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

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praises which vnbeleeuers are as heauie vnto as a beare to the stake because they wāt the spirit which crieth in the hearts of Gods children abba father Fourthly it hath a liuely hope accompanying it it causeth watchfulnesse and waiting for yea and reioycing in the hope of the appearing of the Lord Iesus Rom. 5.2 beeing iustified by faith we reioyce vnder the hope of the glorie of God Secondly we may hence gather a cause why some beleeue some beleeue not it is not because some will and some will not whatsoeuer free-will-men presumptuously auouch the Holy Ghost telleth vs it is not in the willer nor in the runner but therefore men come to the faith because they are elected Act. 13.48 And why did not the Iewes beleeue the heauenly doctrine of Christ himselfe the reason is giuen Ioh. 10.26 Ye beleeue not because ye are not my sheepe most true is it here the elect haue obtained sauing faith the rest are hardened Rom. 11.7 The third conclusion is that this peculiar faith of the elect is ordinarily wrought in them by the ministrie of the word this beeing noted here that the end of the ministrie is to bring the elect vnto the faith Iob. 33.23 If there be a messenger or interpreter one of a thousand to declare to man his righteousnesse now this righteousnesse is no other then the righteousnesse of faith for this ende were the Apostles called furnished and sent out into the world to teach men faith on the Sonne of God as appeareth in their commission Mar. 16.16 Goe into all the world and preach the Gospel to euery creature he that beleeueth and is baptized shall be saued to this purpose is it that Paul affirmeth of the great mysterie of Godlinesse that it must first be preached vnto the Gentiles and then beleeued on in the world Vse 1. If this be the principall ende of the ministerie let ministers herein employ their first and principall paines to bring men vnto the faith wherein they shall imitate our Apostle not onely here but in his other Epistles who first dealeth in the causes and meanes of saluation and then instructeth in Christian manners as one whom the wisdome of God had taught that if the inside be not first made cleane and the heart purified by faith whatsoeuer actions can proceede from men be they neuer so glorious yet indeede they are no better then glistering sinnes he hath the right way of teaching in the schoole of Christ that first layeth for his ground faith in Christ and then buildeth thereon all his precepts of Christian Philosophie 2. The Minister ought to propound before him Gods end in performance of euery ministeriall dutie and that is by enlighting conuerting confirming comforting to bring and stablish men in the faith Which iustly reprehendeth such as forgetting themselues their dutie and people out of the pride of their hearts busie themselues in finding out obscure and darke mysteries tying hard knots to vntie them againe not much vnlike the dogge which refuseth soft meate to gnaw vpon bones and all this to get the praise of nimble heads and sharpe wits whereas the true glorie of a Minister is the number of those that are begotten to the faith who are gathered by the plaine euidence of the word in the words not which mans wisdome but which Gods spirit teacheth 3. The Lord hauing set out the ministrie for this vse let euery hearer acknowledge herein Gods ordinance and yeeld themselues with all submission vnto the ministerie and the word there preached that thereby they may haue faith wrought in their hearts God will haue men taught on earth and not from heauen by man not Angels or dead men let this meanes be despised nothing in heauen or earth can do thee good fast pray afflict thy soule forget not to distribute doe all the good thou canst but yet all this while despise the word offered and thou hast forsaken thine owne mercie nay more come to the ministerie heare the word read preached ioyne in the prayers and Sacraments of the Church if thou commest without the submission of thy heart whereby thou art become as prepared ground to couer the seede vnto increase all is in vaine for what is Paul what is Apollos what is the minister be he neuer so choise and excellent except he be the Minister of thy faith and so what is the ministerie to thee if it be not the ministerie of thy faith 4. Euery man may hence examine himselfe whether in the vse of the ministerie he finde sauing faith begotten wrought in his heart and by examination some may finde their vnderstandings more enlightened their iudgements more setled their practise in some things reformed but a very fewe shall finde Christ apprehended and rested in vnto saluation seeing so fewe there are that liue by faith in the Sonne of God for of all the sinnes that the spirit may and shall rebuke the world of this is the chiefe because they beleeue not in Christ. Howsoeuer many are in some things bettered by the ministerie yet very fewe haue attained this principall ende of it which is to put men in possession of true faith and by it of saluation And the knowledge of the truth which is according to Godlinesse The Apostle beeing called to beget faith in the elect magnifieth and extolleth this his calling from the difficultie of the worke for it is not to bring forth by his trauell any blind perswasion of faith which beeing too naturall to men would rise of it selfe fast enough without any such manuring but such a faith as is peculiar to the elect as before we heard In the which least men should be deceiued as easily and willingly the most be he taketh paines to set downe the whole nature of it in particular And first here we haue the ground of faith which is knowledge and because the truth of faith cannot find footing vpon follies or fansies nay nor vpon euery profitable knowledge he teacheth what kind of knowledge he speaketh of and that is the knowledge of the truth that is of the Gospel beeing a word of truth yea truth it selfe so called by way of excellencie or eminencie as though no other truth deserued that name or because this carrieth the onely vndoubted truth with it And further because many thinke all cocksure and that they cannot faile of faith if they be able to discourse of this truth he teacheth vs that it is not euery knowledge of the truth he meaneth but such a one as is according to godlinesse that is such as frameth the heart of the possessor to true Godlinesse Whence naturally arise these three conclusions First that the doctrine of the Gospell is the truth it selfe Secondly that the knowledge of this truth is the ground of faith Thirdly that where it is aright it frameth the heart to Godlinesse First the doctrine of the Gospel is truth it selfe 1. because the author of it is truth
hereticall seducers vnder this title seeing they tread the s●me steps of the old Puritane heretikes the memorie of whom let it be accursed for euer No no the beleeuer is ●aught daily to pray Lord forgiue vs our debts with the Publican Lord haue mercie on mee a sinner he accounteth his owne righteousnesse as a stained clout well knowing that if he should challenge righteousnesse from himselfe that his owne cloathes would defile him yea let them take much snow and nitre yet of themselue● can they neuer be cleane but that Christ becommeth as purging fire and fullers sope vnto them Now if any yet thinke it vnreasonable to ascribe both puritie and impuritie to the same soule the answer is the Scripture hath taught vs how to conceiue it 1. Ioh. 1.7.8 The blood of Iesus Christ purgeth from all sinne yet if any say he hath no sinne he deceiueth himselfe It is indeede Gods grace and fauour to account the beleeuers his doue and vndefiled and in regard of that perfect robe of righteousnesse he couereth them withall to adde that there is no spot in them but it is grace in them to acknowledge and vtter of themselues that which Christ did of his disciples ye are all cleane but you had neede haue your feete washed seeing that this purging is not wrought all at once in vs but by degrees and that in this life there remaineth alwaies some impuritie to be purged Vse 1. Let none dare to scoffe at the godly vnder this title or any other which the Lord vouchsafeth them hearest thou the Lord accounting his Church as pure as the sunne and perfect and vndefiled in their way calling them his holy ones and saints and thinkest thou this a sufficient ground to scoffe at them or doest thou shewe thy selfe one of this number or rather is it not the part of an Ismaelite and a cursed wretch to scoffe at the sonnes of blessing for the blessings sake nay rather seeing the Lord thus honoureth his seruants and testifieth his loue in passing by all their imperfections as though there were none let such as haue taken occasion to scoffe at Christians from that which is their onely approbation before God euen ioyne themselues to the people of God that as the liberties of Gods people in Persia made many of their enemies become Iewes so those that haue been enemies and readie to offer them violence seeing the fauour of God towards them may be mooued to become friendly vnto them 2. If the deuill doe raise any scoffing Micholl to scorne our sinceritie while we solace our selues before the Lord and if the sonnes of men will not cease to turne our glorie into shame Let not those that feare God be daunted nor giue ground much lesse flie backe for any tearmes of contempt but account this their priuiledge before God a badge of Christs profession and their honour before all the world and thus encourage themselues to striue on to further puritie both of heart and life 1. Of heart because the inside must first be made cleane and 2. of life for when the soule is purified it must worke in the life in obeying the truth through the spirit Thus the Christian man beeing like a cleare chrystall glasse with a light in the midst which must needes appeare through euery part of it hauing within him the light of grace holdeth it forth although in the midst of a froward and wicked generation The reasons to mooue vs hereunto are sundrie 1. In regard of Gods account and estimation of such as shall choose such cleane paths to walke in as we haue heard what neede a man care if all men condemne him so God iustifie and approoue of him and his wayes 2. Hereby onely a man becommeth capable of Gods graces who powreth not his gratious liquors into any fustie or filthie vessell but if any man purge himselfe he shall be a vessell vnto honour sanctified and meete for the Lord and prepared vnto euery good worke 3. All the promises of God are made only to such Dauid breaketh out into a resolued conclusion Psal. 73.1 Surely God is good to Israel to the pure of heart Let his trialls be what they will let his person be neuer so meane let his name be neuer so reproched the Lord respecteth him that is of an holy conuersation there is no difference between Iew and Gentile rich and poore with God so the heart be purified Such are only fit to approach God in prayer who can lift vp pure hands and so offer that cleane offering prophecied of to be lifted vp in euery place God heareth not sinners saith the blind man And the exhortation is let vs drawe neare God with true hearts in assurance of faith sprinkled in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies with pure water Heb. 10.22 Nay more the studie of puritie hath the promise of blessednesse of the blessed vision of God for who shall ascend into the mountaine of the Lord and who shall stand in his holy place Euen he that hath innocent hands and a pure heart Seeing then that without it no man shall see God and that all vncleane persons shall be kept without the gates of the Citie let this consideration added to the expectation of such pr●●ises mooue vs to cleanse our selues from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and grow vp vnto full holines in the feare of God 2. Cor. 7.1 4. This course is a note of a true beleeuer who as in other things so herein is made conformable vnto Christ in purging himselfe as he is pure the scope of the place is to shew this to be a marke of our adoption when knowing our selues subiect to sinne yet we desire and endeauour by all good meanes to cleanse our selues daily propounding herein before vs Christ as a patterne of imitation 5. Lastly let vs be prouoked to a greater care of holines seeing the Lord hath not beene niggardly in affoarding vs meanes aboue many by the which we might be clensed He hath giuen vs his word plentifully wherby faith might be wrought vs to the purifying of our hearts He hath sent out his Sonne whose blood through the eternall spirit offred without spot by himselfe vnto God purgeth our consciences from dead workes to serue the liuing God he hath giuen vs of his spirit to renew vs by whose blessed dewes we might be besprinkled as with pure water so as we might be iustified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the spirit of our God He hath sent out his chastisements and afflictions in such greeuous manner as our Fathers neuer saw the like by which as by rubbing and beating and wringing many might be purified and made white He hath sought to purge his floore by sundrie fannes of afflictions by plague and pestilence famine and dearth violent and vnseasonable winds and weathers and by the angrie distemper of
