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A76798 Expositions and sermons upon the ten first chapters of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, according to Matthew. Written by Christopher Blackwood, preacher to a Church of Christ in the city of Dublin in Ireland. Blackwood, Christopher. 1659 (1659) Wing B3098; ESTC R207680 612,607 923

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nor in that which is to come therefore some sins are forgiven in the world to come Answ Mark expounds it that such a one hath never forgiveness Mark 3.29 Matthew to aggravate the sin against the holy Ghost uses a Periphrasis as if we should speak of a sick man he can sleep neither day nor night that is never or as if we should say the grace of faith can never be bought with mony neither in this life nor in the life to come that is never For that place 1 Pet. 3.18 19 20. Being put to death in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit by which also he went to preach to the spirits in prison which sometimes were disobedient when once the long suffering of God waited in the dayes of Noah therefore say some the Gospel was preached in the world to come for forgiveness there is a misunderstanding of three things in this text 1 the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by which they understood the soul of Christ as by flesh his body the body they held to dye but the soul to remain alive in which soul say they he went and preached but by the flesh of Christ is meant his humanity according to this he is said to be put to death but by his spirit is meant his divinity Joh. 4.23 By the power of this spirit and divinity he was raised from the dead 2 Cor. 13.4 A second word misunderstood is this to the Spirits in prison Where the Word are is to be understood or the word being they understood were or had been which words are referred to those men that in the time of Noah were unbelievers and were then in the world now in Peters time their souls were in Hell for by the prison is meant Hell Rev. 20.7 There they are kept to the day of judgement The third word which almost deceived all was the word Going or went which they understood of his going out of the world into Hell when it was meant of his going out of Heaven into the world and speaking then by his spirit in the ministry of Noah to these rebells that were now in Hell in Saint Peters time Now that no sins are forgiven in the world to come appears 1 Because in this life onely are tenders of grace 2 Cor. 6.2 Behold now is the accepted time now is the day of salvation When the master of the house hath shut to the door of this life and ye stand without and knock and say Lord Lord Christ will say Depart from me I know you not Luk. 13.25 The gate of grace was wholly shut unto the foolish Virgins Matth. 25.11 2 The time betwixt this and death is the time for repentance patience and constancy and after death is the present receiving of the crown Rev. 2.10 Be thou faithful unto death and I will give thee a crown of life The godly lamented Stephen at his death but never prayed for him Col. 1.14 9 The grievousness of that prison whereinto unpardoned sins will cast us 1 We are afraid to be cast into a stinking prison for debt yet may there be hope one way or other to get out by satisfaction or compounding or the creditours pity but none of these can befall thee if thou dyest in thy sins and be cast into that prison thou canst not come out by satisfaction because that is of force onely by Christ his satisfaction in this life Act. 13.39 40. Col. 1.13 14. nor yet by composition for thou must lye there till thou hast paid the utmost farthing Luk. 12.59 nor by the creditours mercy because after death the wicked shall have judgement without mercy Jam. 2.13 2 There will be no running away from this prison because the prisoner is bound hand and foot Matth. 22.13 Bind him hand and foot and take him away and cast him into outer darkness Kept in everlasting chains Jude 6. Psal 49. Like sheep that are driven into the fold so are they driven into Hell ver 14. Luk. 16.26 3 In other prisons we have friends come to visit us but here not onely friends 2 Thess 1.9 but also all other comforts shall be removed yea the damned shall be deprived of the presence of God If the deprivement of the sight of God by faith be so grievous how grievous will the deprivation of the beatifical sight in glory be 4 The perpetuity of it to be condemn'd to perpetual imprisonment and that in some loathsom dungeon is terrible yet death may set us free thence but from the prison of Hell there 's no getting out The worm never dyes nor the fire never goes out Mark 9.44 45 46 47 48. It s five times set down the fire that never shall be quenched which are not idle repetitions but to ascertain us of the perpetuity of the torment If the damned had hope after some millions of years to have their torments ended it were something but the burnings are everlasting Isai 33.14 Isai 30.33 the Worm everlasting Isai 66.24 the Fire everlasting Revel 20.10 the contempt everlasting Dan. 12.2 Object But by what right will God punish temporary faults with eternal punishments Answ 1. Sin is committed against an infinite Majesty and so deserves infinite punishment now because man is a finite creature and cannot suffer for it at once therefore he must suffer for it successively to all eternity 2 Because in unpardoned sinners so dying there 's a wicked habit that should they live ever they would sin ever the sinner sins in his eternity and God punishes in his eternity 3 Punishment is to be measured not by length of time the offence is in committing but by the greatness of the offence Murder and Adultery are soon committed shall the Offender be no longer punished than the offence is committing 4 As we are to look upon the perpetuity of this Prison so upon the darkness of it Jude 6. the rebellious Angels are reserved under darkness chains of darkness 2 Peter 2.4 to the wicked the mist of darkness is reserved for ever 2 Peter 2.17 Light is most comfortable but in Hell there 's fire without light 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because the damned see not 10 Together with pardon come all other blessings Ezek. 36.25 26 27. I will sprinkle clean water what more the cleansing from filthiness a new heart the putting of the Spirit within us writing the Law in the heart Power over sin follows pardon of sin Rom. 7.15.8.2 yea all good things here Rom. 8.32 and glorification in Heaven hereafter Whom he justified them he gloried Rom. 8.30 11 True happiness consists in forgiveness of sins the World counts them happy that have great Estates that have the Princes ear but the Lord tells us those are happy that have sins pardoned Psalm 32.1 Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven and whose sin is covered I am covered under the shadow of the wings of Christ and live secure under the most broad heaven of
the light of Moses by the light of the Prophets the light of the Prophets by the light of the New Testament and the light of the New Testament by the light of the Spirit The Scriptures they acknowledg were Gods Word and the Pen-men inspired by God but it was to endure for a time hence they allege 2 Peter 1.19 We do well to take heed to the Scriptures as to a light shining in a dark place till the day dawn and the day-star arise in their hearts Be astonished O ye Heavens at these be ye horribly afraid The horridness of this Delusion wants tears of bloud sufficiently to bewail it that apostate Professours the authours of these Delusions should labour as it were to kill God and his Word with his own Weapons I might wave all Scripture-reason with these that deny the Scripture and reason with them onely as Philosophers also I might let the Reader see that this damnable errour is an epitome of all errour But to answer that place 2 Peter 1.19 Peter shews that if these dispersed Jews attended to the Scriptures of the Prophets they would have a light to guide them in their darkness till the day at last appear and the morning-star the sign thereof scatter their darkness that is till the light of the Gospel clearly manifest unto you this mystery of godliness which ye have begun to receive Some interpret thus that Prophesie is the Night or Darkness the Gospel is the Light or Morning Star the sight of God in Heaven is clear Day so the sense is Attend unto the reading and study of the Prophets that ye may be strengthened by them in the faith of Christ untill the Day Star that is a more clear knowledg of the faith of the Gospel shine unto you that ye being confirmed therein may thereby be brought to the blessedness of Heaven The sight of faith in comparison of the sight in Heaven is but as the Dawning of the Morning to the Light of the Sun at Noon And as the Morning Star is a Middle betwixt Night and Day so is the Doctrine of the Gospel a Middle betwixt the dark Doctrine of the Prophets and the clear sight in Heaven So that by Day Star is not meant Christ whom these believing Jews had already received but their going on and increase in the faith whiles by little and little their knowledg became more certain concerning the Mysteries of Christ that no doubts or scruples concerning the Christian Faith or any point of it might be any longer in their mindes Some by Day dawning and Day Star understand the sight of God in Heaven our Life of Misery in this World being like Night the Life to come will be like Day when all shadows of mortality errour and ignorance shall vanish away See Song 2.17 This word Untill favours this Interpretation because we need Prophesie and the Scriptures all our Life long till we come in Heaven But both Intepretations are to be taken in and then the sense will be Take heed to the Scriptures of the Prophets and Gospel as to the means for your going on in the Faith and building up untill you come to the beatifical vision of the glory in Heaven But never did the Apostle or Spirit mean that the written Word should have its period and time set to last beyond which it is useless and improper to attend unto it The second place is 1 John 2.20 21 27. But ye have an Unction from the Holy One and ye shall know all things but the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you and ye need not that any man teach you but as the same anointing teacheth you all things From this Scripture they argue thus they that have the Teachings of the Spirit have no need of the teaching of the Letter but they have the Unction of the Spirit that teacheth them all things therefore they need neither the teaching of the Letter nor the teachings of men Answ Three things to be opened 1 What is meant by Unction Answ By Unction is meant Christianity for as a Christian in Greek is the same that Anointed is so Christianity is the same that Anointing is now Christianity is the Doctrine grace and wisdom of Christ which from the inspiration of the Spirit is given whereby we are instructed in all the believables and duties of a true Christian which pertain to Christian faith and life and to fly heretical and Antichristian tenents Now this heavenly Light is compared to Oyl because the principal use of Oyl is to maintain Light it hath other virtues as to cool to chear to heal but this is the principal so that by Unction he means the Oyl of holy Doctrine or Truth 2 Quest What is meant by this anointing teaching us all things Answ By all things are not meant every individual truth for the Apostles themselves knew onely in part 1 Cor. 13.9 therefore we must understand it restrictively to the matter in hand Ye know all things that is concerning the shunning of Antichrist and holding the Faith 2 Or by all things he means all things he had formerly taught them so that he rather remembers them and admonishes them of things that he writ than delivers any Principles which were new unto them therefore v. 24. he bids that that might remain with them which they had heard from the beginning 3 Quest What is meant by this Phrase Ye need not that any man teach you Answ The Apostle doth not cry down ministerial teaching for then should he have cried down his own teaching and nullified many other Precepts wherein Preachers are commanded to preach the Word in season and out of season 2 Tim. 4.1 and the Ministry is given for the perfecting of the Saints Ephes 4.11 12. but onely warns them against false Teachers who taught them contrary Doctrines to those wherein by the Doctrine of Truth they had been informed these errours the Apostle calls Lyes v. 22. as being most abominable Lyes to deny Jesus to be Christ So that the sense is Ye have the Light of the Word wherein you have been instructed to teach you all things needfull for your salvation so that you are not to listen to any Impostours that teach you the contrary but from hence to deduce that because you have the Teachings of the Spirit that we need not the Teachings of men is a grand Delusion A third Argument is The Elect shall be all taught of God John 6.45 So that they shall not teach every man his Neighbour and every man his Brother saying Know the Lord for all shall know me from the least to the greatest Heb. 8.11 A. There is a twofold Teaching 1 Notional 2 Affectionate Of the later of these the Scripture speaks The Lord teaches the Elect or Children of the new Covenant as no man can teach with the like he gives them a rellish of good things but because the Lord teaches after this way that no man can teach it follows
grace 2. From the punishment of sin 1 Thess 1.10 Jesus who delivered us from the wrath to come 3. From the guilt of sin Rom. 8.1 There 's no condemnation to them that are in Jesus 4. From the weariness and burden of sin Matth. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden I will give you rest 5. From the remainders of sin this will be in another World Rom. 7.24 25. Who shall deliver me from this body of death I thank God through Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 15.57 3. The means whereby Christ sayes viz. his Death and Intercession If when we were Enemies we were reconciled by the Death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his Life Rom. 5.10 1. By his living to make Intercession for us as it is expounded Heb. 7.25 wherefore he is able to save to the utmost them that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make Intercession for them This is one Argument of Christ his Godhead to save his People from sin for it 's applied to Jehova Psalm 130.8 He shall redeem his People from all their iniquities If there were a Physician in the World that could save a man from all Diseases multitudes of Patients would come to him how should Believers then come to Christ who saves his People from all their sins Psalm 103.1 2. As the Woman that had the Bloudy Issue touching Christ was healed so we touching Christ by the hand of faith the bleeding wounds of our sins are stanched This is true tidings of joy to all believing souls that such a Saviour is born Luke 2.10 11. V. 22. Now all this was done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the Prophet saying The Evangelist sets down a third ground to stablish Joseph's heart and together with him the hearts of all other Believers viz. that this Prediction of a Virgins bringing forth was foretold seven or eight hundred years ago in the Reign of King Ahaz Isai 7.14 Joseph at first was ready to be startled at these strange News the Angel told him but when he heard that all that the Angel told him was confirmed by the Scriptures this brought full satisfaction The sum of the Promise was that not onely that God would save the House of David Isai 7.13 from the Syrians and Men of Israel their Enemies v. 8 9. but that also he would save the believers among them from their spiritual Enemies and because the matter seems hard to believe the Lord gives them a sign to confirm it viz. Behold a Virgin remaining a Virgin still shall be with childe● so that as in Painting or Building there are first rude Lines or Draughts made by the Painters who after by degrees perfect that which they had conceived in their mindes according to the Idaea therein so as the Lord had prophesied of a Virgins conceiving so now he perfects and fulfils it so that as the calling of the Israelites out of Egypt Hosea 11.1 was a Shadow of the Deliverance of the Sons of God out of the spiritual Egypt of Hell so these things told then by Isai did shadow out what was now fulfilled V. 23. Bernard thinks the Devil fell out of envy envying men that Dignity that God should become Man Behold a Virgin shall be with childe and shall bring forth a Son and they shall call his Name Emmanuel which being interpreted is God with us The Evangelist sets forth not onely the sum of the Prophesie but the wonderfulness of it Behold this Adverb still points out attention and admiration Behold as if he should say Men and Angels wonder at this strange unheard of thing that a Virgin should conceive and bring forth Emmanuel that is God-Man Jer. 31.22 The Lord hath created a new thing upon earth A Womam shall compass a man Some men will not wonder at any thing to conceal their own ignorance but here is a providence to admire all And they shall call his Name Emmanuel that is being interpreted God with us that is not onely spiritually that is reconciled to us 2 Cor. 5.19 but because the Word was made Flesh and dwelt among us John 1.14 They shall call all the saithfull and many others shall so call him God with us for this Pronoun Relative they hath respect unto a plurality See Luke 12.20 Luke 16.9 Quest How can Jesus be called Emmanuel Resp Not in sound but in sense Christ was called Emmanuel from the Dignity of his Person and he was called Jesus from his Office and effects of it and in all this it sell out that the Prophesie of Esaias was fulfilled Shut your eys without Christ and say that you know no other God but he that was in the bosom of Mary and suckt her Breasts Where that God Christ Jesus is there is whole God or the whole Divinity found the Father and the Spirit Luth. in Ps 130. I shall also add what a late Writer adds to interpret this Prophesie viz. that within a space of time wherein a Virgin might marry and conceive and bring forth and the Childe come to the distinguishing of good and evil Isai 7.14 15. Rezin and Pekah Ahaz his two Enemies should be brought low and from this he calls an high improved sense over and above the vulgar sense which belonged to the words that from this place the Spirit should gather that a Virgin should bring forth a Son V. 24. Then Joseph being raised from sleep did as the Angel of the Lord had bidden him and took unto him his Wife Here we have Joseph's obedience to the Angel seen first in taking unto him his Wife as the Angel bad him When we are convinced of Gods Commands we must neither dispute them nor delay them Psalm 119.60 now Joseph takes both Mother and Childe into his tuition V. 25. And knew her not untill she brought forth her first-born Son and called his Name Jesus Here is the second thing wherein Joseph's obedience to the Angel was seen viz. in not knowing his Wife he means in a matrimonial way as it is taken Gen. 4.1 to make it appear that Christ was not conceived of Joseph but of the Holy Ghost So the phrase is taken Num. 31.35 1 Sam. 1.19 No doubt the Angel had given Joseph command herein not to know her because he did as the Angel commanded this was done as for the stablishing of our Faith on Jesus Christ as being conceived in such a wonderfull manner so for to verifie the Promise that the Seed of the Woman should break the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 Untill she brought forth her first-born Son It is not for us to contend to finde whether the Virgin Mary were a Virgin ever after she brought forth her first-begotten Son it is curious to seek and more curious directly to define that son is said to be the first-born before whom there was none though he were the onely begotten This word untill oft signifies an
