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A87095 The first general epistle of St. John the Apostle, unfolded & applied. The second part, in thirty and seven lectures on the second chapter, from the third to the last verse. Delivered in St. Dionys. Back-Church, by Nath: Hardy minister of the gospel, and preacher to that parish.; First general epistle of St. John the Apostle. Part 2. Hardy, Nathaniel, 1618-1670. 1659 (1659) Wing H723; Thomason E981_1; ESTC R207731 535,986 795

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exhortation Begin betimes to acquaint yourselves with Gods word and ingage in the war with this wicked one To this end ponder a while on these ensuing considerations 1. Possibly nay probably you may not live to be old old age is that which none can assure himself of and comparatively few do partake of it if the first death overcome us before we overcome the Devil we must needs be hurt of the second death and if we overcome not whilest we are young death may prevent our being old and so cut us off while we are in the Devils jawes Oh who would run so desperate an hazard considering to how many diseases casualties the young are subject 2. If you do live to be old yet consider 1. The conquest over this wicked one will be the more difficult by how much the longer it is delayed the Proverb saith a young Saint an old Devil but I am sure it is hard for a young Devil to become an old Saint Dost thou think it will be so easie to cast out this strong man when he hath had so much time to fortifie himself Wilt not thou every day become weaker and the enemy stronger and must not then the victory be harder It was much saith St Chrysostome that Jonah after three dayes imprisonment escaped out of the Whales belly but it is much more to see an habituated sinner extricate himself out of the Devils snare Sin and Satan are not like Tenants at will to be gone at a Quarters warning the best wisdome is to crush the ●ockatrice in the egge Oh take heed of accustoming thy self to the Devils yoak since then it will not be a facile work to throw it off Nay further 2. God may hereafter deny that grace to thee which now thou● denyest to thy self and then it will not be only difficult but impossible to overcome him It is a sad doom which God uttereth concerning Ephraim He is joyned to Idols let him alone what if God say so of thee He is addicted to the Devils service let him alone it is but just when men give themselves over voluntarily God should give them over judicially to Satans power and then there is no possibility of escaping out of his hands Me thinks it is very observable that only he who first stepped into the po●l after the moving of the waters by the Angel was cured Post est occasio calva time must be taken by the fore-lock Oh then make hast to list thy self a souldier under Christs command least if now thou maiest thou wilt not when perhaps thou wouldst thou shalt not 3. If through divine grace thou shalt hereafter prevaile against this wicked one yet oh what grief and anguish of heart will it be then to thee that thou wast so long bewitched with the Devils temptations How bitterly doth David deprecate Allmighty God Remember not against me the sins of my youth No doubt out of the deep sense he had of and sorrow for them Quae fuerunt inania Juventutis gaudia haec sunt acerba senectutis gravamina the vanities of youth will be the vexation of old age and if the one be a comedy all upon pleasure the other will prove a tragedy of sorrow 4. Finally The only ●●t and most acceptable time for this spirituall conflict and conquest is the time of youth It is good for a man that he bear the yoke in his youth saith the Church Indeed then he is most able to bear it This yoke as St Hilary excellently Non expectat frigescentis senectatis annos nec emortuam jam aetatem pro vitiorum cousuetudin● is not for the weake shoulders of old men who are so much the weaker because sin through custome is become stronger yea as St Ambrose truly Quid potest habere laudis what thanks is it if when our body is enervated through pleasures and the cold frost of old age hath seased on it we should then offer it to God as a Sacrifice It is St Basils note that whereas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is an inscription prefixed before many Psalms it is omitted before the fifteenth which is a breviary of morall Precepts the practise whereof must not be defer'd till the end of our lives Indeed Mane as one wittily observeth is the Devils Verb who tempts us to continue still in his service but Gods Verb who expects the morning of our youth to be devoted to him What the fat was in the sacrifice that is the strength of youth in Gods service very acceptable to him oh let it be offered by us The truth is a young Christian Souldier is both most terrible in the Devils and amiable in Gods eyes The figtree putteth forth her green figs and the vines with the tender grapes give a good smell they are Christs words to his Church Indeed no smell so sweet in his nostrils as that which comes from the tender grapes and withall as St Bernard observeth Hic odor serpentes fugat venimous Creatures cannot endure the sent but so soon as the vines put forth they remove Quod volo attendant novitij nostri a comfort to young Saints who pertake of that spirit whose first fruits the Devils abhorre In one word as it is Gods honour and the Devils terror so it will be our comfort Assure thy self oh young man it will be no grief of heart to thee in thy old age that thou didst begin in youth to engage thy self in this sacred war against the wicked one Temporis preteriti bene impensi suavis est memoria Oh how sweet is the remembrance of youth well spent What a joyfull Harvest doth the old man reap from the seedtime of a Religious youth and with what