the Gospel was restored haue so industriously and happily employed themselues in as there is almost no place in the Scriptures so hard whether matter of Historie of things past or prophecy of some things yet to come vnto which they haue not endeauoured to bring some perspicuity and clearnes as witnes all the worthy Commentaries extant which haue more opened the Scriptures within this last hundreth yeares then in a whole thousand and some hundreths before Now setting before me the singular good accrewing hereby vnto the Church sundrie wayes I thought that my selfe could not more profitably be spent thē in this seruice of the Church nor more acceptably lay out my Masters talent then in adorning this worthy Epistle which hath not been by any before me so largely handled as here thou hast it In the opening of which I haue examined the nature of the words cast euerie branch into his proper place by an easie and familiar method sifted out the true sense which might best stand with antecedents consequents parallel places and analogie of faith conferred with the best interpreters consulted in matters questionable with the auncient Fathers raised naturall doctrines and applyed them to their seuerall vses of instruction reprehension consolation or confutation In some whereof howsoeuer I aimed at the necessitie and occasions of mine owne auditorie yet generally I haue presented generall instructions and all this in that plaine stile wherein it was deliuered both then and now more aiming at soundnesse of matter then sounding of words and more intending to perswade the hearts then to please the eares of men If it be here obiected that this Epistle concerneth but one person and one more generall might haue beene more profitably and fitly chosen I answer That 1. my choise was fitted to my auditorie wherein were as many young Titusses to be instituted to the seruice of the Church as ordinarie Christians to be instructed in the duties of a religious life 2. This Epistle was not so much written for Titus as for the whole Church and therefore he is commanded to teach these things publikely as things of speciall vse for all the people of God and in all probabilitie this Epistle was openly read by Titus to the whole congregation whom in the ende he saluteth in these words Grace be not with thee but with you all 3. We haue not onely the spirit of God recording it among other holy writings to the whole Church but sundrie gracious Pastors haue beene delighted to be conuersant in it as M. Calvin acknowledgeth of himselfe to M. Farrell and Virell who was of them left at Geneva to finish what they had begunne as Titus was of Paul in this Church of Creta If it be further alleadged that I haue beene larger by much then I needed I answer 1. I wish such to remember what Athanasius hath in way of apologie for the shortnesse of this Epistle and it will fitly serue to excuse my prolixitie Titus saith he was a man of great apprehension and therefore the Apostle composeth whole lessons in euerie line and I may say more if not in euery word in the most of them euerie one almost beeing a seuerall and entire text 2. I confesse I want that dexteritie which some of the learned writing on this Epistle professe namely to get through the interpreting of such a materiall Epistle in one moneth neither did I think it the part of a faithfull expositor either wholly to neglect things pertinent though they seeme smaller or altogether to avoide treatises which might prooue more laborious 3. Seeing corruption of manners is the rifest griefe of our dayes I cannot be iustly blamed if I haue more enlarged my selfe in bending my greatest forces against this most dangerous disease and yet my hope is that my Reader shall not iustly challenge mee with multiplication of matterles words who haue laboured to thrust much varietie of matter into as fewe words as possibly I could If it be further obiected that there is no great neede of writing bookes in this age which rather surfetteth of them then otherwise Although this no more concerneth me then others whose labours merit better respect then they meete with yet I answer that 1. painfull Ministers complaine not of any surfet of sound Commentaries of the Scriptures especially of some bookes whereof this is one but rather haue cause to wish more helpes of this kinde then they haue as my selfe did when I first attempted this Epistle 2. be it graunted that the learned haue many good helpes yet ordinarie Christians complaine of want of sauourie commentaries in our owne tongue who are in their godly desires to be respected 3. he that obserueth how thicke Popish bookes are sent in amongst vs and what armies of Popish Priests and Iesuites are without intermission dismissed to the seducing of our simple people from their loyaltie to God and their soueraigne cannot with any conscience prosecute any such allegation 4. besides the instance of many godly friends my owne present condition helped forward this labour for beeing hindered in my course of ministerie how could I better spend my silent time then by casting such a mite as this into the publike treasurie of the Church As for other sinister or selfe-respects in writing God and mine owne conscience shall free me in the presence of both which I professe with Clemens Alexandrinus that not ostentation or the vaine winde of men set me forward but cheifely the desire of doing some dutie whereby I might further my owne reckoning in the day of account and helpe some others also forward in the same worke Wherein if I may knowe my labour fruitfull and acceptable to Gods children I shall not be discouraged to goe on in some other endeauours as the Lord shall affoard mee strength and life And now Christian Reader before I dismisse thee I would commend vnto thy practise these fewe rules in the reading of this and all other Ecclesiasticall expositions 1. Obserue diligently the difference betweene the Scriptures which are the primarie truth reuealed and other mens writings which are but secondarie The Scriptures are to be read and receiued as such which cannot erre or speake any thing contrarie to the truth or to themselues though we vnderstand it not but all other mens writings readings sermons expositions and determinations suppose of whole Churches and Councels must onely be receiued so farre as they agree with the Scriptures which are the rule to which all other diuine writings must be laid and the touchstone by which they must be tried 2. Read godly expositions not to be turned from the reading of the Scriptures or from preaching but to vnderstand better both what thou readest in Gods booke and hearest from Gods mouth 3. Beeing perswaded that no man by his own quicknesse or apprehension can finde out the true sense and vse of the Scriptures bring prayer with thee that God would be pleased to open thine eyes to
it selfe and cannot lie it beeing a part of his word who can neither deceiue nor be deceiued 2. because the penmen of it were inspired by the holy Ghost and spake and writ as they were mooued by him who is called the spirit of truth Ioh. 14.17 3. because it is a doctrine of Christ and aymeth at him who is the the truth principally as well as the way of our saluation Whence it is that the Apostles often stile it by the word of truth as Eph. 1.13 After ye heard the word of truth euen the Gospel of your saluation and Coloss. 1.5 For the hopes sake whereof ye haue heard before by the word of truth which is the Gospel True it is that the Lawe is a true word without all error but yet neuer thus called For the morall law will not now affoard such a truth as by which a sinner can be iustified in the sight of God and the ceremoniall law although it doe acknowledge such a truth yet was it a farre off and in types and not in the truth but the Gospel onely is such a truth as whereby we are raised to saluation Vse 1. Ministers must rightly devide this word of truth as such who would be approoued of Christ both the author and subiect of it for the more notable the subiect is the more care must there be in handling it Which the Apostle Peter teacheth If any man speake let him speake as the word of God The word of truth would be truely dealt with purely preached wisely applyed and so faithfully dispensed as that both God and good men and a mans owne conscience may approoue his worke 2. This word so purely handled shall euery soule finde to be truth it selfe so as beleeuers shall not faile of the saluation published in it and vnbeleeuers shall as surely meete with condemnation seeing hereby they are condemned alreadie 3. Not to haue this truth seated in our hearts is a fearefull case for it argueth a man to be giuen vp to error and delusion 2. To doubt of any part of it is to giue a lie to all the rest 3. To seeke for saluation out of it or besides it as the blinded Papist doth is to cleaue to folly and falsehood 4. To despise this truth is to contemne great saluation for if to despise Moses law bringeth death without mercie how much more sorer punishment is he worthy of which treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God 5. But to fight against this truth is most wofull for it is strongest and will preuaile neuer man lifted against the truth but he found it too heauie for him neuer man spurned against it but to the bruising of himselfe Secondly the knowledge of this truth is the ground of faith for so our Apostle would haue vs conceiue that the faith of the elect is raised vpon knowledge of the truth as the matter of it and in this sence we read that faith is called the faith of truth euen for this reason because it is begotten in the acknowledgement of the truth and Paul in asking that question How shall they beleeue except they heare plainly concludeth that no hearing of the truth no faith in it and how may he that runneth read in the Scriptures that to whomsoeuer faith is giuen they be such as are taught of God such as to whom the holy spirit is become a schoolemaster who openeth their vnderstandings that with much assurance they can see and acknowledge the truth for seeing faith is much more then an vncertaine opinion or wauering fancie it followeth that that knowledge which is the ground of it must be no shaking reede with euery winde but a certaine acknowledgement of the truth approouing of it and assenting vnto it Neither may we thinke that the spirit of truth traineth men in blinde and vngrounded conceits nor leaueth their hearts in vncertainties but that wheresoeuer he worketh such an eminent grace as faith is he maketh men able in some good measure to giue a reason of the hope that is in them And as little reason haue we to conceiue that the worke of the Ministerie is to build castles in the ayre or the castle of faith without a foundation but that Ministers are sent to make the misteries of saluation cleare in the euidence and demonstration of the spirit and so lay men on that foundation to become a spirituall house consisting of liuing stones fit for the honour of the Lord. And to ende the proofe notably doth the Apostle Paul prooue the effectuall faith of the Thessalonians from this ground of it for our Gospel was not vnto you in word only but in power and in the holy Ghost and in much assurance which place must be vnderstood so to be both in the teachers and the hearers as the context declareth Vse 1. If knowledge be the ground of faith then sleight is the faith of the most whatsoeuer men professe Numbers of most silly creatures swarme euery wheare who pretend and presume vpon as strong a faith to God ward as the best preacher of them all and yet liue no better then Atheists euen without God in the world without the knowledge of his waies without his feare in their hearts to loue God aboue all and their neighbours as themselues is but a breath with them to beleeue in Iesus Christ is so naturall as they neuer doubted of it all their liues to bring forth fruits of faith whose propertie is to worke by loue in the obedience of the Commandements of the first and second table this they do they hope as well as God wil giue them leaue or as others of their neighbours do whereas alas euen their speach bewraieth them to be destitute of vnderstanding and consequently vtterly voide of the faith of truth 2. If the ground of faith must be a certaine knowledge of heauenly truth then hereby 1. is ouerturned that fond distinction of the Papists which masketh there more then Egyptian blindnes ioyned with wilfulnes and obstinacie vnder their modest vaile of vnexpressed faith or the faith of lay-men whereby if they can professe themselues Catholikes liue and die in the beleefe of their falsely so termed Catholike Church although they know not what it beleeueth it is sufficient for their saluation And indeed be that professeth that religion which like the apples of Egypt will abide no touch had need leane vpon an implicit faith And so some of them pretending more learning thē is common among them beeing pressed by argument haue thought they haue learnedly enough answeared in saying that their Doctors can answer for them But who seeth not these Pharisies taking away the key of knowledge and incurring that we denounced against such as will neither enter themselues nor suffer others to enter into the kingdome of heauen for surely if little or no knoledge little or no faith of a mans owne were enough how vnwise was Paul so to trouble
himselfe either stand still like a statue in the way or else like the creuise goeth backward but he must in nothing giue offence least his Ministerie be blamed yea more he must be an example to the ●●ocke so Paul enioynes Timothie to be to them that beleeue an example in word conuersation loue spirit faith purenes euen as he set himselfe an example to Timothie 2. Tim. 3.10 But thou hast knowne my doctrine manner of liuing purpose faith long suffering loue and patience for this example hath the force of a rule either good or bad Peters example constrained the Gentiles to do like the Iewes and Barnabas was drawen in with him see also 1. Pet. 3.1 Now not needing further motiues to prouoke Ministers to labour after good life we will onely mention some meanes whereby euery of them may become vnreprooueable 1. Labour with thy heart to set it selfe still in the presence of God and this will be a meanes to keepe it order whereas otherwise an vnruly heart will breake out one time or other 2. Haue a care of a good name as well as a good conscience not so much for thy owne as for Gods glorie neither because thy selfe but others stand much vpon it 3. Auoid occasions of sinnes appearances of euill seeing thy motes become beames 4. Studie to doe thy owne dutie diligently meddle not with other mens matters 5. Curbe and couer thy own infirmities buffet thy bodie and bring it in subiection 6. Daily pray for thy selfe with desire of the prayer and admonition of others Thus oughtest thou that art a Minister set thy selfe a coppie vnto men howsoeuer the most rent such coppies out of their bookes as too precise and exact Vse 3. How men are to conceiue of Ministers not as of men without sinne or infirmities as the Apostles confessed they were mortall men subiect to the same infirmities with others and to acknowledge the goodnes of God in keeping them altogether not from all sinne yet vnreprooueable that is vntainted of greiuous crimes whereby his name and this calling should be highly dishonoured which were it well considered of men we should not heare such outcries against euery infirmitie in the person of the Minister as though the verie calling could exempt him from sinne which we see the calling of the very Apostles could not doe Husband of one wife Hauing ●eard what is generally required of euery Minister that he be vnblameable Now we are with the Apostle to descend to those priuate vertues which concerne his economicall administration And those in this verse are two the former concerning himselfe in preseruing his owne chastitie the latter respecteth the persons within his family namely his children ouer whom he is to exercise Christian authoritie gouerning them as a father who is a Minister framing them to dutie towards God and himselfe and trayning them vp carefully in the doctrine both of faith and good manners For 1. concerning their religion it is required that they be faithfull children 2. For their manners they must be 1. temperate 2. obedient And both of these declared in their contraries whereof they must be free as 1. they must not be slandred of riot which is a lauish wasting and a needles spending of goods 2. Not disobedient but such as will endure the yoke These two vertues must especially be exercised of euery one that is to be a Minister of Christ the former of which beautifieth his owne person the latter graceth his family and both of them adorne his calling and profession To vnderstand the former aright we must first remooue the false interpretations and 2. propound and establish the true sense and then come vnto the doctrines And first where the Apostle requireth that the Minister be the husband of one wife the Papists interpret it most ridiculously in an allegorie affirming that Pauls meaning is that an Elder must haue but one wife and that must be his Church But the scope of the place