service committed to the meanest servants such a phrase in English I am not worthy to carry his Books after him Some take it as the custome of the Hebrews who going into some more holy place were wont to put off their Shoes Exod. 3.5 Josh 5.15 Put off thy Shoes for the place where thou standest is holy ground and those who were more rich or noble had some Body to carry their Shoes Other Evangelists have the Latchet of whose Shoes I am not worthy to unloose in which speech they allude unto the manner of their being shod In hot Countreys their Shoes had onely Soles below and tyed above and therefore they were to be loosed before they could be pulled off the Greeks call them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And we when we come home or go to bed call to the meanest Boy to pull off our Shoes Hence Psalm 108.10 Over Edom will I cast out my Shoe that is I will imploy the Edomites in the basest service as to take away my Shoes when they are put off John hereby acknowledges Christ to be his Lord and himself his meanest Servant He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with Fire Some think John Baptist hath respect to that Acts 2.1 visible pouring out of the Spirit in the shape of fiery Tongues at Pentecost though this be a truth as appears Acts 1.5 John truly baptized with Water but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence Yet may we understand it of the power of the Spirit or of inward Baptism whereby the Spirit in the Hearts of Believers burns up their Lusts not onely enlightening of them but inlivening and kindling in them holy affections As the Spirit is called Water from the purging away of our filth Titus 3.5 so is it called Fire because by a spirit of burning he burns up our dross Isai 4.4 The Lord shall purge away the Bloud of Jerusalem from the midst thereof by the spirit of burning In a word Gospel Preachers may baptize you with Water but the Spirit renews us inwardly by the Spirit Now that the Ethiopians baptize with Fire they add to the Institutions of Christ and to the Scriptures which shadows out unto us and presents to our memories the benefit of the Spirit by variety of expressions The Abissines brand the baptized persons with Fire Beza in loc This practice gave occasion to some bolder Library keepers in some Copies to blot out the word Fire The Spirit is well resembled by Fire because it hath the properties of Fire as to purge to drive away darkness to shine to kindle to snatch upwards to strengthen Ephes 3.16 to change into it self 2 Cor. 3.18 Believers are by the Spirit changed into the same glorious image Mark 1.8 It 's said he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost Fire is left out here for explanation sake it is added by the Figure Hendiadys The sum is Christ alone bestows whatsoever outward Baptism figures or signifies Now Fire in this place seems to be opposed to Water I baptize you with Water saith John Christ baptizes with Fire to signifie unto us that some fiery and spiritual power towards our purging and cleansing is represented to us by the Water of Baptism Besides this purging Fire bestowed on the Elect is opposed to that everlasting burning Fire which in the former Verse is threatned to fruitless Trees V. 12. Whose Fan is in his hand and he will thorowly purge his Floor and gather his Wheat into the Garner but will burn up the Chaff with unquenchable Fire John had set forth the power of Christ about Baptism now to awaken his Hearers the more some of whom were in a deep sleep he extends it further to the last Judgment which he shews by similitude of an Husbandman who when the Harvest is come gathers the Corn with the Chaff into the Floor and by and by thresheth it and separates the Chaff from the Wheat Whose Fan is in his ●a●d That is the Preaching of the Gospel before the L●rd ●owse us up thereby we are as it were folded up in an heap of confusion untill which come the whole World is like a great heap of Chaff Or rather by Fan understand his judging power He will thorowly purge his Floor That is his Church gathering out of the Field of the World his Corn he brings it into his B●rn as the Husbandman doth and when by an outward Call in the Ministry of the Word he hath brought them in because there are and will be many Hypocrites in his Churches hence he will thorowly purge his Floor as the Husbandman doth of the Chaff that is of wicked men who are compared to Chaff Psalm 1.4 Job 21.19 But this will be at the Day of Judgment which should be as a comfort to Saints and terrour to awaken carnal men so that the Floor signifies not the Place but the Corn upon it by a Metonymie Wheat into the Garner That is Saints into Heaven where the Sheep are at the Judges right hand from thence they go to Heaven Matth. 25. ult When the Fan hath once severed them that is his power and wisdom whereby he is able to sever Sheep and Goats whereby he is able to judg persons for every thing done in the B●dy whether thoughts words or deeds This Fan is said to be in his hand it shews the ●ear approach of the Judgment James 5.9 The Judg slandeth before the Door For if th●●e were some hundreds of years to the last Judgment yet compared with Eternity they are as nothing Burn up the Chaff with unquenchable Fire Not that it cannot be quenched but that it doth not quench in burning wicked men it never turns their Bodies to Ashes Neither is this impossible for the Sun it self which many suppose to be Fire is always burning and never quenched we reade of the Bush burning and not consumed Exod. 3. This Fire is still kindled by the breath of the Lord Exod. 30.33 This is five times together mentioned Mark 9.43 44 45 46 47 48. that we might the more fear it So that we see the wofull condition of the Chaff they are not onely severed from the Wheat but after the manner of the Nation of Palestine they are burnt in the Fire V. 13. Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan unto John to be baptized of him We have here in this second part of the Chapter the Baptism of Christ set down wherein we have 1 The end of Christ's coming from Galilee to Jordan which was to be baptized of John 2 We have John's Prohibition of him together with his Reasons I have need to be baptized of thee and comest thou to me 3 Christ's Answer to John shewing why he would be baptized which was for the fulfilling of all Righteousness v. 15. 4 Christ's Reception of Baptism amplified 1 From the Adjunct He ascended out of the Water being baptized being then thirty years old Luke 3.23 2 From the signs that
therefore Matthew Mark and Luke say As a Dove and like a Dove It 's like it was of a fiery matter as the fiery Tongues were The Spirit appears in the likeness of a Dove to shew that that Spirit that was in Christ was full of meekness Isai 42.1 2 3. I have put my Spirit upon him the bruised Reed shall he not break nor smoaking Flax shall he not quench See Matth. 11.29 Again a Dove represents the Graces of the Spirit Isai 11.2 The Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him to shew the innocency purity and charity in Christ A Dove was the sign of the Reparation of the World after the Floud and here it is a sign of Reconciliation by Christ This Dove was a fit Resemblance to this Lamb of God for as the Lamb is most harmless among Beasts so is the Dove among Birds The Flight of this Dove denotes the divine Influence of the Spirit coming from Heaven into the Members of Christ as well as into the Head Mahomet by putting Corn into his Ear accustomed a Dove to fly to his Ear which eat what was there put by this way he perswaded the People the Spirit of God was familiar with him and suggested to him his Alcoran Yet must we not think this substance or body resembled by a Dove to be hypostatically united to the Spirit of God as the humane nature of Christ was to Christ but as Angels oftentimes took humane bodies and appeared to men with them and laid aside those bodies afterwards so did the Spirit of God As the Heavens were opened unto Christ to shew his Doctrine was not earthly but heavenly so did the Spirit come upon him to shew his Doctrine was the Ministry of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.8 called The glorious Ministration of the Spirit this visible Appearance of the Spirit could not but send divers of the Spectators to the perusals of those places of the Prophets forementioned Isai 11.2.42.1 2 3.61.1 especially Christ so interpreting the visible descent of the Spirit upon him Luke 4 18. To conclude by this visible sign of a Dove is shewn that Christ is that harmless one in whom the Spirit hath his constant residence in and through whom alone we are to receive of the gifts of his Spirit for whose sake rather than for his own in whom the fulness of the Godhead dwelt bodily this Spirit descended upon him and especially for John's sake to whom this sign was promised whereby he should be certified in a most absolute clearness of the person of the Messiah John 1.32 On whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending like a Dove that same is he This Spirit John is said to see not essentially but believingly for by a Metonymie the name of the spiritual thing is given to the visible sign V. 17. And lo a Voice from Heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased We have here the third sign confirming the Call of Christ and his Instalment into his Office viz. a voice from Heaven when the Heavens clove that voice sounded It was the voice of the Father doubtless in that he saith This is my beloved Son here was the first clear Revelation of the Trinity under the New Testament the Father shews himself in a voice the Son in the flesh or humane nature the Spirit in the likeness of a Dove This is my beloved Son Not an adoptive but onely begotten my onely everlasting and coequal Son These words are partly taken out of the second Psalm v. 7. I will declare the Decree the Lord said unto me Thou art my Son By this forementioned voice he made his Son King upon Sion That Psalm is to be referred to this Of this beloved Son Isaak was a Type Gen. 22.2 Take thy son thy onely son thy son whom thou lovest And so was Solomon called Jedidiah or the beloved of the Lord. Oft was Christ called Beloved in the Book of Canticles the Fathers voice might have respect to these Figures Of this Christ speaks John 17.26 I pray that the love wherewith thou lovest me may be in them Ephes 1.6 We are said to be accepted in this Beloved In whom I am well pleased The same with that In whom my soul is well pleased Matth. 12.18 As if he should say Thou my Son onely and chiefly beloved pleasest me in all things and that infinitely and no man pleases me but by thee yea by thee am I appeased with all them I have given thee at whom I was offended by the sin of Adam and there is nothing in thee that displeases me Enoch pleased me Heb. 11.5 but not so as thou dost for in thee I am appeased and reconciled to the World of Believers The shew of a Dove was a dumb thing therefore here 's a voice to make all things concerning the Messiah out of question and also opening the whole Mystery of our Redemption for what is our Redemption but this whereas formerly we were at enmity with God now God is well pleased with us in Christ 2 Cor. 5.19 God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself These words are taken out of Isai 42.1 and in that Chapter is the calling and sending of Christ to his Ministry described and indeed the whole Scripture whence some words are taken should be lookt into To this in the Transfiguration was added Hear him not Plato Socrates Moses further than he Witnesses of Christ but hear him who being in my bosom John 1.18 shall reveal my Mysteries which have been hid from the foundation of the world He shall open the way to Heaven to you CHAP. IV. IN this Chapter there are four parts 1 Christ his Tentation from v. 1. to v. 12. 2 Christ's Preaching in Galilee from v. 12. to v. 18. 3 Christ's calling of four Disciples Peter Andrew James John 4 The Confirmation of his Doctrine by Miracles v. 23 24 25. In the Temptation observe 1 The Time v. 1. immediately after Baptism 2 The Place in the Wilderness v. 1. 3 The efficient Cause viz. the Spirit of God 4 The End to be tempted of the Devil v. 1. 5 The kindes of the Temptations which are three 1 To Unbelief v. 2 3. 2 To Presumption v. 5 6. Cast thy self down for he shall give his Angels charge of thee 3 To the vain glory of the glory of the World v. 7 8 9. 6 The Victory Christ got over these Temptations so that the Devil was forced to give ground v 11. amplified from the Weapon wherewith Christ overcame him which was the Word of God 7 The comfort Christ had after the Temptation was over The Angels came and ministred to him V. 1. Then was Jesus led up of the Spirit into the Wilderness to be tempted of the Devil This Temptation of Christ is set down 1 From the Time Then When Even presently after his Baptism Mark 1.12 Immediately the Spirit driveth him into the Wilderness and being full of the Holy Ghost he was led by
in some supposititious writings falsely ascribed unto him V. 11. Then the devil leaveth him and behold Angels came and ministred unto him We have here the victory over the tempter The devil brought the worst of his fiery darts but Christ overcomes him We may see the temptations of Satan are limited that God will not still suffer Satan to tempt 1 Cor. 10.13 nor us to be tempted above strength Luke adds when the devil had ended all the temptation ●e departed from him for a season Satan left not Christ altogether but onely for a season to let us know that the rest of his life was not free from temptations and to teach us that sometimes Satan politickly gives way to try afterwards whether he can finde us secure Satan will try whether we have not lost our former strength care or vigilance or whether God that now doth not will not at another time for some causes suffer us to be led into temptation Satan would come oftner but that God who knoweth our strength or rather our weakness will not suffer him Satan is apt to come again with the same temptation to see if he cannot tyre and weary us out with the anguish and vexation of it 2 Cor. 12.8 Satan thrice tempted Paul with pride and sometimes he changes his weapon Let us do as the Pilot doth have our compass ready and stand ready to turn your needle to any point knowing that your lust within is for any sin and Satan can as easily tempt us to prodigality as to covetousness Onely when Satan comes with some other weapon God doth it for our good as change of Physick is good for the body for the same Potion always used will not work so well so the longer we are used to the same temptation the less it worketh God will have Satan turn some other way to purge some other stream of lust Besides God will have us learn skill by experience at all sorts of weapons by the falls of Hezekiah and Jehosaphat and David learn we that when one temptation is over another will come which will be a mean to prevent spiritual pride and security As we must not be secure when the temptation comes but set against it before Satans suggestion joyn with our corruption set against it while it is young so let us not be secure when the storm of the temptation is blown over let us do as Mariners that mend their tacklings against another storm come We are apt to think we shall have no more such temptations and then comes the tempter Satan was never so beaten by any as by Christ yet he came again and again A man that is once well beaten in the Field will hardly be brought to fight with the same man again but it is not so with Satan We must have some good days to breath in else we should not be willing to live and more fits of Temptations we must have or else we should not be willing to dy And behold the Angels came and ministred to him Here 's the comfort Christ had after the Temptation was over Angels come to minister to him Consolations are wont to follow after Temptations Hereby Christ saw the Father had a care of him and whereas solitariness in a Wilderness was one Trial here 's the company of good Angels nor had he onely their company but also he had them ministring to him Meat and other necessaries till he came out of the Wilderness The word Behold le ts us see that this was no little wonder that the Son of God who was even now exposed to Satans scorns should have not onely one but divers Angels ministring to him The like was in his passion Luke 22. As in Battel when the Enemies are dispoiled and driven away Friends come to congratulate with us so the Devil being overcome the Angels come to rejoyce with Christ As the Angels ministred to Christ after his Combate so do they serve Believers they are all ministring spirits Heb. 1.14 but it 's not to Run-aways but to then who have valiantly stood it out Thus we see Satan's great Temptations 1 Distrust in Adversity 2 Presumptuous undertakings without a Call 3 To seek success in our Calling as Riches Honour c. without and against a Command of God The second part of the Chapter containing Christ's Preaching in Galilee in which observe 1 The time when which was when John was cast into Prison 2 The place where viz. in Galilee 3 The end wherefore Christ preached which was 1 For the fulfilling the Prophesie v. 14. 2 For the enlightening of those in darkness v. 15 16. 4 The subject matter of his Preaching which was the Doctrine of Repentance v. 17. V. 12. Now when Jesus had heard that John was cast into Prison he departed into Galilee We have Christ's Preaching set forth 1 By the time when which was when Jesus heard that John was cast into Prison from that time Christ began to preach v. 17. which was as soon as John Baptist his fore-runner was cast into Prison of this mention is made Acts 10.36 37. The Word which God sent unto the Children of Israel preaching peace by Jesus Christ that Word you know that was published throughout all Judea and began from Galilee after the Baptism which John preached This circumstance of time notes to us that this Jesus was the Lord whom they looked for who sent John as a Messenger to prepare the way of his Gospel which was prophesied by Isai cap. 40.6 and Malachy cap. 4 5 6. Hence the Disciples when they saw Elias come after Christ in the Transfiguration they scrupled saying Why do the Scribes say that Elias must first come Christ tells them that John Baptist was that Elias the fore-runner of Messiah according to those words of his father Zachary Thou Childe shalt be called the Prophet of the Highest for thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his way namely as the Angel told him in the power and spirit of Elias Luk● 1.17 This John was Christ's fore-runner both in his Birth being born six Moneths before him and in his Preaching and also in his Passion and Suffering Matth. 17.12 Elias is come and they knew him not but have done to him whatsoever they listed even so also shall the Son of man suffer of them Now seeing the coming of Christ is twofold the first in the flesh the second to judg the World whether do not the Prophesies imply that there must be an Harbinger of his second coming as well as of his first for though the Prophesie of Isai 40.6 seems applicable onely to his first coming yet that Mal. 4 5. seems to be applicable to both his commings I will send you Eliah the Prophet before the coming of that great and terrible Day of the Lord and he shall turn or restore the hearts of the fathers to the children that is he shall bring the unbelieving Jews to have the same heart then holy fathers and
That is from the Countreys placed beyond Jordan in respect of Calilee as Gilead Trachonitis Abilene and all that Countrey that fomerly belonged to Sihon and Og and the Countreys of Arabia which were the happy Arabia abounding with Spices and the rocky Arabia and the desert Arabia which was a Wilderness And from many other remote countreys so that a while after Christ his death Justin Martyr said There is no one kinde of Mortals whether Barbarians or Greeks or by what other names they be called either of the Hamazobians or Nomades that want a house and live in tents among whom by the Name of Jesus Christ crucified prayers and thanksgivings are not made to the Father and Creator of all things Justin cont Tryph. CHAP. V. WE have in this Sermon 1 The Preface v. 1. 2 The Sermon in the rest of the Chapter V. 1. In the preface observe 1 The Author of the Sermon viz. He that is Jesus 2 The place where it was in the Mount 3 The occasion seeing multitudes follow him 4 The persons he taught his Disciples 5 The gesture he used he sate 1 The Author of the Sermon viz. Jesus Christ wherein he propoundeth a new Law far more perfect then the law of Moses wherein there are divers things added for to this Thou shalt not commit adultery is added He that looks upon a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her in his heart instead of Thou shalt not kill He that shall say to his brother Racha shall be guilty of hell fire Is not the law of committing of Adultery safe to which the law of not lusting is added Tert. de pudicitiâ All conclude that Christs intent is to clear the true meaning of Moses and the Prophets which was corrupted by the false gloss of the Jewish teachers but it seems to me that Christ added some things not onely by way of explication but by way of rule and this he did as the Prophet of his Church whom we are to hear in all things Acts 3.22 2 The place where it was in the Mount Thither he went to spend the night in prayer in order to the calling of his twelve Disciples for this Sermon and that Luk. 6. was one and the same as appears by their matter and subject This Mount is supposed by Chorographers to be 〈…〉 saida and here Christ called his Disciples unto him and chose out of them Twelve whom he called Apostles and sent them forth to preach In the top of this Mountain Christ chose his twelve Apostles in the descent of the Mountain he preached this Sermon Both Matthew and Luke gather the chief points of Christian doctrine into one place 3 The occasion which was not onely Disciples but multitudes were there present Teachers should observe opportunities when to preach We may desire to preach among multitudes not for vain-glory sake but because where there are many its like some or more will be wrought upon 4 The gesture He sate Luke 4.16 He stood up and read his Text and then sate down and preached He sate among the Doctors hearing and asking them questions Luk. 2.46 being apprehended he told the multitude I sate daily with you in the Temple teaching Matth. 26.55 Christ taught sitting because it was the manner and custome of the Teachers of that Church so to do Matth. 23.2 The Scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses chair Luk. 5.3 He sate down and taught the people out of the ship Christ sate down either because he was weary in going up the Mount or because of the length of his Sermon which if delivered with amplifications would have wearied him standing and to shew that Preachers are not confined to one kinde of gesture but as Christ sometimes preached sitting sometimes standing so may they 5 Whom Christ taught viz. his Disciples who to prevent the multitudes that would have prest him stood near him Yet did he not onely teach them but also taught the multitude V. 2 3. And he opened his mouth and taught them saying Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the Kingdome of God He opened his mouth That is Christ that had formerly opened the mouths of the Prophets now opens his own mouth Heb. 1.1 God who at sundry times and in divers manners spake unto the Fathers hath in these last times spoken unto us by his Son Blessed are the poor in spirit In these words two things are considerable 1 The happy and blessed condition of them that are poor in spirit 2. The reason of it For theirs is the Kingdome of heaven For the former Obs Poverty of spirit is a blessed frame of spirit But before I come to open this point let me lay down some cautions as 1 That Christ shews not by what means we may come to blessedness but onely the qualifications of them that do attain it as in Ps 15. in the whole Psalm much less doth Christ set down by what merits we obtain blessedness He shews what manner of persons he will have them to be who expect blessedness viz. poor in spirit mourners meek mercifull hungring after righteousness these are rather notes of blessed men than procuring causes of blessedness Such we are to put difference betwixt Scriptures that speak of the causes of blessedness such as these John 3.16 6.54 8.24 Psalm 32.1 and those that speak of the properties of blessedness such as Psalm 1.1 112.1 James 2.1 So that we see the meaning why Christ saith not Blessed are they that are redeemed with Bloud or blessed are they which believe in me because he would teach not wherefore we are blessed but who they are that are blessed Four things to be discust 1 What it is 2 Grounds of it 3 Trials 4 Means to it 1 What spiritual poverty is It 's whereby a poor soul having some grace sees a want of further grace and so goes for supply out of himself to find it in Christ There are two degrees of it 1 When we are convinced of our miserable estate by nature so that the soul desires to be otherwise then it is Joh. 16.10 2 After we are in Christ whence follows 1 Sight of emptiness in all things save Christ Phil. 3.8 compared with Christ the soul counts them dung 2 Self abasement Luke 18.13 the Publican cries God be merciful to me a sinner Phil. 3.8 Paul calls himself less then the least of all Saints 3 Earnest desire after the favour of God Esa 41.17 18. When the poor and needy seek water I will open rivers in high places and fountains in the midst of the valleys Take we notice of our poverty by nature we are not able to pay our debts and apt to be cast in prison for them Grounds of spiritual poverty 1 Else we will not come to Christ the prodigal came not to his father till he saw himself poor 2 This is the end of Gods permitting us to fall God left Hezekiah to try him that he might know all that was in
