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

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he taught which was the most divine and heavenly Truth of God without all mixture of Falshood or Error This was confessed by his very enemies Mark 12. 14. 2. In regard of his powerful miracles which accompanied his Doctrine 3. In regard of the excellent manner of his Teaching which was such as did procure and win unto him great Authority and this is chiefly meant here Now the manner of his Teaching was excellent in sundry regards 1. He taught in his own Name as being Lord of his Doctrine and not onely as a Messenger or Interpreter thereof as the Prophets were therefore he did not use to say in his Preaching Thus saith the Lord as the Prophets used but I say unto you c. See Matth. 5. alibi 2. He taught with great power and efficacy so as his Doctrine wrought very effectually upon his Hearers for he did not onely sound the Word into their ears but he was able by his divine Spirit to work upon their hearts causing them to believe and embrace that which was taught 3. He taught with much zeal and earnestness of Affection shewing himself zealous of his Father's Glory and very earnest and desirous to save men's Souls 4. His speech and delivery was with special grace Luke 4. 22. The People wondred at the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth the meaning is his words were such as did manifestly express the inward graces of the Spirit that were in him above measure as Humility Love Mercy c. See Isa 50. 4. And not as the Scribes Here we are to shew 1. Who were Scribes 2. What their manner of teaching was Touching the first This was a name of Office among the Jews Whereof there were two sorts 1. Civil who were publick Notaries or Secretaries unto Princes to write and record the publick affairs of the Common-wealth 2 Sam. 8. 17. Seraiah was David's Scribe So 2. Reg. 22. Shaphan was Josiah's Scribe 2. Ecclesiasticall Scribes which were imployed in Church-matters and these were a certain order of Ecclesiasticall persons who being skillful in the Law of Moses were appointed to be publick Teachers and Expounders of it to the People Such a Scribe was Ezra Chap. 7. Ver. 6. He was a ready Scribe in the Law of Moses See Nehem. 8. 4. and such were they by profession who were called Scribes in our Saviour Christ's time as Matth. 23. 2. The Scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses Chair c. that is They are such by Office who are appointed to expound the Law of Moses therefore they are sometimes called Lawyers and Doctors of the Law as Luke 5. 17. Luke 7. 30. These were very learned in the Letter of the Law as may be gathered 1 Cor. 1. 20. vide infrà Cap. 2. v. 6. Touching the second thing namely the manner of teaching used by the Scribes we must know That in our Saviour's time they were faulty in their teaching two wayes 1. In the matter which they taught for instead of the pure Word of God they taught the precepts of Men that is their own unwritten Traditions See Matth. 15. 9. and Luke 11. 52. 2. In the manner of their teaching in that they taught coldly negligently and without zeal and power This may appear because the Evangelists do oppose their teaching unto the powerfull teaching of Christ which shews That as His Doctrine was delivered with zeal and power so theirs was void of power This latter faultiness in the manner of their teaching is chiefly meant here Now to the Instructions to be learned hence Observ 1 Observ 1. From the manner of our Saviour Christ's teaching observe this That it is not enough for Ministers of the Word to preach true and sound Doctrine but they must also look that it be done in due and right manner 1 Pet. 4. 11. If any man speak let him speak as the Words of God As Ministers must teach the Divine truth of God so they must teach it after a Divine and Spirituall manner So did Paul 1 Cor. 2. 4 13. He taught with demonstration of the Spirit c. not with the words which mans wisdom teacheth but which the Holy Ghost teacheth comparing spirituall things with spirituall things More particularly for the right manner of teaching the Word these two things are required 1. That it be taught with an earnest zeal for Gods glory and with a fervent desire of the People's Salvation 2. That it be taught and delivered in powerful and effectuall manner so as to move and affect the hearers and to work upon their hearts if it be possible Thus Paul 1 Thes 1. 5. Our Gospel came not to you in Word onely but in Power c. Now to this end 1. Ministers must labour to be touched in their own hearts with a feeling of those things which they deliver for by this means their preaching will in all likelyhood work the more effectually on others when themselves are first moved and affected with that which they teach 2. Ministers in teaching must labour so to speak as to manifest and expresse the inward graces of their own hearts as meekness love humility c 〈◊〉 the People may see and acknowledge these graces of God in them as 1 Cor. 14. ●● Then the People will be the more affected with their Doctrine Use 1 Vse 1. This reproveth the cold negligent and powerless teaching that is used by some Ministers of the Word which shew and expresse no zeal or fervency of affection nor yet any spirituall power or efficacy in their teaching These are like the Scribes c. They do the work of the Lord negligently no marvel if they do little good by such Preaching Use 2 Use 2. This may teach the People to love and desire a zealous and powerfull Ministery not contenting themselves with this to have the true Doctrine of the Word taught unto them but praying unto God to give unto their Pastors the Spirit of zeal and power to deliver and teach the word in such manner as that it may be effectuall to work upon their hearts Observ 2 Observ 2. Our Saviour preached as one having Authority that is he was careful by the manner of his teaching to maintain and preserve the Authority and Credit of his Person and Doctrine with the People Hence Ministers may learn That they ought to be careful so to carry themselves in their Ministery that they may preserve the credit and reputation of their Persons and Ministery and save it from contempt especially in their own places This charge Paul gives to Timothy 1 Tim. 4. 12. See that no man despise thy youth and to Titus Tit. 2. 15. These things speake and exhort and rebuke with all Authority See that no man despise thee Reas Reas The fruit and profit of their Ministery depends on the credit of it c. Quest Quest How may a Minister maintain the credit of his Person and Ministery By the same means as Christ did Answ 1 Answ 1. By teaching
Place Calling or Office in the Church forasmuch as no outward Calling or Office can exempt any man from Errour but to build our Faith and Religion only upon the written Word of God which is the Word of Truth and cannot deceive or lead us into Errour Observ 4 Observ 4. In that the ground and cause of this Errour of the Scribes was their mis-understanding of that place of the Prophet Malachy before alledged hence we are taught what is one main cause of all Errours and corrupt Opinions of men in matters of Faith viz. The Ignorance or misconceiving of the true sense of the Scriptures See this handled Chap. 8. 28. Mark 9. 12. And he answered and told them Eliasverily cometh first c. Nov. 19. 1626. IN this Verse and the next is laid down our Saviour's Answer to the Question of the three Disciples propounded to him in the former Verse touching the Opinion and Doctrine of the Scribes conce●ning the coming of Elias before the coming and manifestation of the Kingdom of the Messiah In which Answer our Saviour resolveth the doubt moved by the Disciples and withal discovereth and confuteth the Errour of the Scribes The Answer consisteth of three parts 1. A Concession or granting of that to be in some sort true which the Scribes taught touching the coming of Elias that he was indeed to come before the Messiah 2. A further declaration or shewing both of the end of Elias his coming or what he should do at his coming He should restore all things And also what he should suffer or what ill entertainment he should find in the World at his coming namely that he should suffer such abuses at the hands of wicked men as Christ himself was to suffer according to the Scriptures 3. A plain discovery and confutation of the Errour of the Scribes teaching and holding that Elias was not yet come c. This our Saviour confuteth by avouching that he was already come and had suffered c. Of the first He answered and told them c. Though the Disciples in moving the former Question discovered much Ignorance and Weakness yet our Saviour beareth with them and gently answereth them shewing himself ready and forward to resolve and satisfy them in the matter they doubted of Elias verily cometh first q. d. It is true in some sense which the Scribes say and I grant it to be so as the Prophet Malachi fore-told that Elias ought indeed to come first that is before the coming of the Messiah Here note that our Saviour doth not speak of Elias in that sense as the Scribes did in affirming that he was to come before the Messiah For the Scribes understood this of the coming of the Prophet Elias himself in his own Person to live upon Earth again but our Saviour under the Name of Elias understandeth John Baptist the Fore-runner or Harbinger of Christ even as the Propet Malachi also doth Chap. 4. 5. before alledged calling him by the Name of Elias and affirming that this Elias that is to say John Baptist ought indeed to come before the Messiah That this is our Saviour's meaning is plain and clear Matth. 17. 13. where it is expresly affirmed by the Evangelist that the Disciples understood our Saviour's words in this sense viz. That he did not speak of Elias himself in his own Person but of John Baptist whom he called by the Name of Elias So also Mat. 11. 14. All the Prophets and the Law prophesied till John And if ye will receive it this is Elias which was for to come Quest Quest. Why doth the Prophet Malachi in the place before alledged and our Saviour in this place call John Baptist by the Name of Elias Answ Answ This Name is given to John in regard of the resemblance and likeness that was between him and Elias in sundry things As 1. In excellency of gifts and graces of the Spirit in which John Baptist resembled Elias in which respect it is said Luke 1. 17. that he should go before the Lord in the Spirit and Power of Elias Especially John resembled Elias in his great and fervent Zeal for God's Glory for as Elias was zealous for the Lord of Hosts 1 King 19. 10. and testified his Zeal by reproving Sin and setting himself against it even in the highest Persons as in King Ahab and ●esabell his Wife so also did John shew his fervent zeal in like manner by reproving sin plainly in the greatest Persons as not only in the Pharisees and Sadduces which came to his Baptism but also in Herod himself and Herodias his Wife 2. John resembled Elias in this that as Elias living in a very corrupt Age of the Church wa● a special Instrument and means of reforming the abuse and corruptions reigning in those times and of restoring the decayed state of Religion so also John Baptist was stirred up of God in very corrupt times of the Church and was appointed as a special means of restoring the corrupt and decayed state thereof as appeare●h by the words immediately following this Text. 3. John resembled Elias in the manner of his outward Life and Conversation amongst men viz. In the strictness and austerity of it and particularly in his very Diet and Apparel As Elias was a man of a strict and spare Diet as may appear 1 King 19. 6. so was John also for his Meat was Locusts and wild-Hony And as Elias was cloathed in a hairy Garment in which respect he is said to be a rough or hairy man and was girt with a Girdle of Leather 2 King 1. 8. so also was John Baptist cloathed with Camel's haire and had a Girdle of a skin about his Loyns as we heard Chap. 1. Again as Elias lived for a time in the Wilderness whither he was forced to fly for his life being persecuted by Jesabel so likewise John Baptist both lived and preached in the Wilderness of Judea as we heard Chap. 1. 4. Lastly as Elias was hated and persecuted by Ahab and Jesabel and suffered much at their hands for his zeal and faithfulness in his Ministry so also did John suffer much for the same cause being hated of Herodias and imprisoned and put to death by Herod Now further when it is said here that Elias that is to say John Baptist was not onely to come but to come first This is to be understood in respect or relation to the time of Christ's Birth or coming into ●he World that John was to come before him in time that is to say to be born and to live on Earth before Ch●ist for the space of six Months as appeareth Luke 1. 26. 36. as also to exercise his Ministeriall Office of Preaching and Baptising some space of time before Christ himself Quest Quest Wherefore or to what end was John Baptist appointed to come before Christ that is to be born and to preach before him Answ Answ That he might be as a Harbinger to prepare the way for Christ that
