Answ Answ In these things chiefly 1. In the clear and evident publishing of the Gospel of the Kingdom This Doctrine hath been more evidently preached since the coming of Christ than it was before It hath been preached by Christ himself and by his Apostles and succeeding Ministers far more plainly than it was taught by the Prophets of the Old Testament See 2 Pet. 1. 19. 2. In that Christ being risen from the dead is now actually advanced to heavenly Glory at God's right hand c. 3. In the powring forth of the gifts of the Spirit upon the Church in greater measure and abundance than before the coming of Christ Of this we read Act. 2. Joel 2. and Ephes 4. When he ascended on high he gave gifts
But know this that as a great Fall should not keep a man from rising again and as a dangerous Disease doth not keep a man from seeking to the Physitian so thy great sins should not hinder thee from coming to God by Repentance they should rather cause thee to make more haste unto God that he may pardon them There is a multitude of mercies with him for the pardoning of great Iniquities See Isa 1. 18. Though your sins be as Crimson and Scarlet c. David's Adultery and Murder were foul sins yet they kept him not from Repentance the Jews Sin in crucifying Christ was most heinous yet even they are called to Repentance Act. 2. A second hinderance is The profit and pleasure of sin Some sins bring in profit as Usury Oppression Covetousness false Dealing c. Other sins are sweet and pleasant to Man's corrupt Nature And thus by the profit and pleasure of sin men are allured to continue in their sins For removal of this hinderance of Repentance Consider 1. What shall it profit a man to gain the whole World and to lose his own Soul Mat. 16. 20. Besides all that is gained by sin hath God's Curse following it 2. Touching the Pleasures of sin Know this that howsoever it be sweet in the committing yet afterward it will be most bitter to us Prov. 20. 17. Bread of deceit is sweet but Gravel in his mouth afterward c. The pleasure of sin is short but the pain and torment which it will cause to thee is endless Delectat in momentum cruciat in aeternum Look at the End not at the Beginning of all sin A third hinderance is The difficulty of Repentance It is painful and tedious to the Flesh to humble and afflict our selves for our sins to have the heart broken with godly sorrow c. This painfulness of Repentance so discourageth some that they are loath to set about the practise of it But for this know 1. That the great benefits that come of it as inward Joy Comfort Peace of Conscience c. these do abundantly make amends for all our pains taken The dressing and searching of a Wound or festred Sore is painful yet we endure it in hope of future ease and soundness of Body So must we in the matter of our Souls 2. Some sins are as painful or more painful to commit than Repentance is to practise 3. Heaven is worth all our pains The fourth and last Impediment of Repentance is The vain hope of longer life Men think they shal have time enough hereafter to repent If they can have but an hour on their Death-bed it is enough c. But deceive not thy self For 1. Though thou live longer yet art thou not sure thou shalt have grace to repent when death shall come God must work it in thee thou canst not turn to him of thy self without his Grace inabling thee 2. Though true Repentance is never too late yet late Repentance is but seldome true and unfeigned The Repentance which many make shew of on their death-beds comes oftentimes rather from fear of Hell and of God's Judgments than from true hatred of sin and so it is to be feared that it dyes with the party Therefore beware of putting off Repentance in hope of longer life Hebr. 3. To day if ye will hear his Voyce harden not your hearts c. God hath not promised thee To Morrow Qui promisit poenitenti veniam non promisit dilationi crastinum diem Ambros Mark 1. 15. And believe the Gospel Octob. 25. 1618. HAving spoken of the first part of our Saviour Christ's Exhortation in which he stirreth up to Repentance Now we come to the second part in which he exhorteth to the practise of Faith in these words Believe ye the Gospel In the words we have two things 1. The Act of Believing 2. The Object or matter to be believed The Gospel Touching the meaning of the words it is needful to shew briefly 1. What is meant here by the Gospel 2. What it is to believe the Gospel By The Gospel understand The glad Tidings of Reconciliation with God and of Salvation by Christ or the Doctrine of free Grace and Salvation by Christ 2 Cor. 5. 19. it is called The Word of Reconciliation and Ephes 1. 13. The Gospel of Salvation Now to Believe the Gospel is not onely in general to be perswaded of the Truth of all things in the Gospel but particularly to apply to our selves the Doctrine of the Gospel and the Promises of Salvation by Christ contained in it Therefore in the Greek it is Believe in the Gospel which phrase of speech doth imply a particular applying of the Promises of the Gospel to our selves and a relying upon them This is the sense of the words In handling them I will first speak of Faith in general and then of the Object of it as it is here mentioned namely The Gospel Touching the first which is Faith it self Sundry Points are to be spoken of it 1. What Faith is 2. The Degrees of it 3. The necessity of this grace for a Christian 4. The special marks whereby to discern it 5. The means to get and encrease it 6. The lets and hinderances which keep men from it are to be removed Quest First of the first Point What is Faith Answ Answ True justifying Faith for of that we speak here and of that our Saviour Christ speaketh in this place is a Grace wrought in us by the Spirit of God whereby we apprehend and apply Christ and all his benefits to our selves Joh. 1. 12. To receive Christ and to believe in him are put for the same and Gal. 3. 14. We receive the promise of the Spirit by Faith More particularly in true Faith there are three things which are as the parts of it The first is Knowledge of Christ as he is revealed in the Gospel The second is Assent of the mind unto the truth and certainty of those things which are known of Christ The third is a particular applying of those things to our selves when we rest perswaded that the Promise of Salvation made in Christ belongs to us in particular and in this particular Application of Christ stands the very life of Faith Thus Paul did particularly apply Christ to himself Gal. 2. 20. I live by Faith in the Son of God who hath loved me and given himself for me So Thomas Joh. 20. 28. My Lord and my God Here then observe against the Papists that true Faith is not onely a general belief of the truth of God's Word but a particular applying of Christ or of the Promise of Salvation by Christ And this is proved by these Reasons Reas 1 1. In the 6. Chapter of John Verse 54. Believing in Christ is called Eating of his Flesh and Drinking of his Blood So Austin Crede manducâsti And the Rhemists are forced to confess it on the 32. ver of that Chapter Now this comparison shews the Nature of
diligent were the Pharisees in the outward exercises of prayer fasting and keeping of the Sabbath This we may observe in that proud boasting Pharisee Luke 18. This we may also see in the Jews in the Prophet Esay's time Esay 1. They brought a multitude of Sacrifices and were very strict in keeping their new Moons and Sabbaths and yet were they but Hypocrites and wicked in their Lives for their hands were full of Blood Ver. 15. See also Mich. 6. 6. How forward Hypocrites are in outward Services and Duties of Religion We see it also in Cain who was forward to offer Sacrifice as well as Abel Gen. 4. Thus also Hypocrites and Wicked Men are sometimes forward in hearing the Word and in receiving of the Sacraments Herod heard John gladly Mark 6. 20. and Judas heard Christ's preaching as well as the other Apostles And Simon Magus received the Sacrament of Baptism as well as others that truly believed Acts 8. In a word there is no outward Duty of Religion but an Hypocrite and Wicked Man may perform it outwardly as well as the good Christian Use 1 Vse 1. See how many delude themselves in thinking that they are Religious enough because they are outwardly Baptized and come to Church and hear and receive the Word and Sacraments outwardly and use set times of prayer publick and private whereas all these things may be done by a formall Hypocrite and one that hath no soundness of Religion at all in him These Duties are good and necessary to be done but they are no sure Notes or Arguments to prove such as do them to be good Christians Use 2 Vse 2. Rest not therefore in the outward performance of Religious Duties of prayer fasting hearing the Word receiving the Sacraments as if the outward work done were enough and as much as God requireth but labour above all to perform Duties of Religion in due and right manner so as God may accept of them And to this end practise three Rules 1. Labour to do all Religious Duties in Faith believing and being perswaded that our Persons are accepted of God through Christ and so that in Him our works please Him Thus Abel offered his Sacrifice by Faith which made it acceptable to God Hebr. 11. 4. and Rom. 14. Whatsoever is not of Faith is Sin 2. Joyn the inward Service of the heart with the outward performance of Religious Duties Joh. 4. 24. God will be worshipped in Spirit and Truth 1 Cor. 6. 3. Aym at the right end namely the glory of God in all religious Services which we perform Look not at Sinister ends c. Observ 3 Observ 3. In that John's Disciples at the motion and perswasion of the Disciples of the Pharisees did joyn themselves with them in taking exception against Christ for his not Fasting so often as themselves did herein they shewed great infirmity for so doing they offended diversly 1. In joyning themselves in league and society with the Disciples of the Pharisees whom their Master John Baptist had so sharply taxed and reproved for Hypocrites and Wicked Men Matth. 3. 7. 2. In that they presume to find fault with Christ for not training up his Disciples to a stricter course of Life 3. In that they seem to be tainted with vain-glory in boasting after a sort of their own Fasting thereby shewing that they too much pleased themselves therein In all these respects they offended and hereby discovered great corruption and infirmity though otherwise no doubt they were good and holy Men Now from hence we learn That good Christians are not without their corruptions and sinnes of infirmity Jam. 5. 17. Eliah himself was a man subject to passions that is to humane corrupt affections Jam. 3. 2. In many things we offend all Even the best Men. We have examples of this in Abraham Moses Job David Jonah and many others whose corruptions and sins of infirmity are recorded in Scripture notwithstanding that otherwise they were indued with excellent graces of God's Spirits The Apostles themselves were not free from corruptions as we see in Peter and in Paul and Barnabas Acts 15. 39. Reas Reas The sanctification of God's Children is imperfect in this Life the corruption of sin is but in part mortified in them therefore there are still some remainders of corruption in them during this Life so long as they carry this body of Death about them Use 1 Use 1. This is for the comfort of such weak Christians who because of their great corruptions and infirmities and because of their often faylings in Duty and slips into sin through weakness are apt to be discouraged and to fear and doubt that they are not God's Children Such must know That if they see and feel their own corruptions and faylings and do truly mourn and grieve for them and if withall they hate them and strive against them their estate is good before God notwithstanding all their infirmities and frailties and it is with them no otherwise then it hath ever been with other Saints and Children of God A good Christian in this Life is not such a one as hath no infirmities or corruptions but one that hateth and striveth against his corruptions such a one Paul sets forth himself to be Rom. 7. A Child of God is not one that never sinneth or falleth through infirmity but such a one as seeth his own falls and slips and is humbled truly for them daily mourning for them and bewayling them and one that is more and more watchfull over himself to prevent such falls for time to come Examine whether it be thus with thee c. Use 2 Use 2. Not so to admire holy men as to addict and tye our selves to their example in every thing but to follow them onely so far as they do well Observ 4 Observ 4. In that the Disciples of John and of the Pharisees do here demand of Christ why his Disciples did not Fast as often as themselves thereby taxing and blaming Him for not training up His Disciples to do as they did Hence observe That it is a naturall corruption and fault in men to desire to tye others to their own example and practise in every thing and therefore to condemn and judge hardly of all that differ from them in practise yea though it be in small and circumstantiall matters that are in their own nature indifferent and not simply commanded or forbidden in the Word of God To keep set times of Fasting was a thing indifferent in our Saviour's time yet because these Disciples of John and of the Pharisees used it they would needs tye and bind Christs Disciples to their own practise and therefore they blame Christ himself and them also for that they did not do as themselves did This shews how naturall it is to men to desire that others should be tyed to their example and practise in every thing This we may see Acts 15. in the Jews who would needs urge the Gentiles to be circumcised and to keep
we can Exod. 32. Though Moses were angry at the Israelites yet he prayed for them Ver. 31. 6. Lastly Our anger must be joyned with grief for the person against whose sin we are offended But of this in the next Point Now to make use of this Vse 1 Vse 1. Seeing this holy anger against sin is lawfull and necessary this condemns the want of it in many who can see and hear God dishonoured by the sins of Swearing Sabbath-breaking Drunkenness filthy speaking c. and not be moved with any indignation or displeasure their spirit is not stirred in them at these things there is much sinfull anger in men but little anger against sin An evident sign there is no true zeal in them for God's Glory if there were they could not but be more moved to see his Name dishonoured and his Glory troden under feet In their own Cause many can be hot as fire upon the least occasion but in the cause of God when they see Him dishonoured by sin they are cold as Ice their hearts rise not against it they are no more moved then if it did not at all concern them How far do these come short of the zeal of Eliah Moses Paul c. Vse 2 Vse 2. Labour for this holy affection of anger against sin that we may have our hearts moved with indignation when we see God dishonoured To this end labour for the true love of God in our hearts then we shall not indure to see Him dishonoured without being angry and displeased at it A loving Child cannot but be displeased when he sees his Father abused neither can any true Child of God indure to see or hear God dishonoured but must needs shew dislike and displeasure at it So much of the first affection with which our Saviour was now moved against the Scribes and Pharisees namely his anger against them Now to speak of the second which is his grief or sorrow for the hardness of their hearts Mark 3. 5. Being grieved or mourning for the hardness of their hearts He said unto the Man Stretch forth thy hand Sept. 12. 1619. And he stretched it out and his hand was restored whole as the other MOurning also Or mourning together that is joyning inward sorrow and grief with his anger Observ 1 For the hardness of their hearts That is because he perceived their hearts to be rooted and settled in malice against him and in a willfull resistance of the Truth whereof he had convinced him that by no means they would be reclaimed or drawn from these sinnes The Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is derived of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies the thick skin or brawninesse of the hand gotten by much labour which brawny skin is without sense Whence this Word is here used to note out unto us the great obstinancy of these Scribes and Pharisees in their Sins that they were so rooted in them that they had no sense or feeling of any means used to reclaim them This for the meaning Observ 1. In that our Saviour Christ with anger against the obstinate malice of the Scribes and Pharisees joyned grief for their hardnesse of heart we learn That our anger against the Sins of others should be joyned with sorrow and grief for those Sins and for the Persons offending Though our Saviour were greatly offended against the obstinate Jews for rejecting his Doctrine and for refusing to believe in Him yet withall He was grieved for this their obstinacy and for the heavy Judgment of God which was come on them and their City and therefore He wept over it Luk. 19. 41. So Mark 8. 12. when the Pharisees tempted Him seeking a Sign He was no doubt offended at them for this their Malice and Hypocrisie And yet He sighed deeply in Spirit for them c. Thus Lot vexed his Soul not onely with anger but with grief also for the wicked lives of the Sodomites Thus the Prophet Jeremy living in a most corrupt age could not but be much offended at the greivous Sins of the Jews in his time and yet withall he wished his head were Waters and his eyes a Fountain of tears to weep Day and Night for them Jer. 9. 1. Reason of this Point True zeal for God's glory is a mixt affection consisting partly of a holy anger against sin and partly of a hearty grief for sin as also for the party offending Therefore both these must go together in all that are truly zealous for the Lord of Hoasts as Eliah was Vse 1 Vse 1. This condemneth the carnall anger that is in many which is not accompanyed with grief for the persons and sins against which they are offended Some are carryed away with bitternesse of heart and hatred against the Persons of those with whom they are angry so far are they from being grieved for them Others again are so far from grieving for the Sins of those against whom they are angry that they rather rejoyce and are glad to see them run into sin hoping that this will be a disgrace to them and that they may insult over them This is wicked and sinfull anger which Christians must beware of Far be it from thee to rejoyce at the sins of the party against whom thou art offended for if it be thus with thee this shews thy anger to be against the person and not against the sin whereas contrarily thou art bound to love the person and to be angry at the sin onely and to grieve both for the person and the sin Use 2 Vse 2. Examine our anger against others by this property to know whether it be good and holy Is it joyned with inward grief for the person and for the sin Can we mourn in heart for the sins of those with whom we are offended as our Saviour Christ did Then our anger is good not otherwise If it be not thus accompanyed with sorrow for the person and for the sin it is not such as it should be Try therefore all our anger by this We are by nature very apt to carnall anger and we are ready still to plead for it that it is against the sins not against the persons of others See here how to try whether it be so indeed or no Is there any true sorrow or mourning in thy heart for the sin against which thou sayest thou art angry Art thou grieved that God is dishonoured by it Art thou also sory for the person Dost thou pitty his case in regard of the misery and danger unto which sin layes him open If it be thus it is good and holy anger otherwise suspect it as carnall and unholy Let us every one throughly sift our own hearts touching this matter If we so do we shall find how little holy anger is in us and how much we offend by sinfull anger How often are we angry with others with our Children Servants c. when there is no mourning at all in our hearts for their sins Consider and
1. ver 24. Now whether our Saviour did cast out these Devils at this time out of the Possessed is not expressed but it is most probable that he did ●or he did not refuse at other times to dispossesse any that were brought unto Him So much of the meaning Observ 1 Observ 1. Here we are taught that our Saviour Christ hath absolute Power over all wicked Spirits and Devils being able to subdue and master them at his pleasure and to force them to subjection as he did here and at sundry other times while he lived on Earth for he no sooner commanded them to go out of the Possessed but presently they were forced to go out yea sometimes He cast out a Multitude of them at once as Chap. 5. Ver. 9. Now if he had this Power over the Devils while he was on Earth in the state of Humiliation How much more now being exalted to Glory See this Point before upon Chap. 1. Ver. 25. Observ 2 Observ 2. Further From the Attribute given to the Devils being called Unclean Spirits we learn that the Devils are most impure and polluted Creatures wholly polluted with sin c. See this also handled before Chap. 1. Ver. 23. Mark 3. 11 12. And the unclean Spirits when they saw h●m c. Octob. 17. 1619. IN these two Verses the Evangelist sheweth how our Saviour Christ did tame and master the wicked Spirits in such as were possessed In the words I considered two things 1. The behaviour of the Devils towards our Saviour 1. In falling down before him at the very fight of him 2. In crying out and confessing him to be the Son of God 2. The carriage of our Saviour towards them in that He rebuked them sharply that they should not utter him Touching their falling down before our Saviour I have spoken It follows to speak of their crying out and confessing of him And they cryed saying Thou art c. Some think that this Confession was forced from the Devils by the Power of Christ which he made them to feel Sic Calvinus in locum Howsoever it be whether they were forced to it or whether they made it willingly it is certain that in making this Confession they aimed not at any good End but at evil and sinister Ends. What these were see before Chap. 1. Ver. 24. Observ 1 Observ 1. In that the unclean Spirits do profess Christ to be the Son of God though it be in Hypocrisy and for evil Ends Hence observe that it is not enough for men to speak of Christ or to make an outward Profession of Him or of the Doctrine of the Gospel concerning Christ unless they do it in truth and sincerity of heart and for good and right Ends. The Devils themselves can make an outward Profession of the Truth of Christ's Person and Offices and of the Doctrine of the Gospel But it is for evil Ends as either to bring the Truth into disgrace and discredit causing men the more to doubt of it because he that is the Father of Lyes gives Testimony to it or else to make the World believe that he is a friend to Christ and to the Gospel when there is no such matter but the contrary So also wicked men and gross Hypocrites yea Reprobates may make outward Profession of Christ and of his Doctrine as we may see Matth. 7. 22. Many shall say to Christ at the last day Lord Lord Have we not by thy Name prophesyed and by thy Name cast out Devils and by thy Name done many great Works And then he shall profess to them I never knew you depart from me c. Judas though a Devil incarnate yet professed Christ and the Gospel and was a Preacher of it and even then when he came to betray Christ yet he could salute him kindly saying Hail Master and kissed him So that the vilest Hypocrites in the World yea the Devil himself may sometimes make an outward Profession of Christ Use Vse See then that we must not rest in a bare outward Profession of Christ's Name and Gospel as if this were enough to prove us good Christians Such as think so do miserably delude themselves If this were enough to speak well of Christ and of the Gospel and to profess love to them in word it were an easy thing to be a Christian and the Devil himself should then be a Christian But there is much more required of Christians Know therefore that our outward Profession of Christ and the Gospel is nothing worth nor shall ever do us good unless it be made in sincerity and truth of heart proceeding from a true love to Christ and his Gospel and unless also it be joyned with a holy practice and conscionable Obedience to the Word of Christ in our lives Not every one that saith Lord Lord c. Mat. 7. 21. So Luke 6. 46. Why call ye me Lord Lord and do not the things that I speak Observ 2 Observ 2. Further we learn here from this that these Devils do confess Christ to be the Son of God That there is an Historical Faith in the very Devils themselves whereby they know and believe in generall the History of the Gospel concerning the Person and Offices of Christ See this Point before Chap. 1. Ver. 24. It followeth Ver. 12. And he sharply rebuked them or straitly charged them yet so as withal he did reprove them That they should not utter him Or make him known or manifest who he was Not that our Saviour would have the Knowledge of his Person wholly suppressed for at another time he commended Peter for confessing him to be the Son of God Matth. 16. 17. and it was one end of his Miracles to prove his God-head but the Reasons why he forbad these unclean Spirits to utter him were these as we heard before Chap. 1. ver 25. 1. Because the Devils were no fit Persons to utter or teach the Truth of Christ's Person and divine Nature being the professed Enemies of Christ and of the Truth See Psal 50. 16. 2. Because they confessed Christ for evil and sinister ends 3. Because the time appointed for the full and clear Manifestation of the God-head and divine Glory of Christ was not yet come for this was not to be done till his Resurrection and Ascension See Matth. 17. 9. In the mean time he was to continue in his estate of Humiliation and Abasement and the Glory of his divine Nature was to lye hid after a sort under the Vaile of his Flesh until the time came in which it was more fully to be manifested So much of the sense of the words Observ 1 Observ 1. Here first we learn not to hearken to the Devil though he speak things true in themselves because he uttereth the Truth with a false and deceiptful purpose and for evil ends Of this Point see Chap. 1. Ver. 25. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour Christ perceiving that the unclean Spirits did confess him in