fleet he would not joyn with his son Ahaziah though sollicited When a man hath had a fall from a resty horse which had like to have broke his neck he will hardly come upon his back again 2 He will not be hired for any gain of sin against God he will not sell himself as Balaam did Tryals of thy Mourning 1 True mourning that comes from the spirit of grace looks at God who hath been dishonoured and at Christ who hath been crucified Psal 51.3 4. Mine iniquitie is ever before me against thee thee onely have I sinned Hos 6.1 Come let us return unto the Lord for he hath torn us and he will heal us Luke 15.18 Father I have sinned against heaven and before thee so it looks on Christ as crucified Zach. 12.10 They shall look upon him whom they have pierced In opposition to this there is a mourning flowing from the spirit of bondage which is a forced work this differs from the other as the motion of a clock from the motion of a living creature the one is moved from a principle of life the other from weights in the one a man is humbled in the other he humbles himself 2 True mourning hath a change of heart going with it Jer. 4 14. Luke 7.38 those eys that had been employd in wanton glancings now they weep those hairs that had been laid out to entangle now wipes Christs feet those lips that had kist wantonly now kiss Christs feet Hypocritical mourners have no change of heart they are like thievs who forbear stealing while in prison onely 3 If thy mourning for sin be right outward contents will not take it off David had the delights of a Court yet did not this take off his mourning Psalm 51.3.38.6 4 If thy mourning for sin be right it will be on this ground because it turnes away the face of God 2 Chron. 7.12 13. 5 Thou wilt mourn for secret sins as well as for open Psalm 19.12 Cleanse me from my secret sins as vain thoughts Jer. 4.14 c. 6 Thou wilt mourn especially for thy great sins as David doth for his adultery and murder Psalm 51 14. and Paul for his blasphemy 1 Timothy 1.13 7 Thy mourning will be especially for thy master sin Psalm 32.4 5. All Davids mourning was nothing till he came to touch upon this sin of murder to mourn for it 8 Thou wilt mourn for it not onely in times of extremity as Pharaoh Exod. 9.27 and Judas Matth. 27.4 but likewise in times of prosperity 9 True mourning looks at Gods face and favour 1 Sam. 7.3 Psalm 51.8 12. Ezek. 7.16 Hypocrites mourning is to have temporal judgements removed 1 Kings 21.27 and so Jehoram 2 Kings 6.29 30. and those who howled upon their beds for Corn and Wine Hos 7.14 Means to mourning 1 Urge the Lord with his Promise of taking away thy stony heart Ezek. 36.26 Zach. 12.10 God promises to pour upon the house of David and the Hierusalem of Jew and Gentile a spirit of grace and supplication and they shall mourn c. 2 Be frequent in self-examination Psalm 22.28 They shall remember themselves and turn to the Lord Lam. 3.39 Jer. 31.19 after Ephraim was brought to know himself he lamented 3 Keep thy heart under the powerfull dispensation of the Word Jer. 23.29 The Word is a Fire and Hammer Acts 2.37 4 Look often on Christ crucified Hard is thy heart if it mourns not when thou remembrest the dying of Christ Zach. 12.10 looking on him they pierced they mourned 5 Pray for the Spirit of grace to be poured upon thy soul Isai 32.15 When the Spirit is poured from on high the Wilderness will be a fruitfull Field that is those hearts that were like Wildernesses and Forests when the spirit was poured from on high became fruitfull Fields 6 Get assurance of thy interest in Christ crucified A man cannot mourn heartily for sinning against the Lord so long as he knows not but God may damn him in time to come but when Gods love is manifested there will be great sorrow 7 Mournfull considerations as that thou hast broken an holy Law thou hast offended a tender Father that thou hast lived an unprofitable life that thou hast sadded righteous men and gladded wicked men that thou hast been partaker with other men in their sins that thou hast often slidden back from God that thou hast been so dead-hearted in thy secret approaches to God 8 Consider the benefits of holy mourning as 1 Joy is wont to follow it Psalm 97.11.126.6 7. as a joyfull Harvest follows a weeping Seed-time when the poor Farmer mourns to cast away his precious Seed which his Family so much wants Luke 6.25 Isai 57.18 Isai 6.1 2 3. 2 Such persons are marked in an evil time Ezek. 9.4 Job 5.11 3 Such persons are not without blessedness though they be without comfort for Blessed are they that mourn Yea a time is coming when the Lord shall be thy everlasting Light and the days of thy mourning shall be ended Isai 60.20 4 This is one of the effects of Repentance 2 Cor. 7.7 Joel 2.12 5 Godly mourning is a special means to compose the dissoluteness and loosness of our affections which are apt to be scattered too much among carnal joys James 4.9 10. Be afflicted and mourn let your laughter be turned into mourning and your joy into heaviness 9 Practise duties as 1 Private admonition 2 Sam. 12.7 Psalm 141.5 2 Take a fit season for plowing up thy heart Jer. 4.3 when softened by outward trouble 3 Get a particular knowledg of thy evils 1 Sam. 12.19 We have sinned in asking us a King 2 The Reason why mourners are blessed For they shall be comforted here in part 2 Cor. 1.4 and hereafter fully in Heaven James 1.12 Apoc. 7.17 V. 4. Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth Obs Meek persons are blessed 1 What meekness is 2 Why the meek are blessed 1 What it is it is a certain moderation of minde speech and gesture whereby a man becomes gentle and tractable towards those with whom he converses so that he is not sharpened unjustly at their follies and frowardness and smaller offences they commit against him 2 Why meek persons are blessed 1 Because Christ pronounces them blessed Psalm 149.4 The Lord taketh pleasure in his people he will beautifie the meek with salvation Psalm 147.6 The Lord lifts up the meek The meek shall increase their joy in the Lord Isai 29.19 2 Christ promises such persons rest Matth. 11.29 Learn of me for I am meek and ye shall finde rest for your souls Now what rest is this save the rest of grace and glory 3 A meek spirit is of high price in the sight of God 1 Peter 3 4. God exalts such souls in blessedness Hence Preachers are sent to preach good tidings to the meek Isai 61.1 Psalm 76.9 4 Let us learn this duty 1 We have the example of Christ herein Matth. 21.5 Behold thy
the spirit of truth that in all his decrees and determinations he cannot erre on the other side the French cry him out of his infallible chair and conclude him subject to errour and deposable by a general counsel yet in this brawling there 's no universal breaking of communion why then should not private communion be granted among those that fear God 7 The multiplicity of relations that tyes Christians to peace worship of the same God profession of the same faith expectation of the same hope suffering for the same cause begotten by the same word children of the same father have the same comfort of love the same fellowship of the Spirit Phil. 2.1 8 The benefits that come by it 1 The kingdome of God consists in it Rom. 14.17 Some Christians thought that others could not come to heaven if they did not eat such meats as they but Paul tells them The kingdome of God consists not in meat and drink but in righteousness and peace and joy of the holy Ghost 2 It 's the way to a long and an happy life 1 Pet. 3.11 3 The fruit of righteousness is sown in peace Jam. 3.21 q. d the crop of grace and glory is not reap'd of proud and contentious persons of such as make rents in Churches and would be many masters of which he speaks v. 1. nor of those who boasting of themselves and their opinions would alone seem to be wise but it will be reap'd of peaceable Christians who being of a peaceable spirit themselves endeavour to make peace among others and sow the seed of peaceable discourses in order thereto 4 By peace we resemble God for when in God there are three subsistences yet there is one will one love and one consent whereas in contention weresemble the Babel builders 5. Peace is the way to have the presence of God with us 2 Cor. 13.11 Live in peace and the God of love and peace shall be with you Some creatures are by artificial means invited as Pigeons by looking glasses and Larkes by the resemblance of the Sun in a looking glass by peace the God of peace is invited who unites those one to another that are united to him John 17.21 I le conclude with Bernards Distich Nullum turbavi discordes pacificavi Laesus sustinui nec mihi complacui 6 The peaceable carriage of you to others will cause others to carry peaceably to you Judg. 8.3 Gideon peaceably answering the men of Ephraim who did unjustly in proud wrath chide him their spirits abated towards him For they shall be called the children of God that is they who evidence their Christianity out of conscience of the command by stablishing peace among them with whom they live are and ought to be acknowledged among men as regenerate and thereupon called Gods children 1 They are his children in likeness as God sent his Son into the world to make peace 2 Cor. 5.19 so do they 2 They are like Christ who being God and man made peace with the blood of his cross Eph. 2.14 Col. 1.20 and took away all enmity betwixt God and us 3 They shall be called the children of God in heaven though sometimes in this world they are not seen nor acknowledged 1 John 3.1 4 They shall be so called because having first made peace with God they feeling the sweetness of it make peace with men Ob. But how can such as make peace with men be called Gods children seeing we find many carnal men good arbitrators and make-peaces among neighbours Ans 1 Such persons do it not out of conscience of the command but either out of vain glory or to keep themselves imployed in business and so to keep off their consciences or at most out of a principle of good neighbourhood whereas Gods children do it from the command 2 They make peace not out of the sence of inward peace they have with God but out of the beneficial concernment of neighbourly peace 3 Carnal men making peace it 's usual in matters of claim betwixt man in meum and tuum but peace-makers to whom the promise belongs make peace where there are heart boylings and sinister conceptions and heart grudges betwixt man and man 4 Carnal peace makers are stir'd up to do what they do upon sollicitations and intreaties but those to whom the promise is made are stirred up to their duty by the belief of the promise and it is done many times in secret where no man knows what they aime at but themselves know that they aime at a right understanding betwixt neighbour and neighbour Christian and Christian in order to peace Use Exhort to peace-making that this promise may belong to you as God is called the God of peace Rom. 16.20 1 Cor. 14 33.2 Cor. 13.11 Phil. 4.9 1 Thess 5.23 2 Thess 3.16 Heb. 13.20 So by endeavouring after peace you shall be like unto him V. 10. Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousness sake for theirs is the kingdom of heaven In this verse 3 things 1 The suffering its persecution 2 The cause not for wickedness but for righteousness sake 3 The crown theirs is the kingdom of heaven Quest What is meant by righteousness Answ Neither universal or paticular morral righteousness for many of the heathens suffered for honest interests and for righteous causes but spiritual righteousness is here meant as for the profession of their faith for conscience towards God 1 Pet. 2.19 This is thank worthy if a man for conscience towards God suffer wrongfully and endure grief So that righteousness signifies obedience to all the commands of God Here is inrightment to blessedness when we will rather suffer then transgress the commandment of God Observ They that are persecuted for Christ and his cause and commandements are blessed persons Jam. 1.12 Blessed is the man that endureth temptation for when he is tried he shall receive the crown For Application 1 Be exhorted to suffer persecution 1 For Christ's sake 1 Hereby thou wilt prove thy soundness of heart Dan 3.17 18 Shadrach Meshech and Abednego and Daniel cap. 6 shewed their sincerity herein unsound men will not suffer Persecution Gal 6.12 The denying of Circumcision was the Object of Persecution hence the false Teachers would have the Galatians circumcised lest they should suffer Persecution Matth 13.21 See it in the Stony Ground 2 This is the principal difficulty in Christianity to witness truth before Kings Psalm 119.46 and Councils Matth 10.17 To resist to Bloud Heb 12.4 and not to love our Lives so much as our Duty to God Luke 14.26 27 Rev 12.11 17 3 In all Persecutions for Christ thou shalt have wisdom to answer the Persecutour Luke 21.15 I le give you a Mouth and a Tongue that your Adversaries shall not be able to gainsay Acts 6.10 They that reasoned against Stephen were not able to resist the wisdom and spirit in Stephen 4 Thou shalt have strength to overcome the Persecutours 1 John 4.4 Greater is he that is in you
of God Esa 38.5 A holy heart directs his prayer to God as an archer doth his arrow to the mark Psal 5.3 In the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee 2 A Diligent use of all means for prayer is onely one part of the means 3 It must not proceed from feigned lips Psal 17.1 Give ear unto my prayer that goeth not out of feigned lips Burning lips and a wicked heart pretending many glorious expressions in word when there 's no sutableness of spirit thereto such are like potsheards covered over with silver dross Prov. 26.23 we must not onely draw nigh with our lips but also with our hearts Esa 29 13. 4 Avoiding all affected gestures and expressions for prayer properly doth not consist of Rhetorical expressions nor of their studied or invented conceptions but of the powring forth of the sigh or groan in the heart God doth not like affected complements but abhors it as in all other ordinances so especially in prayer God seeks such worshippers as worship him in spirit and truth Joh. 4.23 24. 5 A heart bent against all sin Psal 66.18 such persons are upright and therefore usually their prayers upright and such as God delights in Prov. 15.8 the prayer of the upright is his delight 6 When we speak the present temper frame and disposition of our hearts the confessions to be of present sensible wants the petitions to be of things that the soul in the frame of it earnestly longs after to be full of expressions from brain and memory prompting the mouth may gain an opinion among men but hath little audience in the court of heaven We had better discover to a whole Church that distemper that is upon us by dumbness barrenness sencelesness and hartlesness then seem something to men and nothing to God by artificial expressions in prayer Hence prayer is never called by the name of expression but it s called by the name of breathing Hold not thy peace at my breathing Sam. 3 56. by the name of sighs and groans Rom. 8.26 and by the name of desire Psal 10.17 God is not a hearer of the voice but of the heart Cypr. de orat 7 If thy prayer be sincere thou wilt find it by thy closet prayers A neglect of secret prayer or a careless drowsie performance of it and that usually argues a spirit of slumber out of which if the soul be not awakened it may in time be cast into a deep sleep These are like some maried persons who before people have a great deal of love but in secret are full of discontents Let us have the same apprehension of Gods eye in secret that we have before a multitude and as much bewail thy dead heartedness there as that which thou findes before a multitude Ver. 6. But thou when thou prayest enter into thy closet and when thou hast shut thy door pray to thy father which is in secret and thy father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly But thou when thou prayest enter into thy chamber That is any secret place both to shun vain glory and to gather thy affections to God Some have gathered a mystical sence by closet understanding the heart by shutting the door the shutting out of vain thoughts onely to think of God but the literal 1 Is here meant yet when he saith enter into thy closet he bids us not avoid the society of men when we pray but Christ speaks comparatively rather to enter into a closet to pray then to desire multitudes of men to look on us 2 Christ here commends unto us closet prayer hence saith when thou prayes as speaking of a duty which lies upon every believer though not precisely pointing out the number of times hence the wives are to mourn apart from their husbands Zach. 12 13. and the husbands from their wives 1 Cor. 7.5 Yea servants apart as Eleazar Abrahams servant did Gen. 24.12 Reasons for secret prayer 1 Examples of holy persons Hanna 1 Sam. 1.13 Cornelius Act. 10.4 Peter prayed upon the house top Act. 10.9 Abraham Gen. 18.22 to ver 3● expostulating all that while in behalf of Sodom Isaac Gen. 24.63 and Christ often Luk. 6.12 13. and that penitent Lam. 3.28 and David Psal 55.18 and Daniel ch 6.10 2 There are particular necessities which concern particular souls as David when he sought God for the life of the child Paul for removing the thorn in the flesh 2 Cor. 12.9 There are secret occasions for obtaining personal mercies and turning away personal judgements 3 That we may more freely unbosom our selves to God to powre out our sighs and groans to him Ps 142.2 David when he was alone in the cave powred out his complaint before God and shewed before him his trouble Psal 42.4.102.2 Job 16.20 when alone his eyes powred out tears to God 4 That we may be free from outward entanglements hence Christ oft prayed in private for this end 5 That we may enjoy more of communion with God The soul usually enjoyes most of God in secret God is wont to speak comfortably to the soul in the wilderness Hos 2 14 Jacob Gen. 32.23 wrastled with God and prevailed in these prayers God oft speaks peace to his people Psal 85.8 in this the Lord came into Hannas soul 1 Sam. 1.15.18 to Hezekiah Esa 38.5 I will lead you with weeping and supplications Jer. 31.9 Pretend not this will hinder thy occasions for David Job Cornelius prospered much in their affairs nor that thou art a servant for what servant but may find some corner to pray in as thou art the servant of men so art thou the servant of God again though thou art a servant yet dost thou own God for thy father and therefore must pray unto him in secret and must not forbear though forbid by thy master no more then Daniel did when forbid by the King Pretend not want of conveniency of place for we may find many odde corners fields gardens out-houses if you have places for your horses cows hoggs can you not get some retiring place wherein to meet the Lord For application let it be thy constant practice thus to pray Satan hath many excuses and pretences to hinder this sacrifice he will tell thee this and that occasion that unless thou resolve with a peremptory will thou wilt be kept from it Many prove as unsuccesful for want of private prayer as the disciples were who assayed to cast out a devil without praying before hand for it Mat. 17.21 Motives 1 Christ delights in the Saints secret prayers O my dove that art in the clefts of the rock in the secret places of the stairs that is thou that hidest thy self by faith in me that am the rock and by degrees of faith like so many stairs fixest upon me let me hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice Song 2.14 Jer. 33.3 2 The sweet answers God hath given to closet prayers Esa 38.5 Blessed be God who hath heard the voice of my weeping Psa
