Selected quad for the lemma: spirit_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
spirit_n love_v zeal_n zealous_a 54 3 9.2332 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A14721 Theologicall questions, dogmaticall observations, and evangelicall essays, vpon the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to St. Matthew Wherein, about two thousand six hundred and fifty necessary, and profitable questions are discussed; and five hundred and eighty speciall points of doctrine noted; and five hundred and fifty errours confuted, or objections answered: together with divers arguments, whereby divers truths, and true tenents are confirmed. By Richard VVard, sometimes student in the famous vniversities of Cambridge in England: St. Andrews in Scotland: and Master of Arts of both the kingdoms; and now a preacher in the famous city of London. Ward, Richard, 1601 or 2-1684. 1640 (1640) STC 25024; ESTC S118017 1,792,298 907

There are 19 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

presented Or as when the gates are beate open or the walls of a besiedged City broken downe or a ship of the enemies grappled withall Iosh 6.20 every man thrusts and strives to enter as fast as hee can Even so here the kingdome of Heaven suffers violence that is Christ having broken downe the wall of separation and partition and rent in twaine the veile and opened the gate of heaven to all whether bond or free Iew or Gentile Greeke or Barbarian hence of all sorts from all places many flocke unto the Church of Christ Secondly Respectu ordinis neglecti in regard of the conditions which now were abolished and disanulled namely Circumcision legall sacrifices and that hard and impossible condition Fac vives fullfill the Law and thou shalt be saved by the Law otherwise thou canst not be saved Now these being worne out of date and antiquated wee men runne unto God onely by faith in Christ hoping thereby to be saved Thirdly Respectu interni roboris in regard of inward strength and power God giving under the Gospell ordinarily a more ample spirit or measure of his spirit now of this by and by § 3. And the violent take it by force Sect. 3 These words have the force of an exception As if our Saviour would say the kingdome of Heaven suffers violence but yet not all obtaine it but onely the violent Violenti rapiunt Hence then observe That the kingdome of heaven cannot be obtained or gained Observ without a vehement motion of the heart and a desire enflamed and kindled with the zeale of faith Luke 7.29.30 What was required of the Jewes in regard of the Messias Quest 1 First that they should earnestly and greedily Answ 1 expect him and this they did Rom. 8.23 as appeares by the Proverbe Vt Iudaei Messiam and also by Iohn 1.19 c. and 4 25. Answ 2 Secondly it was required of them that they should beleeve Elias the Messenger and fore-runner of the Messiah and by and by seeke out Christ As Iohn 4.30.39 Luke 7.16 Answ 3 Thirdly it was required that having found out Christ they should follow him with joy forsaking for his sake all other things as Mat. 4.25 and 8.1 and 12.15 and 14.13 and 19.2 and 20.29 and Mark 11.9 and Luke 5.15 and 12 1. and 15.1 Answ 4 Fourthly it was required of them that they should embrace and accept of Christ upon any termes or conditions whatsoever although never so hard to flesh and blood And not like Agrippa who was almost perswaded to become a Christian or like the young man who departed from Christ sorrowfull but felling all leaving all denying themselves and taking up those crosses as Christ enjoyned them they should follow him Answ 5 Fiftly it was required of them that having once embraced and accepted of Christ they should serve him zealously all their daies And then at the end of their life they should be crowned with life eternall Now all these are required of us and all those who desire to be made partakers of the heavenly Kingdome For I. We must above all things long for expect and desire that Christ would come unto our hearts and soules II. We must beleeve his Messengers and Ministers who bring his word and declare his will unto us III. Wee must obey those directions which are taught us by his Messengers for the obtaining of him although the Rules prescribed be difficult and contrary to corrupt nature IV. Having found out Christ and obtained him we must rejoyce in him yea so rejoyce that we would part with and forsake al things rather then him V. We must then learne and labour to be truely zealous in his service and for his glory because this zeale is the fire which mollifies and softens our hearts and makes them the more easily receive divine impressions Now these things beeing well weighed and considered wee may safely conclude That heaven cannot be had without zealous desires motions and endeavours because violenti rapiunt onely the violent take it and that by force Quest 2 Wherein is our zeale to be expressed Answ 1 First in the love of Religion which we can never love too much or affect zealously enough Answ 2 Secondly we must be zealous in the encreasing of our faith and desire unfainedly and earnestly to be sealed by the holy Spirit and thereby to be assured of Christ and salvation Rom. 8.15.16 and 1 Iohn 5.10 Many desire this grace of a true and sure faith but they seeke it fluggishly and expect to obtaine it easily Cantic 3.1 But wee must be zealous in the search and enquity thereof and then we may hope that he whom wee desire should come will come and not tarry Heb. 10.38 Thirdly we must be zealous in our prayers Answ 3 for this is the most true approbation of the heart Here observe that there are two things which sharpen the edge of zeale to wit I. The sense of our want or misery for hee who conceives himselfe or his estate to be miserable will cry aloud unto God with a sad heart and a sorrowfull countenance as we see in the Publicane whereas the proud Pharisee onely gives thankes but prayes for nothing Luk. 18.11 And therefore wee must labour to be sensible of our sins and wants II. A desire of the benefit offred as Christ said to the woman If thou knew the gift or grace of God then thou wouldest aske water of me Iohn 4.10 And therefore we must labour to know what spirituall gifts and graces are excellent and wherin we are indigent and then hunger long and pray earnestly for them but because the gift and grace of prayer comes from above and without the assistance of the Spirit we cannot pray as we ought we must therefore desire the Lord to give us the spirit of prayer as also strength and power to offer up pleasing and spirituall sacrifices unto him Fourthly wee must be zealous in obedience of Answ 4 life and that with humility and submission of our wils to the will of God And thus if wee be zealous in the Profession of Religion zealous in desire and endeavour to encrease our faith zealous in our prayers and in the pious practise of our lives and conversations wee may then be certainly assured that we shall be made partakers of the kingdome of glory for Violoni rapium The violent take it by force VERS 13.14 For all the Prophets V. 13.14 and the Law prophesied untill Iohn And if yee will receive it this is Elias which was to come § 1. All the Prophets and the Law prophesied untill Sect. 2 Iohn What is the meaning of these words Quest 1 First it is expounded De scope Prophet●num Answ 1 thus this Iohn is he at whom all the Prophets and this Law almed and marked Thus Calvin Muscul s Why did they levell rather at Iohn then at Quest 2 Christ or why doth Christ say they all prophesied of Iohn and not rather that they all
all our actions and see whether wee live in the Spirit and walke in the Spirit or not when wee give way unto sinne and avoid not the occasions unto evill wee should consider whether herein are wee led by the Spirit of God or by flesh and blood Fourthly we may try our adoption by our affection Signe 4 for if we love God and are zealous for his glory and would by no meanes displease him but are carefull by our sincere obedience of him to approve our love unto him then wee are his Sonnes Signe 5 The next Signe is the love of holy things that is 1. Of holy men the faithfull Saints and sincere professors of the Gospel 2. Of holy duties and the exercises of Religion Certainly those who are in deed and in truth the sonnes of God they will love both good men and good meanes unto goodnesse Signe 6 Lastly if we be the children of our heavenly Father we will love even our enemies but this comes to be considered of in the next particular And thus much for the Argument Secondly the next thing considerable is the Consequence The Argument was this Because ye are the children of God The Consequence is this therefore love your enemies as becomes the children of God as if our Saviour would say none is the child of God who doth not love his enemies Quest 3 Why must we love our enemies Answ 1 First because he who loves none but friends is guided onely by a humane spirit for wicked men can love those who love them and do good to those who doe good unto them vers 46. Answ 2 Secondly because herein we imitate Christ who loved us when we were enemies Rom. 5.8 yea prayed for those who were the instruments of cruelty even his bloody murderers Luke 23 34. Thirdly because this is a divine thing and an Answ 3 argument of a minde guided by a divine Spirit to love those who hate us and doe good unto those that doe evill unto us If wee love those who deserve to be beloved of us or those who never deserved any evill from us what reward shall we have But if we love those who have deserved evill at our hands this will be gratefull and pleasing unto God § 2. Which is in Heaven Sect. 2 Why are these words added Which is in Heauen Quest 1 To teach us Answ that the love of our enemies is not true except it be founded upon our obedience towards God Observ Or there is no true and right love unto any but onely that which is for Gods sake And therefore our Saviour teacheth us not to love for other respects to wit either for gaine or praise or our owne quiet but for the Lords sake Christ doth not say love thy en●my 1. Because he is a man of the same kind that thou art Or 2. Because he is ignorant and foolish for otherwise he would never have injured thee as he hath Or 3 Because he is but a dead man for if there were any life of grace in him hee would labour to be reconciled unto thee and acknowledge his wrong and who would be angry at the barking of a Dogge or for any thing that is done or said by a foole or a dead man Christ I say urgeth none of these but onely 4. The imitation of God because ye are the children of your Father which is in Heaven who doth good both to bad and good therefore from him learne to love your enemies Why must we love our enemies Quest 2 In God there are three reasons Answ why wee must love them First because God suffers him to be our enemy and permitted him to doe the injury which is done unto us and therefore we must confesse and acknowledge it to be just both in regard of God and us that is the Lord did justly permit it and we justly deserve it And therefore hate not thy Brother because he is but the instrument and the stone which is throwne at thee Secondly if thou be the sonne of God then thy enemy cannot harme thee because the Lord will preserve thee And therefore why shouldest thou hate him who cannot hurt thee Thirdly though thou be injured and harmed by thy enemy yet it shall be profitable for thee either 1. Probando by trying thy faith and patience Or 2. Corroborando by strenghtning thee more and more to undergoe whatsoever the Lord shall lay upon thee Or 3. Coronando by crowning of us because all the crosses which we endure for the Lords sake shall be rewarded And therefore why should wee hate those who doe that unto us which is thus profitable for us § 3. For he maketh his sun to rise Sect. 3 What is observable in the Sunne Quest First the Philosophers gave it many high Answ 1 praises and phrases as some of them called it the heart some the eye of the world some the fountaine of light the eye of heaven and the mind of the world some a heavenly fire a sempiternall living creature a vitall or animate planet Speusippus Answ 2 Secondly the Heathens supposed it to bee a God Agamemnon prayed unto it the Persians adored it the Egyptians called it a God Plato de republ cals it the Image or Vicar of God I forbeare here to shew how some of the Gentiles worshipped the Sun how some of them painted it how some built Temples unto it yea how others in many things compared it to a Lyon Answ 3 Thirdly Christians have called a day by it to wit the first day of the world or the Lords day hath beene for a long time called Sunday Answ 4 Fourthly wee may from the Sunne observe these things I. It is a body or substance full of splendor and glory yea comfortable to every creature read to this purpose these places Eccle. 11.17 Cantic 6.9 Psal 19.5 Mat. 13.43 and 17.2 and Act. 26.13 and 1 Cor. 15.41 Rev. 1.16 and 10.1 and 12.1 and 21.23 In these places wee may see 1. the glory and excellency of the Sunne and 2. what glorious things are compared thereunto II. the Sunne runnes continually never abating his course at all Read Psalme 104 and Cant. 1.5 III. It enlightens the world whence it is called magnum luminare o Gen. 1.6 Psal 136.8 the great light IV. The Sunne divides the times and seasons Winter and Summer Gen 1.14 V. It ripens fruit by his heat and warmth as we see by experience every yeare VI. It is a meanes of mans generation Sol homo generat hominem Aristot VII The Sunne animates quickens and vivifies the world yea without the Sunne the world in nature could not subsist But I enlarge not these things Sect. 4 § 4. And his raine to fall What is observable in the raine Quest First we might speake here of the water philosophically Answ 1 as namely I. That it is the embleme of purity both in the law of Moses as also 1 Pet. 3.21 and Tit. 3.5 II. Water is the carrier away