is not to answer the question whether one minister may haue two Churches or no but what a one he ought to be for the gouernement of himselfe and his that is to be set euer any people 2. What meaneth it that this husband must haue faithfull children if he may not haue a wise other then the Church If it be said that by these children must be meant the faithfull and the children of God begotten in the Church I answer that the same Apostle to Timothie cutteth the sinewes of all such cauills where he expoundeth the same precept necessarily to be meant litterally and not in this allegorie by the reason of it annexed for if he cannot gouerne his owne house how shall he gouerne the house of God Secondly others say he must be the husband of one wife onely and that after the first he may not haue a second Which opinion Montanus and Tertullian extended to all sorts of men the Grecians after restrained it to the Clergie and the Romanists were readie inough to take it vp and stil reserue it among the rest of their rubbish But that also is as grosse and false exposition For 1. he that marrieth a second wife after the decease of the first if he keepe himselfe faithfully vnto her is still but the husband of one wife seeing the lawe of the former is by God dissolued 2. It is a generall commandement that if the brother die without children his next brother was to marrie his brothers widow and raise vp seed vnto him Now as in the other tribes so doubtlesse happened it among the Leuites and therefore the Leuite although a widower was to marrie his brothers wife Obiect If it be here said that we now are in precepts deliuered to Ministers of the newe Testament and are not to square our selues vnto that speciall administration of the old I answer that the generall precepts of the newe Testament affirme no lesse as He that cannot containe let him marrie and to all widowes the Apostle giueth leaue to marrie so in the Lord and that that is of generall perpetuall equitie to men as well as women and to all sorts of men as to one kind is plaine by Rom. 7.3 The woman if the husband be dead is free from the law of the man so as she is not an adulterer if shee take another man To which truth many of the fathers accord Thirdly an other sleight of the Papists must be auoided who haue thus corrupted it If any haue beene the husband of one wife and now be not he may be a minister but the spirit of God changeth no tenses here and the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be supplyed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lastly neither must it be vnderstood so as the Minister must of necessitie be the husband of one wife and may not liue single for though all cannot receiue Christs speach concerning continencie yet some there are to whom it is giuen and to them his
committed his flocke vnto him ●o let him resolue and say to the Lord as Iacob to Laban I will feede and keepe thy sheep In like manner let euery congregation to whom the Lord hath giuen a pastor according to his owne heart testifie their thankfulnes herein in beeing contented to haue their waies looked into and spoken of as well conceiuing the miserable estate of sheepe without shepheards not saying to the Seer see not least that plague befall thē pronounced against the men of Anath●th praying also that the kingdome of God may come euery where and his lightsome countenance shine on them that want such meanes seeing their estate is such as hath great need of watchmen Secondly from the force of the argument namely that he that is to be a Bishop ouer others must of necessitie watch ouer himselfe and his owne in priuate note a generall rule to be obserued in all elections and furnishing of any place and office namely that due respect must be had what gifts the office requireth and those must be principally regarded in that person that is to be placed in it as for example if the place require the tongue of the learned seeke out for learned men if wisedome seeke out wise men if grauitie sobrietie conscience and diligence seeke out for graue sober conscionable and diligent men and thus the Lord dealeth whensoeuer he placeth any man If he haue a curious sanctuarie to build he seeketh out some B●zaleel some Aholiab or other filled with excellent spirits of wisedome and vnderstanding and knowledge to worke in curious works of gold siluer c. If he set Salomon to build a glorious temple to himselfe he directeth him to send to Hieram for a cunning man a wise man and of vnderstanding If he be to bring his people out of Egypt he furnisheth a Moses and an Aaron If to take the land by fighting he fitteth some valiant captaine as Ioshua if to bring them out of captiuities he raiseth some Darius or Zerubbabel or Nehemiah euen suiting persons vnto places yea the Sonne of God beeing to gather his Church among the nations and to plant his owne ordinances to bring men out of their nusled idolatry and Gentilisme to serue the true God if he had not aforehand considered the difficultie of the work and accordingly furnished such as he dismissed for this purpose how had it like euer to haue beene effected Vse The cause of all corruptions in elections and designements to offices and places lyeth here that men looke not to the qualitie of the place first but beginning where God ends first at the man either because he is a proper man for parts and gifts of bodie and minde or by such and such commended or furnished to performe such expectations and contracts or an auntient or a kinsman c. this marres all and often setteth fooles on horsebacke when wise men walke on foote by them Let everie man whom it concerneth learne wisedome of God and his spirit here which first inquireth into the place and so in passing their suffrages in elections thus reason oh this is a difficult matter where haue we a fit man for it if to choose a Magistrate this requires one able to execute the Lords iudgements where haue we a man of courage fearing God and hating couetousnesse If a fellowe of a colledge this requireth learning iudgement and one able at least to bring vp youth in knowledge and godlinesse where shall we finde such an one but if a minister oh this requires one able to build vp the bodie of Christ and who is sufficient for this thing The reasons hereof are 1. the externall election of the Church ought to follow the internall of the spirit see 1. Sam. 10.24 2. it euer argueth corruption to preferre priuate respects before the publike good 3. the ends of euerie calling are 1. and principall Gods glorie 2. neerer and inferiour 1. the helping of the communion of Saints 2. building of the Church which he who is likely most to preferre is principally to be preferred As Gods steward Here are likewise to be considered two things 1. the signification of the word 2. the force of the argument First the word implyeth thus much that God is a great housholder Matth. 21.33 that his house is his Church where he as a great personage keepeth his residence more stately and honourable then the court or standing house of any earthly king in the world in that herein he pleaseth to manifest his presence by his spirit working in the word and ministerie and as it is with other great houses so the spirit of God speaketh of this as committed not to one but many stewards who take the charge of it to order and gouerne it according to the minde of the Master and vnto his greatest honour and aduantage And these stewards are the ministers so called 1. because as the steward in an house is to dispence all necessaries vnto the whole familie according to the allowance and liking of his Lord euen so the Minister receiueth from God power to administer according to the necessities of the Church all the things of God as word Sacraments prayer admonition c. 2. As the steward receiueth the keies of the house to open and shut to lock and vnlock to admit or exclude out of the house for so is it said of Eliacim Isa. 22.22 euen so euery Minister receiueth the keies of the kingdome of heauen to open and shut heauen to bind and loose to remit and retaine sinnes as Matth. 16.19 3. As the steward sitteth not in his owne as an owner or freeholder but is to be counteable and to giue vp his bills monethly or quarterly when the master shall call for them so euery Minister is to be counteable of his talents receiued and of his expenses and how he hath dispensed his masters goods Heb. 13.17 They watch for your soules as they which must giue accounts Doct. From which similitude we may learne that it is the dutie of euery Minister to see that he haue both the calling and also the properties beseeming him who is the steward of God And for his calling he must be Gods steward the Lord must set him in this place of seruice so neere him or else he is but a theife and intruder of whom it cannot be said that the Lord hath made him ruler ouer his house The properties of Gods steward are principally two 1. Wisedome 2. Faithfulnes So we finde them in the place alleadged who is a wise and faithfull seruant whom the Lord may make ruler ouer his house And first of the faithfulnes of this steward as the cheife Doctor of his Church hath gone before in example who was first appointed and then faithfull vnto him that appointed him Heb. 3.2 so is it required of euery Minister of Christ and disposer of the secrets of God that he be found faithfull Now this
sometimes of his doctrine lay open vnto him their greife as to their Phisician vnder Christ and seeke for particular direction in speciall cases from him in all which and many moe mutuall duties they may not by this inordinate humor be deterred and hindered but rather with all meeknes and lenitie be allured louingly enterteined and contentedly dismissed from him Vse This doctrine may be profitably applyed both to Mnisters and people The Minister must learne to be 1. docible 2. affable the former fitteth him to learne of others the latter to teach others for none can be apt to teach others who is not apt to learne of others and in the Minister especially a tractable and teachable disposition is a singular inviting of others by his example more easily to admit his teaching whether by reprehension admonition or howsoeuer Elihu ioyneth learning and teaching together Let a man of vnderstanding tell me let a man of vnderstanding hearken vnto me and euery one will thinke it fit that young Ioshua should minister vnto Moses young Samuel to Eli Elisha to Eliah Baruch to Ieremie Titus to Paul yea the disciples to Christ thinke it vnreasonable that the blind should offer to lead the blind But this is the fault of many Ministers that conceiuing they are now fitted to teach others they disdaine to be taught by others and thinke it too base for them to heare such as they conceiue meaner and weaker in gifts then themselues whom I wish they would remember what a dangerous thing it is to haue the faith of God in respect of persons and to receiue the word as mans word and not as Gods whose indeede it is 2. That the Apostle Peter thought it meete that euen such as had knowledge and were stablished in the present truth should be put in remembrance of such things as they knewe and stirred vp to the practise of them 3. That all haue not the same gifts nor the same gifts in the same measure that no man might say of any mans gifts I haue no neede of them Ioseph can expound a dreame when he heareth it but Daniel can declare a dreame which the King hath forgotten and expound it also which is a double knowledge yea that Iethro in some things may see more then Moses and Naamans seruant more then himselfe As for the other vertue opposed to frowardnes namely affabilitie which teacheth to entertaine the talke of others with signification of our good will vnto them in our speaches and gestures it is a great grace and a profitable ornament in a Minister that can graciously and wisely weld it 2. So hearers seeing frowardnesse is such an impediment to instruction must learne to cast it from them which in many otherwise well affected is a disposition hard to please in some making them seldome contented with the paines matter or manner of their ministerie but hauing a bed in their braine of their owne size whatsoeuer is longer they cut off whatsoeuer is shorter they stretch and racke it for their owne o●inions may not yeeld not knowing to giue place to better Others are secure and therein growne froward against the word beeing mourned vnto they weepe not beeing piped vnto they daunce not if their Minister be a companion they reiect him as he is if he be not he is too austeere and too precise yea numbers are so superstitiously froward and so setled in their superstitions and olde customes that let the Minister speake out of the mouth of the Lord they say plainely they will not heare him as the Iewes did against Ieremie oh that the tractablenes of our people were so come abroad as it might be both their owne praise and their ministers ioy whereof we should soone see fruits wel beseeming the people of God for while it attributeth vnto God his truth and men teaching it that authoritie which is due vnto them it freeth the minde from ignorance deliuereth from the bands of delusion and errors and openeth a large entrie into the treasures of wisedome Not angrie Quest. Is it not lawfull for a Minister to be angry at all Answ. We must knowe that all anger is not condemned in Scripture For 1. anger is a naturall affection which may be vsed as wel as others both calmely and in heate also of holy men in an holy manner as Moses the meekest man in the earth as appeared both by the Lords testimonie as also by bearing such reuiling speaches of his brother and sister Numb 11. yet is he said to be verie angrie yea his fierce anger caused many to be slaine Exod. 32. 2. The Prophets and Apostles were verie angrie oftentimes and therefore commended as Phineas and Paul calleth the Galatians foolish Galatians nay Christ himselfe is said to be angrie Mar. 6. and called Peter Satan Matth. 16. 3. It is an affection commanded Eph. 4.26 and Eccles. 7.5 anger is better then laughter so as it is sinne not to be angrie against sinne 4. When the Scriptures condemne anger they vse such restraint as that the sinne of it rather then it selfe as sinne should be condemned as Matth. 5.22 whosoeuer is angrie with his brother vnaduisedly shall be culpable of iudgement yea and when we are commanded to be angrie and sinne not it is plaine that not anger but the sinnefulnes of it is condemned Quest. In what respect then is it here prohibited Ans. So farre as it is not rightly grounded or not rightly bounded and moderated for in the right ordering of this affection diuerse offend diuersly Some there are who are not so soone mooued to anger but being so their anger is bitter and long abiding the passion working in them as fire doth in yron which is long in heating and longer in cooling Some are implacably angrie whose patience beeing once mooued and broken they are hardly euer reconciled the passion in these is as fire hid in some mouldring matter but neuer bewraying it selfe without the ruine and wast of the thing it hath caught neither of these two rightly bounde their anger but it resteth in the bosome of fooles There are a third sort of men who are easily ouercome of the passion not mooued hereunto vpon iust cause as when Gods glorie is impaired or the cause waightie but suddenly for euerie trifle and vpon euery dislike whose passion worketh as fire in stubble soone in and soone out these are here noted in the word vsed by the Apostle men of short spirits so hastie and ●eastie as they seldome looke to the right grounding and footing of this affection The thing then here condemned is not so much anger as hastines to anger which is a disorder not onely reprooued in the Minister for euerie where it is a vice but Salomon speaketh generally to all Bee not of an hastie spirit to be angrie Doct. Hastines or pronesse to anger is a great enemie vnto the ministerie and such a blot as may
