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A45335 A practical and polemical commentary, or, exposition upon the third and fourth chapters of the latter epistle of Saint Paul to Timothy wherein the text is explained, some controversies discussed, sundry cases of conscience are cleared, many common places are succinctly handled, and divers usefull and seasonable observations raised / by Thomas Hall ... Hall, Thomas, 1610-1665. 1658 (1658) Wing H436; ESTC R14473 672,720 512

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fare the better for them every day why is the heap of chaff kept from burning but because there 's some wheat mixt with it but if once the wheat were out the chaff should soon be set on fire When once the number of Gods Elect is accomplisht the world shall not stand a moment 'T is just with God to take them from us for our abusing them we cast dirt and God casts dust on them many great men are fallen of late in this our English Israel nigh an hundred godly Ministers are taken from us within the space of three years past many of them young and eminent for Piety so that we this day are weakned both in Church and State Ioseph is not and Simeon is not and Benjamin is not all these things are against us This is and should be a Lamentation to us Now since there is such aboundance of false fire and fein'd zeal in the world we had the more need to try our own Some are mislead by a blind zeal Rom. 20.2 Others by an indiscreet zeal Matth. 26.51 Luke 9.52 53 54. Iohn 8. ult Others by an hyrocritical zeal they pretend Religion but they intend their own inriching So Demetrius pretended the preservation of Religion when indeed he intended his own silver Trade Acts 19 24. 1. True zeal is known by the Rise and Original of it 1. If it be wrought in our hearts by the Spirit of God we are not born zealous for God his Truth and People but by nature are full of enmity to all these Acts 9.1 Phil. 36. Paul in his natural state persecutes the Church out of a blind zeal many mistake the fire of their own flints and the fire of Hell for this celestial fire But the Author of all true zeal and Heavenly fire is the holy Spirit of God which is oft called fire Acts 2.3 4. Matth. 3.11 because like fire it inlightens and heats our cold and frozen hearts Luke 24.32 A man that hath fire in his bosom will quickly be sensible of it Prov. 6.27 28. 2. T is operative like fire daily burning up our lusts purging out our dross and working out our scumme 'T is the true purgatory fire which all beleevers pass through Isay 4.4 2. It springs from knowledge as David first beleeved and then spake so the zealous man first knows Gods Will and then is zealous in the prosecution of it Blind zeal is rather fury and madness rashness and rudeness then zeal 'T is celeris cursus extra viam It 's like mettle in a blind Horse which carries the Rider into many dangers Like a Ship without a Pilot which runs it self on many Rocks and Sands Like wild-fire in a Fools hand or the Devil in the Demoniack which cast him sometimes into the fire and anon into the water The Jews had a zeal after Legal Rites and Ceremonies but 't was a blind zeal that But spoiled all Rom. 10.2 as without knowledg the mind is not good so neither is the man nor his zeal Prov. 19.2 as blind obedience is no obedience so blind zeal is not zeal Such is the zeal of Papists and Sectaries 3. It springs from a Love to Christ this constrains us to do and suffer for Christ. 2 Cor. 5.14 As Christ loved us and spent himself for us so the sense of this love being shed abroad in our hearts will make us to spend our selves for him This fire of Gods love to us will make us contemn all other fire 4. When it springs from a Love and Compassion to our Brethren when all our admonishions and reproofs come from a spirit of love and tenderness and are mixt with meekness and mourning this is true zeal Thus Samuel 1.16 tells Saul plainely and sharply of his sin yet mourns for his person Lot reproves the Sodomites for their wickedness yet calls them Brethren Gen. 19.7 Christ was angry at the sin yet mourned for the sinners Mark 3.5 So doth Paul 2 Cor. 12.22 Hot and moist is the best temper both in nature and grace When men rave and rage and are full of bitterness then Satan casts out Satan and they do more hurt then good These hate the sinner and not the sin when the good man is merciful to the sinner but cruel and unmerciful to the sin 2. True zeal is known by its End viz. Gods glory It can be content to decrease so Gods honor may increase Iohn 3.30 As true zeal comes from God so 't is for God and his glory and not for self The hypocrite may seem very zealous but 't is for his own ends like the Sheca●ites that would be cirumcised that they might get cattle Gen. 34.33 Iehu did an act that for the matter was good but his selfish Vain-glorious ends marred all and made it murder Hosea 1.4 3. By the properties and effects of it which are five 1. It increaseth by opposition Like Fountain-water 't is hottest in the coldest weather As water cast on lime by an Antiperistasis burnes more fiercely The more the wicked oppose Gods Law the more David loves it Psal. 119.126 If Michol mock David for dancing before the Ark he 'l resolve to be yet more vile 2 Sam. 6.22 True zeal over-looks and over-leaps all lets and impediments difficulties are but whet-stones to fortitude Heroick spirits know not what discouragements mean Many waters of opposition cannot quench this ardent love but intend it rather Cant. 8.6 7. As we see in Iacob Gen. 32.24 25 26. and the Woman of Canaan Tell Caleb there are Anakims and he 'l say le ts go up couragiously against them Numb 13.30 Tell Paul of bonds why he fears not death Hypocrites make a great shew till they meet with oppositions and then like snailes they pull in their horns 2. It will make us abound in duty if there be the fire of zeal within there will be a flame of a holy Conversation without love especially zealous love is bountiful it thinks it can never do enough for God he 's glad he hath any thing of worth to lose for him and resolves with the Martyr if he had as many lives to lose as he hath haires on his head and as much blood to venture as there is water in the Sea it should all go for Christ. They are ready to act to their power yea and beyond their power 2 Cor. 8.3 Zeal is a very high and intensive heat of all the affections it makes us burn in our love to God in our desires after him our joy in him our fear to offend him our indignation against all that speak or do any thing against him or his Psal. 139.21 Ier. 13.9 10. 'T is not so much any one Affection as the intensive Degree of all when they are all improved to the utmost for the furtherance of Gods glory and the good of his People A zealous man is a man of mettle and spirit he 's all life and activity 'T
shew all they have when the rich Marchant makes but a small shew of that whereof he hath great plenty within The worst mettle rings loudest and the emptiest eares of corn stand highest Labour therefore for the contrary grace of Modesty whose excelle●cy you may find in that usefull Peace Mr. Robinsons Essayes Observation 58. p. 511. 4. Proud 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This is a third branch of Self-love viz. Pride in Heart As arrogant Boasters shew their Pride by their words so these have it in their hearts and shew it in their actions by contemning others and exalting themselves This sin is the daughter of Covetousness Hence the Apostle would have rich men take heed of being High-minded 1 Tim. 6.17 thereby implying that Riches are apt to engender pride Proud persons are like to Oyle which loves to be above in their own conceits they are wiser than all the world besides And is not this the Master-sin of this last and loose age of the world when did pride ever more abound in City and Country in Body and Soule in Heart Head Haire Habit In Gestures Vestures Words Works what Painting Poudring Patching Spotting and Blotting themselves How are men loaded and bedawbed with Variety of Ribbons before and behind above and beneath with yellow red black blew they have more colours then the Rain-bow and are more like Morrice-dancers then Professors These fantastick garbs argue fantastick hearts They say to their fine cloaths as Saul said to Samuel Honour me before the people to this end every finger must have a Ring and every joynt a Jewell what sad Bills of Indictment will one day be put up against such persons Imprimis 20 l. for brave cloathes but not 20 s. for a pious use Item 10 l. for Gold and Silver lace but not 10 s. for the poor Item 5 l. for Gew-gaws and Ribbons but not 5 s. for the needy Item 20 s. for a pair of silver-laced shoes and scarce 20 d. to the poor How will these one day curse themselves for their folly and cry out when 't is too late What hath pride profited us and what comfort yea what discomfort have these Vanities brought upon us Be wise now therefore in time and Honour the Lord with your Riches which is the best way to keep and increase them but waste them not on your lusts lest you loose them Hos. 2.8 9. The plainnesse of former times will condemn our Vanity the very trimming that some in our dayes wear would have bought our ancient Kings a whole suit of apparell Our Chronicles tell us that William Rufus who in his time was accounted sumptuous in apparell when his Chamberlain had brought him a pair of Breeches and he demanding what they cost it was answered 3 s. The King bad him be gone and bring him a pair of a Mark price Heu prisca simplicitas Whither is our ancient Simplicity fled 2. For spirituall pride which is the worst sort of pride as fighting more directly against God who is a Spirit when did it more abound then at this day There is amongst us 1. Superbia de Religione men