Jewes by circumcision to the Christians by Baptisme but if Iohns baptisme were not the same with the baptisme of the Christian Churches then Christ was not thereby united unto them The sixt reason is because there is but one Baptisme a Ephes 4.5 and therefore Iohns was the same with the baptisme of Christ The seventh reason is because we are all baptised into one body b 1 Cor. 12.13 and therefore those that were baptised by Iohn were united unto Christ The eight reason is because Iohns baptisme was from heaven c Matth. 21.25 Ioh. 1.33 The ninth reason is because Christ permits Iohn still to baptise after he was baptised and begun to preach d Ioh. 3.23 The tenth reason is because Apollos learned the way of Christ and yet was not rebaptised as the Holy Ghost saith of him he was instructed in the way of the Lord he was fervent in spirit he was diligent in preaching Christ and yet knew onely the Baptisme of Iohn e Act. 18.25 And thus although the Papists say that the baptisme of Iohn did conduce nothing at all either unto repentance or the remission of sinnes being onely a preparation unto another baptisme yet I hope by that which hath beene spoken the contrary will evidently appeare to any indifferent Reader Object 6 They object further for the proofe hereof that those who were baptised unto Iohns baptisme were againe rebaptised f Acts 19 4 5. and therefore Iohns baptisme is not the same with Christs We shall consider God willing more amply of that place when we come unto it in the meane time I answer first that all those that were baptised Answ 1 unto Iohns baptisme were not rebaptised as appeares by Apollos named before Secondly the difference here was in the graces Answ 2 not as yet received but now given not by a new Baptisme but by the imposition of hands onely which the Papists themselves call Confirmation It may be hence farther demanded is there Quest 2 no difference at all betweene the Baptisme of Iohn and Christ I answer first some state this difference betwixt Answ 1 them that Iohns baptised unto Christ who was shortly to be revealed we now the Ministers of Christ baptise unto Christ already revealed Secondly some state this difference that Answ 2 Iohn baptised onely in the name of the Messias not of the Trinity but this is uncertaine Thirdly the true difference is twofold first Answ 3 betweene the Persons the Messias and the Minister Iohn was but Christs forerunner Christ was the true Messias and therefore they differed in their person as do the Master and the servant Secondly betweene the Sacrament externall and internall and this is the principall thing that Iohn meanes in this verse when he saith I baptize with water but Christ with the Holy Ghost that is I am not the author of this Sacrament but onely a servant appointed to celebrate it My part is to administer water and the outward ordinance but it is Christ onely that gives grace For the full understanding whereof observe that the scope of the Baptist in this place I baptise with water is twofold First generall Secondly particular First Iohns generall scope hereby was to remove the admiration of the people from himselfe unto Christ Observ Teaching us that in the undertaking and administration of the Sacraments wee must looke unto Christ and that for these two causes First because hee that in the Sacraments lookes no further then man doth much derogate from the dignity of the Sacrament Secondly because he that lookes not unto Christ in the Sacrament is unworthy of that blessing which is expected and desired in the administration of the Sacrament Secondly Iohns particular scope hereby was this to shew that his Baptisme had no efficacie nor power in it from him at all but onely from Christ § 2. Whose shooes I am not worthy to beare Here Sect. 2 is an excellent paterne of true humility in the Baptist who although hee were the greatest of the sons of men m Matth 11.11 yet he thinks himself unworthy not as the Prouerbe is to carrie his books after him but to carry his shooes or to untie them Teaching us that humility becomes the chiefest of the Saints and the best of Gods children Observa we must preferre one before another a Rom. 12 10. we must not minde high things but condescend to men of low estate b Rom. 12 16. we must be lowly and meeke c Eph 4.2 in humility of minde esteeming others better then our selves d Phil. 2.3 Why should we thus labour to be humble Quest 1 I answer first because thus we shall shew our Answ 1 selves not to be of the world or to bee contrary unto the world the ordinary custome and practise of the world is for great ones to Lord it over the poore but it shall not be so among you saith our Saviour e Matth. 20 26. the Pharisees being proud loved to be called Rabbi but saith Christ unto his Apostles be not ye called Rabbi for ye are brethren f Matth. 23.7.8 Answ 2 Secondly because thus we shall shew our selves to be truely spirituall sanctified by the Spirit of grace Saint Paul when he was a Pharisee was most strict g Acts 22.3 and in his life unblameable h Phil. 3.6 8. c. but when he was a Christian an Apostle of Christ yea a Saint upon earth then he thought himself the greatest of sinners Answ 3 Thirdly because thus we shal shew our selves to bee imitators of the best David was humble his heart was not haughty nor his eyes lofty but his soule was as a weaned child i Psa 131.1.2 The Blessed Virgin was lowly therefore God regarded her k Luk. 2.48 52. yea Christ himselfe was humble taking upon him the forme of a servant l Phil. 2.7 and meek commanding us to imitate him therein m Matth. 11.29 Answ 4 Fourthly because there is nothing in us that we can justly be proud of and therefore we should not be exalted or puft up by any vertues or graces but remember alwayes these three things First that whatsoever good is in us is not of us or from our selves but from Christ from whom comes both the will and the deed n Phil. 2.13 Secondly that the good that is in us is not according to the measure of that depth of obedience which we owe unto God but comes farre short of what we ought to pay and performe unto the Lord and therefore we should not be proud of any thing we doe but rather confesse that wee are but unprofitable servants o Luke 17.10 Thirdly we must remember that all our honey is mingled with gall our wine with water our silver with drosse our good with evill our obedience mixed with many infirmities because in many things as S. Iames saith we all sin And therefore our blacke feete
the beginning of his preaching and yet some are gained Teaching us that the preaching of the Observ 1 word is never barren or unfruitfull but converts some wheresoever it comes How comes it to passe Quest that the word of God never returnes in vaine First because the Gospell is a seed and alwayes Answ 1 some falles in good ground Matth. 13.5 It is a two edged sword Hebr. 4.12 and therefore wounds some wheresoever it is sent Secondly the principall reason of this is because Answ 2 God doth order and dispose the journeyes of his servants and directs their preaching and that two severall wayes viz. First by hindring them from going to some places thus God hindered Saint Paul from going to Rome h Rom. 1.13 and 15.22 and hee was hindered also from going to Thessalonica i 2 Thess 1.18 yea directly forbidden by the holy Ghost to goe either to Asia or unto Bithynia k Acts 16.6.7 Secondly Sometimes Ministers are called by God from one place unto another thus Saint Paul was called from Troas to Macedonia l Acts 16.8.9 And hence it comes to passe that whithersoever God sends his word there hee doth call some by it which may serve for the comfort and encouragement of the Ministers to continue faithfull and painfull in their vocation because so long as they continue and abide they may hope God hath some there to convert and turne unto him But some Ministers will object Obiect their people are stubborne rebellious refractory and doe not feare neither care to heare neither will obey and therefore they may as well not preach at all as to the walls or to no purpose First be people never so wicked yet Ministers Answ 1 must preach for their owne sakes because thus they shall save their owne soules If thou warne the wicked of his way to turne from it if hee doe not turne from his way he shall die in his iniquity but thou hast delivered thy soule a Ezech. 33.9 Secondly Ministers must preach though Answ 2 people will not obey and that for the peoples sake That they may know that there hath beene a Prophet among them b Ezech. 2.5 Thirdly they must not forbeare to be instant Answ 3 in their calling because God hath his wheresoever the Gospell is to be called and united unto Christ in his due time and therefore Ministers must let nothing be wanting in them but doe their endeavour then leave the successe unto God waiting his appointed time for a blessing upon their labours § 3. He saw two brethren And afterwardes Sect. 3 he met with the sonnes of Zebedee Why is mention made here of their affinity Quest 1 and kindred that they were brethren First to teach us that the Ministry is a kinde Answ 1 of Fraternity and therefore all Ministers should be one first in opinion at least in fundamentall and necessary truths Secondly in mutuall love one of another Thirdly in care over and for their flockes Fourthly in the worke of preaching the message of the Lord. Secondly to teach us that Christ loves this Answ 2 brotherly concord and agreement Quest 2 Why doth Christ thus love and delight to see brethren to dwell together in amity Answ 1 First because it is a good thing whatsoever is good Christ loves but for brethren to dwell together in unity is good c Psa 133.1 therefore Christ loves it Answ 2 Secondly because God commands it whatsoever God commands Christ loves but God commands this concord and brotherly amity therefore Christ loves it Love comes from God 1 Ioh. 4.7 and is both the new and old commandement 1 Ioh. 2.7 yea it is the fulfilling of the commandements Rom. 13.9 Answ 3 Thirdly because Christ himselfe hath commanded it Whatsoever Christ doth command he loves and delights to have obeyed but Christ commands that we should love one another as brethren therefore he rejoiceth when we doe so this is my commandement saith Christ that ye love one another d Ioh. 15.12 Answ 4 Fourthly because we are brethren that is first brethren among our selves members of the same body Rom. 12.5 and 1 Cor. 12.12 Secondly we are the brethren of Christ Mat. 12.38 and Heb. 2.17 and therefore Christ loves to see us live as brethren Answ 5 Fiftly because this is the practise of the Church of Christ the members of the Church and professours of Christ did live in unity love and concord as one man as we see by these Scriptures Acts 1.14 and 2.44.46 and 4.32 they had their Agapae or love feasts Jude 12. vers they had their kisse of love 1 Pet. 5.14 yea a holy kisse as we see Rom. 16.16 and 1 Cor. 16.20 and 2 Cor. 13.12 and 1 Thes 5.26 All which shew their mutuall and reciprocall love and endeared affection one towards another which our Saviour loves to have us imitate Answ 6 Sixtly because it is an argument that wee are the Disciples of Christ translated from death unto life in whom God dwells and purified by the Spirit of God That which testifieth and approveth us to be the Disciples of Christ purged by the Spirit translated from death and the Temples wherein God dwells is pleasing and delightfull unto Christ but to love the brethren with a pure heart fervently doth argue us to be the Disciples of Christ Iohn 13.35 translated from death unto life 1 Ioh. 3.14 purified by the holy Spirit of God 1 Pet. 1.22 in whom God himselfe dwells and resides 1 Joh. 4.12 therefore it is gratefull and delightfull unto God Vers 19 VERS 19. And he saith unto them follow mee and I will make you fishers of men Quest 1 What is the meaning of this phrase Fishers of men Answ 1 First sometimes the phrase is taken in mala● partem in the worst sense thus the Lord threatens his people for their Idolatry Behold I will send for many fishers and they shall fish them f Ierem. 16.16 Answ 2 Secondly some times the phrase is taken in meliorem partem in a good sense thus the Lord shewing unto the Prophet g Ezech. 47.10 the vision of the holy waters sayth And it shall come to passe that the fishers shall stand upon it Thirdly the sense of the phrase here used is Answ 3 by an Allegory of fishing to shew forth the nature of the Ministry In the allusion there are foure things observable First the Sea that is the World Secondly Fishes that is Men not onely rich men but all men Thirdly the Net is the Gospell the kingdome of heaven that is the Gospell is like unto a Net saith our Saviour and therefore they are wicked fishers who leaving this net fish with other poysoned hookes that is preach their owne inventions errours heresies schismes and the like Fourthly the Fishers are the Ministers Why doth Christ speake unto these two Apostles Quest 2 in an Allegory they being unlearned was it because he would not have them converted as it is
they were more obedient ut essent corpore viciniores quia animo praeceptis appropinquabant a Aug. de S. D. in Monte. Observ that they might be nearer to his person in body as they were nearer to his precepts in mind Teaching us that the more obedient any man is unto God the nearer Christ will draw him unto himselfe and hence come those phrases If ye obey me ye shall bee my friends and my brethren Mark 3.34 Ioh. 14.6 They came unto him If any man desire to be Quest 2 made partaker of Christ hee must as the Apostles doe here come unto Christ But it may be asked how must we come First not negligently or remissely we must Answ 1 not seeke Christ in our beds nor come slowly unto him Answ 2 Secondly we must not come unto him with a bare externall profession onely Matthew 7.21 Answ 3 Thirdly but wee must come with a longing and hungry affection after him If any man thirst saith Christ then let him come unto me b Ioh. 7.37 Wee must be so sensible of the want of Christ that wee desire nothing in comparison of him And therefore let us not come unto Christ with idle desires or sluggish endeavours vult non vult piger but with longing desires and labourous endeavours untill wee have found him whom our soule loves and are made partakers of him Object We can do nothing of our selves we can neither fervently desire Christ nor faithfully labour to approach and draw neare unto him and therefore in vaine is this exhortation Answ Certainly without the Divine assistance of the Spirit of God we can doe nothing that good is but when God gives posse velle good desires and ability and power to effect that which is good then we must endeavour to perfect and finish it we must not sit still and cry God helpe us but use those means which the Lord commands and endeavour to performe what hee prescribes and conanti aderit Deus he will certainely blesse those our endeavours and assist us by his grace to worke out thorowly the worke of our salvation c Phil. 2.12.13 What is required on our part for the obtaining Quest 3 and enjoying of Christ First thou must take up thy crosse patiently undergoing whatsoever the Lord laies upon thee to beare Answ 1 Secondly thou must deny thy selfe Mat. 16.24 Answ 2 that is thy owne workes thy owne merits thy owne desires yea thy owne affections thou must put off the old man with his old garments and put on Christ by faith and new obedience not making provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof but labouring to fulfill and obey the will of God d Rom. 13 13.14 casting away from us though never so deare unto us whatsoever may hinder us from approaching neare unto Christ blind Bartimeus threw away his cloake because it was an impediment unto him when Christ called him he Traveller and Souldier cast away whatsoever may hinder them in their journey or warefare and thus must we if w●●esire with the disciples here to come unto Christ we must cast off those sinnes that hang so fast on and cleave so fast too and runne cheerfully unto Christ e Heb. 12.1 VERS 2. And he opened his mouth Vers 24 and taught them saying § 1. And he opened his mouth Why doth the Sect. 1 Evangelist use this periphrasis or circumlocution or needlesse phrase Quest can any speake without opening of his mouth First it is an Hebraisme he opened his mouth that is exorsus loqui Calvin s hee begunne to Answ 1 speake thus Saint Peter when hee had heard why and upon what occasion Cornelius sent for him opened his mouth and said f Act. 10. ● 34. that is begun to preach unto them True it is the Jewes did not alwayes use this phrase of opening the mouth when they meant to expresse the beginning of a speach but onely when they were to speake of some serious and weighty things thus the Psalmist I will open my mouth in a parable I will utter darke sayings of old g Psal 78.2 And thus Salomon Open thy mouth for the dumbe yea open thy mouth and judge righteously That is bee carefull to speake and plead the poore mans cause which is oppressed h Pro. 31.8.9 Thus Gualter sup thinkes that the Hebrewes onely used this phrase in such cases of moment but Beza thinkes it is not universally true Secondly this phrase is here used to shew the originall of the Prophesies and predictions of the Answ 2 Prophets that it was Christ who opened their mouthes as if he would say Christ now opened his owne mouth who of old opened the mouths of the Prophets Thus August S. Dom. in monte Thirdly or this phrase may here bee used to shew that Christ taught some and sometimes Answ 3 without the opening of his mouth and that either by internall revelations or inspirations or visions or by his workes and externall miracles thus Chrysost sup Fourthly or this phrase doth shew that Christ Answ 4 was wont to keepe his mouth shut and to open it but when there was need as David saith The mouth of the righteous speaketh wisedome and his tongue talketh of judgement i Psal 37.30 And Solomon the mouth of a righteous man is a well of life yea the mouth of the just bringeth forth wisedome k Pro. 10.11.31 Teaching us hereby two things to wit First that we ought to set a watch over our mouthes and keep Obser 3 our tongues as with a bridle Secondly that we ought liberally and freely to open our mouthes to preach the Gospell of Christ and the word of God VERS 3. Blessed are the poore in Spirit Vers 3 for theirs is the kingdome of heaven Blessed There are three parts of this Sermon Sect. 1 preached by our Saviour upon the Mount the first whereof is the Preparation layd downe in the two first verses of this Chapter the second is the Sermon it selfe beginning at this verse and continuing unto the Chapter 7. vers 28. The third is the Conclusion in that 28. vers This Sermon doth either Prepare the Apostles and that By comforting them Chap. 5. vers 11.12 By counselling and advising of them chap 5. vers 13. Teach the Prophets what is to be Known to wit two things First true happinesse wherein First generally he recites 8 severall beatitudes Secondly particularly he applies the 8th to his Apostles vers 11. Secondly the exposition of the Law wherein First he speaks of the Interpreters thereof the Ministers vers 13. c. Secondly of the interpretation thereof vers 17. c. Done viz. holinesse of life where he removes the Remoraes and that both in The sixt chapter wherein he names Hypocrisie vers 1. c. Care of this world chap. 6. vers 19. c. The seventh chapter wherein hee takes away many and sundry impediments vers 1. c. Blessed The Fathers l
