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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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that many who now stand not in the last ranks of professors if times should serue would play but an Hazaels part or stand at open defiance of the truth if once the chaffie profession should be blowen away no man euer saw the change and alteration of religion but he saw also this truth verified The third point in the words is the miserable condition of the hypocrite He is an abhominable person Where note that men of corrupt mindes taking vpon them the names of Christians and doing the works of Atheists are worthely abhorred of God and if they could be discerned ought to be an eyesore to men who should not with patience behold them They are abhominable to God which appeareth both 1. in their persons 2. their actions 3. their punishment For their persons they are but halfe Christians neither hote nor cold and therefore the Lord cannot digest them compared to cakes but halfe bakte Hose 7.10 and not turned on the other side below they are hote that is either in their owne superstitions or in smaller trifling matters or else in forme and outward appearance they seeme so zealous as though the zeale of Gods house would consume them but aboue in matter of spirit and truth in the inner man in the soule and heart remaine vnbaked impenitent vnturned the fire of the spirit hath not once touched them and so they remaine a mixt lump still neither hote nor cold Seeing therfore they are such as withdraw their best part from God the soule of God can take no pleasure in them Their actions although neuer so good in themselues neuer so specious vnto others neuer so behoofull to the societie where they liue yet are abhominable vnto God yea in their most deuout seruices they doe nothing but as Ephraim compasse the Lord with lyes and deceit Hose 11.12 Their punishment sheweth them to be euery way abhorred of God for as men deale with things they hate so the Lord 1. casteth them out of his sight Iob. 13.16 The hypocrite shall not come before him the workers of lies shall not enter within the walls of that holy Citie yea sometimes they are cast out of his presence as Caine was euen out of the visible Church as they are euer out of the inuisible to shew that they shall neuer be endured hereafter 2. Destroieth them for their destruction from the Lord sleepeth not but shall surprise them perhaps while they are in the bodie as Ananias and Saphirah but certenly hereafter and the damnation of such is no ordinarie damnation but a more ample and abundant iudgement is reserued for them then others and it is worthy obseruation that when the holy Ghost would rouse vp the slouthfull seruant he threatneth him his portion with hypocrites Matth. 24.51 and for both together it is said Matth. 13.41 that the Angels shall gather out of Christs kingdome all that offend and cast them into a furnace Ioh. 15.6 those that abide not in Christ though they cleaue a long time to the visible Church yet are seperated from the true inuisible Church and cast out like withered branches and men gather them and cast them into the fire how shall then such abhominable persons in Gods eyes avoid the damnation of hell it is almost an impossible thing for such a viperous brood of professed hypocrites euer to be saued And ought not such persons also to be an abhomination to good men in whose eyes euery vile person ought to be contemned yes surely could we discerne them or God discouering them we should be affected towards them as Elisha was towards Iehoram who in his straitnesse could seek to Gods Prophet and otherwise to Baal as the Lord of hostes liueth were it not that I regard the presence of Iehosaphat I would not haue looked towards thee nor seene thee Vse 1. If these be the notes and this the estate of an hypocrite then must it needs be very hard to know who is an hypocrite because it is a lurking sinne and so masked as there is litle yea often no outward difference betweene the sound and vnsound and consequently it cannot but be verie dangerous to lay this imputation vpon any man till the time least we iudge our brethren rashly and condemne the iust which is as odious a sinne as the iustifying of the wicked And this is rather to be noted because it is become so rise a practise to range euery professor vnder this title and marke him with this blacke cole of hypocrisie But as it is true that an hypocrite must be a professor so is it false that euery professor must be an hypocrite And as for all other notes here obserued or elsewhere in Scripture they are such as whereby the owne heart of a man and his owne spirit within himselfe may iudge of himselfe rather then the heart or eye of another man