beginning of the solemn publishing of the doctine of the Gospel or The preaching of the Gospel began first in the ministery and preaching of John Gospel of Jesus Christ It is so called in two respects chiefly 1. Because Christ Jesus as he is God is the Authour of this Doctrine 2. Because 〈…〉 principal subject and matter of this doctrine The Son of God Christ is 〈…〉 God not in respect of Creation as Adam and the Angels nor of Adoption as the faithfull but in respect of eternal generation in that he was begotten of God the Father Now this begetting was by communicating the whole Divine essence of the Father unto him from all eternity after an unspeakable manner Note that Christ is begotten of the Father not as he is God if we speak properly but as he is the Son for he is God of himself as well as the Father but his person is from the Father The Godhead of the Son was not begotten of the Godhead of the Father but the person of the Son was begotten of the person of the Father or thus He hath the beginning of his person from the Father but not the beginning of his essence and nature So much for the sense of the words which being thus explained we may consider these two things in them 1. The Prerogative of John Baptist his Ministery or preaching in that it was the beginning or first publishing of the Gospel 2. A description of the doctrine of the Gospel 1. By the name given it The Gospel 2. By the Authour and Matter of it Christ Jesus who is also set forth to us further by a special title or attribute the Son of God Now let us see what matter of Instruction may be gathered from this Verse Obser 1 First From this that the ministery of John is called the beginning of the Gospel That John Baptist was the first preacher and publisher of the doctrine of the Gospel it was his priviledge to be the first preacher of Christ and of the doctrine of salvation by Christ. See Luke 16. 16. Math. 11. 13. All the Prophets and the Law prophesyed unto John Though Moses and the Prophets spake more obscurely of Christ and of salvation by him yet none preached this doctrine so plainly and evidently before the time of John Baptist He was the first plain and express preacher of the Gospel in respect of which honour done unto him he is said in the 11. Verse of that Chapter to be the greatest of those that were begotten of Women before his time that is greater then any of the Prophets of the Old Testament which is to be understood not in respect of his person simply but in regard of this prerogative of his office and ministry that it was the first beginning of the plain preaching of the Gospel Use See our happiness who live in these times since the Gospel hath been thus clearly taught by John Baptist the first publisher of it yea not onely by him but by Christ himself also who followed John and by the Apostles and Ministers of Christ who have followed since Eph. 3. 5. The mystery of Christ in other Ages was not opened unto the Sons of Men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit They that lived before John Baptist had the Gospel darkly preached in the Sermons of Moses and the Prophets which were but as a candle shining in a dark place 2 Pet. 1. 19. But we now have the Gospel plainly and clearly taught in the Sermons of John Baptist the first that ever preached Christ directly and plainly and not onely in his Sermons but in the Sermons of Christ himself and his Apostles This is our great priviledge and happiness that now there is a clearer manifestation of the Gospel than ever was before John Baptist's time so that we may come now to a clearer knowledge and discerning of Christ than they could possibly attain to who lived in the times of the Old Testament This must stir us up unto true thankfulnesse to God for this his mercy to us that live in this Age of the World since the first publishing of the Gospel in such clear manner and withall it must move us to open our eyes to look upon this clear light of the Gospel which now hath long shined ever since John Baptist's time and beware that we shut them not against it as many do which continue still in grosse ignorance of the doctrine of Christ notwithstanding it hath now been so long time most clearly published But let us remember that speech of our Saviour Joh. 3. 19. This is the condemnation that light came into the World and men loved darknesse rather than light c. Take heed how thou continue and live in ignorance of the Golpel in these times wherein so clear a light of it shineth for as Paul saith to the Corinthians if our Gospel be now hid it is hid to those that perish c. 2 Cor. 4. 4. So much of the prerogative of Johns Ministery Now followeth the description of the doctrine of the Gospel his verbis The Gospel of Jesus Christ. Obser From the nature of the word Gospel signifying good tydings we may observe the excellency of this doctrine of the Gospel It is such a doctrine as containeth the most gladsome tydings and message that ever was sent from God unto mankind Namely the tydings of salvation by Jesus Christ therefore called the Gospel of our salvation Eph. 1. 13. To this purpose is that prophesie of Christ Esay 61. 1. that the Lord anointed him and sent him to preach good tydings unto the poor by which good tydings is meant nothing else but the doctrine of the Gospel and comfortable promises of it So Rom. 10. 15. How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tydings of good things So Luke 2. 10. The Angel preaching Christ to the Shepherds tells them that he brings them good tydings of great joy that shall be to all People All which places shew the excellency of the doctrine of the Gospel contained in it and such happy and joyfull tydings concerning our reconciliation with God and salvation by Jesus Christ for what news or tydings can be more excellent and blessed than the tydings of forgiveness of sins peace with God and eternal salvation of our souls Use 1 To stir us up to a love and liking of this doctrine and to cause us with all readiness to embrace believe and obey it in our hearts and lives How gladly do we entertain good news touching our Body Goods Friends or outward Estate how welcome is it to us See Prov. 25. 25. And shall not this blessed tydings of the salvation of our souls by Christ which is brought to us in the Gospel be much more welcome to us Is not the news of Liberty welcome to the Prisoner the news of a pardon from the Prince welcome to the condemned Malefactor And
us nor his protection over us in the discharge of it See Psal 91. 11. Use Use This reproveth such as rashly adventure upon the undertaking of such Callings Offices and Actions for the vvhich they have no vvarrant from God and from his VVord Some take upon them such Callings as are in themselves unlavvfull and sinfull Others take upon them lavvfull Offices yet by unlavvfull means or else vvithout sufficiency of gifts for discharge of them Hovv can such go on with courage and constancy in discharge of their Duties or expect any blessing or protection from God in those things vvhich they undertake seeing they have no assurance in their consciences that God hath called them thereunto So much of the generall Point Novv I come to those Points of Instruction vvhich do more particularly arise from the VVords Observ 1 Observ 1. From the first miraculous Sign shevved at the Baptism of Christ namely The visible opening of the Heavens upon him or unto him for so it is said Math. 3. 16. Hence vve may gather That our Saviour Christ even vvhilst he lived on Earth in the state of his humiliation vvas nevertheless a Person of great Honour Glory and Majesty This vvas shevved by the very opening of the Heavens upon him this shevved the Glory and Majesty of Christ's Person in that the very Heavens did a kind of Homage and Reverence unto him in that they vvere divided and cut in sunder as it vvere over his head at this time of his Baptism The reason of this Glory and Majesty of Christ's Person living on Earth is this because he vvas even then not a meer Man but God and Man even the Son of God incarnate Novv if he vvere a Person of such divine Glory and Majesty vvhilst he lived in the form of a servant upon Earth hovv much greater Glory and Majesty hath he novv obtained being advanced to God's right hand in the Heavens But of this excellency of Christ's Person vve heard before Ver. 7. Observ 2 Observ 2. VVhen our Saviour Christ vvas called to take upon him his publick Office the Holy Ghost cometh dovvn upon him in miraculous manner to shevv that he vvas novv furnished vvith all sufficiency of spirituall gifts and graces requisite for the discharge of that Office Hence vve learn this That vvhomsoever God calleth to any Office or Function those he furnisheth and inableth vvith gifts sufficient for discharge of that Office and Calling to vvhich he appointeth them This is true of publick and private Offices and Callings 1. Of publick Whomsoever God calls to the Office of civil Magistracy in the Commonwealth those he indueth with the Spirit of Wisdom and Courage fit for that Calling Examples of this we have in Moses Joshua Saul 1 Sam. 10. 9. Solomon c. So also those that are called of God to the Office of the Ministery they are furnished of God with gifts of the Spirit answerable to that Calling as the gift of Knowledge Utterance c. This we see in the calling of the Prophets as Jer. 1. 9. The Lord touched his mouth and said unto him Behold I have put my words into thy mouth So also Ezek. 2. The Lord incouraged him and put his Spirit into him when he called him to Prophesie So when the Apostles were called to Preach the Gospel the Holy Ghost was sent upon them Acts 2. 2. This also is true of more private Callings as the callings of 〈◊〉 and Masters of Families that those whom God appointeth unto these Callings and Places he doth also qualifie them with such gifts as are fit for the discharge of them else they cannot be said to be called of God to such Offices if they be not in some measure qualified with gifts fitting for them Vse 1 Vse 1. This convinceth many to be wrongfull Usurpers of those Offices and Callings wherein they live and that they were never called of God unto them because they are not qualified with gifts sitting for such Callings How many Ministers are there which live in that Calling and yet want ability or willingness to teach the Word How many Magistrates and Governours in the Commonwealth that want Wisdom Courage and Zeal for God's glory How many Parents and Masters of Families that are not able to Govern their Families aright not able to Catechize their Children and Servants c. Let all such know That God never called them to those Places and Offices for the discharge of which he hath not qualified them with some sufficiency of gifts Use 2 Vse 2. If we would be assured That God hath called us to those Places and Callings wherein we live let us labour to see and know our selves to be qualified with gifts answerable to them else never presume that God hath called thee to undertake any Office or Function Publick or Private if he have not furnished thee with some measure of sufficiency and ability to discharge that place in which thou livest Observ 3 Observ 3. From the manner of the Holy Ghost's descending upon our Saviour Christ in that it was in the shape of Dove to shew what kind of person Christ should be and how qualified by the Spirit namely likely unto the Dove Hence we may gather That Christ Jesus is such a Saviour as doth in nature disposition and properties fitly resemble the Dove For the clearing of this We must shew what are the speciall properties of a Dove that so we may see how our Saviour Christ is qualified with such vertues as are resembled in the Dove 1. The Dove is an ignorant and harmless Creature Math. 10. 16. Be harmlesse as Doves So our Saviour Christ was most innocent and harmless Yea He was pure from all spot of sin both in his Conception and Birth as also in his Life Heb. 7. 26. Such an High Priest became us who is Holy Harmless Undefiled separate from sinners c. 2. The Dove is a loving and tender-hearted Bird. Aristotle commends them for chast loving each other Histor Animal l. 9. c. 7. And some write that the Dove is very loving to her young Ones and carefull to cherish them So Christ is a most loving Saviour to us so greatly loving us that he laid down his Life for us Ephes 3. 19. The love of Christ passeth knowledge 3. The Dove is a meek and gentle Creature some write of it that it hath no gall and hence is that Proverb in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Calepin So Christ Jesus is to us a meek and gentle Saviour Math. 11. Learn of me that I am meek c. So the Apostle saith I beseech you by the meekness and gentlenesse of Christ c. Use 1 Vse 1. This is matter of singular comfort to the faithful Members of Christ for Christ being innocent and harmless like the Dove yea pure from all spot of sin this his purity and holiness is imputed to so many as truly believe in him and by it they are accepted as holy and pure through