that by our example others might be provoked Secondly they say it is not onely iniquum an unjust thing but it is also impium a wicked and ungodly thing for by this meanes they injure their children and hee that provides not for his family is worse than an Infidell I answer we must preferre neither the riches Answ 2 of our children nor our owne pleasure before the life of our brother And therefore although the flesh be prone to murmure in this kinde yet let us remember these things First it is not actus elicitus sed imperatus not a free and voluntary action but a thing commanded and enjoyned by God and therfore we are obliged thereunto in dutie towards God Secondly remember we and the poore are but one flesh Thirdly that which we doe unto them wee doe unto God Fourthly if we be hard-hearted towards the poore we provoke the wrath of God without mercie Fiftly Merrcie being a Divine worke shall certainly be rewarded And thus much for the first branch of the first part who they are that are blessed Secondly what mercie is this which is required Quest 3 unto this blessednesse Mercie may be defined thus Answ Alienae miseriae in corde compassio August de Civit. Dei 9.13 A commiserating of another mans miserie in our heart Or aegritudo ex aliena miseria Cicer. Tuscul 3. A sorrow for another mans distresse Or Dolor pro aliena miseria ex voluntate charitate Gualt A heartie grieving for another mans griefe arising out of an unfained love unto the partie afflicted Or more plainly thus Mercie is a pitying of another mans miserie with a desire and endevour to helpe him to the uttermost of our abilitie And therefore unto mercie is required First a sorrow Secondly sorrow for our brothers affliction not for our owne Thirdly a cordiall not a counterfeit sorrow Fourthly not a a bare sorrow of the heart but a griefe accompanied with a helping hand How manifold is this mercy to which is made Quest 4 this promise of blessednesse First some divide it into Temporall and Spirituall Answ 1 in generall but more particularly into these seven branches First to have a care of Orphans and Widowes Secondly to plead the cause of the oppressed Thirdly to protect and defend the life of him that is in danger whether it be by ship-wracke or pursute of enemies or false witnesse or the like Fourthly to redeeme captives Fiftly to reduce those into the right way who stray and erre from it Sixtly to advise and admonish a man of that danger which we see approching unto him Seventhly to defend and maintaine the reputation and credit of those that are scandalized I grant these are good workes of mercie but this division is imperfect many things being omitted therein as followes by and by and therefore I passe by and from this Secondly others Stapleton Luk. 6.37.3 S. say Answ 2 that mercie is exercised either first in judgement or secondly in almes or thirdly in pardoning of offenders And this partition is consonant to Scripture Answ 3 Thirdly mercie is either Towards thy selfe not spoken of in this place Towards others viz. Either towards Cattell Or Towards Men which is either Internall Or Externall which is shewed either By giving Or Forgiving Answ 4 Fourthly in mercy three things are to be considered to wit First quibus to whom mercie is to be shewed To all men To Beasts Secondly in quibus wherein to wit In Heart In worke and that both By not repaying injuries and wrongs that is evill with evill By giving good things Either spirituall as for example I. Instruction if the partie bee ignorant or erroneous II. Reprehension if hee have sinned III. Consolation if his conscience bee pressed with the sense of sinne IV. Prayer for him in all these and all other his afflictions Or externall as for example I. To preserve him whose life is in danger II. To advise and counsel him for his health who is sicke III. To preserve the good name of our brother IV. To give meat and drinke unto the hungry and thirstie V. To entertaine those who are weary through travell VI. To cloth the naked VII To visite and comfort those who are in prison VIII To give counsell to our neighbour in his affaires IX To bury the bodies of the dead Thirdly quomodo quatenus how farre and how mercie is to be shewed to wit 1. With a pious intention 2. Prudently to all but principally to the godly 3. Plentifully 4. Quickly without delay 5. Cheerfully 6. Frequently and often First mercy is to be shewd to all men or the object of mercy are all those who stand in need thus our elder Brother exhorts us Give to every one that askes h Luke 6.30 And thus our heavenly Father doth He causeth his sun to shine and his raine to fall upon all men i Matth. 5.45 Quest 5 Why must we be mercifull and charitable unto all both good and bad Answ 1 First because we have the Lord to be our president herein who doth good unto those that are evill yea shewed mercy and that extraordinary unto us when we were his enemies giving his onely begotten Sonne to die for us k Rom. 5.6.7 Answ 2 Secondly those who are to bee loved are to be helped but all men are to be loved therefore charity and mercy are to be extended unto all Every one is our Brother either in the Lord or for the Lord and therefore every one is to be loved and helped Againe all men are linked together by one of these chaines viz. Either first by the bond of the Spirit as all the religious and godly are united together Or secondly by Hope thus all the elect are linked together and although for the present some be Sauls and enemies yet we hope they may become Pauls and friends and therefore we love them Or thirdly by the bond of the flesh as all those who have any carnall relation unto us at all whether by affinity or consanguinity or cohabitation or the like Or Fourthly by creation and thus all men in the world are our brethren and therefore are to be loved and helped by us in their necessities Secondly mercy is to be shewed to beasts or to be exercised towards them What mercy is to be shewed to unreasonable Quest 6 creatures First if they wander or stray thou must bring Answ 1 them home Exodus 23.4 Deuteronomie 22.1.2 Secondly if they fall downe in the way thou Answ 2 must helpe to lift them up againe Deuteronomie 22.4 Thirdly thou must give them rest upon Answ 3 the Sabbath day not working them therein Exod. 20. Fourthly thou must regard the life of thy Answ 4 beast and not over-worke them or over-load them Prov. 12.10 Fiftly thou must not delight to exercise cruelty Answ 5 upon any creature whatsoever Having briefly shewed Quibus To whom mercy is to Quest 7 be shewed it remaines in the next place to shew In
those who offend And thirdly necessary for our selves because Non irasci ubi irascendum est peccatum peccato addere b Chrys s Not to bee angry when we should is to adde one sinne unto another Secondly is an anger against sin to wit either against Our owne proper sinnes or our selves for our sinnes and thus Bern. s 4. Psal 4.26 Bee angry and sinne not that is saith he bee angry with thy selfe for thy sinnes committed and sinne no more Our brothers sinne Oportuna est ira quae increpando convertit c Chrys s that anger is seasonable and commendable that reduceth a brother from his evill way Object Against the last particle it may bee objected He that is angry with his brother for sinning is angry with his brother which is here forbidden by Christ Answ To this Augustine answers Non fratri qui peccato fratris irascitur Hee is not angry with his brother who is angry with the sinne of his brother for sinne and the sinner are two distinct things and therefore a man may hate his brothers sinne and yet love his brothers person he may bee angry with the offence committed and yet not breake the bond of Christian charitie with the offender Chrysostome upon this place gives us these examples hereof first of Moses whose anger waxed hot for the peoples idolatry and yet hee hated not their persons d Exod. 32.19 And so againe in the matter of Korah Dathan and Abiram it is sayd that meeke Moses was very wroth e Numb 16.15 Secondly of Paul who seemes to reproach the Corinthians I speake it to your shame and yet through his whole Epistle he shewes how he loves them f 1 Cor. 6.5 And againe he calles the Galatians fooles g Gal. 3.1 but hates them not Wee may adde how his spirit was stirred in him when he saw the Idolatry of the Athenians h Acts 17.16 And thirdly the example of Christ who was angry when he saw the hard-heartednesse of the people i Marke 3.5 and scourged some at another time out of the Temple k Iohn 2.16 And this Anger is called Zeale Yea fourthly we have an example of Gods anger kindled against a holy man for want of this anger Eli hearing of his sonnes impietie admonisheth them Why doe yee such things your dealings are evill and it is no good report I heare of you l 1 Sam. 2.23 but yet notwithstanding this what sayth the Lord I will judge his house for ever for the iniquitie which he knoweth because his sonnes made themselves vile and he restrained them not or according to the Hebrew he frowned not upon them m 1 Sam. 3.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God did not thus threaten Eli because hee would not hate the persons of his sonnes for that had beene unnaturall but because hee was not zealously moved against their sinnes And therefore there is a godly anger against our bretherens sinnes Wherein doth this anger consist which is to Quest 3 be kindled against our brothers sinne It consists in foure things Answ or is it to be moderated according to these foure Rules First let the object of this anger be lawfull or Rule 1 let it be for a just cause namely some publik evil and not a private let it bee for the honour of God of Christ of the Gospel of Religion and of profession or for something that is hurtfull to the Common-wealth or for the perverting of Justice or for the slandring or calumniating of good men or the oppressing and injuring of the poore and godly Thou must not be angry with thy brother for thy owne private cause and patient in a common evill for it is a vile thing to be provoked unto rage for a private injury and not to bee moved at all for a publike Secondly let thy anger be against Satan not Rule 2 against thy brother Cum Sathan instigat frater instigatur ad malum in illum converte iram in hunc autem mi ericordiam n Basil hom de Ira. When Sathan doth instigate and thy brother is perswaded by him unto evill be angry with him that tempted but mercifull and pitifull unto him that is tempted Be angry with the Divell as the cause of thy brothers sinne but not with thy brother who is overcome by his subtilitie and strength Thirdly this anger must arise from love not Rule 3 envie or malice because we love our brother therefore wee must bee angry with his sinne it being pernicious unto his precious soule Fourthly let this anger never be immoderate Rule 4 or unbridled anger must bee curbed as a head-strong horse with a bridle Sit ira instrumentum virtutis non domina mentis sed ancilla ad obsequium parata o Gregor Mor. 5.33 Anger must be the instrument of vertue not the instigator unto vice it must be as a dutifull hand-mayd alwayes prepared to obey not a mistresse of the minde to dominiere or command When the cause of thy anger is not good then restraine it when the cause is good then loose the reines but doe not cast the bridle out of thy hands but still restraine it that so thou mayst never breake forth into intemperate rage Sect. 4 § 6. Shall be in danger of the judgement Quest Answ What is meant here by Iudgement The word being expounded before § 3. quest 1. I here onely adde that there is a three-fold judgement Namely First Discretionis of discerning or separating the good from the evill For judgement sayth Christ am I come into the world p Ioh. 9.39 that is to divide the good from the bad Secondly Punitionis of punishment either Particular at the houre of death Or Generall at the last judgement Thirdly Remunerationis of reward when the Lord shall judge the Saints This verse neither speakes of the first judgement of Separation or of the last of Remuneration but of the second and second particle thereof the judgement of the last day For these words Hee shall hee in danger of judgement do containe the reward and punishment of unlawfull anger as if our Saviour would say anger shall not escape just punishment but shall bee arraigned and summoned before Gods Tribunall at the dreadfull day of judgement when the angry man shall not be able to answer one word of a thousand Sect. 7 § 7. Whosoever shall say to his brother Racha shall be in danger of the Councell Object Bellarmine lib. 1. de amiss grat cap. 9. objects this place to prove that all sinnes deserve not eternall death Christ sayth hee makes three degrees of anger proportioning also three degrees of punishment thereunto to wit of Iudgement Counsell and Hell fire which is threatned onely to bee inflicted upon him that calles his brother Foole Therefore there are some sinnes which doe not deserve hell fire Answ 1 First this place doth shew a difference and degree of everlasting punishment according to the qualitie and