are proud of their religious duties as the Pharises were 2. There is Superbia in Religione Religious duties are proudly performed amongst us 3. Superbia cum Religione Pride conjoyned with Religion the Professors of Religion are men of proud lives and haughty spirits and this is the very Mother of all those Hell-sprung Heresies which have of late overspread the Land Make a man proud and he will quickly be erroneous 1 Tim. 6.3 4. Simon Magus that great Haeresiarch was a very proud man his picture had the Inscription Simoni Sancto Deo Arrius also that Arch-Heretick was notorious for Pride The Gnosticks of old conceited that they knew more then all the world besides boasting that God had made them of his privy Counnsell and had revealed those secrets to them which others knew not this is the song of our Quakers now but none were a greater scandall to Religion then these Gnosticks 'T is spiritual Pride which is the Root of all that separation and Semi-separation of all those Divisions and Subdivisions which are amongst us The proud Pharises were great Separatists Men of late have gotten very high conceits of themselves they say even to the reall Churches of God stand off for we are holier then you They are so afraid of Popularity that they run themselves into Singularity Young Ministers are much to be blamed for their Pride and Self-conceitednesse every Novice now thinks himself wiser then the aged Pious experienced Ministers of the Land yea then all the Churches of Christ in the world I had almost said then Christ himself These want a Rod I mean the Discipli●e of Christ to curb their exorbitancies 'T is spirituall pride which makes so many boast of their perfections when he that hath but half an eye may see their grosse imperfections ' T is this sin which makes so many to transgresse the bounds of their callings and to become Teachers when themselves had need to be taught the fundamentalls of Religion These are wiser in their own conceits then seven men that can render a reason Prov. 26.16 though they were the seven wise men of Greece yet were they all but fooles to them They know more by the the Spirit of which they boast they never boast of their learning I cannot blame them they are loaded with so little of it then their betters can know by twenty years study who yet have a greater measure of the spirit then they The people of England were never poorer and prouder then at this day even now when the Lord is beating us for our pride and is staining the pride of all our glory and hath brought into contempt the Honourable of the earth Isai 23.9 yet such is the height of our rebellion that we sin under the Rod and are the worse for beating when the body swells 't is a sign it is diseased the Tympany of pride which is now in the land is a sad symptom that all is not well with us I wish our State Physitians and Spirituall-Physitians may see to it betimes before the disease become Chronicall and incurable 3. That inundation and overflowing of all manner of sin too clearely shewes the pride of the land There is a kind of tacite interpretative pride in every sin for in sinning we prefer our own wills before Gods will and seek to please and advance our selves rather then God Pride affronts God it stops the eare against his commands and will not suffer mon to submit their necks to Gods yoak Ier. 13 15 17. and 2.31 Hence sin is called a despising and contempt of God 2 Sam. 12.9 10. The voluptuous man saith God shall not rule over me and the worldling saith He 'l not leave his profit to be commanded by him and every rebellious sinner stands it out against God and saith We will not have him
to those that are Novices they discover no such things but suffer them to gape or mutter as stupified with admiration of their words and so they lye hid under those winding forms as thieves hide themselves in their dens These are those swelling words which Peter and Iude compare to Bubbles and froth which end in nothing But whilest they study by their lofty stile to lead others into errours they so mislead themselves that they understand not their owne bablings I remember when once Quintin saw me in a great Assembly sharply reproving his chattering he desirous to shunne the stroke said I reproved his speech because I did not understand it To which I answered that I understood somewhat in it more then he did for he did not at all perceive those things which he uttered but I perceived that he meant to bewitch the minds of men with his absurd and pernicious dotages which will appear to be so in that he doth so plunge them in and involve them with such foolish speculations that neither heaven nor earth can appeare unto them By this Note they are discerned from others when they speak they make a noyse like a Chough so that nothing they utter can be understood The tongue was created by God that we might expresse our Thoughts and communicate them to each other but they pervert the order instituted by him and with a confused sound beat the ayre or by long circumstances they minister matter of such varying and altering to the auditours that at last they are left wholly in suspence when the mysteries of God are to be handled we ought to make the Scripture our Rule let us then follow the Rule which God hath delivered to us and not wander out of the compasse of it for God knowing that if he should use onely such words as become his Majesty our apprehensions could not reach them useth therefore such expressions as suit best with our shallow capacities And as a nurse speaks broken and imperfect words to her Infant so doth God to his people that he may be understood Whosoever therefore inverts this order aimes at nothing but to bury the Truth of God which cannot be perceived any other way then by that which he hath revealed unto us See then how we must labour in the explication of their circumlocutions so as by force to draw their meaning into light that so their abominations which they study to cover may be made manifest to all men And all Christians ought to be admonished that when they hear their gagling in this manner they break off their speech and say Either speak as the Lord hath taught us and according to Scripture phrase or get you gone and make your speech to stones and trees So farre pious and judicious Calvin 8. They preach one thing in publike and another thing in private In publike I have heard some call for Duties Ordinances c. and acknowledge the Deity of Christ but talk with the same men in private and they are other men They are like Fortune Constans in levitate sua constant in unconstancy They are more mutable then the Moon and change themselves into several shapes like Proteus As the Jesuite is omnis homo so these can say and unsay they can play fast and loose with ease 9. 'T is their property to conceal many of their Opinions especially at first till they have fitted their Disciples to receive them They deal with their Proselites as Absalon did with his followers he at first covers his Treason with a shew of courteous behaviour zeal for justice and the pretence of performing a Vow 2 Samuel 15.2.8 he never shews himself in open Rebellion till he was sure of the peoples hearts Error in it self is ugly and if it should appear especially at first in its proper colours men would detest both it and those that bring it 10. They boast much of the Spirit when upon triall 't is a mere Satanicall deluding spirit that leads them For such sensual Separatists as these have not the Spirit of God saith Saint Iude 19. They think they know more by the Spirit then their betters can know by twenty yeers study who yet are led by a better spirit then they V. Tactica S. l. 2. c. 2. S. 8. 11. They boast much of New-light and love to vent such things as savour of Novelty They know that itching eares cannot away with common Truths they must have novum aut nihil By this the old Prophet brought the young Prophet into the Lions mouth by telling him that an Angell spake to him and had brought him some New-light 1 Kings 13.18.24 and 't is an old Policy of the Devill to cry up sin and errour under the Notion of New-light Thus he beguiled Eve Gen. 3.5 this is rather strange Light then New 'T is Light in Name but Darknesse indeed Let us examine them and we shall find that these New-lights are nothing but Old-Errours and so are Neither Lights nor New 1. They are not Light because they are contrary to the Light of Gods word from whence all true Light springs Isay 8.20 neither are they New but rather renewed for most of them were broached in or before Austins time which is above 12. hundred yeares agoe The Ghosts of those old Hereticks are now come out of their graves to scarre men and mislead them 12. They pretend to Miracles and extraordinary Revelations When they cannot make good their Tenets by Scripture then as the Papists fly to unwritten Traditions so these fly to Miracles and Revelations This is no more then what Christ long since foretold that in the last days false Christs and false Prophets should arise showing signs and wonders and should deceive many Matthew 24.23 So doth Antichrist with his lying wonders 2 Thes. 2.9 They cry up an extraordinary light within them and cry down the Scriptures and Preaching as low things because they discover their works of darkness Thieves put out the light because darknesse best becomes their deeds of darknesse 13. They seem modest at first they desire you onely to hear them speak then to separate and after to be rebaptized and then farewell all They drop a little at once into their followers and never administer their Physicke till they have first given good Preparatives to make it work and then stronger potions as they finde the pulse of the Patient They do not alwayes deny in plain terms fundamental Truths but often when they pretend to own the Scripture expressions they deny the Truth They desire you at first but to taste of the Devils broth Isay 63.4 not doubting but at last to make you eat of his beef He that saith yea to the Devil in a little shall not say nay when he pleaseth Sinne is gradual as well as Grace As no man attains to a height of Vertue suddenly so neither of Vice A spark neglected may burn down a Town Arrius at first a spark