put it off But deceive not thy self If thou be yet under Satans power think it not easy to be delivered and that thou canst break from him when thou wilt No it is God that must break the snare and set thee free else thou canst never escape therefore defer not the practice of Repentance the longer thou goest on in sin the stronger hold Satan gets in thee and the harder it is to be delivered c. Use 3 Use 3. Take heed of comming under Satans power let him not get hold and possession in our hearts by his Temptations lest we find it very hard to cast him out again c. Mark 3. 28 29 30. Verily I say unto you All Sins shall be Forgiven unto the Sons of Men and Blasphemies wherewithsoever they shall Blaspheme But he that shall Blaspheme against the Holy Ghost hath never Forgiveness Dec. 26. 1619. but is in danger of eternal damnation Because they said He hath an unclean Spirit IN the matter of our Saviour Christ's answer to the Blasphemous slander of the Scribes we considered two things 1. A Confutation of that slander 2. A Recrimination or contrary accusation laid against them by our Saviour Of the former we have spoken upon the former Verses Now to speak of the latter set down in these three Verses now read In which our Saviour chargeth and accuseth the Scribes as guilty of the unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost yet he doth not this directly and plainly but indirectly as it were and covertly by shewing and setting out to them the hainousness and fearfulness of that sin compared with other sins In the words consider three things 1. The manner of our Saviour Christ his speech and censure of the Scribes and of their sin 1. With earnestness and vehemency using an Asseveration Verily 2. With Authority speaking in his own Name I say unto you The second thing to be considered is the matter of his censure in which he layes forth the grievousness and fearfulness of the sin against the Holy Ghost by comparing it with other sins shewing the difference between them in that all other sins are pardonable and shall be actually pardoned to so many as truly Repent of them but the sin or Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost is unpardonable and shall never be forgiven but such as commit it are guilty of Eternal Judgment ver 28 29. The third thing is the reason yielded by the Evangelist Saint Mark why our Saviour gave this fearfull censure of the sin of the Scribes viz. because they said he had an unclean Spirit ver 30. Verily The word in the Original is Amen which is an Hebrew word signifying as much as Truly It is an Asseveration or vehement Affirmation which our Saviour often used when he was to speak of serious and waighty matter which were of great necessity to be known and believed thereby to win both Attention and credit to that he spake And sometimes he used for more vehemency to double this word Verily Verily In this place he used it upon a waighty occasion being to speak of the nature and danger of the sin against the Holy Ghost I say unto you These words are also added to procure greater credit unto that Doctrine which he was about to deliver to them therefore he speaks in his own name and by his own Authority being a most true and Faithful Witness yea being Truth it self Observ 1 Observ 1. Vehement Asseverations are to be used onely in waighty and serious matters for the confirming of some necessary Truth and to procure credit unto it Thus our Saviour used it as we may observe in divers places of the Evangelists So Paul speaketh to like effect 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a true saying c. Rom. 9. 1. I say the Truth in Christ I lye not c. But in ordinary matter of less moment we are to content our selves with naked Assertions using onely Yea and Nay See Matth. 5. 37. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that our Saviour delivereth this Doctrine touching the hainousness of the sin against the Holy Ghost in his own name saying I say unto you We may observe a difference between his Teaching and the Teaching of all others that Teach in the Church All other Teachers speak in the name of God and of Christ and therefore the Sermons of the Prophets usually begin with these and the like Prefaces Thus saith the Lord The Word of the Lord c. But our Saviour Christ taught in his own Name and by his own Authority and therefore he often used these words in his Teaching I say unto you See Matth. 5. where he often opposeth his own words and Authority against the Authority of the Jewish corrupt Teachers and expounders of the Law You have heard it said of old c. But I say unto you c. Therefore also he saith Matth. 23. 8. One is your Doctor that is to say your absolute Teacher who Teacheth in his own name being not onely an Inte●preter but Lord of that Doctrine which he teacheth Use Use This serveth to strengthen our Faith touching the truth and certainty not onely of that Doctrine which Christ taught in his own person while he was on Earth but also of all other Doctrines agreeable thereunto that are taught in the name of Christ by his Ministers lawfully Called To call any part of such Doctrine into question is to question the Authority of Christ himself So much of the manner of our Saviours speech The matter follows Where Consider two things 1. All other sins pardoned 2. The Sin against the Holy Ghost unpardonable ver 29. All Sins c. Of what Nature kind or degree soever Shall be Forgiven They are pardonable or may be pardoned unto men and they shall be actually pardoned to so many as Repent of them truly To the Sons of men That is to men See Job 25. 6. Blasphemies The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth properly signify any reproachful speech uttered to the defaming of another It is in Scripture used two wayes 1. Sometimes referred to man and then it signifies to slander or speak evill of men as Tit. 3. 2. and Ephes 4. 31. 2. Sometimes and that most usually it is referred unto God and then it signifies any word uttered to the reproach or Dishonour of God So we are to take it in this place and of such Blasphemies there are divers kinds of which I will speak afterward So much of the sense of the words The scope of which is to set out the mercy of God in pardoning all other sins unto men except the sin against the Holy Ghost as the scope of the words following in the next verse is to set out Gods severity and Justice in not pardoning that sin and Blasphemy against the Holy Ghost Touching the words in hand in them the sins that are pardonable are set out by the kinds of them 1. All sins in general 2. More specially the sins of Blasphemy
was powred out blasphemed the God of Heaven for their pains They accused God of Injustice or Cruelty for punishing them so severely So the Scribes and Pharisees in charging Christ to work by the Devil c. 2. By taking from God and denying unto him that which belongs unto him As the King of Ashur denying that God was able to save his People blasphemed So to deny God to be Holy Just Infinite c. is Blasphemy 3. By attributing the properties of God unto creatures Thus the Scribes and Pharisees as we heard Chap. 2. ver 7. falsly accused Christ of blasphemy because being but a man as they pretended he took upon him to forgive sins which is proper to God But this kind of blasphemy themselves were guilty of in attributing that unto the Devil which is proper to the Godhead of Christ viz. the power of casting out devils from the possessed 4. Lastly By speaking contemptibly of God as Pharaoh Exod. 5. 2. Who is the Lord that I should obey his voyce c. And Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3. 15. Who is that God that shall deliver you c Now for the hainousness of the Sin of Blasphemy it may appear by this That the Jews abhorred the very name of it and therefore they used blessing instead of it as may appear 1 King 21. 13. The false Witnesses accused Naboth for blessing God and the King that is for blaspheming them It may also further appear both by the nature of the sin in that it tends so directly to the reproach of the Name of God See Levit. 24. 16. as we see by that which hath been said of the several kinds of blasphemy as also by the capital punishment appointed to it by the Law of God by which the Blasphemer was to dye the death Levit. 24. 16. And the Apostle delivered up Blasphemers unto Satan by the fearful Censure of Excommunication 1 Tim. 1. 20. This is sufficient to shew the greatness of the Sin Vse 1 Use 1. Learn by this to detest the Popish Religion which is so full of Blasphemies c. Of this before Chap. 2. Verse 7. Use 2 Use 2. Learn to abhor this sin of blasphemy in our selves and others being so hainous a sin and so dishonourable to God Take heed we be not guilty of it or of any degree or kind of it Take heed of the least evil thought against the Majesty of God much more of uttering words blasphemous against him Remedies against this Sin 1. Consider the fearfulness of the sin which hath been before shewed It argueth great wickedness in the heart 2. Consider how God hath been revenged upon Blasphemers even by temporal Judgments as upon Pharaoh Nebuchadnezzar Sennacherib the Nation of the Jews c. 3. Our Tongues are given us to blesse God and Man c. Jam. 3. 10. 4. Labour for a reverent fear of the Name of God in our hearts This will cause us to think and speak of him with all due Reverence c. 5. Take heed of unreverent using the Name of God and of common swearing Use 3 Use 3. Give not occasion to others of blaspheming Gods Name by professing Religion and yet living profanely Rom. 2. 24. Observ 3 Observ 3. Further we learn out of these words That although blasphemy be a great and haynous sin yet that it is a pardonable sin that is being truly repented of it may be pardoned by Gods mercy 1 Tim. 1. 13. Paul was a Blasphemer yet obtained mercy All blasphemies may be forgiven except the blasphemy against the Spirit c. Use 1 Use 1. See and admire the abundant grace and rich mercy of God in being content to pardon not onely small sins but even the blasphemies with which men strike through his Reverend and Sacred Name Well may we here cry out Oh the deepness of the mercy of God c. Gods Name is very pretious unto him Vse 2 Use 2. Seeing there is mercy with God for the pardoning of the sin of Blasphemy yea of all blasphemies except that against the Spirit this should move those that have been guilty of this sin to repent of it and to sue to God for pardon in Christ of this haynous sin and for time to come let them cease from such blasphemies and labour by all means to honour the Name of God which they have formerly blasphemed and reproached Hearken to this thou that hast been a blasphemer of the Name of God though thy sin be fearful and haynous yet if thou wilt truly repent and forsake thy sin there is mercy with God even to forgive blasphemies Labour to have a part in this mercy Paul saith his blasphemy was forgiven to the end that Christ Jesus might in him shew forth all long-suffering for a pattern to them which should after believe in him to life ever lasting 1 Tim. 1. 13-16 Use 3 Use 3. Seeing God doth in wonderful mercy pardon such as blaspheme his Name when they truly repent let us imitate him our Heavenly Father as good Children in being ready to forgive such as reproach and speak evil of us yea in being ready to pray for such as curse us Matth. 5. 44. 1 Cor. 4. 13. Being evil spoken of we intreat Mark 3. 29 30. But whoso shall blaspheme against the Holy Ghost c. Jan. 2. 1619. IN these two Verses and the former we considered 3. things 1. The Manner of our Saviours speech 1. With Earnestness implyed by the word Verily 2. With Authority in these words I say unto you 2. The Matter of his speech containing an indirect and close accusation against the wicked Scribes charging them as guilty of the sin against the Holy Ghost 3. The reason why he so charged them Vers 30. Because they said He had an unclean spirit Touching the manner of his speech we have spoken and in part of the matter In which he chargeth the Scribes as guilty of the sin against the Holy Ghost And this he doth not directly and plainly but indirectly and covertly by shewing against them the grievousness of that sin compared with other sins All other being pardonable and that alone unpardonable In the words are contained two main Propositions or Points of Doctrine 1. That all sins except that against the Holy Ghost may be pardoned unto men 2. That the Sin against the Holy Ghost can never be pardoned but maketh those that commit it guilty of eternal damnation By the former of these our Saviour sets out Gods Mercy By the latter his Severity and Justice Of the former we heard last day Now to speak of the latter Verse 29. But whoso shall blaspheme c. In the words two things are to be considered 1. The Nature of the Sin against the Holy Ghost implyed by the name given unto it in that it is called the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost Whoso shall blaspheme c. 2. The special property of this sin which is twofold 1. That it shall never be forgiven to those that
so as it may cost thee bitter tears and deep Humiliation and Repentance before thou canst recover thy self Use 3 Use 3. Learn further to fear and tremble at the thought of this Sin and especially to use all good remedies and Preservatives to keep us from falling into it 1. Take heed of all Sins that come near to it or that make way unto it As 1. Sins against Knowledge and Conscience contrary to the Light of the Truth revealed unto us These are very dangerous wounding the Conscience and hardning the Heart very much and though every Sin against Knowledg be not the Sin against the Holy Ghost yet it is as it were one step towards it and often Sinning against Conscience may in time bring One to the Sin against the Holy Ghost if it be not in time prevented 2. Take heed of falling often into the same Sins against Knowledge and after Repentance made shew of This is worse and more dangerous then the former and doth more harden the Heart 3. Take heed of Sinning presumptuously presuming upon mercy before-hand and especially beware of Sinning with an high hand and contemptuously making slight of Sin and of the Law of God which forbids it This comes very near to the Sin against the Holy Ghost 4. Beware of all hardness of heart and impenitency strive and pray against these 5. Take heed of all backsliding in Religion That we leave not our first Love Rev. 2. A second Preservative is to labour to have our hearts affected with true love to the truth of God then we shall be far from opposing it maliciously Contrà 2 Thess 2. 10. Such as will not receive the love of the Truth that they may be saved God sends them strong Delusions to believe lyes that they may be damned He gives them over c. A third Preservative If one be driven through fear and of infirmity to deny Christ or his Truth as Peter was let him not persist but speedily Repent of it And lastly Pray unto God to keep us from this Sin above all other If David prayed against Presumptuous Sins c. Psal 19. Now further from the connexion of these words Never hath Forgiveness but is in danger c. Observ Observ That so many as have not their Sins forgiven are sure to be condemned they are guilty of Eternal Damnation and cannot escape it Therefore Matth. 18. 34. That evil Servant who had not his Debt forgiven was delivered to the tormentors c. Vse Use Give no rest to our Souls till we know our Sins to be pardoned in Christ Labour for true Faith in him and humble thy self to God by true Repentance that he may forgive thy Sins according to his promise made to the Penitent Do it speedily whilst thou hast time and whilst God spares thy life for after death there is no place for Repentance or Pardon It followeth Ver. 30. Because they said c. These are the words of the Evangelist shewing the reason why our Saviour charged the Scribes and Pharisees as guilty of the unpardonable Sin against the Holy Ghost viz. because they had before Blasphemously charged our Saviour to have an unclean Spirit by whose help they said he cast our Devils Observ 1 Observ 1. This place sheweth plainly that the Scribes and Pharisees were guilty of the Sin against the Holy Ghost because the Evangelist gives this reason why our Saviour avouched unto them the fearfulness of that Sin even because they had committed it in Blaspheming Christ maliciously against their own Knowledge for they could not but know Christ to be the Son of God and to be sent from God because they had not onely heard the preaching of John Baptist and of our Saviour Christ himself but they had also ●een the great Miracles of Christ which proved him to be God And that they did know him to be so may further be gathered from these places Joh. 3. 2. and Joh. 7. 28. Now therefore seeing they could not but know him to be sent from God and to be indued with Divine power and yet did not cease from time to time most maliciously to persecute him and to speak evill of him this argues plainly that they were guilty of the Sin against the Holy Ghost yet it doth not follow that all the Scribes and Pharisees were guilty of it but onely some of them even so many as knowing Christ to be come from God did yet maliciously oppose and persecute him Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Evangelist gives this reason why our Saviour did so sharply reprove the Scribes and Pharisees charging them with the unpardonable Sin against the Holy Ghost because they shewed their obstinate malice against him in accusing him to have an unclean Spirit Hence we may learn that obstinate and notorious wicked men are not to be favoured or spared by Ministers of the Word but sharply to be reproved and the Judgments of God to be threatned against them to terrify them and if it be possible to humble them and bring them to Repentance Tit. 1. 13. Rebuke them sharply c. So our Saviour Christ thundereth against these Scribes and Pharisee Matth. 23. Wo to you c. Generation of Vipers c. and John Baptist Matth. 3. Mark 3. 31 32. Then came his Brethren and Mother c. Jan. 9. 1619. VVEE are now come to the fifth and last principal part of this Chapter which contains a Message sent by the Mother and Brethren of our Saviour Christ unto him and the Answer which he made unto those that did the Message In the words consider these particulars 1. The persons sending the Message The Mother and Brethren of our Saviour described by two Things 1. By their forwardness to come unto Christ for it is said They came to him 2. By their behaviour when they were come to the place where he taught 1. They stood without 2. They sent unto him and called him 2. Consider the persons by whom the Message was sent who were the people that sate about him 3. The Message which was done by them in these words Behold thy Mother and thy Brethren seek for thee without 4. Consider the Answer of our Saviour unto this Message done to him by the people of which we shall see when we come to it ver 33 34 35. His Brethren That is His Kinsfolks according to the flesh after the Hebrew phrase for the Hebrews call all Kinsfolks by the name of Brethren Gen. 13. 8. Abraham saith Lot and he were Brethren yet Abraham was Lot's Unkle Gen. 11. 27. So 2 King 10. 13. the brethren of Ahaziah for the Kinsmen of Ahaziah as appeareth 2 Chron. 22. 8. Rom. 9. 3. Paul calls the Jews his Brethren and Kinsmen after the Flesh So also Mar. 6. 3. Our Saviour is called the brother of James and Joses and of Juda and Simon Now which of the Kinsfolks of Christ these were that are spoken of in this place is uncertain because it is
first but a very slender measure of Grace when he came to our Saviour by night to confer with him and to learn of him Joh. 3. 1. but afterward this seed of Grace grew to a greater measure of Grace in him as may appear Joh. 19. 39. when he came openly in the day time and shewed his love to Christ in bringing sweet Odours to Embalm his dead body and in helping to bury it 2. We may consider these degrees of Grace as they are found and do appear in sundry Christians at the same time for some are indued with a lesser and some with a greater measure of Grace Some are Babes in Christ 1 Cor. 3. 1. and some are well grown Christians some are weak and some are strong Rom. 15. 1. Vse 1 Use 1. This is matter of comfort to such weak Christians who are troubled and discouraged because of the small measure of Grace which they feel in themselves and because they come so far short of the Graces that are in some other Christians Such must remember this that there are different degrees of Grace and that God doth not give his Spirit in like measure unto all that are partakers of it but in such measure as he in his Wisdome seeth fittest for every one Consider also this that God doth more respect the truth and sincerity of that Grace that is in thee then the measure or degree of it Look therefore to this especially that the Graces that are in thee as Knowledg Faith Repentance c. be sincere and sound whatsoever the measure of them be They may be sound in thee though but in small measure And the smallest measure of Grace if it be sincere and sound is sufficient to give thee right and interest to Salvation If thy Faith be but as the grain of Mustard-seed in quantity yet if it be true and unfained Faith it is able to save thee If thou canst but truly and unfeinedly hunger and thirst after Christ and his Righteousness thou art blessed Matth. 5. 6. Onely do not rest contented with a small measure of Grace but strive to a further growth But more of this in due place Vse 2 Use 2. Such as have received the greatest measure of Spirituall Graces must from hence learn not to despise those that come behind them in Grace but rather to incourage them and to cherish the smallest beginnings of Grace in others remembring that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 4. 7. Who maketh thee to differ from another And what hast thou that thou didst not receive Doctr. 3 Doctr. 3. In that the work of Grace wrought by the Ministry of the Word is here compared to the grain of Mustard-seed which being small doth grow in time to a Tree we may further learn this that it is the property of true and sound Grace to grow and increase in those that are partakers of it Though it be never so small in them at first yet it will grow and increase in time to a greater measure 2 Thess 1. 3. We are bound to thank God c. because your Faith groweth exceedingly and the Charity of every one of you aboundeth c. 2 Cor. 4. 16. The inward man is renewed day by day 2 Cor. 3. 18. We are changed into the Image of the Lord from glory to glory c. that is we grow in Grace and the glorious Image of God is daily more and more restored in us Joh. 15. 2. Every branch that beareth fruit in Christ is purged that it may bring forth more fruit Here note two things touching the growth of Grace 1. It is not alike in all Christians but in some greater in some less 2. It is not alwayes sensible for the present time As we see not the growing of the Mustard-seed but we see it is grown c. Use 1 Use 1. This convinceth such not to have any truth or soundness of Grace in them who do not grow in it Some think they have enough Knowledg Faith and other Graces already and therefore rest as they are never caring or endeavouring to go forward in Grace Such have no soundness of Grace at all in them for if they had they could not posibly rest in that measure which they have but must needs strive to a further growth Others are so far from increasing that they decay and go backward in Grace leaving their first zeal and love as did the Church of Ephesus Revel 2. 4. And indeed such as go not forward in Grace must needs go backward in it for there is no standing at a stay in this case Now such as do thus stand at a stay or go backward have just cause to suspect that there was never any truth or soundness of Grace in them Quest Quest May not such as have soundnesse of Grace decay and go backward in it for a time Answ Answ Yes this is possible and doth sometimes come to pass though it be a very dangerous thing so to fall away But such as have thus fallen back if there be any soundness of Grace in them so soon as they come to see their own backslidings will labour speedily to recover themselves and they will ever after strive so much the more to grow and increase in all Graces of the Spirit which have bin for a time quenched or decayed in them Therefore our Saviour bids the Church of Ephesus to remember whence they were fallen and to repent and do their first works Use 2 Use 2. If we would know what soundness of Grace is in us examine our selves what growth of Grace is in us Quest Quest. How may we know this Answ Answ By these marks or signs 1. By the abatement and decaying of our sinfull corruptions which are opposite to Grace and do fight against it in us The more the flesh decayeth the more the Spirit groweth and getteth the upper hand in us As it is with one that begins to recover out of bodily sickness the more the corrupt humours in his body do decay and are wasted and purged away the more the party groweth in strength and health of body So it is with us in our Spirituall growth in Grace when our corruptions decay in us and the strength of sin is more and more abated in us this is an argument of the growth of Grace in us As on the contrary if our corruptions grow stronger in us this argues the decay of Grace in us Try thy self by this therefore if thou wouldst know whether thou grow in Grace look whether the corruption of sin decay in thee look whether those sinfull lusts which have bin strong in thee do now grow weaker and are more and more mortified in thee If it be thus with thee this is an evidence of thy growth in Grace As on the contrary if thy corruptions grow stronger and more prevail in thee than they have done it is to be feared that thou decayest in Grace 2. We may know our growth in Grace by our increasing and