abundant contentment doth he gather those ripe fruits of virtue which budded forth in his youthfull daies Oh then be wise you young m●n and instructed you that are of tender years for Gods sake nay for your own sake for his glory and for your own comfort and sa●ety give no place to the Devill resist him speedily resolutely so shall you overcome him gloriously And now if you be such young Men as my Text describeth the instructions here given cannot but be welcome to you no wonder that our Apostle by these qu●lifications as by so many arguments inciteth to the practice both of the precedent precept and the subsequent prohibition 1. Love not the world because you are strong and the word of God abideth in you and you have overcome the wicked one He that is given up to the world is wicked and he that is entangled with it is weake a strong Saint is so far from loving that he contemneth it having his conversation in Heaven they that by waiting on the Lord renew their strength Mount up with wings as Eagles and so are free from deaths snares Worldly love will not suffer the word of God to abide in us This diverts us from hearing and reading the
the last Chapter of this Epistle plainly ascribeth this Office of bearing witness to the Spirit and yet it is no less true that these graces and qualifications do beare the same witness these two witnesses being the one subservient to the other whilst the spirit is the principall and these qualifications are the Spirits instrument in this work Whether there be an immediate Testimony given by the spirit to the Soul of a Believer assuring him o● his interest in Christ I will not now dispute That the spirit can thus testifie is not to be questioned and that at some times to some eminent Saints he hath been and may still be pleased to vouchsafe it will not be denied but doubtless the usuall way of the Spirits witnessing is by the grace of Sanctification imprinted on the heart and expressed in the life To this Testimony the Spirit concurreth especially two waies partly by implanting his graces in us in which respect they are called the fruits of the Spirit and partly by discovering them to us in which regard St Paul saith We have received the Spirit which is of God that we might know the things which are freely given us of God The truth is as we cannot have grace without the Spirits operation so neither can we discern it but by the Spirits irradiation and as the beauty of all colours is manifested by the light of the Sun so is the truth of all graces in the heart by the Spirits light By all which it appeareth that the Spirit is the chief in this work so that as if you ask how we know that we know Christ and are in him the answer is by keeping the Commandments and walking as Christ walked so if you ask how we are inabled to keep the Commandments and walk as Christ walked and how we are to know that we do thus walk and keep the Commandments the answer is by the Spirit To close up this with a double consectary 1. That assurance of an interest in Christ which many pretend to who walk contrary to him and his Precepts in their lives is not a Christian Knowledg but a vain confidence a carnall security a lying delusion and a damned presumption To all such therefore who hug sin in their Bosomes and yet suppose they are folded in Christs arms who sail with full speed to Hell and yet think to cast Anchor at Heaven Gates who live in Rebellion against and yet promise to themselves Salvation by Christ we say not rejoyce with trembling but tremble without rejoycing not work out your Salvation with fear but fear without any hope of Salvation in this condition And whereas such persons may perhaps plead an immediate Testimony of Gods spirit assuring them that they are in Christ we are bold to tell them it is an hissing of the old Serpent not a whispering of the good Spirit it is the voice of the Devill not of God Ah my Brethren we sometimes pity mad Persons whom we seelying in the straw clad in rags and yet heare them boasting themselves to be Kings and Queens Have we not as great nay far more reason to pitty our own madness in fancying to our selves we are in Christ washed by his Blood and made Kings and Priests to God when as we transgress his Laws and cast both his Precepts and Pattern behind our back Me thinketh when men who live in Adultery Fornication Covetousness Envy Rebellion or any work of the Flesh promise to themselves an interest in Christ their sins should presently look them in the face and tell them that they are none of Christs 2. It neerly concerneth us all to search our hearts and try our waies to enquire into the Obedience and Conformity of our Conversations that hereby we may know we are in Christ It is an excellent saying of St Bernard Quantum creseis in gratiam tantum dilataris in fiduciam according to the measure of our Obedience so is the measure of our Confidence if therefore we would strengthen the latter we must by due inquiry assure our selves of the former Ah my Brethren it is an easie matter for a man to say I know I am in Christ but it is no easie matter to say Hereby I know I am in him what is it for a man to brag that such and such Lands and Lordships are his unless he can shew his evidences These qualifications are the evidences of our title to Christ and what will it avail to lay a claime to Christ if we have not these to shew Oh then what need is there of a diligent search that we may find these qualifications in us and because in nihilo facilius periculosius erratur there is nothing wherein we may more easily and yet more dangerously be mistaken then in this enquiry Oh what need is there of a due care that there be no flaw in our evidence that our qualification be of a right stampe To this end Study carefully the directions of the word Pray fervently for the illumination