bloud or an infected house the neighbourhood Hence Christ blames the Church of Thyatira not for commanding but for conniving and tolerating Iesabel to seduce his people Rev. 2.20 The simple seduced people would be pittied but the obstinate seducers would be punished 'T is well observed by a Reverend Divine that such evil men as are publick and scandalous such as are obstinate and pernicious such as are evil plotters evil promoters such as are seducers and misleaders such as are incurable and hate to be reformed these and if there be any like them ought not to be born He that restrains not such when he hath power to do it makes himself guiltie of their sins When a Judge in Germany was aggravating the guilt of a Malefactor before him since he had murthered now six men No my Lord sayes one he killed but one and you killed the other five who had him before you for the first and yet let him escape Eli advised his sonnes but because he restrained them not by his authority himself was punisht 1 Samuel 3.13 and usually those wicked ones which men tolerate in their wickednesse become scourges to those that tolerate them Ioshua 23.11 12. The greatest mercy is to punish such saith the same Reverend Authour If you would be a friend to them punish them favour and complyance fattens their sins and hardens thir hearts whereas reproof and punishment may possibly reform them Objection But they are Souldiers and such as have done good service Answer Be they what they will if they will be so bold as openly to transgresse the Lawes of God the Magistrate who is or ought to be a Terrour to evil doers must be so bold as to punish them He should answer as Canutus a King of the Vandals did when one desired him to spare his son who had committed a great crime no sayes he sed filio nostro sublimiorem erigite crucem Make the Gallows higher for my son who durst break the Lawes not onely of his King but of his father that the world may see that I will do justice on my son And being deceived They Actively deceive others and Passively are deceived themselves by the Devil that lying Spirit and Grand Impostor of the world who is the executioner of Gods wrath on such workers of iniquity Revelations 12.9 and 20.10 He is that great deceiver of deceivers who cozeneth the whole World id est all all the Reprobates and wicked of the world whose names are not written in the Booke of Life As Theives when they would rob a man draw him aside out of the high way into some Wood and then cut his throat so this grand deceiver and his Agents draw men aside from the right way of Gods Worship into some by-paths of error to their ruine The Devil he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seducens universum orbem he is the Cheater of Cheaters and Deluder of deluders 't is his constant Trade as the Participle implies And this is the Reason why many false Teachers may die with boldnesse and courage for their Opinions viz because they are blinded and deluded by the Devil they think themselves Martyrs when they are grand Deceivers and grossely Deceived We had need therefore to pray for the Spirit of Grace and Illumination that we may see the Methods Depths and Devices of Satan and avoid them In the general Observe That the prosperous estate of wicked men is more dangerous then the afflicted and persecuted condition of the Godly for the godly by persecution grow better when the wicked that live at ease grow worse and worse inventing errors and mischief to the destruction of themselves and others The prosperitie of such fools destroyes them Prov. 1.32 that which makes many so unhappy is their too much happiness the glittring glass is soonest broken the rankest corn is soonest laid and the fruitfullest bough is soonest slit If Ioseph be a fruitful bough let him be sure the Archers will vex him Gen. 49.21 23. 'T is a harder thing to know how to abound then how to want though Paul A man eminent in Grace could doe both Philippians 4.12 Elisha prayed for a double portion of the Spirit why so Why Elijah was persecuted and banisht and lived in the Wildernesse but Elisha was to live at Court and therefore had need of a double portion of Gods Spirit to assist him Prosperity hath more dangerous temptations accompanying it then Adversity True adversity hath its trials The Devil like a Fowler layes his Lime-twigs in the Winter when the Birds can get no food like the Usurer which lieth at the catch for a good penniworth when he sees thee now arrested and going to prison then he offers him money for his Estate When Christ was an hungry then Satan sets on him Matthew 4.1.2 3. Hence Christ calls the time of Affliction the houre of darknesse because then the Prince of Darknesse is most busie therefore we read of many that in time of affliction and persecution have fallen away Mar. 4.17 Luk. 8.13 Ahaz is branded for sinning in the time of his distresse when he should have been best he was worst 2 Chro 28.22 Saul in his distresse goeth to a Witch and Asa trusts in Physicians when we are brought to an Extremity that is Satans opportunity as well as Gods he loves to fish in troubled Waters this maketh so many Witches When people are poore sicke and vext with Enemies then comes the Tempter and then is a time for us to Pray that we be not overcome by Power of Tentation Luke 22.40 Psalm 50.15 Iames 5.13 But where the Devil getteth one by Adversity he getteth hundreds by Prosperity that hath slain its thousand but this ten thousand When Gods hand is on men then they will pray Isay 26.16 and learn Righteousnesse Isay 26.9 and turn to God Hosea 5. ult and 6.1 as we see in Manasses Paul the Prodigall Then a Saul will Sacrifice and call on Samuel to pray for him and Ioab flies to the Hornes of the Altar We never read of any that were converted by Prosperity but many by Adversitie 2 Chronicles 33.12 Iob 33.14 Few of the Saints were ever hurt by Adversity but almost all of them have been hurt by Prosperity Noah whilest kept wakeing by a wicked Generation fell not but when they were drowned and he came to live in Peace then he falleth Genesis 9.20 21. So did Lot when he was got out of Sodom and his Righteous Soul was no more vext with them then he falleth Genesis 19.30 David whilest persecuted by Saul how tender conscienced and watchful was he but when he came to a Kingdom then we read of his falls 1. He commits Adultery 2. 'T is double not single Adultery both parties were married 3. 'T was committed against great Light and Love even after the receit of signal favours 2 Sam. 12.7 8. 4. It occasioned much scandal 2 Samuel 12.14 5. In
sight to see Old M●ason's old Cedars in the house of God old disciples whom no storms nor tempests can drive from the truth Acts 21.16 like the Church of Thyatira to have our works more at last then at the first Revel 2.19 like spiritual Sampson we must break the cords of difficulties forgetting what is past and pressing towards the work Like Heroick Luther whom men nor devils could draw or drive from the truth And like another Caesar not cease from doing till all be done Nil actum credens cum quid superesset agendum Instat atrux Lucan Pharsal l. 2. To this end we must first labour to know the truth for how can a man walk in a way which he doth not know 2. When we have found the way we must walk in it with full purpose and resolution Ier. 6.16 Acts 11.23 let the understanding be never so clearly convinct yet if the will resolve not to obey there is no good to be done 3. Lay a good foundation dig deep he that will build high must lay low Deny your own strength and wisdom for in his own strength shall no man be strong 1 Sam. 2.2 9. but we must be strong in the Lord and the Power of his might if ever we look to overcome Ephes. 6.10 if ever we would be able to do or suffer we must get vertue and strength from Christ. Philip. 4.13 We are never stronger then when we are most apprehensive of our own weaknesse 1 Cor. 12.10 nor ever weaker then when we trust most to our selves as we see in Peter and in the book of Martyrs the timerous trembling souls who suspected their own strength were faithful to the death when the proud and Self-confident basely turned with the times 4. Put on the whole armour of God and gird it close to you An ignorant unbelieving unarmed man hath no heart to fight 't is the man that hath the shield of Faith the helmet of Hope the breast-plate of Righteousnesse the girdle of Truth c. that like the valiant horse rejoyceth to meet the armed man Iob 39.19 20. the Apostles were armed with these graces and see how boldly they go on in despight of all opposition 2 Cor. 6.4 to 8. He that would see more of Constancy and perseverance let him peruse Dike on Conscience cap. 9. p. 130. c. Barkers Serm. before the Parliament 1648. on 1 Cor. 15. ult Gatakers Serm. on Revel 2.10 fol. p. 317. Downams Guide to Godlinesse l. 3. c. 1. and l. 4. c. 8 9 10 Hildersham on Psal. 51.7 Lect. 144. to 150. all those six last Lectures are very useful for our times M. Vennings Serm. on Rev. 2.5 In the things which thou hast learned Observe That even the best are learners here Whilest wee live in this world though we should live Methuselahs dayes yet we may learn something still We know but in part and the most perfect are imperfect here Object We have the Spirit to teach us Answ. So had David who yet desires to be taught still Psal. 119. So had Paul who yet prest forward toward the mark still Philip. 