true it is that rash anger against the teacher neuer accomplisheth the righteousnesse of God but causeth men to cast off the care of that righteousnes which God in the Ministerie enioyneth and vrgeth vpon them Wherefore laying apart all filthines and superfluitie of maliciousnesse let vs receiue with meeknes that is with silence moderation of mind and teacheablenes the ingrafted word for vpon whom else can that holy spirit of God rest but vpon the humble and meeke and none but these doth the Lord teach in his way Vse 3. Let no man minister nor people giue place to this vnruly and troublesome affection of rash anger which must be pleased in euery thing be it neuer so vniust or else the whole man is enflamed with the vnnaturall heate of this raging feuer of the mind The truth of which appeareth in Abner when Ishbosheth King of Israel asked him why he so boldly went in into his Fathers Concubines what faith he am I a doggs head that thou shouldst say thus vnto mee and yet euery man saw the vnrighteousnes of the action besides himselfe Besides that the dangerous fruits of it are daily discouered in suddaine quarrells and barbarous mischeifes Notorious was the effect of it in Theodosius otherwise a good Emperour who vpon occasion of a seditious tumult wherein a few of his officers were slaine called all the citizens of Thessalonica into the theatre as though he had had to shew them some solemnitie and there commanded his souldiers to fall vpon them and slew of them both innocent and guiltie to the number of about seauen thousand for which fact Ambrose excommunicated him and brought him to publike repentance and humiliation How cursed was the rage of Simeon and Levi who most treacherously and barbarously for one offender brought so much innocent blood vpon themselues How fearefully did Dauid forget himselfe in vowing the death not of Nabal only who was churlish towards him but of all his guiltles family who were so well affected towards him Obiect Oh but I am of such a nature that I cannot but be angrie would to God I could bridle mine hastie anger Ans. 1. A Christian must haue more then nature in him grace must teach him when and how and how long to be angrie it breaketh not meeknes for trifling occasions but in causes of importance especially in case of Gods dishonour in our owne great damages of name goods or estate and the iniuries of others especially the Saints of God in all which cases the Scriptures are plentifull in examples Againe grace must moderate anger and suffereth it not vpon any pretext to degenerate into rancour and malice not to wrack it selfe vpon the person but the sinne nor for one person to hate any other as commonly for the weaknes of some one professor all are hated nor to puffe vp but to humble himselfe in the weaknes of another nor to reioyce but sorrow in their falls nor to reuenge but compassionatly to correct considering himselfe And for the time grace suffereth not the heart to giue place to the deuill nor the sunne to set vpon our wrath much lesse to make it our bedfellow 2. The meanes to bridle and staie this rash and vnaduised anger stand partly in meditations partly in practises For the former 1. Meditate on the prouidence of God without which not the least greife or iniurie could befall vs for euen the least is a portion of that cup which Gods hand reacheth vnto vs to drinke of And this would be as water to quench this inflammation as may be seene in Dauid when Shemei railed on him God hath bid him rayle and Iob looked not at the Sabeans and theeues but the Lord hath taken away blessed be his name and Ioseph accused not his brethren but comforted them after their fathers death and said The Lord sent mee into Egypt before you 2. On the patience and lenity of God who with much mercie suffereth vessells ordained vnto destruction How long did he suffer the old world how loath was he to strike if in an hundred and twentie yeares he could haue reclaimed them And adde herunto the meeknes of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath commanded vs to learne it of him his voice was not heard in the streetes a bruised reed he would not breake how long bare he with Iudas beeing no better then a Deuill within his family that euen when he was meditating his sinne he was loath to discouer him plainly to be the man but hee that dippeth with mee and one of you shall betraie me not expressely noting Iudas and when he was acting his sinne Christ refused not to kisse him but called him freind and vttered such words as might haue wrung out not teares but blood out of the most rockie heart of any but the sonne of perdition 3. On the vnbounded measure of Gods mercie whose vertue his child must endeauour to expresse God forgiueth to that man which iniureth thee much more then thou cansts he forgiueth him infinite sinnes and canst not thou passe by one offence and thou hast more reason for thou knowest not his heart nor his intention it may be he meant better vnto thee neither art thou acquainted with the strength of his temptation which perhaps was such as would haue ouerthrowne thy selfe nor the reason why the Lord suffereth him to be ouercome and fall by it And yet if all this cannot bridle the headines of this vile lust apply this mercie of God to thy selfe thou standest in need of a sea of Gods mercie for the washing of so many foule offences and wilt not thou let one drop fall vpon thy brother to forbeare and forgiue in trifling wrongs 4. Vpon the danger of retaining wrath which is an high degree of murther thou praiest to be forgiuen as thou forgiuest the promise is forgiu● 〈…〉 you the threatning is that iudgement mercilesse shall be to him that sheweth not mercie and be sure that what measure thou metest vnto others shall be measured to thee againe and returned into thine own bosome And for the practises 1. In thine anger make some delay before thou speakest or dost any thing which point of wisedome nature hath taught her clients to obserue That of Socrates to his seruant is better knowne then practised I had smitten thee but that I was angrie and memorable is that answer of Athenodorus to Augustus desiring him to leaue him some memorable document and precept aduised him that when he was angrie he should repeat ouer the Greeke Alphabet before he attempted any speach or action But although this be a good meanes yet will it be to no purpose without the heart be purged of disorder 2. Apply to thy heart by faith the death of Christ to the crucifying of this lust of the flesh nothing else can cleanse the heart but the blood of Iesus Christ who as he was crucified so they that are his haue also crucified the flesh and the
himselfe by insensible wounds and true it is that wine kills more then the sword As for the plagues wherewith the Lord pursueth this sinne after this life they are vnvtterable only let the sinner of this suit know that it banisheth him from the suite of the Saints and excludeth him out of heauen 1. Cor. 6.10 Let Ministers and people therefore consider well what a number of sinnes and plagues that man thrusteth himselfe into that is giuen to wine and strong drinke and sitteth downe with drunkards and yet how hath this sinne as a deluge ouerflowne the land yea and that height of it seeketh not corners whereby one man sporteth himselfe in making another drunke oh woe vnto that man that maketh himselfe merrie in another mans sinne which should be as a dagger at his heart and woe worth that deuillish reioysing which triumpheth in putting out Gods image and bringeth a man to the condition of a bruite beast whereas our reioysing should be in remoouing blocks from before the blind rather then in laying them Alas that these should be the fruits of the Gospel will not such things force our God to remooue the hedge of his vineyard and breake downe the wall nay is not the hedge troden down already seeing such so vile sinns vnheard of among the heathen like so many wilde beasts depopulate and wast this Garden of Eden planted by the Lords owne fingers that vnlesse the Lord of hosts returne and visit this vine and returne vs vnto him by repentance we that haue bin enuied for our happines shall come of all nations to be pitied when the long patience of our God shall be expired with a soddaine ruine and a wofull downefall And yet further we who liue in the Goshen of our Countrie if darknes couered the face of all the land we should be light the sunne is vpon vs we are in the sunne let vs walke as in the noone-day those that are drunke are drunke in the night let vs be ashamed of such works of darknes that we may be answerable vnto our light should Gilead be a citie polluted with such a bloodie sinne especially let the schoole and the sonnes of the Prophets as to whom it is more especially directed meditate of this precept that a Bishop must not be giuen to wine No striker This fourth vice seemeth fitly to be set after the former as beeing an vsuall attendant of them The right meaning of which that we may better conceiue we must know that we may not so vnderstand the precept as that at no time a minister may lawfully strik another for there be times and cases when it may be not only lawfull but necessarie For 1. it detracteth nothing from his priuate economicall right whereby he may and ought moderately as occasion is offered exercise his power of correcting his seruants and children 2. It derogateth nothing from his common right in case he be set vpon and cannot call for the Magistrats helpe in which case by a iust and common law he is armed and warranted to become a Magistrate to himselfe and may not onely strike but euen kill with the sword also so be his heart be free from that desire and his intendment be not to kill but rather weaken the enemie and to defend himselfe rather then hurt the other in which case Christ allowed the Disciples whom he could haue miraculously preserued the vse of swords Luk. 22.36.38 except we will allegorically vnderstand those places as Beza doth and Peter had a sword readie to draw and smite at Christs apprehension 3. Some Ministers may be present in a iust and lawfull warre to teach souldiers to fight the Lords battels after the Lords minde to pray for prosperous successe to comfort and animate the camp Thus Moses praied in the campe and we read of Ambrose in the campe of Theodosius and of Zuinglius who died in the field in which case it is not doubted but that a Minister may strike and kill also the enemies of God The meaning then is that a Minister may not be a man of a martiall heart and spirit such a one as in his priuate matters will stand out with euery man at the slaues end in contending or a man of a word and a blow an hackster or cutter but one of a patient spirit meeke long-suffering following peace with all men yea propounding himselfe a patterne of peaceable disposition to the flocke Reasons 1. Because the weapons of our warrefare are not carnall but spirituall The Apostle denieth not but that the calling of a Minister is a fight and warrefare 2. Tim. 2.3 but they fight not against flesh and blood but spirituall wickednesses and the weapons are suitable to the warre and to the enemies not such as wound the flesh but which subdue Satan and sinne and wound the consciences of men and cast downe high cogitations which fortifie themselues in strong holdes and exalt themselues against God as of pride rebellion false conceits and opinions namely the sword of the spirit put into their hands which in the constant and conscionable preaching of it beeing wisely welded is sufficient and powerfull against all enmities besieging the soule Besides they haue prayers teares faith zeale loue if Ministers will strike they may with these and ought and the effect will be proportionable that is not to bring mens bodies into subiection vnto themselues but their soules and consciences vnto the obedience of Christ. This castle is not wonne by fists or clublaw neither with the strokes of the tongue by bitter and feirce rayling speaches nay the seruant must not thus striue but be gentle towards all men apt to teach suffering the euill men patiently 2. Tim. 2.24 2. The Minister is the Surgeon of mens soules who must heale wounds but not make them except for cures sake And as a good Phisitian who beateth not his patient no not when through distemper perhappes he may fall vpon him but considereth his case and goeth on in his course of cure so must the Minister after the example of Christ beeing smitten not smite againe beeing reuiled not reuile againe being in passion not threaten For if such had beene fit meanes to build his kingdome how easily could Christ haue beene auenged of his enemies nay which is more if Peter shall in the loue and zeale of his Master and that in the defence of his life draw a sword Christ will bid him put it vp againe into his place for he is now out of his owne element and newly stepped out of his calling not without indignation threatning him that if he dares to take the sword when God hath not put in into his hands he shall perish with it Yea and least any man for his cause sustaine bodily harme he will heale Malcus his eare who surely deserued nothing lesse Whence easily we see that those fierie men who with those two Disciples would for euery iniurie cal for