c. 2. It signifieth the Kingdom of Glory in Heaven after this life ended 1 Cor. 6. 9. The unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdom of God and Joh. 3. 3. 3. It is put for the visible Church on Earth in which are both good Christians and Hypocrites as Matth. 13. 47. Like a Draw-net c. 4. For the Preaching of the Gospel Matth. 21. 43. The Kingdom of God shall be taken from you c. 5. For the spiritual Regiment and Government of the Church exercised by the Messiah after his coming in the Flesh and in this sense it is to be taken here So the meaning is That the Messiah being exhibited and come in the Flesh hath now begun to exercise his spiritual Government and Kingdom amongst men called the Kingdom of God because it is assigned unto Christ of God Quest 1 Quest 1. Did not Christ exercise a spiritual Regiment in and over the Church before the time of his coming in the Flesh Answ Answ Yes But not so manifestly and clearly nor in such conspicuous manner as he did after his Incarnation Kingdom of God The full and clear manifestation of the spiritual Kingdom of the Messiah Is at hand To be shortly accomplished Quest 2 Quest 2. Wherein stands this spiritual Regiment which Christ exerciseth Answ Answ In sundry things chiefly in these 1. In calling and gathering his Elect out of the World causing them to become his subjects Mat. 23. 37. O Jerusalem how often would I have gathered thee c. See also Joh. 15. 19. 2. In overthrowing and destroying the contrary Power and Kingdom of Sin and Satan in his Elect. 3. In conferring on them all saving graces of his Holy Spirit 4. In guiding and directing them in the whole course of their lives 5. In bringing them to be partakers of eternal life c. Quest 3 Quest 3. How or by what means doth he exercise this spiritual Government Answ Answ By a twofold means 1. Outwardly by the Ministry of his Word which is therefore called the Word of the Kingdom as we heard before 2. Inwardly by the power and efficacy of his Spirit Rom. 8. 14. So much of the sense of the words Now to come unto the Instructions to be gathered from them Observ 1 Observ 1. The time is fulfilled that is the full time appointed of God for the coming of the Messiah and for the manifestation of his Kingdom this time is accomplished in that the Messiah is now already come in the Flesh hence gather that God hath appointed a certain time for the fulfilling of all those things which himself hath purposed in his eternal counsel to do or which he hath promised in his Word and in that due time they are and shall be all accomplished God purposed from Everlasting and promised to our first Parents after their fall to send the Messiah and he appointed a certain time for the sending of him and when that time was expired he sent him accordingly So 1 Pet. 1. 20. This is true of all other purposes and promises of God there is a certain time appointed of God for the fulfilling of them and when that time is come they are alwayes fulfilled Eccles 3. 1. To every thing there is a season c. Hab. 2. 3. The Vision is yet for an appointed time c. The Lord appointed a time for the deliverance of the Israelites out of Aegypt and when that time was come the self same day they departed c. as it is said Exod. 12. 41. So the Lord appointed a time for the return of the Jews from Captivity namely after seventy years and at the end of that time Cyrus gave them leave to return Use 1 Use 1. Prescribe no time unto God for the accomplishing of any thing which we desire for our selves or for God's Church but wait untill the time appointed of God himself for the enjoying of every Blessing or good thing which he hath promised in his Word Rest upon his Word for it and be content to waite till the time be fulfilled which God hath set for the accomplishment of it knowing that to be the fittest time which the Lord himself hath determined Remember this in times of trouble and distress though God defer our deliverance yet faint not neither cast away our hope patience and confidence in God but wait still for a happy Issue at the time appointed of God In the mean time live by Faith Hab. 2. remembring that it is one property of Faith not to make haste Isa 28. The Husbandman waiteth long for the fruits of the Earth so let us wait patiently on the Lord for the accomplishment of his Promises and beware of using any unlawful means to bring any thing to pass which we desire or God hath promised Vse 2 Vse 2. To strengthen our Faith to believe and certainly to hope for the Resurrection of our bodies after death and for eternal life in Heaven God having promised these things he hath also appointed a time wherein he will fulfil them c. Observ 2 Observ 2. Christ came in the Flesh at the time foretold by the Prophets Gal. 4. 4. when the Sceprer was gone from the Jews to the Romans and toward the end of Daniel's seventy weeks c. in the last Age of the World Use Use Therefore he is the true Messiah Seek Salvation in him onely Mark 1. 15. And saying The time is fulfilled and the Kingdom of God is at hand c. Octob. 11. 1618. THe third Observation The Kingdom of God is at hand that is the spiritual Kingdom and Government of Christ the Messiah is now begun shortly to be manifested more clearly and plainly than heretofore Doctr. Doctr. Hence then observe this That the spiritual Regiment and Kingdom of Christ was more clearly and evidently to be manifested after his coming in the Flesh than it was before He was then to administer the same in more conspicuous and glorious manner than ever he did before his Incarnation This was foretold by the Prophets Isa 9. 7. and Jer. 23. 5. And it is now and hath been long accomplished since the coming of Christ in the Flesh Quest Quest Wherein stands this so evident manifestation of Christ's Kingdom Answ Answ In these things chiefly 1. In the clear and evident publishing of the Gospel of the Kingdom This Doctrine hath been more evidently preached since the coming of Christ than it was before It hath been preached by Christ himself and by his Apostles and succeeding Ministers far more plainly than it was taught by the Prophets of the Old Testament See 2 Pet. 1. 19. 2. In that Christ being risen from the dead is now actually advanced to heavenly Glory at God's right hand c. 3. In the powring forth of the gifts of the Spirit upon the Church in greater measure and abundance than before the coming of Christ Of this we read Act. 2. Joel 2. and Ephes 4. When he ascended on high he gave gifts
obstinate unbelieving Jews that Herod cut him off betimes to please the Jews Acts 12. 2. And the noyse of St. John's thunder we hear at this Day in reading his Writings so full of zeal and power of the Spirit How mightily doth he thunder against the Hereticks of his time which denied the God-head of Christ This appears in his Gospel and in his Epistles and in his Revelation Simon the Canaamite is called Zelotes as is likely for his zeal in Preaching Use 1 Use 1. Ministers are to labour for this Spirit of zeal and power in Preaching the Word though all cannot be Eliasses having the Spirit doubled on them neither can all be such sons of Thunder as James and John were yet every faithfull Minister must strive to be in some degree a son of Thunder Use 2 Use 2. The People are to pray for their Ministers that they may be Zealous and Powerfull in their Ministery Mark 3. 19. And Judas Iscariot c. Nov. 14. 1619. THe last day we heard three particular Observations gathered from the Evangelists rehearsall of the severall Names of the twelve Apostles Now to proceed to some other Points to be observed from this 19 Ver. where the name of Judas the Traytor is set down who is put in the last place as being the most unworthy of the Twelve and indeed not fit to be numbred among the good Apostles therefore is he set after them all both here and Matth. 10 and Luke 6. In the words we have 1. His proper name Judas 2. Another Name or Title given him for distinction-sake in that he is called Judas Iscariot from the place where he was Born or Lived as is probable 3. He is further described by a speciall note or mark of infamy whereby he is marked out from the rest as a wicked Apostate in that it is said It was he that did betray Christ unto Death But to come to the Instructions to be gathered hence Observ 1 Observ 1. In that wicked Judas the Traytor is numbred here among the twelve Apostles of Christ who were the most excellent and holy Society that ever was on Earth We may learn That there is no Visible Church nor society of Christians in the World so holy but there may be and are ordinarily some Hypocrites and wicked Men among them Joh. 6. penult Have not I chosen you twelve and one of you is a Devil He carryed himself so well in outward shew that our Saviour Christ thought fit to choose him into that holy Fraternity yea and after he was chosen he demeaned himself so well in shew that the other Apostles could not discern his wickedness and therefore when our Saviour told them that one of them should betray him every one suspected himself as much as Judas Matth. 26. 22. and yet all this while he carryed a wicked heart within him So Acts 8. 13. Simon Magus joyned himself in Profession with Philip and the Church in Samaria and yet was a Reprobate And thus it hath ever been in all Societies on Earth whether Churches or Families though never so holy yet some wicked Men and Hypocrites have lurked in them some false Brethren have crept into them In Noah's Family there was some cursed Cham in Abraham's a wicked Ismael in Isaac's a prophane Esau Matth. 13. The Visible Church is a Field in which good Wheat and Tares are sowed and grow till Harvest and like a draw-net which takes as well bad Fish as good So Matth. 3. in the Lord's Corn-floor there is Chaff and Wheat mingled till they be severed by his Fann. 2 Tim. 2. 20. In a great House there are not onely Vessels of Gold and of Silver but also of Wood and of Earth some to honour and some to dishonour So it is in the House of God c. that is in the Visible Church on Earth The like may be said of private Families of Christians which are little Churches In the best there may be and are often some Hypocrites Vse 1 Use 1. To teach us not to marvail or take offence at it when we see Hypocrites and wicked Men mingled with true Christians in the Visible Church though it be never so holy and excellent a Church yet there may be false Brethren in it as in the Church of Galatia Gal. 2. 4. So in those Churches mentioned Revel 2. 3. Chapters The Church of God on Earth is as a Sheep-fold Joh. 10. 1. Now as there may be some Sheep out of the Fold and some Wolves get into it so it is in the Church There may be some true Christians that live out of the Visible Church as among Turks Pagans and Hereticks God may call and save some extraordinarily and so on the other side there may be and are usually some yea many Hypocrites and wicked Ones within the Visible Church We are not therefore to think strange of it when we see it so in any particular Church much lesse forsake the Fellowship of it because of Hypocrites and wicked Ones that lurk in the bosome of it It is the errour and fault of the Brownists to seperate from our Church because of many profane and wicked Ones that live in it unreformed being mingled with good Christians As if the mixture of some rotten Members with the true Members of the Church did or could make it to be no Church Contrà then there should be no true Visible Church at all on Earth c. We must therefore know That there is no absolute perfection of any Church on Earth to be dreamed of onely in Heaven shall the Church be without spot or wrinckle c. In caelo omnes boni in inferno omnes mali in terra boni sunt mali Stella in Luc. 6. pag. 160. Vse 2 Use 2. This also serves for the comfort of religious Masters of Families who fear God truly themselves and are carefull in using all good means that those of their Family may fear God and yet sometimes have against their wills some profane person or persons in their Houses as stubborn and disobedient Children or wicked Servants And this they are not to think strange of nor be discouraged at it remembring that in Christ's own Family there was a Judas Onely they must look to it that they do not countenance nor willingly harbour such wicked Persons in their Families but use all good means to reclaim them and if they will not be reformed then to rid their Families of them if they be such as they can put away as profane Servants lest they bring the Curse of God upon the whole House Vide Augustin Epist 137. Vse 3 Vse 3. This must teach us not to content our selves with this that we live in the Visible Church or have outward society with good Christians and that we are Baptized and come to Church and conform to outward exercises of Religion as they do For all this one may do and yet be no better Christian then Judas He was of
forgiven In these words Lest at any time they should be Converted and their sins should be forgiven them First to clear the words In seeing may see This is an Hebraism implying a frequent earnest or diligent seeing or beholding of a thing And here it is to be understood not of the bodily eyes but of the eyes of the mind and understanding and so it implies a frequent diligent Attention of the mind in observing and considering any thing And not perceive That is not throughly and rightly understand the Doctrine of the Kingdome of God As if our Saviour had said Though they did often and diligently behold mark and consider in their minds the Doctrine of the Word yet they should not be able truely and rightly to conceive and understand the same Hearing they might hear This also is spoken after the Hebrew Phrase implying an often or diligent hearing of the Doctrine of the Word with the outward ears And not understand That is rightly and throughly conceive the true Heavenly Doctrine Lest at any time they should turn Or be converted that is from their sins unto God by true Repentance So much of the sense of the Words Doctr. 1 Doctr. 1. In that our Saviour gives this as a reason why he spake darkly in Parables to the obstinate Scribes and Pharisees that so the Judgment of God might be shewed on them in giving them over to their own willfull blindness and ignorance we may hence gather that it is just with God to give those over unto further blindness and ignorance in Spirituall things who wilfully reject the truth and shut their eyes against the light of it The reason is because by this means he doth punish such and that most severely for their great and hainous sin of willfull contemning his truth The wilfull contempt and rejecting of the Doctrine of the Word of God being a most hainous sin and tending directly to the Dishonour of God therefore it is just with him to punish it with this heavy Judgment of giving over such to their own blindness leaving them in it and so suffering them further and further to blind themselves Thus he dealt with the Scribes and Pharisees as we see here So also with the obstinate Jews in the Prophet Esayes time Esay 29. 10. The Lord powred out upon them the Spirit of Deep sleep and closed their Eyes c. And the Vision of all the Prophets and Seers became to them as the words of a Book Sealed c. So with the Gentiles Rom. 1. 28. And even as they did not like to retain God in their Knowledge God gave them over to a Reprobate mind to do those things which are not convenient So the followers of Anti-christ 2 Thess 2. 