of the Spirit consult not with flesh and blood hearken not to the suggestions of Satan but deal impartially with thy own Soul as knowing of how great concernment the right managing of this work is And now upon serious and deliberate search 1. On the one hand Canst thou not find these qualifications in thee Be not too hasty in passing a determinate sentence against thy self since though these graces be necessary effects yet they are no● necessary signs of Faith and therefore they may be in us and so we truly in Christ and yet not appear so as we to know either that they are in us or we in Christ Perhaps thou art at that time clouded with some violent passion assaulted with some virulent temptation under spirituall desertion and no wonder if in such a case thou be not able to see those graces which yet thou hast since though there be fire yet so long as it is hid in the Embers it cannot flame forth nor doth it appear to be there Besides the operating there must be as you have heard a discovering work of the spirit By the former Faith bringeth these graces forth as effects by the latter a Believer maketh use of them as signs and these two do not alwaies go together Indeed if thou manifestly find the contrary vices reigning in thee thou maist and oughtest to conclude thy self as yet to be without Christ but though thou canst not clearly apprehend the inbeing of these graces thou must not peremptorily conclude against thy being in Christ but rather hanging as it were between hope and fear wait and pray and search for further discovery 2. On the other hand dost thou find the truth of these qualifications in thee Bless thy God know thy bliss own thy priviledg and labour after greater measures of this apprehension since as he that only hopes he keepeth the Commandments can only hope that he knoweth Christ so he that knoweth and is
the Preacher delivereth are either according to Brugensis the new and glorious mysteries of the Gospell in old and common resemblances or according to St Hilary and the Ancients Nova vetera in Evangeliis in lege the Legall and Evangelicall verities according to this is that occasionall note of St Ambrose upon those words of the Spouse At our gates are all manner of pleasant fruits new and old which I have laid up for thee oh my Beloved Teneo mandata omnia novi veteri Testamenti I keep the Commandments both of the old and new Testament for whereas the Jewish Synagogue neither keep the new in the letter nor the old in the Spirit the Christian Church observeth both and instructeth her Children in both Suiteble hereunto it is that this great Apostle of the Christian Church and well instructed Scribe for the Kingdome of Heaven brought forth in his Preaching and here layeth up a writing both old and new chiefly pressing upon us the observance of a command both Legall and Evangelicall Brethren I waite no new but an old c. Again a new Commandment I write unto you 2. Having dispatched the Compellation Brethren we have entred upon the first branch of the commendation drawn from its divine authority and therein the consideration of it as an old Commandment which having been already handled in the Assertion we are now to proceed to the Probation as it is implicitly couched in these words which we had from the beginning and explicitly set forth in those The old Commandment is the word which ye have heard from the beginning That you may see the strength of the Argument I shall forme it into a Syllogism thus That which you heard and had from the beginning is the old Commandment But This Commandment about which I write unto you is that you heard and had from the beginning Therefore It is not a new but an old Commandment The Conclusion is the Assertion and hath been already handled the Major and Minor containe the Probation and remaine now to be dispatched 1. Begin we with the Major The old Commandment is the word which was heard from the beginning To clear this Be pleased to know That a thing may be said to be old either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in some respects only or absolutely That which is not from the beginning and therefore is new in respect of preceding times may yet in respect of following ages be said to be old but only what is from the beginning is absolutely old Antiquity properly referreth to time so that what hath the priority carryeth it in point of antiquity and Id prius quod ab initio saith Tertullian That is first which is from the beginning principium a beginning being Id quo nihill prius that before which nothing is else it could not be the beginning In this sence it is we most justly say that which is true is old for though error may be old truth cannot be new Yea Since as that forementioned Father excellently argueth Falsum est corruptio veri Falshood is nothing else but an adulteration of truth Truth must needs be before Falshood and so the terms are convertible that which is true is old and that which is old is true for no error but is new in respect of that which is from the beginning though it be old in regard of that which followeth Upon this account it is that the same Father disputing with Marcion put it to this issue I say my Gospell is true Marcion saith his is I say Marcions Gospell is false he saith mine is Quis inter nos determinabit nisi temporis ratio ei praescribens authoritatem quod antiquius reperiretur let antiquity end the controversie that which can shew largest prescription of time and so the eldest let it be accounted truest Indeed Christianity stands upon holy antiquity and there is no better way of discovering what is false and reforming what is amiss then by looking back to the beginning Upon this ground it is that we contest both with the Papists on the one and all Sectaries on the other hand as being ready to justifie against both