not be offended therefore wee must doe nothing that may displease him we must abstaine from every appearance of evill therefore we must disobey and resist the Magistrate rather than yeeld to such ceremonies as seeme evill to some This is to strain the Scripture beyond his native sense and to make it speake a strange language § 2. Thou shalt love thy Neighbour Sect. 2 How many degrees of love are there one towards another Quest The Ancients have these eight degrees I. Answ Some love those who love them this is naturall love II. Some love those from whom they have received or hope to receive some good turne this is mercenary love As Augustine saith Qui amicum amat propter commodum non amicum convincitur amare sed commodum Hee who loves his friend for his gaine thinkes gaine worth loving but not his friend III. Some love others because they trace the same path of impiety that they doe thus drunkards love drunkards and Hereticks love those who maintaine the same Heresie that they doe this is a wicked and diabolicall love IV. Some love others for some good worke that they have done or because they see them to be good men this love is commendable V. Some love others because they are members of the same body with them that is the children of their heavenly Father this is a spirituall love VI. Some love those who love not them and this is a gratious love Che●● Harm c. 51. p. 5●6 There are two degrees more which the Ancients have ranked with these but they cannot be called degrees of love but rather of hatred namely VII Some love not those who love them and these are perverse persons VIII Some love not entirely any but are lovers of themselves and this is an humane corruption and infirmitie § 3. And hate thy enemy Sect. 3 The Scribes and Pharisees say this Observ but Christ rejects it and therefore we may easily affirme it to be false and this to be true That the true Christian must hate none Why must we hate none Quest 1 First because hatred is alwayes forbidden and Answ 1 ranked with those things which are evill The workes of the flesh saith the Apostle are these adultery fornication c. hatred variance c. Secondly because God loves all his creatures as followes verse 45. and therefore wee Answ 2 should herein imitate him hating none Answ 3 Thirdly because the blessed Spirit of God teacheth us to hate none and Christians ought to practise no other things then he teacheth unto them Answ 4 Fourthly the Scribes and Pharisees acknowledge that we must love our brethren now unto Christians all men are brethren either in Christ or for Christ as was shewed before verse 7. of this chapter and therefore we must love all and hate none Object But against this it will be objected the Israelites were commanded to hate the seven Nations to smite them to destroy them to make no covenant with them to shew no mercy unto them Deut. 7.1 2. Iosh 23.7 12. Answ 1 First this was a peculiar precept and therefore is no generall rule neither concludes any thing against what hath beene formerly affirmed Answ 2 Secondly although it be not allowed to hate any man for the evill that is in him yet it is lawfull to hate the evill that is in men Quest 2 How farre and in what regards is it lwafull for a man to hate his enemy There are two sorts of enemies to wit ours and Gods Answ First if they be our enemies then wee must not hate them at all Indeed it is lawfull for us to pray against them as David did arise O Lord disappoint him cast him down and deliver my soule from him d Psal 17.13 And againe O Lord overthrow thou the counsell of Achitophel Secondly if they be wicked men and so Gods enemies then these things are required of us namely First we must hate their wicked workes yee that love the Lord hate evill Psal 97.10 The flesh that toucheth any uncleane thing must not be eaten e Levit. 7.19 nor the society of sinners must be delighted in f Prov. 1.10.15 but wee must hate the wickednesse of the wicked with a perfect hatred g Psa 139 21. Secondly it is lawfull for us to pray against their malice whether it be 1. against God Or 2. Religion Or 3. Our brethren Thirdly we must decline familiarity and all intimacie with those who are Gods enemies Davids delight was in the Saints h Psal 16.3 and so must ours be not in the wicked for their company we must avoid i Psal 26.4 5. and 101.6 Esa 52.11 and that for these three causes 1. Lest by their society we should be drawne into sinne as Salomon was 2. Lest we should bee punished with them Read Numb 16.26 Prov. 13.20 and 22.24 Apoc. 18.4 3. Lest at least our hearts should be grieved and our eyes and eares offended with their wickednesse Thus Lots righteous soule was grieved with seeing and hearing the abomination of the wicked Sodomites k 2 Pet. 2.9 Here wee must distinguish between those who Oppose themselves obstinately against all goodnesse and Religion these are to be avoided and their company not to be frequented Are blind and ignorant doing evil because they know no better these are not altogether to bee shunned but as occasion offers it selfe to be instructed and exhorted Fourthly but whatsoever they be though never so bad yet they are to be loved 1. Because they are flesh of our flesh of the same species with us 2. Because it may be they shall be converted hereafter And therefore love them for that hopes sake which thou maist have of them VERS 44. But I say unto you love your enemies Vers 44 blesse them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and pray for them which despitefully use you and persecute you § 1. Love your enemies Sect. 1 How doth it appeare that our enemies are to Quest 1 be loved First from Levit. 19.17 18. Thou shalt not Answ 1 hate thy brother in thy heart thou shalt in any wise rebuke thy Neighbour and not suffer sinne upon him Thou shalt not avenge nor beare any grudge against the children of my people c. Where we see 1. Our enemies must be reproved and wee must not suffer them to sinne vers 17. 2. We must not avenge our selves upon them 3. We must not remember the injuries they have done unto us vers 18. Secondly it appeares from Rom. 13.9 Thou Answ 2 shalt not commit adultery thou shalt not kill thou shalt not steale all is comprehended in this thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy selfe And therefore Saint Augustine saith l De doct 1.30 this precept of loving our enemies belongs unto all Thirdly it appeares from Rom. 12.20 21. If Answ 3 thine enemy hunger feed him if hee thirs● give him drinke and be not overcome of evill but ●vercome evill with
good If we must love God with all our heart and Quest 2 with all our minde and soule and might and strength as we are commanded Deut. 6.5 and Mat. 22.37 then where is there any place left for the love of our Neighbour First it is certaine that we must love none but Answ 1 onely in the Lord we must not love any supra contra aut prater Deum either above God or besides God or contrary to the command of God Secondly but in the Lord we may and ought Answ 2 to love men as a man is said to love his wife only and yet he loves his children also Thirdly yea those who love not men cannot Answ 3 love God Reade 1 Iohn 2.9 and 3.10 and 4.20 How must we love our enemies Quest 3 First affirmatively we must love them thus Answ 1 namely I. As they are men and so flesh of our flesh II. As they are our enemies we must not covet or desire to be avenged of them III. Yet we may lovingly reprove them for their amendment Answ 2 Secondly negatively thus we may not love them to wit I. as wicked men lest so we be found to love wickednesse which God hates II. as the enemies of God for thus wee are by Davids example to hate them Doe not I hate them oh Lord that hate thee yea I hate them with a perfect hatred m Psa 139.21 22. III. we must not love them unto death that is so love them that our love be a meanes to bring them unto perdition we must not flatter them in evill but labour by gentle reproofes to reduce them from their errours Quest 4 If to love be to esteeme as a friend then how can this agree with an enemy to love our neighbour is to hold him our friend how then can a man love his enemy that is hold him as his friend for to be a friend and an enemy are contraries We must not hold any man our enemy Answ but every one our brother friend and neighbour This our Saviour teacheth us by the parable of the man who was wounded betwixt Ierusalem and Iericho and was helped by the Samaritane concluding that we must hold every man our neighbour n Luk. 10.31 c. and none our enemy yea under the Gospell we are taught That all men are our brethren either By Regeneration or By Creation either Indeed or In hope either In the Lord or For the Lord. And therefore none are to bee held as enemies Quest 5 Why must we love those who by their deeds shew themselves to be our enemies Answ 1 First because herein wee shall imitate our God who is an examplar hereof unto us verse 45. Answ 2 Secondly because otherwise wee cannot love God If any man say he loves God and hates his brother is a lyar for how can hee love God whom he hath not seene and hate his brother whom he hath seene 1 Iohn 4.20 Answ 3 Thirdly because otherwise wee have not the Spirit of God for every one who is borne of God loveth his neighbour 1 Iohn 4.7 Answ 4 Fourthly because now none are enemies we are all one body 1 Corinth 12.12 the partition wall being broken downe so that there is now neither Iew nor Gentile which are to be hated but all must be loved Rom. 12.18 And therefore they who hate the persons of those who are without know not what Spirit they are of Answ 5 Fifthly the bond of peace is to bee preferred before all other things and therefore wee must suffer any thing rather than dissolve and break it Answ 6 Sixthly if there were any cause why wee should hate any it were for their hatred and hostilitie against us but this is no cause of hatred we being to looke upon God not man And therefore for his sake we must love those who hate us Quest 6 What are the impediments which hinder us from taking out this hard lesson of loving our enemies Answ The Remoraes or hinderances are these Impedi ∣ ment 1 First an apathia of the love of Christ were men truely sensible or heartily affected with the love of Christ towards them when they were enemies then they would not think it so strange to love their enemies but men are not sensible of this what love Christ hath borne towards them and therefore they are kept backe from the love of their enemies Impedi ∣ ment 2 Secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 want of affection towards their brethren Love covers a multitude of sins and therefore the lacke of this Christian charity is an impediment which hinders us from the love of our enemies Thirdly the errour in judging of love and charity we neither know the excellencie or Impedi ∣ ment 3 valew of this Evangelicall vertue of brotherly affection neither the necessity thereof but thinke it to bee like a free-will offering and hence we are not so carefull to practise it as we ought Fourthly the love of the world and selfe-love Impedi ∣ ment 4 is another thing which hinders us from the love of our enemies Fifthly too deep an apprehension of the Impedi ∣ ment 5 wrongs and injuries that have beene offered us Sixthly an innate and naturall pronenesse unto Impedi ∣ ment 6 anger envie and hatred Seventhly the difficulty of shewing and Impedi ∣ ment 7 doing the workes of mercy and charity What are the remedies against these impediments Quest 7 The remedies or meanes by which we may be helped forward in this duty of love towards Reme 1 our enemies are these First Answ Love God and preferre God before thy selfe thy own will and all things else and then for his sake thou wilt not be unwilling to doe any thing which he requires of thee Secondly learne to see thy brother in thy Reme 2 God and to love him as a child of God and then thou wilt easily be induced to be reconciled unto him though he have offended thee Thirdly despise and contemne the world Reme 3 love thy profit and gaine lesse than thou hast done and then thou wilt not be so sensible of any injury offred unto thee in temporall things Fourthly undervalew thy selfe esteeme Reme 4 basely of thy selfe and consider if thou hatest thy brother for some wrong done unto thee dost not thou deserve to bee hated of some others for the like injury done unto them at least dost not thou deserve that the Lord should looke upon thee as an enemy and hate thee as an adversary seeing thou hast offended him more often and more grievously than all the world hath or can doe thee Fifthly Let thy conversation be in heaven Reme 5 let thy affections bee set upon those things which are above walk continually in the paths of love charitie patience humility and meeknesse and then thou wilt be the more ready to love those who hate thee and to doe good unto those who doe evill unto thee Sect. 2 § 2. Blesse them that curse you doe good to them
behold thy selfe in that glasse and it will show thee thy face Iames 1. Answer 2 Secondly give thy selfe to a daily examination of thy selfe examine thy words works and heart by the word and so thou maist easily see what is amisse Answer 3 Thirdly pray daily unto God to give thee that eye salve that thou maist see clearly what is amisse and wanting in thee Revel 3.18 Verse 4 Verse 4. Or how wilt thou say to thy brother let me pull out the mote out of thine eye and behold a beame is in thine owne eye Sect. 1 § 1. How wilt thou say to thy brother Observation A brotherly and friendly admonition or reproofe is laudable a●d yet wee may bee abused whence wee may observe That wee may sinne in the performance of the best duties Quest How doe wee sinne in the performance of good duties Answer 1 First when wee doe them weakely superficially or key-coldly Answer 2 Secondly when wee performe them proudly or boastingly as the Pharisees did Answer 3 Thirdly when they are done for some base or by Answer 4 end for some second or sinister respect Fourthly when they are done corruptly that is with a heart not purged as here for if we regard iniquitie in our hearts nothing that wee doe can bee acceptable unto God § 2. And behold a beame is in thine owne eye Sect. 2 Wee may learne hence Observation That it is a foolish thing to condemne sinne in others so long as iniquitie remaines in our selves Why may not a man reprove another although Question 1 himselfe be guilty First because then the party reprooved will answer Answer 1 Physitian heale thy selfe Secondly because such a man by reprooving an Answer 2 other did condemne himselfe Rom. 2. And God will judge him out of his owne mouth Thirdly because such an one reprooves through Answer 3 hatred not out of any true zeale for 1. If such an one did but see the danger and fearefull consequents of sinne he would labour to avoid it himselfe as well as admonish others of the danger 2. If such an one did but see the filthinesse of sin how loathsome a thing it is in it selfe and how deformed it makes us in the sight of God hee would eschew it himselfe as well as advise another to beware of it 3. If such an one did seeke the glory of God he would then glorifie him himselfe by his owne life And therefore it is cleere that he who reprooves sinne in another and retaines it in himselfe doth it neither because sinne is perillous nor because sin is a horrid thing nor because he desires the glory of God but onely out of hatred to the person whom he reprooves or some supercilious humour and therefore those who ●re guilty themselves ought not to reprehend others Who are faulty here Question 2 First those who condemne the sinnes of others Answer 1 but examine not their owne as for example 1. The prodigall condemnes the covetous and he the prodigall but neither of them looke to examine themselves or their owne wayes 2. The drunkard reproves the adulterer and is reproved by him againe but neither of them blame or amend themselves Secondly prophane persons are here to be blamed Answer 11 who condemne the godly for small sinnes and yet are guilty themselves of great ones Verse 5. Thou hypocrite first cast out the beame out of thine own eye Verse 5. and then shalt