10. Because they received not the love of the truth c. For this cause God shall send them strong delusions that they should believe a lye that they all might be damned c. Vse 1 Vse 1. See by this how fearfull and dangerous a sin it is for any wilfully to contemn or reject the Word of God and to say unto him with those Job 21. 14. Depart from us for we desire not the knowledg of thy wayes This is the way to provoke God to give over such to their own wilfull blindness and to suffer them further to blind themselves because they did at first shut their own eyes against the light of the truth shining to them in the Word and in the Ministry of it which is a most fearfull judgment This is for terrour to all contemners of the Word and of the Knowledg of it not caring nor desiring to be Instructed therein but despising the means of Knowledg and Instruction as the reading and hearing of the Word Prayer conference c. Let such fear lest God revenge this contempt of his Word upon them by giving them over to further blindness It is just with him so to do and oftentimes he doth so Do we not see this verified in some that live in places where they have the Word of God ordinarily taught and the Doctrine of it plainly laid open to them and yet in seeing they see not and in hearing hear not c. they remain still as blind and ignorant as ever they were before they had such Teaching yea it may be feared that some the longer they be taught the more ignorant and blind they grow What is the reason of all this Surely this is probable to be one reason because some of these ignorant persons are also contemners of Knowledg and of the means of it not caring for them not esteeming or desiring them as they should therefore God in just Judgment leaves them in this their wilfull ignorance and suffers them to be further hardned in it Seeing they willingly refuse the Knowledg of his Word therefore it is just with him to leave them in ignorance seeing they will not know his will touching the means of their Salvation it is just with him that they shall not know it c. Let such be admonished to consider how fearfull their case is and therefore in time to Repent of their willfull contempt of the Word of God and to pray earnestly unto God that this their hainous sin may be forgiven them and that God may be pleased to open their eyes to see and know his truth Use 2 Use 2. To admonish all to take heed of willfull contemning the knowledg of the Word It is a fearfull thing to live in ignorance of the Word of God but much more fearful to be a despiser of knowledg and a contemner of the means Of all kinds of ignorance this is the worst and most dangerous Joh. 3. 19. This is the condemnation that light is come into the World and men loved darkness rather then light c. If thou willingly shut thy eyes against the light of the Word of God take heed lest God in Justice give thee over to further blindness As it is with those that have the light of their bodily eyes dimmed with a Cataract or bad humour breeding and growing in them if they refuse or neglect the means of curing it their sight groweth worse and worse till at length it be quite put out so those that are spiritually blind if they centemn knowledg and the means of it it is just with God to give them over to more and more blindness and even quite to put out that eye of knowledg which once they had if ever they had any Doct. 1 Doctr. 2. In that it is said that in seeing they should see and not perceive and in hearing they should hear and not understand Hence we may gather That men may often hear the Word outwardly and also diligently mark and observe with their minds the things that are delivered and yet for all that remain in blindness and ignorance of the doctrine taught not truly or rightly conceiving the same Thus it was with the Scribes and Pharisees as we see here though they
c. they hence take occasion to contemn and reject the Doctrine it self which they teach And this is one great and main cause of the contempt of the Gospel and of so little profiting by it in these our dayes Use Use Take heed we be not in this like unto the profane and wicked beware of stumbling thus at the outward quality or condition of the persons of Gods Ministers sent unto us with the Word of Salvation let not this be as a block in our way to hinder and keep us from believing and imbracing the Doctrine it self which they bring to us Therefore let us turn our Eyes from the persons of Gods Ministers and let us especially look at the Doctrine it self which they Preach to us which if it be sound and agreeable to the written Word of God we are to imbrace and yield obedience to it whatsoever the outward quality or Condition of the person be that Preacheth it though he be but a mortall and frail man like our selves and though he be a man of mean outward estate in the World or of mean Parentage Kindred c. The Heavenly Treasure of the Word of God is never the less worth or less to be esteemed though it come to us in Earthen Vessell● as the Apostle speaketh 2 Cor. 4. 7. If a Message be sent to any of us from some great person we look not so much at the person that brings it as we do at the Message it self So when Ministers of the Word Preach the Word of God to us we must not so much have an eye to the outward quality of the persons that Preach as to the Doctrine it self which they deliver the excellency and Divine Authority whereof must move us to imbrace and yield obedience to it Mark 6. 4 5 6. But Jesus said unto them c. Mar. 11. 1620. THe Evangelist having in the former Verse shewed that the People of Nazareth took offence at Christ in regard of his mean Education birth and kindred and were hindred thereby from believing in him and from imbracing his Doctrine Now he setteth down the events which happened upon this their being offended 1. Our Saviour closely reproveth them for taking offence at him and for contemning and rejecting his person and doctrine shewing them the cause of that contempt which was this That he was their Countryman who having heretofore lived and been brought up amongst them for sundry years together was familiarly known to them and therefore they so contemned him And that it was so he proveth by a common and general sentence or proverbial speech then in use as it seemeth in these words A Prophet is not without honour but in his own Countrey c. The summe whereof is this That the true Prophets of God are usually most contemned where they are most familiarly known as among their own Countrymen kindred c. The second event is That our Saviour being so contemned of his Countrymen did work but few Miracles among them Verse 5. 3. That he marvailed at their unbelief Verse 6. 4. That he left them and went round about the Villages teaching A Prophet This word doth often signifie such extraordinary Teachers as were stirred up and immediately called of God to teach the Church and to foretell things to come But here it is to be taken in a more large sense for any ordinary Teacher or Minister of the Church lawfully called to that Office either immediately of God or mediately by the Church Act. 15. 32. Judas and Silas are called Prophets that is Ministers or Teachers of the Church So also we are to take the word 1 Cor. 14. 32. The spirits of the Prophets are subject to the Prophets Is not without honour Is not contemned and vilified or dishonoured But in his own Countrey In the place where he hath been born or brought up and lived In his own house That is in his own family or among those of his natural Stock or Lineage for so the word house is sometimes used as 2 Sam. 7. 18. David thus speaketh What am I O God and what is my house c. And Luke 1. 27. The Virgin Mary is said to be of the house of David that is of the natural race and posterity of David Vide Bezam in hunc locum Now this proverbial sentence uttered here by our Saviour is not so to be taken as if it were generally and absolutely true in all cases for sometimes a Prophet of God may be dishonoured out of his own Countrey among such as are strangers to him and none of his familiar acquaintance or kindred yea this often commeth to pass as experience sheweth And on the other side sometimes a Minister of God may be well respected and honoured even in his own Countrey and among his kindred and so it was with our Saviour himself for although the most of these Nazarites his Countrymen did take offence at him yet there is nothing against it but that we may think some few of them at least did well respect him and his doctrine and believe in him which is the more probable because it is said Verse 5. That he wrought some Miracles among them which it is likely he did for their sakes who did honour him and believe in him And though some of his Kindred also did not so honour him as they should as we heard Chap. 3. 21. where they said of him That he was beside himself yet others of them did truly honour him and believe in him as those Kinsmen of his mentioned in the former Verse James Joses c. Therefore our Saviour's meaning here is to shew not what comes alwayes to passe but what most usually falleth out to the Teachers of the Church that for the most part they are not so much contemned amongst any as amongst their own Countrymen Kindred c. So much of the sense of the words Doctr. 1 Doctr. 1. Here then we learn That good and faithfull Ministers of God are usually most subject to contempt and dishonour in the places where they are most familiarly known as amongst their own Country-men Kindred or those of their own family Our Saviour Christ had experience of this for he was no where so little regarded nor so much vilified as among his own Countrymen of Nazareth as we see here and Luke 4. Though he came twice to preach unto them yet both times he was rejected of them and not only so but they thrust him out of their City the first time he came and would have thrown him headlong down the Hill on which the City stood Luke 4. 29. And as his Countrymen so also some of his Kindred were apt to dishonour him as may appear both by this place and also Mark 3. 21. Joh. 7. 5. In which respect that may be truly said of him Joh. 1. 11. He came unto his own and his own received him not And this also we may see in some other Prophets and Ministers of God
art made partaker of them and hast true Title to them Use the means therefore to attain to this Faith especially the frequent and Conscionable hearing of the Word c. Doctr. 2 Doctr. 2. In that our Saviour wrought some few Miracles at Nazareth for their sakes which did Believe though the most Believed not Hence gather That the unbelief of some cannot prejudice others which Believe nor keep them from being partakers of Christ's benefits Rom. 3. 3. The Apostle sheweth that though some of the Jews did not believe yet their unbelief could not make the Faith of God to be without effect By the Faith of God understand his truth and fidelity in performing his promises of Mercy and Salvation to the Faithfull So the meaning is that the unbelief of some could not hinder others which were believers from being partakers of that Grace and Salvation which God had promised to them in Christ So that the Faithfull are sure to be partakers of Gods mercies in Christ and of all benefits of Christ needfull to Salvation notwithstanding the unbelief of the wicked and Reprobate Vse Use Comfort to true Believers living amongst unbelievers and wicked ones void of Faith the unbelief of such cannot prejudice their Faith nor hinder them from being partakers of the Mercies of God and benefits of Christ So much of the second event or Consequent of the Nazarites being offended at Christ namely his working of so few Miracles there Now follow the two last events ver 6. The one That he marvelled at their unbelief The other That He went round about the Villages Teaching He Marvailed at their unbelief This is mentioned as the cause of his working so few Miracles there because their unbelief made them unfit to be partakers of his Miracles the greatness of which their incredulity is here set forth in that our Saviour is said to have wondred at it Not that he did so wonder at it as if he had bin ignorant of the cause of it as men are wont to admire those things whereof they know not the cause or reason for our Saviour as he was God knew well enough the cause of their unbelief to be the great hardness of Heart unto which they were given over of God but this must be understood of Christ according to his humane Nature onely that as he was man he considering their unbelief did wonder at it and by his admiration shewed the greatness of that sin in them And there was just cause for our Saviour thus to admire the greatness of their incredulity if we consider the excellent and most powerfull means which they had to work Faith in them even the Preaching of Christ and his Miracles wrought before their eyes the excellency of both which themselves were driven to confess and yet these means did not work Faith in them which shews that they were exceedingly and strangely hardned in unbelief Doctr. Doctr. Here then observe this That when any people or persons have excellent and powerfull means of Grace and Salvation vouchsafed them of God and yet are not bettered by them nor any saving Grace wrought in them by such means this discovers great and extraordinary hardness of Heart in such even such hardness of Heart as is to be admired and wondred at This shewed great hardness of heart in the Scribes and Pharisees in that they heard Christ's Doctrine and saw his Miracles which were powerfull means to work good on them and yet they were not bettered by them Therefore our Saviour was grieved for their hardness of heart it was so great as we heard chap. 3. ver 5. The like we may see in Judas and Pharaoh and in those Cities of Chorazin Bethsaida and Capernaum which repented not though Christ Preached and wrought most of his great Miracles amongst them Matth. 