that what we teach is truly old because the word from the beginning 1. As the Gibeonites cheated Joshuah with their old Shooes clouted upon their feet old Garments dry and mouldy Bread So do the Papists delude many poore souls with pretence of the old Commandment and the old Religion It is the calumny they cast upon us Where was your Religion before Luther we are Novelists and but of Yesterday yea that we daily broach new Doctrines That some who are among us but not of us do so we cannot deny but still we are ready to justifie the Doctrine of our Church to be the old Doctrine nor do we desire a better Medium of proving it then this in the Text The old Commandment is the word which was from the beginning Take any or all of those opinions wherein we differ and for which we separate from them such as are Transubstantiation half Communion adoration of Images invocation of Saints and Angels the supremacy and infabillity of the Pope and the like And we shall find even by their own confessions that they were not from the beginning Scotus acknowledgeth that till the Counsell of Laterrane which was almost 1200 Years since Christ Transubstantiation was no Article of Faith Cassander confesseth that for a thousand years the holy Sacrament was administred in both kinds it were easie to instance in the rest but that learned Prelate hath already done it to the full and now let any rationall man judge whether we or they are to be charged with Novelty when as those things wherein they and we disagree have no primitive antiquity to establish them 2. As in this Particuler we vie with the Papists so are we ready to put the differences between Us and the Sectaries upon this triall Do we contend for a Lyturgy in the Church is it not because all Churches Greek and Latine have had their Lyturgies from the first Plantation of Christianity Yea Christ himself hath left a Prayer upon record to be not only a Platform after which manner he would have his Disciples pray but a Set form which they were to say when they did Pray Do we contest for our Hierarchie in the Church is it not because it was so from the beginning St Paul gave Timothy and Titus single persons Episcopall power of ordaining and governing Presbyters Those Angels of the Seaven Churches manifestly appear by the Ecclesiasticall History to be Bishops Yea No Church since the Apostles till Calvins time hath been without Episcopall Government Do we oppose the office of a Lay ruling Elder in the Church is it not because it was not from the beginning We can trace no footsteps of it in antiquity nor yet any such Officer or Office described in holy writ Finally To name no
have the light to walk in it to walk worthy of it to walk as children of it by walking in this path of love And so much for that Exposition The other interpretation renders these words assertively is true in you and expounds the darkness and light of sinne and grace an Exposition which I incline to as most rational it being very probable that our Apostle as in the following verses he useth the same metaphors so here intends the same things and that there his primary scope is to describe by darkness and light mans corrupt and regenerate estate will appear in the handling For the better prosecution of these words in this sense be pleased to proceed with me by these steps and observe 1. What is the state of all men before conversion Namely a state of darkness darkness is in our minds the darkness of ignorance and infidelity we neither do nor can know aright either God or our selves The naturall man perceiveth not the things of the Spirit of God is St Pauls generall Doctrine asserting our ignorance of God and the particular charge against Laodicea That she knew not she was wretched and miserable poor blind and naked may justly be extended to all mankind in regard of self-ignorance Indeed there is so much light left in us as may render us inexcusable but not as can lead us to Heaven we neither of our selves can find out nor yet discern divine truths though they are set before us how quick sighted soever reason may be in naturals it is dimme yea blind in spirituals and as our blessed Saviour argueth If the eye be darkness the whole body must needs be darke the eyes of our understanding being darkned no marvell if our will and affections be clouded yea a darkness of sin overrun our whole man so that what St Paul saith to the Ephesians is true of all unregenerate persons they are not only in the concrete darke but abstract darkness it self 2. What the state of all regenerate persons is The darkness is past and the true light of saving knowledg and heavenly grace shineth in their hearts Regenerate Christians are called in the new Testament new Creatures and indeed not unfitly since as it was in the old so is it in this new Creation We read in the beginning of Genesis That darkness was upon the face of the deep and God said let there be light A fit Embleme of the Spirits work in a sinners Conversion Whereas darkness covereth the soul before a glorious light ariseth in and diffuseth it self through it To this no doubt the Apostle alludeth when he saith God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts and for this reason it is that very often the turning of a sinner is set forth by this Metaphor so Pauls conversion of the Gentiles is called a turning them from darkness to light the converted Colossians are said to be delivered from the power of darkness and of the Ephesians it is said You who were sometimes darkness are now light in the Lord. Suitable to all which is this phrase in my Text The darkness is past and that true light now shineth Nor is it unworthy the observation how fitly these two clauses are ioyned together since the one cannot be without the other nay indeed one is the cause of the other In every