before them nor any admonition or reproof of his would do any good upon them but all was in vain Vse 1 Use 1. This shews us how fearful a Judgment it is for any to be given up of God to hardness of heart and to their own natural blindness and infidelity to be left and forsaken of God in these it is a most fearful Judgment This was worse then all the other Plagues sent up on Pharaoh for the hardness of his heart was the cause of all the other Judgments and the cause also that he profited not to repentance by them nor by any other means used of God to turn his heart And so it is the cause usually that no means though never so excellent can prevail with many to work faith true conversion in them even because their hearts are so hardned that they cannot repent Rom. 2. 5. and that they cannot believe imbrace Christ truly effectually therefore though they have never so excellent means to work faith and repentance in them though they have the Word powerfully preached to them though they be reproved and exhorted in publike and private and though God lay heavy Judgments upon them to humble them and drive them to repentance and bestow great mercies on them to allure and draw them to him yet all is in vain because they remain still settled upon the lees of their ignorance unbelief and other sins so as they cannot be removed thence by any means but by their fearful hardness of heart they resist the Holy Ghost as Stephen saith of the stiff-necked Jews Act. 7. 51. and all good means which the Spirit of God useth to work good upon them This is a fearful estate to be in and we are to pity and pray for such earnestly that God may mollifie their hearts at length if it be possible and that he will work faith and repentance in them that they may be saved Use 2 Use 2. This must teach us to pray unto God not to give us up to hardness of heart nor to leave us in our natural blindness and infidelity lest all means of grace and salvation do become vain and unprofitable to us More cause thou hast to pray against hardness of heart than against all other temporal Judgments in this life More cause then to pray against fire sword famine pestilence c. None of these hurt so much as hardness of heart Above all Judgments and Plagues therefore desire the Lord to keep thee from this which is the worst of all Vse 3 Use 3. Lastly This must move all whose hearts God hath softened by his Spirit and made them pliable to the means of grace and salvation to be thankful for this unspeakable mercy If God have taken away thy stony heart and given thee a heart of flesh fit to be wrought upon by the Ministery of the Word and by other means of grace which God useth to gain thee to himself and to bring thee to salvation know that this is an inestimable favour of God to thee He hath done much more for thee than if he should have given thee all outward blessings which this World can afford Therefore never think thou canst be thankfull enough to him for delivering thee from the fearful Judgment of a hard heart and for giving thee a heart pliable to the means of grace which himself hath used to call and convert thee Vse 4 Use 4. Hence gather That the happiness of a people stands not in this that they have the outward means of grace though in excellent and plentiful measure but in that they profit truly by the means c. Mark 6. 3. Is not this the Carpenter c. March 4. 1620. IN this Verse and the former the Evangelist mentioneth the Effects of Christ's preaching at Nazareth 1. That many hearers were astonished 2. That they questioned and reasoned with themselves about him 1. Touching the excellency of his Doctrine and great Miracles 2. Touching the outward meanness of his person in respect 1. Of his Education 2. Parentage And 3. Kindred Verse 3. The third Effect was That they were offended at him Of the first Effect which was the astonishment of the hearers we have spoken In part also of the second namely their reasoning about his Doctrine and Miracles Verse 2. Now we are to speak of their questioning also about the outward quality and condition of his Person Is not this the Carpenter Thus they speak in way of contempt of his Person in regard of his mean Education being trained up with Joseph his reputed Father who was by Trade a Carpenter as appeareth Matth. 13. 55. And we must note That they call him not only the Carpenter's son as Matthew hath it but also the Carpenter Is not this the Carpenter as Mark saith here whereby they seem to imply plainly That he had not only been brought up there at Nazareth with Joseph being by Trade a Carpenter but that he did also work with or under Joseph in that Trade and this is confirmed by the words of Luke Chap. 2. 15. where he sheweth that he did not only go with his Parents Joseph and Mary to Nazareth to dwell there with them but that being there he was subject or obedient to them The word there used 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signifie such subjection as is performed by Inferiours to Superiours in authority as by Children to Parents by Servants to their Masters and the like It implyes therefore that he was obedient to them in all lawful and good things which they enjoyned him or willed him to do by vertue of their authority over him as they were his Parents Now among other things which they enjoyned him there is no doubt but this was one That he should not live idly and unprofitably without a particular Calling wherein to employ himself now we read not of any other particular calling or ordinary employment which he had in his younger years for he was not trained up to learning as appeareth Joh. 7. 15. Neither did he take on him his publike Office of preaching and working Miracles till he was about 30 years of age in the mean time therefore it is most probable thar his Father Joseph would have him to work under him in his own Trade of a Carpenter and that he was herein subject and obedient to Joseph And so much the ancient Fathers of the Church many hundred years ago did gather from hence Therefore Justin Martyr one of the most ancient living about 150 years after Christ writeth of him That he made Yokes and Ploughs Justin in Dialog cum Tryphone Judaeo Brother of James c. That is The Kinsman of James c. according to the phrase of the Hebrews who used to call all Kinsmen by the name of Brethren See before Chap. 3. 32. James There were two of the Twelve Apostles which were called by this name James the son of Zebedeus the brother of John and James the son of Alpheus
and the three next following he proveth the Crime of which he accused them by an example or instance which he giveth of two particular precepts of the Word of God which they rejected and disannulled by their Tradition Where 1. Our Saviour layeth down or alledgeth the precepts of the Word of God which he chargeth them to abrogate Ver. 10. 2. He layeth down their contrary unwritten Tradition which they opposed against the written Word Ver. 11 12 13. Where he shews how they abrogate God's Word by that Tradition Touching the alledging of the precepts of the written Word of God in which our Saviour instanceth we are to consider two things 1. The manner of alledging them viz. the name of Moses the Pen-man of those Books of Scripture out of which the precepts are cited Moses said c. 2. The matter and substance of the precepts which are two in number The first Being a precept of the Morall Law even the Words of the fifth Commandement recorded Exod. 20. 12. Deut. 5. 16. Honour thy Father and thy Mother The second Being a precept or Ordinance of the Judiciall Law which was the Law of punishments for Breakers of the Morall Law enjoyning the penalty of Death to be inflicted on such Children as did break the fifth Commandement and that in a high degree by cursing or speaking evil of their Patrents in these words Whosoever shall speak evil c. which Judiciall Law is found written Exod. 21. 17. and Levit. 20. 9. First Of the manner of alledging these precepts of the Law of God Quest Quest Where did he say it Answ Answ In his written Books before mentioned Moses said So saith our Evangelist here Yet Matthew 15. 4. it is said God Commanded c. The reason is because Moses was imployed of God as his Instrument and Secretary in writing of the Law and whatsoever he wrote and in writing delivered to the Church in those Books of his before mentioned he wrote it by Authority received from God himself and that immediately St. Mark ascribeth that to Moses which St. Mathew attributeth to God that he might commend to the Church the Divine Authority of the Books of Moses Observ Observ Here take notice of the Divine Authority of the Books of Holy Scripture that though they were written by Men as Instruments imployed of God in that service yet they contain no other but the Divine and Heavenly Doctrine of God himself So that what Moses wrote in his five Books which we have it is the Doctrine and Writing of God Hos 8. 12. I have written to him that is to Ephraim the great things of my Law c. So all that is written in the rest of the sacred Books of the Old and New Testament is no other but the very Word and Doctrine of God himself Acts 1. 16. The Holy Ghost spake by the mouth of David in the Book of Psalms The reason is because all the Pen-men of Scripture wrote those Books of Scripture by immediate extraordinary direction and assistance of the Spirit of God instructing them infallibly both in the matter and manner of Writing 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture is given by inspiration of God c. 2 Pet. 1. 21. Prophecy came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost Quest Quest. How to know and be assured that the Scriptures were written by immediate Divine inspiration and consequently that they contain the Doctrine and the Word of God himself Answ Answ The main and principall means to be assured hereof is by the inward infallible testimony of the Holy Ghost in the consciences of Men especially of the Elect of God when they read the Scriptures or hear them read or preached This inward testimony of the Spirit is the onely means abled undoubtedly to perswade the conscience that the Scriptures are the Word of God If no man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 12. 3. Then much less can any come undoubtedly to be perswaded that the whole Scripture is the Word of God but by inward testimony of the Spirit sealing it to his heart Now this Testimony is especially found and felt in those that do unfeignedly desire and endeavour to obey the Will of God revealed in his Word Joh. 7. 17. If any man will do his Will he shall know of the Doctrine whether it be of God c. But besides this inward testimony of the Spirit there are also sundry other proofs and evidences which may be drawn from the Scriptures themselves which are sufficient to convince the conscience of any not willfully blind that the Doctrine of the Scripture is the Word of God so as they cannot in conscience deny it though otherwise they have not Grace to yield obedience to it as the Word of God I will not speak of all but of some of the principall of those evidences by which our consciences may be settled in the truth of this weighty Point and by which we may be armed against profane Atheists and all that deny or call in question the authority of the Scriptures The proofs are these which I will but briefly touch 1. The Power and Efficacy of the Scriptures in working on the inward Souls and Consciences of men both to humble them in the sight and sense of their sins and to raise them up and comfort them being humbled No Writings or Doctrine of Man hath like Power Hebr. 4. 12. The Word of God is quick and powerfull c. See also 1 Cor. 14. 25. 2. The Antiquity of the Scriptures for the Books of Moses are more antient then any humane Writings setting down the Originall and first History of things done from the beginning of the World which other Writers either knew not at all or borrowed them from Moses and corrupted them with many Fables and untruths 3. The wonderfull Harmony and Consent that is found to be in the Books of Scripture among themselves though they were Written by sundry persons at sundry times and in different Ages of the World And though there be some shew of difference or contrariety in words sometimes yet all such places as seem to differ and to be at jarr are sufficiently reconciled by those of the Church who have laboured therein 4. The fulfilling of the Prophesies found in Scripture in their due and appointed times even unto this very Age in which we live For example The Israelites going into Aegypt and being delivered thence again and coming into Canaan The seventy years Captivity of the Jews and their deliverance by Cyrus who is also named by the Prophet above a hundred years before he was born Isa 45. 1. So also the time and manner of Christ's coming in the Flesh the calling of the Gentiles destruction of Hierusalem revealing of Antichrists c. All these and many other things foretold in Scripture are already fulfilled and other things are daily more
them unclean or unholy for the use of them See Col. 2. 16. and Rom. 14. So much of the Point of Doctrine propounded and avouched by our Saviour That whatsoever Meat or Drink from without entreth c. Now follows the Proof hereof Ver. 19. Because it entereth not into his heart c. In which words he proveth That Meat entring into the Body cannot defile a man by a reason taken from the place whither Meat which is eaten goeth which is shewed 1. Negatively whither it goes not It enters not to the heart 2. Affirmatively whither it doth go 1. Into the Belly 2. From thence to the Draught which is also amplyfied by the end or use for which this passage of Meat from the Belly to the Draught serveth viz. for the purging of the Meats themselves The reason stands thus That which goeth not to the proper place or seat of spirituall uncleanness which is the Heart that cannot make a man spiritually unclean But Meat eaten doth not go to the Heart c. but into the Belly c. Therefore it cannot defile the person before God It entreth not into his Heart By Heart understand the whole inner man which is sometime called the Soul or Spirit of man comprehending in a large sense all the principall faculties of the Soul as the Mind Will Affections and Conscience See 1 Pet. 3. 4. It entreth not That is it doth not reach or extend to the defiling of the inner-man Quest But into the Belly c. Quest How is it said That all Meat entring into the Body goeth into the Belly and from thence into the Draught seeing part of it doth not come into the Belly but being perfitly digested it doth turn to good Blood and to the nourishment of the whole Body as Physitians teach Answ Answ Our Saviour speaks not of the whole matter and substance of Meat received into the Body but of that part onely which being impurer than the rest is by the naturall heat of the stomack and liver separated from the rest as unfit for nourishment And this impure gross and superfluous part of Meat eaten is said here To go into the Belly and so into the Draught that is into the place of Excrements Purging all Meats This is added to shew to what end the Body doth naturally expell the Superfluities and Excrements which come of Meat viz. That by this means all Meats eaten may be purged that is the impure and gross part of them may be separated from the rest and conveyed out of the Body that so the Body may not be annoyed or defiled therewith And this makes the more plainly for confutation of the Pharisees who thought that Meats eaten with unwashen hands did defile men Against this our Saviour here affirmeth That whatsoever uncleanness is in Meats it doth not stay in a man but is purged out by the Draught and therefore cannot defile the person q. d. That which stayes not in a man doth not defile him But meat eaten stayes not c. Ergo c. So much of the sense of the words Now to gather some Instructions from them Observ Observ In that our Saviour brings this reason to prove that Meats do not defile a man because they reach not the heart or inner-man Hence we may gather That nothing defiles the person or makes him loathsome or odious before God but that which defileth the inner-man the Heart Mind and Conscience c. Reas 1 Reas 1. Nothing defileth the person before God but sin this onely makes a man loathsome and unclean in God's sight For He is of purer eyes then to behold sin c. Hab. 1. 13. Now all sin is originally seated in the heart and inner-man that is the Root and Fountain whence it springeth and proceedeth and floweth forth to the outward man as we shall see more fully afterward Sin doth first and principally defile the Heart and Soul of Man c. Reas 2 Reas 2. God looketh chiefly at the Heart and Inner-man and as that is affected and disposed so he accounteth of the whole person If the Heart be pure and upright before him if the Conscience be purged from the guilt and corruption of sin that it raign not then God accepts the person in Christ as holy and pure As on the contrary if the Heart be unclean God abhorreth the Person as unclean c. Object Object Then it may seem lawfull to defile the Body with sin so that the Heart be kept pure Answ Answ The Heart cannot be pure if the Body be defiled with sin For 1. All corruption of Sin cometh first from the Heart 2. Such Sins as are practised with the Body do bring the guilt of sin upon the Conscience and so defile the Inner-man Use 1 Vse 1. See how carefull we should be to keep our Hearts from the defilements of Sin that no wicked lust may raign there that no root of bitterness spring up in our Hearts to defile us then we shall keep our Persons holy and pure before God though not perfectly yet so far as is possible in this Life and so as God in Christ will accept and accompt us as holy and pure before him Remember then the Counsell of Solomon Prov. 4. 23. Keep thy Heart with all diligence c. Use 2 Vse 2. Comfort to such as are carefull thus to keep their Hearts and Spirits pure and upright before God free from the Dominion of Sin and wicked Lusts Outward uncleannesse cannot make them loathsome or odious to God though they should be infected and polluted with never so loathsome Diseases in the Body c. Mark 7. 19. Because it entreth not into his Heart but into the Belly and goeth out into the Draught purging all April 28. 1622. Meats OBserv 2. See here one reason why the use of such outward things as are in themselves unlawfull or indifferent cannot defile a Man or make him loathsome before God The reason is because such things do not in their use reach or extend to the inner-man they touch not the Heart and Conscience much lesse defile the same and therefore cannot defile the person before God Vse 1 Vse 1. See then that it is a weakness of Judgment in any to make scruple of conscience touching the use of outward things being lawfull and indifferent in their own nature as if the bare use of them could defile a man before God which cannot be seeing they reach not to the inner-man but onely to the body Indeed the abuse of them toucheth and defileth the inner-man as well as the outward and therefore we ought to make conscience of that but not to fear or shun the use of them altogether Use 2 Use 2. Take heed of condemning any as wicked or profane before God onely for the using of such Meats and such Drinks Apparrel c. I say for the using of them so it be in lawfull manner or measure c. for otherwise if any abuse them to
are two 1. That his ears were opened that is The faculty and use of Hearing was restored to him 2. That the string of his tongue was loosed that is The Impediment of his Speech was taken away or the difficulty of it removed and this is proved by a further Effect and Consequent viz. That he spake plain that is he was enabled to speak with ease and freedom of Tongue or he came to have and enjoy the true and right use of his Speech And this argueth that he was not stark dumb before c. Us suprà The second thing in the words is The amplification of these miraculous Effects by the Circumstance of time or the speedy and suddain accomplishment of them In that they were straightway fulfilled that is so soon as ever Christ had used those gestures of putting his fingers into the Ears of the deaf and touching his Tongue c. and had thereunto added his powerful Word And this is added to shew the truth and certainty of the Miracle and the more to set out the greatness of Christ's Power Observ 1 Observ 1 Here is another proof of Christ's God-head c. Observ 2 Observ 2. Here we learn That our Saviour Christ as he is God hath absolute Power and Authority over all diseases and infirmities of Man's body being able to cure and heal them and to restore the body to perfect health and soundness again yea he can do this miraculously and extraordinarily without ordinary means of Physick onely by his Divine Power immediately Thus being upon Earth in the state of Humiliation he was able miraculously to cure such as were deaf and dumb as we see here or to cure such as were born blind and to cure all the most incurable diseases as Leprosies Feavers Palsies bloody-Issues in Women c. Now if he had this Power being on Earth then he hath still the same Power being exalted to Heavenly Glory c. his Arm is not shortned or weakned but rather strengthned by his advancement to the right hand of God c. See more of this Point and the uses of it Chap. 2. ver 12. And Chap. 5. Ver. 29. Observ 3 Observ 3. In that our Saviour did thus miraculously cure this man of his bodily Deafness and Dumbness restoring to him the use of his Hearing and Speech Hence gather that he onely is able to cure such as are spiritually deaf and dumb The same Divine Power is seen in both See Matth. 8. 17. Such as are unable and unfit to hear spirituall and heavenly matters as the Word of God and the Doctrines of it who have deaf hearts and consciences unfit to hear that is to believe and to obey the Word of God Christ alone is able to open the deaf hearts of such by the Power of his Divine Spirit enabling them to believe and imbrace the Word of God and to yield obedience to it Thus he opened the heart of Lydia which before was deaf making her fit to attend to Paul's Doctrine and to embrace and obey the same Act. 16. So also such as are spiritually dumb that is unfit and unable to speak of spiritual and heavenly matters to the Glory of God and to the edifying of others Christ alone can unty the string of their tongues that is enable and teach them by his Spirit how to speak to God's Glory and the edifying of others he onely can furnish them both with matter and words to speak graciously So also such as are unable to speak unto God by Prayer Christ alone can open both their hearts and mouths to pray aright unto God Therefore Luke 11. 1. his Disciples desired him to teach them how to pray and David Psal 51. 15. prayeth to the Lord to open his lips that his mouth might shew forth his praise Thus it is Christ Jesus alone which can and doth cure and heal such as are spiritually deaf and dumb And therefore Isa 35. 5. it is prophecied that in the Kingdom of Christ that is in the flourishing estate of the Church of Christ in the times of the Gospel the Ears of the deaf shall be unstopped and the Tongue of the dumb shall sing c. which is to be understood not onely of the restoring and curing of such as should be taken or possessed with bodily deafness and dumbness but of such especially as should be spiritually deaf and dumb Now How should these be cured but by the Divine Power and Spirit of Christ which he should manifest in and by the Preaching of the Gospel Use Use See what is to be done of those that are spiritually deaf and dumb as we are all by Nature more or less Let them go and seek unto Christ Jesus who miraculously opened the ears of the deaf and the mouths of the dumb when he was upon earth Pray unto him to bore the ears of thy heart that thou mayest be fit to hear that is to believe and obey his Word and pray him to loose the string of thy tongue that thou mayest be able and fit to speak to him in Prayer and to speak to his Glory and the edifying of others Pray with David Open thou my lips c. If he do but touch thy heart and tongue with the finger of his Spirit and say but Ephphatha unto thee that is Do but will that thy heart be opened and thy tongue loosed it shall be done but without the Divine Power of his Spirit it can never be done Straightway his eyes were opened c. Observ Observe the truth and certainty of this Miracle that it was wrought immediately by the Divine Power of Christ as he was God and not by any natural or ordinary means whatsoever for then it could not have been wrought thus suddenly and speedily so soon as ever Christ had uttered the word Ephphatha for in all cures of the body which are wrought by means there is some space of time required for the means to shew their natural Power and Vertue to effect the cure But it was not so here which therefore proveth it to be truly miraculous and serveth to strengthen our Faith in the Divine Power and God-head of Christ and in the truth of the Doctrine of Christ which was sealed from Heaven by this and many the like Miracles Mark 7. 36 37. And he charged them that they should tell no man but the more he charged them so much Aug. 25. 1622. the more a great deal they published it And were beyond measure astonished saying He hath done all things well he maketh both the deaf to hear and the dumb to speak IN these two last Verses of this Chapter the Evangelist layeth down the Consequents of the Miracle of Christ wrought upon him that was deaf and half-dumb The Consequents are these four 1. The charge given by our Saviour unto the party cured and to those that brought him to Christ that they should not divulge the Miracle 2. Their disobedience to his charge and violating