6.6 Psal 31.22 Jonah when in the whales belly Jon. 27. 3 The great refuge Saints have herein Manasses when in chains 2 Chron. 33.11 12. thus sought God Paul 2 Cor. 12.8 Esther and her maidens when the Jews were designed to destruction When a child of God is overtaken with some sin or in distress he would not for a world want this Peter Mar. 14.72 when Esau came against Jacob this was Jacobs refuge Gen. 32.9 4 Our own personal wants wherein perhaps not one in the church or family is in our case Onely in secret prayer take heed of hypocrisie that thy voice may not if possible be heard of others nor thy meltings and weepings perceived by others also of customariness come out of sense of thy wants else if thou keep thy hours thou wilt perform prayer either with listlesness or slightness Also take heed of profaneness to put off secret prayer till thou be moved by the Spirit by this delusion some have not prayed alone for some moneths It is a fit season to pray when the Spirit moves but not the onely season Father which is in secret Here 's the object of our Prayer viz. God as a Father Who is a Father 1 By creation hence called the Father of spirits Heb. 12.9 2 By Regeneration 1 Peter 1.3 Who hath begotten us again to a lively hope which also is called Adoption Gal. 4.6 hence 1 Call upon this Father One of the first things in nature is for a Childe to call Father so it should be the first thing in grace Matth. 7.9 2 Honour this Father Mal. 1.6 If I be a Father where is mine honour and live so that others may honour him Matth. 5.16 3 Imitate your Father as children do their father in love Ephes 5.1 2. In doing good to Enemies Matth 5.44 In holiness 1 Peter 1.14 4 Patiently bear his corrections Heb. 12.5 6 7 8. 5 Sort our selves with Gods children 2 Cor. 6.14 2 Comfort to Christians in sundry respects as 1 That God will bear a tender respect to us in all Troubles as a Father loves his childe as well when sick as well nay he is then more affectionately tender to him the father then sets the whole house a work for his recovery some going for Physicians others for Friends others tending of him so when souls are sick God sets Christians to pray for them Preachers to comfort them Yea suppose thou hast broken some resolutions and been overtaken yet what father would take the Forfeiture of a Bond of his son especially when he forfeits it against his will much less will God who is infinitely more a Father to his Children 2 In desertion A father solacing himself with a childe steps aside into a corner that the childe may dearlier prize the fathers presence so our heavenly Father by restraint of his influence in shining upon us inflames our love towards him 3 In respect of sustentation in trouble A father sets his childe upon its feet to try whether its able to stand alone but withall he holds his arms on both sides to hold it up if it incline either way so doth our heavenly Father 4 In respect of provision The childe takes not care what it shall eat or wear so should Saints cast all their care on their Father 1 Peter 5.7 Your heavenly Father knows ye have need of these things Matth. 6.32 5 Against total falling away A father will not cast off a fatherly affection to his son how hard it is for a father to cast off a rebellious son we see in David to Absalom 2 Sam. 10.5 Hosea 11.8 Luke 15.18 Much less will God cast off his children who desire to please him Mal. 3.17 I will spare him as a man spareth his own Son 6 In respect of our bold access If it be a privilege to come into a Princes presence-chamber what is it to come into the presence of God A childe comes boldly to his father though strangers and servants keep a distance Heb. 4.16 7 In respect of imperfections A father calls two of his children one of three years old the other of thirteen they both make all the haste they can and though the elder outgo the younger and comes first yet the younger comes wadling as fast as he can the father accepts of the endeavours of the younger as well as of the faster going of the elder so doth our heavenly Father 8. In case of disinheriting because we will not touch this or that unclean thing our parents casts us off well says God in this case I will be your Father and you shall be my sons and daughters 2 Cor. 6.17 3 Exhortation to perform reverence Mal. 1.6 and obedience Jer. 35.16 and confidence Thy Father which sees in secret shall reward thee openly Christ stirs up the faith of his petitioners by a twofold Argument 1 From the omnipresence of God wheresoever we are even in the most secret closet God is there present hearing prayers 2 From the goodness and mercy of God who will not suffer such prayers to be in vain but will grant the things at present wanting and hereafter shall give a Reward openly Onely know it's a Reward of Grace not of Debt for what desert can a Beggar allege V. 7. But when ye pray use not vain Repetitions as the Heathen do for they think they shall be heard for their much speaking Christ comes to shew the third sin of the Pharisees which is vain Repetitions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do not speak vain things as Montanus translates it or speak not much as Erasmus the word is derived of Battus a Poet who was an egregious Babler As the Heathens thought they should be heard for their much speaking so did these Pharisees As Rhetoricians by their flanting style think to move the Judg to acquit the guilty so did these Yet doth not Christ condemn a frequency and continuance in prayer but he shews the grace of God is not obtained by the vain flowing of many words but the sighs and groans of the heart are the arrows that pierce Heaven Quest Whether are all Repetitions in Prayer vain Answ No. Solomon often uses them 1 Kings 8.30 39 43. Hear thou in Heaven thy dwelling place Nehemiah uses Repetitions Nehemiah 1.6 7. and so doth Daniel cap. 9.5 We have sinned we have committediniquity and done wickedly Repetitions are lawfull 1 When they come from pinching necessity so Christ cried My God my God and three times uttered the same words Matth. 26.39 42 44. 2 When they come from holy affections Psalm 72.19 Let the whole earth be filled with his glory Amen and Amen Repetitions in prayer are sometimes Ecchoes of strong cries of the Spirit Blessed be his holy Name for evermore Amen and Amen Psalm 89.50 51. So Abba Father Mark 14.36 1 Kings 18.39 The Lord he is God the Lord he is God 3 When they come from love as Holy holy holy Isai 6.3 Rev. 4.8 4 When used though the second time yet they
are accompanied with holy affections and renewed desires of the same thing formerly in the same prayer requested Psalm 80.3 Cause thy face to shine upon us and we shall be saved this saying is thrice mentioned as v. 3. v. 7. and v. 19. So Psalm 67.3 5. this saying is twice mentioned Let the people praise thee O God let all the people praise thee 5 When used to stir up our dulness Psalm 107.8 15.21.31 Four times the Prophet saith O that men would praise the Lord for his goodness and declare his wonderfull works to the children of men Psalm 47.6 Sing praises unto our God sing praises sing praises unto our King sing praises There is twenty six times mention made of the Lords mercy enduring for ever Psalm 136.1 to the end 6 Sometimes the heart of a childe of God exceedingly runs upon some one desire and so he may vent it more than once in prayer without vain repetition So David Psalm 119. more than once Repetitions in prayer become sinfull 1 When affected as strains of eloquence and Rhetorick as he that cried Hyperbolical God thou that dwellest in the third Heaven of Hyperbolees 2 When empty frothy and impertinent wherein is no spiritual life or heat so those worshippers cryed from morning to noon O Baal hear us 1 Kin. 18.26 Not onely those that are directed to Idols but those directed to Saints as those in the Papacy Holy Paul pray for us holy Peter pray for us mentioning thirty or forty Saints in this manner yea even repetitions of this kind directed to God as in the common prayer book Lord have mercy upon us Christ have mercy upon us Lord have mercy upon us so in the Letany Good Lord deliver us is eight times mentioned and one and twenty times there is mentioned We beseech thee to hear us good Lord. 3 When men from want of holy notions of the word in their hearts through which the Spirit would convey it self are forced to use the same repetitions these in some measure disparage the spirit of praier and had need be humbled for their seldom reading of the word and meditation thereof from whence comes this strangeness and forcedness of repetitions 4 When men have an itch to pray as long as others that because an other hath praid an hour perhaps from a true enlargment they will pray as large as he hence some persons use vain repetitions when the spirit ceases from assistance and indisposition prevails it s our wisdom and humility to give out For they think they shall be heard for their much speaking Christ sets forth a ground why the heathens used vain repetitions because they thought they should be heard for their much speaking by gentiles he means the heathen or nations whereas the jews were called by the name of people and so they are contradistinguished twice Act. 26.17 23. These prophane nations thought that because they wearied themselves with the irksomness of a long prayer that therefore God would hear them because they would say many things they must needs say what is already spoken but when in prayer there is nothing spoken but that which is needful such an one ought not to be accounted a much speaker Quest Whether or no are long prayers and much speaking unlawful Answ 1 Long prayer may be upon extraordinary cases Moses continued a whole day in prayer Ex. 17.11 12. and Christ a whole night Luk. 6.12 nor are carnal men fit judges in this case who snuff at any small time spent in Gods service Mal. 1 13. crying When will the Sabbath be gone Amos 8.5 nor is the unregenerate part of Godly men a fit judge but before I answer hereto I must premise some things 1 The heart is not easily or suddenly gotten upon the wing yet in that doth the life of prayer consist it is a lifting up of the heart Psal 25.1 Many weights of dulness hardness heartlesness strangeness unbelief from whence arises dumbness discouragement and listlesness are upon the heart which are not easily removed now motion is a cause of heat hence to bring the soul to sensibleness there may be the longer essaying 2 If prayer have its due growth in the several parts of it con●ession petition intercession and thanksgiving it cannot be very short 〈◊〉 O● manifold wants to be supplied and benefits to be acknowledged import that our prayer usually cannot be very short But to answer 1 We are to abominate all long prayer which is performed for any carnal end or pretence whether to get an opinion to be men of parts or to seem religious and get applause or because others so pray The wicked scribes for pretence made long prayers Mat. 23.14 2 See that your length of prayer arise from a true enlargment of heart and from a gracious quickned frame which if it be your petitions will be free and not forced Powre out thy heart like water before the face of the Lord Lam. 2.19 that is thy petitions will come freely as water powred out thy lips will drop as the hony-comb which needs no squeezing Song 4.11 they will be also pat and seasonable according to occasion wherein the heart oft will be put into an holy melting frame After this manner Christ prayed Heb. 5.7 and such a frame of spirit is promised Zach. 12.10 these enlargements the people of God have more often in closet prayer then elsewhere because they can there more freely rip up their hearts and can most insist upon those petitions that will make the soul bleed and yern 3 In long prayers see that your hearts be able to hold out as well as your tongues Our worship must be with our spirit Joh. 4.23 Rom. 1.9 Paul served God with his spirit a short prayer made with servency and devotion prevails with God Jam. 5.16 more then long prayers which are but lip labour Esa 29.13 4 Gods people have upon extraordinary occasions usually used long prayer as Solomon at the consecration of the temple 1 King 8. so when under agonies and great troubles Psal 102.1 the overwhelmed soul powres out his complaint it comes like a flood so when the spirit comes to visit the soul with enlargement the soul in this case is wont to pray long and loth to let the Lord go Gen. 32.26 when we have the breathings of the spirit upon our hearts it s not our wisdom to give out Longa hora brevis mora Bern. God's long a coming and his tarryings are not long Shall we be watchful for winde and tyde and shall we not take the gales of the spirit moreover afflictions are wont to awake the soul hence the soul being awakened prayes with more earnestness and length Jacob when he feared death and destruction from Esau he cryed to God all night long Gen. 32. when the Church is in hazard of ruine also so Hester and the Church Act. 12.5 5 In long prayer we must have respect to them that joyn with us as to our selves when the mouth of
reverend boldness and confidence but when we are doubting timorous and fearfull it 's a sign we come in our own names Christ hath a golden Censer wherein is much Incense which he offers with the prayers of all Saints Revel 8 3. as the high Priest of old did who put Incense on his Censer when he made an atonement for the people Numb 16.46 2 Pray with the Spirit We have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba father Rom. 8.15 Also v. 26. The spirit makes request for us with groanings that cannot be uttered The grones of the spirit are strong cries which so fills heaven and earth that besides it God hears nothing saith Luther If in tentation or trouble we shall onely sigh to God and say Jesus Christ come and help me or else I am undone for ever we shall finde often ease hereupon All the sons of God have the spirit of his Son in their hearts crying Abba Father God grants not that often which is in the top of the heart and in the froth of words but according to the depth of the sigh to which often words answer very barely or not at all How many worldly wise men are there that might they have a world to continue one quarter of an hour in ripping up their hearts in conceived prayer they were not able to do it Some short wishes they have as God be thanked for his blessings God send us rain Others there are who have learnt the art of prayer or the gift but they have not the grace of prayer they pray artificial prayers and give artificial life to them as if the spirit accompanied them but in the mean time their hearts are neither warmed nor melted But those prayers wherein God delights are stir'd up by the holy Ghost Jude 20. Eph. 6.18 Praying with all supplication in the spirit Without this spirit we may speak of God but not unto God indeed the best of our prayers are but as the stammering voices of infants begging bread or meat at the Table yet these chatterings or stammerings coming from the spirit he that searcheth the heart must needs know what they mean because he maketh intercession for the Saints now he intercedes not by way of merit as Christ doth nor by way of supplication but by stirring us up to cry to God Rom. 8.27 Do the bowels of a father yern towards an infant groaning and panting and unable to tell where his pain is and will not God be moved with the sighs and groans of his children When Moses spake never a word yet he is said to cry to God Exo. 14.15 Hanna's voice was not heard 1 Sam. 1.13 yet she is said to powr out her heart v. 15. the sighs of the godly are as so many beams of the spirit which tyrants cannot hinder from ascending heaven though they should cut out their tongues Asaph groaned when he could not speak Psal 77.4 Now that this praying with sighs and groans comes from the spirit appears because when the spirit ceases from working upon our hearts we become dull and heavie and weary of the dutie that it becomes a very penance to us the soul then is like a becalmed ship All Saints that pray aright even Paul himself pray by this spirit Rom. 8.15 By this spirit we present such sighs as cannot be expressed and utter such words as are not able to be repeated The sighings of the needy God hears Psal 12.5 Now though carnal men sometimes groan and that to God yet are these groans a fruit of nature as the bruits do under feeling of a pressing weight the groans of saints come not onely from feeling of pain but from sorrow for sin 2 The groans in Saints lifts up their hearts to heaven and brings back chearing and sence of Gods love 3 There 's usually a sweet satisfaction comes in those groans which doth not in the groans of wicked men Those that have this spirit of prayer they have many ejaculations amidst their callings Nehemiah when he was speaking to the King prayed to the God of heaven Neh. 2.4 they frequently dart out many broken sighs to quench the sprowtings of lust as pride unclean desires revenge c. and have many invisible springings of heart upon the receipt of blessings on themselves or others Many zealous wrastlings for removal of corruptions and supply of grace To powr out the soul out of sense of spiritual wants in that form or phrase which groanings and meltings of the spirit doth indite and frame is beyond the ordinary reach of unregeneration Yea thus to pray is the hardest of all works because it cannot be effected without the spirit This spirit of prayer is of more worth then the world especially when a Christian hath by any scandalous sin or relapse or sin against conscience turn'd away Gods favour for hereby he hath restitution into Gods favour and the return of Gods countenance Jon. 2.4 7. Infinite more fruits the spirit of prayer works as many secret exultations and rejoycings spiritual ravishments strong though silent cries passionate meltings unutterable groans zealous longings which are riddles to prophane men but known to the children of God 3 Thirdly the person must be righteous Hear my prayer for I am holy Psal 86.2 The prayer of the wicked is abomination to the Lord Prov. 15.8 A holy man may make a carnal prayer as when the flesh gets the upper hand but a carnal man cannot make a spiritual prayer I mean a prayer prevailing for spiritual things Jon. 9.31 God heareth not sinners but if any man be a doer of his will him he hears The righteous cry and the Lord heareth and delivereth him out of all his troubles Psal 34.15 The prayer of a righteous man avails much Jam. 5.16 If ye abide in me and my words abide in you ye shall ask what you will and it shall be done unto you Joh. 15.7 8. Whatsoever we ask we receive of him because we keep his Commandements and do those things which are pleasing in his sight 1 Joh. 3.22 The spirit of prayer is called the spirit of grace if thou hast not the spirit of grace thou canst not pray Zach. 12.10 yet know the righteousness of a person may consist with variety of passions as he instances in Eliah Jam. 5.17 In all begging it's a great matter who it is that begs if it be a sturdy beggar we have nothing for such so in prayer if a wicked man pray for any spiritual blessing saith God I have nothing for you but if it be a believer Christ saith be of good chear to such Luke 8.48 if thou prepare thy heart and stretch out thy hands towards him if iniquity be in thine hand put it far away Job 11.13 14. He will fullfil the desire of them that fear him Psal 145.19 Contrary when a man inclines to wickedness in his heart the Lord will not hear him Psal 66.18 The Pagans had so much divinity as to say the gods