convert there is not only a passing away of darkness but a shining of the true light yea the shining of the light is the cause of the passing away of the darkness in which respect Zanchy noteth that Conjunctio copulans pro causali posita videtur the Copulative Conjunction and is put for the Causall for This will the more appear if we consider what St Austin hath observed Namely That darkness is nothing else but the non residency of light and therefore that which expelleth darkness must needs be the presence of light thus the grace of the Spirit infused into the Soul is that which prevaileth to the expulsion of sin Look as the taking of an antidote driveth out the poyson the putting of a new Seal upon the Wax defaceth the old stampe and the return of the Sun causeth the darkness to vanish so is it the donation of the Spirit and his grace which dispossesseth Sin and Satan of the Soul Hence we may take notice what it is that maketh the difference between a Convert and a naturall Man namely the shining of the light of grace We that are converted were once involved in the same state of darkness with the rest of the world and as unable to deliver our selves from it had not Gods free grace caused the light to shine upon us which he denieth to others in which regard St Peter saith to the converted Christians to whom he wrote You are a chosen Generation a royall Priesthood an holy Nation a peculiar People that you should shew forth the praise of him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvellous light But yet it must withall be considered that the words in this sense are better read according to the Greek the darkness passeth away then that it is past since so long as we are here though our light be true yet it is not perfect but shineth more and more to the perfect day Now according to the increase of the light is the decrease of the darkness and therefore because it is not full noon perfect day whilst we are here the darkness cannot be said to be wholly past but rather is still passing if then we are sensible of the remainder of darkness in our hearts let it trouble but not too much dismay us light and darkness in remiss degrees may be together nor must we expect the darkness of sin to be wholly removed till we participate the light of Glory 3. In whomsoever the darkness passeth and the true light shineth this is true of which our Apostle here speaketh this grace and duty of love will shew it self in all regenerate persons it is a clear maxim where there is the cause there will be the effect such as is the root such will be the fruit now goodness which is a companion of love is called by the Apostle Paul A fruit of the Spirit or as some Greeke Copies read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a fruit of light this light which here is said to shine which is no other then the grace of the Spirit no wonder if where this light shineth there this beam and fruit of it appear indeed glowe worm light and star light is such as hath no beat at all to accompany it but Sun light which is the true light expelling darkness wanteth not heat which is the Embleme of this grace of love whereby the soul is warmed yea enflamed Examine we then our selves by this Character if we be brought from darkness to light this is true in us who so experienceth this change will find
question their Faith you shall find them very strong in confidence of being saved by Christ and yet if you examine their knowledge you shall finde them ignorant of that Christ by whom they believe to be saved Solomon saith A poore wise Childe is b●tter then an old and foolish King will not many knowing Children rise up in judgement one day against ignorant Fathers whilest a Childe of ten years old shall give a better account of Christian Religion then some old men of sixty I know not whither I shall chide or weep declaime against the folly or bewaile the misery of such old Men when I consider the dismall threatning uttered by St Paul That God will come in flaming fire rendering vengeance to them that know him not and which will certainly render the account of these old men the greater and vengeance hotter who live within the Pale of the Church in that they have not only had time but meanes and opportunity of gaining this Heavenly knowledge but they neglect them Oh then you Fathers receive a word of admonition though whilest you were young men you were careless of divine things yet now surely it is time to look after them it is one of St Cyprians twelve horrid abuses Si sine religione senex esse inve●iatur for an old man to be irreligious and a stranger to Heavenly things you are almost at the end o● your daies on labour to know him which is from the begining your naturall life through Gods goodness is prolonged I but it must at length be ended let nothing content you without the knowledge of the true God and his Sonne Jesus Christ which is eternall life Why should you be as bad Apprentices that having served seaven years are still to learne their Trade heare so much and so long and yet know so little of Christ Assure your selves the only comforts of old age are Conscientia bene peractae vitae scientia Christi experimentalis the conscience of a well lead life when you are able to reckon not only daies and years but good workes done in those daies and filling up those years and chiefly the experimentall knowledge of Christ whereby as good old Simeon you embrace him in your armes This will be both your comfort and your honour An hoary head being a crown when it is found in a way of righteousness and knowledge As then God is pleased to adde to your daies do you adde to your knowledge And though old age cause your strength of body to cease yet strive that souls may more and more increase in this and all other graces of the holy Spirit 2. There is yet