Many are so like vnto the deuill that they make no bones of accusing the godly as Satan did Iob of hypocrisie beeing led by that same spirit which is an accuser of the brethren but not by the spirit of God which is the spirit of loue which thinketh no euill but hopeth all things euen the best of the worst which is not iudging neither dare it enter into the counsell of God nor iudge the person of another mans seruant who standeth or falleth to his owne Lord which is so farre from carping at or misconstruing things well done in appearance as that maketh the best and giueth most fauourable construction of things and actions which are in appearance euill as well knowing that the searching of the heart belongeth to the maker of it and that no man can know with what intention vpon what grounds or causes this or that is done by another And much lesse yet doth that spirit of Christ which vseth not to quench smoaking flaxe but cherisheth euen good shewes as in the young man discourage better proceedings by deeming those who exercise themselues most diligently in the courses prescribed by the word the most worthy to be abhorred of God and man And yet where can a man goe but he shall meete with the spirit that beareth rule in the word which conceiueth not speaketh not so bitterly against whooremongers theeues drunkards c. as against many sound hearted professors of Christ and of his truth thus with the wicked Iewes preferring Barrabas before Christ himselfe Oh that men knew what they did and then would they not thus crucifie the Lord of glorie in his seruants who will fearefully reuenge such indignitie done against them When Dauid sent his seruants to Hanun to visit him and he euill entreated them vsing them as spies and not as visitors sent from a freind how hotly doth Dauid prosecute the reuenge of their wrongs he destroied seauen hundred charrets and slew fortie thousand horsemen beside the forte insomuch as he forced other Kings to make peace with him how much more will the Lord more
from them but as by the learned it is called an Abridgment of all Pauls Epistles so is it fraught with such varietie of precepts sitted to all sorts sexs ages and conditions of men as whatsoeuer he hath in all his Epistles more largely handled the same he seemeth to haue summarily reduced into this one wherein as in a mappe or modell he would deliuer his whole spirit stile and vnderstanding in the doctrine of saluation And which he would leaue to the Church as a manuall or compendious summe of all Christian religion to the end that Christians beeing hence instructed in the matter of faith and manners might he made not only wise to saluation but profitable and fit for the place which God hath in any of the societies of 1. Church 2. Common-wealth 3. Familie assigned them vnto For if in any hee enlarge the doctrine of mans miserie by sinne or magnifie the doctrine of the Gospel and mans diliuerance from sinne If in any he cleare the doctrine of free iustification of faith alone or enforce the doctrine of good workes the fruites of that faith If in any he largely propound either such duties as belong to publike persons as namely the Magistrates and Ministers or such offices as are fitted to the seuerall conditions of priuate men If in any he prouoke to the practise of Christian curtesie and kindnesse or else if neede require of Christian seueritie and sharpnesse surely in this Epistle he doth with such admirable plainnes and shortnesse all these as no other nor all the other shew him a more skillfull workeman then this doth But accounting it follie to paint a pearle I will rather now giue some tast and reason of that I haue done as also remooue some scruples which may otherwise perhappes be mooued against it Gold lyeth not vpon the face but in the bowells of the earth and the richer any minerall is the more industrious hath nature beene to laid it vp in the deepest vaines Euen so considering that the price of the wisedome of God cannot be found to which the purest gold of Ophir nor all pearles are to be compared we may not thinke that the Lord is so prodigall of it or carelesse as to leaue it abroad for euery stranger that passeth by to take vp with an idle hand or to trample vnder his wandring feete but that hee hath disposed it as men doe their treasures which they hide and locke in their surest coffers and that vnder their eye And were it not so needlesly should we be commanded to seeke for her as for siluer and search for her as for treasures vpon which condition only it is couenanted that we shall vnderstand the feare of the Lord and find the knowledge of God For howsoeuer we may not ascribe darkenesse and obscuritie vnto the Scriptures vnlesse we will say that the Lord hath spoken something which he would not haue