1 Peter 2.5 And Angels are called holy Mark 8.38 but there is none holy as the Lord 1 Sam. 2.2 Saints and Angels are holy with a derivative holiness but in God it is essential Holiness in the creature is a quality in God it is his being and nature in the creature it 's finite and in such a measure in God it 's infinite and without measure Being then so infinitely and essentially holy let us sanctifie his Name by 1 Acknowledging him to be the true God Psal 103.1 The gods of the Heathen were impure Lechers 2 By being abased when thou comest into his presence after Jobs eye had seen God he abhorred himself in dust and ashes Job 42.5.6 Peter out of the apprehension of that great vileness in himself and holiness in Christ saith Depart from me for I am a sinfull man O Lord Luke 5.8 3 By extolling and praising this holiness in God Glorious in holiness and fearfull in praises are joyned together Exod. 15.11 Psalm 30.4 Give thanks at the remembrance of his holiness Without Gods holiness what were his wisdom but subtilty his will but wilfulness his power but oppression his love but dotage his justice but terrour but his Holiness declares the perfection of all his Attributes 4 By removing all causality of sin from God he can no more be a cause of sin than the Sun of darkness Shall not the Judg of all the World do right Gen. 18.25 God may will the being of sin but man the nature of it as in a Chain that breaks none is in fault but that which breaks so in the concurrent causes of sio none is to be faulted but the immediate cause the will of man God withdrawing his restraint which he is not bound to give corruption boils out and the creature sins necessarily but voluntarily He that drives a lame Horse is the cause of his going not of his halting God is the cause of the actions of the sinner for in him we live and move Acts 17.28 but not of the corrupt turning of the will 5 By avoiding all prophanation of his holy name When a man and his father went in to the same maid they prophaned Gods holy name among the heathen Amos 2.7 so the Babylonians seeing the unholy lives of the Jews cryed These are the people of the Lord and so Gods holy name was prophaned Ezek. 36.20 A small impeachment to the name of a Prince stirrs him up to arms and will not the Prince of Princes be jealous for his holy name See Ezek. 36 2● Ezek. 39.25 Give unto the Lord the glory due unto his name Psal 96.8 6 By imitating God in holiness be ye holy for I am holy 1 Pet. 1.16 as a little white is like a great white differing onely in degrees so let our holiness be like Gods Are we not Gods temples wherein his spirit dwells and were not temples severed from common uses Was Belshazzar so punished for abusing a material temple and shalt thou escape if thou prophanes a spiritual temple The lives and families of too many proves that they live the lives of heathens under the name of Christians some cry out as Corah Are not all the Lords people holy Numb 16.3 others think there 's none holy but glorified Saints but there is a people who are called to holiness and who so walk making holiness their Element wherein they live as the birds in the aire and fishes in the water Hereunto were we elected that we should be holy 2 Thess 2.13 we cannot climbe up into heaven to behold our election yet may we read it in our sanctification Without holiness we cannot prove our justification seeing the water and spirit witness with us as well as the blood 1 Joh. 5.8 Ere long heaven and earth will be on fire holiness at that time will be like pure gold which will not be consumed by the fire 2 Pet. 3.11 3 Gods Name is his Attributes which name God proclaimed Exod. 33.19 compared with cap. 34 6. I will proclaim my name before thee and the Lord passed by and proclaimed the Lord merciful gracious c. the name of God is every thing which is truly affirmed of him Thou shalt fear this glorious and fearful name the Lord thy God Deut. 28.58 to derogate from any attribute of God as to tax his justice to limit his power to question his faithfulness to ascribe that to fortune which is due to providence is a prophaning of the name of God 4 Gods Name is his ordinances Mal. 10.14 as the word Psal 138.4 Prayer Act. 9.14 The supper 1 Cor. 11.29 There ought to be a discerning of the Lords body so baptisme Matth. 28.19 Baptizing them into the name of Father Son and Spirit onely God magnifies his word above all his name Psal 138.4 5 Gods Name is taken for the honour of God and credit of Religion Rom. 2. ●4 My Name is blasphemed every day through you that is you Jews who profess my name and live loosly Ezek. 36. ●0 the loose Jews in Babylon prophaned Gods name when the heathens reported These are the people of the Lord Esa 52.5 Hallowed be thy name To hallow is taken 1 for the making of a person or thing that was unholy to become holy 1 Cor. 6.10 thus we cannnot hallow Gods name 2 For the declaration or for an appearing to be holy so God will have his name appear to the whole world that he is an holy God not onely by a reverend speaking of his essence and Attributes avoiding all swearing cursing c. but also by a holy conversation Thus we are to sanctifie God in our hearts 1 Pet. 3.15 and in our lives 1 Pet. 1.16 Be ye holy for I am holy We by our holiness should show forth the glory of Gods holiness that if there be so much holiness in poor Saints how much is there in God 3 For the publishing of a thing to be holy so we are to publish the name of God to be holy Ps 105.3.111 9. Holy and reverend is his name Psal 30.4 4 For the manifestation of Gods holiness in a way of judgement when sinners will not show forth his holiness in a way of practice so when God destroyed Nadab and Abihu he saith I will be sanctified in them that come nigh unto me Levit. 10.3 so God was sanctified in the destruction of Zidon Ezek. 28.22 so God will be sanctified of God in the eyes of the heathen Ezek. 38.16 23. Thy kingdome come There 's a twofold kingdome 1 of grace 2 of glory 1 Of grace this kingdom we desire may come 1 By casting down the kingdome of Satan in us 2 Cor. 10.4 2 By setting up Christ to raign in every one of our hearts thus the kingdom of God is said to be within us Luk. 17.21 governing us by his Word and Spirit 3 By stablishing all means towards the building up of this Kingdom as the preaching of the Word which is called the Gospel of the Kingdome 4
Remission of sins which is spread over me Luth. Tom. 4.76 Now that happiness consists in forgiveness appears thus 1 Sin exposes us to all misery both in this life and hereafter Rom. 3.23 now it 's a happiness to be freed from this misery 2 The blessing cannot come upon us till the curse be removed Gal. 3 1● 14. now we are not freed from the curse till our sins be forgiven 3 Where God forgives there 's none can condemn Rom. 8.1.33.34 now it must needs be a state of happiness to be free from condemnation 4 Without forgiveness there 's no reconciliation now we can never be happy till God and the soul be reconciled That reconciliation goes with forgiveness appears 2 Cor. 5.19 God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them 2 Use Triall whether God hath forgiven thy sins 1 There will be then a writing of Gods Law in thy heart because the branches of the new covenant are inseparable Heb. 8.10 12. where God remembers sin no more he so writeth Gods Law in the heart 2 The sealing of the Spirit manifested to Gods people in Prayer Ephes 1.13 After ye believed ye were sealed Every comfortable answer in Prayer doth help to clear up pardon to the soul 3 A thankfull frame of heart in the receipt of this privilege Psalm 103.1 2. Bless the Lord O my soul why who forgiveth all thy sins Hezekiah praises God for this mercy Isai 38.17 Behold for peace I had great bitterness but thou in love to my soul hast delivered me from the pit of corruption for thou hast cast all my sins behinde thy back 1 Tim. 1.13 14 15. 4 With pardon there is a subdument of the reigning power of sin Mic. 7.18 19 Rom. 6.14 Rom. 8.1 2. Jebusites will dwell in the Land whether you will or no onely they are conquered and become tributary Josh 17.11 12. 5 Pardon of sin is accompanied with sanctifying grace as the Lord took Joshua's filthy garments off so he gave him change of raiment Josh 3.3 4. Ezek. 16.9 10 11. There 's ever a love goes to the Lord. Luke 7.47 speaking of Mary Magdalen he saith Her sins which are many are forgiven her for she loved much Her love was not the cause of remission but a declarative sign thereof the Pharisee findes fault with Christ for suffering a sinner to be so familiar with him Christ answers She is no sinner he proves it because her sins were forgiven her but how proves he that why she loved much And as it is accompanied with the grace of love so with the grace of fear Jer. 32.40 6 Repentance and Forgiveness goes together Luke 24.47 Acts 2.38 39. Acts 3.19 Acts 5.31 Therefore whatsoever evidences Repentance evidences Forgiveness 7 Pardon of sin is accompanied with sovereign love to God 1 John 4.19 We love him because he first loved us and for the degree see Matth. 10.37 so Mary Magdalen Luke 7.38 compared with v. 47. Love is in true Faith as the Fruit in the Root 8 Peace of Conscience is an evidence Rom. 5.1 being justified by Faith we have Peace with God I mean such a Peace as arises after trouble or deliverance from danger and frees the soul from slavish fears 9 A desire of more and more assurance This is an Argument that we have tasted the sweetness of Pardon in some measure There are three things proper to Saints they think they can never be humbled enough nor thankfull enough nor assured of Gods love enough Hence David after Nathan had come to him and assured him of pardon prays Psalm 51.8 Make me to hear joy and gladness that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoyce and not being satisfied herewith v. 12. he prays Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation Onely if the evidence of the Spirit shew not it self always in the same measure we must have recourse to those Evidences God gives sometimes knowing that these Evidences which come from the Spirit as a cause and the fruits of sanctification as effects are occasional refreshings for the soul in its way to Heaven but not daily food for the soul to feed upon Feasting is not for every day except the Feast of a good Conscience that the Conscience witnesses we live not in the omission of a known duty nor in the commission of a known iniquity 10 We know it by these three witnesses the blood of Christ pacifying the conscience 1 Joh. 5.9 the witness of water altering our natures and the testimony of the Spirit saying I am thy salvation thy sins are pardoned such testimonies ought to be carefully kept even as a malefactor carefully keeps a pardon under seal which he means to produce for his life at the next assizes between the Lord and a true believer there is as it were a mutual contract Faith sets to its feat that God is true in that he promiseth Joh. 3 3● And God by his Spirit seals unto the believer that he shall be undoubtedly brought to the salvation he hath bel●●●ed 11 When thou canst produce some promise that doth discharge 〈◊〉 which the Spirit ●●th made over to thy soul as that Esa 43.25 Joh. 3.16 It s not bare remembring promises is so comfortable as those promises made over to thy soul wherein thy soul rests and received comfort If a man have paid his debts he is able to produce his acquittance that they are paid When we have such promises so made over to produce they are as it were acquittances under hand and seal Suppose that without the in-come of the Spirit in the promise thou shouldest believe which I doubt of yet through the in-come of the Spirit in the promise thou mayest know that thou dost believe As the pipes of a conduit convey water hither and thither so doth the Spirit in the promise believed convey grace and comfort into our hearts Yet some think that when God gives a particular promise it is not to measure our condition by but to uphold the soul in the condition of desertion or temptation Hence though Hezekiah had a particular word for deliverance the three children had not 3 Use to believe the forgiveness of sins and labour after assurance thereof Wherefore came Christ into the world Wherefore hath he carried our nature into heaven and there appears for us Why hath he given us his oath Heb. 6. Why hath he given us the signes of the Covenant Why have we so many commands to believing and so many reproofs of unbelief Why have we besides the sealing of the promise with the bloud of the testator the sealing with the spirit of promise as a pledge a pawn and an earnest but onely to urge us to believe Though we will not believe a mans word or bond yet upon sufficient pawn we will deal though the man be but weak and shall we not trust God for that for which we have so good a pawn as his Spirit And in order to this thy
assurance of thy pardon get more and more earnest of the Spirit Men that deal in great matters love to get as good earnest as they can the fuller earnest the more security Again people keep and esteem an earnest more then other mony because it hath reference to further matters which other mony hath not So should we esteem the Spirits testimony as sealing us up unto the future inheritance in heaven at which day it shall cease to be any further an earnest as earnest mony ceases to be earnest when the whole sum is paid Mean time till we come into that glory the Spirit though it do not always confirm us to present sence yet doth it confirm us to present experience from the former workings thereof which we have felt as the former movings of the infant in the mothers womb confirm the mother that she is with childe though at the present she feel no moving at all thereof Obj. But the heart is deceitful Ans The Spirit in us is too holy to deceive and too wise to be deceived When there is an object to be seen and an eye to see and light to discover the object to the eye sight must needs follow so in a believer there is grace to be seen and an eye of faith to see it so is there a light of the Spirit discovering that grace to the soul Obj. But some as Papists and others think there can be no assurance of remission of sins and of salvation A. That we may be assured herein appears 1 The Word bids us make our pardon and salvation sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Heb. 6.11.10.22 which were in vain if such a thing could not be 2 The Saints have been assured hereof Job saith c. 19.25 I know that my Redeemer liveth and that I shall stand up with him on the earth at the last day and I shall see him not with other but with the same eys 2 Cor. 5.1 Paul saith We know if our earthly tabernacle were dissolved we have a building of God Abraham Rom. 4.21 22. 1 John 3.14 1 John 5.14 15. We know we are translated from death to life we know we have the petitions desired 1 Pet. 5.1 I am also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed Peter speaks of himself in this life Obj. But what these Saints had they had by special revelation Answ No. For the Saints Peter writes to had obtained like precious faith with himself 2 Pet. 1.1 And Paul saith I am perswaded that neither life nor death shall be able to separate us from the love of God See he names other believers as well as himself Rom. 8.38 39. 2 All the Saints have the same Spirit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 though not in the same degree Timothy saith I know whom I have trusted 2 Tim. 1.12 See there is a certainty in knowledge The Hebrews knew in themselves they had a better and enduring substance which was the ground they not only patiently suffered but also joyfully endured the spoyling of their temporal substance Heb. 10.34 They did not onely conjecture it but knew it in themselves Peter when Christ asked him whether or no he loved him he did not answer Lord thou knowest we cannot tell truly whether or no we love thee but appeals unto Christ saying Thou knowest all things thou knowest that I love thee John 21.15 16 17. Peter mentions it three times shewing the undoubted assurance he had thereof 3 The Scripture bids us prove our selves as concerning our estate to God ward Gal. 6.4 Let a man prove himself that he may have rejoycing in himself alone 1 Cor. 11.28 Let a man examine himself and so let him eat 2 Cor. 13.5 Examine your selves whether you be in the faith This bidding us search our conscience according to the rule and the declaring that rejoycing followes thereon doth denote unto us that assurance of remission of sins may be had It is ridiculous to think that the Spirit should bid us search for that which cannot be found 4 That certainty and assurance of salvation may be had appears from the many signes and evidences the word of God sets down of our being in Christ of our having the Spirit of our regeneration uprightness confidence to say that he that hath these graces is not sure whether he have them or no is a great mistake for do not I know that I love the Lord better then any thing that I love my brother yea mine enemies that I combate against all sin hunger after righteousnesse that my heart closeth with every command of God that I hate all sin do not I know that I have comfottable answers from God in prayer when I have them Comfortlesse is the assurance of hope arising from humane conjecture allowed by Papists and differs from Theological or divine hope arising from faith 5 The doctrine of doubting of remission of sins or conjectural hoping for salvation is a comfortlesse doctrine for 1 It kills our joy and thankfulness for how can I joy in or be thankfull to him who for ought I know may damn me another day and how can I joy in a thing which I know not whether I shall have or no 2 This doctrine of doubting stuns and hinders our proceeding in a godly course How can a man have a heart to go on when he cannot tell whether all he doth will come to any thing yea or no The Scripture ordinarily exhorts to duty from the knowledge we have that our labour will not be in vain Gal. 6.9 Be not weary in well doing knowing in due season you shall reap if ye faint not 1 Cor. 15.28 Be ye alwayes abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know your labour will not be in vain 3 The doctrine of doubting must needs fill the conscience with much anguish and anxiety A man that is condemned and hath no way to escape but by a pardon must needs be in perplexity of mind till he know of his pardon so must the soul needs be that sees its own lost estate and knows nothing of the pardon of his sins 6 From experimental feeling when I trust to a person promising to give or lend me any thing I know I trust to him and rest on him for what he hath promised and shal I by faith rest on Christ and know no such thing 7 From the testimony of the renewed conscience for our spirits regenerate witness our good estate Rom. 8.16 Yea even this is witnessed even in weak Christians though with some fear of the contrary the poor man cryed out Mark 9 2● Lord I believe help my unbelief How could we say we believe if we could not know it we cannot speak that truly whereof we can have no certainty 8 From the seal of the Spirit witnessing with our spirits Take heed of expecting such inward witness of the spirit as some expect viz. a discovering of your adoption without first discovering the signes of it as if by an
understanding the Word Matth. 13.19 Such were the way-side hearers from whom the wicked one catched away that which was sown Hence preachers must preach words easie to be understood 1 Cor. 14.9 Many seeing see not Matth. 13.15 They have not an eye given them to see an ear to hear nor an heart to understand Deut. 29.4 In order to the Disciples profiting by the word Christ opens their understandings Luk. 24.46 Matth. 13.23 11 Cares of the world and immoderate pursuit of riches choke the Word Matth. 13.22 12 Filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness Jam. 1.19 Lay aside all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness that is all filthiness of soul yea every kind of sin which like so many weeds possesse the field of our hearts hindring both the rise and increase of the good seed It s a Metaphor from husbandmen who gather out of their fields to be sown or already sown all weeds stones and stuff Use Exhortation Labour to hear for thy good Job 5.27 Pity so much of the precious Word of God should fall to the ground That thou mayest be a profitable hearer observe these rules 1 Ponder and weigh the words that are spoken Luk. 2.19 Mary kept all those things which she heard and pondered them in her heart Deut. 11.18 2 Come with a purpose to obey every thing commanded from God Act. 10.33 Else thou art no better then Ezekiels hearers Ezek. 33.31 3 Call over the truths you have heard by repetition that your hearts may not be leaking vessels to let truths slip Heb 2.1 There was a great growth in the families of professours in times past when this was done Deut. 6.6 7. These words which I command thee thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house This would make children and servants be attentive in hearing as being to be called to give account 4 Bring a wakeful spirit and herein be sober in the use of meat and drink drowsy hearts let many precious truths slip away A spirit of slumber in hearing is threatned as a sore judgement Rom. 11.8 God hath given them the spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and ears that they should not hear Yea it 's a judgement to have the heart made heavy in hearing Esa 6.9 10. Make the heart of this people fat and make their ears heavy 5 Have a love to the preacher 1 Thess 5.12 13. Where prejudice and want of love is what is heard how sound soever is but too much slighted I know there may be degrees of love as there are diversities of gifts and as a ministry is blest to conversion in general and to your conversion in special yet must we have a love to all in order to profit by all Rom. 10.15 How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tydings of good things and beware we do not admire and prayse one to the dis-respect slighting and contempt of another 1 Cor. 3.21 22. Let no man glory in man for all things are yours whether Paul Apollos or Cephas 6 Come with a desire to be informed so Cornelius Act. 10.33 Carnal men they desire not the knowledge of Gods Laws Job 21.13 14. And this will lye one day heavy upon them that they would not hear Matth. 10.15 7 Hear with attention Luk. 4.20 The eyes of all that were in the Synagogue were fastned upon Christ when he preacht Prov. 4.13 Take fast hold of instruction It was the praise of Lydia that she attended to the things which were spoken by Paul Act. 16.14 The ears of all the people were attentive to the book of the Law when Ezra expounded it Neh. 8.3 See Job 57.2 Prov. 4.1.20 Luk. 19.48 8 Hear with discretion and examine doctrines whether they agree with the Scriptures so the Bereans Act. 17.11 They searched the Scriptures whether those things were so It s no disparagement to the ablest preacher to have his doctrine tryed 1 Thess 5.21 Prove all things hold fast that which is good that is prove all the doctrines spoken by the Prophets of whom he spake ver 20. and whatsoever is agreeing to wholsom doctrine hold that especially when any new doctrines are brought by the preachers which have not been tryed 1 Joh. 4.1 this will make us boldly to stand to the truth both in persecuting times and in time of temptation yea beget a good opinion of the Teacher finding what he speaks to be truly alleged 9 Desire satisfaction in things wherein you are not clear See for this John 16.19 Christs Disciples were desirous to ask him about his Doctrine and he encourages them in it so the Disciples Matth. 13.36 Declare unto us the Parable of the Tares of the field See cap. 19.10 Benefits hereby 1 It would make Preachers very cautelous in what they deliver 2 Tim. 1.15 Jer. 23.28 knowing that their words in comparison of Gods are as Chaff to Wheat where they leave the Word of God Titus 2.8 2 It was no other than was practised by Christ himself Luke 2 46. Christ sate in the midst of the Doctours in the Temple both hearing them and asking them questions 3 It was practised of Christs Disciples to him Matth. 17.10 4 It tends to the clear Information of the hearers being hereby doubts will be cleared up and questions cleared 5 Hereby we may witness against destructive Doctrines if any such shall be delivered and we not be guilty of silent denial of Christ 6 Hereby we shall be guiltless of the seducement of a whole congregation whiles too oft gross errours are swallowed down all being silent 7 As the Preachers lips should preserve knowledg so should they herein seek the Law at his mouth Mal. 2.7 8 For the want of this duty people are apt to go away and mis-report Doctrine Rom. 3.8 Object But if there be such Reply made it will set all the Congregation in a Tumult Answ Such Tumults arise partly from the pride of Teachers who will not have any thing they deliver questioned and yet Christ in his Ministry permitted it partly from the ignorance of rude multitudes who think the examination of Doctrine to be an affront to the Preacher and to the Word which is onely duty 1 John 4.1 partly from the passionateness and pride of Protessours and Church-members who possibly may in a masterly way call in question upon pretence of Liberty the clearest Truth James 3.1 My brethren be not many masters 2 If any such Tumults shall be it 's the duty of Elders to silence it Rules in replying For this Doctrine will through pride c. Be apt to be abused 1 Let it not be in Circumstantials but in Fundamentals either of faith or practise So when Peter walked not with a right foot but dissembled Paul opposed him before all the Church of Antioch Gal. 2.11 14. 2 Let it not be in such points which the Preacher shall cite as doubtfull wherein he