he reckneth vp these kinds of sinnes among those which for the vncleannes and filthines of them ought not to be named among Christians Now it becommeth euerie man to examine his gaine and trie by these rules whether it be filthie gaine or no that if he finde it so it may no longer cleaue to his fingers but he may cast it away from him as Zacheus did and for time to come beware of such a foule blemish wherewith not onely the soule and conscience but euen that holy profession which euerie one even the worst make of obedience vnto the Gospel is blemished and dishonoured and the rather for these considerations 1. In regard of that holy commandement Philip. 4.8 whatsoeuer things are honest iust pure worthy loue of good report in which are any vetue any praise thinke on these things and doe them v. 9. Obiect But it is impossible to liue by true and honest dealing Ans. Marke the promise of God made to such dealing in the words following the peace of God shall be with you that is his fauour and loue in Christ shall embrace you and all that outward prosperitie and successe as his wisedome shall thinke meete for you 2. Consider that it is not euerie gaine that makes rich euerie gaine may bring in wealth and abundance but mans life stands not in that but in the blessing of God which maketh rich and he addeth no sorrowes with it and therefore a Christian man should not purse that pennie which he seeth not made his by Gods blessing and which he cannot craue a blessing vpon Now can God vouchsafe a blessing vpon that which his vnchangeable word hath blasted alreadie for treasures of wickednes shall not profit and can his hand blesse that which his lawe hath cursed as sinne or ioyned with sinne which dishonoureth the person and profession of a Christian farre be it from the Lord to be so contrarie vnto himselfe 3. Consider that such filthie gaine is for most part put in a broken bag or if it stand a while with a man the iustice of God raiseth him vp some foole or vnthrift for his heire who shall as fast and sinnefully scatter as euer the father gathered to the ruine of himselfe and not seldome of the whole familie as our eyes haue seene many great heires who haue consumed themselues and all their substance aboue ground long before their fathers carkases haue beene consumed vnder ground Who hath not seene the curse of God in the house of the lyar and theife or who of reason is so young as he cold not daily obserue it Here is alleadged prouidence and care of wife and children c. but consider aright of the matter and thou shalt see no iust reason why the care of wife or children should cause a man to giue vp himselfe to filthie lucre for this is the way to bring the greatest curse and want vpon his house and children for so runnes the threatning The curse entreth into the house of the lyar and theefe and cursed shall his children be after him and Iob obserued that the offspring of the wicked are not satisfied with bread although himselfe often be the promise to the iust is to inherit the land but the wicked shall not dwell in it that is shall not abide and continue in their generations their possessions shall spue out the vngodly possessors Doctr. 3. The Scriptures speaking of riches for most part ioyneth some such epithite with them as may be a backbyas to withdrawe the hearts and affections of men from them as here filthy lucre Salomon obserued an euill sicknes vnder the sunne or such an euill as bringeth greife with it namely riches reserued for the hurt of the owner then riches are not alwaies heaped vp for good The Prophet Micha obserued much wealth in the house of the wicked but it was treasures of wickednesse And therefore all treasures and store are not iustifieable nor comfortable Habacuk calleth the increase of wealth the lading of a man with thicke clay Christ tearmeth the care of them thornie cares and themselues deceiueable riches Paul stileth them by the title of vncertaine riches according to that of Salomon Prou. 23.5 Riches haue wings and flie away like an eagle For what other cause doth the Scripture of purpose euery where speake of them that we can scarcely read two words together of them but the one shall be as a curbe to restraine our desires from them but to abate our fierie edge and weane our affections from the immoderate hungring after them And further because the spirit of God seeth what is in man and well perceiueth the hardnes and knottines of our mould in this behalfe he hath prepared other wedges as hard as this to subdue these couetous lusts As 1. By giuing them the name of the most grieuous sinne couetousnes which is idolatrie Coloss. 3.5 There is neuer a couetous man but would be loath to be counted of but as a Christian and a good neighbour c. but indeed if he looke his face in the Apostles glasse he is no better then an Idolater for his heart is quite withdrawne from God Iob in his time knew some that made Gold their hope and heard some say to the wedge of gold thou art my confidence And Satan knew that either this temptation would bring Christ to idolatrie or none his last and forest temptation was all these will I giue thee which if it be resisted it is time for him to depart Secondly by ascribing vnto it an inuincible power to hold men in the practise of all impietie discouering it to be an enemie to all religion and opposing it vnto pietie and godlinesse 1. Tim. 6. It keepeth out the word where it is not it choaketh the word where it is it maketh of professors reuolters and Apostates who in their beginnings could with Iudas teeme to forsake all as the other disciples did yet long before their end haue with Demas forsaken the truth and embraced the present world that as the young man they came not so hastily as they departed heauily It hath caused many discontented students to growe vp to resolution in heresie poperie treasons and most desperate attempts And it is no lesse enemie to righteousnes then to religion beeing an vnmercifull and cruel sinne often with some one stroke destroying fathers with their children orphanes widowes families and whole townes For whence are oppressings ●ent-rackings vsuries monopolyes thefts robberies and murders are they not especially from these couetous lusts which fight in the members 3. By shewing the blacke taile of this sinne which causeth the Lord in his anger to smite with grieuous strokes Isay 57.17 for his wicked couetousnesse I haue beene verie angrie with him I haue smitten him and hid my selfe from him and is one of the sinnes for which the wrath of God commeth vpon the children of disobedience Coloss. 3.5 teaching that
hearts God giues them ouer to beleeue and broach doctrines besides the word all their learning hindreth not nay rather armeth them to sticke fast to falshood and errors and to defend doctrines of much loosenesse and libertie Especially the iudgement of God is come vpon the Romish Church to the vttermost who because they lay this for a ground of their doctrine that this word is not of it selfe faithfull and certaine vnlesse the Church and Councels and the Pope authorize it to mens consciences and that any other word thrust vpon the Church by the former authoritie is euery whit as faithfull as this hence is their whole religion a mysterie of iniquitie and delusion hence comes in intercession of Saints worship of images prayer to and for the dead pilgrimages here purgatorie hereafter reuelations masses bread-worshippe propitiatorie sacrifices mixture of Moses and Christ which is a doctrine cutting them off from Christ who haue before cut off the authoritie and credit of the Scriptures which are the word of Christ which fearefull iudgement let it mooue euerie Timothie and Titus carefully to keepe the worthie thing which is committed vnto them 2. Euerie Minister is taught hence to hold him vnto this faithfull word for so he shall deliuer not things doubtfull and vncertaine but such as men may leane vnto rest and as we say write vpon And this is insinuated by our Apostle that that is a faithfull ministerie which holdeth it selfe vnto a faithfull word such as is the sure anchor of mens soules against which hell gates cannot preuaile Such was the ministerie of the true Prophets Ieremie saith of a truth the Lord hath sent me and bidden me speake these things of the Apostles who deliuered such things as they receiued of the Lord and commanded vs that if an angel from heauen or a deuill from hell should bring not a contrarie but a diuerse doctrine from that to hold him accursed yea of the Sonne of God himselfe who said my word is not mine but my fathers What horrible blasphemie then is daily practised in the Popish Churches whose teachers calling these faithfull words a nose of waxe send men to dumbe idols the teachers of vanities and lies yea to Apocryphall writers to fathers councels Bishops and Popes as though the Scriptures had lost all their faithfulnesse or as though the canons decrees summes and sentences of men were more stable then that eternall truth that shall out-last heauen and earth Was this a faithfull word in Pauls time and is it not so still doth the sonne of the eternall father pronounce of his fathers word that it is not onely true but truth it selfe and that not one iot of it can passe or faile and is it any other then the voice of Antichrist which shall say that it is no certaine word at least to me vnlesse the Church say so Shall the spirit of God call it a sure word of the Prophets and Apostles and a word of truth and shall we heare a wicked and lying spirit come out of hell and say that this stabilitie and truth dependeth vpon man whereas let God be true and euerie man a lyar and that if those men whom they tearme the Church change their minds or any sense in the Scripture so doth the holy Ghost also Let these owles flie the light of the Scriptures as such as loue to liue in darkenes carnall religion must haue carnall props like lips like lettice we say and such a Church such lawes As for vs let vs as it standeth vs in hand hold vs vnto this faithful word and not in stead of it deliuer the vnfaithfull words of men whether Philosophers or fathers or schoole-men And is it not good reason that we should be tied to this word when euen the Prophets and Apostles were Isai must take a role and write and binde the testimonie and seale the lawe among the disciples the commandement to Ieremie was preach the words that I shall tell thee In the newe Testament they must heare Moses and the Prophets Paul was separated to preach that Gospe● which was promised before by the Prophets and accordingly he witnessed that he spake nothing besides the things foretold by the Prophets Againe what ministeriall worke is it which this word doth not most naturally and happily effect for this is a sure instrument to beget faith Ioh. 17.20 and to confirme it Act. 15.32 to conuert soules Psal. 19.7 and to saue soules Iam. 1.22 Now vnto hearers this doctrine affoardeth also speciall vse of instruction 1. If it be so faithfull a word euerie man must attend vnto it 2. Pet. 1.19 we haue a surer word to which yee doe well that yee attend 2. To lay vp this word surely as beeing the sure euidence of thy saluation and of thy heauenly inheritance among the Saints Men locke vp their euidences or convaiances of land in sure and safe places delight often to read in them suffer no man to cousen them of them whatsoeuer casualtie come these are by all meanes possible safegarded and shall any man carelesly neglect such an euidence as this is without which he hath no assurance of saluation nor the tenure out of his idle conceit of one foote in heauen a lame man if he hold not fast his staffe falleth and whosoeuer looseth his part in the word looseth his part in heauen 3. Here is a ground of thankfulnesse in that the Lord hath not onely vouchsafed vs life and glorie and immortalitie when we were dead and when nothing could be added to our miserie but hath also giuen vs such a constant guid and direction therunto we might either haue groped after him in palbable darknes or haue had such direction as might haue affoarded vs lesse assurance and comfort but now beleeuers knowe assuredly that they were loued of the father before the foundation of the world and out of that loue chosen vnto life that the Sonne was sent to ransome them from sinne and present them iust before his Father that his spirit is sent out to regenerate them and to further and finish their sanctification that by his prouidence they are supplied in all their good that by his power they are protected from all their euills He might haue brought vs to heauen and neuer haue let vs know any of these comforts in earth yet would he not so slenderly leaue his Church but as our Sauiour noteth he hath spoken and written this word that our ioy might be more full which is one generall vse of the whole word of God Now what can we doe lesse then in way of thankfulnes 1. yeeld vp our selues to be directed by this faithfull word 2. Beleeue it in whatsoeuer it commandeth threatneth or promiseth in that it is such a faithfull word and hereby we set also our seale vnto it 3. Constantly cleaue vnto it in life and in death and not to be so foolish as
to be soone remooued to another Gospell nor so fickle as children to be carried about with euery winde of doctrine but hold fast such a stable truth so full of direction in all the life and so full of comfort at the time of death for it is as a fast and faithfull freind tried in time of aduersitie standing closest to a man in his greatest necessitie Obiect There is no feare but we shall hold out whatsoeuer should betide we are grounded and setled Answ. But how many did in the fierie triall in Queene Maries time scarce one in Cambridge both the Vniversitie and Towne or if one poore Townsman held it out in the flames that was all Lastly both Teachers hearers must trie their doctrin by this touchstone if it abide this touch it is gold it is a pure and faithfull word if it be not according to this word there is no light in it Which is according to doctrine Here our Apostle both deliuereth another note and setteth another marke vpon the word as also vseth another argument why the Minister should hold and hold himselfe vnto the word of God deliuered in the Scriptures because it is not onely a faithfull word vnto which the faithfull may cleaue and rest as vpon a sure anchor but also such a word as beareth the bell for the ●itnesse of it to institute instruct and edifie the Church and members thereof as if he had said That word which is most fitted to edification and instruction is to be maintained and held fast that it may be held forth before Gods people but this is such a word and therefore Ministers must hold it fast Doctr. Whence we learne that the word of God is his owne ordinance fitted to instruct the elect in all necessarie truth and doctrine which is the very scope of our Apostle and will otherwise also appeare if we consider 1. The wisedome of God who hath in the bookes of Scripture comprised and deliuered a most perfect rule of doctrine concerning faith and manners to teach as both concerning God our selues and others whatsoeuer is necessarie or profitable to be knowne to saluation To the proofe of which serue all those places where we read that it is able to make a man wise vnto saluation to instruct him to all righteousnesse to furnish him to euery good worke to make him blessed by inchoation here in this life and consummation in the life to come for here through patience and comfort of the Scriptures we haue hope Rom. 15.4 and hereafter life eternall Ioh. 5.39 2. The mercie of God who hath written mysteries aboue the apprehension of the Angels themselues euen to the capacitie of the simplest in things of absolute necessitie whereas if he had but spoken the word it had beene more then he ought vs but he hath written it that we might ponder and meditate of it yea he hath translated it into euery mans language and so fitted it to edifie the more so as fiue words now are better then ten thousand if it were shut vp in it owne fountaine or any other strange tongue besides he hath brought it to vs by an easie price in one portable volume that we might conueniently exercise our selues in it day and night And that we might vnderstand those hard places which for our exercise we shall meete withall in reading and that we might be lead beyond the letter of the Scripture to shew the life of it in the keeping of faith and good conscience he hath appointed a Ministrie in the Church and in all ages hath raised vp men of God whome he hath furnished with the gifts of prophecie and enabled with sundrie gifts of the spirit to see and reueale the truth therein contained For euery manifestation of the spirit is giuen to profit withall and he gaue some to be Apostles some Prophets c. for the edifying of the Church and the gathering of the bodie of Christ. 