vnderstood and also falsifie that of the Apostle who compareth the word of the Prophets which of all parts of the Scriptures are the darkest to a light shining in a darke place yet the wisedome of God would haue not all but some places more difficult to our darke vnderstanding not only for the dazeling of the eyes of the worst who neuer care to know or comprehend any of these mysteries but that the best also might 1. see their owne dulnesse of conceit in heauenly things so to keepe them low in their owne eyes as who cannot attaine such an high knowledge of themselues 2. be stirred vp to more diligent studie reading hearing meditation and prayer that by this continuall exercise in the word they may profit and proceed in the knowledge of God and in the vnderstanding of these mysteries which are admirable to the Angels themselues 3. make so much the more both of the word and the ministerie of it the Lord foresaw that the things that are easie we easily contemne and that things lightly come by are lightly set by That any part of this booke is clasped and sealed it is in regard of our naturall blindnesse who cannot behold the brightnes of the sunne of righteousnes shining in the Scriptures But that this naturall corruption might not raigne in the elect for their hurt the Lord Iesus hath left to his Church the gift of interpretation which is as the key to open this closet of God and hath stirred vp faithfull men from time to time endued by his spirit who in attentiue and diligent reading of the Scriptures by the helpe of 1. Arts as Grammer Rhetorike Logicke Philosophie c. 2. knowledge of the proprieties of words and phrases of the tongues wherein they were written 3. comparing of Scriptures with themselues antecedents with consequents obscure places with plainer and figuratiue speaches with more proper 4. soundnesse of iudgement in the agreement and analogie of faith 5. diligent obseruation of predictions with their accomplishments of types with their truth and of the historie of the Church which it selfe is a commentarie of Scripture haue beene themselues enabled to vnderstand as also partly by liuely voice in the Ministrie and partly by their learned monuments and writings to make the people of God vnderstand euen the darkest mysteries conteyned in them so farre as is necessarie for the saluation of beleeuers Whose labours and writings to contemne sauoreth of a proud Anabaptisticall spirit who while they complaine of so many commētaries despise the gifts of God who by his seruants he communicateth to his Church and so are iustly left of God in the ignorance of the Scriptures or else in the grosse and ridiculous peruerting of them Well said that noble Eunuch How can I vnderstand without an interpreter what was Moses but an interpreter of the law what were the Prophets but interpreters of Moses what was Christ but an interpreter of the Prophets what were the Apostles but interpreters of Christ what are all Pastors and teachers wherewith Christ hath euer furnished his Church since he ascended into heauen but interpreters of the Apostles Well knew the Sonne of God commanding it and his Apostles commending it how behoouefull it was for the edification of the Church by interpretation of the Scriptures to draw out both the true sence and the true vse of them which are the two proper parts of interpretation seeing so many things are to vs hard to vnderstand and things which for their sense are easiest cannot so easily of euerie one be applyed to their proper vse without this helpe This is that edifying gift which the Apostle so highly advanceth 1. Cor. 14.3 4. He that prophesieth speaketh vnto men to edifying to exhortation and to comfort and he that prophesieth edifieth the Church This is that which the auncient Fathers since the Apostles haue fruitfuly laboured in as appeareth by their learned Sermons preached written This is that which the faithfull Pastors in all ages especially of later daies since the cleare light of
in the mudde of some one of them But because it is a shame to speake in publike of the things they shame not to doe in secret I will forbeare further to mooue and stirre in this sinke which sufficiently stinketh in the nostrills of God and men and conclude the point with Epiphanius his speach They haue refused marriage but not lust no true● of the Originians then of all the Popish orders Doctr. Polygamie was euer a thing blameworthy and euill in it selfe notwithstanding much vsed of Iew and Gentile Reasons 1. The first matrimonie was instituted betweene two persons onely of whom the Lord said expressely they two not they three or more shall be one flesh In which first institution are two grounds ouerturning this sinne 1. Gods action of creating one man and one woman and no moe 2. His