Providence Justice Mercy c. This will keep us from tempting him c. Mark 8. 12 13. And he sighed deeply in his Spirit c. Octob. 13. 1622. VVEE have before heard of the Pharisees practise in coming to Christ and questioning with him about his Person and Calling and seeking of him a Sign from Heaven that is some new and extraordinary Miracle to be wrought by him in which the divine Power of God might be manifested as it were immediately from Heaven Now followeth our Saviour's Answer made to their Request or Petition Ver. 12. together with the Consequents of it Ver. 13. Touching the Answer made by our Saviour the Evangelist setteth down two things 1. The preparation unto it in the speciall Gesture used by our Saviour He sighed deeply in his Spirit 2. The matter of the Answer consisting of two parts 1. A reproof of them for seeking a Sign in these words Why doth this Generation seek a Sign 2. An absolute denyall of their Sute refusing to work such a Miracle as they requested in these words Verily I say unto you There shall no sign be given c. First of the preparation to his Answer Where consider three things 1. The Gesture or Action He sighed 2. The manner of his Sighing 1. In Spirit 2. Deeply Sighed deeply Or groaned from within being moved with a great and extraordinary measure of grief and sorrow conceived in his Heart and Mind In Spirit That is from his inner man from his humane So●l and Mind So Joh. 11. 33. He groaned in Spirit Quest Quest What was the Cause of so great Grief in Him Answ Answ The consideration of the grosse Hypocrisy and fearfull obstinacy and hardness of Heart which he discerned in the Pharisees and which they discovered by coming to tempt him thus by seeking a new Sign or Miracle from Heaven Especially he was grieved and he thus deeply sighed for their obstinacy and willful persisting in Unbelief and standing out against Christ and his Doctrine contrary to the light of their own Conscience for although he had formerly wrought many and great Miracles which were sufficient to convince their Consciences that He was either the Son of God and the Messiah or at least a Person sent from God yet for all this they did not receive his Person nor believe or embrace His Doctrine but maliciously and wilfully rejected both Therefore they sinned not of Ignorance or Infirmity but against Knowledge and maliciously c. which may appear by his very sharp Reproof of them Matth. 16. calling them Hypocrites and a wicked and adulterous Generation which He would not have done if they had offended through weakness c. Therefore that sharp Reproof argues that they were obstinately wicked and malicious against Christ contrary to Knowledge and consequently incurable so long as they remained so which was the main cause that our Saviour did so inwardly grieve in Spirit and deeply sigh for them Observ 1 Observ 1. That our Saviour Christ living on Earth was subject to like humane and natural Passions as we are onely without Sin Hebr. 4. 15. He was subject in his Humane Soul to Passions of Grief Sorrow Joy Fear Anger c. Here he is said to have sighed in his Spirit that is out of the inward grief of his Soul So Joh. 11. 33. He groaned in Spirit Matth. 26. 38. My Soul is exceeding sorrowful unto death Therefore also he wept for Lazarus Joh. 11. and over Jerusalem Luke 19 41. Contra Luke 10. 21. He rejoyced in Spirit c. Hebr. 5. 7. mention is made of his fearing of death Vse 1 Use 1. Hence gather the truth of his humane Nature Use 2 Vse 2. Seeing Christ was subject to humane natural passions of Grief Fear c. Hence gather That these Affections are not in themselves evil or sinful but onely so far forth as they are immoderate or are set upon evil and unfit Objects Otherwise they are lawful and good and we may and ought to be moved with such naturall Affections when just cause is offered so it be moderately God doth not require that we should be as sensless Stoicks void of humane Affections but that we moderate and rectify them Observ 2 Observ 2. The sins of others should be matter and cause of great sorrow unto us causing us to mourn and sigh for them when we see or take notice of them So did our Saviour here and Chap. 3. He mourned for their hardness of heart So Luke 19. 41. he wept over Jerusalem for the sins of the Inhabitants Psal 119. 136. David saith Rivers of waters run down mine eyes because they keep not thy Law 2 Pet. 2. 8. Righteous Lot dwelling among the Sodomites in seeing and hearing vexed his Soul c. See Ezek. 9. 4. Jerem. 9. 1. the Prophet wisheth that his Head were waters and his Eyes a Fountain of tears that he might weep day and night for the sins of the Jews and for the Judgment of God coming upon them for the same Elijah so grieved for the sins of his time that he was weary of his life 1 King 19. 4. Reas 1 Reas 1. The sins of others are offensive to God and dishonourable to his Name therefore they should be matter of grief to us otherwise we shew no true Love to God or Zeal for his Glory if we can see or hear him offended and not be grieved Reas 2 Reas 2. The sins of others are most hurtful and dangerous to those Persons which are guilty and do live in them bringing destruction of Soul and body upon them if they repent not in time therefore we should by grieving for them shew our true Love to the Persons and our desire and care of their good Use 1 Use 1. For reproof of such as are not moved with grief for others sins though they see hear and take notice of them they take them not to heart to mourn or sigh for them but pass them over leightly and can speak of them without any testimony or sign of grief yea with delight and in way of merriment to make sport for themselves and others yea though they be foul and heinous sins as Drunkenness Uncleanness or the like sins committed by others they can talk pleasantly and merrily of them Is this to be grieved and to sigh for others sins Is this their love to God and zeal for his Glory How dwelleth the love of God in thee if thou canst see or hear him offended and not be grieved Again How dwells the Love of thy Brother's Soul in thee if thou canst see or hear that he lives in a known Sin and not mourn and grieve for him This therefore shews want of true love to God and to thy Brother Some can grieve and be sorry for the outward miseries crosses and afflictions of others that are their friends but do not grieve for their sins which yet are the causes of all other miseries and hurt them much more than any outward
and hear of so many corrupt false and erroneous Teachers in the Church or out of it as Papists Anabaptists Lutherans Armintans c. Thus it hath been in all former Ages of the Church and God hath appointed to suffer it so to be for the causes and ends before mentioned Therefore no cause to be offended hereat or to grow in suspicion or dislike of the true Religion because there are so many Sects of false Teachers which labour to corrupt the same Use 2 Use 2. See what need there is for God's People in all Ages to be well grounded and setled in the sound Knowledge and Belief of the truth lest otherwise they be plucked away with the Errours and false Doctrines of corrupt Teachers and fall from their own stedfaastness in the true Faith and Religion of Christ So we in this Age and time of the Church See also what need to be very wary and circumspect in shunning all corrupt and erroneous Doctrines But of this more in the next Point Observ 3 Observ 3. That it is the duty of Christians carefully to shun and avoid all corrupt and erroneous Doctrines and erroneous Opinions of men in matters of Religion which are either contrary to the Word of God or not grounded upon the same Our Saviour warns his Disciples to take heed of the Leaven of the Pharisees and of Herod that is to reject their corrupt Doctrine and Opinions and to be far from believing or embracing the same either in Judgment or Practise So Deut. 13. 1. If there arise among you a Prophet and say Let us go after other Gods Thou shalt not hearken to the words of that Prophet So Matth. 7. 15. Beware of false Prephets It is to be understood not so much of shunning their Per●ons though they are also to be avoided as of shunning their false Doctrine Hebr. 13. 9. Be not carried about with diverse and strange Doctrines 2 Pet. 3. 17 Seeing ye know these things before beware lest ye also be led away with the Errour of the Wicked c. Matth. 24. 4. Take heed no man deceive you c. 2 Joh. 10. ver If any come and bring not this Doctrine c. Reas 1 Reas 1. Erroneous and false Doctrine is odious to God Revel 2. 15. Christ sayes He hateth the Doctrine of the Nicolaitans Therefore such Doctrine should be hateful to us and we are to shew our hatred by careful shunning the same Reas 2 Reas 2. There is great danger in embracing erroneous Doctrine for this draws men into Errours in life and practice and so is a main cause of Sin and Wickedness of life Hence it is that corrupt and heretical Teachers have alwayes for the most part been men of profane and wicked life So the Pharisees and Sadduces in our Saviour's times So afterward the Nicolaitans Arrians c. So the Papists at this day Quest Quest How far are we to shun corrupt Doctrine Answ Answ 1. So as not to embrace or consent to it either in Judgment Affection or Practice 2. So as to oppose our selves against it by all means so far as our Calling will warrant us especially Ministers Vse 1 Use 1. For reproof of such as are so farr from this careful shunning of Errours and false Doctrine that they are ready to believe and embrace such corrupt and erroneous Doctrine and Opinions especially if those Errours be taught or holden by such men as are of great place and Learning or by such whose Persons they affect or esteem highly of or agree to corrupt Nature c. Many are so weak and unstable in matters of Faith and Religion that like Children they are ready to be tossed to and fro with every wind of false Doctrine and corrupt Opinions of men which they hear or take notice of especially if those Errours or Opinions seem plausible and carry some shew of truth then they soon embrace them and rashly give consent to them without further trial and examination of them by the Word of God Vse 2 Use 2. To exhort and stir us up to the conscionable practise of this Duty viz. Carefully to shun and avoid all corrupt and erroneous Doctrines of men in matters of Religion and to be far from embracing or consenting to them either in our Judgment or practice though they seem never so plausible and carry shew of truth yea the more plausible they are the more dangerous and so the more to be taken heed of It is not enough for us to receive and hold the truth in matters of Religion but we must also reject and renounce all errours contrary to the same yea hate and detest such errours and keep our selves by all means from being seduced by them Especially shun the errours of our own times as the Doctrine of Popery Arminianism c. Helps to further us in this Duty of shunning erroneous Doctrines and Opinions and to keep us from embracing or consenting to them 1. Pray unto God to lead us by his Spirit into all truth and to preserve and keep us from Errours and false Doctrine Seek to him also for the Spirit of Judgment and Discretion whereby we may be enabled to discern things that differ as the Apostle speaketh Phil. 1. 10. 2. Labour to be well grounded and stablished in the sound truth of the Word of God but especially in the principles of Christian Religion To this end use all good means as diligent hearing of the Word reading of the Scripture and other sound and orthodox Treatises Conference with such as are of sound Judgment c. Matth. 22. 29. Ye do err not knowing the Scriptures c. 3. Labour not onely for sound Knowledge of the Word of God but withal see that we do entertain the Love of the truth in our hearts lest otherwise God do justly give us up to believe lies and errours 2 Thes 2. 10. Because they received not the love of the Truth For this cause God shall send them strong Delusions to believe a Lie 4. Make conscience to practise all known truths which we have learned out of the Word of God This is a good means to be preserved from Errours and false Doctrine 1 Tim. 1. 19. Paul bids him hold Faith that is he Doctrine of Faith and a good Conscience together The latter being a help to the former And therefore he addeth that Hymenaeus and Alexander having put away a good Conscience made Shipwrack of Faith 5. Try and examine all Doctrines and Opinions of men by the Touch-stone of the Word of God before we embrace them for currant Be not too hasty in receiving or embracing any Doctrine or Opinion till we have first examined it by the written Word especially if it be a new Doctrine which we have not before heard or if it seem in any sort to cross or contradict any Principle of Religion or other known truth wherein we have been formerly instructed 1 Thes 5. 21. Prove all things hold fast that which is good 1 Joh. 4.
thee Joh. 3. 19. This is the condemnation that Light is come into the World and men loved Darkness rather than Light c. Observ 2 Observ 2. From the 18 Verse In that our Saviour amplyfieth their ignorance in spirituall matters by their contrary ability to conceive earthly things in that they had Eyes and Ears yet did neither see nor hear that is they had Naturall reason and capacity of mind to conceive Earthly matters and yet were not fit to conceive things Spirituall Hence we may learn That men may have good Naturall understanding to conceive of Naturall things and earthly matters and yet be blind and dull to conceive things Spirituall and Heavenly This is to have Eyes and not to see and to have Ears and yet not to hear If it were thus with Christ's Disciples how much more is it true of meer Naturall Men who have no Light at all of God's sanctifying Spirit in them Nicodemus Joh. 3. had no doubt Naturall wit and capacity enough to conceive earthly matters and yet how blind and dull was he to conceive the Doctrine of Regeneration So Matth. 16. 3. our Saviour tells the Pharisees That they had Naturall skill and knowledge in the seasons of Weather but no Spirituall understanding to discern of the Signs and Miracles which did go before and accompany and follow his coming in the Flesh They could discern the face of the Sky but not the Signs of the Times Experience shews That many who excell in Naturall wit and capacity are yet very blind dull and hard to conceive things of God and his Kingdom Use Use See then that Naturall wit and understanding though never so excellent is no sufficient help to the conceiving of things Spirituall and Heavenly which concern God's Glory and our Salvation being revealed in the Word of God 1 Cor. 2. 14. The naturall man receiveth not the things of God's Spirit for they are foolishness unto him neither can he know them c. that is by the help of Naturall reason and understanding onely Which must therefore teach such as have good Naturall Gifts of wit reason and naturall capacity yet not to rely upon these for the understanding of things spirituall which concern God's Kingdom but to deny their own Naturall wit and understanding in the matters of God and of his Word and to seek to him for the supernaturall Light of his holy Spirit to clear the Eyes of their Mind and Judgment to discern of these spirituall and heavenly matters He that will be wise here must become a Fool in himself that he may be truly wise Observ 3 Observ 3. In that our Saviour doth not onely reprove the ignorance of his Disciples but doth also repeat and urge this Reproof unto them again and again in other words Ver. 18 and Ver. 21. Hence we may learn That it is necessary and fit sometimes for such as have a Calling to reprove sin in others not onely to reprove or admonish such as have need of Reproof but also to urge and presse such a reproof that so it may the more work upon the conscience of the party reproved This urging and pressing of a Reproof sets a sharper edge upon it that it may enter the more deeply and leave the deeper impression in the conscience of the Offender Especially this is needfull for Ministers of the Word in their publick Ministery not only to reprove sin but to urge and presse such Reproofs and Admonitions as occasion is offered and according to the nature and quality of the sins reproved Eccles 12. 11. The words of the Wise are as Goads and as Nails fastened by the Masters of Assemblies c. A hard Heart is that which hath little or no feeling of sin nor of the means of Grace used of God to work Repentance and Reformation Note here further That there are two Kinds or Degrees of hardness of Heart 1. A totall hardness of Heart not felt or perceived at all This is onely in the wicked as in Pharoah Ephes 4. 19. 2. When there is some sense of sin but not in that measure and degree as should be And of this our Saviour here speaks It followeth The third fault or sin reproved by our Saviour in his Disciples viz. Their hardness of heart In fine versus 17. Have ye your hearts yet hardned That is Are you grounded and settled in ignorance and unbelief that ye are not yet sensible of these Corruptions in your selves nor affected with my Doctrine and Miracles as ye should be By heart understand the inner-man especially the Will and Affections Observ Hardned The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying properly the thick skin or brawn of a man's Hand which by long use of labour doth become insensible which being in Scripture applyed to the Heart of Man doth signifie such a Heart as through custom and continuance in sin is become insensible having little or no feeling of sin or of the means used of God to bring to sight and feeling of sin Vse 1 Observ There may be and is some degree of hardness of Heart even in good Christians as here in Christ's Disciples they were not only tainted with some degree of ignorance and unbelief but they were also in some sort hardned in these corruptions they were not so sensible as they should have been of these corruptions nor so affected with the means used to reform them as became Christ's Doctrine c. Not that they were not at all sensible of their corruptions but not in that measure and degree as they should have been So Mark 6. 52. They considered not the Miracle of the Loaves for their heart was hardned So Chap. 16. 14. He upbrayded them with unbelief and hardness of heart Usuall causes of this hardness of Heart in the godly 1. Some sin or other committed and not soundly repented of especially if it were against knowledge This hardened David after his Fall so as it was long ere he came to thorough-humiliation 2. Custom in sin 3. Negligence or coldness in good Duties publick or private as Hearing Reading Prayer Conference Hebr. 3. 13. There are two kinds of hardness of Heart 1. Naturall 2. Voluntary and contracted by custom in sin c. Both these are in the godly in some degree yet great difference between this hardness in the godly and in the wicked 1. The wicked are totally hardned ut suprà not so the godly 2. The wicked do either not feel this hardness or not mourn for it truly and strive against it c. Use 1. Comfort to such as do feel and complain of hardness of Heart that they are not so sensible of their sins as they should be c. being also truly humbled for it in themselves and striving against it all they can no cause to be discouraged seeing it may be and is thus sometimes with the best Christians and Saints of God Vse 2 Use 2. See here what cause even