3. The power of God who conuaieth such a power into this his ordinance as whereby it becōmeth so mightie in operation so able to cast downe strong holds and euery high thing exalted against God yea so strong at the weakest as that by it alone the kingdome of darknes and of the deuill is bartered and subdued and Iesus Christ the Prince of peace set vp in his throne within the hearts of men Vse Would any Minister edifie his people let him hold fast this word would he teach them Christ this word testifieth of him would he beget faith in them this word must doe it Rom. 10. would he destroie sinne in them as Dauid said of Goliahs sword there is none to that so there is no sword of the spirit but this would he raise the afflicted hence may he speake a seasonable and sauorie word to him that is weary in a word if a man will take the most compendious way to bring soules to heauen let him obserue this rule of holding him to this word which is ordained for doctrine But if a man either for idlenes or ease neglect the reading and study of the Scriptures or according to the vanitie of his heart lay by this booke and fall to the studie of Friars or Fathers and seeke to preach matters of more applause or to get a name of learning is in his profundities curiosities and such quainte deuises as he meeteth withall in mens writings this man leaueth the right way of edifying men in the waies of God and is in his conceit wiser then his maker who hath fitted this word for doctrine and no other 2. Hence note that it is Gods will that euery man should be expert in the Scripture seeing he hath so fitted it for the teaching of the simplest Which must force euery man to examine himselfe whether he hath found it such a fit word for doctrine for he whose heart cannot iustifie the word in this propertie is no child of wisedome Many haue heard this word a long time and yet vnderstand it not haue learned little or nothing are ignorant of Christ and what he hath done but in grosse and generall tearmes haue attained no lasting comfort from the same Where now lieth the fault the word is fit to ●each thee the Ministerie stablished and sanctified to the edifying of thee all the gifts of the ●eachers are giuen to profit thee Why then ha●t thou not profited Oh the sinne lyeth at thine own doore in that thy selfe hast refused or resisted instruction It is not the obscuritie of the Scripture but the darknes of thy blind mind that hath hindred thy profiting The word is as fit to teach thee as the choysest seed is to take and grow with encrease but thy soule is vnprepared thy heart is as the stonie or thorny or high way ground no seed can thriue in it all the labour of Gods husbandmen is lost vpon thee Thy sinne hath suffered the word to loose the vertue and power of it in raising
vrgeth pyetie they are impious towards God and whereas it prohibiteth all iniustice they are iniurious to men and in one word whosoeuer receiue not the word with that reuerence and subiection as it requireth are in the degrees of this sinne of gainsaying the truth And in the words the Apostle propoundeth three things to be considered of 1. That all these gainesayers must be conuinced 2. that euery Minister must be able to conuince and improoue thē 3. that he hath this abillitie from the faithfull word Doct. First when the word is resisted and gainsaied there must be no bearing on the Ministers part who is put in trust to resist those that resist the truth And hence are all our stirres and tragedies in that this truth must goe away a conquerer be it euen against Kings and Princes and the great ones of the world Pharaoh Ahab Herod must be gainsaid and resisted though it cost the Messengers their liberties yea their liues Many men fret and fume that the Ministers are so bold and peremptorie and their sermons are too to censorious speaking in effect the language of Corah and his complices yee take too much vpon you Moses Aaron murmur against such truths as crosse their lusts saying with the Iewes they are hard sayings and who can beare them If the word say they may not sweare with the swearer nor be drunke with the drunkard nor prophane the Sabbath nor scoffe at religion and the exercises of it but set a watch before their tongue and keepe the doore of their lips from filthy idle and scurrill speach oh here are bonds indeed fitter for gally slaues then liberall and free dispositions Come say they we will breake these bonds and cast these cords from vs and yet these men would haue the Ministers tongue tyed and chafe and fume if they heare any thing they would not But are you gainsayers of the truth and must not we resist you doe you rise vp against Christ in falsifying his word and contemning his ordinances and must not we arme our selues against you sound trumpets and proclaime open warre against you yea must not we so weld the sword of the Lords mouth against you as that we neuer suffer you to haue peace in your sinnes And if any of you thinke much to be called a gainsayer of the truth because yee acknowledge in generall the truth of the Scriptures and for a need can make confession of all the articles of faith I answer It may be thou art not come to the height openly to gainsay as Iannes and Iambres did Moses nor as Elimas and Demetrius Phigellus and Hermogines Hymeneus and Philetus did Pauls preaching but if thou secretly spurne against the word or endurest not the guidance of it thou art a gainesayer and maist not look to be pleased in the Ministerie And to know thy selfe a little better trie thy selfe by these three notes 1. He that cannot abide the discouerie of his sinne cannot endure the light which maketh euery thing manifest this maketh Ahab hate Micha 1. King 22.8 and the world hate Christ himselfe because he testified of it that the workes were euill If thou then wantest that obedient eare which should make thee beare a reproofe thou canst not but be a gaine-sayer 2. He that cannot abide the curbing of his lusts is a resister of the truth for what other is the scope of all diuine truth then to bring men out of their naturall estate which because men loue so well they willingly cast off the yoke of Christ the more then thou striuest for the libertie of the flesh the more thou resisteth the freedome of the spirit and so becommest the more a seruant to sinne and a captiue to the law of it 3. He that is not with mee saith Christ is against me and he that gathereth not scattereth Art thou with Christ in thy affection hearest thou his sayings in which thou testifiest thy loue or art thou one of that number that tooke it greeuously that Peter and Iohn taught the people and preached Christ or that with Sanballat and Tobiah who were sore greeued that a man was come who sought the good of Ierusalem Nay if thy affection be with Christ thou canst not lightly speake euill of that way the feete of these tydings bringers are bewtifull thou reioysest in their light Now examine thy selfe if any of these be found in thee although thou openly fight not against God thou art a gainsayer of the truth and thou must be resisted in the Ministerie The Iewes held and maintained the letter of the Scriptures most accuratly and yet Steven telleth them that they were alwaies resisters of the holy Ghost and the reason was because when it came neere them then they kicked and spurned against it If thou wouldst not be roughly dealt withall in the Ministerie resist not the word but entertaine it in thy best affections to order thy selfe and life by it and then though it haue beene tart and bitter thou shalt afterward find the sweetnes of it it shall be as honie in thy mouth in regard of the promises if it meet with any rellicks of thy sinne in the iust reprehensions of it thou shalt be able to say O let the righteous thus smite mee for this is a benefit vnto me this is a precious ointment which suppleth my wound O let me not want it This is the way to finde the word sweete Micha 2.7 Are not my words sweete to him that walketh vprightly oh then be so farre from spurning at the word that thou maist rather tremble at it then in stead of the spirit of contradiction the spirit of God shall rest on thee These things if thou doest not but wilt still rebell blame thy selfe if in the word thou beest still vnder blowes for thou thy selfe beginnest the fraie Doctr. 2. Secondly we note what a sufficient man euery Minister ought to be namely such a one as hath a word of knowledge in his mouth vpon all occasions both to exhort and conuince for which purposes he must haue a doubled knowledge and as a good shepheard a double voice one to gouerne his sheepe which must be familiar vnto them and another to driue away wolues one to stablish and perswade the truth another to preuent errors and heresies herein resembling Nehemiahs builders who held a trowell in one hand and a sword in the other and accordingly built with the one hand and fought with the other Let a man consider of which of these two he will and then tell me whether it be not a matter of great difficultie in any good sort to performe it but both together will force the Apostle himselfe to aske who is sufficient to these things it is not euery reader nor euery ignorant Preacher that can stand vnder this burthen No no if euery part of the Ministers office require as compleate a man as that one Isai 50.4 if the speaking
of a word in season require a learned tongue how much more doth the whole office require an Ezra a man prompt in the law of the Lord a workeman indeed and such a one as need not be ashamed And can we thinke that the Lord sendeth any other doth he vse to send a message by the hand of a foole surely if he send any he maketh them first able Ministers of the new Testament not of the letter but of the spirit In the old Testament if he raised vp any extraordinarie persons vnto this worke what spirit what power what deepe vnderstanding what resolution manifested they as that they seemed rather pettie Gods then men both in the exact knowing although by reuelation and making knowne things meerely to come as also in the powerfull resisting of sinne euen in Kings themselues and the greatest vpon earth Such were Moses Elias Isay Ieremie c. If ordinarie Ministers they also are first fitted yea though they were but inferiour Levites and Priests both to be the peoples mouth vnto God to put incense before the Lord as also to be Gods mouth to the people to teach Iacob Gods iudgement and Israel his law But if high Preists they must be such as whose lips must preserue knowledge and such as who can resolue the people when they seeke vnto his mouth in the difficult cases of the law of God for he is the messenger of the Lord of hosts Mal. 2.7 In the new Testament accordingly if the Church haue need for a time of extraordinarie Ministers such as are Apostles Euangelists euangelicall Prophets such are raised and to such is giuen by the spirit the word of wisedome that is a more excellent reuelation and more speciall and immediate instinct and assistance of the spirit together with more eminent authoritie in explaning the mysteries of Christ. If ordinarie Pastors bee raised by God by the same spirit is giuen to them the word of knowledge that is by diligence in the Scripture they obtaine such knowledge as that they are able to make Christ knowne vnto others although they be farre inferiour to the former Where this word of knowledge is wanting that commission is not sealed from God The Eunuch could reade well enough euen as many among our people can and yet he could not vnderstand without a guide and how could he haue been a guide vnto him except a blind guide that could doe no more then himselfe could namly reade perhaps without vnderstanding also God sent him no such guide but a Philip a mightie man in the Scriptures and full of the power of God Vse Let euerie man whom this doctrine concerneth examine hereby the truth of his calling whether he hath receiued the word of wisdome or no which finding he shall boldly say with Ieremie of a truth the Lord hath sent me and runneth not before he be sent 2. It is a great motiue to thankefulnesse wheresoeuer such able Ministers are planted where God giueth learned tongues that can exhort according to wholesome doctrine learned Ezraes skilfull in the lawe of the Lord eloquent Apolloes mightie to convince by the Scriptures the gainsayers Whereas pitifull is their want who in this regard are as men cast out of Gods sight wanting the blessed meanes of an able ministerie for in such places godlinesse must needes be vnperswaded vice vnresisted truth vntaught falshood vnconvinced there people cannot but lie open to become a pray to the deuill a spoile to his wicked instruments a shop for all wicked practises In such places seducers and wicked Iesuites the verie heads to imagine and hands to execute all mischiefe lurke as in the vaults of safe conduct practising daily to withdrawe men from alleagiance to our heauenly and earthly Gods and Kings such soiles lie vnder the heauie wrath of God as to whome no sinne commeth amisse If there be no knowledge of God in the land needs must there be varietie yea an inundation of most fearefull sinnes and consequently of heauie iudgements into which both Prophets and people who haue sinned together shall fall together for where vision faileth people are nakedly laid open to all the curse of God and when Israel had beene a long season without the true God without the Priest to teach and without the lawe no meruaile if there were no peace to him that went out and in implying both these points that without true teaching without the true God and without God without peace and blessing Oh that men therefore could prize the blessing where it is and so bewaile it where it is wanting as that by all good meanes they labour the procurement and presence of it Doctr. 3. All this abilitie in the Minister must be had out of the Scriptures seeing the Apostle affirmeth that by holding fast the faithfull word he shal be able to both these maine works of the ministerie In like manner our Apostle teacheth Timothie not onely in generall how the Scriptures are able to fit the man of God to euery good work of his ministerie but reckoneth vp also all the particulars of his dutie that no man might doubt but that it fitteth him vnto all And indeede the Scriptures are a rich treasurie which affoardeth abundantly things both newe and old he that would read the writings speeches and doings of the auncient fathers let him reade the Scriptures diligently they be a storehouse wherein a man may furnish himselfe vnto all 1. doctrine all of it beeing written for our instruction 2. vnto all consolation for through the comfort of the Scriptures we haue hope and Dauid affirmeth that if he had not found comfort in the lawe he had perished in his trouble 3. vnto all resolution of doubts by which alone Christ himselfe resolued the case of diuorce Math. 19. and the Sadduces in the case of the resurrection Mat. 22. 4. vnto all strength in temptation by which sword of the spirit alone Christ vanquished all Satans assaults Mat. 4. 5. And for the other branch of conuincing the aduersarie The Scriptures are fitly compared by the auncient vnto Dauids scrip whence he fetched out the stone wherewith Goliah fell vnto the ground they be the onely hammer of heresies Whatsoeuer controuersies Christ and his Apostles met withall they brought the deciding of them vnto the Scriptures although they might haue otherwise confuted falshoods and by their miracles haue confounded their aduersaries When the Priests and Scribes disdained Christ because the people sung Hosanna vnto him he presently prooueth his diuinitie out of the Scriptures So Peter prooued out of the Scriptures Act. 2. and 3. and Paul euerie where that Christ was the Messiah and Sauiour of the world out of Moses and the Prophets Apollos was a man eloquent and mightie in the Scriptures but not by his eloquence did he mightily and with vehemencie confute the Iewes but shewed by the Scriptures that Iesus was the Christ. Vse