iniunction and strait charge to all posteritie that one man should cleaue to one wife who must be his wife and no stranger and not to many wiues at once so as it is against the law of nature and the first institution 2. The Lord by Moses forbiddeth it Leu. 18.18 Thou shalt not take one woman to her sister that is thou shalt not take one woman to another to make them as sisters for in the 16. verse the marriage of the wiues sister is forbidden by proportion euen in monogamie no not after the sisters death seeing consanguinitie and affinitie agree in duration alike Besides that the phrase in Hebrew is commonly so vsed as Gen. 26.31 Exod. 26.3 and the reason of the precept is that such a one must not be taken to greeue the other and seemeth properly to be meant of wiues in polygamie who in the Scriptures are called aduersaries 3. The Prophets themselues reprooue it vpon the ground of the first institution Mal. 2.15 God made but one woman at first and why but one not that he wanted spirit for he had abundance but because he sought a godly seede wherefore keepe your selues in your spirit and let no man transgresse against the wife of his youth where the Prophet proueth it to be not onely against the first institution but wisheth all posteritie carefully to avoide it 4. Christ himselfe taxeth it as a violencing of the first institution Mat. 19.4.5 Haue ye not read that God made them at the beginning male and female and for this cause shall a man leaue father and mother and cleaue to his wife not wiues and they twaine shall be one flesh 5. Christs Apostles condemned it Eph. 5.31 the same speach of our Sauiour Christ repeated 1. Cor. 7. Let euerie man haue his owne wife not wiues and here the Apostle accounteth it such a blot as hindreth the admission of any such into the ministerie And thus polygamie beeing condemned by the first institution of marriage before the Law and also in the Lawe after the Lawe by the Prophets after them by Christ himselfe and by his Apostles it followeth that it was euer an euill condemned euen from the beginning Obiect But the example of the most of the Patriarkes is alleadged for the lawfulnesse of it for else all they would not haue vsed it beeing the best men that euer liued Answ. The canon lawe saith that a common error may not preiudice the least truth true it is that after that most sauage tyrant Lamech had first depraued Gods ordinance it greatly preuailed by example and especially then when there was no King in Israel yet notwithstanding the Prophets and Christ call men not to example but to the rule of the first institution 2. We neuer reade of any of them no not the best well caried it but what fruit had it betweene Hadah and Sillah at first it still retained For what molestation brought it euen to good men what a stirre had Abraham to compose Sarah and Hagar to peace and in their children Isaac and Ismael what a number of sparkles of contention were kindled what heart-griefe was it to Iacob to see such daily emulation betweene Leah and Rahel and what other was the fruit of their enuie but an occasion further to draw him into sinne in taking first one of their maids and then anothers and all to please both to say nothing of the doe he had doubtlesse about their children When Moses speaketh of Esaus 2. wiues he added they were an heart griefe to Isaac and Rebecca Gen. 26.35 when the Scripture speaketh of Gideons 70. sonnes begotten of his owne bodie with the reason for he had many wiues Iud. 8.30 the very next chapter sheweth how Abimelech slewe all these 70. sonnes on one stone saue Iotham How was Elcanah troubled to satisfie and recompence his wife Hannah for the reproach wherewith Peninnah her aduersarie vexed her sore In the inclining of Salomons prosperitie the first exception the Lord tooke against him was that he loued many outlandish women which sinne brought him to all the wickednesse that was found in his hands 3. Whereas it is said that the Patriarks were carried hereunto not by fleshly lust but in desire of increase of that holy seede which was in that one people I answer we may so religiously and charitably conceiue of them and in that regard of the Lords more speciall indulgence and connivence yet can it not prooue lawfull it may make it in them a lesse euill but not no fault for if it had beene lawfull for the fathers in regard of multiplying the Church and filling the earth it had beene much more lawfull and fit for our first Parents for to them was said encrease and multiplie and fill the earth and yet God permitted it not to them but it crept into the world against that first institution Obiect 2. Sam. 12.8 He gaue thy Lords wiues into thy bosome therefore Dauid had many wiues both of his owne and Sauls the Lord beeing the author Ans. Those words