11. 20. therefore our Saviour justly upbraided them with their impenitency Use Use See then what a fearfull thing it is for any to live unprofitably under excellent and powerfull means of Grace and Salvation as to live where the Word is plentifully and powerfully Preached in publick and where there is plentifull means of private Reading Conference and the like helps and yet not to profit by such excellent means not to be furthered in sound Knowledg of the Word nor to have any measure of saving Faith and Repentance wrought in them by such means An evident sign of great hardness of Heart and that such are setled upon the Lees of their ignorance unbelief and other sins as the Prophet speaketh Zephan 1. 12. We are to pitty the case of such and to pray for them that God may soften their Hearts by his Spirit that they may be fit to be wrought upon by the means of Salvation And this must also admonish us to look to it that we be not in the number of such as live unprofitably under the excellent and pretious means of Salvation lest we discover our selves to be given over of God unto great hardness of heart which is a most fearfull Judgment 〈◊〉 have cause to pray against more then against any Temporal Plague or Judgment as we heard before ver 2. It followeth And he went round about the Villages c. Because they of Nazareth conremned him and rejected his Doctrine therefore he departed from them and went and Preached in other Villages near adjoyning round about them Observ Observ The Lord doth in Justice punish those that contemn the means of Salvation and profit not by them by taking away those means from them See this handled chap. 5. ver 18. Mark 6. 7. And he calleth unto him the Twelve c. Mar. 18. 1620. NOW we are come unto the second principal part of this Chapter in which the Evangelist layeth down the History of Christ's sending forth of his Twelve Apostles to Preach Where we have to consider 1. The sending of them forth with the diverse Circumstances of it ver 7 8 9 10 11. 2. Their obedience in going forth and in performance of those duties of their Apostolicall Office which they were sent to perform ver 12 13. Touching the sending of them we may consider 1. The person sending Christ together with the Action of sending 2. The persons sent the Twelve Apostles 3. The manner of sending them Two and Two together 4. The qualifying of them for the performance of the Embassage on which they were sent He gave them power over unclean spirits 5. The charge given them at the time of his sending them verse 8. c. The occasion of this sending forth of the Apostles see Matth. 9. 36 c. ad finem Capitis He called them and began to send them forth Having before solemnly chosen and ordained them to this Office of Apostles chap. 3. 14. Now he sendeth them to execute that Office Having hitherto for some good space of time lived with Christ as his unseperable companions seeing his Miracles and being instructed of him in publick and private and so by
love of all sin As it is with a sick body if Physick taken do onely stir and trouble the bad humours and not purge them it is not the better but the worse So if the Conscience be onely troubled for sin c. It followeth ver 15 16. Others said That it is Elias c. Now the Evangelist compareth Herod's false opinion of Christ with the false opinions of others who differed from him in Judgment Where 1. He mentioneth the different conceipts of others ver 15. and then ver 16. he repeateth Herod's opinion shewing how he was grounded in it in that he would not be removed from it though others about him were of different opinions Others said it is Elias c. Luke 9. 8. It was said of some that Elias had appeared and of others that one of the old Prophets was risen again By which words of Luke compared with this place of Mark it appeareth that there were three different Opinions of Christ besides that of Herod 1. Of those that thought him to be Elias 2. That he was one of the old Prophets risen again 3. Or at least That he was a Prophet not inferiour to those ancient Prophets See the like diversity of opinions Matth. 16. 14. Touching the first Opinion we must know That the Jewes in our Saviour's time held this erroneous opinion of Elias the Prophet that he was to return and live again upon earth in Person before the coming of the Messiah which Errour they grounded upon that place of the Prophet Mal. 4. 5. falsly interpreted for whereas the Prophet meaneth that John Baptist should come in the Spirit and power of Elias as appeareth Matth. 17. 12. Matth. 11. 14. Luke 1. 17. they understood him to speak of Elias coming again in his own person how that this was the conceipt of the Jews in our Saviour's time appeareth not only by this but by other places as Joh. 1. 21. Matth. 17. 10. And this Errour they hold also at this day as Buxtorfius a learned man who lived amongst them testifieth See his Book called Synag Jud. cap. 2. and in sundry other places of that Book See also Drusius in Joh. 1. 21. Touching the second Opinion of those that thought him to be one of the old Prophets risen again This they held as it is likely according to that heathenish Errour of the Gentiles That the Souls of the dead do passe into other bodies and so return to live on earth again as before with which Errour also Herod was infected as we have heard before Touching the third Opinion That he was only a great Prophet not inferiour to the ancient famous Prophets this also was a gross Errour for Christ was more than a Prophet and a far more excellent person than any of the old Prophets being indeed the Son of God incarnate and the true Messiah but this which was the truth neither Herod nor any of the rest did conceive or hold Observ 1 Observ 1. Hence gather That the Devil is a great enemy to the true knowledg of Christ labouring all that he can to keep men from it and to hold them in ignorance of Christ and in errours touching his Person and Office This was no doubt one main cause of so many gross Errours which Herod and others held touching Christ and that amongst them all none held the truth The Devil laboured to blind the eyes of their minds that they might not see the truth So it is said of him 2 Cor. 4. 4. that he blinded the eyes of reprobates that the light of the glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ who is the Image of God should not shine unto them Object Object Mark 1. 24. and elsewhere we read that he confessed Christ to be the holy One of God that is the true Messiah therefore it may seem that he is willing that others should know so much Answ Answ He made that profession of Christ in hypocrisie as we have heard not thereby to instruct others in the knowledg of Christ's Person and Office nor to perswade them that he was the true Messiah but rather on the contrary to bring the Person of Christ into disgrace and contempt and to perswade the people that he was not indeed the true Messiah because the Devil the father of lyes affirmed him so to be So that his desire and purpose was no other but to hold the people in ignorance errour and doubting of Christ's Person and Office And thus he hath still laboured in all Ages since to stir up many errours and heresies concerning Christ's Person and Office So at this day among the Papists Reas 1 Reasons 1. He knoweth well how dangerous a thing it is to be ignorant of Christ or to erre in the doctrine of his Person or Office as he is Mediatour forasmuch as there is no salvation to be had without the knowledg of Christ Act. 4. 12. None other name under heaven given among men whereby we must be saved Now none can be saved by him but such as know him aright Joh. 17. 3. This is life eternal that they might know Jesus Christ Now the Devil seeks by all means to hinder mans salvation Reas 2 Reas 2. The Devil beareth extream hatred and malice against Christ knowing him to be his greatest and most deadly enemy and enemy of his Kingdom of darkness and therefore he labours to keep men in ignorance of Christ that so not knowing him they may not believe in him nor be saved by him Use 1 Vse 1. The more the Devil laboureth and bestirreth himself to keep us in ignorance of Christ and to hold us in erroneous conceits of his Person and Offices the more careful had we need be in using all means to be well instructed and grounded in these Doctrines touching Christ and to hold fast the truth of them taking h●ed of all contrary Errours such as are holden and maintained by the Church of Rome and by the Lutherans Remember that it is life eternal to know Christ Jesus aright therefore to be ignorant of him or not to know him aright how dangerous is it This is death eternal to be ignorant of Christ Therefore let not Satan keep us in this dangerous kind of ignorance but use all means to come out of it Think no time too much no pains or cost too great to bestow in getting the excellent knowledg of Christ for which Paul counted all things loss c. Phil. 3. 8. and 1 Cor. 2. 2. he sayes he determined not to know any thing among them save Jesus Christ c. This knowledg is more worth than all other knowledg wisdom and learning in the world therefore seek it above all other and be the more diligent in seeking it because the Devil so laboureth to hide it from us It is not for nothing that he laboureth so much herein but because he knoweth the excellency pretiousness and necessity of this knowledg of Christ for all that will be saved Therefore as he
Now all these things happened to them for our examples and are written for our admonition upon whom the ends of the World are come See Hos 8. 12. As the antient Satutes of the Land which are yet in force did not onely bind those in whose time they were inacted but us c. Use 1 Vse 1. To confute the Anabaptists who reject the Books of the Old Testament as if they concerned not us in these Times contrary to the expresse testimonies of Scriptures before alledged and contrary to that 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture c. Use 2 Vse 2. See how needfull for Christians in all Ages and for Us in these Times to be well acquainted with the Doctrine of the Word of God and to have it dwell in us richly in all Wisdom c. Col. 3. 16. Seeing it doth as neerly concern us to know believe and practise this Doctrine as it did those which lived at the very time when it was first Preached and Written Here then we must be stirred up to the diligent use of all good mean● whereby we may come to be grounded in sound knowledge of the Scriptures especially to attend diligently on the publick Ministery and to joyn therewith private searching of the Scriptures c. Hearing and reading of the Word is as necessary for us now in these Times as ever it was for any that have lived before us since the Scriptures were first written and the Doctrine of it now as neerly concerns us to know believe and practise as it did them Let none be so ignorant or profane as to think that the Precepts Examples Reproofs c. recorded in Scripture do not concern them because written so long ago By these thou must one Day be Judged as well as they Use 3 Use 3. This must teach us in hearing the Word Preached to apply all that is taught unto our selves every Instruction Exhortation Precept Reproof Threatning Promise c. labouring to make some use of all to our own Souls for the beating down of sin in us and the building up of us in Grace towards God's heavenly Kingdom remembring that every Text and Portion of Scripture handled doth neerly concern us as well as those in whose time it was written So also in reading or hearing the Word read we are to apply and make use of all that is read to further us in sound knowledge and Christian practises remembring that all Scripture is profitable and necessary as well for us now as in former times and that whatsoever is written aforetime is written for our Learning c. So much of the manner of alledging this testimony of the Prophet Esay against the Scribes and Pharisees Now follows the matter or substance of the Testimony which contains a sharp censure or reproof of the Jewes in the Prophet's time and of these Scribes and Pharisees in our Saviour's time for two speciall sinnes 1. Hypocrisie in that they made great shew of outward worship but no conscience of inward They honoured God with their Lips when their Heart was far from Him 2. Superstition and Will-worship in that they taught for Doctrines the Commandements of Men where also this their Superstitious Will-worship is further set out by the adjunct or property of it in that they are said To worship God in vain This People This is literally to be understood of those antient Jews which lived in the Prophet Esay's time but prophetically and by way of application it is to be referred also unto these Hypocriticall Pharisees and Scribes which our Saviour here taxeth Honoureth me That is serveth and worshippeth me The effect put for the cause because such as serve God aright do thereby honour Him he accepting that service as an honour done unto Him Yet here we must not understand any true and upright serving or honouring of God but such as was in shew and appearance onely q. d. This People seemeth to honour me or maketh great shew c. With Lips That is with the body and outward Man It is spoken by the figure Synechdoche whereby a part is put for the whole the Lips named for all parts of the Body with which Service is outwardly performed unto God the reason is because the principall parts of outward worship are performed with the Mouth and Lips Quest Quest Doth the Prophet here condemn the outward serving of God with the Body Answ Answ Not simply or absolutely for God requireth that as well as inward worship but so far forth only as this externall worship was severed from the internall of the heart as the words following shew But their Heart is far c. Isa 29. 