3.12 13 14. he disclaimes perfection and desires to know Christ more clearly Our learning doth not hinder but further the work of the Spirit in our souls Timothy that had a plentiful measure of the spirit for he was an Evangelist yet must give himself to reading and meditation still 1 Tim. 4.13 Such is the profoundnesse of the Scripture that he who knoweth most may still learn more and the more we know the more we shall acknowledge our ignorance And hast been assured of or as others read it which hath been committed to thee The truth was not barely delivered to Timothy but it was committed to him to be kept as a sacred Treasury with the greatest care Observe That the Truth of God revealed in the Scripture is a sacred depositum a choyce Treasure a precious Jewel which must be carefully kept by all Christians and especially by the Ministers of Christ. The Oracles of God and the doctrine of the Gospel is more specially committed to our care and fidelity that we may publish it to others 'T is true every private Christian in his Sphere and Calling ought to preserve the truth and contend for the faith Iude 3. we cannot keep the truth without strong contention the word signifies to strive with all our might or say some it's to strive one after another in our places and successive generations Insuper certare or certamen repetere it 's not enough to strive once and to assert the truth but we must doe it again and again after one another as oft as the Truth is opposed But the Gospel is committed primarily to the care of Christs Ministers they are his Heralds to proclaim and publish it to the world as appeares 1 Tim. 1.11 and 6.20 and 2.1 14. 1 Thes. 2.4 Titus 1.3 1 Cor. 9.17 Gal. 2.7 of all men Ministers must hold fast the faithful word Titus 1.9 we must hold it against all opposition and hold it with both hands hold it with all our strength hold it in our Judgements in our Affections in our Practice part with it at no rate to Schismaticks Hereticks false Prophets c. As Moses was faithfull and would not part with a hoof to Pharaoh so we must not part with a tittle of Gods truth to his enemies for all Truths even the least are precious truth is like gold which is glorious in the Ray and Spangle as well as in the wedge As 't is in Practicals he that makes no conscience of little sins will quickly be drawn to greater so 't is true and holds in Doctrinalls he that admits of a little error will soon be drawne to a greater Though every truth be not fundamental yet every truth is a guard to the foundation the outer skin of an Apple lyes remote from the heart yet if you pluck that off the heart will soon be rotten The finger is not a vital part but a Gangrene in the finger will in a short time reach to the very vitals and corrupt the blood with the spirits Not onely the garment of Truth but the fringes thereof are useful and must be preserved Numb 15.38 39 40. We experimentally see that those who forsake Truth in Discipline quickly fall to errors in Doctrine We shall hardly find a man that erres in the one to be sound in the other As therefore we must count no sin small so we must esteem no error small for the least truth of Gods Kingdome doth in its place uphold the whole Kingdome of his truth Take away the least Vericulum out of the world and it unworlds all Potentially and may unravell the whole Texture Actually if it be not conserved by an extraordinary power 2. Consider that truth is the choycest gift which God ever gave to the sonnes of men it is better then any created Ens or Bonum which
man to marry before five and twenty nor a young woman till twenty My Reasons are 1. Because the married Condition requires people that have some experience in worldly Affaires and specially in Religion 1 Peter 3.7 the Apostle would have the Husband to be a man of Knowledge Now this Knowledge how to govern a Family wisely and religiously cannot be attained without a considerable time Adam was a Man of full Age and Eve a Woman not a Childe when God brought her to Adam Of all people that we read of in the Scripture Kings did use to marry soonest that so they might have Heires betimes yet we reade of few of the Kings of Israel that married before twenty 'T is not for Children and green-heads rashly to run upon such weighty undertakings they that marry in such haste shall repent by leisure 3. Mutability and unconstancy they be not settled nor stayed in their judgements 'T is the younger sort that usually are led away with errour Old Birds stayed Professours are not so soon caught with this Chaffe Hence the Apostle Exhorts young Timothy to continue in the Truth 1 Tim. 4 16. 4 Rashness Headiness and Revenge such were Rehoboams young Counsellours 1 Kings 12.6.10 Youth is voyd of judgement Prov. 7.7 and apt to fly in the face of a Reprover 5. A disesteeming and sleighting of old Age. They were young ones that mockt the Prophet 2 Kings 2.24 and despised Iob 30.1.12 'T will be our wisedome to fly these lusts betimes It s a comely sight to see mortified and self-denying young people They are subject to stronger Temptations and more violent Affections there is a greater propensity to sinne in youth and therefore the Obedience is the more excellent and acceptable when out of love to God we can break through all these Young persons have many suiters the World the Flesh the Devil all cry be mine be mine They all ly in wait for the flower of our dayes The Flesh casts baits the World digs pits and the Devil sees snares So that unless we be magnanimous and resolute we shall be foiled and overcome 6. A sixth sinne of Youth is Neglecting the seasons of Grace not knowing the day of their Visitation a sleighting the tenders and offers of Gods Grace unto them There is a time when the Lord cometh a wooing to the Soul and by the motions of his Spirit knocks at the doores of our Hearts for entertainment Revelations 3.20 The Devil doth his utmost to hinder the match and therefore he perswadeth young persons that they are too young to be godly and too young to deny themselves in point of pleasures and carnall delights he tells them they may believe and repent time enough hereafter when they are Old He dealeth with them as the Philosopher did with the young man that came to him desiring him to tell him when he should marry Oh said the Philosopher thou art too young not yet not yet at last he grew old and then he came to know when he should marry Not at all now said he The Application is easie 1. Let such consider that there are thousands and ten thousands now in Hell that thought to have repented Hereafter Many have an Intentionall but no solid Repentance they resolve to repent but they resolve not when and so delay till the day of Grace bee past 2. Consider it is not in our power to repent when we please God must give us the Grace 2 Timothy 2.25 they way of Man is not in himself It is God must turn us or we shall never be turned Iremiah 31.18 He must draw us or we shall never runne after him Canticles 1.4 Iohn 6.44 We must observe Gods time or we loose all 3. How dost thou know that thou shalt live till thou art old younger and better then thou are gone Shorter graves then thine may be seen 4. Suppose thou shouldest live till thou wert old yet thy heart may then be so hardened that thou canst not repent and because when God called thou wouldst not answer therefore thou shalt cry and shalt not be heard Prov. 1.24 Ier. 22.21 22. 5. If it were in our power yet we may in no wise deal so dis-ingeniously with our God as to give the Devil the Marrow of our Youth and reserve the dry bones of our old Age for God It is no wisedome to lay the greatest load on the weakest Horse Old Age though in it selfe it be a Blessing yet is accompanied with many troubles sicknesses and diseases they are the Dreggs the Lees the Winter of our dayes As all Rivers meet in the Sea so all diseases meet in Old Age Hence it is called the evil day Eccles. 12.3 4 5 c. then the Eyes grow dimme the Eares deafe the Hands tremble and the Leggs are feeble and the Memory failes 'T is a time of spending not of getting and such compulsive Repentance is seldome true They are cursed that offer the blinde and the lame in Sacrifice Malachi 1.8 ult and if the blinde and the lame were abhorred of Davids soul much more of Gods 2 Samuel 5.8 'T is the greatest Wisedome in the World for young persons to know the day of their Visitation and to improve the Seasons of Grace seeking the Lord while he may be found Isaiah 55.6 and opening when he knocketh 'T is good sayling whilest the Ship is sound the Pilot well the Marriners strong the Gale favourable and the Sea calme The onely way to finde the Lord when we seeke him is to seeke him in due time even Now 2 Corinthians 6.2 Behold Now is the acceptable Time Now he calleth all men every where to Repent See how the Holy Ghost prevents Objections I 'le repent hereafter No it must be now Acts 17.30 31. Object I am rich or I am poor I am a Iew or a Gentile and cannot repent Answ. He calls All men Object I dwell amongst ill neighbours Answ. He calls all men every where The time present is the only time the Time past is gone the time to come we have no assurance of the time present is our time Hence we are called upon so oft to obey whilest 't is to day Psal. 95.7 8. Heb. 3.15 and to return i. e. presently Isai 21.12 In all obligations say the Lawyers where no time is specified there the condition is presently to be performed So Ier. 13.15 16. Zech. 1.4 Zeph. 2.1 2. Now because we are naturally averse and backward to this special duty I shall give you 20. Considerations to Quicken you 1. Consider that this speedy repenting and turning to God in our youth is Comfortable because 't is a good evidence of the Truth of our Repentance as late Repentance is seldome true so speedy repentance is seldome false It 's a good sign we have made God our God indeed when with David we can seek him early Psal. 63.1 and with Zaccheus we make hast to receive him joyfully Luke 19.6 This