had with his Disciples touching their own and others opinion of his Person In the words are four things set down as ye have heard 1. The occasion of the Conference Our Saviour's going out with his Disciples into the Towns of Cesarea Philippi 2. The Time and Place when and where it was had By the way 3. The Conference it self 4. The Event or Consequent Ver. 30. Of the two first ye have heard Now followeth the Conference it self which consisteth of two parts 1. A twofold Question or Demand of our Saviour moved to his Disciples touching himself 2. Their twofold Answer thereunto The first Question is touching the common People's opinion of Him Whom do men say that I am Whereunto the Disciples Answer is That some said he was John the Baptist some that he was Elias and others that he was one of the Prophets ver 28. The second Demand or Question is what the Disciples own opinion was of Christ whereunto Peter in all their Names answereth Confessing him to be the Christ ver 29. To speak of the words in order as they lye And first of our Saviour's first Demand and their Answer to it Whom do men say that I am That is What do the common sort of men or the common People think and speak of me So St. Luke expoundeth it Luke 9. 18. whom say the People that I am which shews That our Saviour did not here enquire of his Disciples what the Scribes and Pharisees and such like of great Place and Accompt did speak or think of him for he knew that they were his open malicious and professed Enemies holding such gross and absurd and openly blasphemous Opinions of him as had no colour at all of Truth as that he was a Blasphemer a friend of Publicans and Sinners that he had a Devil c. Therefore hepasseth over the censure of these as not worthy to be mentioned and he asketh onely what the common and meaner sort of People said of him who had some honourable opinion of him though erroneous Quest Quest Wherefore did our Saviour thus enquire of his Disciples what others spake and thought of him seeing he was not ignorant hereof before he asked Joh. 2. 25. Answ Answ He did not ask this out of any ambitious desire of vain-glory from men or as if he depended upon the common Peoples Opinion or Speeches of him for he received not mans testimony touching his Person or Calling as he professeth Joh. 5. 34. but he moved this Question to them for other Ends and Reasons As 1. That by consideration of the false and erroneous Opinions which others held of him he might the better take occasion to confirm his Disciples in the true Faith which they had conceived of his Person which was the main end of all this Conference with them as may appear Matth. 16. 2. That by putting them in mind of the gross errours which others held of him he might stir them up to bless God for revealing to them the true knowledge of his Person and for giving them Faith to believe in him Matth. 16. 17. Blessed art thou Simon c. Flesh and Blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father c. 3. That he might by this Question admonish them to take heed of those erroneous Opinions which others held of him Observ Observ It is needful for Christians not onely to be gounded in the sound Knowledge of the Truth in matters of Religion but also to take notice of those Errours and corrupt Opinions which are holden contrary to the Truth Therefore our Saviour here examineth his Disciples not onely touching the Truth which themselves did hold but also touching the erroneous Opinions which others held of him thereby shewing That it was needful for them not onely to know and believe the Truth but also to take notice of the contrary Errours maintained by others against the Truth Therefore in Scripture not onely the true Doctrine of God is laid down but also contrary Errours and false Doctrine discovered As for Example The Errours of the Sadduces denying the Resurrection Matth. 22. 23. and affirming that there is neither Angel nor Spirit Acts 22. 8. So also the Errour of Hymenaeus and Philetus affirming the Resurrection to be past already 2 Tim. 2. 18. So also the devilish Doctrines of those false Teachers of those latter Times prophesied of 1 Tim. 4. 3. which should forbid Marriage and command to abstain from Meats c. These and the like Errours and false Doctrines of Men contrary to the Truth should not have been thus particularly mentioned in Scripture if it were not needful and profitable for Christians to know and be acquainted with them Therefore also we are bid to try the Spirits of false Teachers 1 Joh. 4. 1. which we cannot do without taking notice of those false Doctrines which they teach and hold Reason Reason Christians ought carefully to shun and avoid all erroneous Opinions and Doctrines contrary to the Truth as we have heard before ver 15. of this Chapter which they cannot well do unless they do know and take notice of those erroneous Opinions Note that this is not so to be understood as if Christians must of necessity know and be acquainted in particular with all Errours and corrupt Opinions which have been or are holden against the Truth for that cannot possibly be but that it is fit and necessary for all Christians so far forth as they have means to know and be acquainted in some measure with the principall and fundamentall Errours which are holden by others against the Truth in such Points and Doctrines of Faith as are of necessity to be believed unto Salvation And especially Christians have need to be acquainted with the Errours of their own Times with which they are most in danger to be infected So the Apostles were well acquainted with the Errours and Heresies of their own Times So the Christians of the antient Church in the Ages succeeding the Apostles So we in these Times have most need to take notice of the Errours and Heresies now raigning and most dangerous as the Errours of the Turks Jews Papists Lutherans Anabaptists c. Further note That as it is needfull and profitable for all Christians so especially for Pastors and Ministers of the Word to be not onely grounded in the Truth but also to know and take notice of the contrary Errours and false Doctrines that so they may not onely themselves shun and avoid such Errours but also to be able to discover and confute them and to teach others to avoid them Tit. 1. 9. A Bishop or Pastor must not onely hold fast the faithfull Word but be able also to convince the gainsayers Use Use See how needfull for all Christians to be furnished with a good measure of knowledge in the Word of God that so by the Light thereof they may be able not onely to know and understand the truth in all Doctrines needfull to Salvation but also to discern
such remain grosly ignorant in matters of Religion even in the most common and easy Principles of it seeing they refuse the means of being better instructed Besides that hereby they greatly dishonour God and shew contempt of the Authority of those that are set over them in place of Government Again this also reproveth such as being called before such as are in place of publick Authority to give an Accompt of their Faith and Religion do refuse to do it either through shame or fear of Mens displeasure or do for these or the like causes dissemble their Faith and Religion A great dishonour to God and betraying of his Truth Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Disciples did here make outward Confession of their Faith unto Christ requiring them so to do we learn that true Faith must not lye hid in our hearts but it must be outwardly confessed to others and before others as occasion is offered and so often as we are thereunto called Rom. 10. 10. With the heart man believeth unto Righteousness and with the mouth Confession is made unto Salvation 2 Cor. 4. 13. We having the same Spirit of Faith according as it is written I believed and therefore have I spoken we also believe and therefore speak Mat. 10. 32. Whosoever shall confess me before men him will I also confess before my Father which is in Heaven But whosover shall deny me c. For this cause Hebr. 3. 1. Christ is called the Apostle and High-Priest of our Profession to shew that we are not onely to believe in him by Faith but also to make outward Profession of this Faith before men when we are thereunto called 1 Joh. 4. 15. Whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God God dwelleth in him and he in God Thus have the Saints of God used to make outward Confession of their Faith before men when they had a Calling so to do Mark 9. 24. So the Apostles being brought before Authority confessed their Faith as Paul before Agrippa and Festus Act. 26. So the Martyrs as Steven and others that followed him whence they were also by the ancient Fathers called Confessours yea Christ himself before Pontius Pilate witnessed a good Confession 1 Tim. 6. 13. Quest Quest. When are we called to make outward Confession of our Faith before men Answ Answ 1. When such as have Authority over us do demand of us an Accompt of our Faith ut suprà dictum 2. At other times when there is hope and likelihood of glorifying God and edifying others thereby for otherwise it is better to be silent than to make any such outward Profession As if it be before malicious professed enemies and scoffers at Religion here is no fit time or place to make Profession of our Faith but we more glorify God by silence Mat. 7. 6. We are forbidden to cast Pearls before Swine c. Use 1 Use 1. To reprove such as fail in this excellent and necessary duty of making outward Confession of their Faith before others as occasion is offered Some think they may keep their Religion and Faith to themselves and need not make any outward Profession of it to others but here we see the contrary It is not enough to believe with the heart but there must be also Confession with the mouth Others are afraid to confess their Faith in Christ before such as are Enemies of Religion lest it endanger their liberty goods or life This was the Sin of Peter into which he fell through infirmity denying and forswearing Christ to save his own life The like have others done in time of Persecution Others are ashamed to make Confession of their Faith before men lest it be some disgrace or discredit to them See Joh. 12. 42. Let such consider what our Saviour saith in the last Verse of this Chapter Whosoever shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this sinfull Generation of him shall the Son of Man be ashamed when he cometh in the Glory of his Father with the holy Angels Others are ignorant and know not how to make Profession of Christ or of their Faith when it is demanded Vse 2 Use 2. To exhort us to make Conscience of this Christian duty of confessing and professing our Faith before men so often as good occasion is offered and we have a Calling to it yea though it be with hazard of our goods liberty or life it self in case we should be called before such as are the professed enemies of the Go●pel and of Christ yet we must not shrink from our Profession for fear of their displeasure or of any Punishment they can impose on us but we must witness a good Confession Rules for the right performance of this Duty of outward confessing our Faith 1. It is to be done with Christian wisdom and discretion observing due circumstances of time place and fit Persons before whom we do it 2. To be done with spiritual boldness and freedom of Speech not being daunted or dismayed herein by the faces of men that are enemies of the Truth though never so great Examples of this courage and boldness we have in sundry of the Martyrs 3. This Confession must come from inward truth and sincerity of heart aiming at God's Glory and the good of others it must not be in Hypocrisy aiming at our own praise credit or advantage 4. It must be done with the Spirit of meeknesse and mildnesse and not in distempered Passion or heat of Contention 5. It must be with fear and reverence of the Ma●esty of God before whom we stand and with reverent regard of his truth which we make profession of 1 Pet. 3. 15. with meekness and fear Mark 8. 29. And Peter answereth and saith unto him Thou art the Christ. ●une 19. 1625. NOw followeth the matter confessed Thou art the Christ Doct. 1 Doctr. 1. That Jesus the son of the Virgin Mary is the Christ or true Messiah that is to say that special and singular Person ordained of God to be the Mediator between God and Us and to be the Redeemer and Saviour of Mankind This is the main truth believed and professed here by Peter for the rest of the Apostles Thou art the Christ that is to say Thou who hast avouched thy self before to be the Son of man for so our Saviour did Matth. 16. 13. Whom say the People that I the Son of man am art the true Christ o● Messiah ordained and sent of god to execute the Office of a Mediator in redeeming and saving Mankind The same truth also they had before this time made Profession of Joh. 6. 69. We believe and are sure that thou art that Christ the Son of the living God Yea this some of them did believe and profess at the time when they were first called to be Christ's Disciples as may appear Joh. 1. 41. Andrew so soon as he began to follow Christ finding his Brother Peter tells him thus We have found the Messiah which is
being interpreted the Christ. And it is even the main scope of the four Evangelist in writing the History of Christ to prove this Point That Jesus is the Christ or true Messiah Joh. 20. 31. These things are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ c. This was also clearly testifyed by all the Miracles of Christ Joh. 10. 25. The works that I do in my Father's Name bear witness of me See Mat. 11. 4. Reason Reason All things foretold by the Prophets in the Old Testament touching the true Messiah are fulfilled in this Jesus Act. 10. 43. as may appear by considering some of the principal matters prophecyed of him before-hand which are these 1. Touching the Person of the Messiah That he should be both God and Man in one Person foretold Isa 7. 14. His name Emmanuel implieth this signification God with us that is God in our Flesh or Nature 2. The Birth of the Messiah or his coming in the Flesh with the Circumstances of it as the time place manner c. are foretold by the Prophets His Birth Isa 7. 14. Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son c. and Isa 9. 6. To us a Child is born c. The time of his Birth foretold by Jacob Gen. 49. 10. The Scepter shall not depart from Judah till Shiloh come that is The Scepter of Government shall not be taken away from the Jews till the Messiah come which implyes that when that Scepter should depart then they should look for the Messiah So the place of his Birth that it should be at Bethlehem Mich. 5. 2. 3. The Death and Sufferings of the Messiah are foretold together with the time and manner of them as we may see Psal 22. Isa 53. Dan. 9. 4. His Glorification which followed his Death and Sufferings with the severall Degrees of it viz. His Resurrection Psal 16. Thou wilt not leave my Soul in Grave c. His Ascention Psal 68. 18. He ascended up on High c. His sitting at the right hand of God Psal 110. The Lord said to my Lord Sit thou on my right hand c. Now all these things foretold by the Prophets touching the Messiah are every one fulfilled in this Jesus the Son of the Virgin Mary as may easily appear by comparing the Places and Predictions of the Prophets before mentioned with the History of the four Evangelists in which all those things are plainly fulfilled in this Jesus But I will not further insist upon the clearing of it Vse 1 Vse 1. To convince the blind and obstinate Jews at this Day denying this Jesus to be the Christ or true Messiah promised and foretold by the Prophets notwithstanding that they have the Books of the old Testament and do daily read the things foretold by the Prophets touching the person of the Messiah and touching his Birth and time of his coming c. and seeing them to be fulfilled in this Jesus the son of Mary yet believe not that he is the true Messiah but look for another yet to come yea notwithstanding that themselves are driven to confesse that that time is expired many hundred years ago wherein the Prophets foretold he should come yet for all this they remain still obstinate in their wilfull blindnesse and unbelief unto which they are justly given up of God Rom. 11. 25. Blindnesse or hardnesse is happened to Israel untill the fulnesse of the Gentiles be come in We are to pity them and to pray unto God for them that the Vail may be taken from their Eyes and that they may be converted to believe in this Jesus the onely Messiah that they may be saved by him The rather we are to do this because God hath not for ever shut them up in Unbelief but for a time as the Apostle sheweth in the same place Rom. 11. therefore we are to be the more earnest with God in prayer to call and convert them to the Faith of Christ in that due time which he hath appointed Vse 2 Vse 2. Teacheth us to receive and imbrace this Jesus by Faith as the onely true Messiah ordained and sent of God and to seek Redemption and Salvation in him alone renouncing all other false means of Salvation as those which the Papists have brought in as mediation of Angels and Saints-departed which they joyn with Christ also merit of good Works humane Satisfactions Popes Pardons c. remembring what is said Acts 4. 12. There is no Name under Heaven given among men whereby we must be saved but onely by this Jesus the Son of the Virgin Mary and the true Messiah Therefore seek forgiveness of Sins and Salvation in this Jesus in this Christ alone in whom it is hid and who is the onely Fountain of Life and Salvation Joh. 5. 11. This is the Record That God hath given to us eternall Life and this Life is in his Son that is in this Jesus Christ who is not onely the Son of Man but also the very naturall and eternall Son of God Doctr. 2 Doctr. 2. Further from this speciall Title given here unto our Saviour being called the Christ or the anointed of God in regard of his speciall calling to the Office of Mediatour We learn That Christ Jesus the Son of God did not take upon Him his Office of Mediatour to be the High Priest Prophet and King of the Church without a Calling from God but He was spiritually anointed and called of God unto this Office Isa 61. 1. The Lord hath anointed me to preach good tydings unto the meek He hath sent me to bind up the broken-hearted c. Hebr. 5. 5. Christ glorified not himself to be an High Priest but he that said unto him Thou art my Son c. Now this spirituall anointing or calling Christ to his Office of Mediatour includeth two things in it 1. The solemn Consecrating of him to this Office in God's eternall purpose Joh. 6. 27. Him hath God the Father sealed 1 Pet. 1. 20. Said to be fore-ordained before the foundation of the World Note that this is to be understood of Christ not as He is God but as He is Mediatour God-and-Man for so He is inferiour to God the Father and so he is said to be ordained of Him to this Office of Mediatour The second thing contained in this anointing and calling of Christ is the qualifying or furnishing of him with perfection of all Graces needfull for discharge of this Office of a Mediatour and that not onely as he is God but even in his humane Nature Psal 45. 7. God thy God hath anointed thee with Oyl of Gladness above thy fellows Isa 61. 1. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because the Lord hath anointed me c. Acts 10. 38. anointed with the Holy Ghost and Power Joh. 3. 34. The Spirit given him not by measure Vse 1 Vse 1. Seeing Christ Jesus took not his Office of Mediatourship upon Him without a calling but was annointed of
arm our selves against this trial because it is no easy matter but hard to our Nature to bear such contempt and disgrace in the World for the Name of Christ Use 4 Vse 4. To comfort us against all contempt and disgrace which we meet with in the World at the hands of men for the Name of Christ or for well-doing and to encourage us patiently to bear the same What though thou be rejected and despised of men or basely esteemed Christ thy Head and Saviour was so rejected and despised before thee He hath gone before thee in this kind of Suffering leaving thee an example to follow his steps Therefore be content to follow Him The Disciple is not above his Master If they have called the Master of the House Beelzebub how much more will they so reproach and disgrace the Servants Now follow the Persons by whom our Saviour was to be rejected The Elders Chief-Priests and Scribes Observ 1 Observ 1. That those Persons who by their Place Calling and Authority in Church or Common-wealth should be the greatest friends of Christ and favourers of Christian Religion are oftentimes the greatest Enemies of Christ and of Religion Such were these Elders Chief-Priests and Scribes who being men of Place and Authority in Church and Common-wealth ought to have used their Authority to the favouring countenancing and defending of Christ and his Doctrine but they on the contrary abused it to the contemning and disgracing of him yea to the putting of him to death as appears in the words following Act. 4. 11. Peter tells the High-Priests Elders and Scribes being assembled that Christ was the Stone set at nought by them who were the Builders that is who by their Place and Calling ought to have been Builders of the Church and friends and favourers of Christ the chief Corner-stone in the building but they were nothing less they rejected Christ the precious Corner-stone and were rather Destroyers than Builders of the Church So the Scribes and Pharisees should by their Place and Calling have been among the chief friends and favourers of Christ but we see the contrary how they were his most malicious and deadly Enemies So Herod and Pilate c. Psal 2. 2. The Kings of the Earth set themselves and the Rulers take Counsel together against the Lord and against his Anointed These should have stood for Christ above all other but they were his main Adversaries Act. 17. 18. when Paul came to Athens and disputed there and taught Christ the learned Philosophers who should have been most forward to embrace the Doctrine of Christ were greatest Enemies to it Use 1 Use 1. See that it is not safe for us to tye our practice to the Examples of men of great Place and Authority in Church or Common-wealth lest by this means we become Enemies to Christ and his Religion as men of great place are oftentimes By following the example and practice of great men of the World we may come to reject and despise Christ as they oftentimes do If the Apostles of Christ or others Disciples and Believers in him had followed the Example of the great ones as the Scribes Pharisees Elders Chief-Priests c. they had never believed in Christ nor embraced his Doctrine but on the contrary had proved his dangerous enemies So if Athanasius had followed the other Bishops or the Emperour c. In Queen Mary's dayes if the Martyrs had taken example by many great men then living as by Popish Bishops Doctors c. they had persecuted Christ and the Gospel in the Professors and Preachers of it as those great men did See therefore the folly of such as make the example and practice of great men the Rule of their life as if it were alwayes safe to follow such Here we see the contrary for such great ones are oftentimes the greatest enemies of Christ and of the Gospel Therefore take heed of following them further than they follow Christ and his Word Vse 2 Use 2. To shew what need there is for us to pray unto God for such as are in Authority and Place above us in the Church and Common-wealth as for our Magistrates and Ministers that God may put his true fear in their hearts and make them truly religious that so they may be friends and not enemies of Christ and of the Gospel See what cause we have to pray that they may use their Authority and Dignity to the help and furtherance of Christ's Kingdom and not to the hinderance thereof 1 Tim. 2. 2. I exhort that Prayers be made for Kings and for all that are in Authority that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all Godlinesse and Honesty Such great ones if they be not religious and friends to Christ and to Religion then are they usually the most dangerous enemies of Christ and of Religion and therefore there i● great cause to pray for them that they may be religious and that they may use their authority credit honour wealth learning c. to the glory of Christ and good of his Church and furtherance of his Gospel Observ 2 Observ 2. That there is no Calling Office or Dignity though never so high amongst men that can or doth exempt those that are called to it from Errour in judgment or practice Though these which rejected Christ were men of high Place and Authority yet they erred dangerously in refusing and rejecting Christ So the Pharisees and High-Priests themselves Yea the Apostles themselves were not simply and absolutely priviledged from Errour by their outward Calling and Office but so far onely as they were immediately infallibly assisted by the Holy Ghost in the execution of their Office as in Preaching and writing the Scriptures they were therefore in other matters wherein they were not guided by the infallible assistance of the Spirit they were subject to Errour Act. 1. 6. at the Ascension of Christ they dreamed still of an earthly Kingdom and Act. 10. 14. Peter was ignorant that the Ceremonial Law touching the distinction of clean and unclean Creatures was abrogated by the death of Christ See Perk. in Gal. 2. 4. Use 1 Use 1. To confute the fond Opinion of the Papists touching their Pope's being exempted from Errour in matters of Faith by vertue of his Papal Office and Function But let them shew any ground of Scripture to prove that his Office doth priviledge him from Errour more than the Office of these Elders Chief-Priests and Scribes did exempt them from Errour Vse 2 Use 2. To teach us not to build our Faith upon mens Opinion or Judgment though they be of never so high Place Authority or Calling in the Church but upon the Word of God Mark 8. 31. And be killed c. Aug. 7. 1625. NOW followeth the second particular kind of Suffering foretold by our Saviour viz. His Death that He must be killed or put to death An Article of our Faith For the opening of which some Questions are to be answered