thou see cleerly to cast out the mote out of thy brothers eye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eijce cast out the beame The beame as was shewed before signifies sin and the phrase here of casting out doth intimate violence as if our Saviour would say sinne cannot be expelled except valiantly and by force it be cast out for he who strives to overcome sinne must fight against it resisting it even unto blood Hebr. 12.4 How doth it appeare that sinne cannot be overcome Quession 1 except it be thus manfully resisted for many thinke that they can leave sinne when they will First sinne is fixed in our hearts naturally with Answer 1 deep rootes and is hereditary unto us Psal 51.7 And therefore cannot easily be weeded out Secondly hence from this originall corruption Answer 2 which is so deepely rooted in us all our affections are set upon sin therfore it cannot easily be expelled Thirdly sinne is like a faire fawning fl●ttering Answer 3 harlot which often by subtile perswasions and allurements and sweet alluring blandishments doth regaine admission and entrance after it is cast out and therefore it is not easily forsaken Answer 4 Fourthly sinne is a strong enemy yea like a strong man armed Luke 11.20 And therefore cannot be conquered without strong resistance Fifthly Sinne is backed aided corroborated Answer 5 and environed with an hoste of accomplices to wit Satan the world and the flesh who suggest wicked things unto us tempt us unto them and hinder us from that which is good by employments forgetfulnesse weakenesse distraction of the mind and the like and therefore it cannot with ease be expelled Question 2 Who are faulty in this duty Answer 1 First those who think it not necessary that sinne should be expelled these are either 1. Carnall men who say let us sinne that grace may abound Or 2. Familists and Libertines who say God will dispose of their sinnes to his glory Answer 2 Secondly those who thinke it an easie thing and therefore never seriously arm and gird themselves preparing courageously to fight the good fight of Faith Answer 3 Thirdly those who procrastinate and delay the worke these never consider 1. How fast time flies 2. How their hearts grow daily harder and harder 3. How sinne gets daily more strength in them and over them 4. How daily they approach nearer and nearer unto death And therefore they are much to blame Answer 4 Fourthly those who doe the word of the Lord negligently who would be perswaded converted and changed by the word but are not industrious in the use of the meanes but sluggish and lazie Answer 5 Fifthly those who give themselves leave to sinne thus polluting and poysoning themselves and surrendring the fort of their hearts up to the possession of Satan Answer 6 Sixtly those who give way to the occasions of sinne and those coards of vanity which draw on iniquity as with cart-ropes Esa 5.18 Answer 7 Seventhly those who leave sinne but doe not loath it retaining and reserving the love thereof still in their hearts Answer 8 Eightly those who trust to themselves and their owne strength not arming themselves with the Holy spirit not being carefull in hearing nor fervent in praying nor zealous in desiring and endeavouring to be converted sanctified and cloathed with Christ Rom. 13.12.14 Question 3 What armour must we use against this strong enemy Answer 1 First take unto thy selfe the sword of the spirit for that will drive him away Answer 2 Secondly take unto thee the shield of Faith for that will repell keepe off and
in the smallest things Fiftly Faith fructifying in love and sanctity Rom. 13.11 Philip. 1.27 But wicked men believe not neither obey and therefore they are strangers from life Sixtly Christ is the way unto life Iohn 14.6 Acts 4.12 But wicked men are without Christ and therfore it is evident that this straite way of piety is unknowne unto them Answer 3 Thirdly it is cleare also that naturall men are ignorant of this narrow path by the estate and condition of mankinde after his fall he then becoming brutish Thus the Prophets say that man may now bee compared to the beasts that perish Psal 49.12 Ierem. 10.14 and 51.17 And therfore undoubtedly is ignorant of the way of life Answer 4 Fourthly it will bee as cleare as the day if wee consider but the ignorance of naturall men For 1. The best clerke and wisest naturall man is but a foole so long as hee is not taught spiritually and instructed from above Rom. 1.22 Prov. 16.22 and 1. Cor. 1.20 and 3.19 2. The naturall man is but childish in religion 1 Cor. 13.12 Ephes 4.14 3. He knowes not what heaven and life eternall is Haec est vita aeterna ubi possumus Deum videre facie ad faciem ubi est sanitas sine infirmitate requies aeterna sine labore pax sine timore laetitia sine moevore veritas sine errore Life eternall is that place where wee shall see God as we are seene face to face where wee shall have health without sicknesse rest without disturbance peace without feare joy without sorrow and trueth without errour This nature is altogether ignorant of 4. He knowes not how heaven life eternal may be acquired nature can neither teach how heaven may bee had nor procure it And therefore wee may hence collect how necessarie it is for every member of old Adam to labour and endeavour to bee free from this naturall condition wherein hee is and to be regenerated and engrafted into Christ Why must wee thus earnestly desire to bee changed Quest 6 renewed and incorporated into Christ First Because naturally wee are blind and cannot Answer 1 walke without a guide and therefore so long as wee are naturall wee must needs erre and goe astray from the wayes of God Secondly because naturally wee are foolish and Answer 2 spirituall things are too high above our reach And therefore if wee desire to understand those things which concerne the glory of God and our owne good we must labour that we may bee regenerated and united unto Christ Thirdly because by nature wee are but evill Answer 3 trees And therefore if wee desire to bring forth good fruite we must labour and desire that wee may bee cut off from this wilde olive and engrafted into the new and living stocke Jesus Christ Fourthly by nature we are void and destitute Answer 4 of grace yea deade unto grace Ephes 2.1 and therefore if wee desire that wee may be recovered and the grace of God againe quickned in us we must labour to be changed and transformed after the Image of Christ Fiftly because by nature wee are the members of Answer 5 Sathan Ephes 2.3 And therefore if wee desire to be made the members of Christ and the children of God wee must labour to come out of our naturall estate and condition By what meanes may wee bee freed from this miserable Quest 7 condition wherein by nature we are I answer here from the second answer of the former question save one use these meanes Answer First studie the word of God Meanes of regeneration labour for the knowledge thereof for that will teach thee thy misery Secondly obey the word of God when thou knowest the will of God then labour to doe it abstaine from all evill prohibited observe every good duety enjoyned 3 Thirdly love the Lord above all things he onely regenerates by his holy Spirit and therefore love him with all thy heart and with all thy soule 4. Fourthly labour for Christ for hee sends the Holy Spirit unto us hee is the alone Mediatour betweene God and man and all grace which is conferred upon us by God is in and through Christ And therfore no mercy is to be expected but by him and for his sake Fiftly pray unto God that hee would bee graciously pleased to wash us from our sinnes to plant and engraft us into Christ and to sanctifie us by his holy Spirit Thus we have heard the first cause how the way of piety which leades unto life is strait in respect of the Obscurity thereof it being hard to find G Secondly the way of piety which leades unto to life is strait Respectu difficultatis in regard of the Observat 2 difficulty thereof as if our Saviour would say The way to heaven is a hard way Reade Acts 14.22 and 2 Timoth. 3.12 and 2 Corinth 4. How is the way to heaven hard when as 1. God Quest 8 calls all Esay 55.1 And 2 Rejects none that comes James 1.5 And 3. gives his word unto all Actes 20. Which word is a bright and cleare light Psal 119.105 And 4. reveales himselfe unto all those who seeke him We say the way is hard for these causes to wit Reason 1 First because the naturall man cannot understand this word nor be subject thereunto Rom. 8.6 c. Reason 2 Secondly because many seeke not to walke in this way neither regard what the word faith unto them Reason 3 Thirdly because many seeke to walke in this way but seeke amisse that is otherwise then by Christ as by pilgrimages and meat and monasticall vowes and the like Rom. 9.31 Reason 4 Fourthly because this way of religion teacheth things contrary to sense and above reason as 1. That there is imputative righteousnesse Psalm 32.1 2. That wee must deny our selves and submit our selves wholy to the will and pleasure of God And therefore this way may truly be called hard Reason 5 Fiftly this way is hard in respect of our conversion he that would walke in this way hee must turne from two things namely 1. From the world lest otherwise he perish with the world this is very hard for a man to be in the world and not of the world for so he shall be scorned by the world 2. From himselfe and his fore-passed life this is extreame hard and difficult for a man to forsake his owne sense judgement will affection and whatsoever is contrarie to the good pleasure of God Reason 6 Sixtly this way is hard in regard of Mortification and abstinence from sinne yea even those which are most deare unto us as for example 1. Sometimes wee are tempted to have a care of our fame and credite and therefore to forsake the profession of the Gospell because it is derided and scoffed by wicked men 2. Sometimes wee are tempted unto pleasure as unto drunkennesse gluttony wantonnesse adultery pride contention revenge and the like 3. Sometimes wee are tempted unto profit as to couetousnesse lying deceiving
is I. Not in an unknown language as the Papists do who pray in Latine II. Not without attention Qu●●●d● Deo audiri speras cum teipsum non attendis Cyprian How can a man hope to be heard of God that doth not himself mark what he utters The Papists here give a double distinction to wit First betwixt a perfect and a weak attention and this distinction as true we admit because we are imperfect in all services and weak in the best performances And therefore at best our Attention in prayer is but weak and imperfect yet we must strive unto perfection and labour that our mindes in prayer may be wholly taken up with heaven and heavenly things Secondly they distinguish betwixt an Initial perpetuated Attention that is Men they say must have an Intention to pray and an Attention to what they pray when they begin their prayers but there is no necessity of continuing this attention unto the period of their prayers This distinction as foolish and false I reject because their aim and meaning herein seems to be this That men must be attentive at first when they pray unto God that so they may procure the Lords attention to their prayers and when once God attends to what we pray then we need attend no more unto that which we powre out because God will hear it though we do not mark it Secondly we must pray only for good things Rule 2 such as are agreeable to the good will of God 1 Iohn 5. carefully avoiding all petitions which tend to the hurt either of our selves or our neighbour or our God or our Religion For if God hear from us and grant unto us such requests it is in anger according to the fiction of Myd●s his golden prayer or wish Thirdly we must pray in faith Mark 11.24 Rule 3 Iames 1.6 being assured that God loves us that God hears us that God is able to help us yea that he will help us in as much as may stand with his glory and our good Fourthly we must pray with the Spirit 1 Cor. Rule 4 14. Iude 20. Rom. 8.26 For if our requests be the signs and groans of the Spirit or dictated and suggested unto us by the Spirit then they shall be both pleasant unto and prevalent with our heavenly Father Fiftly we must pray in humility Luke 18.13 Rule 5 Latrones Errones docent ●e orare Hier. in vitas patrum As Beggars pray for an Alms and Theeves for a Pardon so must we for those things which we stand in need of Sixtly we must pray penitently How can we Rule 6 comfortably or confidently pray unto God untill we are assured that we are reconciled unto him and our sins pardoned Non prodest medicamentum d●● ferr●● in ●●h●●re Isidor In vain is the plaister applied to the sore so long as the Bullet or iron is in the wound In vain no we pray for mercie or any blessing from God so long as sin is not forsaken hated and repented of Seventhly we must pray perseverantly Rom. Rule 7 12.12 Continuing untill God have heard our prayers or granted our requests Eightly we must pray in the name and mediation Rule 8 of Christ Iohn 16. Acts. 4.12 And that I. Because he is the onely beloved Son of God with whom God is well pleased and in whom he is pleased with us Iohn 11.42 II. Because Christ by his office is our Advocate 1 Ioh. 2.1 III. Because he onely merited pardon and redemption for us particular Rules Secondly the more particular Rules to be observed in prayer are these viz. Rule 1 First we must pray daily and ordinarily remembring that God is daily to be worshipped but prayer is a part of his worship wherefore we must daily pray Luke 18.1 and 1 Thess 5.17 Rule 2 Secondly we must pray fervently sending forth lowd clamours and strong cries unto God Psalm 5.5 Rule 3 Thirdly we must pray for particular blessings for health Iames 5.15 for victory rain and the like as was afore said and that I. By an acknowledgment of thy duty that thou oughtest to pray unto God and thou wert unworthy to receive any good thing from him if thou shouldst be negligent herein And II. We must pray particularly upon a sure hope that we shall obtain what we want if it be good for us and the rather because we pray for it which is the Lords own ordinance appointed for the obtaining of what is awanting unto us Sect. 2 § 2. Vnto the Lord of the harvest We see here that our prayers must be made unto God for First Christ is the Lord of the harvest as appears by his sending forth of Apostles and Disciples f Mat. 10.1 and Luke 10.1 Yet Secondly he names not himself but the Lord that he may shew that labourers come from him Observ 1 Hence we may learn That we must pray unto none but unto the Lord Psalm 50.16 Quest 1 Why must we pray onely unto the Lord Answ 1 First because he onely can give unto us what we want salvation being onely in his hand Answ 2 Secondly because he onely can attend unto the prayers of all every where at once Answ 3 Thirdly because he onely knows the heart and discerns whether we dissemble with him or pray in sincerity Answ 4 Fourthly because he loves us above all others or none loveth us so much as he doth Iob. 3.16 Object It will here be objected we pray unto men for divers things Paul prays the brethren and men daily pray and petition Kings and great and rich men and that lawfully how then do we say that we must pray onely unto God Answ To pray may be two manner of waies understood namely First in generall for every petition and request and thus indeed it is true that we may petition sue and make requests unto men but it must be for some temporall not for spirituall things and these requests must be made unto living and mortall men not unto the dead and glorified Saints Secondly prayer sometimes is understood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for prayer for spirituall graces and eternall glory and thus understood we must pray onely unto God Quest 2 Why is God called the Lord of the harvest Answ 1 First because the harvest is his possession right Secondly because the harvest is gathered in by him Whence we may learn That the collection and gathering together Answ 2 of men unto the faith and profession of Religion Observ 2 is the work of God as evidently appears thus First Election is his Decree and the calling of men unto the truth first came from him Secondly as it came from God so it ends in him for the calleth men to the profession of Religion for his own glory Reade Ephes 1.4 5 6 Thirdly all things which serve hereunto are but Gods instruments whether the word or Spirit or Ministers or Day the Sabbath or Temple the Church yea or Christ himself All these are the