another fitness which would be considered in this Character and that is in reference to the matter about which he writeth especially the praecedent and subsequent Doctrines that thereby we may see what influence the right knowledg of Christ hath upon those excellent duties of contempt of the world and Love of the Brethren 1. Because you have known him which is from the begining love not the world It is that which may very well be urged upon a double account by an argument drawn 1. Ab Indecoro It is a very unbeseeming thing for you who have known him that is from the begining and have been so long Scholars in Christs Schoole to love the world That they who know no better should soare no higher it is no w●nder and therefore if Heathens Pagans Infidels should be earthly minded it is no more then what is to be expected but for them who know Christ and knowing him cannot but know what an excellency there is in him and what a vanity there is in the world to dote upon it is very incongruous A Bristol stone is very glorious in his eyes who never saw a Diamond but he would deservedly be accounted stupid who should prefer a Bristol stone before a Diamond all Christians especially Aged ones cannot but experimentally know Christs fulness and the worlds emptinesg and therefore it must needs be a very irrationall affection in them to Love the world 2. A Cantrario The knowledg of him that is from the begining and the Love of these things that have both begining and ending are contrary to and so inconsistent one with another and the reason is plain because as hath been already intimated the true knowledg of Christ is inseperably attended with Love to him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Loving is caused by seeing where the Object is amiable Christ is altogether Lovely so that it is impossible to see him and not to Love him The Orator saith of virtue that it is so desirable that if men could with bodily eyes behold it they would be ravished with it sure I am he that with spirituall eyes beholds Christ cannot but be enamoured with him Now the world must needs be vile to him to whom Christ is precious if the knowledg of Christ attract us to him it cannot but weane us from the world so that whosoever professeth to know Christ and loveth the world he giveth his profession the lye and plainly discovereth his knowledg to be such which though it have light hath no heat and is none of that knowledg which Christianity cals for 2. Because you have known him which is from the begining loue the Brethren and this likewise is that which may be strongly pressed by a double enforcement 1. Ab Object● The knowledg of him who is from the begining carryeth with it a knowledg of that Love which he had from the begining toward us and did manifest in the fulness of time to us and no such obligation to Love as Love of our Love to the Brethren as Christs Love to us It is very observable how St Paul perswading to walk in this path of brotherly love doth not only direct but incite to it by Christs example But walk in Love as Christ hath loved us Indeed he that knoweth the Love of Christ cannot but be in some measure sensible how free and how full it is and surely that Love which is both sine merito and sine modo to use St Bernards phrase both undeserved and unmeasurable may well engage to a return of Love in whatsoever way he who hath so loved us should expect and direct i● 2. Ab Effecto Inasmuch as Brotherly Love is though not an immediate yet a genuine effect of the knowledg of Christ the account whereof take briefly thus Our Brethren to wit by grace are Christs Brethren and if we love Christ we cannot but love his relations All Christian Brethren have the Image of Christ stamped upon them and if we love Christ we cannot but love his Image where then there is a true and sincere affection to Christ there cannot but be a love of the Brethren and where there is a saving knowledge of Christ there as hath been already manifested cannot but be a sincere love to him That therefore it may appeare our knowledge of
Catholick Religion but yet even these are falsely pretended by hereticks and by the feigned semblance of these it is that they indeavour and oft times with too much success to seduce their auditors from the faith These Seducers have been more or lesse in all ages but I think I may safely say never more than in this and if you mark it you shall finde the Old cheats still practised The Papists on the one hand pretend to the Church Traditions Miracles and a formal sanctity The Socinians boast much of Reason The Antinomians of Liberty The Anabaptists Quakers and such like of Enthusiasms a light within breathings impulses and discoveries of the Spirit All Sects have some mixtures of truth and would father their Errours upon the Scriptures And now being encompassed as it were with such subtle Sophisters crafty Seducers what need is there of a prudent vigilancy lest wee bee insnared by them according to that excellent advice of St. Peter Beware lest ye also being led away with the errour of the wicked fall from your own stedfastnesse Behold saith our blessed Saviour to his Disciples I send you forth as sheep among wolves bee yee wise as Serpents and innocent as Doves wise as Serpents to defend themselves innocent as Doves in not offending others or as Prosper to our present purpose innocent as Doves in not circumventing any and wise as Serpents in not suffering themselves to bee circumvented and surely this Serpentine wisdome is that which concerneth all Christians in some measure to attain so much the rather because these wolves as our Saviour elsewhere speaketh come in sheeps cloathing for this reason saith Optatus Ut prius ovis mordentem lupum sentiat quam praesentiat venientem that they may seize upon the sheep before it can perceive them