into thy bosome indeede often signifie the neere coniunction of marriage yet here as in some other places it signifieth onely that they were giuen vnder Dauids power and hand namely into his subiection and so it signifieth sometime nothing else but to haue something with a man as elsewhere Dauid saith he bore the reproaches of the mightie in his bosome so here Dauid had with him his Master Sauls wiues 2. If the phrase should not so be here taken incest would be defended in Dauid seeing the consanguinitie of the wife is in the same degree to the husband as to the wife and therefore Dauid could no more marrie the stepmothers of his wife Mical then if they had beene his own 3. We neuer read that Dauid tooke any of them that were Sauls to become wife vnto himselfe Obiect Deut. 21.10.15 there are two laws which seeme to fauour it If a man cast his affection vpon a woman c. And if a man haue two wiues the sonne of the hated if first borne shall inherit and therefore the Lord at least permitteth polygamie Ans.
For how absurd will it seeme to reason with the word to call the hungrie blessed to account the rich vnhappie to esteeme corrections loue the Iulians of the world would scoffe at such paradoxes who as the Prophet speaketh walke by the sparkles of their owne fire but the life of faith is when the heart giueth vp the whole man vnto Gods leading when his wisedome is become thy direction and his word the men of thy counsell And for the latter thou must doe three things First set thy selfe often in his sight and himselfe alwaies at thy right hand let thy heart religiously thinke vpon him and his presence let thy tongue reuerently speake of him and his goodnes Secondly whatsoeuer thou doest whether thou eatest or drinkest and much more performest the duties of thy calling to which these are but seruants doe all to his glorie beeing about any thing aske thy selfe what glorie will redound to God by this speach or by this action Thirdly by euery euent make this vse to gather still into his fellowship by euery blessing gather encrease of faith loue and confidence in him by euery crosse adde vnto thy feare reuerence watchfulnesse by euery speciall prouidence obserue his admirable wisedome truth and goodnesse and thus by euery thing growe vp in him these are worthy fruits of pietie The third rule is to keepe the set times of Gods worship both publicke and priuate for this is the pale and preseruatiue of pietie which whosoeuer hath he will vse Gods meanes to preserue it A godly heart reuerenceth and reioyceth in all holy things the word Sacraments sabbaths and striueth to make his house a little Church and he that makes little or no conscience of the sabbath and family duties let him pretend what he will is an vngodly person without all religion 4. Be carefull to attend the waies of thine owne heart both how it subiecteth it selfe to the will of God written whether it be desirous to receiue the law at his mouth whether it tremble at the word as also how it subiecteth it selfe to the will of God done whether in prosperitie it lift vp it selfe to be something besides or without God and whether in correction it be silent vnto God because he hath done it Attend it how readie or heauie it is to lift it selfe vp in prayer for wants in praise for supplies whether it pray alwaies or in all things giue thankes Watch ouer it in thy seruices that it start not away and leaue thy worship liueles without spirit without truth know that God is a spirit and will be serued of thee if aright as he was of Paul in thy spirit and looke well to this matter for Iudas can follow and reuerence Christ and yet his heart going after couetousnesse be practising to betraie him and Herod can pretend to worship when he intends to kill Watch it further in the motions to sinne whether it be zealous and resolute against it and whether it sticke fast and with full purpose vnto the Lord whether it feare the least offence of God or can swallow smaller sinnes whether it bridle the tongue from idle talke and smaller oathes vaile the eyes from wanton lookes or whether it can easily digest such things which are no small departures from God when occasion is offered and know that such is thine heart as it is found in temptation Lastly watch it in the motions of the spirit how it entertaineth them how stirring it is in the causes of God as when occasion is offered of promoting Gods glorie in his pure worship or in the establishing of a conscionable ministrie how it entertaineth such good motions offered how it entertaineth Gods counsells rebukes and exhortations in the ministerie a cleare case it is that those that neglect such motions and much more resist them are yet in their sinnes and are no better then impious and vngodly persons 5. In the