excitantur Ministri ad concionandum And thus Peter Acts 3. and Paul Acts 17. take occasion to Preach Christ Certainly if First the obedience of the Church be observed that we have a commission or at least a permission to Preach from the Church wherein we live And Secondly if the rule of decencie be observed And Thirdly if scandals and giving of just offences be avoided Then the word may be preached alwayes and every where in season and out of season 2 Tim. 4.2 both because it is the word of God and seed of salvation and also because herein we imitate our Lord Christ Sect. 2 § 2. Preach Wee see here that lost and wandering sheepe must be reduced and brought home againe and that by the Preaching of the word to teach us Observ That the meanes of bringing us home unto Christ is the preaching of the word the truth hereof in generall appeares by these places Rom. 1.16 and 16.25 and 1 Corinth 1.18.21 Titus 1.3 But more plainely by these particulars namely First because as God gave his word so hee gave also Preaching Rom. 10.8 and 1 Pet. 1.25 and Preachers Ephes 4.11 Secondly because God forbids those to Preach who are not sent Rom. 10.15 c. or not called as Aaorn was Hebr. 7. Thirdly because God blesseth and assisteth those whom he calls and sends that is I. He enables them by his grace in some measure for that great calling making them able Ministers 2 Cor. 3.6 and 4.6 And II. He blesseth their labours with good successe making them profitable and powerfull for the reducing of lost sheepe unto Christ Acts 2.47 Romanes 15.29 and 1 Corinth 3.6 c. 2 Tim. 4.17 Fourthly because where hee will not have those who go astray to be reduced and brought backe there he denies the word Amos 8.11 c. Acts 16.6 and 19.9 Fiftly because still those who are converted are converted by Preaching Reade the places in the margent b Acts 2.41 and 4.4 and 8 6.35 c. and 10.34 c. and 11 19.20.26 and 13.42 c. and 17 11. Object But it may here be objected This is but a temporall precept to preach the word and therefore it is not the meanes now of bringing us home unto Christ Answer I denie the antecedent because it is not a temporall precept but an eternall continuing from the beginning to the ending as may bee thus proved First God himselfe preached divers waies and after manners unto Adam Abraham and Iacob Heb. 1.1 Secondly God hath enjoyned and commanded the Prophets to preach unto his people Esa 40.9 yea to lift up their voyces and reprove them Esa 58.1 Thirdly the Lord sanctified Iohn Baptist in the wombe for this end that by preaching he might bring many children unto their fathers Mal. 4. Luk. 4. Matth. 3.1 c. Fourthly Christ himselfe preacheth yea spends his time wholly in preaching and working of miracles Matth. 4.17 and 9.35 and 11.1 Ephes 2.17 Fiftly here he commands his Apostles to preach to the Iewes and the lost sheep of Israel Sixtly afterwards he makes this precept concerning preaching generall for all people Matth. 28.20 Go and teach all nations and promiseth to be with them and to assist them Mark 16.16 Seventhly and to the Churches which are established he hath given Pastours and Teachers Ephes 4.11 unto whom he hath committed the care of his flock Acts 20.28 Eightly yea this he hath ordained untill the end of the world Ephes 4.13 c. and his second comming 1. Tim. Who are here to blame Quest 1 First those Pastours who being called unto Answ 1 this worke are negligent therein not caring how seldome they preach Saint Paul enforced himselfe to preach and did strive therein Rom. 15.20 because he knew that a woe belonged unto him if he did not preach 1 Corinthians 9.15 Secondly those are here faulty who neglect Answ 2 and despise the word preached whether it be I. Through tediousnesse and wearisomnesse this is so common as nothing more men usually are so weary of the word that they slight and contemne it Amos 8.11 Or II. Through an opinion of another Spirit or as though the Spirit of God would teach them without the word Indeed it is said that the faithfull under the Gospel shall be taught of God Ierem. 31.32 but this is by his word and the preaching thereof as was shewed in the proofe of the point Or III. Through curiositie except the word preached be sweetned Here First hearers are to blame who having itching eares despise sound doctrine loving and liking onely quaint and rhetoricall and humane learning Secondly speakers who vaunt themselves or seeke onely for praise and applause by their acute neat and eloquent discourses Not like Paul who desired onely to preach in the demonstration of the Spirit Nor like Peters preacher who must speake as the Oracles of God yea so as that God in all things may be glorified through Iesus Christ c 1 Pet. 4.11 Thirdly they are very faulty here who hinder Answ 3 the preaching of the word the more carefull we are to promote Preaching the liker we are unto Christ and the more we oppose or hinder it the more unlike yea contrary we are unto him This was the fault of the Iewes continually Matth. 23.13 and Acts 14. For they still withstood and hindered the word of God and the preaching of Christ And this is too great a fault now in our dayes and places For I. Some disswade others from the preaching of the word as the Papists and Seminaries do II. Some forbid others the preaching of the word Now these are either masters of families who will never or very seldome suffer their servants to come to Divine Service or Sermons or else idle Ministers and dumbe dogs who neither will or can teach their people themselves nor suffer them to go where they may be taught This is as much as in them lies to hinder them from conversion Christ and salvation III. Some calumniate detract and slander the godly Ministers of the word that so their mouthes may be stopped and they hindered from preaching Answ 4 Fourthly they are to blame here who make other use of the word preached then this that they may be converted thereby Certainly we are lost and wandring sheep untill we be reduced unto Christ and therefore although it be a good thing for a people to have a faithfull and carefull Pastour yet it is unprofitable unto them so long as they are not brought home by him unto the Shepherd of their soules Iere. 51.9 Luke 5.5 Quest 2 What is meant by this word preach Answer It signifies to publish and proclaime to teach them First that preaching is a worke publikely to be performed And Observ Secondly that in preaching they must rather teach then perswade Or That the chiefest office duty and worke of a Minister is publikely to teach his people the Christian faith here two things might be distinguished namely First Quomodo docendum
testimony of his Spirit that we may be enabled to call him Father Rom 8.15 Answ 4 Fourthly Patiendo by suffering and enduring patiently whatsoever afflictions the Lord layes upon us Heb. 12.8 Answ 5 Fiftly Verbum audiendo by hearing and obeying the word of God Iohn 17.13 Answ 6 Sixtly but our filiation principally consists in two things namely I. Credendo in faith in Christ Iohn 1.12 Gal. 3.26 And II. Obediendo in obedience unto God for those who would approve themselves to be the sonnes of God must put off the workes of darknesse and the old man and putting on the new man walke as becomes the children of light Ephes 5.8 and 1 Thess 5.5 And therefore if we desire to be made the children of God we must I. Be Peace-makers and Lovers II. Wee must love our enemies and do good unto those who doe evill unto us III. We must pray daily unto God to sealeou adoption in us by the evidence of his Spirit IV. We must patiently undergoe whatsoever the Lord layes upon us V. VVe must love reverence and prize the preaching of his word VI. Wee must labour to apprehend and apply Christ unto our selves by a lively faith And VII Wee must devote our selves wholly unto the service of God in a sincere and sanctified obedience Why doth Christ ascribe that unto God Quest 3 which hee did himselfe First negatively not to deprive himselfe of Answ 1 all power Chrys s for he saith afterwards All power is given unto me of my Father But Secondly affirmatively to shew that his Father Answ 2 was not moved by the importunity of others but that of his owne free grace and goodnesse he enlightned those who were of small account in the world and revealed these saving truths unto them Chrysost s § 4. Because thou hast hid these things Sect. 4 What is meant here by hiding or how doth Quest 1 God hide or blind the eyes First God is said sometimes to blind the eyes Answ 1 and harden the heart as Exod. 4 21. and 7.3 and 9.12 and 10.1 and 14.4 and Esa 44.18 But Secondly this is not so to be understood as Answ 2 though the Lord did shut up open eares and make blind seeing eyes or change a mollified heart into a hard one Nor Thirdly onely by permitting us to harden our Answ 3 selves But Fourthly by detaining of his grace from us Answ 4 whereby we should be softned or by denying to give that eye-salve unto us without which wee cannot see Revelat. 3.18 From whence wee may note that the Lord Observ 2 blinds and hardens wicked men not by changing them from better to worse but because he changeth them not from wor●● to better that is hee doth not harden by infusing or inferring any wicked quality into them which before was not in them but because he doth not give better qualities unto them then by nature they have in them Reade 1 Sam. 20.2 and 2 King 4.27 Gen. 18.17 For they were evill before yea altogether evill Genes 6.5 and 8.21 And therefore must not blame the Lord for their obduration or destruction because he made them no worse then they were but onely made them no better then they were which he was not bound to doe but lay the fault onely upon themselves How can the Lord blind some and not others Quest 2 seeing he is equall to all and hath professed himselfe to be no respecter of persons God doth not respect outward things Answ as honour or riches or beauty or comelinesse of person he doth not preferre Eliah before David nor Esau before Iacob But he looks upon inward things as piety iniquity pride and the like and therfore the cause of Gods blinding some will appear by the examination of the persons blinded For who were blinded the Wise Who were these wise men who were blinded Pharisees who First sate in Moses chayre Matth. 23. and were Doctours of the Law and yet Secondly could not discern of Christ but contemne and despise him Iohn 7.47 Luk 16.14 and laugh at him yea persecute him Iohn 8.37 and 3.32 And slander him calling him a Samaritane and Beelzebub And therfore because they despise the salvation of the Lord sent unto them and offered unto them in the Messias God hides himselfe from them Observ 2 From whence we may learne that God for pri●e and hardnesse of heart takes away from men the saving light of his word and of the knowledge of God leaving them in palpable blindnesse Reade Esa 6.10 Iohn 12.40 Rom. 11.18 This is but that lex Talionis which God hath promised to observe Proverb 1.24 c. Because First I have called And Therefore Yee shall call But I will not heare But Laugh at your destruction Secondly yee have not heard But Therefore Yee shall call But I will not heare But Laugh at your destruction Thirdly despised and derided my message Therefore Yee shall call But I will not heare But Laugh at your destruction The Lord leaves none but those who first left him hee hardens none but those who are already hardened he despiseth none but onely despisers as is plaine from 1 Sam 2.30 Esa 66.4 Quest 3 How doth the Lord hide himselfe from th●se Two manner of waies viz. Answer First detinendo by keeping back or taking away the word and by letting out the vineyard to other Husband men Reade Amos 8.12 Acts 13.46 and 19.9 Matth. 21.41 The word is the fire which melts the dew which mollifies and the hammer which breakes the hard heart And therefore needs must the heart grow hard when the word is taken away Secondly Non benedicendo by not blessing the word the word without the Spirit is but a dead Letter and therefore when the Lord doth not speake to the heart as well as the word to the eare no wonder if the heart remaine hard and obdurates for if the word preached bee not mixed with faith which is simply and only wrought by God in the hearers it is heard and Preached in vaine Heb. 4.2 and 1 Cor. 3.7 Quest 4 Why is the Gospell and word preached hid from so many of the hearers thereof Answ 1 First because Sathan stops the eares and shuts the eyes and hardens the heart of many Answ 2 Secondly because many despise and contemne the word And Answ 3 Thirdly because God gives them over to a reprobate sense Rom●ns 1.24 26 28. Quest 5 How is the word contemned and despised The word is despised by many many waies viz. Answ First some despise the word for the meannesse and poverty of the Ministers and thus did the Pharisees Iohn 7.47 yea because this is every where usuall our Saviour therefore doth comfort his servants with this that the contempt of them reflects upon himselfe those who despise them despise him and as contemners of the Lord shall certainly perish Luke 10.16 Secondly some deride and scoffe at the word 2 Chronic. 30.10 and 36.16 Acts 13.41 Thirdly some hinder the Preaching of