1. To mooue such as are separated to the ministerie vnto the diligent reading of the Scriptures to redeeme that time which they haue or may otherwise spend in reading filthie lewde and wanton bookes superstitious pamphlets Machiauells blasphemies or Popish errors and heresies vnlesse it be 1. with sound and setled iudgement able to discerne right from wrong truth from falshood and 2. with this end either more to detest them in themselues or fore warne others of them and thus the wise marriner neede not leaue the sea if he can avoide the rockes But let a Timothie or Titus hold him to this booke he shall hence haue supply of wisedome to saue himselfe and others or what wouldst thou wish besides wisdome for thy calling wouldst thou be fitted to exhortation deceiue not thy selfe philosophie cannot fit thee onely the word of God worketh in all the parts and powers of the soule minde will and euerie affection by Philosophy thou maist enforme the vnderstanding although but darkely in the things of God but did that euer reform● or alter any mans heart reade then this booke teach this and thou shalt ransacke the affections yea and consciences of the hearers Or else wouldst thou haue a dexteritie and facultie in the quicke resoluing of doubts studie this truth be readie in it and thou shalt finde truth manifesting both it selfe and the contrarie And seeing this is the onely euerlasting veritie it will much more make the mightie to ouerthrowe whatsoeuer is contrarie vnto it Finally wouldst thou haue eloquence added to all these former abilliments without which they could not be but obscure then studie this truth of God and thou shalt feele it framing thine heart and so ministring speech yea thou shalt speake out of the fulnesse and abundance of thy heart graciously nay it will be with thee in thy measure as it was with the Apostles thou canst not choose but speake the things thou seest and knowest 2. To confute the Popish teachers who contrarily 1. teach that the Scripture beeing so hard and obscure as they say it is may be wres●ed abused by heretikes at their pleasure and that no man can be fitted vnto these duties especially the latter of conuiction of error fully by the euidence of Scripture it selfe except he borrowe some helpe and force elswhere namely from the expositions and voice of their Church And 2. in deciding their controversies of religion according to the former position they ●lie from the word vnto Bishops Fathers Councels Decrees and Popes But to the first we answer that although we are not to neglect much lesse despise the light and direction of godly mens expositions and iudgements nor such truthes as are receiued by the true Churches of God yet without them by considering the nature of the things themselues the conference of places the knowledge of tongues the suitable correspondence of the parts of the context we may come to attaine the true meaning of the place controuerted by that be able to convince withstand all gainsayers And to the latter their practise is contrarie vnto Christs and his Apostles as we haue shewed As also the practise of the auncient Churches since as may appeare by that memorable course of Constantine the Emperour who commanded the Fathers met together in the Nicene Councel about 362. yeares after Christ to referre the great controversie then in hand against the Arrians to the decision and determination of the Scriptures Which godly course Augustine backeth who liued not past 40. yeares after when he affirmeth that it was an auncient order of disputing to haue present the books of holy Scripture and to stand to the triall thereof If this was an auncient order of disputing in Augustines dayes surely the contrarie Popish practise is but a nouel●ie and we iustly presse them to antiquitie Vers. 10. For there are many disobedient and vaine talkers and deceiuers of minds cheifly they of the circumcision 11. Whose mouthes must be stopped which subvert whole houses teaching things which they ought not for filthy lucres sake The coniunction for sheweth that the words following containe a reason of the matter preceding namely why the Minister should be a man so qualified with able parts both to maintaine the truth and confute the falshood The reason is drawne from the description 1. of teachers in these two verses and 2. of hearers in the 12. The teachers are described by three arguments 1. from their indefinite number there are many not two or three who are easily set downe but many 2. By their adiuncts which are two 1. They are disobedient or refractarie such as will not submit themselues to the true doctrine and discipline of the Church 2. they are vaine talkers that is such as beeing giuen to ostentation and vanitie contemne the studie and deliuerie of sound and profitable doctrine and search out words and matters of wit and applause both of them of more sweetnesse vnto the flesh then soundnes vnto the soule and spirit 3. By their most dangerous effects and these also are two 1. Their deceiuing of minds for which vngodly practise he especially brandeth them of the circumcision that is either by metonimie the Iewes themselues circumcised or else Gentiles Iudaizing embracing Iewish opinions mixing the Law and Gospel Moses and Christ circumcision and baptisme together making indeed an hotchpotch of religion by confounding things that can neuer stand together The 2. effect of them is their subuersion of whole houses that is they poyson and infect whole houses yea and where the grounds and foundation of religion hath beene laid they ouerturne and ouerthrowe all This last effect is declared by two arguments 1. from the instrumentall cause of it and that is by their false doctrine teaching things which they ought not 2. from the finall cause of it that is couetousnesse for filthy lucres sake Now these teachers beeing so many so dangerous and hurtfull their mouthes must needes be stopped Which is a common conclusion set betweene the two verses as hauing reference vnto them both as a common remedie against all the mischeife which any way may be let in by them and therefore those that are to be admitted into the Ministerie must be of abillitie to stop their mouthes For there are many disobedient Doctr. 1. In that the first thing taxed in these false teachers by the Apostle is disobedience we learne that disobedience commonly is the ground of false doctrine For 1. it is iust with God to giue vp those to errors and delusion that receiue not the truth in the loue of it for wheresoeuer it is receiued in loue obedience cannot but be yeelded vnto it 2. The nature of sinne is euer to be excusing it selfe and is loath to be crossed although neuer so iustly but studyeth how to defend it selfe as long as it can euen by wresting the Scriptures and by taking vp one error for the maintenance of another 3. The tenour
minde is put for all the faculties of it especially the vnderstanding reason and iudgement all which are deluded and deceiued by these vain teachers Quest. How did these false teachers deceiue mens minds Ans. Foure waies 1. by suppressing the truth for by their vaine iangling and speaking liker Poets Philosophers historians then Prophets Apostles or any successors of theirs they made a cleanly conuaiance of the light from the people and withholding the truth and light they led them from Christ from the right knowledge of the Scriptures from sound godlinesse and religion in iudgement and practise and so they remained as darke in their vnderstanding as erronious in their iudgements as froward in their affections and as wicked in their liues as euer before Secondly by flatterie for they would not deale directly against the sinnes of the age as godly Ministers doe but deceitfully that they might not displease herein imitating Satan himselfe who was wont of olde to answer in riddles as he answered Craesus that if he would transport himselfe ouer the riuer Halys he should ouerthrowe a most mightie kingdome namely his owne But Micha will not deceiue nor flatter with Ahab although it stand vpon his life Thirdly by letting men see their estate in false glasses so as they neuer see the truth of it for people taught by fables and nouelties think and are borne in hand that they are in heauens high way their soules are brought on sleepe and comming from such froathie discourses they sit downe and please themselues in that they haue done their task required especially if they can bring home a iest or some wittie sentence when perhaps they scarce heard a word of Christ of their iustification of their mortification or of their glorie 4. By placing religion in bodily exercises not in matters of spirit and truth Colos. 2.20 thus did the Pharisies in their times the Papists in these and whosoeuer more vrge the decrees of men more then the commaundements of God Quest. But whose mindes are deceiued Answ. First their owne and then others for they are blind leaders of the blind deceiuing and beeing deceiued and although here our Apostle expresseth not here who they be that are deceiued yet elsewhere he doth as Rom. 16.18 they deceiue the hearts of the simple and 2. Tim. 3.6 they lead captiue simple women and 2. Pet. 2.14 they beguile vnstable soules whence we see that ignorant inconstant and vnsetled soules which hand ouer head receiue any doctrine without examination or triall whose simplicitie disableth them to iudge betweene truth and falshood and whose leuitie makes them like shaken reeds these are the carkases on which such vultures do seaze Hence 1. note three notable properties of errour 1. it neuer loueth solitarinesse but is a spreading leauen shrowding it selfe in multitudes and compassing sea and land to procure patrons and Proselytes Example we haue in the Iesuites the arch deceiuers of minds and impostors of the world 2. It taketh the highest holds of men euen the mind vnderstanding and iudgement that the eie once beeing put out and the light turned into darknes it might cary men headlong remorslesly to all cursed practises which necessarily resemble as they proceed from the former 3. It ouerturneth all Gods order ordinances for whereas the scope of the teachers calling is to enlighten mens minds perswade their consciences rectifie their hearts so as they might growe vp in the sauing knowledge of God in Christ and the liuely sense of their owne saluation in a word whereas they are to set and containe men in the right way error in their minds causeth them to drawe men out of the right path as this word properly signifieth 2. Note what is the best fence against false teachers and an hedge against seducers namely 1. knowledge 2. loue of the truth The former armeth simple soules by letting them see the difference betweene the right hand and left without the which the minde cannot be good But the latter is the surest pace of truth and that is the loue of it for no matter it is that men know professe and can talke of the truth if their soules cleaue not vnto it for euen vpon those that receiue the truth shall God send strong delusions to beleeue lyes if they receiue it not in the loue of it Quest. But what is this doctrine to vs we all professe the truth and loue it from our hearts and therefore we hope we are fenced from deceiuers or beeing deceiued Answ. But let vs consider 1. That these are the last times which the Apostles prophecied of euen perilous times wherein many deceiuers should creepe into the Church and many should giue heed to the spirits of error 2. That these deceiuers of mindes were such as liued in the bosome of the Church among such as professed Christ and his religion 3. That they lurked secretly and that the Christians of that time could hardly of themselues descrie them and therefore the Apostle is glad to helpe them and wisheth them carefully to preuent them and therefore there may be priuie impostors among vs. 4. That we hauing set doores open for them we shal not want deceiuers for whatsoeuer many men say most men loue not the truth sincerely delt withall nay they desire to be deceiued while they hate with a deadly hatred such Michaes as would let them see their estate and helpe them out And is it not Gods manner of iust proceeding when men desire preachers that will preach of wine and strong drinke to send them such teachers as they desire that he that is ignorant and filthie may be ignorant and filthie still Those then that care not for the truth shall haue teachers which shall be Gods executioners to lead them into error that as by the great Antichrist the Lord reuenged and plagued the contempt of the light in the world so also in particular Churches and places by false teachers and pettie Antichrists If men will not abide wholesome doctrine but haue itching eares they shall haue an heape of teachers after their owne lusts to turne their eares fr●m the truth and delude them with fables Let Ahab once hate Micha the Lord presently consulteth who shall deceiue him and if this question once proceede out of Gods mouth the deuill is present and so forward in the execution of Gods vengeance as he shall preuaile against 400. false Prophets at a clappe before he shall not fall by them This truth is as a finger in the bile and beeing rubbed will perhaps make Zidkiah take his fist from Michaes face and say when went the spirit from me to thee yet ceaseth it not to be the truth of God concerning our selues who so long as we giue heede to the spirit of error cannot want deceiuers Let men therefore professing themselues members of the Church looke vnto themselues and labour to knowe the truth to affect it to stand vnto it if they would be fenced