idle drowsie habit but an active lively operative thing hence all Gods servants have been men of fire Abraham how zealous in Praying for Sodom how ready to circumcise himselfe and all the men in his house how ready to part with all at Gods bare command Lot doth not onely abstaine from the sins of Sodom but his soul was tortured and tormented with their wickednesse 2 Peter 2.8 Moses one of the meekest men in the world yet when God was dishonoured in an holy heate he throweth down the two Tables of stone and breaketh them signifying thereby their breach of Covenant with God by their sins yet did not the Lord checke him for it He onely bid him goe make new ones where we may observe the goodnesse of God that if our zeal transport us too far yet the Lord pardons the errour of our fervency rather then the Indifferencies of Security and Luke-warmnesse Thus Bar●e how earnestly doth he act in Gods work Nehemiah 3.20 Nehemiah forsooke all his Court preferment passed through many dangers and difficulties and contends even with Rulers for profaning the Sabbath he cursed them i. he caused them to be excommunicated and driven out of the Congregation or he sharply reproved them telling them they had made themselves guilty of the curses whereinto they had entered Nehemiah 10.29 and 13.25 Holy David was a man even compounded of zeal as appeareth Psalm 119.53 97.136.139.158.174 How did he prepare with all his might for the House of God and thinketh all the gold and riches he had given to be as nothing 1 Chronicles 29.2 3 4. he prepared an hundred thousand Talents of Gold and a thousand thousand Talents of Silver he gave of his owne proper goods thirteen Millions eight hundred seventy five thousand pound sterling But what makes David so magnificently liberal Why it was his zealous affection to the House of God It is want of affection not want of money that makes men give so basely to the promoting of Gods Worship yet so inlarged was Davids heart that he accounts all this but a poor gift 1 Chronicles 22.14 In my poverty so 't is in the margin of your Bibles have I prepared all this he accounts his 1300. cart load of gold and silver but a poor gift it was no● answerable to his desires nor according to that which the transcendent Majesty of God might require but it was according as he was able by reason of his continual troubles and afflictions what a Seraphim was Paul how did he burn with a zeal for Gods Glory how was his Spirit kindled in him when he saw the Idolatry at Athens Acts 17.16 How gladly doth he spend himself for the Church of God 2 Cor. 12.25 What pains did he take what hazards did he run that he might win souls Rom. 15.19 He surpassed Alexander the Great and all the Conquerours of the world for they conquered men by the Sword but Paul by the Word they gained Kingdoms to themselves but Paul for Christ they conquered bodyes he souls they men he devils But where shall we now find a zealous Elijah a man of fire against sin and errors where are our Luthers Lattimers Bradfords that fear not the faces of great ones Blessed be God he hath many in the Land that both in the Pulpit and by their Pens do witness against the enormities of the times yet in comparison of the swarms of idle heretical profane self-seeking Ministers they are thin sowen for 1. Some are ignorant and cannot 2. Others are scandalous and dare not reprove sin for fear of being upbraided themselves 3. Others are Time-servers and to keep their places they go along with the current of the times and say as the great ones would have them Are the times for liberty so are they Are the times for Anabaptists c. so are they Doctores aerei like wax ready to take any impression that the Rulers and great ones will put upon them 4. Others are zealous but 't is against zeal instead of being instant in Preaching they are earnest against zealous Preachers and preaching Instead of heavenly fire they are full of strange fire They are zealous but 't is for Superstition Will-worship Anabaptisme c. When they should use all means to keep in and increase this holy fire as the Priest was commanded Levit. 6.12 13. not to suffer the fire of the Altar to go forth but he must bring wood to it and nourish it that it alwayes might burn yet these by their negligence suffer it to decay 'T is said that the Image of Isis was carried by a dull Asse such a servant may fit such a saint but dead Ministers are no servants for the living God I rejoyce not in these victories of the devil but shall turn my complaint into a prayer that the Lord would purifie the sons of Levi and purge them as gold that they may offer in righteousness Malac. 3.3 And that all Zions Nazarites may be purer then snow and whiter then milk Lam. 47.13 That all those whom the Lord hath set apart for his own immeditate service may in some measure resemble their Lord and Master in the beauty of holiness that they may be like Apollos who was fervent in spirit mighty in the Scriptures and taught diligently the way of the Lord. Acts 18.25 26. that like Micah 3.8 we may be filled with the Spirit of God and so may be enabled to fulfil our duty That he would flame us with the fire of love that we may help to inflame others Did Ministers love their peoples souls more they would be more zealous for their good Love is an active thing it will make one do and suffer much for the party beloved A mother loves her child which makes all her pains with it light One being askt out of what book he got such fiery fervent Sermons answered I get them out of the Book of Love This will make us fervent in prayer for our people and faithfully to discharge our duty by admonishing the wicked comforting the afflicted resolving their doubts sympathizing with them in their sorrows and visiting them in their distresses as Esay did Hezekiah in his sickness 2 Kings 20 1. The false Prophets are branded for feeding themselves but not the flock the sick they did not heal nor bind up the broken Ezek. 34.24 Much of the sins and errors of the times lie at Ministers doors and cold Ministers make bold sinners Hence Christ blames the Angels and Pastors of the Churches for the sins of the Churches Rev. 2. and 3. Our Apostysy makes others to apostatize many begin like thunder but they end like smoak We may say of many Ministers as they say of Butter 't is gold in the morning silver at noon and lead at night or like one Baldwin Archbishop of Canterbury whom Pope Vrban greets in the stile of a fervent Monk a warm Abbot a Luke-warm Bishop and a key cold
is the very formalis ratio the quintescence of zeal to be intense and increased to the utmost 'T is not every degree of Affection for a formalist may have some cold Vellieties and Luke-warm desires and a carnal man may have some joy and fear But zeal is another thing 't is a boiling over again with extremity of heat 'T is sacra ebullitio a holy heat and rising of the heart against sin It makes a man fervent or seething hot against sin Rom. 12.11 Water may be hot in some measure and yet not seeth seething hot is the highest degree of heat But the Hypocrite is affraid of being too zealous and active for God whereas we can never be too zealous in that we know to be good in it self and good for us to do We cannot exceed in our love to God nor in our obedience to him No vertue in its formal reason can be too much intended a man cannot be nimis liberalis tho he may be nimius in largitione Keep the horse under the bridle and in the right way and keep the stream within its banks let it run in a right channel and then the stronger the better 3. It will make us sharp and severe against our own sins but pittiful and compassionate to others As charity so zeal begins at home no man can speak so sharply against him as he doth against himself though others may excuse him yet he 'l not excuse himself 2 Sam. 24.10 But the Hypocrite he 's parcus sibi severus aliis High and harsh in his censures of others but indulgent to himself Matth. 7.4 the worst men are usually the greatest censurers Acts 28.4 4. It makes a man more zealous in great matters then in lesser In great causes he sheweth great zeal and in lesser causes lesser zeal He calls not for a Sword to kill a Flea nor for an Axe to crack an Egge He well knows that the same fire is not requisite for the roasting of an Egge as is for the roasting of an Ox. But the Hypocrite he 's magnus in minimis he 's fiery in small matters and cold in weighty ones With Saul he kills the lean but spares the fat And with the Pharises he Tythes Mint and Cummin but neglects obedience in the great things of the Law Matth. 