Doctori Greg. Past oftentimes the Lord out of his love mercy unto the people enables the Ministers to speak profitable and seasonable words unto them And on the other side the Lord sometimes for the sinnes of the hearers takes away the Ministers or the word from them Cum verbi auditores esuriunt pro eis reficiendis majora Doctoribus dona tribuuntur Greg. Past When hearers hunger after the word then the Lord for the refreshing comforting and satisfying of them doth give more Talents and greater gifts unto the Preachers But when people grow cold in their hearing or in their desires to heare or in their love unto the word then God often lessens the gifts of the Ministers or else takes away his painfull labourers sending Loiterers amongst them IV. He blesseth their labours and gives an increase to their indeavours 1 Cor. 3.6 Pedes quatuor bestiarum Evangelistarum Ezek. 1.7 ut scintillans aes aes candens est Praedicatio inde scintillae prodeunt quia ardent desyderio sonant verbo corda quae scintillae tetigerunt incendunt Greg. s Ezech. hom 3. The Ministers of the Word according to the Commandement of the Lord preach to their flocks and the Spirit of the Lord by their preaching doth oftentimes inflame their hearts and kindle their affections and fill their souls with sanctified desires and turn them truly unto himself And thus we see how the holy Ghost works and teaches in the Preachers of the Word he both making them M nisters and also able Ministers he both directing them what to speak and also blessing what they speak Secondly In Auditoribus the holy Spirit teacheth in the hearers as well as speakers for he makes their hearts often burn within them when they hear as Luke 34.32 Otiosus est sermo Doctoris nisi Spiritus sanctus adsit cordi audientis Greg. s Evang. hom 30. In vain doth the Preacher speak unto the ears of the Auditours except the Spirit speak unto the heart Nisi Spiritus sanctus auditorum corda repleat vox doctorum ad aures corporis incassum sonat nam formare vocem exterius possunt sed interius imprimere non val●nt Greg. Mor. lib. 27. Now although preaching be unprofitable without the Spirit yet seldome doth the holy Ghost fall upon any or come unto any but in the preaching of the word when Peter preached then many were pricked in their hearts Acts 2.37 yea then the holy Ghost fell upon many Acts 10.44 And in preaching Lydia had her heart opened Acts 16.14 What is here required of Hearers Quest 5 First they must pray when they come unto Answ 1 the Word and that I. For themselves that the Lord would be pleased so to assist them by his Spirit that they may learn Christ in the Ministery of the Word yea that he would give his holy Spirit unto them and fill them with the graces thereof this was Davids prayer for himself Psal 143.10 and Pauls for the Ephesians chap. 3. v. 18 19. and for the Colossians chap. 1. v. 9. Nulla in discrudo mora est ubi Spiritus sanctus Doctor adest Beda s Luc. hom 9. If the holy Ghost be our School-master then we shall not be Trewants but good proficients and at Schollers And therefore let us beg at Gods hands the Spirit of Revelation Ephes 1.17 c. that so we may go away from the Word alwaies bettered Pray with Augustine in one of his Epistles Sanctum opus semper inspira in me ut cogitem compelle ut faciam suade ut diligam confirma me ut te teneam custodi me ne te perdam Sanctifie thou O Lord so my heart that I may alwaies think that which is good strengthen thou so my hands that I may alwaies do that which is good perswade thou so my affections that I may above all things love thee the chiefest good establish thou me so in faith that I may hold thee fast and so keepe mee by thy Spirit that I may never lose thee II. Hearers must pray for the Preachers of the Word that speech and utterance may be given unto them Ephes 6.19 that the door of the Word may be wide open unto them Colos 4.3 That they may be permitted enabled to speak the Word freely 2 Thes 3.1 yea that they may so speak that their Word may become blessed unto their Auditours Rom. 15.29 30. And hence came that religious custome still practised by our Church to have Prayers and that both First before Sermons that the blessed Spirit would be graciously assistant and present both with speakers and hearers And also Secondly after Sermons that the same good Spirit would confirm what hath been spoken and establish and imprint it in the souls of the Hearers Answ 2 Secondly as Hearers must pray for the divine assistance of the Spirit in the hearing of the Word by which God ordinarily teacheth the mysteries of the gospel so also they must be carefull to hear what the Spirit saith in the Word reade Rev. 2.7 Acts 10.33 Certainly here there is a most lamentable neglect ordinarily amongst Hearers and little or no fruit can be expected of their hearing so long as that remains Hearers are wont I. To hear for fashion sake onely and not for the feeding of their souls Yea II. To absent themselves or keep themselves from the Word for the least cause or upon the smallest occasion that may be Yea III. To hear with prejudice or prejudicate opinions or imprudent censures for some hearers deride some tax and reprove the rudenesse or plainnesse of the speaker that he neither shews Eloquence nor Learning in his Sermons When this is amended either by him or by some other that is if we hear learned elaborate and eloquent peeces then we praise the eloquence learning wit and quicknesse of the speaker in all things seeing and judging man and not God And so long as we look onely upon man in the preaching of the Word so long we cannot expect the assistance of the blessed Spirit i●●he Word yea the more we look upon man the lesse we look for the holy Ghost And therefore in the hearing of the Word let us withdraw our ears and eyes and minds from men and look wholly up unto the Lord remembring that they who preach are his Messengers and that which they preach is his message and the word preached is made profitable onely by him that so we may desire assistance in hearing and expect a blessing upon our hearing onely from him and return all glory honour and praise unto him alone How may we know whether Christ have taught Quest 6 us the knowledge of God and mysteries of the Gospel or not First certainly he that is uncertain of this Answ 1 may be most certain that he is ignorant of it he that knows not whether he know God or not may be sure that he knows not God No man disputes whether there be a Sun or not except it be hid for
hinder good things from us Or III. That our present estate makes more for Gods glory then another condition of life would doe Or IV. That the Lords appointed time is not yet come And therefore in this case wee must bee subject and patient and awaite the Lords leisure with perseverance in prayer Secondly the Lord often seemes not to regard Answ 2 his servants when they seeke for Christ Reade Psalme 104.229 Cantic 3.1 and 2 Corinth 3.18 Why doth God seeme herein not to regard Quest 2 his servants First because they are not as yet purged from Answ 1 the pollution of sinne but are captivated and contaminated by the reliques of rebellious lusts Or Secondly because they are not as yet truely Answ 2 humbled but selfe-conceited as the two sonnes of Zebedee were Or Thirdly because they are not as yet weaned Answ 3 from the world nor the world crucified unto them The Apostles wee see forsooke all for Christs sake and yet they strive who shall be the greatest so hard a matter is it for us to be weaned from the world Or Fourthly because they seeke not Christ fervently Answ 4 but coldly in their be is as the Church did Cantic 3.1 Or Fifthly perhaps because they have omitted Answ 5 or lost or let slip some occasion or meanes which hath beene offered unto them as the Church did Cantic 5.2 c. Or at least Sixthly because the Lord would have them Answ 5 being at first but probationers to be exercised that so grace may take the deeper impression in their hearts for that which is with much labour and difficulty acquired is the most charily kept and more highly prized And therefore if any have begun to set their faces towards Sion and to seek the Lord and after some long search have not found him Let them then confesse that the reason is either I. Because some sinne yet gets the upper hand over them Or II. Because they are yet proud and selfe-conceited Or III. Because they are not yet weaned from the world Or IV. Because they seek not Christ fervently and industriously Or V. Because they have not been so carefull as they ought to nourish and obey the motions of of the Spirit and to lay hold upon the offers of mercy and to use those means which God hath prescribed in his word Or else VI. Because God would inure them to labour at the first that so by exercise they may grow the stronger Wherefore if we desire to find Christ and to bring him home to our souls let us labour to remove these impediments and learn First to subdue and bring under all our corruptions and take heed that we be not subdued or brought under by any And Secondly to be humble and poore in Spirit and low in our own eyes And Thirdly to use the world as though we used it not and not to love it or set our hearts upon it And Fourthly to seek Christ with all our hearts and with all our soules And Fifthly To be carefull to attend to the motions of the Spirit and the calls of the word And. Sixthly to be constant and couragious in the use of all Holy meanes untill the Lord have fully revealed himselfe unto us for although hee come not within a little time yet he will certainly come at the last And therefore I. Be not discouraged neither faint II. Pray unto him to reveale himselfe and to be found by us Psal 31.16 and 80.3 7 19. and 119.135 III. Doe not delay or slack this search of Christ And IIII. Labour to remove all impediments out of our way and then hee that shall come will come and not tarry Sect. 5 § 5. O VVoman great is thy Faith Many profitable Quaeres will here bee made namely Quest 1 Whence had this Woman this great Faith Answ St. Marke saith that she heard of Christ and so according to St. Paul Rom. 10.14 her faith came by her Hearing Quest 2 How did the Woman approve her Faith to bee great Answ By her works as true faith ought to be confirmed Iames 2. Quest 3 What workes were remarkable or observable in this Woman Answ 1 First her comming unto Christ she flyes not to Witches or Inchanters or Idols or the intercession of the Saints or the mediation of the Apostles but onely unto Christ the Saviour of the world Secondly this woman by her comming unto Answ 2 Christ doth shew her love unto her Neighbour For the Law enjoynes the love of our Neighbour and the Gospell commends it as a good worke and this woman doth shew by her petition Lord be mercifull unto me and help me that she was as sensible of her daughters miseries as if they had been her own and besought Christ as earnestly in her behalfe as she could have done for her self observing herein the Apostles lesson Weep with those that weep Rom. 12.15 Thirdly this Woman prayes unto Christ Answ 3 which is an acceptable worke unto God when it is performed by his Children yea she invocates and implores his mercy in whom she only beleeves She doth not call upon or cry after the Apostles but onely prayes unto Christ And yet the Papists do alleadge this place to prove the intercession of the Saints But I. We doe not reade that she cryed after the Apostles but only unto Christ And II. The Apostles as yet were living and we deny not but the living may pray for the living though neither for the dead nor unto them III. The Apostles though not sought unto sue unto Christ as it seemes to help her because Christ answers I am not sent but to the lost sheep of Israel verse 24. but yet they prevail not and herein the Popish invocation of Saints is like unto this But Pareus s pag. 755 thinkes that the Apostles did not entreat Christ in her behalfe but disdained her desired that Christ would stint her lowd clamour and cause her to depart because with her cryes she troubled them Dimitte eam vel abige Drive her away Lord because she troubles us And therefore let us not with Papists forsake Christ and flee unto the Saints but with this faithfull Female let us First pray our selves unto our God his Christ And Secondly let us continue praying as she did untill we be heard And Thirdly let not our basenesse or unworthinesse hinder either us from praying or our faith in praying but let it be rather an Argument unto us that we shall be heard because the Lord never sends such empty away as are truly sensible of their unworthinesse Fourthly another good worke observable Answ 4 in this woman is Patience for shee patiently suffered her selfe to be called Dog and to bee sleighted as it were by Christ Fifthly in this woman we see a singular humility Answ 5 as well as perfect patience For our Saviour saith It is not good to take the Childrens bread and to cast it to Dogs And what saith this woman unto it I. She doth not
and danger but also the turpitude and filthinesse of sinne and doth teach us not onely to detest the punishment of sinne but even sinne it selfe yea not to hate God who is the avenger of sinne or righteousnesse and holinesse which are contrary to sinnes but to hate our selves for the violation of the rules of righteousnesse and the provocation of so gracious and good a God I might enlarge this particular but I will but onely briefely branch it out into a double worke of the holy Spirit to wit I. The Spirit of God doth shew us three things namely First our guilt that is how wee have transgressed and violated the whole Law of God and therefore if God should call us unto judgement or enter into judgement with us wee must needs accuse our selves and confesse that wee are guilty of the transgression and breach of the Law And Secondly our danger wherein wee are by reason of our sinnes the wages of sinne being death Rom. 6.23 and the reward of the violation of the Law eternall condemnation And Thirdly the pollution and filthinesse of sinne how that it is out of measure sinfull and a thing most loathsome both in it selfe and unto the pure eyes of our heavenly Father II. The Spirit of God doth negatively not teach unto us these two things viz either First to hate God because he is the punisher and avenger of sinne or because he will not suffer us to sinne without punishment for this the malignant Spirit teacheth to men who have given themselves over unto sinne Or Secondly to hate righteousnesse and true holinesse because they are contrary unto our sinnes lusts and vile affections and because for the violation of the rules of righteousnesse and holinesse wee are punished and plagued For this Sathan and our owne corruption teacheth unto us and not the good and blessed and holy Spirit of God III. The Spirit of God affirmatively teacheth these three things unto us namely First to hate the punishment of sinne the Spirit teacheth us that it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of God because he is a consuming fire and that those who continue to transgresse an infinite Law and to offend an infinite Law-giver shall be infinitly punished with torments intollerable though alwayes tollerated and borne and therefore wee are taught by the Spirit to hate these punishments which are the reward of sinne And Secondly to hate sinne it selfe which is the cause of this punishment and that with a perfect hatred yea not onely in regard of the punishment of sinne but in regard of sinne it selfe it being in its owne nature a thing worthy to be detested and abhorred Yea Thirdly the Spirit teacheth us to hate our selves for our folly and madnesse that have loved and delighted in those things which are both infinitly evill and ougly in themselues and shall be so severely and unspeakably punished without repentance And this is the first degree and steppe unto Regeneration Answ 2 Secondly the Spirit of God doth excite and stirre vp in us an unfained desire of the remission and pardon of all our sinnes and this is the second step and degree of Regeneration Now because a wicked man may desire to have his sinnes forgiven him it will not be amisse to observe the difference betweene the desire of the Regenerate and unregenerate man I. The desire of the Regenerate is serious and solide they conceive sinne to bee an infinite evil and a thing so odious unto God that it separates him from man Ierem. 