13. The words are these They have removed their Hearts far from me But there is no difference in the sense onely St. Mark alledgeth them somewhat more briefly than they are found in the Prophet Now by Heart understand the Inner-man which is sometime called the Soul and Spirit comprehending all the faculties and powers thereof as the Understanding Will Affections c. 1 Pet. 3. 4. called the hidden man of the heart Is far from me That is from yielding any true honour service or obedience unto me So much of the sense of the words Doctr. Doctr. Hence we may learn this Point of Instruction That it is the property of Hypocrites to make great shew of honouring God by outward service of the Body when in the mean time they are not carefull to give him the inward worship of their Hearts and Souls They draw near to God with the outward man but their inner-man is far estranged from Him Thus it was with the Hypocriticall Jews in the Prophet Esay's time as he justly complained So Ezek. 33. 31. they were forward to come and sit before the Prophet and to hear him with outward ears but their hearts went after covetousness So the Scribes and Pharisees in our Saviour's time were forward in outward Duties of Religion and of God's worship as Prayer Fasting outward sanctification of the Sabbath c. but their hearts were far estranged from God and were not upright before him in performance of those Duties therefore our Saviour here reproveth this their Hypocriticall serving of God by this testimony of the Prophet Esay Matth. 23. 27. Woe to you Scribes and Pharisees Hypocrites for ye are like unto whited Sepulchers which indeed appear beautifull outward but are within full of dead mens bones and all uncleanness Even so ye also c. Luke 18. That proud Pharisee which went up to the Temple to pray was forward in the outward worship of God honouring God with his Lips by Prayer and Thanksgiving but his Heart was far from God being carryed away with pride and self-conceipt of his own Righteousnesse and therefore he was not justified before God Cain offered Sacrifice but not his Heart to God Judas drew neer to God in outward Duties of his worship as in Preaching Prayer hearing Christ and joyning with him at the eating of the Passover but his
actually sent they ought to hear him Hear This word is in Scripture used diversly especially in a two-fold sense 1. To signify an outward hearing or hearkning with our bodily ears So Mat. 13. 9. Who hath ears to hear let him hear 2. To signify that Obedience which is yielded to those things which we hear with our outward ears when we so hear as to yield Obedience to that which is taught or spoken to us So 1 Sam. 15. 22. To obey is better than Sacrifice and to hearken is better than the Fat of Rams Now in this place we are to take it both these wayes though especially in the latter sense quasi diceret So hear him with your outward ears that withall ye do yield Obedience to that which he shall teach you Him that i● Christ the Son of God who was spoken of expresly in the words going before And in this word Him there is an Emphasis to be marked For by it Christ is in special manner distinguished not onely from Moses and Elias who had a little before appeared with him in the Mount but also from all other Prophets and Teachers of the Church and is preferred before them all So the meaning is that they should not onely hear and obey Christ and his Teaching but they must hear him as a speciall and eminent Prophet and Teacher sent from God yea as the Son of God and true Messiah himself who was the chief and head of all Prophets and Teachers in the Church and to be heard and obeyed above them all Quest Quest Why are the Disciples enjoyned to hear and yield Obedience to Christ's Teaching seeing they had already done so Answ Answ 1. To correct Peter's Errour in being so desirous to have Moses and Elias to continue and dwell there with them in the Mount and withal to comfort him for their departure For by these words is implied that Christ's company was much more to be desired than the company of Moses and Elias and that there was more to be learned of him than by the Teaching or Conference of Moses and Elias yea that his Teaching alone was sufficient without Moses and Elias And therefore both Peter and his fellows are bid to hearken to Christ alone as their best and principal Teacher 2. Though they had already heard and begun to obey Christ's Doctrine yet they are willed still to do the same that is to persevere and continue so to do and the rather because his Doctrine was not easy but hard to be obeyed as being contrary to flesh and blood and an enemy to corrupt Nature as the Doctrine of the Cross and of denying themselvs c. which he taught them a little before The words being thus opened we may from them gather two Points of Instruction 1. That Christ Jesus the Son of God is the chief and principal Prophet or Teacher of the Church 2. That all Christians ought to hear and obey his Teaching Of the first That Christ is the chief and principal Doctor or Teacher of the Church this is here implied when the Disciples are bid to hear him in special manner and as a special Teacher sent of God yea as the chief of all Teachers in the Church And this is one special part of Christ's Office as Mediator That he is called and appointed of God viz. to be the chief Prophet and Teacher of his Church Therefore he is called the Word called also Prophet yea set forth as the most eminent of all Prophets Deut. 18. 15. and Act. 3. 22. To this purpose also is that Mat. 23. 8. One is your Master even Christ c. Hebr. 13. 20. called The great Pastor of the Church Reas 1 Reas 1. He onely hath absolute Power and Authority to teach in his own Name as being Lord of his own Doctrine for which cause he used in his ordinary Teaching while he lived on Earth to speak thus Verily I say unto you c. to shew that he spake and taught in his own Name and by his own Authority Herein he excelleth all other Teachers in the Church who are to teach in the Name of God and of Christ not in their own names Object Object Joh. 7. 16. My Doctrine is not mine but his that sent me Answ Answ He doth not deny simply and absolutely that it was his own Doctrine But 1. That it was not his onely but withal the Doctrine of God his Father who sent him 2. Not his Doctrine as he was Man but as he was God and as Mediator Not a humane but a divine Doctrine Reas 2 Reas 2. He is the most able and sufficient of all other Teachers in the Church being furnished with the greatest measure of gifts and graces above all other Teachers Joh. 3. 34. God giveth him the Spirit not by measure Col. 2. 3. In him are hid all Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge He is called by the Name of Wisdom Prov. 8. 9. Reas 3 Reas 3. He hath Power to ordain and send all other Pastors and Teachers of the Church Ephes 4. 11. When he ascended c. he gave some Apostles some Prophets c. Reas 4 Reas 4. He onely by the Power of his Spirit maketh the Doctrine and Ministry of other Teachers effectuall Quest 1 Quest 1. Wherein stands this Teaching of Christ Answ Answ In making known to his Chuich the Will of God in all things needful to Salvation Joh. 1. 18. No man hath seen God at any time c. The onely begotten Son hath declared him Joh. 15. 15. All things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you Joh. 16. 13. He promiseth his Spirit who should guide them into all truth Quest 2 Quest 2. How doth He execute this Office of Teaching the Church Answ Answ Two wayes 1. Outwardly by his Word and the Ministry of it and that both in his own Person while he lived on Earth and also by all those Pastors and Ministers which he calleth and sendeth to teach and instruct the Church from time to time and that in all Ages of the Church Their Teaching is his Teaching in as much as they teach and preach in his Name and by Authority from him He spake by the mouth of all the Prophets in the Old Testament as by Noah 1 Pet. 3. 19. and by the Apostles 2 Cor. 13. 3. 2. Inwardly by his divine Spirit enlightning the minds of the Elect and inclining their hearts to embrace and yield obedience to that which is taught Thus he opened the Understanding of the Disciples Luke 24. 45. that they might understand the Scriptures And Act. 16. 14. he opened the heart of Lydia Vse 1 Use 1. See God's special love to his Church and his care of the good and Salvation of it in that he hath not onely given his Son to merit and work our Salvation as our Priest but also hath called and appointed him as our Prophet to teach us and to reveal and make known to us the
know the fellowship of Christ's Sufferings c. Observ 2 Observ 2. By comparing these words with the former in that our Saviour having said that John Baptist should restore all things now intimateth that he should suffer many abuses and indignities at the hands of ●en Hence we may gather That such as are called of God to be Instruments of restoring the Church and of reforming abuses in it do usually meet with many Troubles and Afflictions in the pe●formance of that work of restoring and reforming the Church Thus John Baptist being called and sent to be as a Reforme● of the corrupt state of the Church in his time was appointed also to suffer and did suffer many Troubles in the course of his Ministery and in accomplishing that work of Reformation which wa● to be done by him So the true Elias in his time as he was a speciall means of Reforming Religion and the corrupt state of the Church So in performance hereof he suffered many things great Troubles and Persecutions were stirred up against him by Ahab and Jesabel and by the Idolatrous Israelites 1 King 19. Being threatned by Jesabel he was forced to fly into a Wilderness for safety of his Life to live there for a time where he grew weary of his Life as appeareth ver 4. And ver 14. he saies They sought his life to take it away So our Saviour Christ and his Apostles who were also called to be Reformers of the Church did suffer many things in performance of this work So in the Ages since the Apostle● such Christian Magistrates and such Pastors and Ministers of the Church as have been stirred up to be Reformers of Religion and ●f the corrupt state of the Church in their time have in accomplishing that work suffered many and great Troubles and Afflictions Constantine the Great the first Christian Emperour of Rome and the first Restore of Religion and of the decayed state of the Church in his time did go through many Troubles as appeareth in the History of Eusebius So Athanasius and others who withstood the Arian Heresy and laboured the Reformation of the Church in their times c. So Luther Melanthon Calvin c. So Queen Elizabeth of late Famous memory here in England c. Use Vse See that all Christian Magistrates faithfull Ministers and other good Christians who in their Places and Callings do labour to reform abuses and disorders in the Church must make accompt in so doing to meet with many Troubles and Afflictions For thus it hath been usually with those who have most laboured and sought the Reformation of the Church in their times They have suffered much for this cause great oppositions have been made against them by the Devil and his wicked Instruments great Troubles and Persecutions have been raised against them to hinder them in that excellent work of Reforming the Church Therefore every one that in his place sets himself against the abuses of the times and seeks the Reformation of disorders in the Church whether he be Magistrate Minister or other Christian let him look to meet with many Oppositions and Troubles let him be sure the Devil and his Instruments will stir against him and labour to discourage him all they can The Devil knows well that such as seek to reform Abuses and Disorders in the Church do hinder his Kingdom therefore he stirs against them c. Mark 9. 13. But I say unto you that Elias is indeed come and they have done unto him whatsoever they listed as Jan. 14. 1626. it is written of him THE third and last part of Christ's Answer to his three Disciples touching the coming of Elias which contains a discovery and confutation of the Errour of the Scribes who held that the Prophecy of Malachi touching the coming of Elias was to be understood of the coming of Elias the Prophet in his own person to live on Earth again before the coming of the Messiah and consequently that that Prophecy was not yet fulfilled nor Elias as yet come Now this grosse Errour our Saviour here discovereth and confuteth by avouching the contrary Truth viz. That Elias was already come c. In the words consider 1. The manner of our Saviour's avouching this matter against the Scribes In his own Name and Authority I say unto you 2. The matter avouched concerning Elias or John Baptist which is two-fold 1. Touching his coming That he was already come 2. Touching those things which he was to Suffer at his coming They had already done to him whatsoever they listed 3. The Ground or Reason of the coming of John Baptist viz. The Prophecy of the Scripture which went before of it As it is written of Him Of the first Observe a difference between the manner of Christ's teaching while he lived on Earth and the teaching of all other Pastors and Teachers of the Church whether in the old or new Testament In that Christ taught in his own Name as being Lord of his own Doctrine whereas all other Teachers teach in the Name and by the Authority of another viz. In the Name of God and of Christ who calls them and sends them to teach Of this see before Chap. 3. ver 26. Of the second The matter here avouched or affirmed by our Saviour touching Elias that is John Baptist 1. That he was indeed come already 2. That they had done unto him c. Elias Not Elias the Prophet in his own proper person but John Baptist who is called Elias by the Prophet Malachi because he was to come in the Spirit and Power of Elias and to resemble him sundry wayes as we have before heard Is indeed come Hath been already sent of God into the World or hath already been born and lived in the World and hath executed his ministeriall Office of preaching and baptizing and hath also begun the work of restoring the corrupt state of the Church as was appointed for him to do More is to be understood than is expressed Observ Observ In that our Saviour doth here discover and confute the Errour of the Scribes touching Elias his coming by avouching the quite contrary unto that which they taught Hence we may learn That it is the duty of Pastors and Teachers of the Church not onely to teach true and sound Doctrine but also to discover and confute the contrary Errours and corrupt Doctrines of false Teachers So did our Saviour Christ confute the Errours of the Scribes and Pharisees as Matth. 5. Their corrupt expositions of the Law So the Apostles by their preaching and writings did confute the Errours and corrupt Doctrines of false Teachers And to do this is one speciall part of the Office of all Pastors and Ministers of the Church Tit. 1. 9. They must be able not onely to exhort by sound Doctrine but also to convince the Gain-sayers And to stop the mouths of false Teachers as it is said afterward ver 11. Vse Use See how needfull for Ministers of the Word to