23.23 5. He 's more zealous in Gods cause then in his own Moses how meek and quiet in his own cause Numb 12.3 Yet how hot in Gods Exod. 32.9.19.27 Hezekiah mourns more for Senacherib's blasphemy then for the Sword that was drawn against himself 2 Kings 19.3 4.16 David when himself was persecuted became as a deaf man but when Gods Law is transgressed his zeal consumes him and rivers of tears run down his eyes Christ himself in his own sufferings was as a Sheep before the Shearer dumb but when Gods house is profaned he doth not onely by words but blows drive them out with an holy violence Nehemiah how silent when himself was reproached but when Gods Sabbaths are profaned he contends even with Nobles about it Ioshua 7.8 is more tender over Gods Name then his own he doth not say what shall our names estates and lives do but what wilt thou do for thy own name The Church of Ephesus could bear any suffering but not sin Rev. 2.2 But the hypocrite is hot in his own case and key-cold in Gods let any wrong him or rob him he 's all on a flame but let Gods Name Sabbaths Servants be wronged he cares for no such things 4. True zeal may be known by it's concomitants and companions which are 4.1 'T is ever attended with wisedom and discretion 'T is not a rash ungrounded zeal but a wise sober well-grounded fervour As a good dish may be spoiled in the dressing so a good reproof for want of observing due circumstances of persons time and place may loose it's due operation Hence Solomon commends a word that 's spoken Beophman super rotis suis running on the wheels of all due circumstances Psal. 25.11 Fire on the hearth is good but fire in the top of the house is dangerous Love allows us to be warm and plain but not scalding hot in our reproofs A well-ordred zeal will teach a Nathan to catch a David in a parable Caut. Yet must we beware least under pretence of discretion we destroy zeal of which see more in the Objections 2. It keeps the bounds of its calling It dares do nothing without a call from God Simeon and Levi were good men and the cause was good but the prosecution of it was ill for they assumed the Magistrates power without a call Gen. 3.4 Excessive heat or excessive cold is poysen 3. He loves to see and to make others zealous It 's the nature of fire to multiply one living●coal kindles another zealous Abraham will not keep his goodness to himself but he 'l communicate it to his family So Moses Numb 11.29 and Paul Acts 26.29 4. 'T is of a growing nature we must grow in zeal as well as in other graces A grain of mustard seed though it be little yet 't is lively Fire on the Altar might not be suffered to go out Levit. 6.13 As natural strength so this is increased by exercise To him that hath true zeal shall be given more Lastly this must quicken us all to an holy zeal and emulation in well-doing Most men seek to excell their Neighbours in riches fine houses fine fare but who labours to excel in vertue The living God delights not in dead hearts dead spirits become not his servants cold wishes and faint desires please not him we must be active and stirring if we desire that God should be with us for our God is not the God of the dead but of the living Who should be zealous and active for God if we be not as Nehemiah said in another case Neh. 6.11 Should such a one as I fly I that am under such special promises special protection special providences should I dishonour my profession and in a fearful manner fly so should such as we be cold and dead who live upon the bread of life and drink the water of life who have lively Oracles and lively Ordinances and all meanes to make us lively Let us therefore do what we do with all our might as David did when he danced before the Ark. 2 Sam. 6.14 Let us oppose sin with all our might Preach Pray and praise God with all our might Iudge 5.12 Psal. 103.23 Rom. 12.11 We should burn and boyl up in our spirits in duty By this meanes we shall prevent aboundance of dangerous temptations which seise on Luke-warm professors When Honey is cold every Fly and Wasp robs us of it but when 't is boyling and scalding hot they dare not come neer it When men are cold and indifferent in Religion every Sectary and Seducer which are the Devils Flies and Emissaries makes a prey of us but when we are hot
Sancta sanctis these holy things call for holy Ones We must first take an holy Vomit and by a sincere confession of sin rid our stomacks and purge out of our souls those malignant peccant humors of malice guil hypocrisy filthiness and superfluity and naughtiness before we can receive the Word with meekness so as to grow thereby 1 Pet. 2.1 2. Iames 1.22 Iacob purgeth his family before he goes to Bethel Gen. 35.1 2. The husband-man first rids his ground of those bushes briars and brambles which stand in his way and then falls to plowing before he goes to sowing and so must we first rid our hearts of all inordinate cares which like thornes choak the good seed of the Word and then receive it into honest and good hearts Matthew 13. Ier. 4.3 when the people were prepared for the hearing of the Law Exodus 19. Then and not till Then doth God speak unto them Exodus 20.1 Our Translation reads it And but former Translations render it Then and so saith the Arabick Version Deinde then or after that viz. they were prepared Many come but like Rachel they bring their Idolls with them Genesis 31.19 like the Samaritans they will serve the Lord and their Idolls too 2 Kings 17.33 Such God disownes Ver. 34. They serve not me saith God he will have all or none at all and therefore he threatens to set himself against such Ezekiel 14 7 8. there is no standing with comfort or confidence before God in our sins Ezra 9. ●lt The prime cause of so little profiting after so long hearing is our unpreparednesse for the duety This hardens the heart Accidentally maketh it more blind Isay 6.9 10. The Sun softens waxe but hardens clay and if the word be not the savour of Life then contrary to its own Nature meeting with the rebellious hearts of men it hardeneth them and becommeth the savour of death unto them 2 Corinthians 2.16 2. Hear Atte●tively give heed to what is delivered Acts 5.16 There is no getting or keeping knowledge without attention Proverbs 5.1 2. Let a Minister preach never so powerfully if the people sleep talk gaze or come when ha●● is done they cannot profit We should rouse up our selves to attend as for our lives remembring it is for Eternity The people that heard our Saviour attended or as the word signifieth they hanged upon him Luke 19. ult as the young birds doe upon the Bill of the Damme every one openeth his mouth to see which can catch it and that bird which is not sed waits till his turn cometh They hung upon him as Bees on Flowers to suck out the Virtue that is in them so Luke 4.20 3. Intentively with the highest intention of Affection We must hearken diligently and encline our ears to hear Isay 55.2 3. We must set our hearts on the things we hear for it is our life Deut 32.46 Ezek. 40.4 The word must not swim in our Heads but sink down into our eares and Hearts Luke 9.44 we must mark it diligently and entertain it readily The Kingdome of Heaven must suffer violence and we must take it by force Matthew 11.12 4. R●tentively We must retain the Word and lock it up in our hearts as a Jewel of the greatest price So did Mary Luke 2.51 and so must we Deuteronomy 11.18 Iob 22.22 Proverbs 2.1 Iohn 15.20 an holy remembrance of Gods Word is an excellent preservative against sin Psalm 119.11 and a singular support to us in our trouble● Psalm 73.17 Hereby we shall be the better enabled to practice what we hear we cannot practice what we forget The sciens must be grafted into the stock before it can grow the Word must be graffed in our heads and hearts before we can bring forth fruit to Christ Iames 1.21 The Devil useth all means to steal the word out of our hearts and to make us forget it Matthew 13.19 For he knoweth it is the way to blessednesse when men hear the Word and keep it Luke 11.27 28. We should therefore pray for the Spirit of Grace which may lead us into all Truth and bring all good things to our remembrance Iohn 14.26 and 16.13 and pray with David that God would keep his Truth in the imaginations of the thoughts of our hearts 1 Chronicles 29.18 2. Love the Word we doe not easily forget the things which we love Ieremiah 2.32 If Rachel love her Fathers Idolls she will lay them up Genesis 31.34 Want of Affection breedeth want of memory If David delight in Gods Law hee will never forget his Word Psalm 119.6 3. Use the Meanes Reade Heare Meditate Conferre Apply the Word and write it as Baruc did Ieremies Sermons Ier. 36. 4. The Israelites must make them Fringes that they may not forget the Law Numbers 15.38.39 and above all be sure to receive the Word with all readinesse of minde Acts 17.11 It is a mercy that we heare the Word a greater mercy when we can approve of it but the greatest mercie is to receive it into our hearts in the Love of it 1 Thessalonians 2.13 When we can eate the Word Ieremiah 15.16 and receive its sharpest reproofes with submission and Thankefulnesse 1 Samuel 25.33 Psalm 141.5 5. Vnderstandingly We must not barely reade but we must search the Scriptures and labour to understand what we heare Matthew 15.10 Iohn 5.39 Praying for the Spirit of Illumination Ephesians 1. 17.18 6. Discreetly we must Try the Doctrine before we trust it Though it be Paul that Preach yet the Beraeans will trie his Doctrine by the Scriptures Acts 17.11 and Paul calleth on his hearers to Judge and consider what he said 1 Corinthians 10.15 and 2 Timothy 2.7 1 Thessalonians 5.21 and biddeth them Try the Spirits 1 Iohn 4.1 God hath given his People an Anointing to this end that they may be able to judge and discern of things that differ Colossians 1.9 10. We will not take gold but We will try it first and we will count Money after our own Fathers and shall we take Doctrines onely upon trust 7. Beleevingly we must by faith apply it to our selves whether it be for Humiliation or Consolation Iob 5.27 It must be engraffed in our hearts by Faith Iames 1.21 This is the way to make it effectual Romans 1.2.16 1 Cor. 1.21 Unbelief bars the heart against the Word and maketh it unprofitable to the hearers Heb. 4.2 8. Reverentially no service pleaseth God that is not mixt with Reverence and feare Psalm 2.1 Hebrewes 12.28 We must set our selves as in Gods presence and so heare as if God himselfe spake to us so did Cornelius though a Souldier and a great man Acts 10.33 So did the Thessalonians 1 Thess. 2.13 They received not the Word as the word of Paul but as the Word of God It is God that speaketh to us by the mouth of his Prophets Luke 1.70 and 10 16. Daniel 9.10 Micah 6.9 Iohn 1.23 2 Corinthians 5.20 We are Christs Embassadours and the words of an