shall onely shew his opinion 3 Let it be with modesty and humility not in a proud magisterial way that it may appear the desired satisfaction arises meerly from conscience and not from humour 4 With a care to preserve the authority and reputation of the Teacher Titus 2.15 5 Upon due satisfaction given to sit down and hold your peace and not for the defence of your own opinion and credit to violate peace and holiness See Acts 11.18 6 To avoid all words that may force strife that the hearer may go away and report that God is among this people whiles they can peaceably debate of the things of God 1 Cor. 14.25 See 2 Tim. 2.23 7 Be sure that what you have to reply against any thing delivered be of moment and strength else your selves who shall reply will suffer reproach and scorn herein and come under the name of a gain-sayer Titus 1.9 8 In case words tending to no profit but to the subverting of hearers shall be brought the Preacher is to charge them before the Lord That they strive not about words to no profit 2 Tim. 2.16 Also v. 14. Shun profane and vain bablings for they will increase unto more ungodliness and their word will cat as a Canker as Hymenaeus and Philetus who denied the Resurrection so Quakers Antiscripturists are thus to be charged For the time will come when men will not endure sound doctrine but will turn away their ears from the truth and shall be turned into fables 9 Sometimes apostate Professours stirred up by the Devil this way as well as others may make great resistance against the words of a faithfull Preacher 2 Tim. 2.14 Alexander the Copper-smith greatly withstood the Apostles preaching and it may be suspected that some will be apt to abuse this Liberty proudly opposing sound Doctrine for meer trifles 10 Herewith rejoycing Jer. 15.16 Thy words were found and I did eat them and thy word was unto me the joy and rejoycing of my heart Psalm 119.162 David rejoyced in the Word as one that findeth great spoil Acts 2.41 Object But the stony ground received the Word with joy Matth. 13.20 Answ So they did and it was well that they did but 1 Hypocrites joy in some part onely but right hearers joy in every part hypocrites joy in the promises not in the precepts 2 Hypocrites joy in the notion onely but the right hearer joys in those truths as having an interest in them We rejoyce in the sight of a Diamond but joy more in the property The joy of one is like the joy of a man that is glad to see a fine field of Corn the joy of the other is like the joy of him that is the owner of this field of Corn. 3 Hypocrites joy in the Word after the outward man as apprehending most of the duties equitable and reasonable and many of them advantageous to a mans Estate credit and relations but a right hearer delights in the Law of God after the inner man Rom. 7.22 4 True joy is accompanied with fear Psalm 2.11 Rejoyce in him with trembling and also righteousness Rom. 14.17 The Kingdom of God consisteth in righteousness peace and joy of the Holy Ghost It 's otherwise in hypocrites their joy is accompanied with love of some Lust 11 Practise Christian conference Mal. 3.16 The godly when they met together spake often one to another of the providence of God The two Disciples going to Emaus communed together and reasoned of what they heard from Christ Luk. 24.15 Exhort one another daily while it is called to day Heb. 3.13 In speaking of the good things we have heard we do not onely warm others but our own hearts also 12 Retain and hold fast the Word 1 John 3 9. The seed of God abideth in him Cares pleasures will be apt to steal away the Word Else the fowls of the air will devour it Luke 8.5 For as many fowls follow the Seeds-man to pick up what is sown so do many Devils follow Sermons to pick up the seed Devils are called Fowls of the Air both for the nimbleness of their motion in a little time they will compass the whole earth Job 1.7 and from the place of their habitation which is the Air Ephes 2.2 13 Avoid all cavilling objections against the Word 1 Tim. 6.3 4. we ought to consent to the Doctrine according to godliness without any cavilling It 's one thing to make an objection in order to Christian satisfaction and another thing to cavil from pride and conceitedness Cavillers in Pauls time were out of Churches 1 Cor. 1.23 Where is the disputer of this world Take we heed they be not now in the Church It was the wickedness of the Jews that they were gain-sayers not onely their ears but their hearts Rom. 10.21 against Gods truth I have stretched out my hand to a gain-saying people 14 Practice meditation Deut. 32.46 set your hearts to all the words I testifie among you this day As a plaister works not unless it be bound on to the sore no more doth the Word unless meditation bind it on the affections Unclean beasts contrarily chew not the cud As the ground cannot be quickned with fruit unless it receive the seed no more can our hearts be quickned with the Spirit and fruits of it till by the use of hearing and meditation we have taken in this seed Many are so far from meditating that they are like children when schooling time is ended glad who can first get out and think not of what they have learned 15 Consider the benefits you shall have in the preaching of the Gospel when rightly received As 1 The graces and comforts of the Spirit conveyed in the beginnings and increases thereof even as Conduit-pipes carry water hither and thither Luke 24.32 Did not our hearts burn within us whiles he talked with us by the way Gal. 3.2 5. 2 Therein glad tydings are conveyed Rom. 10.15 How beautifull are the feet of them that bring good news Upon the hearing of it we feel as it were new spirits to return to us how much more when we hear tydings of reconciliation from God how should our hearts abound in comfort shall other news revive us not this 3 The excellency of the ministry we are under it is the ministry of the Gospel far more excellent then that of the Law 1 In the Law they saw darkly we with open face 2 Cor. 3.18 2 The one is the ministration of death but the Gospel is the ministration of righteousness and life v. 7 8 9. Obj. But may not the Gospel also be called a ministration of death Answ Yes by accident not directly when souls will not obey the Gospel it turns to their condemnation As a Princes pardon cannot kill any one of it self but being despised it doubles the guilt and brings to a more hasty destruction so the pardon of God in the Gospel killeth not any but being despised causeth more heavy destruction But the Law
of the Earth Luke 13.28 29. They shall come from East West North and South as this Centurion came from far You are of this people O then come in Shall come That is to me and to the faith of this Centurion being called by the Word of Christ and drawn by the Spirit of Christ even all that are given to Christ shall come and he that comes shall not be rejected John 6.37 compared with 44. And shall sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven Metaphor from a Banquet wherewith we shall be satisfied when Christ shall appear Psalm 16.11 36.8 They shall be abundantly satisfied with the fatness of thy house and thou shalt make them drink of the Rivers of thy pleasures Luke 14.15 Blessed are they that shall eat Bread in the Kingdom of God See Luke 22.29 30. Revel 19.9 This was signified by the Parable of the Mariage Matth. 22.2 Luke 14.16 The things of grace and glory were like a well furnished Feast or Banquet set before Jews and Gentiles but the Jews cavilled at it and railed against it and persecuted it but the Gentiles that had but a Crum they embraced it so that this Banquet is the glorious things of the Gospel and the Inheritance of Heaven With Abraham Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdom of Heaven He names these three 1 Because he styles himself their God Exod. 3.6 2 Because the promise of Canaan a Type of Heaven was made to them 3 For their faith and holy examples these shall as it were sit at the upper end of the Table and the Gentiles shall come to sit down by them for there is one Communion of all Saints There being a common Inheritance it supposes a common Faith So that the sense is as this Centurion and stranger being perswaded of divine power in me hath obtained health for an afflicted body so very many of the Gentiles flying unto me by like perswasion shall obtain grace here and eternal salvation hereafter Besides whereas the Jews think themselves so holy that they will not eat with a stranger many strangers shall eat Bread with Abraham Isaac and Jacob the Jews Ancestours whose names they brag of the Jews being shut out But the children of the Kingdom shall be cast out into outer darkness The children of the kingdom are they to whom by priviledge of covenant the kingdom was appointed before others unless themselves withstood it 2 Because the word of the kingdom the doctrine of salvation was sent unto them Act. 13.26 Children of the stock of Abraham to you is the word of this salvation sent 3 Though they were not the kingdom to whom the inheritance was promised Matth. 25.34 Yet because they possessed a place in the visible Church they are called the children of the kingdom The Jews could have borne it that the Gentiles should have been planted in with the Jews to be one body but that the Jews should be cast out and the Gentiles taken into an empty place they could not bear this Shall be cast into outer darkness Here 's a commination and punishment against the ungrateful Jews If a King should make a sumptuous feast for his courtiers and they should not onely despise it but rail upon the King and persecute him for it would not the King not onely keep them from his Table but cast them into a most filthy prison so these Jews refusing Christ his banquet they have blindness hardness and extream outward calamities here and hell hereafter Into outer darkness Its called outer to understand this know that formerly people were wont to eat very sparingly in the morning and then to satisfie and chear themselves at supper giving themselves to their business on the day time hence they used to have their feasts at supper Mark 6.21 John 12.2 1 Cor. 11.20 See Clem. Alex. 2. Paedag. 2. Athenaeus de Caenis sapientium See for this 1 Thess 5.7 Matth. 22.2 Luk. 14.16 Rev. 19 9. Now when they had supt they had plenty of light in the house where the feast was but without it was darkness so these that partake not of this glorious supper whereof Christ had before spoken they shall be cast into outer darkness such as believe not on the Son of God shall not partake of this supper with the blessed but be cast out into outer darkness thus he that wanted the wedding garment was bound hand and foot and cast into outer darkness Matth. 22.13 Such persons when they shall see Abraham Isaac and Jacob in the kingdom themselves shall be cast out Luk. 13.28 the door shall be shut against them Luk. 13.25 The contrary is promised to believers and conquerors Rev. 3.12 Rev. 22.15 Without are dogs wicked men are still said to be without 1 Cor. 5.12 Col. 4.5 These damned souls shall not onely have inner darkness whereby their minds shall be deprived not onely of the light of mysteries vvhich Saints shall have the Tabernacle of heaven being open to them and of the beatifical sight and light of Gods countenance and all inward comfort but also they shall be punished with outward sensible darkness which excludes sensible light 1 Concerning curious questions as 1 Whether in hell there be fire without or whether the fire of hell shine so far that the damned can behold their own and others torments I leave it undetermined 2 Where the place of hell is whether in the centre of the earth which is judged to be from the superficies three thousand five hundred miles if so the so great darkness in the earth must needs cause great darkness in hell Some think its without this visible world and the region of the blessed to which I●ncline So that the damned in hell shall not onely be punished with an obstinate blindness to hate God and holiness and all good because God torments them in hell and to love all evil out of their rage against God and despair of their own salvation but also with sensible darkness Jude 6. They are reserved in everlasting chains of darkness to the judgement of the great day And marke who the persons are who are thus punished they are the children of the kingdom fruitless and carnal professors Let such as have a forme of godliness without the power tremble at this that they shall have the sorest place in hell even outer darkness which is the furthest removed from light whereas they that have a great faith as the Centurion had shall have chief place in heaven and shall sit down with Abraham Isaac Jacob. Where there is weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth Metaphor from prisoners who partly from the hunger cold and nastiness they endure and partly from the fear of the stroke of death ready to surprise them weep and wail and gnash their teeth or as men in great torments weep and gnash their teeth so shall the damned they shall have the worm of conscience eternally gnawing of them Isa 66.24 Mark 9.44 Moreover men gnash their teeth
James 1.10 3 Rest content in thy condition so Christ here and Paul 1 Cor. 4.11 Phil. 4.13 If at any time we are taken by poverty let us rest contentedly therein living in abundance take heed ye fall not by proud boasting and living in want take heed ye be not supplanted with sorrow of heart one and the same countenance appearing Just Mart. ad Zenam p. 391. V. 21. And another of his disciples said unto him Lord suffer me first to go and bury my Father V. 22. But Jesus said unto him follow me and let the dead bury their dead Suffer me first Here is another of Christ his Disciples who would follow Christ but it must be when his father was dead Christ here shows that nothing should be put before the observation of his commands as being a matter of eternal concernment nor must we use delay herein See Exod. 22.29 Psal 119.60 Nor must we preferre service to relations as probably this man might pretend to serve his Father while he lived or to bury him now dead for some think his Father was now dead and Christ comes to him at this time to comfort him in the want of that relation However Christ called him to follow him Luke 9.59 and he makes this excuse some think his father was old and it would not be long first before he were dead It was a moderate request to go and perform the last office of love but Christ knew others could do it and then matters of salvation are to be preferred before matters of comliness and decency But Jesus said unto him Follow me That is let thy love be so to thy relations that if Christ call thee thou mayest leave all for him Matth. 4.22 Matth 10.37 The end why he followed Christ was ●o preach the Gospel Luk. 9.60 And let the dead bury their dead By dead in the former place he means those who are dead in sins Eph. 2.1 5. Eph. 5.14 1 Tim. 5.6 Bury their dead Christ doth not condemn burying their dead friends who if godly are buried in hope of a comfortable resurrection but hereby tells us that whatsoever hinders us from a right course savours nothing but death and that the unbelieving Jews who were dead in sins might serve to bury this man when he was dead he had some brethren or kindred who might do it also Obs When God calls us to do duty we must not use delayes Gen. 22.2 3. Many sinners are like him that cryed a little more slumber Prov. 6.6 7 8 9 10. To day if ye will hear his voice harden not your hearts Heb. 3.7 8 13. Prov. 27.1 2 Service to relations is not to be preferred before service to Christ 3 Every unbelieving man is no other then a dead man Joh. 5.24 Rom. 5.6 Not like the man that fell among the thieves dangerously wounded but quite dead dead we are by the sin of our first parents not onely temporally Rom. 5.12 but spiritually as unable to do spiritual actions as dead men are to do the actions of living men Col. 2.13 As in natural death there is a separation of the soul from the body so in spiritual death there is a separation of God from the soul For the seat of this spiritual death It is in the understanding John 1.4 5. Eph. 5.14 It is in the will Rom. 6.13 It 's in the conscience Heb. 9.14 It 's in the affections Obj. But if men be naturally dead why do you preach to them Answ 1 The word spoken is a mean to bring them to life Joh. 5.24 When the Spirit of Christ accompanies it the ministry of the word is appointed to turn persons from darkness to light Acts 26.18 2 Though men be naturally dead yet 1 Are they not without reason to consider what is spoken and upon what grounds 2 Though they be dead yet they may offer themselves to the means Obj. But there are some inward workings in the hearts of natural men as sence of sin fear of punishment thoughts of deliverance wishes for heaven therefore they are not dead Answ These and much more may be in natural men yet are they dead As in the generation of man there are many fore-going dispositions which go before the induction of the form so there are many fore-going actions preceding spiritual regeneration as we see in those converts Acts 2.36 37 38. Obj. Man hath some reliques of knowledge how then is he dead Answ Every knowledge doth not suppose life but that onely which affects the heart with affiance and love John 17.3 The devils know much remaining devils still Besides mans natural knowledge makes him inexcusable not salvable Obj. Natural men have many excellent virtues in them therefore they are not dead Answ As the evil actions of good men redound not to their persons to make their persons evil so the good actions of evil men redound not to their persons to make them righteous Good works do not make a good man but a good man makes or does good works evil works do not make an evil man but an evil man makes evil works So that it behoves the person always to be good before all good works and good works come from a good person Luth. Tom. 1 Cat. fol. 469. Their vertues are like pictures without life There are many natural men fine Schollers and Gentlemen too good to go to hell yet not good enough to go to heaven for they being in the flesh cannot please God because they are not good trees they cannot bring forth good fruit all their virtues are like flowers upon a dead mans carkasse that may adorn it and keep off the stink thereof but cannot give life thereto As in the flesh of a beast some part of it is sold at a great price other of it is cast away or little regarded yet all is flesh so some works of the natural man are abhominable and some are commendable but all are but flesh There are several sorts of madnesse some light and foolish some more sober and solemn yet all is but madness so in spiritual madness the lives of some natural men are sober grave serious the lives of others are wilde and ranting yet all are dead and mad Obj. Natural men are not dead because they have some signes of Gods image in them Answ There 's a twofold image 1 Natural standing in immortality immateriality mentioned Gen. 9.6 He that sheds mans blood by man shall his blood be shed for in the image of God made he him 2 A supernatural image consisting in righteousness and holiness Col. 3.10 You have put on the new man which is created in knowledge after the image of him that created him The former image may be in natural men not the latter Use Try two things 1 Whether thou art dead 2 Whether thou art alive Tryalls of a man dead 1 When he lives in sin Rom. 6.2 How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein 1 Joh. 3.6 He that abides in