5.25 And therefore so long as they are not certaine that their sinnes are remitted they are uncertaine of the presence of God in them or of his love unto them or of their reconciliation unto him yea untill they are sure that their sinnes are done away they cannot have any true peace of conscience or spirituall rejoycing Now as they earnestly and unfainedly desire to be certaine of all these viz of the presence and love of God and reconciliation unto him and peace with him and with themselves and of the joy and consolation of the Spirit in themselves So they incessantly and heartily desire the assurance of the pardon of their sinnes without which assurance they cannot be assured of the other II. The desire of the unregenerate is a confused and fleeting desire he wisheth often that his sinnes were pardoned but the desire thereof doth not constantly possesse his heart hee may desire remission remissely sleightly and casually but not seriously and solidly or vpon those grounds whereby it is desired by the Regenerate man III. The Regenerate man desires rather to be purged from the evill of sinne then freed from the evill of punishment When the child of God groanes both under the burden of sinne and of punishment and is sensible of both the Evils then he desires to be freed first from the guilt and filth of sinne as the greater evill and prayes unto God more heartily to wash him and purge him and cleanse him from his pollution then to ease him of his paine IIII. The unregenerate man is more sensible of the evill of punishment then of sinne and more desirous to be freed from that then this Thus this earnest and unfained desire of the assurance of the pardon and remission of sinne is the second degree of Regeneration Thirdly the next step and degree of Regeneration Answ 3 is the Spirit of supplication and prayer now three things are here to bee examined by us namely I. Whether pray wee daily unto God to pardon our sinnes and to regenerate us And with David cry unto the Lord to create cleane hearts and renew right Spirits within us Psal 51.11 And II. Whether can wee commit our selves unto the Lord and expect with willing obedience the revelation of his will can wee when wee pray say unto the Lord I flee unto thee O Lord doe unto mee as shall seeme good in thy eyes And III. Whether doe wee obtaine our requests at Gods hand or not wee should marke the returne and fruit of our prayers and see whether with the King of Niniveh and the prodigall Child our prayers be heard and our suites granted For if wee can fervently pray and faithfully commit and commend our selves unto the good will and pleasure of God and obtaine our suites at his hands we may be comfortably perswaded that we are regenerated because God heares not sinners Iohn 9.31 Fourthly the last degree and highest step of Answ 4 Regeneration is the testimony evidence and pledge of the Spirit whereby is sealed unto us and wrought in us the certainty of tho love of God together with a full purpose of heart to walke before the Lord all the dayes of our lives And therefore wee should examine our selves whether the Spirit of God witnesse unto our spirits that God loves us and that in love unto him wee purpose to give our selves wholly up unto him Who are Regenerated Quest 3 Onely those who are endued with the
reward given to men according to their meede and therefore it is necessary that there should be a Resurrection Iustin Martyr Sect. 2 § 2. Yee erre not knowing the Scriptures It is questioned betweene us and the Church of Rome whether the Scriptures be necessary or not and we affirme That they are necessary for the people of God the reading preaching and understanding thereof being the onely ordinary meanes to beget faith in us Argum. And this wee confirme from this place by this Argument That whereby we are kept from errour and doubtfulnesse in matters of faith is necessary but this is performed by the Scripture Therefore it is necessary Here two things are to bee shewed namely First that the Scripture keepeth us from errour this is cleare from these words yee erre not knowing the Scripture where our Saviour shewes that the ignorance of Scripture was the cause of their errour And Secondly if our knowledge were onely builded upon Tradition without Scripture we should then be doubtfull and uncertaine of the truth Thus St. Luke saith in his Preface to Theophilus I have written saith he that thou mightest be certaine of those things whereof thou hast beene instructed Whence wee conclude that although we might know the truth without Scripture as Theophilus did yet we cannot know it certainly without it § 3. But shall be as the Angels Sect. 3 The Papists teach us to pray unto the Saints and that we may be the easilier induced to learne this lesson they assure us That the Saints heare our prayers and because they feare we will not credit this without proofe therefore our learned Countreymen who can draw Quidlibet ex quolibet produce this place for the proofe thereof arguing thus As CHRIST proveth here that in heaven the Saints neither marry nor are married Object because there they shall be as Angels So by the very same reason is proved that Saints may heare our prayers and helpe us be they neare or farre off because the Angels doe so and in every moment are present where they list and neede not to be neere us when they heare or helpe us Rhemist sup § 4. First our Saviour CHRIST speaketh not of the Answ 1 soules departed at this time but after the Resurrection and therefore the Argument is absurd Secondly CHRIST doth not in all points compare Answ 2 the Saints after the Resurrection to Angels for then they should be invisible and without bodies as the Angels are but in that they have no need or use of marriage Thirdly it is false that the Angels may be present Answ 3 in every moment where they list for they cannot be in more places at once then one neither are they where they list but where God appointeth them Fulke Whether are or ought the Saints and faithfull in this life to be like unto the Angels Quest and wherein They should labour to be like the Angels Answ in these things namely First in rejoycing at the conversion of sinners Luke 15. And Secondly in reverencing the divine Majestie like the Angels who cover their faces before him Esa 6.2 And Thirdly in standing ready prest to execute the will of the Lord as the Angels doe Psal 103.20 21. And Fourthly in executing the will of God for the manner as the Angels doe that is with cheerefulnesse with sincerity and without wearinesse VERS 32. I am the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac and the God of Iacob God is not the God of the dead but of the living Verse 32 Quest 1 How or in what regards is the Lord called Deus viventium the God of the living Answ 1 First Ratione causalitatis providentiae because he both created all perfect living creatures and also provides for all Now providence hath place onely in those things which have an existence or being in rerum naturá but when God pronounced these words unto Moses Exod. 3.6 the Patriarches were corporally dead and their bodies dissolved and therefore it was necessary that their soules should remaine and be alive Answ 2 Secondly the creature is referred unto God in a reall relation which is not founded but onely in an entity and being and therefore that whose God God is said to be must needs be really something and consequently those Patriarches who were not in regard of their bodies were in regard of their soules Quest 2 How may we prove or conclude the Resurrection of the body from hence Answ 1 First because the reasonable soule being the forme of the body and the substantiall part of man hath alwayes a naturall inclination unto the body neither hath a perfect subsiestnce in it selfe but doth desire to be in man now nature doth nothing in vaine and therefore the soule which for a time is separated from the body shall at last be eternally united and conjoyned unto the body Answ 1 Secondly because the reasonable soule cannot obtaine perfect felicity untill she have reassumed the body in regard of that naturall affection which she hath unto the body And therefore there shal be a Resurrection of the body Quest 3 How can this verse stand with Romans 14.9 For it is said Here God is not the God of the dead but of the living And There CHRIST died that he might be Lord both of the dead and living Answ Our Saviour here denies that God is the God of the dead that is that he will not give grace and glory to those who are corporally dead and shall rise no more and hence he doth evince the Resurrection of the dead by ●his argument Glory cannot be conferred upon dead men as dead men But glory shall be conferred upon Abraham and all the faithfull Therefore they shall not remaine alwayes dead or in an estate of death but shall rise againe at the last Hence the Apostle saith That CHRIST is Lord both of the living and of the dead that is of all the faithfull who either now live or are dead but shall rise at the last day and of dead shall be made living as it is said in the Creed Hee shall judge both the quicke and the dead that is those who now are dead shall live againe at the last day VERS 37.38.39.40 Vers 37 38. c. JESVS said unto him Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule and with all thy mind This is the first and great Commandement And the second is like unto it Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy selfe On these two Commandements hang all the Law and the Prophets § 1. Thou shalt love the Lord thy God Sect. 1 Whether can we love the Lord above all things Quest as wee are here enjoyned by nature or by grace We cannot love the Lord above al things by nature Answ and therefore grace is simply necessary thereunto as appeares thus First the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by his holy Spirit Rom. 5. and the fruit of the Spirit is love Galath
and this the faithfull never fall into Quest 5 What is required of the righteous in their humiliation or when their consciences accuse them Answ They must inquire and see what manner of conscience it is for there is a double conscience viz. First of sinne and this is good yea we should labour to be sensible of our sinnes and wish that our consciences would check us for sinne And Secondly of the anger of God for sinne now the mouth of this conscience they must labour to stop and not give way to this desperate feare that God loves them not but hates them and is wrathfully displeased at them For in their greatest humiliation they should say with Iob Though the Lord kill me yet will I put my trust in him Object If the conscience should urge the Law and anger of God against the transgressors thereof they must thereunto oppose Answ the mercies of God the merits of Christ the promises of the Gospell and that new covenant which hath beene contracted and confirmed betweene God and them Object If this conscience should yet urge that these things belong not unto them they being carnall and mundane they must then give a double answer viz. Answ 1 I. If they have any signes of the truth of their repentance and regeneration they must expresse them They must see if they have First the testimony of the Spirit within witnessing unto their Spirits that they are the Children of God And Secondly if they be changed from what they were before hating their former beloved sinnes and loving holinesse and uertue formerly not beloved And Thirdly if they love God and be beloved of him and assisted and guided by the holy Spirit in the paths of piety For these signes will deceive none and therefore blessed are all they who can by these comfort themselves in the houre of temptation II. If they cannot find these things in themselves Answ 2 they must then run unto the Sacrament with these promises Those things which J have not as yet done I will now doe without any more delay yea I will now while it is said to day conver● and turne unto the Lord and then they may be safe because the Lord hath said That at what time soever a sinner doth repent he shall find mercy Ezech. 18. and a Father hath said That true repentance comes never too late Secondly humiliation is divided according to the cause moving it For I. There is a humiliation which ariseth onely from the horrour of Gods judgement and vengeance And II. There is a humiliation which ariseth from the love of vertue and the hatred of sinne as sinne and from the hope of reward But of this we have treated heretofore Thirdly humiliation is divided according to the effects thereof For I. There is a humiliation which is without any good fruit or effect And II. There is a humiliation which worketh true repentance and converted unto God Whence note First that the righteous onely have this true humiliation which is called conversion l. Ezech. 18.21 Zach. 1.3 and Acts 3.19 And Secondly that the wicked may have the false humiliation as we see in Iudas § 4. And he brought againe the thirty pieces Sect. 4 of silver to the chiefe Priests and Elders In this Section two things are considerable to wit I. The thing brought backe viz. the thirty pieces of silver And II. The action of bringing backe Reduxit he brought againe First the thing brought backe was the silver peeces What was meant by a silver peece Quest 1 First it hath no certaine signification but the Answ 1 Hebrewes take it for a shekel as we may see Zach. 11.12 Secondly the Jewes had a double shekel Answ 2 namely I. The shekel of the Sanctuary which was worth foure drachma's And II. The vulgar or common shekel which was worth two drachma's Thirdly it is hard to determine or say certainly Answ 3 how much their drachmas or penies was in our money for some say that a peny was worth sixe Drachmas and some say that a Drachma was almost two pence Fourthly in our money some say that the Romane Answ 4 peny was worth 4d. or 6d. as the marginall note saith or but 3 pence as the marginall notes upon Matth. 18.28 Fifthly it may suffice us to know that it was Answ 5 but a vile and base price for the life of a man Zach. 11.13 Secondly we have here his action of bringing backe where we see that he doth not bring a part of the money backe as did Sapphira or Cain who offered of the worst of his fruits but he brings backe all even every peny that he received and yet this satisfaction profits him not at all To teach us Obser That satisfaction and restitution is not sufficient in it selfe to take away the sinne committed or to satisfie Gods justice Quest 2 Is not Satisfaction good Answ There is a double satisfaction to wit First a satisfaction due unto our neighbour and is called restitution and it is of the fact not of the sinne and this is altogether or by all m anes to be done as principally necessary with these exceptions restrictions and cautions namely I. Not as a satisfaction for the sinne for this we owe unto God Nor II. Through horror as Iudas here did but out of a desire to be reconciled unto our brother and to satisfie him for the injury we have done and to appease and pacifie our owne consciences Nor III. Through some immediate necessity for it may come to passe that he who hath done wrong unto his neighbour is not able to satisfie for the injury done and in this case God can save the sinner without restitution if so be the offender doe as much as in him lyes Now these conditions observed every greedy oppressor and griping usurer and deceitful person is bound to make restitution Secondly there is a satisfaction due unto our God wherein two things are considerable viz. I. Wherein this satisfactio● consists namely First not in oblations and pilgrimages But Secondly partly to the poore in Almes deeds as Daniel counselled Nebuchadnezzar And partly to God in repentance and sincere sorrow Acts 3.19 And II. These things are not to be done as a satisfaction of Gods justice for our sinne But First as an argument of our obedience And Secondly as a testimony of our thankefulnesse Sect. 5 § 5. I have sinned We have heard of Iudas his Contrition and Satisfaction and now followes his Confession which is twofold viz. I. Of his owne sinne in this Section And II. Of CHRISTS innocencie in the next First we see here that the Traitors tongue witnesseth against it selfe and that his Conscience cannot dissemble to teach us Observ That an evill Conscience is worse then a thousand witnesses Read Genes 3.10 and 42.21 and 2 Sam. 24.6.10 Proverb 28.1 Esa 57.20 and we shall find that an evill conscience is a continuall feare and torment Jnfinite in a manner are the humane examples whereby