comming Hee that walketh among snares had need bee cautelous and no less reason have we to bee circumspect who are in the same danger which those Christians were in of them that would seduce then and so much shall suffice to have been spoken of the first General namely the mischievous design of the false Teachers I go on to a more brief dispatch of the other which is The Pious care of true Apostles These things have I written to you concerning them For the full discussion whereof I shall look upon the writing here mentioned in a double reference namely as it was a result of the Spirits dictate and as it was an argument of St. Johns care 1 As a result of the Spirits dictates for St. John and the other holy men of God spake and wrote as moved by the Holy Ghost and so wee are here to take notice that the Divinely inspired writings are of excellent use against Seducers Indeed as a straight line discovers what is crooked and the clear light dispells darknesse so the word of God serveth to discover who are Seducers and to dissipate their clondy errours you erre saith our blessed Saviour to the Sadduces not knowing the Scriptures tacitly teaching us that the Scriptures well known and rightly understood are a guard against errour The whole Scripture saith St. Paul is of divine inspiration and is profitable as for reproof of sin so for the correction of errour Let it therefore bee our business especially in such erroneous times as these to study the Scriptures and not onely to bee well versed in the letter but acquainted with the meaning of them that as our Saviour refelled the tempter so wee may bee able to refute seducers with a scriptum est No darts pierce so deep as those which are taken out of the Lords armory no arrows hit the mark like those which are drawn out of Gods quiver nor is any sword so sharp as that of the Spirit and therfore as David hid Gods word in his heart that hee might not fall into sin so let us that we may not run into errour 2 But that which would bee chiefly taken notice of is that his writing these things concerning Seducers was an argument of his care that the people might not bee deceived by them It is that which wee finde to have been not only the care of this but the other holy Apostles the greatest part of St. Judes Epistle and of St. Peters second Epistle is concerning these Seducers frequent caveats wee meet with in St. Pauls Epistles to the same purpose witnesse his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Col●ssians Beware lest any man spoil you nay his threefold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Philippians beware of Dogs beware of evil workers beware of the concision and to name no more his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Romans beseeching that they would mark and avoid such It were easy to let you see how the Fathers of the Church have in this particular traced the footst eps of the Apostles Ignatius bespeaketh the Christians of Antioch in words much like those of St. Paul to the Philippians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Beware of Dogs Serpents Dragons Aspes Bazilisks Scorpions St. Cyprian in his Epistle to all the people is very urgent with his ●r● vos fratres and again with his admone● pariter et consulo advising admonishing intreating that they would not beleeve the smooth words of false Teachers lest they did mistake darknesse for light night for day and poyson for a remedy Irenaeus in his Preface to his first book against Heresys saith this was the reason of his writing those books that the wolves might not devour the sheep of Christ through his default for the same cause were those things written by Epiphanius Athanasius St. Augustin and many others which are extant concerning heresies Nor was it without a great deal of Reason that those holy men were and in particular here St. John was so careful to write concerning Seducers and that both respectu populi in regard of the people for the preservation of their safety and respectu sui in regard of himself for the discharging of his own duty 1 In respect of the people St. John well knew 1 That all men are naturally prone to errour their understanding as well as will being corrupted yea that the best being but men may through want of judgement and partiality of affection bee led aside The bad through wickedness and the good through weaknesse sometimes like sheep have gone astray 2 That the errours to which these Antichrists did indeavour to seduce them were in things fundamental for so it appeareth by the charge hee laiet● against them which is that they denyed the Father and the Son that they denyed Jesus to bee the Christ a doctrine upon which the whole Christian Religion is founded St. Hierom upon that o● our Saviour Bee wise as Serpents observeth Serpentis astutia ponitur in exemplum quia toto corpore occul●at capu● ut illud in quo vita est protegat the Serpent is therefore mentioned as an Example of Wisdome