Wine to new bottles To communicate Gospel truths to such is a double loss 1 Of the Wine whiles unregenerate men reject the Gospel because it 's contrary to their lusts or scandalize that Gospel they profess 2 The bottles are broken that is these men perish whiles by degrees they apostatize Luke adds c. 5.39 No man having drunk old Wine straightway desires new for he saith the old is better As if Christ should say it befals my doctrine as it befals them who have been accustomed to old Wine for as they cannot endure new Wine because it hath a certain fowrness so ye being accustomed to old superstitions and pompous traditions cannot away with my doctrine which is humble sharp and powerful even to the renewing of the whole man which when they are renewed then are they capable to receive the doctrine of the Gospel So that the sum is the doctrine of the Gospel can neither be joyned with ceremonial services nor carnal natures the Law of Ceremonies is made old like an old garment or old bottles by my coming in the flesh therefore my Disciples do well that they do not fast according to the Law Of these three interpretations I prefer the first and third V. 18. While he yet spake these things unto them behold there came a certain Ruler and worshipped him saying My daughter is even now dead but come and lay thy hand upon her and she shall live We have in this story 1 The request of a Ruler of the Synagogue at Capernaum whose name was Jairus as Mark and Luke sets him down Mark 5. Luk. 8. Which is amplified 1 From the time which was whiles he was speaking to the Disciples of John and the Pharisees 2 From the place which was Capernaum where he healed the Palsey man where he was feasted by Matthew and where the Pharisees cavilled with him for not fasting 3 From the devotion and submission of the Ruler he worshipped Christ v. 18. 4 The thing requested which was that whereas his daughter was dead or at the point of death that Christ would come and heal her 5 The weakness of his faith in that in healing his daughter he limits Christ to such a means lay thy hand upon her and she shall live 2 We have the healing of the woman who had a bloody flux Amplified 1 From the length of time wherein she was afflicted with this disease which was twelve years 2 From the means of her healing which was her faith she said within her self If I may but touch his garment I shall be whole ver 20.21 3 The comfortable absolution Christ pronounces to her trembling soul who was not without doubts and fears because she had closely and surreptitiously obtained her healing Daughter be of good comfort thy faith hath made thee whole v. 22. 3 We have the healing of Jairus daughter Amplified 1 From his dismissing the Minstrels and people and taking the father and mother of thed amosel in Mark 5.40 and Peter James and John Luke 8.51 who saw the miracle 2 The consolation he gives to the mourners who were there wailing She is not dead but sleepeth v. 24. 3 The derision that was cast upon Christs words They laughed him to scorn v. 24. knowing that she was dead as Luke hath it Luke 8.53 4 The manner of his raising her up He took her by the hand v. 25. saying Maid arise Luke 8.53 5 The effects of this 1 Her spirit came again and she arose straightway Luke 8.55 and Jesus bade they should give her meat 2 The fame of the miracle went abroad into all that Land v. 26. notwithstanding Christ charged the damosels parents that they should tell no man what was done V. 18. While yet he spake these things unto them That is in Capernaum where Matthew feasted him Behold there came a certain ruler Called a Ruler of the Synagogue Mark 5.22 Luke 8.41 called Jairus All the three Evangelists put a note of admiration upon it Behold It 's a great thing for a Governour to come to Christ but most wonderfull for a Ruler of the Synagogue He vvas one of the Rulers of the Synagogue Mark 5.22 that is of the Synagogue of Capernaum He vvas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there vvere divers of these as appears Acts 13.15 who had an inspection over or into the Synagogue Among these there was one that did excel who for his ability to instruct vvas set over the rest vvhose office it was to interpret the Law and to pray Just cont Triph. of these Luke 13.14 And worshipped him The ruler is set down from his devotion that he worshipped Christ Mark hath it he fell at his feet and besought him greatly Mark 5.22 23. He fell down at his feet and besought him that he would come into his house Luk. 8.41 whether this worship were religious or civil I shall not at present determine howbeit some think it was a bare bending of the knee My daughter is even now dead Christ orders afflictions so that he can make one or other bring us to Christ so here the death of a daughter brings the ruler to Christ Now that he saith his daughter was dead he spake herein conjecturally considering how sick she was when Christ left her It s like at first he cryed that she was at the point of death Now he cryes that she was dead upon the report the messengers brought and because when he left her she was breathing out her soul or near thereto And so we may reconcile Marks saying Mark 5.23 She was at the point of death and Luke and Matthews saying she was dead so that the messenger that came seeing the case desperate bids him that he would not trouble the Master that is Christ Christ therefore seeing him wavering in his faith and hope strengthens him saying Fear not believe onely and she shall be made whole Luk. 8.50 so gracious is Christ to bear with the weaknesses of his peoples faith But come and lay thy hand upon her and she shall live His faith was weaker then the Centurions The Centurion believed that Christ though absent with a word of his mouth could heal his servant but Jairus saith Come and lay thy hands on her Here was the weakness of his faith that he limits Christs power to laying on of hands yet are not persons weak in faith to be rejected but encouraged as Christ doth encourage the ruler Luk. 8.50 Besides its like he had seen or heard that Christ had healed sundry persons at Capernaum by laying on of hands and therefore he hoped he would do the same to his daughter Laying on of hands is an act 1 Of power or dominion 2 Of a will ready and inclining to do good as to heal and help I shall speak a little concerning this doctrine of laying on of hands There is a threefold laying on of hands 1 Curatory or healing Mark 16.18 They shall lay hands on the sick and they shall recover Act. 28.8 Publius his
true Baptism Learn this observation descends from that Authority that after the Lords Ascension the holy Spirit came down upon the Apostles Eusebius in his History lib. 6. cap. 35. relates that Novatus though he were baptized yet because he was not confirmed or had hands laid on him after Baptism he never obtained the Holy Ghost His words are Neither did he get other things wherewith he ought to have been endued after Baptism according to the Rule of the Church nor was he sealed of the Bishop with the Lords seal meaning Imposition after Baptism which he having not obtained how could he I pray you obtain the Spirit For modern learned men take Gerson out of Hugo What profits it that thou art lifted up from thy fall by Baptism unless thou also beest strengthened by Confirmation Estius in Heb. 6.1 saith The Apostle undoubtedly understands that Laying on of Hands which is wont to be administred to the faithfull presently after Baptism of which Saint Luke Acts 8. Acts 19. That is to say the Sacrament of Confirmation whereby the Spirit of God is given to persons baptized wherewith they being strengthened confess the Name of Christ undauntedly among the Enemies of the Faith and then he concludes For that Hands were wont to be laid upon baptized persons after the Example of the Apostles Universa docet antiquitas All antiquity teacheth Grotius in Heb. 6.1 Hands were laid upon baptized persons to obtain the strengthening power of the holy Spirit and on persons ordained to the Eldership and on them that were reconciled after sins and those who were weak in body and on new maried people desiring a blessing from the Church Erasmus in Heb. 6.1 The first step to Christianity is to repent of our former life next that salvation is to be hoped from God next that we be purged in Baptism from our filth next that by laying on of hands we receive the holy Spirit Heming in Heb. 6.2 Imposition of hands was done by the Bishops and Elders on persons examined he should have said Baptized prayer and blessing being added thereto at this laying on of hands the holy Spirit was often visibly given Obj. But seeing Baptism and laying on of hands are conjoyned how came they to be severed Answ When persons with a right Baptism came back from Hereticks or Schismaticks to the Church they were not rebaptized but received onely by imposition of hands so the counsel of Arles can 8. If any one come to the Church from the Arrian Heresie let the preachers of our faith ask them their Creed and if they see they were Baptized into the Father Son and Spirit let them onely lay hands on them that they may receive the holy Ghost Leo. Epist 77. He that is Baptized among Hereticks let him not be rebaptized but let him be confirmed by laying on of hands with calling upon the holy Spirit Yet was not this rite used every where for Gregory de consecrat cap. 4. saith The west was wont to receive such as returned to the Church from Hereticks by imposition of hands but the eastern parts were wont to receive them by the anointing of Oyl Aug. against the Donatists lib. 5. c. 23. Gives a reason hereof and saith If laying on of hands should not be used to one coming from Heresie he would be judged to be without all fault but for the coupling of love hands are laid on Hereticks amended 2 When upon necessity any man was Baptized of an ordinary man that the Baptism might be approved and confirmed the person Baptized was brought to the Bishop that he might be confirmed Concil Eliberitanum Can. 18. A believer and in case of necessity one instructed in the Faith may Baptize so that if he that shall be so Baptized shall live he bring him to the Bishop that by imposition of hands he may be perfected 3 A third reason is mentioned by Hierom in his Dialogue against the Luciferians He saith The custom of the Churches was that the Bishop being about to lay hands to the calling on the Spirit of God he made haste to those that were Baptized in lesser cities by Elders and Deacons the meaning is as is after exprest when the Bishop knew they believed rightly and were lawfully Baptized he made haste to lay hands on them and to call upon the Spirit that they might persevere in that faith From all these customes not onely the common people but also sundry Bishops long before Hieroms time came to this opinion as if Baptism were without the Spirit and that the Spirit was first given and received when the Bishop to the calling on the Spirit of God laid hands on the person Baptized which Hierom confutes and proves that Baptism is not without the holy Spirit Answer to objections Obj. 1 In the laying hands on the Samaritans there were visible gifts conveyed Act. 8.18 Simon saw that through laying on of hands the Holy Ghost was given Act. 19.6 When Paul had laid his hands on the twelve they spake with tongues and prophesied but in imposition that is or shall be by the Apostles of the Churches there are no visible gifts given therefore that imposition in Scripture and yours is not the same Answ 1 That God did sometimes convey visible gifts after imposition of hands to honour it is true yet were these visible gifts no more parts of the ordinance much less essentialities thereof then Philips suddain surreption or catching away by the Spirit from the Eunuch were any part of the Eunuchs Baptisme Act. 8.39 40. this miraculous surreption was a confirmation to the Eunuch So when the twelve spake with tongues after Baptisme and laying on of Hands it was onely a confirmation to them of the truth of that Doctrine and powerfulness of that person into whose name they were baptized 2 The Apostles Peter and John Acts 8.16 17. would never have come down to Samaria for to do Miracles for Philip had there wrought Miracles abundantly Acts 8.7 in casting out Devils healing Palseys lameness c. therefore they came for some other end which was that the Samaritans might receive the Spirit Object But here were visible gifts given Simon saw that through laying on of the Apostles hands the Holy Ghost was given Answ There 's a sight of the understanding as well as of the eye Simon might see the Holy Ghost given whiles he beheld the operations of the Spirit in Prayer self-denial mortification yet not one gift given visible to the bodily eye But if visible gifts conspicuous to the bodily eye were given they were no parts of the Ordinance but Crowns and Ornaments thereof The Holy Ghost may be said to be given not onely in gifts of Tongues and Healings but also in meltings of heart Prophesie c. 2 It 's a mistake to say that in the Apostolical Imposition always visible gifts were conveyed such as the natural eye could behold for Paul laid his hands on Timothy and had nothing conveyed save inward gifts
and grace 2 Tim. 1.6 Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift of God which is in thee by the putting on of the Hands of me Paul speaks of such gifts and graces as were raked up in ashes as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies which the Apostle bids him rake out of the ashes or make alive as you do fire almost dead by blowing of it Object But this gift and grace given to Timothy was given by the Presbyters when he was ordained an Evangelist and not by Pauls laying on of hands after Baptism Answ Paul speaks of such a gift as was given by the laying on of his own hands 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the Imposition in Ordination to Preaching was by the Hands of all the Eldership 1 Tim. 4.14 where the Greek words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying a conjunction of persons but 2 Tim. 1.6 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to denote the act of one man Object But the Apostles who laid on Hands after Baptism were such Apostles as were immediately called of Christ as Peter John and Paul how will the Consequence hold from them to the Apostles of the Churches Answ There 's a twofold Call 1 Immediate or personal 2 Mediate or virtual the Apostles of the Churches though they act not by an immediate and personal call yet they act by a mediate or virtual call of Christ 2 Matthias though chosen mediately of the Church had the same power the eleven had who were immediately called of Christ why may not then Apostles chosen of the Churches have the same power For what difference betwixt the eleven called immediately and Matthias called mediately or any others of like kindes when they can make their power appear and so much the more when persons whether immediately or mediately called can make one and the same end appear in their Office viz. the work of the Ministry the perfecting the Saints the edifying the Body of Christ Quaere Whether there be any essential difference betwixt the twelve Apostles and the Apostles of the Churches 3 If Imposition after Baptism belong onely to Apostles called immediately it had been in vain to have called it a Foundation to have conjoyned it with Faith and the Resurrection sith the persons that had the administring of it were most of them dead and the rest in a short time would be dead Ergo I conclude that Apostles whether called immediately or mediately may lay on Hands on baptized persons Object But if laying on of hands be an ordinance of Christ what is conveyed in it Answ An increase of the Spirit 2 Tim. 1.6 Stir up the gift of God which is in thee by the putting on of the hands of me So that as the Spirit is conveyed in the use of prayer Luk. 11.13 and preaching Act. 10.44 Gal. 3.3 5. and Baptisme Gal. 3.28 and supper 1 Cor. 10.16 so also is it conveyed in the laying on of hands Quest But what are those gifts of the Spirit which are or may be conveyed in laying on of hands Answ 1 An increase of all habits of grace as 1 Boldness to confess Christ When Paul bids Timothy stir up the gift of God which was in him ver 7. he shows what gift he means even boldness for God ver 7. God hath not given us a spirit of fear but of power of love and of a sound mind ver 8. Be not thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of the Lord. q.d. he that hath received the Spirit aright in laying on of hands hath an habitual intention to confess without blushing against all oppositions whatsoever or at least it is his duty so to have 2 The Spirit is a free agent dividing to every one severally as he pleaseth 1 Cor. 12.11 to one is given a word of wisdom and knowledge to another strengthning grace to another comfort to another power to resist temptations to another constancy the Spirit knowing what grace is most wanting to his people in a right receiving of an ordinance is wont to help herein Yet know that laying on of hands is not all this ordinance or the principal part thereof but prayer is the principal So much Melchiades de consecra dist 5. The holy Spirit gives beauty in Baptisme to innocency in confirmation he performes an increase to grace Chemnitius cites some sentences out of the ancients as out of Urban All believers by the laying on of the hands of the Bishops ought to receive the Spirit after Baptisme that they may be found full Christians and he the same person gives to confirmation these prayers that we may become spiritual that the heart may be enlarged to wisdom and constancy that we may be wise to discerne good and evil to resist malice to resist wicked desires that we being kindled with the love of eternal life may be able to lift up our mindes from earthly to heavenly things Clemens saith a person Baptized receives the seven forme grace of the Spirit else in no wise can he be a perfect Christian nor have a place among the perfect Although he have been Baptized after he shows what he means hereby viz. a spirit of wisdom and understanding a spirit of counsel and strength a Spirit of knowledge-and godliness and fill him with the fear of God So much the compilers of the Common Prayer-book thought who after they had acknowledged laying on of hands ought to be retained saying we make supplication unto thee for these children upon whom after the example of thy holy Apostles we have laid our hands to certifie them by this signe of thy favour and goodness towards them come to adde that they apprehended an increase of grace to be conveyed therein as in the first prayer of confirmation appeareth in these words Almighty God who hast vouchsafed to regenerate these thy servants by water and the holy Ghost and hast given unto them forgiveness of all their sins strengthen them O Lord with the holy Ghost the Comforter and daily increase in them the manifold gifts of grace the Spirit of wisdom and understanding the Spirit of counsel and Ghostly strength the Spirit of knowledge and true Godliness and fulfill them O Lord with the Spirit of thy holy fear Amen And then the Bishop laying on his hands said these words Defend O Lord this child with thy heavenly grace that he may continue thine for ever and daily increase in thy holy Spirit more and more untill he come to thy everlasting Kingdom And in the rubrick after confirmation none were to be admitted to the Lords Supper till such times as they were confirmed Object But if the Spirit be conveyed in Laying on of Hands let us see a Promise of God for it that an increase of the gifts and graces of the Spirit shall be given therein Answ A command of God is enough to receive an Ordinance though there were no Promise annexed concerning benefits herein Now I have before proved a command 2 Some
resurrection after we have slept the sleep of death 2 In sleep there is such a binding of the sences that the body seems to be liveless so that it neither moves nor regards any object that is before it nor any relation that is next unto it Quest But seeing Christ saith that the maid slept whether do the souls sleep in the bodies till the resurrection or are they annihilated till that time Answ They are not annihilated being they act intellectually and the souls being absent from the body are present with the Lord 2 Cor 5.1 2. They that dye in the Lord are pronounced blessed from henceforth the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the moment of their departure Rev. 14.13 Now all blessedness consists in action which is contrary to annihilation 2 They do not sleep if so why would Paul have desired to be dissolved and to be with Christ Phil. 1.23 why doth Paul say we would not be unclothed but clothed upon that mortality might be swallowed up of life 2 Cor. 5.4 As the souls of the wicked are at present tormented so the souls of the godly are at present in bliss Jude 7. The souls of the Sodomites in Judes time were suffering the vengeance of eternal fire So the rich man Luke 16.24 saith I am tormented in this flame Not I may be or shall be but am at present Besides the souls under the Altar cry How long Lord Rev. 6.9 Therefore though Saints have not a personal blessedness before the day of judgement yet have they a blessedness of soul the receiving whereof doth not exclude ful personal blessedness at the coming of Christ but is an earnest peny thereof as we see in the thief who was admitted the same day he suffered not into an earthly paradise which by the flood was dissolved but into a Paradise of glory whereinto Paul was taken up 2 Cor. 12.2 compared with v. 4. That which ver 2. he calls the third heaven ver 4. he calls Paradise And they laughed him to scorn Being carnal and not considering the power of Christ they laughed him to scorne as thinking it absurd and impossible that Christ should restore her to life Christ rejecting them takes three Disciples to witness this miracle Luk. 8.51 for they were not worthy to see that they did not believe V. 25. But when the people were put forth he went in and took her by the hand and the maid arose Mark hath it Talitha cumi Damosel I say to thee Arise Talitha cumi Christ did not use these Syriack words to be used by way of inchantment as some have done supposing by the repetition of these and such like they could do wonders but that the power of Christs words in raising up the dead might be made manifest In that he uses the words I say to thee Mark 5.41 He puts a difference bewixt those who raised up others to life by his power as Peter did Dorcas and himself who raised this Damosel up by his own word and power q.d. I the Lord of life and death command thee who though thou art dead as to nature yet thou sleeps as to me I command thee that thou arise and stand up The learned say Cumi is a Syriack word which signifies to stand which is the posture of men in health in opposition to lying which is the posture of sick men Took her by the hand Luke adds he said Maid arise such a voice after to Lazarus Lazarus come forth The voyce was from his humane nature the power from his divinity It was the omnipotent Word of God and of the man Christ Luke adds that her Spirit came again and she arose cap. 8.55 straightway the immortal soul of man is separable from the body so Eliah stretched himself upon the child and said I pray thee O Lord let this childs soul come into him again 1 King 17.21 in death the body returns to dust and the Spirit to God who gave it Eccles 12.7 now when God permits a soul to return to its body it 's quickned and rises again as we see in Ezekiels dry bones cap. 37.7 Mark cap. 5.42 adds that her Parents were astonished with a great astonishment as such suddain sights are wont to do Luke cap. 8.56 adds He charged them that they should tell no man what was done not that he would hinder persons from believing on him through the fame thereof but to stop the rage of the Pharisees against him who were sorely provoked by his miracles 2 To teach us from his example to shun all desire of vain glory seeing he would have so great a work concealed 3 That the ruler and his wife might not be proud of this priviledge And the maid arose Mark adds Christ commanded to set meat before her cap. 5.53 to shew not onely that she was alive but also was well and in health V. 26. And the fame hereof went abroad into all that Land Lest any man should think the Miracle was feigned Christ adds The fame hereof went abroad into all that Land The whole Countrey were witnesses and doubtless praised the work as a new unheard of thing and consequently acknowledged Christ as the Messias There were three Christ raised from death this Maid the Widows so n of Naim and Lazarus V. 27. And when Jesus departed thence two blinde men followed him crying and saying Thou Son of David have mercy on us In this History three-things 1 The Petition of two blinde men set down 1 From their following Christ and crying unto him in the way v. 27. 2 From their following him to the house v. 28. 2 We have Christ his grant amplified 1 From the antecedent Question Believe ye that I am able to do this together with the blinde mens Answer They said unto him Yea Lord. 2 From the present cure v. 29. Then touched he their eys saying According to your faith be it unto you 3 From the following effect v. 30. Their eys were opened 4 From the Injunction Christ lays on them v. 30. Jesus straitly charged them saying See that no man know it 3 The unthankfulness and disobedience of the blinde men They when they were departed spread abroad his fame in all that Countrey Two blinde men These whether from the reports of his Miracles or whether from the Prophesie of the Messiah Isai 35.5 The eys of the blinde shall be opened desire Christ to restore their sight The loss of sight is a great loss 1 Sight is the largest of senses whereas the ear onely takes in sounds the smelling takes in odours but the eye takes in not onely quantities and motions but colour and figure The eye is not satisfied with seeing Eccles 1.8 2 Sight is the most comfortable sense There are many glorious objects in Heaven and Earth but little content should we have had we not sight to behold them Hence to behold the glorious objects of Heaven the eys shall be raised up so that we shall see our Redeemer