to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you and to you who are troubled Rest with us when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from Heaven c. What a comfort is this to us in the midst of all the troubles of this life in the midst of all wrongs and abuses offered us by wicked men That Christ our Saviour is shortly coming to right our cause and give us final and perfect deliverance Therefore Jam. 5. 8. Be patient stablish your hearts for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh Though Christ's second coming shall be dreadful to the wicked yet it will be most comfortable to the godly Luke 21. 28. Look up and lift up your heads for your Redemption draweth nigh Act. 3. 19. it is called a time of refreshing from the presence of the Lord. Use 4 Use 4. To teach us certainly to expect and look for this second coming of Christ to Judgment As we profess to believe it as an Article of our Faith so shew our Faith by living in continuall expectation of the day and time of Christ's coming making it present oftentimes to us before it cometh as that ancient Father who whatsoever he was doing still thought he heard the last Trumpet sounding in his Ears and these words Arise ye dead and come to Judgment Luke 12. 35. Let your loins be girded And your selves like men that wait for the Lord when he will return from the Wedding Phil. 3. 20. Our Conversation is in Heaven from whence we look for the Saviour c. If all Creatures do earnestly expect and wait for this coming of Christ as appeareth Rom. 8. 19. much more ought we especially seeing it is said Hebr. 9. in the last Ver. that to such as look for him He shall appear the second time unto Salvation And so much the rather must we live in expectation of Christ's second coming because the time of his coming is uncertain and yet is not like to be far off Mark 13. 36. Watch for ye know not when the Master of the House cometh c. Great good comes of this continual expecting of Christ's coming to Judgment For this will cause us to shake off security and to be the more watchful and careful to prepare our selves unto the coming of Christ On the contrary Mat. 24. 48. Because the evill Servant said in his heart My Lord delaieth his coming he begins to smite his fellow Servants c. Use 5. To move us to prepare our selves unto this second coming of Christ to Judgment that we may be ready to meet him and able to stand before him with comfort at that day 2 Pet. 3. 14. Be diligent that ye may be found of him in peace without spot and blameless Quest Quest How shall we prepare our selves to Christ's coming Answ Answ 1. Get Faith in Christ that we may be found in him not having our own Righteousness but his imputed to us whereby we may stand before God at that day Phil. 3. 9. Get this Oyl in our Lamps to meet our Bridegroom 2. See that we repent of our sins so many as have not done it to do it speedily without delay judging themselves that they be not judged of the Lord at his coming 1 Cor. 11. 31. and such as have repented already to renew their Repentance daily Act. 17. 30. Now God commandeth all men every where to repent Because he hath appointed a day c. So Act. 3. 19. 3. Walk conscionably before God in the duties of our general and particular Callings that the Lord may find us well imployed at his coming Mat. 24. 46. Blessed is that Servant whom his Lord when he cometh shall find so doing Act. 24. 15. Paul looking for the general Resurrection endeavoured alwaies to have a Conscience void of offence toward God and Man Mark 8. 38. When he cometh in the Glory of his Father with the holy Angels Mar. 12. 1625. NOW followeth the Description of Christ's second coming by the manner of it In two things 1. In the Glory of his Father 2. With the holy Angels In the Glory of his Father that is with the same Glory or Divine Majesty which is originally and primarily in God the Father as the Fountain of the God-head and which Christ as he is the Son and as he is the Mediator doth receive from the Father He is called the Father of Christ in regard of eternal Generation by which He was begotten of the Substance of the Father and received the beginning of his Person from Him Object Object Luke 9. 26. it is called his own Glory Answ Answ The Reason of that is because as he is God or in respect of his God-head simply considered He hath this Glory and Majesty from himself See Joh. 17. 5. With the holy Angels that is Being accompanied with the good Angels as his Ministers Servants or Attendants They are called Holy to set forth the excellency of their Nature and to distinguish them from evil Angels or Devils which are unholy and therefore are called Unclean Spirits There is a two-fold Holiness 1. Increated and infinite which is in God onely One of his essential Attributes 2. Created which is in elect Angels and Men which they receive from God and he worketh it in them Now this created Holiness is also two-fold 1. Imperfect which is in some measure begun to be wrought in the Saints in this life The Grace of Sanctification whereby God's Image lost in Adam is in part restored in them 2. Perfect Holiness and purity both in regard of the parts and degrees of it without all imperfection or mixture of Sin which is the elect Angels by Creation and with which Man also was at first created and which shall be in all the Saints after this life in Heaven And this is here meant when the Angels are called holy Doct. General Doctrine That the second coming of Christ to Judgment shall be in most glorious manner full of divine Glory and Majesty It is here said He shall come in the Glory of his Father and with the Holy Angels So elsewhere the glorious manner of his coming is set forth Matth. 24. 30. They shall see the Son of Man coming in the Clouds of Heaven with Power and great Glory Mat. 25. 31. When the Son of Man shall come in his Glory and all the holy Angels with him c. More particularly That the second coming of Christ shall be glorious in these respects 1. In respect of that infinite Glory and Majesty of Christ himself which he shall then manifest in his own Person being the same Glory which is in God the Father as is here said And if at the time of his transfiguration on Mount Tabor his face did shine as the Sun Mat. 17. 2. then how glorious shall he be in his second coming from Heaven 2. In respect of his glorious Attendants which shall then accompany him and wait on him viz. the good Angels being most excellent and glorious Creatures
2 Observ 2. That there is a distinction of Persons in the God-head Though there is but one God and one Divine Nature and Essence yet this one Nature is distinguished into several Persons There is the Father who is the first Person and there is the Son the second Persion who is partaker of one and the same Glory with the Father as our Saviour himself here sheweth So also there is the Holy Ghost the third Person in the God-head as appeareth by other places of Scriptures although he be not here expresly named 1 Joh. 5. 7. There are three which bear Record in Heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one Note that though these three Persons be truly and really distinguished one from the other and have distinct and incommunicable properties by which they differ so as the Father is not the Son or the Son the Father c. yet they are not divided or separated one from the other but are most nearly united together within themselves being all but one and the same Nature and Essence But I will not here insist further upon this Use Use To confirm our Faith in this Mystery and Doctrine of the distinction of Persons in the God-head and to teach us how to conceive of God in our prayers and other Worship which we perform unto him namely as one God in Essence and Nature distinguished into three persons c. Thus labour to think of God yet withall take heed of troubling and distracting of our thoughts in time of prayer or other religious Duties with curious speculations about this distinction of Persons in the Trinity lest it hinder our Affections in prayer c. It followeth With the holy Angels Observ The excellent nature and quality of the good Angels that they are most holy and pure Creatures perfectly holy and free from all spot of Sin and that by vertue of their first Creation Acts 10. 22. Cornelius was warned from God by an holy Angel Therefore they are sometimes called Saints Deut. 33. 2. The Lord at the giving of the Law came from Mount Sinai he came with ten thousands of Saints c. So Jude ver 14. For this cause they used to appear in white Apparrel to shew the purity of their Nature c. Use 1 Vse 1. See the excellent state of the Saints after this Life Eph. 5. 27. like the Angels free from sin c. Matth. 22. 30. Long for that estate to be rid of Sin So Paul Rom. 7. 24. Vse 2 Vse 2. See the excellency and dignity of the Saints of God in this Life in that they have these holy Angels to attend upon them for their good and to protect them from evil Hebr. 1. ult Are they not all ministring Spirits sent forth to Minister for them who shall be Heirs of Salvation See Psal 34. And Psal 91 Great comfort to the Godly against the contempt of the World c. Psal 16. The excellent of the Earth Use 3 Use 3. Teacheth us to imitate this holiness and purity of the Angels striving to resemble and become like unto them in some measure even in this Life that so we may be perfectly like unto them after this Life in Heaven which otherwise we cannot be we must first be Saints on Earth before we can be Saints in Heaven Labour therefore to know and feel our selves in some measure truly sanctified in this Life and to shew forth the Fruits of Sanctification in our Lives purging our Hearts and Lives more and more from the corruption of Sin 2 Cor. 7. 1. Let us cleanse our selves from all Filthinesse of Flesh and Spirit perfecting Holinesse c. The more we do this the nearer we come to the holy Nature and Life of the Angels in Heaven We pray that we may do God's Will on Earth as it is done in Heaven by the holy Angels and Saints and this is one principall part of the Will of God that we should hate sin and be holy in all manner of Conversation 1 Thess 4. 3. This is the Will of God even your Sanctification c. Use 4 Use 4. For admonition to look to our outward carriage and behaviour at all times that it be holy and religious forasmuch as we are before the Angels of God which pitch their Tents round about us and do take notice of our outward behaviour what it is Now they being so perfectly holy and pure cannot but hate all sin and profaness in word and deed therefore take heed of such carriage lest we grieve and offend the holy Angels They are said to rejoice in the conversion of a Sinner therefore they are grieved to see sin committed c. Take heed therefore of all profaness in word and deed be careful to carry our selves in all holy and seemly manner considering that the Angels of God which are perfectly holy and pure do continually behold our outward Conversation If we could with bodily eyes see those glorious Creatures the holy Angels which encamp about us how would their presence curb us from Sin and cause us in all holy and reverent manner to carry our selves wheresoever we become Now it is as certain That they are about us and do take notice of our wayes as if we did see them in bodily shapes Therefore look to our behaviour before them c. Especially in the publick Congregation where they are in special manner present to behold what is done 1 Cor. 11. 10. Women must be decently covered because of the Angels Finis Octavi Capitis CHAP. IX Mark 9. 1. And he said unto them Verily I say unto you that there be some of them that stand here which shall Mar. 19. 1625. not taste of Death till they have seen the Kingdom of God come with Power THE principall parts of this Chapter are these 1. The History of our Saviour Christ's transfiguration before certain of his Disciples in the Mount unto ver 14. 2. His miraculous casting of the Devil out of a Child that was possessed from ver 14. to the 30. 3. His foretelling of his Passion and Resurrection to his Disciples from ver 30. to the 33. 4. His private teaching of the Doctrine of humility to his Disciples from ver 33. to 38. 5. Lastly A further discourse which he made to his Disciples teaching them sundry other points of Christian Doctrine and Practice from ver 38. ad finem Capitis Concerning the first The Evangelist mentioneth 1. Our Saviour's prediction or foretelling of his transfiguration ver 1. 2. The actual accomplishment of it ver 2 c. And he said unto them c. These words have dependance upon the latter end of the former Chapter being the conclusion of that excellent Speech or Doctrine delivered by our Saviour unto his Disciples and the Multitude touching the bearing of the Crosse in this Life for Christ's sake For having taught them the necessity of the Crosse and used forcible Reasons to move them to take
actually sent they ought to hear him Hear This word is in Scripture used diversly especially in a two-fold sense 1. To signify an outward hearing or hearkning with our bodily ears So Mat. 13. 9. Who hath ears to hear let him hear 2. To signify that Obedience which is yielded to those things which we hear with our outward ears when we so hear as to yield Obedience to that which is taught or spoken to us So 1 Sam. 15. 22. To obey is better than Sacrifice and to hearken is better than the Fat of Rams Now in this place we are to take it both these wayes though especially in the latter sense quasi diceret So hear him with your outward ears that withall ye do yield Obedience to that which he shall teach you Him that i● Christ the Son of God who was spoken of expresly in the words going before And in this word Him there is an Emphasis to be marked For by it Christ is in special manner distinguished not onely from Moses and Elias who had a little before appeared with him in the Mount but also from all other Prophets and Teachers of the Church and is preferred before them all So the meaning is that they should not onely hear and obey Christ and his Teaching but they must hear him as a speciall and eminent Prophet and Teacher sent from God yea as the Son of God and true Messiah himself who was the chief and head of all Prophets and Teachers in the Church and to be heard and obeyed above them all Quest Quest Why are the Disciples enjoyned to hear and yield Obedience to Christ's Teaching seeing they had already done so Answ Answ 1. To correct Peter's Errour in being so desirous to have Moses and Elias to continue and dwell there with them in the Mount and withal to comfort him for their departure For by these words is implied that Christ's company was much more to be desired than the company of Moses and Elias and that there was more to be learned of him than by the Teaching or Conference of Moses and Elias yea that his Teaching alone was sufficient without Moses and Elias And therefore both Peter and his fellows are bid to hearken to Christ alone as their best and principal Teacher 2. Though they had already heard and begun to obey Christ's Doctrine yet they are willed still to do the same that is to persevere and continue so to do and the rather because his Doctrine was not easy but hard to be obeyed as being contrary to flesh and blood and an enemy to corrupt Nature as the Doctrine of the Cross and of denying themselvs c. which he taught them a little before The words being thus opened we may from them gather two Points of Instruction 1. That Christ Jesus the Son of God is the chief and principal Prophet or Teacher of the Church 2. That all Christians ought to hear and obey his Teaching Of the first That Christ is the chief and principal Doctor or Teacher of the Church this is here implied when the Disciples are bid to hear him in special manner and as a special Teacher sent of God yea as the chief of all Teachers in the Church And this is one special part of Christ's Office as Mediator That he is called and appointed of God viz. to be the chief Prophet and Teacher of his Church Therefore he is called the Word called also Prophet yea set forth as the most eminent of all Prophets Deut. 18. 15. and Act. 3. 22. To this purpose also is that Mat. 23. 8. One is your Master even Christ c. Hebr. 13. 20. called The great Pastor of the Church Reas 1 Reas 1. He onely hath absolute Power and Authority to teach in his own Name as being Lord of his own Doctrine for which cause he used in his ordinary Teaching while he lived on Earth to speak thus Verily I say unto you c. to shew that he spake and taught in his own Name and by his own Authority Herein he excelleth all other Teachers in the Church who are to teach in the Name of God and of Christ not in their own names Object Object Joh. 7. 16. My Doctrine is not mine but his that sent me Answ Answ He doth not deny simply and absolutely that it was his own Doctrine But 1. That it was not his onely but withal the Doctrine of God his Father who sent him 2. Not his Doctrine as he was Man but as he was God and as Mediator Not a humane but a divine Doctrine Reas 2 Reas 2. He is the most able and sufficient of all other Teachers in the Church being furnished with the greatest measure of gifts and graces above all other Teachers Joh. 3. 34. God giveth him the Spirit not by measure Col. 2. 3. In him are hid all Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge He is called by the Name of Wisdom Prov. 8. 9. Reas 3 Reas 3. He hath Power to ordain and send all other Pastors and Teachers of the Church Ephes 4. 11. When he ascended c. he gave some Apostles some Prophets c. Reas 4 Reas 4. He onely by the Power of his Spirit maketh the Doctrine and Ministry of other Teachers effectuall Quest 1 Quest 1. Wherein stands this Teaching of Christ Answ Answ In making known to his Chuich the Will of God in all things needful to Salvation Joh. 1. 18. No man hath seen God at any time c. The onely begotten Son hath declared him Joh. 15. 15. All things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you Joh. 16. 13. He promiseth his Spirit who should guide them into all truth Quest 2 Quest 2. How doth He execute this Office of Teaching the Church Answ Answ Two wayes 1. Outwardly by his Word and the Ministry of it and that both in his own Person while he lived on Earth and also by all those Pastors and Ministers which he calleth and sendeth to teach and instruct the Church from time to time and that in all Ages of the Church Their Teaching is his Teaching in as much as they teach and preach in his Name and by Authority from him He spake by the mouth of all the Prophets in the Old Testament as by Noah 1 Pet. 3. 19. and by the Apostles 2 Cor. 13. 3. 2. Inwardly by his divine Spirit enlightning the minds of the Elect and inclining their hearts to embrace and yield obedience to that which is taught Thus he opened the Understanding of the Disciples Luke 24. 45. that they might understand the Scriptures And Act. 16. 14. he opened the heart of Lydia Vse 1 Use 1. See God's special love to his Church and his care of the good and Salvation of it in that he hath not onely given his Son to merit and work our Salvation as our Priest but also hath called and appointed him as our Prophet to teach us and to reveal and make known to us the
permission yet none at all over our Souls c. Vse 2 Use 2. See that we are not to judge any to be rejected or forsaken of God though they be much abused disgraced and persecuted by the Wicked in this Life For God often permitteth the Wicked thus to have their Wills of his dearest Saints and Servants in respect of their bodies and outward estate c. And if we should so judge we should condemn the holy Prophets Apostles Martyrs yea Christ himself Observ 3. See here the extream rage and malice of the Wicked against the true Saints and Servants of God in that they do not onely hate them and set themselves against them as Enemies but also do desire and seek to have their Wills of them that is to satisfy their own malicious Minds and Wills in abusing and wronging them all manner of wayes so far as God permitteth them They do not desire or care to do what is just and equall to them but what is pleasing to their own malicious Wills to do even what they list unto them that is to spend the utmost of their malice upon them and against them Thus Herod and Herodias did even what they listed to John Baptist they even fulfilled their own malicious Wills against him and upon him in imprisoning and putting him to Death Psal 12. 4. David's Enemies resolve with themselves that with their Tongues they will prevail against him c. So the wicked Jews though they could all edge no just cause unto Pilate why our Saviour should be condemned and crucified yet to satisfie their own malicious Wills against him they would needs have it done that by this means they might wreck their malice and envy upon him to the full So the persecutors of the Church c. And such is the malice and outrage of the wicked often against the Saints of God that they desire nothing more than to satisfie their own malicious Minds and Wills by offering unto them the greatest wrongs and abuses which they are any way able Vse Vse This should move us to acknowledge and magnify the goodness of God in curbing and restraining this extream rage and malice of the Wicked against his Saints and not suffering it so far to break out as otherwise it would It is God's great mercy to set bounds and limits to this malice of the Wicked which of it self is boundless having no measure For although the Lord do suffer the Wicked sometimes to satisfie their own Wills and malicious Desires and Purposes against his faithfull Servants yet he doth not alwayes suffer this neither doth he at any time absolutely give up his Servants unto the malicious Will of their Enemies but he so limiteth and restraineth the malice of the Wicked that they go no further in shewing the same against his Saints than he doth think good to permit and suffer them Were it not for this mercy of God in restraining the outragious malice of the Wicked they would soon devour and utterly root out the true Church of God from the face of the Earth Let us therefore bless God and be truly thankfull for this his goodnesse and mercy Now followeth the Ground or Reason of John Baptist's coming viz. The testimony of the Scriptures which fore-told it As it is written of him That is As it was fore-told or testifyed before of him in the writings of the Prophets in the old Testament Now these words seem to have relation chiefly to the coming of Elias or John Baptist mentioned by our Saviour in the first words of this verse and not so much unto those things which he had suffered at the hands of his wicked Enemies For we do not read in the Prophets of any expresse mention made of the Sufferings of John Baptist which he should suffer at his coming but his coming we find to be expresly foretold by the Prophet Malachi Chap. 4. 5. Behold I will send you Elijah the Prophet c. that is John Baptist in the Spirit and Power of Elias c. Observ Observ In that our Saviour here affirmeth that the Prophecy of Malachi touching the coming of Elias or John Baptist was already fulfilled and accomplished that John Baptist was indeed come and had fulfilled his Ministery as was written of him c. Hence gather That the Scriptures are the true and undoubted Word of God and not Men's writings only Inasmuch as the Prophesies contained in them concerning things to come have been truly and certainly fulfilled in their due time though many hundred years after as here the Prophecy of John Baptist his coming before Christ c. So also the Prophecy of Christ's coming in the Flesh and of his Sufferings The Prophecy of calling the Gentiles by the preaching of the Gospel The Prophecy of the Jews Captivity in Babylon and of their Deliverance by means of Cyrus King of Persia after seventy years The Prophecy also of the Destruction of Hierusalem and the Temple by the Romans fore-told by our Saviour Matth. 24. All these and many other have been already fulfilled in their due time though long after they were fore-told which is one speciall evidence to prove the Scriptures to be the true and undoubted Word of God indited by his Spirit for none but God himself could fore-tell those things which are fore-told in Scripture and which have been hitherto fulfilled so certainly in their due time This therefore must strengthen our Faith in this main Point touching the truth of the Scriptures to be the very Word of God himself and cause us undoubtedly to believe all things contained in them And in particular it serves to strengthen our Faith touching the fulfilling of those Prophesies of Scripture which are yet unful●●lled as namely touching the calling of the Jews the destruction of Antichrist the generall Resurrection of Bodies and coming of Christ at the last Day to Judgment c. Mark 9. 14 15. And when He came to his Disciples c. Janu. 28. 1626. HEre followeth the second general part of this Chapter containing the History of a great Miracle wrought by our Saviour in curing a lunatick Child and in casting the Devil out of the same Child being possessed therewith This History is laid down from the 14. to the 30. verse of this Chapter In which we have to consider three things 1. The Antecedents or Occasions of this great Miracle which went before and made way unto it ver 25. 2. The manner of our Saviour's proceeding in the working of the Miracle ver 26 27. 3. The Event or Consequent which followed ver 28 29. Of the first The occasions of the Miracle are sundry 1. Our Saviour's returning or coming back to his Disciples after his Transfiguration in the Mount together with some speciall Events or Accidents which happened at his return as that he found a great Multitude with his Disciples and the Scribes questioning with them c. ver 14 15. 2. His questioning with the Scribes touching the