not Bring my Silkes Satins Plush Velvets Copes Rochets Palls c. and other furniture enough to load a Cart but bring my Cloake and Bookes this is all the Apostles House-holdry If good men have food though it be but bread and water and rayment though it be never so course yet they rest contented with it Our happynesse doth not lie in the Pomp and pleasures of this World It is said of Iohn the Baptist that he was Tota Vox All voyce His Diet his Dwelling his Apparel his doing and his suffering all preached mortification and selfe-denial So this our Apostle was All Voyce Though a great part of the World was his Diocess yet he never affected nor once sought great things for himself He was poore in Temporals though rich in Spirituals 2 Corinthians 6.10 Silver and Gold he had none All his riches were a few Bookes and writings and a few old Cloathes to keep him warme 'T is said of that laborious and judicious Calvin that all the goods which he left behind him his Library being sold very dear came scarce to three hundreth Florens which is about ninety pound of our money It becometh not Gods People who are strangers and Pilgrimes here to seeke great things for themselves Ieremiah 45.5 How unlike then is Pope Paul and his successours to Saint Paul here and Saint Peter who cryed Silver and Gold I have none Acts 3.6 when Pope Iohn the two and twentieth had two hundred and fifty Tunnes of Gold found in his Treasury What Palaces Revenewes Attendance charge of costly Rayments have these men of sinne had which plainly sheweth that they are the Devils Vicars and not Christs 5. Observation 5. Whilest we live in this World we must have a moderate care of our health When winter approacheth Paul sendeth for his winter Garment to keep him warm The body is the souls Organe and Instrument by which it acteth and therefore it must be kept what in us lieth in tune for the service of the soul. He that forbiddeth us to kill our selves commandeth us inclusively to preserve our lives by all good and lawfull meanes such as necessary Cloathing wholesome Diet and convenient Lodgeing and therefore those Quakers that attempt to fast fourtie dayes as our Saviour did and thereby starve and famish themselves as some of them have done are no better then self-murderers Caution Onely we must beware of excessive carking and caring for the body remembering it is but the outside and the carkasse the soul is the man that is the Jewel which calleth for our special care Deuteronomy 4.9 Iohn 6.27 6. Observation 6. Good men are humble men They disdain not to stoop to the meanest services for the good of others If Timothy were a Diocesan Bishop as some Bishop-Would-bee would fain have it surely he was a very humble one since here he disdaineth not to bring Pauls old cloake with his Bookes and his Parchments after him Pride can stoop to nothing but Humility maketh a man become all things to all men so far as he can with a good Conscience that he may win some Bring the Books with thee Paul was now old in prison and ready to dye yet he calleth for Books 7. Observation 7. The Ministers of Christ must be studious men They must be much in Reading Writing and collecting even in their old Age and to their dying day Though a man have made a good proficiency in Learning and have extraordinary gifts of the Spirit so had Paul who was taught the mysteries of salvation more immediately by God himselfe and was wrapt up into the third Heaven and had been an Apostle so long yet still he calls for Bookes and Note-Bookes His dead Counsellours were his best Companions And if the Apostle who had such extraordinary gifts used Bookes and Notes 't is no dishonour to the best man in the World now to use them especially since we are commanded to give our selves to Reading 1 Timothy 4.13 and we amongst the rest must more especially search into the Scriptures Iohn 5.39 Away then with that Pride and folly of the Anabaptists and Enthusiasts who cry down Books and reading boasting that they have attained to such extraordinary gifts of the Spirit that they can Preach Prate they should say Non-sense and blasphemy without Books To these I briefly answer for I love not to spend much time about these Bruits 1. Let us see those extraordinary gifts you speake off I must professe seriously I could never yet finde ordinary gifts in these extraordinary Braggadoco's I have divers of their Letters by me wherein there is neither good matter good Language good Sense nor true English 2. Admit these men had these extraordinary gifts which they so boast off yet are they better then Paul Timothy or Daniel 9.2 for all these used Bookes Who knoweth not that the Spirit of God worketh by means and as he that will be rich must work for it so he that will be rich in knowledge must reade and study for it Solon a wise Heathen when he was old yet gloried that he still learned something and shall we that are Christians come short of Heathens Let these young men then that thinke themselves so full that they need no more remember old Paul who still was learning and studying the Scriptures even to his dying day The Word of God is a great deepe and we know but in part being clogged with our corrupt Nature and the mists of the flesh that hinder us from seeing the wonderous things which are in Gods Law Especially the Parchments 8. Observation 8. We should extract semething out of that we reade and treasure it up for our owne use and the good of the Church Our memories are weake and since the fall they are woefully crazed and become very deceitful to us and therefore we had need to use all good means to help them if Paul used Parchments for such a use as the learned conceive he did it is then no disparagement to the best to doe it VERSES 14 15. Alexander the Copper-Smith did me much evill the Lord reward him according to his workes VERSE 15. Of whom be thou ware also for he hath greatly withstood our words IN these words we have a relation of the injuries and oppositions which Paul met withall from Alexander an open and profest enemy to Paul and his Doctrine where we have 1. A Narration or Complaint set forth in an entire proposition Alexander the Copper-smith hath done me much evil 2. An Imprecation The Lord reward him according to his workes Alexanders Opposition springing from the extremity of malice to the power of Godlynesse he curseth him in the Name of the Lord and not out of any private revenge but in a holy zeal to Gods glory 3. Here is a Caution to Timothy to shun him of whom be thou ware also q. d. Thou seest what an enemy he is to me thy Father trust him not for he will
betray the son too 4. Here is the Reason of this Caution why he should shun the society of Alexander viz. because of his desperate condition he being one that openly and maliciously opposed the Truth of God and greatly withstood Pauls words Alexander the Copper-smith c. There is a great Controversie amongst Interpreters who this Alexander should be and it is conceived by the most judicious that it was that Alexander mentioned Acts 19.33 Who was a Jew and dwelt at Ephesus who was on Pauls side at the first and sought to appease the tumult stirred up at Ephesus against him where he had like to have lost his life for appearing on his side yet now he maketh shipwrack of the Faith and opposeth the People of God revileing and traducing them which the Apostle calleth blasphemeing 1 Timothy 2.20 The Copper-smith A man of a mean Condition one that got his living by his hammer and hard labour in an inferiour Calling He was sometime Pauls Disciple and profest the Truth but now the scales are turned and of a Professour he is become a persecutor Hath done me much evil The word which we render hath done in the Original signifieth to shew It is an Hebraism they put shewing for doing Psal. 4.6 Who will shew us any good .i. who will effect our desires in that kind so Psal. 60.3 thou hast shewed thy people hard things .i. thou hast caused them to see and endure hard things probably he might by his agents and friends stir up Nero against him as a seditious person a broacher of strange doctrine and and enemy to the Jewish religion which was then tolerated at Rome What this evil was he shewes in the next Verse He resisted our words and opposed the truth which Paul delivered The Lord reward him according to his works which he hath done and still endeavours to do against me and the truth of God which I profess He now delivers him up to the Justice of God who is a righteous Judge and will reward every man according to his works The Vulgar to mollify this Imprecation have put the word in the future Tense and so would make it a Prediction and not an Imprecation The Lord shall reward him but the word is Optative in the Original and implyes a heavy Imprecation The Apostle by a prophetical Spirit saw manifest signes of reprobation in this man and thereupon denounceth this curse against him Quest. But how doth this Imprecation agree with that Apostolical sweetness and mildness which was in the Apostle Answ. The Apostle spake not these words out of any private spleen but o●t of Prophetical zeal he desires the Lord to execute his justice on this incurable Apostate So that it was an Imprecation darted by a particular motion of the Holy Ghost and so not to be imitated by us who have not that extraordinary measure of the Spirit as Paul had Of whom be thou ware also Observe him and take heed of him for he goeth up and down stirring up the Jews against the Gospel q. d. The reason why I mention him at this time is that thou maist shun him as an excommunicate person and one delivered up to Satan Since then he is an incurable Apostate avoid him as the Pest and Poysener of humane Society For he hath greatly withstood our words much more will he withstand thine q. d. He hath not onely resisted us but