Brethren with many words So in the Church of Corinth 1 Cor. 14.1 c. In the Church of Ephesus Ephes 4.11 gave some Prophets In the Church at Thessalonica 1 Thess 5.17 Despise not prophesying Yea we finde Prophets in the Church when Babylon shall be destroyed Revel 18.20 Rejoyce over her ye holy Apostles and Prophets for God hath avenged you on her he means such Prophets as the Beast made to prophesie in sack-cloath 1260. days Rev. 11.3 Now of these Prophets there were two sorts in the New Testament 1 Those that did foretell things to come such was Agabus Acts 11.28 under this kinde came the Prophetesses Philip had four daughters which were Prophetesses Acts 21.9 of this Acts 2.17 This is that which was spoken by the Prophet Joel saying I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh and your sons and your daughters shall prophesie your young men shall see visions and your old men shall dream dreams And of this it 's probable 1 Cor. 11.5 6. Every woman praying or prophesying with her head uncovered dishonoureth her head and every man prophesying with his head covered dishonoureth his head that is with his head covered with Ribbons and Garlands after the manner of the Heathen and the women prophesied after the manner of the Sybills with their hair hanging down and so dishonoured their head Christ Of which heathenish custom Lucan in his fifth Book speaks who lived a little after Christs time Bacchatur demens aliena per antrum Colla ferens vittásque dei Phaebeáque serta Erectas discussa comas per inania templi Ancipiti cervice rotat spargítque vaganti Obstantes tripodas magnóque exaestuat igne Iratum te Phoebe ferens In English thus The frantick Beldam raging through her den Bearing strange necks the heads of sundry men Adorn'd with Ribbons and with Garlands fair To Phoebus honour flownc'd her gastly hair Wheels here and there through temples empty spaces Shaking her doubtfull head here there she faces c. These Prophets told things past and future to persons as Christ did to the Woman of Samaria John 4.29 and Elisha to Gehezi 2 Kings 5.26 Irenaeus 1.6 saith himself had known and heard many Brethren that could discover the hidden things of men he means such secrets as could not be known by the power of mans wit From the revelation of which secrets it is supposed the Ideot or Heathen falls down and worships your God reporting that God is in you of a truth 1 Cor. 14.24 25. 2 Those that did expound the prophetical places of Scripture prophesying according to the proportion of faith Rom. 12.6 and did apply their doctrines to exhortation and confirmation so Judas and Silas Acts 15.32 to edification and comfort 1 Cor. 14.3 If any man ask whether prophesying be the same with preaching I answer no. 1 The words in Greeek are diverse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying to preach and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to prophesie Besides 2 Preaching is to be performed to every creature prophesying is to be performed onely to the Church 1 Cor. 14.22 Now if you ask what these Prophets were I dare not determine them to be Officers in Churches unless I could prove the manner of their call to make out which I can finde nothing but that they are put in the order and rank of men who are called by Office Eph. 4.11 As Apostles Prophets Evangelists Pastors Teachers which is something in order to prove them Officers but not full proof Some think them to be grown brethren such as are called perfect men 1 Cor. 2.6 Fathers 1 Joh. 2.13 Clemens makes three sorts of Christians 1 They that are turned from the Gentiles 2 They that are going up towards knowledge 3 They that are chiefly knowing It may fall out sometimes there may be some such knowing men in Churches who are by virtue of a gift as able to teach as a person in office pity such gifts should be quenched for want of exercise though I doubt not the fault of the times is on the contrary hand in that upon pretence of gifted Brethrens prophesying those that are not gifted in too many places are prest hereto verifying too much that conceipt that hath been cast by some viz. that ignorance impudence and a Concordance were all the accoutrements some had for preaching I speak not this to quench any gift where it is real but to sober those who may perhaps think of themselves more then is meet Prophets then if any such be out of office they are such as are perfect or well-grown Christians Heb. 5.14 Strong meat belongs to them that are perfect the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those who by reason of habit have their senses exercised to difference good and evil But let Prophets be what they will be a Church can no more comfortably be without Ministers then a body without eye and hand Luth. Tom. 4.374 I shall conclude this with one querie Whether it be required by the word of God that a weak Brother that hath but a little measure of the Spirit and so consequently can pray but weakly and but weak parts both in the Analizing Explaining and Dividing the Scriptures and so must needs teach much more weakly be required to be a mouth for the Church at a Church-meeting especially in a Church where there are Brethren of better parts to be had And whether the exercising such weak Brethren be a mean for them to obtain the gift of prophesie or whether there be not some other way thereto As taking direction from some experienced Preacher and reading besides the Scriptures godly books chosen by the direction of some godly Teacher For which studies as also for the study of their own heart they are to set time apart and whether the company of the faithful are to set times apart on the Week day and to meet together on the Lords day onely to help a weak Brother to increase his gifts or rather to try whether he can by exercise increase them by our hearing of him or whether the faithfull whether Lambs or Sheep are not to meet to hear such persons as are able to feed them with knowledg and understanding and whether the faithfull come not for that very end unto hearing to obtain spiritual nourishment in the knowledg of duty and to obtain quickening from their deadness of heart by lively and powerfull notions and also growth by a higher measure of knowledg and information then hitherto they have had and whether such weak Brethren are able to give such information many whereof are onely babes in Christ many of the hearers being strong And whether the best means of edifying a Church be not to be followed And whether established Teachers in Churches reserving the liberty of Prophets and prophesie be not onely more creditable for the honour of the Gospel and edifying the souls of believers by many degrees then the having such weak Brethren to exercise who besides that they cannot
carry on the Ordinances with such honour and comeliness as is meet in so great a work their words being weak are but in a small degree edifying and ready sometimes to flat the spirits of the hearers instead of quickening of them Quest But is prophesie an ordinary gift in the Churches Answ Yes 1 Because it was used in six of the Churches 2 Because Paul saith Ye may all prophesie one by one 1 Cor. 14.31 not all at once but now one and then one He speaks not of all Members but of Prophets c. 12.29 3 Because women are not to speak in the Church but are commanded to be silent 1 Cor. 14.34 but in extraordinary prophesie they were not to be silent as we see in Hanna Luk. 2.36 also 1 Cor. 11.5 6. Obj. Prophesying is an extraordinary gift because it is joyned with tongues Answ It follows not for it is also joyned with charity Obj. There is an injunction of silence to the speaking Prophet when any thing was revealed to another sitting by v. 30. Answ In ordinary prophesie due time and season must be observed neither is it any disgrace to the first Prophet for the second to speak the first having done part of the minde of God is revealed to one and part to another Object But I would fain have the gift of prophesie what should I do to attain it Answ I am so far from envying any mans gift herein that I can say with Moses Numb 11.29 Would to God all the Lords people did prophesie and that the Lord would put his Spirit upon them In order whereto I shall propound these rules 1 Beg of God to open thy heart to understand the Scriptures 1 Cor. 2.11 14 15. Prov. 2.4 5 6. 2 Get a guide to direct thee Acts 8.30 Understandest thou what thou readest said Philip the Eunuch answered How can I except some man guide me Quest What guide Answ Some experienced Preacher who being desired will deal faithfully with thee and show thee thy superfluities and thy defects and set thee in a way of method and prescribe what books are fittest for thee what Commentators and what other books of practical Divinity 3 Study 1 The Scriptures 2 Thine own heart 3 Fundamental Divinity whereof there are sundry Systems in English as Dr. Ames his Marrow and his Cases in English Ursins his Catechism English Peter Martyrs common places English 4 Get the best English Commentators Mr Baines on the Ephesians Mr. Elton on the Colossians Par on the Romans Dixon on Matthew Hebrews Psalms Hutchinson on the small Prophets Mayer on the Prophets There are some English Commentaries on most of the Scriptures though nothing comparable to the Latin It would be a work well beseeming some Prince or great man to employ ten Preachers or more who being painfull and studious might abridg the chief Latin Commentaries and put them in a short English Commentary oh how would it make the way of salvation plain 4 Consider four things 1 The scope of the Scripture you would speak to if you miss herein you will miserably mangle the Scriptures 2 The connection or joyning with fore-going and following words 3 A right Analyse or division of the Chapter into the parts thereof marking where the Holy Ghost ceases to speak to one subject and where it goes on to another 4 The explanation or true meaning of the words 6 Be careful a while to expound the Scriptures in thy family in the exercise whereof thou wilt be much helped on to edifie an assembly Practice is helpfull hereto but it is but one help 7 Expound so that still you may keep to the proportion of faith Rom. 12.6 8 Consider in the Scripture 1 The position the Spirit lays down 2 The arguments and reasons to prove that position 9 In reading any Commentary note the remarkable things therein at the first reading with a pen and then reade over the second or third time what you have noted passing by all the expositions not noted 10 Compare one Scripture with another and strive to expound darker places by them which are plainer 11 Strive to be a good Text man It 's absurd for a Lawyer to speak without a Text out of the Law much more for a Preacher 12 Mistake not to think that a man cannot be a Preacher without Aristotle In many sacred mysteries we must not dispute or philosophize but hear and believe God to be true though what he saith may seem absurd Many seeking after philosophical speculations have sought for an high Mountain to cast themselvs down 13 Learn to distinguish the Law from the Gospel and to teach cleerly the doctrine of faith and repentance Concerning the way and method how to preach there are sundry books in print as Bernards faithfull Shepherd c. In the name of a Prophet Because he is a Teacher of the Gospel sent from me not because he is a kinsman or a Jew As those that are able ought to do well to all men Gal. 6.10 so especially ought they to do good to the houshold of faith and to the Worshippers of Christ so ought they especially to the Prophets in honour of their Doctrine and Message of Salvation Rom. 10.15 How beautifull are the feet of them that preach the Gospel of peace and bring glad tidings of good things Epistle 3. of John v. 6 7 8. This seems to be taken out of 2 Kings 4.9 10. where the Woman of Shunem speaks to her Husband thus I perceive that this is an holy man of God which passeth by us continually let us make for him a chamber and let us set him there a bed a table a stool and a candlestick and it shall be when he cometh to us he shall turn in thither So Cornelius received Peter Acts 10.33 So Obadiah hid an hundred Prophets Shall receive a Prophets reward There is at the day of Resurrection a peculiar Reward given to the Prophets distinct from the Reward given to all that fear the Name of God Revel 11.18 The time is come that thou shouldest give a reward to thy servants the Prophets and to thy Saints and to all that fear thy Name both small and great Some think this Reward of a Prophet to be the Crown of Glory but this cannot be because all righteous men receive this others carry it to be the revelation of the hidden will of God which being in the company of such Prophets they often hear this is true they that receive such Guests do also receive this Reward But the Reward of a Prophet is not onely the Prayers and Instructions of such a Guest but shall also receive an equality of glory in Heaven with that Prophet so received according to the proportion of assistance and help he hath afforded that Prophet for the divulging of the truth by which assistance he was made able to convert souls and without which he could not have done it this receiving the Prophet being with a proportionable love which the Prophet had
thing and limit the satisfaction to his sufferings then not mentioning any other 2 Suppose it were granted that all the sufferings of Christ should concur in point of satisfaction which I suppose is difficult if at all possible to prove yet it follows not that because all his sufferings through the course of his life as well as those in death did concur in point of satisfaction therefore his observation and fulfilling of the Law should also concur as a part of that price Obj. But is it not dangerous to leave out Christ his fullfilling of the Law And is it not safe to joyn it to Christ his death Answ It 's dangerous to add any thing when the Scripture fixeth the Redemption on the death and sufferings of Christ in and about death He gave his own son the price of redemption for us the holy for them who had transgressed the Law the just for the unjust for what other thing could cover our sins then his righteousness In whom other can we unjust and wicked men be counted just then in the alone Son of God O sweet change that the iniquity of many should be hid in one righteous but that the righteousness of one should cause that many unjust should be counted righteous Justin Mart. ad Diognetum p. 386. The conscience may as well scruple what if I add as what if I leave out for additions are dangerous in this case especially where the Scripture speaks so plainly and positively Gal. 5.4 3 The third cause of our justification is the formal cause whereby Christ his satisfaction and merit is imputed to us as our sin is imputed to him Isai 53.6 Rom. 8.3 4. 2 Cor. 5.21 Christ being our surety Heb. 7.22 and paying our debt he rose out of the prison of the grave and manifested his discharge thereof Acts 2.22 So that as on the cross Christ blotted out the hand-writing of ordinances and took them out of the way and nail'd them to his cross Col. 2. so doth the Lord behold the travel of his soul and rests satisfied therewith Isai 53.11 4 The final cause of a souls justification in respect of God it was the declaration of his severe justice against sin that though in himself he could yet he decreed that he would not pass by sin without satisfaction Rom. 3.25 26. to declare his righteousness that he might be just and the justifier of him that believeth on Jesus There are many other ends as for the shewing forth his free grace to a sinner which I shall pass by Obj. But how are we said to be justified by God and Christ seeing the Scripture saith we are justified by faith Rom. 3.28 Answ The Lord justifies judicially as a Judge justifies an innocent person or a person when sued for debt the paiment of the debt appearing 2 Christ justifies meritoriously Acts 13.39 Heb. 9.26 Faith justifies instrumentally 1 Not professional faith for then all hypocrites should be justified against whom James disputes Jam. 2.24 2 Nor doth the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 credere the act of believing justifie us as if that were imputed unto us for righteousness not for its own merit but for Gods favourable acceptance as if God did accept the act of believing for the perfect obedience of the Law as some have held The act of believing doth not justifie 1 Because no man is saved and justified by an act of his own Tit. 3.6 7. Not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us Being justified by his grace Eph. 2.9 not of works Now to believe is an act of our own taking denomination from the next agent 2 From absurdity then we should be justified by two righteousnesses to wit the righteousness of Christ and the righteousness of faith if one be sufficient what needs another it tends to thrust Christ out and all his merits Faith justifies us objectively as it terminates upon the redemption in Christ Joh. 3.14 15. as it is the eye to look up to him typified by the brazen Serpent Thou holds divers sorts of seeds in thy hand I ask not what the seeds are with which they are joyned but what the virtue of every one of them is Here speak plainly what faith alone doth not with what graces it is conjoyned it takes hold of the promise love and hope have other business Luth. in Gen. 15. This righteousness is called the righteousness of God because he ●ound it out the righteousness of Christ because Christ offers that which was equivalent to righteousness the righteousness of faith because faith is the instrument by which we apprehend it It 's called our righteousness Jer. 23.6 because it 's given us of God to be ours by imputation on Gods part by acceptation on our part First Use for information 1 For information 1 See how thou becomes righteous not by working but by believing Acts 13.38 39. Rom. 3 22. Gal. 2.16 Rom. 4.4 5. A man may work long enough and yet in fine work himself into hell if he have not faith in Christ Paul had a righteousness even to blamelesness Phil. 3.6 before conversion after conversion he disclaims it v. 7. The Law of works saith Do what I command the Law of faith Give what thou commands August The commands are sweet when we understand them not onely in books but in the wounds of a most sweet Savior Luth. Tom. 1. ad Stanpic If a good life have not been led do not therefore despair if a good life have been led do not therefore hope that is as to justification 2 See the danger of thousands of ignorant persons who if you ask them how they hope to be saved they will tell you by their good prayers and well meanings and because they deal justly Many fast pray deny themselves mourn deal justly that God may speak peace to their spirits this is the righteousness of the Law this is a working for life not from life so they refrain from evil that they may not be under the curse In order to satisfaction of Divine justice there must be a full righteousness of an infinite person these two things must be because an infinite Majesty is offended this can be no other then the righteousness of God in Christ Obj. But though the works we do in our natural state do not make us righteous yet the works of our regenerate estate do for they are the works of Christ which he works in us by his Word and Spirit Answ The personal works of Christ in making atonement for our sins justifie us 1 Pet. 2.24 but for his other virtual works they do not justifie us 2 The works of regenerate men are so wrought by Christ that they are also wrought by us Rom. 8.13 If ye mortifie the deeds of the body by the Spirit ye shall live Hence because of our imperfection they cannot be perfect 3 Regenerate men in their best actions stand need of sparing When Nehemiah had desired the