permission yet none at all over our Souls c. Vse 2 Use 2. See that we are not to judge any to be rejected or forsaken of God though they be much abused disgraced and persecuted by the Wicked in this Life For God often permitteth the Wicked thus to have their Wills of his dearest Saints and Servants in respect of their bodies and outward estate c. And if we should so judge we should condemn the holy Prophets Apostles Martyrs yea Christ himself Observ 3. See here the extream rage and malice of the Wicked against the true Saints and Servants of God in that they do not onely hate them and set themselves against them as Enemies but also do desire and seek to have their Wills of them that is to satisfy their own malicious Minds and Wills in abusing and wronging them all manner of wayes so far as God permitteth them They do not desire or care to do what is just and equall to them but what is pleasing to their own malicious Wills to do even what they list unto them that is to spend the utmost of their malice upon them and against them Thus Herod and Herodias did even what they listed to John Baptist they even fulfilled their own malicious Wills against him and upon him in imprisoning and putting him to Death Psal 12. 4. David's Enemies resolve with themselves that with their Tongues they will prevail against him c. So the wicked Jews though they could all edge no just cause unto Pilate why our Saviour should be condemned and crucified yet to satisfie their own malicious Wills against him they would needs have it done that by this means they might wreck their malice and envy upon him to the full So the persecutors of the Church c. And such is the malice and outrage of the wicked often against the Saints of God that they desire nothing more than to satisfie their own malicious Minds and Wills by offering unto them the greatest wrongs and abuses which they are any way able Vse Vse This should move us to acknowledge and magnify the goodness of God in curbing and restraining this extream rage and malice of the Wicked against his Saints and not suffering it so far to break out as otherwise it would It is God's great mercy to set bounds and limits to this malice of the Wicked which of it self is boundless having no measure For although the Lord do suffer the Wicked sometimes to satisfie their own Wills and malicious Desires and Purposes against his faithfull Servants yet he doth not alwayes suffer this neither doth he at any time absolutely give up his Servants unto the malicious Will of their Enemies but he so limiteth and restraineth the malice of the Wicked that they go no further in shewing the same against his Saints than he doth think good to permit and suffer them Were it not for this mercy of God in restraining the outragious malice of the Wicked they would soon devour and utterly root out the true Church of God from the face of the Earth Let us therefore bless God and be truly thankfull for this his goodnesse and mercy Now followeth the Ground or Reason of John Baptist's coming viz. The testimony of the Scriptures which fore-told it As it is written of him That is As it was fore-told or testifyed before of him in the writings of the Prophets in the old Testament Now these words seem to have relation chiefly to the coming of Elias or John Baptist mentioned by our Saviour in the first words of this verse and not so much unto those things which he had suffered at the hands of his wicked Enemies For we do not read in the Prophets of any expresse mention made of the Sufferings of John Baptist which he should suffer at his coming but his coming we find to be expresly foretold by the Prophet Malachi Chap. 4. 5. Behold I will send you Elijah the Prophet c. that is John Baptist in the Spirit and Power of Elias c. Observ Observ In that our Saviour here affirmeth that the Prophecy of Malachi touching the coming of Elias or John Baptist was already fulfilled and accomplished that John Baptist was indeed come and had fulfilled his Ministery as was written of him c. Hence gather That the Scriptures are the true and undoubted Word of God and not Men's writings only Inasmuch as the Prophesies contained in them concerning things to come have been truly and certainly fulfilled in their due time though many hundred years after as here the Prophecy of John Baptist his coming before Christ c. So also the Prophecy of Christ's coming in the Flesh and of his Sufferings The Prophecy of calling the Gentiles by the preaching of the Gospel The Prophecy of the Jews Captivity in Babylon and of their Deliverance by means of Cyrus King of Persia after seventy years The Prophecy also of the Destruction of Hierusalem and the Temple by the Romans fore-told by our Saviour Matth. 24. All these and many other have been already fulfilled in their due time though long after they were fore-told which is one speciall evidence to prove the Scriptures to be the true and undoubted Word of God indited by his Spirit for none but God himself could fore-tell those things which are fore-told in Scripture and which have been hitherto fulfilled so certainly in their due time This therefore must strengthen our Faith in this main Point touching the truth of the Scriptures to be the very Word of God himself and cause us undoubtedly to believe all things contained in them And in particular it serves to strengthen our Faith touching the fulfilling of those Prophesies of Scripture which are yet unful●●lled as namely touching the calling of the Jews the destruction of Antichrist the generall Resurrection of Bodies and coming of Christ at the last Day to Judgment c. Mark 9. 14 15. And when He came to his Disciples c. Janu. 28. 1626. HEre followeth the second general part of this Chapter containing the History of a great Miracle wrought by our Saviour in curing a lunatick Child and in casting the Devil out of the same Child being possessed therewith This History is laid down from the 14. to the 30. verse of this Chapter In which we have to consider three things 1. The Antecedents or Occasions of this great Miracle which went before and made way unto it ver 25. 2. The manner of our Saviour's proceeding in the working of the Miracle ver 26 27. 3. The Event or Consequent which followed ver 28 29. Of the first The occasions of the Miracle are sundry 1. Our Saviour's returning or coming back to his Disciples after his Transfiguration in the Mount together with some speciall Events or Accidents which happened at his return as that he found a great Multitude with his Disciples and the Scribes questioning with them c. ver 14 15. 2. His questioning with the Scribes touching the
own shame and filthiness Use 2 Use 2. This should cause in us a true hatred loathing and detestation of all sin being so foul odious and filthy a thing as it is in the sight of God even the most loathsom thing in the World polluting and defiling the Devil and making him so foul a Spirit and not onely him but Mankind and all the Creatures of God since Man's Fall c. How ought we to loath and detest that which is so foul and unclean and the cause of so much Uncleanness and Filthiness in the Creatures of God This should cause us to hate and loath Sin with the greatest hatred above all things in the World and to shew our true hatred by our careful avoiding it and all occasions of it Jude ver 23. Hate the very Garment spotted with the Flesh Ephes 5. 3. As for Fornication Covetousness c. let them not be once named Shewing how far we should hate and shun sin so far as not to name or mention it without detestation We naturally loath and abhor all outward Filthinesse and Uncleanness whatsoever as stinking Myre or Dirt noysom Carrion loathsom Diseases in Man or Beast how much more shoul we loath and abhor sin which is more foul and odious before God than any outward filthiness in the World How careful should we be to keep our selves from the defilements of all sin in our thoughts words and actions of our life We are very careful to keep our bodies clean and pure yea our very Germents and the Cups and Platters we drink and eat our meat in and the smallest defilement in these is offensive to us Oh how much more shoul we keep our Souls and Conscience from being defiled with guilt and contagion of sin which is much more hurtful and dangerous and harder to be purged away than any outward defilement of the Body or Garments or of the Cup and Platter c. Use 3 Use 3. This should also teach us to refrain and shun the company and society of such as love and delight in Sin lest we be defiled and infected with the contagion of their sins and wickedness 2 Cor. 6. 17. Come out from among them and touch not the unclean thing c. If we know one to be infected with the Plague or some other noysom Disease how careful are we to shun his company Much more should we be to shun the society of profane Persons c. Prov. 23. 20. Be not amongst Wine-bibbers or riotous Eaters of Flesh c. Eph. 5. Have no fellowship with unfruitful works of darkness c. Observ 2 Observ 2. See that such as do defile themselves with practice of sin living and continuing in it without Repentance do resemble the Devil himself and are like unto him who is in Scripture called a foul and unclean Spirit for this very Reason because he doth continually practise sin and defile himself therewith Therefore such as do thus live in sin defling their Souls and Bodies therewith do hereby make themselves like unto Satan that unclean and foul Spirit expressing his Image as Children do of their Parents Joh. 8. 44. Ye are of your Father the Devil c. Zach. 13. 2. the false Prophet is called an unclean Spirit because he doth resemble the Devil in wickedness Vse Use To admonish every one of us to take heed of defiling our selvs with sin and especially of living and continuing in it lest we discover and shew our selves to be like unto Satan that foul Spirit and lest we shew our selves to be his Children by expressing his Image in our life and practice Contra labour and strive unto holiness and purity in all our carriage and conversation that we may shew forth the Image of God and so approve our selve to be his Children Observ 3 Observ 3. Seeing the Devil is such an unclean and foul Spirit this teacheth us That we should abhor all Communion and Fellowship with him having nothing to do with him lest ●e do pollute and defile us with the contagion of his own filthiness Especially this should cause us to abhor and detest all his wicked suggestions and temptations which he doth at any time offer to our minds and by which he laboureth to entise us to sin All such wicked motions we are to abhor as coming from Satan the unclean Spirit and to shew our detestation of them by resisting them at first and labouring to repel them and cast them out of our minds not reasoning or parlying with the Devil as Eve did lest we be deceived by him as she was Jam. 4. 7. Resist the Devil and he shall flee from you And Ephes 4. 27. Give not place to the Devill viz. by yielding to his suggestions c. Remember who is the Author of such sinful motions arising in our minds even Satan that soul and unclean Spirit Now such as the cause is such must the effects needs be Satan being so ●oul a Spirit his suggestions and temptations must needs be foul and unclean and therefore as we profess hatred against the Devil himself so shew it by abhorring and resisting his suggestions and temptations and not yielding to the same Some say they hate the Devil and think they have nothing to do with him because he doth not appear to them in bodily shape but the Truth is if thou love and embrace his sinful motions which he suggesteth to thee and givest entertainment to them thou dost not truly hate him but rather lovest and likest well of him and thou hast to do with him though he appear not to thee in a bodily shape Therefore take heed and beware of loving or being delighted at any time with such evil motions and suggestions of this foul Spirit and on the contrary labour by all means to resist them as by Faith Prayer and by the Word of God And do this betimes even at the very first offering and suggesting of such evil motions before they settle in they heart and mind for then will it be much harder to cast them out Now followeth the Rebuke it self with which our Saviour rebuked the Devil which was sharp and severe as the original Word here used doth imply and as hath been shewed before And by this sharp rebuke our Saviour shewed his indignation and displeasure against the foul Spirit Observ Observ The love and goodness of Christ Jesus toward Mankind in that he doth for our sakes so sharply rebuke or reprove the Devil which is the main Enemy of Mankind and shew himself offended at him for his malice and rage against us So here by this sharp rebuking of the foul Spirit in this Child he shewed his indignation and displeasure against him for his malice and cruelty shewed hitherto against the Child This shews how much Christ is grieved for the miseries of Mankind and how much he desireth our good and happiness in that he doth shew himself so much grieved and offended at the Devil for seeking our hurt