himself c. Hence we may learn that we ough● not to be dismayed much less to despair or distrust of help and deliverance in our distresses Though w● have used some good means for help and yet it doth not succeed but we miss and fail of our desire being as far from deliverance as before in this case we are not to cast away our hope and confidence in God but still to wait on him in the use of further means committing the success thereof unto him in Prayer yea when all humane helps fail us yet still are we to depend on him and to fly to him by Faith and Prayer in our greatest necessities and distresses even as the Father of this possessed Child when he could have no help from the Disciples went to Christ himself c. So must we when men fail us go to God and depend on him c. Thus are we to do both in outward and inward distresses In outward and bodily afflictions as sickness pain c. when we have sought to the Physitian and he cannot help us at first yet are we not to despair of help or distrust God for our recovery but still depend on him and use further means if they be to be had and ●f all means fail yet we are to fly to God and by Faith to depend on him for help who will in due 〈◊〉 either restore us to health if he see it good for us or else sanctify our sickness and fit u● for death An Example of this in that Woman which had the bloody Issue for twelve years Chap. 5. 26. though she had sough● to divers Physitians and had spent all she had on them and was nothing better but the worse rather yet did she not cast away her hope and trust in God but used further means in going to Christ to be healed See also Joh. 5. So should we in our bodily afflictions c. So also in our inward and spiritual distresses as in trouble of Conscience through the burden of our sins though we have sought comfort from men yea from the most excellent Pastors and Ministers of God and yet cannot attain to it we must not despair of comfort but continue still constant in the use of means as hearing of the Word Reading Confe●ence c. and in the use of these still depend on God for comfort Cant. 3. 1 2 3. The Church being in inward distre●s through want of the present feeling of Christ's Love and having sought Christ whom she had lost for a time that i● used means to recover he former feeling of his Love and not finding him at first yet did she continue seeking till she found him c. And though we find no comfort by other means yet still continue our Prayer to God intreating him to send the Comforter even his holy Spirit into our hearts at length which may give us comfort and may ease our Consciences and heal our wounded Spirits c. Use 1 Vse 1. For Reproof of such who being in any trouble or distress outward or inward and having at first used some means for help and deliverance if hereupon they do not find present help and ease and be not presently delivered they forthwith begin to distrust God and to cast away their hope and confidence in him and withal they give over the use of further means as if it were in vain when they are not helped at first or as if God had cast off all care of them and would not deliver them at all because he doth it not at first and so soon as they desire Thus do many in bodily sickness when they have sought unto Physitians and are not helped at first c. This shews either want of Faith or great Weakness thereof in such as do thus quickly cast away their Confidence in God and give over the use of means because he doth not help and deliver them out of trouble upon their first using of the means And in so doing they greatly dishonour God both by distrusting of his Power and Goodness for their deliverance as also by neglect of those means which he hath ordained Use 2 Vse 2. For Admonition to take heed of being too soon dismayed or out of heart in our troubles when we have used means and are not at first delivered Take heed of distrusting God in this case or of giving over the use of means and on the contrary labour by Faith still to depend upon God and constan●ly to trust in him and to wait on him in the use of means even so long until the due time come in which he hath appointed to deliver us remembring what is said Isa 28. 16. that he which believeth will not make haste And when all outward helps and means fail us then fly to God alone by Prayer of Faith and rest on his extraordinary Power c. who will in due time and so far as shall be good send us help c. Do th●s in thy outward and inward distresses Reason Reason By this sin of Unbelief the Saints of God do greatly dishonour and offend God in that they do hereby call into Question his Almighty Power Goodness Truth in his Promises c. and therefore it is ●ust with God for this sin to correct and chastize them with loss of some excellent favours and priviledges which otherwise they might enjoy or which sometime happily they have enjoyed Vse Use See by this what cause there is for every good Christian to resist and strive against this sin of Unbelief ●n themselves seeing it is a sin so hurtful and pre●udicial to them being a means to deprive and hinder them from the enjoying of so many and great priviledges and benefits both spiritual and corporal which otherwise they might enjoy Think of this thou that art a Child of God how hurtful and dangerous this sin of Unbelief or Weakness of Faith is how great hurt and inconveniences it doth often bring upon the Saints and Servants of God robbing them of many excellent priviledges and benefits which they might otherwise enjoy ●s the comfortable feeling of God's favour inward comfort and peace c. besides the loss of many temporal Blessings of this life as outward Peace Prosperity and God's Protection in times of danger c. Therefore beware of harbouring or favouring this sin in thy heart give not way to it but by all means re●st it in thy self Pray against it daily and earnestly even as the Father of this possessed young man doth afterward as we shall hear Ver. 24. and use all other good means to subdue this sin in thy self come duly to publick Ministry meditate on Promises c. Think how dishonourable a thing it is unto God for thee to doubt of hi● Word or Promises made unto thee touching spiritual or temporal Blessings or not to believe and rest upon them in such sort as he requireth therefore take heed of this sin lest for the same God in Justice do correct thee
thereupon followed The evil Spirit came out of him together with the manner of his coming out He cryed and rent the body of the child grievously insomuch that the child became as one dead c. ver 26. 3. Our Saviour Christ's restoring and recovering the child ver 27. Jesus took him by the hand c. Of the first Consider 1. The circumstance of Time when our Saviour charged the Devil to come out of the child When he saw the People came running c. 2. The manner of his charging them With a sharp Rebuke 3. The Charge it self He said unto him Thou dumb and deaf Spirit I charge thee come out of him c. Of the first When Jesus saw the People came running together This the People did no doubt out of their earnest desire and expectation to see the Event of the matter and what would be done by our Saviour And it is probable That our Saviour to 〈◊〉 this opportunity to work the Miracle to the end that the People so earnestly exprecting the issue of the matter might be the more affected with the Miracle when they should see it wrought and so might profit the more by it Observ Observ The wisdom of our Saviour Christ in watching the fittest Seasons and Times for the working of his Miracles when they might do most good and edifie the People most of all by confirming the Truth of his Doctrine He did not alwaies work his Miracles so soon as he was sought to or desired but sometimes delayed the matter for some space of time waiting for the fittest time and occasion So now he did being fought to by the Father of this Child c. So Joh. 11. 6. being sought unto to visit Lazarus being sick he delayed two dayes before he went c. See also Joh. 7. 6. This wisdom of our Saviour we are to imitate in watching the best opportunities of time to do good Duties either of piety to God or of charity or mercy toward our Brethren Gal. 6. 10. As we have opportunity let us do good to all c. Ephes 5. 15. Walk circumpectly not as fools but as wise Redeeming the time c. Now followeth the manner of our Saviour's charging the evil Spirit to go out of the Child with a sharp rebuke or threatning for so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signifie whereby our Saviour no doubt expressed and testified his indignation and displeasure against this evil Spirit for his malice and cruelty against the child for which cause also he doth upbraid him in the words following with the names of dumb and deaf Spirit In verbis duo consideranda 1. The person rebuked evil Spirit Described by his property called the foul Spirit 2. The Rebuke it self Of the first Foul Spirit See chap. 1. ver 23. The wicked Angels or Devils are often in the Gospel so called to distinguish them from the good Angels which are pure and holy Spirits Mark 8. ult and withall to set forth their nature and property in themselves that they are most impure Creatures polluted with the corruption and contagion of sin for whereas they were by their first Creation holy and undefiled Spirits as the good Angels now are they kept not their first estate Jude ver 6. but fell from God by sin and so became most polluted Creatures and that both in regard of that corruption with which their whole nature is defiled ever since their Fall and also in regard of those actuall sins in the practice whereof they have and do continually live as lying murder c. whence it is That they are called evil and wieked Spirits as Ephes 6. 12. And Joh. 8. 44. The Devil is said to be a Lyar and Murderer from the beginning And as they are thus unclean and polluted with sin in themselves so also they labour to defile all the Creatures of God but especially mankind by tempting them unto sin that they may become like unto themselves Observ 1 Observ 1. Hence gather the foulness and filthiness of sin in it self that it is a most foul and unclean thing in that it hath made the Devil himself who by Creation was an Angel of light holy and pure to become so foul and unclean a Spirit as now he is It is sin alone that hath bereaved him of his original purity and hath brought all that filthiness upon him with which he is now polluted This hath made him of a holy Spirit to become an unclean Spirit which therefore shews the foul Nature of sin that it is a most impure and unclean thing in it self for which cause it is in Scripture called Uncleanness and Filthiness Zechar. 13. 1. A Fountain shall be opened to the House of David for Sin and for Uncleanness And 2 Cor. 7. 1. Let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of the Flesh and Spirit c. Yea sin is the most foul filthy and unclean thing in the World and the cause of all Uncleanness and filthiness that is in any of the Creatures The wicked are compared to loathsom and filthy Creatures as to Swine Dogs c. More particularly the foulness of Sin may appear by these Reasons Reasons Reasons 1. It is most opposite and contrary to the most holy and pure Nature of God and most odious and loathsom unto his Majesty Hab. 1. 13. 2. It doth defile not onely the Devils but Mankind also yea all the Creatures of God since the Fall of Angels and Men for by reason of Man's sin the visible Heavens and Earth with all Creatures in them are subject to vanity and corruption Rom. 8. 20. 3. It defileth not onely the bodies of men but their very Souls and Consciences Tit. 1. 15. to the wicked nothing is clean but their minds and consciences are defiled 4. It defileth not onely the Persons by whom it is committed but the very places where it is committed as the Land Cities and Houses where the wicked do live Num. 35. 33. Blood defileth the Land And Zeph. 3. 1. Hierusalem is called a filthy and polluted City c. 5. No means to purge and take away the filth of Sin but the precious Blood of Christ the Son of God The onely Fountain opened for sin Zech. 13. 1. Vse 1 Use 1. See the Profaness of such as make leight of Sin being bold to commit sin and so to defile their own Souls and Bodies yea many there be who love and delight in the practice of sin following it with greediness like Swine wallowing in the mire yea worse than Swine or any other Beasts Such as those that delight in Drunkenness Swearing Cursing Profanation of the Sabbath c. What spiritual folly and madness is this to love and delight in that which is so foul and filthy a thing even filthiness it self c. yet some are worse than the former who not onely love and delight in the filthiness of sin but also glory and boast of their sins which is to glory in their
that our Saviour here compareth Christians unto the Sacrifices offered unto God in time of the Law Hence we learn that Christians ought to be as Spiritual Sacrifices or Oblations offered up unto God in this life yea they ought to offer up themselves to God as such Sacrifices Quest Quest. How are they to do this Answ Answ By separating themselves in heart and life from the World and from the service of sin and Satan and giving up themselves wholly in Soul and body to Gods service in this life As the legal Sacrifices were separated from a common to a holy use Rom. 12. 1. I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God that ye present your bodies a living Sacrifice holy acceptable to God which is your reasonable service Therefore Rev. 1. 6. It is said Christ hath made us Priests unto God his Father viz. to offer up our selves to God in Sacrifice And 1 Pet. 2. 5. Ye are a holy Priest-hood to offer up Spiritual Sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ Quest Quest Is it in the power of Christians to do this of themselves Answ Answ No but they are to endeavour and use the means and so doing God will enable them by his Spirit c. Use 1 Use 1. To answer the Papists cavilling at our Religion because they say we have no Sacrifices nor Priests to offer them to God c. Here we see the contrary that every good Christian as we teach both is and ought to be as a Spiritual Sacrifice offered to God in this life and that by himself Therefore though we hold that the Levitical Priesthood and Sacrifices being abolished by Christ there are now no Sacrifices or Priests properly so called Yet c. Vse 2 Vse 2. To stir us up to make Conscience thus to offer and give up our selves as living Sacrifices to God by renouncing the service of sin and Satan and consecrating our selves wholly in Soul and body to God in obedience Thus must thou do if thou wilt approve thy self to be a good Christian in deed Thou must separate thy self wholly from this World and service of sin and Satan and so consecrate thy self to God by obedience to his Will c. To this end consider that God is thy Creator and Redeemer c. Therefore glorify him in body and Spirit 1 Cor. 6. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Ministry of the Word or the Doctrine of the Word Preached is resembled to the Salt of the legall Sacrifices with which they were seasoned before they were offered to God that so they might be accepted of him Hence we learn the nature of the Word Preached together with one main end and use for which it doth serve by Gods Ordnance viz. to be as salt to season men for God to make them favoury and acceptable to God and fit for his use and service that they may be offered up as pleasing Sacrifices to him As the Salt cast upon the legall Sacrifices by the Priest served to season the Sacrifices that they might be accepted of God So the Ministry of the Word serveth to season Christians c. So in the verse following our Saviour saith that salt is good that is the Ministry of the Word is good and profitable to this end to season men for Gods use c. Quest Quest How is the Word of God Preached and applyed in the Ministery of it a means to season men for God that they may become acceptable to him Answ Answ 1. By mortifying the corruption of sin in them which makes them odious to God and by subduing it so as it reign not in them for as salt being put upon the flesh of the Sacrifices did serve to dry up and purge out superfluous moysture in them and so to take away the ill taste of them So is it the property and vertue of the Word Preached to dry up and purge out of mens hearts and lives the corruption of sin which makes them unsavoury and distastefull to God for which cause also the Word of God is sometimes compared to fire which hath likewise a purging vertue Jer. 23. 29. and to a Sword which killeth the corruption of nature and sinfull lusts in us Ephes 6. 2. By working in them the contrary work of Grace and Sanctification whereby the being renewed and changed throughout and having God's Image of Holiness and Righteousness restored in them do become acceptable to God in Christ Jesus Joh. 17. 17. Sanctify them with thy truth thy Word is truth 1 Pet. 1. 23. it is called the incorruptible seed of our new birth For as salt being put upon the Sacrifices did not onely dry up the ill humours but also give unto them a good savour and rellish so the Word Preached is a means not onely to purge out the corruption of sin from men but also to renew and sanctify them and so to make them savoury and pleasant as it were unto Gods own taste Answ Quest Hath the Word Preached this power and vertue of it self thus to season men and to make them acceptable to God Quest Answ No but from the Sanctifying Spirit of God accompanying the outward Ministry Rom. 15. 16. Paul Ministred the Gospell that the Oblation of the Gentiles might be acceptable to God being Sanctified by the Holy Ghost Esai 59. 21. Vse 1 Use 1. See that by nature all men are unsavoury and distastefull to God yea odious and abominable to him before they be seasoned by the Word even as the flesh or other matter of the Sacrifices being not ●easoned with Salt was abominable to God so is it with every one by nature by reason of the corruption of sin with which he is tainted he is as odious to God and loathsome as an unsalted Sacrifice or as raw and unsavoury flesh or other meats are unto our taste If it were not thus what need were of this Salt of the Word of God to purge and season us Labour therefore to see how loathsome thou art and unsavoury to God by nature in regard of thy sins that being truely humbled in sight hereof thou mayest be fit to be seasoned with this Spiritual salt of the Word of God applyed to thy Conscience in the Ministry of it Vse 2 Use 2. See further by this the necessity of the Ministry of the Word how needfull for all Christians and how ill we can be without it in that it is the onely outward means Sanctified and appointed of God for this excellent use viz. to be as salt to season us for God by purging out the corruption of our sinfull natures and by renewing and Sanctifying us that we may become savoury and pleasant unto Gods taste that we may become acceptable Sacrifices unto him This we cannot be without this salt of Gods holy Word and Doctrine to season us c. Without this seasoning by the Word of God we are loathsome and distastefull to God yea odious and abominable unto him See how ill we can be
appeareth plainly Gen. 2. 18. and 22. ut suprà And Mal. 2. 15. Did not he make one that is create and ordain one wife for one husband at the first and so institute the estate of marriage Therefore Verse 9. What God hath joyned let no man put asunder Quest Quest Wherefore or to what end was Marriage instituted so soon even at the time of man's first creation and before his fall c Answ Answ 1. For the mutual society help and comfort of Mankind that is both of the man and of the woman Therefore Gen. 2. 18. God having first created the man said It was not good for him to be alone and therefore he determined to make him a help c. 2. That it might be a means for the propagation and increase of Mankind Gen. 1. 28. After that the Lord had created them both male and female it is said He blessed them saying Be fruitfull and multiply c. To these is now added a third end since the fall of man viz. To be a remedy against the sin of fornication Vse 1 Use 1. This again doth commend and set forth to us the dignity and excellency of the married estate in that it is from God himself as the immediate and first Author and Ordainer of it who ordaineth nothing but that which is good necessary and profitable for mankind and that both before and since the fall of Man And this is another reason why Marriage is said to be honourable c. Heb. 13. in regard of the Author and Instituter of it because it is a special Ordinance of God instituted for the good of mankind And this again condemns the blasphemy of the Papists in speaking evil of this holy Ordinance of God and forbidding it unto Ministers of the Church as if it were a prophane or unholy estate and not fit for them that are called to that holy function By this the Papists shew themselves to be those seducing spirits prophesied of 1 Tim. 4. 1. who should teach doctrines of devills forbidding to marry c. Verse 3. Vse 2 Use 2. To comfort married persons against the troubles of the married estate God having ordained marriage hath also ordained the troubles incident to it and so in bearing them patiently we obey his Will c. Of the third The Institution it self implyed in these words He made them male and female So Gen. 1. 27. from whence our Saviour alledgeth these words thereby to prove God to be the Author of marriage c. of the near bond c. The meaning is plain viz. That God in the first creation of Mankind at the begining did not onely create or make Mankind by his Immediate and Almighty power as he did other creatures but also that he did create a double sex of Mankind viz. the male and female sex both man and woman kind And this doth further appear Gen. 2. Chap. where Moses doth more particularly set down the manner how God did create both these Sexes of Mankind both the first man and the first woman Touching the man or male sex that his body being first made of the dust of the earth the Lord did immediately create his Soul of nothing and infuse it into the body which is signified by breathing into it the breath of life Verse 7. And touching the woman or female sex that in respect of her body she was made or framed out of one of the ribs of Adam after a miraculous and wonderful manner by the power of God which being done her Soul was also immediately created of God and infused into the body so formed Thus did the Lord make Mankind both male and female at the first Quest Quest How doth this creation of both Sexes prove or shew the Institution of Marriage Answ Answ Two wayes especially 1. Because this was the end why they were created male and female That they might be fit for marriage and capable of it And although God made also two Sexes of other living Creatures as of Beasts Birds c. yet that was not with any respect at all to marriage society but onely for propagation sake Therefore it is noted expresly touching Mankind that they were created both male and female Gen. 1. 27. but not so touching other living creatures 2. In respect of the peculiar manner of the Womans creation which was out of the rib of the man to shew the near conjunction that should be between her and her husband in the married estate viz. that she should be even as a part of him and he of her even two in one flesh ut postea videbimus In the words explained two things are contained 1. The creation of Mankind 2. The manner how God created them He made them male and female Touching the first I will not here speak at large because it was lately han●led on the first Article of the Creed Observ 1 Observ 1. In that God did create two Sexes of Mankind that is both the male and female sex and that to this end that they might be fit for the married estate and thereby to ordain and institute marriage hence we may gather That marriage and the married estate is grounded upon the very nature and sex of mankind which they received in their first creation Therefore so soon as the woman was created the Lord brought her to the man to be his wife Gen. 2. which shews that marriage and the society of Man and Wife in the married estate was agreeable to the nature or natural sexes of Mankind which they received in their first creation For to this end were they so made that they might be fit for marriage Use Use This shews that the Church of Rome in forbidding marriage and tying those by vow unto the single life who have not the gift of continency do sin against nature and against the very end of man's creation Utrum matrimonium sit de jure naturae vid● Aquin. Supplem 3. Part q. 41. Art 1. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that God is the Creator of both sexes that is both of man and woman this teacheth us That therefore both sexes are good necessary and profitable in their kinds both the male and female sex of mankind the one as well as the other That which is said of all the creatures which God made Gen. ● ult That God saw every thing that he had made and behold it was very good this must needs be true of Mankind being the principal of all the visible Creatures and not only is it true of mankind in general but of both sexes of Mankind both male and female and lest any should doubt of the goodness and profitablenes● of the woman or female sex being the weaker of the two the Lord himself did give testimony unto it even before she was created by affirming as we have heard that it was not good for man to be alone and therefore that he would make him a help meet for him c. Use Use This then