loue of men ioyne the loue of God for charitie abstracted from pietie is a counterfeit and this thou shalt doe when thou louest man in and for God because of Gods image and of his commandement so as if thou seest godlinesse grow in any man thy loue groweth with him and if grace decaie as he estrangeth himselfe from God so thou for his good becommest more strange vnto him For although by vertue of Gods commandement we must loue all and do good vnto all yet we must reserue a speciall loue to the image of God renued and especially affect such as are of the houshold of faith Vse If these be the practises of pietie which cannot be attained but by these rules then shall many a one who take themselues to haue taken out this last lesson be found non-proficients and such as whom grace neuer taught any such thing as godlinesse And to omit to speake of wicked Esaus and Ismaels scoffers of such as walke in these straite waies of God tossers of reproaches against them so farre from that inward and pure worship of the heart in spirit and truth as they are open despisers of the outward ordinances of the word and sacraments who are furthest from repentance and verie seldome reclaimed yea so monstrous and black are these filthie dogges and swine as they are not more condemned of others then of themselues for most part We will leaue to wash such bricks and come first to our common people whose extreame and secure ignorance loads them with such a burthen of impietie as it is impossible for them euer to stand vnder it when Christ shall appeare and yet they thinke to get to heauen nimbly inough For this whole practise of pietie is placed in that which they call a good meaning and a good hope but replie and tell them that grace is not contented with good meaning but teacheth to liue godly and so bringeth pietie into the life they answer that they could neuer make any shewes as many men can but yet they hope they may haue as good hearts as the best to god-ward Wherevnto if you demand how that roote can be so good which sendeth out such sower fruite or that fountaine sweete which sendeth out such bitter water for in these good hearts ignorance raigneth and the goodnes of their hearts openly neglecteth the word Sacraments c. the means of saluation and preseruatiues of pietie they can answer that they keepe their Church and doe as the most doe and if they receiue not the sacrament it is because they are not reconciled to some that haue offended them vnder which pretence they can refuse that comfort for many yeares together and carrie ye● the matter further with them and tell them your good heart sendeth out wicked oathes bitter curses and fearefull imprecations then they sweare either nothing but the truth or by nothing but that which is good or if they did happe to sweare or curse much they were vrged vnto it And for the sabboath adde that whereas a good heart maketh it a
not is still borne or a dead child and vnder this I comprehend a cheerefulnesse to all the parts of the publike and priuate worshippe of God whereas the Prophet maketh it a note of a wicked man that he calleth not vpon God that is he casteth off the whole worship of God Wouldst thou then finde thy selfe to be a newe creature finde this change that the clouds of darkenes and ignorance are remooued that thou hast an heart of flesh that thou findest an abatement of thy sinnes and lusts that thou hast heauenly motions that thou vsest meanes carefully of thy spirituall life that thou growest by the nourishment of the word Sacraments prayer reading conference and other exercises of godlines and repentance this is the way of life which thou hast happily found thou art now much nearer saluation then when thou first beleeued Vers. 6. Which he shed on vs abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour To come to the right meaning of this verse we must explane fowre things 1. the gift bestowed which that is the spirit as the former words import 2. the person bestowing him he that is God the Father 3. the measure of the gift 1. powred out 2. plentifully or shed on vs abundantly 4. the person meriting this gift that is Iesus Christ described here to be our Sauiour through Iesus Christ our Sauiour First the gift is the spirit or holy Ghost Quest. How can the spirit be bestowed Answ. In the spirit two things must be considered 1. his essence and person 2. his gifts and effects The former cannot be conferred for neither can his essence or person be concluded in the whole frame of heauen and earth and much lesse in the narrow corners of mans heart he beeing an infinite God equall with the father and the sonne But the latter may for so 1. Cor. 12.11 the Apostle speaking of sundrie operations and gifts ●aith all these things worketh the same spirit and this