old the Law was literally written by Gods Finger in two Tables of Stone so it is spiritually written by Gods Spirit in two Tables of flesh the mind and the heart This annoynting then teacheth 1 Illuminando intellectum by enlightning the understanding to see and discover those things which are revealed in the Word the first work of the Spirit in conversion answereth that first word and work of God in the Creation Let there be light by this light it is that the darknesse of ignorance is expelled and the eyes of the minde are opened to apprehend Divine Writings in their own lustre and beauty It is observed of Paper that being oyled it is thereby made bright and so fitter to receive the beams of the Sun and conveigh the light into the room so is it with our minds which being annoynted with this oyl are thereby fitted to receive that heavenly light of Evangelical Doctrin and whereas the oyl which is put to the Lamp feeds it when it is kindled but cannot give light to it such is the excellency of this Unction that it giveth the light of saving knowledge to them who are altogether destitute of it Nor is this all but further 2 Inclinand● voluntatem by inclining the will to embrace the goodnesse and taste the sweetnesse of those truths which are understood this oyl doth not only cherish the light of the Lamp but softens the hardnesse of the tumor remove the darknesse of the understanding but mollifie the perversnesse of the will As for the manner of the Spirits operation upon the will it is not to bee disputed many Controversies which trouble the Church would easily be reconciled were the Modus layed aside I suppose none will deny but he who made the will knoweth how to perswade it without coaction and incline it without compulsion and therefore we need not fear to affirm that the annoynting teacheth by inclining the will the truth is were it not that this teaching had an influence upon the will as well as the understanding it could not guard against Error and preserve from Apostacy nothing being more usual than for those who are taught outwardly and not inwardly to reject those truthes whereof they have been fully convinced for want of a kindly influence upon the will by which they should constantly adhere To summe up this point and there-with this Discourse See the excellency of the Spirits teaching beyond all others other School-masters set only truths before us but cannot put them into us they present them to our eyes or ears but cannot write them upon our hearts only this School-master can and doth not only by his Word speak to our ears but by his Grace to our souls oh therefore let us implore this sacred Unction that he would vouchsafe to become our Teacher let us begge of him that he would first give us flexible spirits and decible mindes whereby wee may bee willing to bee taught which is to take away the heart of stone and give an heart of flesh and then that he would make us to know and embrace Divine Truths which is to write his Law in our hearts And withall take we heed how we grieve this School-master by a carelesse neglect of his instructions If at any time hee bee pleased to put any good motions into our mindes let us cherish them and let us beseech him that to those motions hee would adde his powerful impressions and if wee be thus taught of him we are well taught so well that we need no other teacher which leads me to the other branch of the sufficiency of his instruction in the negative expression You need not that any man teach you But the time being expired denyeth any further progresse at present and therefore the discussion of that with the other parts of the verse must be referred to the next opportunity THE FIRST EPISTLE OF St. JOHN CHAP. 2. VERS 27. But the annointing which you have received of him abideth in you and yee need not that any man teach you but as the same annointing teacheth you of all things and is truth and is no lye and even as it hath taught you ye shall abide in him THis whole World may not unfitly bee resembled to a Book whereof the cover is the Heavens whose Gilded imbossements are the glittering stars letters are the elements words are the several creatures compounded of those elements sentences are the motions and actions of those creatures and periods are its various ages This is the Book which Almighty God hath given all mankind to read and there is in every man a natural reason which serveth as a Candle whereby wee may discern the characters engraven on it and as a Schoolmaster whereby wee are instructed in the lessons to bee learned from it But besides this School of the World in which the Creator hath appointed to train up all men there is another School of the Church which our Redeemer hath designed for the education of Christians in which respect one of the names by which they are frequently called is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Disciples or Scholars of Christ The Book wherein they are to learn is no other than the Holy Scriptures of the Old and more espeoially of the New Testament The Ushers or Inferiour Teachers are the Ministers whose lips are therefore said to preserve knowledge and at whose mouth wee must seek the Law And if you would know who is the Head-master in this School let St. John give you the answer in the words of the text it is no other than the Holy Spirit of God here called the Annointing But the Annointing which you have received of him c. The sufficiency of this unction in teaching Christians is that part of the Text I am now in handling and having discussed the Affirmative assertion in that it is said to teach all things I am now in order to proceed to the Negative amplification which is expressed in those words And you need not that any man teach you The Apostle Peter speaking of the unlearned and unstable telleth us that they did wrest as many things in St. Pauls Epistles so likewise in other Scriptures to their own perdition where the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Gerard well observes is a metaphor borrowed from those who put men upon the Rack whereby they oft times force them to speak things against their knowledge and conscience for so do Hereticks impose upon the Scripture a sense contrary to what the Spirit of God intended An instance hereof wee have in this Text particularly in this clause which together with those parallel words of the Prophet Jeremy quoted by the Apostle Paul They shall not teach every man his Neighbour and every man his Brother saying Know the Lord is wrested by the Quakers and such like Sectavies among us as it was by the Enthusiasts heretofore to the undervaluing of the Ministry as needlesse in the Church yea of the