which is worse he hath Violently and Vehemently resisted the truth which I have preached to the world The one is but a personal persecution against charity the other is a doctrinal offence against piety and so far more hainous Observations 1. Great Professors may become grievous Persecutors This Alexander was a noted Professor and within the pale of the Church else the Apostle could not have excommunicated him and cast him out of the Church if he had never been in and if he had not profest the faith he could not have made ship-wrack of it 1 Tim. 1.19 20. Yea this man was neer to Martyrdom as Calvin conceives yet now he turns a desperate opposer of the truth The best things when corrupted become the worst The most generous wine makes the sharpest vinegar and the finest flesh when putrified becomes most fulsom These Apostates know the state of the Church better then others and so are able to do it more mischief besides God in judgment gives them up to a reprobate sense and the Devil comes with seven worse spirits and re-enters which makes the latter end of these men worse then their beginning Nicholas a great professor and one of the seven Deacons yet at last fell into foul errours pleading for community of wives and the lawfulness of adultery hence came the Sect of the Nicolaitans Rev. 2.6 Iudas went far yet at last sells his Master Be not then offended when you see Professors turn Blaspemers and Preachers Persecutors it should grieve us but not discourage us It was so in the Apostles time it is so now and it will be so to the end of the world There will be some such Tares mixt with Gods wheat and a Iudas amongst the very Apostles We must look to be hooted at as signes and wonders as mad-men and Monsters and that in Israel Isay 8.18 Quest. But doth not this prove the Apostasy of the Saints since Alexander is said to make ship-wrack of the faith Answ. Not at all There is no arguing from the shadow to the substance from the Meteor to the fixed Star because Hypocrites temporary beleevers and carnal professors fall away therefore real Saints and such as are effectually called may fall away is a manifest Non Sequitur 2. Observation 2. It is lawful sometimes and in some cases to name men Alexander a malicious incorrigible enemy is named that every one may shun him But of this before in Verse 10. 3. Observation 3. The enemies of Gods people many times are sordid men Alexander a Smith a man of no learning of mean education by professing not a Gold-Smith nor a Silver-Smith but a Copper-Smith and by disposition an open enemy to the truth This contemptible man opposeth the Preaching and Practice of chosen vessels an eminently learned Paul Thus it pleaseth God to exercise and humble his choicest servants by vile and worthless men Iob complains of such Iob 19.10 and 30.1 David complains that the abjects and dregs of the people made head against him Psal. 35.15 16. So Acts 17.5 And this was prophesied longe since by Isay 3.5 that such disordered times should come that every boy should behave himself proudly against the Ancient and the base against the Honourable and men of worth It is a trouble to ingenious natures to be molested by such disingenuous ones who want common humanity To fall by the hand of an Achilles or some eminent person for Learning and Valour is some honour But to be vext by such How 's and
se spiritu repletos cum inani vento distenti sunt turgidi Davenant in Colos. 2.18 p. 241. How to know the Spirit of Truth from a false spirit See an excellent little T●act called the True Guide by R. H. Printed 1646. Totus eorum Sermo est de Spiritu Calvin V. D. Reynolds de Lib. Apochr Praelect 214. V. August de Haeres See more against them on v. 16. See Mr. Sherlocke against Quakers p. 73. to 168. and M. Clapham against the Quakers Sect. 8. p. 44. Initia peccati sunt verecunda Progrediendum à facilioribus Sib● Concio ad Cle●um p. 49. V. M● Edwards Gangreen Part. 1. Coral 13. p. 100. and Mr. Young his C●re of Mesprision Sect 40.44 Incipientibus morbis si quid videtur movend●m m●ve Hippocrates Sceptici Philosophi quasi quaesitores consideratores qui omnia in suspenso relinquentes nihil definiunt Aul. Gellius Noct. ●ttic l. 15. c. 5. V. Tactica S. l. 2. c. 2. S 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 insano deltrans amore vel instar faeminae picâ laborantis quae neglectis san● eduli● vel n●xia vel minus sana deperit They make queries and utrums of every thing See more before on v. 7. See Mr. Viner on that Text. p. 17. Diobolus in Specie non ovis non Asini sed Serpentis tentavit Adam à Lap. See Mr. Gournall on Ephes. 6.11 p. 106. a wicked cause needs a smooth Oratour and bad were a pleasing Chapman Idem ibid. Great wits and great gifts are the stock which the Devil desires more especially to graft on As Austin said of Liciniùs a young man of great abilities Cupit abs te ornari Diabolus The Devil desired to be credited by him V. ●urroughs his Irenicum Chap. 2.3 * Mr. ●lake on the Covenant cap 31. in ●●ne V. The Assemblies Answer to the discenting Brethren p 61. in fine See more of the sleights of False Teachers in Master Wells his Preface to the rise and ruine of the Antinomians in New-England E●pedit belluas adeò perniciosas n●tâ aliquâ insigni●i ut dignosci possint ab uno quoque nec quisquam non monitus damnum aliquod reciptat Calvin contra Libertin Beza epist. 1. ad Dud. p. 10. See more in Clerks Mirror cap. 63. See many Reasons against Toleration in Mr. Pryns Tract against the Quakers p. 15. Error cui non resistitur approbatur veritas cum non defenditur opprimitur V. Mr. Fords ●ssise on Psal. 75 4. p. 6 7. Nullum latrocinium adeò scelestum nec venenum adeó pernicrosum quàm haeresis Calvin See the danger of Heresies Mr. Obad. Sedgewick on Rev. 12.15 p 15. to 35. Magist●ates must not be like the Heathen God● Patrons and Protectours of Villany He that commits sin is of the Devil b●t he that connives commands comm●nd it when he 's intrusted to punish it is not onely of the Devil but is a Devil and a great one too Si Haeretici sint manifestè blasphemi in illis blasphemiis pertinaces p●ssunt affici supplicio capitali Ames CC. l. 4 c. 4. q. 6. See in Vines his Se● on 2 Pet. 22. p 64. c. D● Owens Ser. on Dam. 7.15 p. 54. 'T is observed that the Authours of errors have been Church-men either grosly weak or proudly wilful who take up new methods of Language and Doctrine D●c●m annis laboratur antequam Ecclesiola rectè piè instituta paratur ubi parata est irrepit aliquis fanaticus quidem Idiota qui nihil novit nisi contumeliosè loqui contra sinceros Verbi Doctores in uno momento evertit omnia Luther Intellectus est Veritatis sponsa est quaedam castitas judicii hic major cura adhibenda est quia ubi non bene creditur non bene vivitur vitium primae concoctionis non corrigitur in secundâ Debile fundamenuum fallit opus hinc Diabolus Princips tenebrarum tenebras primè ●ffund●t intellectum ut cum lucem eripuerit ducat quò velit D. Sibs concio ad Clerum p. 39 Ubi Plura Mr. Obad. Sedgwick Ser. on Rev. 12.15 Error intellectu parit errorem in affect● V. Gelaspy's Miscelan c. 12. Digus est mun dus cui scelest nebulones illudant quandove●am sanctitatem vel contemnit vel ferre non potest Calvin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non dicit mittet Deus illis errorem sed efficaciem erroris Mascul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V. M. L. Critic S. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 diligenter custodite Spiritus titulo menda●ia sua venum exp●nunt See more Pre●servatives in Mr Brinslyes spirit Vertigo p. 123. and 190. Mr. Sherlocke against the Quakers 2 P. cap. 8. and Mr. Gournall on Ephes. 6.12 p. 127. c. and Mr. Clapham against the Quake●s Sect. 13. V. Tactica S. l. 2. c. 2. S. 10. V. Mr. Strong 31. Ser. Colos. 2.5 Ordinem non constituimus in illis nugatoriis pompis quae nihil habent praeter evanidum splendorem Calvin Lib. Institut 4. Cap. 10. Sect. 27.28 Omne ordinatum pulchrum V. Plura apud Piscat in Praefat ad Numeros He that hath integrity fears no Inquisition he that hath none requires it Rulers are not a Terror to good works but to evill The Interests of England by Constantine 2. P. p. 37. Non dubit amus caete●is paribus majorem pleniorem mensuram communica●i publicis Ecclesiae minist●is quàm singul●s privatis qui neque t●● donis sunt instructi neque tot oculis vident neque privatâ simplici meditatione aequa●e possunt multorum collationem disquisitionem Rivet Isagog cap. 19. Animalia gregalia non sunt n●civa sed animalia solivaga sunt nociva Aristot. How great is their sin then that fight against Gods Ordinance V. Paget against Ainsworth cap. 2. See Mr. Cawdry against Independency cap. 3. p 97. See Mr. Paget against Ainsworth in defence of Presbytery c. 2. p. 2. See Mr. Edwards his Gangreen 1. Part. Corol. 14 p 102. That is proved before Heilyn's Geography Edit ult q. 266 in Brittaine V. The Attestation of the Cheshire Ministers p. 13. Synods have not Potestatem absolutam sed conditionalem ministerialem viz So far as their commands agree with Gods commands Spanheim V. Testimony of the London Ministers p. 24. Note There is variety of senses but no contrariety in the Scriptures See my Schools-Guard Rule 48. They shall proceed no further viz. in esteem with men to seduce them thereby although they shall increase in wickedness Dutch Annot. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 amentia ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 priv 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mens i e. sin● mente amentes Madness i. e. their foolish and false doctrine or their Hypocrisy and shew of holiness Butch Annot. Hypocrisis suâ sponte sese aliquando prodit non potest per omnia sui esse dissimilis deprehensa exploditur Aretius Ea est erroris natura omni licèt ex parte