phrase must be vnderstood by an other Act. 2.17 where Peter alleadging the place out of Ioel 1.28 I will powre out my spirit thus explaineth it I will powre out of my spirit that is the sauing gifts and graces of my spirit such as here the renewing of the spirit by iustification and sanctification of which we shall heare m●re in the next ve●se The second thing is the person bestowing the holy Ghost he that is the Father as ver 4. who as he is the fountaine of the deitie so of all good actions and operations Ioh. 14.26 But when the comforter shall come whom the Father shall send Obiect But Christ saith that he will send the spirit from the Father Ans. This maketh no difference in the thing the spirit proceedeth first from the father as the first in the Trinitie and from the Sonne as from the second in order in the Trinitie and he onely expresseth this order when he saith whome I will send from the Father for when the Father sendeth the holy Ghost it is by the Sonne in whom all our good is deriued but not as by an instrument but as from a principall efficient with the Father onely the second in order from the Father Thirdly the measure of the gift is noted 1. In that he is said to shed or powre him out he saith not he gaue or communicated or dropped or showred but powred him out which noteth the liberallitie and plentie of the thing conferred namely of the graces of the spirit called by the name of the Spirit himselfe that we might conceiue of the bountifulnesse of our God who seemeth rather to communicate the verie fountaine it selfe of grace then the streames and riuers of it In which Metaphor note by the way that the graces of the spirit are here compared to waters which most properly are powred out and that not vnfitly For 1. as water washeth the filthinesse of the bodie so these graces as the pure waters of sanctification wash and cleanse the soule from the corruption and sinne of it Ezek. 36.25 I will powre cleane water 2. water hath a naturall qualitie to extinguish heat and quench the thirst of man and beast so onely these waters bring with them refreshing against the hotte wrath of God which otherwise would prooue a consuming fire for he that drinketh of this water shall neuer thirst more that is he shall neuer wish that grace sooner whereof he shall not drinke to sacietie 3. water softeneth the earth and maketh it fruitfull so these graces of the spirit mollifie the heart so fitteth it vnto all good works which are the fruits of the spirit without which we should be as the heath in the wildernes and as a parched land which seeth not when any good commeth But the second word whereby this immeasurable grace bestowed is signified is the aduerb abundantly or if we wil goe nearer the original richly and so when the Apostle writ this Epistle the spirit was indeed abundantly powred out and that in three respects First in regard of the diuerse kinds of gifts then powred out as 1. The common gifts of the spirit which all good and bad partake in were in greater abundāce thē euer before bestowed such as the gifts of illumination outward calling profession of the truth common generall faith 2. The more especiall gifts of sanctification the which our text most aimeth at as of faith regeneration loue hope c. for so the Apostle seemeth to restraine the graces he speaketh of saying on vs who are renewed by the holy ghost As both the prophet Ioel and Peter speaking the same thing seeme to doe the one mentioning my seruants my handmaids the other speaking of such as inuocate and call vpon the name of the lord and to this purpose we might shew what a number were daily conuerted and how in those dayes the kingdome of God was taken by force 3. More extraordinarie and miraculous gifts which were more proper to those times and in great abundance distributed are here included as the gifts of tongues of healing diseases casting out deuils porphesying command of death after a sort to take and leaue mens bodies and sundrie such other very frequent then aboue all times before or since Secōdly these gifts were plentifully powred out in regard of the persons people vpon whom they were conferred not now vpon some few Iews or handfull of people as before Christs ascension but vpon all flesh saith Ioel 2.28 vpon euerie nation vnder heauen saith Peter Now both Iew and Gentile bond and free circumcision vncircumcision all respect and acceptation of persons remooued haue equall part and promise in these graces Thirdly in regard of the meanes in which the spirit now conueled these graces that is the word Sacraments and ministerie of the new Testament which farre exceeded in glorie all that ministerie that euer was before it For in former time they sawe in their ministerie things a farre off in types shadowes clouds but