knowledge of the Word of God and of the Doctrines of Christian Religion taught therein Though they be ignorant as yet in some necessary Points of Faith yet if they have but some degree of knowledge in those Points that are fundamentall and most necessary to Salvation and do make conscience to practice those things they know already there may be true sanctifying grace in them and consequently they may be good sound Christians Nevertheless this must not make any secure or careless of getting more knowledge in the Word of God But on the contrary they must use all good means to grow therein See Perk. Tom. 1. pag. 128. And pag. 597. touching implicit Faith Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the Disciples being ignorant of Christ's Resurrection did question and reason together about the same We may gather That it is a good and profitable course for Christians to confer and reason together by mutuall questioning one with another about those Points of Christian Religion whereof they are yet ignorant or doubtfull A speciall means to increase knowledge and to come to further resolution in matters of Faith Thus did the three Disciples in this place So Luke 24. the two Disciples that journyed from Jerusalem to Emmaus talked and reasoned together by the way touching the Resurrection of Christ and the thing which happened at the time of it So the Woman of Samaria conferred and questioned with her Acquaintants in the City concerning Christ whether he were not the Messiah c. Joh. 4. 29. Vse Use To move and perswade us to inure and accustom our selvs to this practise of conferring and reasoning together and mutuall questioning one with another upon all good occasions touching matters of Faith and Religion especially touching those Points which we are yet ignorant of or doubtful and unresolved in them Great is the profit and benefit of such conference especially for the increase of our knowledge and setling of our Judgment in matters of Faith and Religion For experience teacheth that as in all Arts and Trades they are usually the most expert and skilfull who use most to conferr with others and to ask questions about the mystery of their Trade So also it is in Christian Religion they are usually the most skilfull and best grounded in sound knowledge there who are most forward and frequent in conference with others about the same Besides that such holy conference is a speciall means to shut out and banish profane idle and unprofitable conference c. See then that it is a matter to be lamented now adayes that such religiou● conference is so little used among Christians and that in stead thereof the greatest part give themselves wholly either to talk of the World or else to worse communication yea even upon the Sabbath-day c. Mark 9. 11. And they asked him saying Why say the Scribes that Elias must first come Octob. 29. 1626. OF the first Consequent of Christ's Transfiguration ye have heard The charge given by Him to the three Disciples to conceal the matter till after his Resurrection together with their obedience c. Now followeth the second Consequent viz. A Question moved by the same three Disciples to Him concerning the Opinion or Doctrine of the Scribes touching the coming of Elias and our Saviour's Answer to their Question laid down ver 11 12 13. 1. To speak of his Disciples Question ver 11. 2. Of Christ's Answer ver 12 13. Of the first They asked him saying Why say the Scribes c The occasion of this their Question seems to be two-fold 1. Our Saviour having many wayes testified and proved himself to be the Son of God and true Messiah and the Apostles themselves having also before confessed him so to be hereupon they wondered how the Doctrine of the Scribes could be true that Elias should come and live again upon Earth in his own person before the coming of the Messiah and therefore they move this Question to be resolved further q. d. If thou be the true Messiah as thou hast sufficiently declared thy self and as we believe and have confessed thee to be then why is not Elias yet come again to live here on Earth according to the Doctrine of the Scribes A second occasion of their moving this Question as appeareth Matth. 17. ver 9 10. was this That our Saviour immediately before had made mention of his Resurrection from the Dead as a matter not long after to be fulfilled Now although they did not yet comprehend the mystery of his Resurrection but were ignorant thereof as we heard before ver 10. yet it is most likely that from the words of Christ they gathered that at the time of his Resurrection the Glory and Majesty of his Kingdom should begin to be more fully manifested now because the Scribes taught and held that Elias was first to come and live on Earth again in person before the coming and manifestation of the Kingdom of the Messiah therefore they demand of Christ How this Doctrine and Opinion of the Scribes could stand with those words which he had newly uttered touching the manifestation of his Kingdom and Glory at the time of his Resurrection Quest Quest But why did not the Disciples before this time move this Question to Christ seeing they did before this believe him to be the Messiah and he had also before told them of his Resurrection which was to be shortly fulfilled Answ Answ 1. Because now by the Transfiguration of Christ they were more certified then before that he was the true Messiah and therefore did the more doubt of the Doctrine of the Scribes touching the coming of Elias 2. Because they were now newly put in mind of this doubt by the sudden appearing and vanishing away again of Elias at the time of Christ's Transfiguration Note that though this Opinion be attributed to the Scribes as chief Teachers yet it was the common errour of the Jews The Scribes Touching these see before who they were c. viz. One sort of those who were Authorized and Called to the publick Office of Reading and Expounding the Law of God to the Jews in their Synagogues called sometimes Lawyers See Chap. 1. 22. and Chap. 7. 1. That Elias must first come That is return to live upon Earth again in his own person before the coming of the Messiah and not onely that he must come and live on Earth again but that he should at his coming be a means to restore the corrupt state of the Church for this also the Scribes taught as may appear by Christ's Answer to the Question of the Disciples Now this erroneous Doctrine and Opinion of the Scribes was grounded upon the mis-understanding of that place of the Prophet Malachi Chap. 4. ver 5 6. where the Lord promiseth to send Eli●ah the Prophet before the great and dreadfull Day of the Lord c. Which Prophecy the Scribes understood literally of the coming of Elias in his own person again whereas it
is meant of John Baptist who should be the fore-runner of Christ and should come in the Spirit and Power of Elias as is said Luke 1. 17. and as our Saviour himself doth interpret the place after as we shall hear See also Matth. 11. 14. Like to this errour of the Scribes is that of Papists touching the coming of Henoch and Elias three years and an half before the end of the World Grounded upon the false interpretation of that place Rev. 11. 3. Observ 1 Observ 1. That Christians may be well grounded in the true Faith and Doctrine of Christ and yet not able to answer such doubts and difficulties as may arise or be objected by enemies against the Truth As here the Disciples of Christ were grounded in the truth of Christ's Person and Office being throughly perswaded that he was the true Messiah and yet they were not able to answer to the contrary Objections of the Scribes nor to convince or disprove their Errors This is matter of comfort for such as do hold the sound Truth in main matters of Faith and Religion by warrant from the Word of God being able from thence to prove the same though they be not able by reason of their ignorance of some places of Scripture to answer and confute the contrary Doubts Objections which do arise or which are alledged against the Truth by Hereticks and Sectaries as Papists Anabaptists Brownists c. Though it is a matter necessary to Salvation for every Christian to understand and believe the Truth in fundamental points of Faith yet is it not of like necessity for every one to be able to confute the contrary Errours or to answer all contrary Doubts and Objections of others against the Truth Ignorance in the main and fundamentall Truths and positive Doctrines of Faith doth prejudice the Salvation of a Christian but unability to answer and confute all contrary Errours and Objections is not prejudicial to the Salvation of any And yet nevertheless this hinders not but that every Christian should labour for as much knowledge in the Scriptures as is possible that so he may not only hold the Truth but be able also in some measure at least to answer and confute the contrary Errours c. Observ 2 Observ 2. In that the Disciples being doubtful in this matter and not able to resolve themselves do propound their Doubt unto Christ their Master to be resolved by him not trusting herein to their own Wit Knowledge or Judgment we may hence gather what is fit for us to do in such Questions Doubts or Controversies of Faith and Religion wherein we are not able to resolve our selves viz. To propound them unto others that have more Knowledge and Judgment than our selves and to seek Resolution from them but especially we are to seek to Christ that is to his Word and Ministers Malach. 2. 7. The Priests lips should keep Knowledge and they should seek the Law at his Mouth c. The Disciples used to go to Christ for Resolution in their Doubts in matters of Faith whensoever they could not resolve themselves As Chap. 4. 10. when they could not understand his Parables they went to him in private and asked him the meaning of them So Mat. 24. 3. when they were doubtful about the time of the Destruction of Jerusalem and of Christ's coming and the end of the World they propounded their doubts to Christ So should we in all our doubts seek to Christ that is to his written Word c. withal seek to him by Prayer Observ 3 Observ 3. In that the Scribes being men of great place and Office amongst the Jews did hold and teach this grosse Errour touching the personal coming of Elias we learn that no outward Calling or Office in the Church though never so great doth priviledge or exempt men from Errours in matters of Faith and Religion but such as are of highest Place and Calling in the Church may erre and have erred in matters of Faith So the Scribes and Pharisees though men of great Place and Calling in the Church of the Jews in our Saviour's time yet were tainted with many gross and dangerous Errours in matters of Faith in so much that our Saviour was fain to warn his Disciples to beware of the Leaven of their Errours Ut supra Chap. 8. 15. They erred grosly in their Expositions of the Law as may appear Mat. 7. 5. and Matth. 23. They erred also as grosly in their Opinions of Christ of his Doctrine and Miracles as we have often heard before So also did the High-Priests and chief Priests insomuch as they all conspired together with the other Jews to put Christ to death Joh. 11. 47. Neither is this true onely of those which were open Enemies of Christ but even of the Apostles themselves For although as Apostles in execution of their Office of Preaching and Writing the Books of the New Testament they could not erre being immediately inspired by the Holy Ghost yet in the particular matters of Faith when they were left to themselves and not enlightned or guided by the Holy Ghost they were subject to Errour and did erre grosly As for example In supposing Christ's Kingdom to be earthly accompanied with temporal Glory and Prosperity as appeareth Act. 1. 6. it was the common Errour of all the Apostles So Act. 10. 14. Peter himself erred in a matter of Faith touching the Calling of the Gentiles and touching the abrogating of the ceremonial Law about the distinction of clean and unclean meats And if it were thus with the Apostles how much more with all their Successours c. Hence is it that the most excellent of the ancient Fathers which were of highest place and dignity in the Church had every one their Errours So those of latter times Luther Calvin c. Use 1 Vse 1. To convince the Pride and Arrogancy of the Pope of Rome holding himself to be priviledged from Errour in matters of Faith by vertue of his Office But herein he doth arrogate to himself a Priviledge above all Bishops and Pastors of the Church that ever were before him yea above the Apostles themselves and that without all ground from the Word of God yea contrary to the same Use 2 Vse 2. For admonition to such as are of highest Place and Calling in the Church not to presume too much upon the dignity of their Calling as if this could exempt them from Errour in matters of Faith but be humble-minded and to pray and seek to God continually for the light and direction of his Holy S●irit to lead them into all necessary truth and to preserve them from contrary Errours For otherwise if God leave them to themselves they may fall into as gross and dangerous Errours as any other c. Use 3 Vse 3. This must teach us not to tye our selves to the Judgment or Opinions of men in matters of Faith not to build our Faith and Religion upon men though of never so high