yield a kind of obedience to God in some of his Commandements but not in all They refrain some sins but not all that are forbidden in the Law of God They practise some duties but not all that are required They keep some beloved and darling sin or sins still as Herod did So far as stands with their worldly profit or carnal delight they are content to obey God but in those Commandements which do most directly crosse their corrupt nature and sinful lusts or do hinder their worldly profit and gain in those they withdraw their obedience But all this is hypocritical and counterfeit obedience such as God accepteth not but rather hateth and detesteth Such therefore must remember what is said Jam. 2. 10. Whose keepeth the whole Law and offendeth but in one point is guilty of all Such an union there is between all parts and Commandements of the Law of God that one cannot be violated without the breach of all the rest in as much as by the breach of one the authority of God the Law-giver is contemned as well as by the breach of all Besides that any one sin or breach of any one Commandement of God being lived in without repentance is fearful and dangerous being sufficient to condemn the sinner Ezek. 18. 10. If he beget a son that is a robber and a shedder of blood and doth the like to any one of these things c. he shall surely dye c. As one leak in a ship upon the Sea is enough to sinck it if not stopped so one sin c. Vse 2 Vse 2. To stir up and move us to make conscience of yielding an universal and entire obedience unto God in all his Commandements remembring that he is the author and giver of the whole Law and will be obeyed in the whole and every part or else he will reject and abhor all our obedience Therefore take heed of obeying God to halves and think not to please him or to have true comfort in thy own conscience by such hypocritical obedience Take heed of bearing with thy self in the breach of any one Commandement of God beware of cherishing the love of any one sin in thy heart Contrà as thou desirest truly to glorifie and please God by thy obedience to his Will and to have true comfort thereby in thy own conscience so look that it be an universal obedience to all and every Commandement of God Now further from that which is evil and discommendable here in this young Ruler Observ 2 Observ 1. In thar he ignorantly and falsly supposeth that he had kept the Commandements well enough because he had performed some kind of outward obedience to them hence observe That it is one property of formal and close hypocrites to rest in outward conformity and obedience to the Law and Commandements of God thinking that to be sufficient without inward and spiritual obedience of the heart Thus did the hypocritical Scribes and Pharisees whom therefore our Saviour reproveth Matth. 23. 25. Woe to you Scribes and Pharisees hypocrites for ye make clean the out-side of the cup and platter c. And Verse 28. like whited Sepulchres ye outwardly appear righteous unto men but within ye are full of hypocrisie and iniquity See Luke 18. 11. And thus it is with all formal hypocrites and unsound Christians they are wont to rest in outward obedience and conformity to the Law of God without any true conscionable care of the inward Such are those foretold by the Apostle 2 Tim. 3. 1 5. In the last dayes perillous times shall come c. In which some shall have a form of godlinesse but shall deny the power thereof These are formal hypocrites resting in outward obedience to the Law and Commandements of God without the inward power and life of godlinesse As the Papists do at this day Reas 1 Reason 1. They are either ignorant or at least do not duly consider of the true nature and property of the Law of God viz. that it is a spiritual Law reaching to the heart conscience and inward man as well as to the outward Rom. 7. 14. We know that the Law is spiritual c. Reas 2 Reas 2. Their only or chief care is to approve their wayes unto men and not so much to obey and please God Matth. 23. 5. Our Saviour sayes of the Scribes and Pharisees All their works they do for to be seen of men And Luke 16. 15. Ye are they which justifie your selves before men but God knoweth your hearts Use 1 Use 1. See how many formal hypocrites are now adayes to be found in the Church in that it is so common a thing with men to rest in ourward obedience to the Law and Commandements of God without care and conscience of the inward How many are there who think they keep the Law of God well enough and are religious enough if they refrain from outward grosse sins before men and if they perform some outward duties of Religion towards God and of charity to men if they come to Church duly hear the Word receive the Sacrament and not only so but use prayer in their Families though this is wholly neglected by a great many If they have some care of the outward sanctifying of the Sabbath and if withall they do perform such outward duties of Charity and Justice toward men as are required in the second Table of the Commandements then they think all is well and they rest in this outward conformity to the Law in the mean time making no conscience of inward and spiritual obedience to the same but harbouring gross sins and corruptions in their hearts both against God and Man Thus is it with many if not with the greatest part of such as bear the name of Christians now adayes which shews how great the number is of formal and close hypocrites and how small the number is of sound Christians and how true it is which the Scripture hath foretold touching these last and dangerous times in which we now live that men should have an ou●ward form of godliness denying the inward power and life of it 2 Tim. 3. Formal hypocrisie is one of the raigning sins of these times the Epidemical disease of Christians yet fearful and dangerous to be lamented with a fountain of tears Vse 2 Use 2. For Admonition to every one of us to take heed of this property of formal and close hypocrites that we do not rest in outward conformity and obedience to the Law of God with the outward man and in outward carriage as if this were sufficient and as much as God requireth but above all to make conscience of yielding the true inward obedience of the heart unto every Commandement of God remembring that the Law of God is spiritual binding the heart and conscience and that God himself is a Spirit and will be obeyed in Spirit and Truth The rather let us take heed of this formal hypocrisie and resting in outward obedience to
after a sort viz. in their causes See Mr. Perk Treatise of Witchcraft pag. 617. And thus not only the Devil but men ordinarily may and do know and foretell some things which are to come viz. such things as are already present in their causes Thus Astronomers do foretel the Eclipses of the Sun and Moon and thus our Saviour sayes of the Pharise●s Matth. 16. that by the face of the Sky they could foretell what Weather would be c. Of the second The Divine power of Christ This he shewed here 1. In making choyce of a young Asse or Colt to ride upon which never had been rid upon before He sends his Disciples for a Colt for him to ride on upon which never any man had sate before and upon the same he did afterwards ride into Hierusalem as appeareth Verse 7. He sate upon him Now by this he shewed his Divine Power which he had over all the Creatures even over the brutish and unreasonable Creatures to rule and over-rule them and to make them serviceable to his Will and that miraculously and contrary to the ordinary course of Nature for so was this that a young untamed Colt which had never been ridden upon before should now suddenly become fit for him to ride upon c. The like Divine power over the Creatures in causing them to be subject and serviceable to him against the course of Nature our Saviour manifested at other times as when he did walk upon the waters causing them to bear up his body contrary to nature c. So when he suddenly and miraculously turned water into Wine at the Marriage-Feast Joh. 2. 2. He shewed his Divine Power in causing the owner of the Asse and Colt to let them go But of this afterward Verse 6. Thus we see these two Divine Properties of the Godhead amongst other which were in Christ being on Earth viz. his Divine Knowledg and Power c. Now as these were in him being on Earth in state of humiliation so much more now he is exalted to the right hand of God in Heaven Now he doth much more clearly manifest the same General Use To strengthen our faith in the Person of Christ assuring us that he was and is true God as well as Man in one Person and consequently that he is a most Powerful and All-sufficient Saviour Heb. 7. 25. He is able to save them to the uttermost which come unto God by him c. But of this often before More Particular Uses from the particular Properties of the Divine Nature in Christ mentioned before Vse 1 Use 1. In that Christ Jesus our Lord and Saviour whom we serve and by whom we hope to be saved is such a Person as doth know all things even things done in his absence and in places far remote and distant from him I mean from his humane Nature which is now in Heaven only yea he knoweth what is done in all places though never so private or secret This must teach us to look to our selves and to our carriage in all places wheresoever we live or become that we walk holily uprightly and conscionably in all our wayes watching over our thoughts words and actions at all times and in all places though never so secret knowing and remembring still that we are in the sight and presence of Christ Jesus the Son of God who seeth all our wayes and what our carriage is in all places in publike and in private at home and abroad in our beds at our tables c. Psal 139. 7. Whither shall I go from thy Spirit c. and Heb. 4. 13. All things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with whom we have to do Vse 2 Vse 2. To comfort us in all afflictions and miseries which we suffer at any time or in any place where we live In that Christ Jesus the Son of God seeth and taketh notice of all we suffer of all our troubles c. Though we suffer in private and so as men take no notice yet Christ the Son of God doth and is ready to help comfort and deliver us c. Use 3 Vse 3. Seeing Christ Jesus our Saviour had this Divine Property being on earth and hath still to foreknow things to come and that of himself and by his own Divine Spirit yea most certainly and infallibly to know and foretell such things as are to come this seemeth to strengthen our faith touching the truth and certainty of those Prophecyes which are revealed in the New Testament in the Writings of the Apostles and Evangelists and are yet unfullfilled to assure us that they shall all be fullfilled in due time For example the Prophecy of the Calling of the Jews of the destruction of Antichrist of the general Resurrection and last Judgment and of the Life to come c. These things are foretold in the Writings of the Apostles who received them by revelation from Christ the Son of God and he being God as well as Man had a Divine and Infallible knowledg of things to come yea of all things to come and therefore of these which are thus foretold in Scripture which must cause us undoubtedly to believe the same as if we saw them already fullfilled Vse 4 Use 4. From the second Property of the Godhead or Divine Nature in Christ which is his divine power in that he hath absolute power over all Creatures even over the sensless and unreasonable creatures to rule and make them subject to his Will and that contrary to the course of Nature This serveth partly for the terrour of wicked men being enemies of Christ and of his Church And partly for comfort to the godly c. 1. For terrour of wicked men c. In that Christ Jesus having such absolute power over the creatures both can and will employ them as Instruments of his wrath against his enemies c. 2. For comfort to the godly assuring them That he having such power over the Creatures will cause them all to work and conspire together for the good and comfort of his Saints yea contrary to their nature Rom. 8. 28. Mark 11. 4 5 6 7. And they went their way and found the Colt tyed c. Sept. 20. 1629. IN the three first Verses of this Chapter we heard of Christ's preparation to his riding into Jerusalem in sending forth two of his Disciples to a Village over against them to fetch from thence a young Colt never ridden upon before c. together with the particular charge and Instructions which he gave them at the time of sending them forth Now followeth the obedience of the two Disciples to Christ's charge and commandment given them Their obedience consisteth in a threefold action performed by them 1. In going to the place whither he appointed them ver 4. They went their way Where also is mentio●ed the event or consequent which followed That they found the Colt tyed by the dore without c. 2. In loosing the Colt which
earth in the state of humiliation that they durst not resist him but were forced to yield and to fly when he drove them out how much more terrible shall his Power and Presence be unto the wicked and reprobate at the last day when he shall come in flaming fire rendring vengeance to them If now there were such ma●esty in his face how much more then If now such power and terrour in his voyce and words that he could by them alone drive out these buyers and sellers from the Temple how much more then when he shall for ever drive away the reprobate from his presence with those words Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire c. Oh how shall they be able to hear and abide that fearful sentence They shall then cry to the Mountains c. Rev. 6. Which being so it should now strike the wicked with remorse and cause them to repent and turn to God speedily from their sins that they may flee from the wrath to come and be able to stand before Christ Jesus with comfort at his coming Mark 11. 15 16. And overthrew the Tables of the money-changers and the seats of them that sold Doves J●●● 10. 16●9 And would not suffer that any man should carry any Vessell thorow the Temple OF the second The Zeal and Indignation which our Saviour shewed in reforming these abuses partly by the sharpnesse and severity which he used in driving them out and in throwing down their Tables and Seats and partly by his strict and unpartial dealing sparing no abuses not suffering so much ●s a common vessel to be carried thorow the Temple See Joh. 2. 17. Observ 1 Observ 1. In that our Saviour shewed such zeal and indignation against this profaning of the Temple by buying and selling there c. We may gather That it is a great and a grievous sin to profane or abuse holy things dedicated or sanctified to God and to his service As here the profanation of the Temple being dedicated to Gods Service was a grievous sin and therefore our Saviour shewed such indignation against it neither do we find that ever he shewed himself so moved and displeased as he did now and once before at these ab●s●s of the Temple He tells them they made his House a den of Theeves Therefore also he would not suffer a vessell c. How did God punish Belshazzar for profaning the Vessels of the Temple Dan. 5. So to profane the Sabbath day being the time dedicated to God's solemn Worship is a grievous sin And therefore in some cases this sin was to be punished with death Exod. 35. 2. and Numb 15. 36. So to profane any other holy things consecrated to God's service is a grievous sin As to convert the Tythes and maintenance of Ministers of the Church to a private or common use called robbing of God Mal. 3. 8. Therefore Verse 9 Ye are cursed with a curse c. To convert common goods of the poor to a private life Prov. 20. 25. So to defile our bodies and souls with sin which should be as holy Temples for the Spirit of God to dwell in 1 Cor. 3. 17. If any man defile the Temple of God him shall God destroy for the Temple of God is holy which Temple ye are Use Vse Take heed of this grievous sin of profaning holy things consecrated to God lest it prove a snare to us and bring a curse upon us No small sin to rob God of his due in any kind and to convert holy things to a profane and common use neither will God suffer this sin to go unpunished if it be not repented of If it be a great sin to rob or steal from men much more from God Observ 2 Observ 2. We ought after the exa●ple of our Saviour here to shew our zeal and indignation or displeasure against sin when we see it practised by others when we see God dishonoured by the sins of others we ought to be moved with zeal and indignation in the Cause of God and for his glories sake and to shew our zeal by the effects and testimonies of it So did our Saviour now and before Joh. 2. 17. His Disciples remembred that it was written of him The zeal of thin● house hath eaten me up Here note That true zeal for God's glory is a mixt affection consisting partly of a holy anger and displeasure against sin and partly of a holy grief because God is dishonoured by it So Mark 3. 5. He looked round about on the Scribes and Pharisees with anger being grieved for the hardness of their hearts Now this holy indignation and grief for the sins of others we ought to be moved with and to shew it upon all occasions as our Saviour now did Thus have the Saints of God used to do As Moses Exod. 32. David Psal 69. 9. Elijah 1 King 19. 14. Paul Act. 17. The Corinthians 2 Cor. 7. 11. Behold this self-same thing what zeal it hath wrought in you viz. against the sin of the incestuous person This zeal and indignation against sin all Christians ought to shew but especially such as are in authority in the Church as Magistrates Ministers c. Quest Quest How are we to shew our zeal and indignation against the sins of others Answ Answ 1. By reproving such sins so far as our calling reacheth and will bear us out Ephes 5. 11. or at least testifying our hatred and dislike of them some way or other as by our countenance gesture c. 2. By seeking reformation of the sin● of others by all means especially in such as are of our charge As Magistrates in their Subjects by their temporal power Ministers in their People by their Ministerial power c. Parents and Masters in their Families c. Use 1 Use 1. If we ought to shew our zeal and indignation against the sins of others then much more against ou● own sins Here our zeal and holy anger must begin else it is not true but counterfeit not spirituall but carnal c. Vse 2 Use 2. For Reproof of such as are cold or luke-warm in the Cause of God shewing no zeal grief or indignation against sin when they see it committed or hear of it Their spirits are not stirred in them when God is dishonoured c. In their own cause they shew much zeal If themselves be wronged never so little they can be moved and shew themselves as hot as fire but in God's Cause as cold as ice This is an evident argument that the true love of God is wanting in them Will a Child hear his own Father abused and not shew his indignation Use 3 Vse 3. To stir us up every one to shew our zeal and indignation against sin whensoever we see it practised or committed by others As we profess to love God and to be zealous for his glory so shew our zeal that is our holy grief and displeasure when we see him any way dishonoured Thus did
c. So are we to receive and imbrace that Doctrine which was Preached by John Baptist while he was on earth and is now left to us written and recorded in Scripture for the substance of it Now the Doctrine of John Baptist was no other but the Doctrine of the Gospel which is the Doctrine of Salvation by Christ the true Messiah consisting of two parts or branches especially which John most urged in his Ministry 1. The Doctrine of Repentance and newness of life Matth. 3. 2. He came Preaching and saying Repent c. and ver 8. To the Pharisees and Sadduces which came to his Baptism he sayes Bring forth fruits meet for Repentance 2. The Doctrine of Faith or of believing in Christ the Messiah Act. 19. 4. John Baptized with the Baptism of Repentance saying unto the people that they should believe on him which should come after him that is on Jesus Christ See also Joh. 1. 7. This being so let us see that we do not onely believe the truth of these Divine and heavenly Doctrines which John Preached but also that we imbrace and yield obedience to the same in life and practice repenting truly of our sins and labouring by true Faith to lay hold on Christ c. Observ 4 Observ 4. The dignity and excellency of the Sacrament of Baptism which John did first administer in that both it and the whole Ministry of John was not from men but from God not from earth but from Heaven as our Saviour here implyeth This proves the Sacrament of Baptism to be of Divine and not of Humane Institution in that John Baptist who was the first Minister of it had his Calling and Ministry from God yea not onely so but he had an extraordinary and immediate Calling from God to bring in that Sacrament into the Church Joh. 1. 33. he sayes the Lord sent him to Baptize with water c. Vse 1 Use 1. To con●ute the gross errour of the Papists teaching that the Baptism of John was not the same with the Baptism of Christ himself which was instituted by him Matth. 28. 19. and administred afterward by the Apostles but that they differed in regard of the Author or first institution of them the one being instituted by John the other by Christ himself Sic Bellarm. de Bapt. lib. 1. c. 20. On the contrary we see here that even John's Baptism was from Heaven c. Use 2 Use 2. How great a sin to despise or profane this Sacrament c. Vse 3 Use 3. This must teach us highly to esteem of this Sacrament of Baptism and to shew it by our care and forwardness to present our Children to it as also by our reverent carriage in the Congregation at such times as this Sacrament is to be administred And lastly by our Christian care to make a holy use both of our own Baptism and of the Baptism of others labouring to feel the fruit of it in our selves viz. the work of Regeneration begun in us c. For if it be from heaven that is of Gods institution it is not instituted in vain but to a holy and heavenly end and purpose viz. to seal unto us our Spiritual ingrafting into Christ and to be an effectual means through the Spirit of God to Regenerate us c. Mark 11. 31 32 33. And they resoned with themselves saying If we should say from Heaven he will say June 27. 1630. Why then did ye not believe him But if we shall say of men they feared the people for all men counted John that he was a Prophet indeed And they answered and said unto Jesus We cannot tell And Jesus answering saith unto them Neither do I tell you c. WEE have heard before of the question moved by the chief Priests Scribes and Elders to our Saviour concerning his Authority and how he answered them at first not directly but by putting another question unto them touching the Baptism or Ministry of John Baptist Whether it were from God or from men c. Now in the next place the Evangelist mentioneth the effects or consequents which followed hereupon viz. upon our Saviours putting the foresaid question to them The consequents are three 1. Their reasoning together about the matter and consulting about the answer which they were to make unto our Saviours question casting what inconveniences were like to follow if they should answer aff●rmatively to either part of the question viz. either that John's Baptism was from Heaven or that it was from men 2. The answer which hereupon they return to our Saviours question being a negative answer That they cannot tell whether John's Ministry were from God or from men 3. Our Saviours reply unto them again refusing to give any further answer to their question Neither do I tell you c. Of the first Our Saviours question touching John Baptist's Ministry did so put them to it and cast them into such straights that they knew not what to answer or say to him on the sudden and therefore they first reason and consult together among themselves about the matter And in this their reasoning or disputation among themselves they do presuppose and cast the inconveniencies like to follow if they should answer affirmatively to either of the two parts or branches of our Saviours question touching John's Baptism or Ministry For 1. If they should answer That it was from Heaven then he might ask why they did not believe him 2. If they should answer That it was from men then they were afraid of the people because all men held John to be a Prophet indeed First to explain the words They reasoned with themselves That is they debated the matter one with another in private conference consulting about the answer which they were to make to our Saviours question being such as they knew not well how to answer without some inconvenience or danger to themselves as they conceived Matth. 21. 25. the Original word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth a mutual conferring talking or reasonning together Why then did ye not believe him q. d. Why did ye not believe or give credit to his Doctrine and particularly to that part of it which he taught concerning me testifying that I was the Son of God and the Messiah and consequently why do ye not bel●eve in me as in the Son of God and true Messiah acknowledging my lawfull Authority and Calling from God to do those things which I have now newly done in the Temple Thus they suppose that our Saviour might expostulate with them and justly reprove their wilfull blindnesse and infidelity in refusing to believe the Doctrine and Ministry of John if they should confess it to have bin from God They feared the people They That is the chief Priests Scribes and Elders before spoken of ver 27. And here is a sudden change of the person from the first to the third person which is usual in other like places of Scripture so that these words are