to hurt they are termed foxes Luk. 13.32 tell Herod that foxe In regard of the latter namely their poison and venome Christ calleth them serpents and generations of vipers their tongues are like stings sharpened against good men and the poison of adders and aspes is vnder their lippes Psal. 140.3 hence doth the Lord threaten most cruell and ineuitable enemies vnder such speeches as Ier. 8.17 I will send serpents and cockatrices among you which shall not be charmed but they shall sting you Whereby he would describe and signifie the implacable and virulent malice and rage of the Chaldeans Now man beeing aboue all other borne a sociable creature and to liue in societie with God and men in the familie Church and common-wealth hath by his hostilitie against God and enmitie against man after a sort put off the nature of man and by such degenerating of good right hath lost euen the name of man also Doctr. Whence we learne that such as are not ledde by reason renewed nor by iudgement rightly enformed by the word of God but followe their owne hearts lusts for their guide haue cut themselues from the account of men and as worthily lost the name as the nature of men for they are become beasts in vnderstanding beasts in sensualitie beasts in brutish practises beasts in Gods account beasts in the reputation but of reasonable and heathenish men The verie light of nature adiudgeth them vnworthie the name of men beeing rather like the pictures or images of wood or stone outwardly resembling things but inwardly wanting which aboue all could make them the things they repre●●nt And hence proceeded those poetries of metamorphoses not that either beasts or birds or trees were changed into men or men into these but in that the eie of nature in these men perceiued that men more and more degenerated from themselues and became daily neerer the beasts in properties qualities and practises although they retained still the shape and place of men Like Nebuchadnezzar who was not changed into the shape of a beast as some haue thought although God could haue done that but his vnderstanding together with his kingdome was taken from him and he driuen from men ate grasse as the beasts did till his vnderstanding he saith not his shape was restored him Hence haue some other of the heathens lighted a candle at noone day and runne into markets and throngs of men to seeke a man as though it were a rare thing euen in a number of men to finde one deseruing the name of a man whereby doubtlesse the Lord would cast the dongue of the Gentiles in their owne faces and that by themselues as here he did by Epimenides Vse Seeing the light of nature and grace conspire in the illustrating of this truth we must be more readie to embrace it and make our best vse of it as the truth not of a vaine man but of the true God Who among vs would not be mooued and disdaine to be called by any man a beast an asse an owle a dog c. and yet haue we occasioned the Lord thus to repute and account of vs and are not mooued for how few of vs can shew our selues men what a number of men and Christians in profession hearing the word and receiuing the Sacraments are as the horse and mule without vnderstanding that is not onely ignorant but incorrigible persons neither spurre nor bridle auaileth them to amendement Such as the Prophet complaineth of whom when the Lord had sundrie waies called them to amendement he hearkened and heard but no man said what haue I done euerie one turned to the race as the horse to the battell yea as horses that haue cast their rider men kicke and spurne against the Lord and his gratious admonitions as Pharaoh who is the Lord and other whilest the Lords sharpe bit is in their mouthes they bite it in with much discontentment but as vnruly afterward as euer before How many deafe adders are euerie where which refuse to heare the voice of the charmer some saying in their hearts some with their mouthes as the hardened Iewes to Ieremie The word of the Lord in thy mouth we will not heare What a number of swine are abroad rooting vp and treading vnder feete holy things contemning the word Sacraments ministerie discipline wallowing in their filthie lusts of vncleannes drunkennes fornication pride riot earthlines euerie one according to his owne appetite and not a fewe hypocrites who not sincerely vndertaking the profession of the truth returne to their owne wont as a swine after washing to the wallowing What a number of dogges without conscience and shame commit all manner of filthinesse euen in the day light and yet incessantly barking and bawling with Shemei against good men and good things let a man be a stranger to them and their courses let him be neuer so honest a man the dogge hath sufficient cause not to spare him and let any thing neuer so good be propounded or do● if not so generally receiued or vnusuall there is no stilling of the dogges against it Who can tell the number of cruell and vnmercifull lyons greedie gripes couetous cormorants woluish extortioners subtile oppressors who as foxes liue by crafty conveiances and whatsoeuer other noysome beast and vncleane that liueth by the pray to which adde those serpentine whisperers tale-bearers busie-bodies the vermine and venome of societies against whome no caution can be sufficient the number of all which kinds of cattell so amounteth as that the world at a blush may seeme rather to be made for beasts then men Now if we would avoide this sharpe censure which our nature so abhorreth let vs iudge our selues in the premises and finde out that bruitish behauiour in our selues whereby we haue forfeited euen the names of men for to this purpose are we so sharply delt withall in the Scriptures that we should be brought to be ashamed and blush at our behauiours We haue a common saying when we see our selues ouerseene or ouertaken in any temporall and outward thing Oh what a beast was I but wel were it if we would seriously thus accuse our selues when we haue failed in our godly course to say Oh what a beast was I to leaue the direction of the word and suffer my selfe to be led by my appetite or by the lust of my heart or the sight of mine eies to this or that sinne alas that I to to whome God hath giuen reason iudgement election deliberation yea his word and spirit should liue all this while as one destitute of all these I vnderstand not what the good and acceptable will of God is but am yet like the horse and mule without vnderstanding I haue stopped my eares at the word like the deafe adder and haue refused the things of my peace I haue barked against God and godlinesse I haue wallowed in my vncleanenes like a swine in his owne filth I haue beene vnmercifull and cruell
as any lyon or wolfe I haue spared no pray and as subtile as any foxe to deceiue my brethen I haue spit out my venome both to the face and behinde the backes of my neighbours and especially against the houshold of faith the professors of religion Oh what a beast was I in all this But now seeing my vnderstanding is restored vnto me againe I will neuer hereafter carrie my selfe but like a man not making my lusts my lawe any longer but reason shall be my guide nay nor that onely but like a Christian man I will by Gods grace suffer my self to be guided hence forth by renewed reason yea by the word and spirit of God If I must needes in any thing resemble the beasts it shall be the oxe and asse in knowing my Lord and Master the storke and crane and swallowe in acknowledging the seasonable time of my repentance the serpent in Christian wisedome the lambe and doue in Christian meekenes and innocencie and thus resembling them I neither shall be nor accounted a beast nor yet be condemned by any of them But if any loth to leaue his brutish properties will be a beast still and followe his l●st it is fit hee should see the ende of his way in one of his predecessors Prou. 7.22 He goeth on as an oxe to the slaughter Many such thinke and pretend they goe to heauen but deceiue not thy selfe no vncleane thing entreth within the gates of that holy citie thou shalt stand with thy fellowes without Reu. 22.15 Without shall be dogges and enchanters and whoremongers and murtherers and idolaters or whosoeuer loueth or maketh lies and one day shall by experience teach thee that the bread of children belongeth not vnto dogges Slowe bellies In these words this people of Creta are by their Poet accused of habituall idlenes and intemperance who howsoeuer to the duties either of the first or second table they were as heauie and slow as any snaile yet in the feeding of themselues and following Epicurus his trade so diligent and instant they were as euery man seemed rather to be a bellie then a man and therefore doth the Poet by an vsuall figure of speach thus expresse them And as this whole hexameter so much more was this part of it more frequent among the heathen who were wont prouerbially to call such persons bellies as they saw addicted to idlenes gormandizing and intemperance Doct. A life led in idlenes and delicacie is condemned both by the light of nature and of the Scriptures Of the former there is good reason seeing it is against that order of nature which God set in all his creatures at the first euery one of which are s●ill vnweariably employed according to their first institutions The celestiall bodies stand not still but by miracle In all inferiour bodily creatures if well ordered there must be these three things 1. An order of the parts the feete may not stand vpon the shoulders for that is the place for the head 2. A proportion of them or a symmetry for the eye may not be bigger then the head 3. A function of each of them for euery one of them must haue some distinct office which it must diligently attend vnto 2. And if we looke vnto the Lords institutions with man we shall see that this idle and dronish kind of life was banished out of paradise it selfe from that innocent estate to the preseruation of which all the creatures offred vp themselues to saue mans paines and yet euen then must Adam dresse the garden then when he was a more absolute Lord ouer all the earth then any man euer since was or is ouer any part of it yet might be not liue as many of our gentrie out of a vocation and calling but must abide in that vocation whereto he was called And euen in paradise seeing the Lord instituted no more Saboaths then one in seauen daies what would he else declare then that innocent Adam was no lesse bound then now we are to employ the most part of the weeke about the things of his calling still in the midst of them remembring to shew forth the loue of his creator and the religious keeping of a good conscience 3. And how much more now since the fall may we thinke is man borne to trauell as the smoke to flie vpward for seeing that by the curse of sinne the creatures haue denied their former serviceablenesse but vpon condition of great industrie and trauell Gods ordinance and commandement is that now in the sweate of our faces we should eate our owne bread prouiding for our selues and ours which is besides the pleasing of God who delighteth that man should make his calling a part of Christian obedience a sweete fruit of our paynes carrying vs more comfortably thorough our way in the world 4. And yet looking nearer the matter we find this order and ordinance of God more forceably fastned vpon those that professe themselues Christians euery one of whom must be so farre from that inordinate walking as that he must withdraw himselfe from such And if any man be he neuer such a professor of Christ will not worke he ought not to eate let him starue his blood be vpon his owne head For such as these in the profession especially whose pride whose ease whose tooth whose play bring in ar●eareges vpon them vnawares are the spots and blots of religion Now therefore that such as professe the Lord Iesus may the better be contained in this order of God both for the discharge of their owne dutie and the good example of others these reasons are to be considered 1. That God who hath set vs in our callings hath promised also to be with vs to giue vs good successe in them to helpe vs to beare out the tediousnes which sinne hath brought vpon our labour to giue vs his protection in these our waies to feed and maintaine vs by the blessing of our labour in the house in the field in our stock and in our store whereas pouertie arresteth the idle person Prov. 28. the idle shall be filled with pouertie And all this is to encourage vs to faithfulnes and diligence in the duties of our callings See Ioshua 1.8 2. Whereas all other creatures liue vnto themselues man was appointed to liue aswell to others as to himselfe the Church the countrie the familie the poore euery man challengeth a part in euery man And therefore although some other creatures be all a bellie as the crabfish who walketh with her teeth yet a Christian man must be a hand to one an eye to another a foote to another a shoulder to support another he must not only consist of bellie and teeth Aske thy selfe then what good doth my life to Church to Commonwealth to family to men and if thy conscience answer truly little or none then maist thou conclude surely I am rather a
to say What is it that I heare my sonnes doe so no more for this is rather a saluing and too hastie a skinning ouer of a rotten sore the fester of which quickly breaketh out againe with more rage and danger but here he must put on the zeale of God yea a iust and holy anger gounded vpon the loue of God and godlines wherein he hath Iohn Baptist Matth. 3.5 and the Sonne of God himselfe going before him Math. 23. It is thought great wisdome in men so to carie their doctrine as no man is offended at it whereas howsoeuer all meeknes and patience in our owne matters is a Christian and commendable vertue yet zeale in the matters of God may not be wanting and were all men Saints or sinners but penitent we might by tendernes and compassion raise them but some are in the fire and must be pluckt out many are fooles to whose backs stripes belong many are festred in their sinnes and must haue corrasiues and fretting waters to make them smart at the quicke in which cases if any of our patients cha●e and storme and grow neuer so impatient it will be no wisedome in such as haue the ordering of them to let him haue his owne will in his desire to be let alone but still make incision search further the depth of the wound and send in taints to the bottom for such louing wounds must go before applying of salues to sound healing 3. Let all godly hearers learne to make manifest their patience and obedience by suffering themselues to be launched and pricked euen to their hearts by those whom God hath sent as his surgions to cure mens soules otherwise by sinne wounded to death as knowing that the hurt of the daughter of Gods people is not healed with sweete words but as the bitterest pill is fittest to purge and worketh kindlier then the sweetest potion and as the thunder and lightning more purifie the ayre then the calmest sunnshine euen so gall and wormewood is the portion which the Lord hath tempered for many to take off the pleasant tast of their sweet sinnes As for vs we take no pleasure in your smart or iudgement but that without it you cannot be cured You cannot but confesse that when sores are ripe and raging the next way to cure is launcing suffer vs then a while and trie whether we are not as readie with the good Samaritan to powre oyle as wine into your wounds so it make to your soundnes But all will not come vnto the supper by entreatie some must be compelled and if we bring a true word and handle it truely it cannot but deuide betweene the marrow and the bone yea betweene the soule and the spirits and the ioynts c. Heb. 4.12 And can all this be done and a man feele no smart nay surely if our Ministrie worke no smart it worketh no cure That they may be sound in the faith Doctr. The sharpest rebukes in the Church ought to ayme at this end the recouerie of diseased Christians to soundnes in religion both in iudgement and practise Which appeareth in that the greatest ordinarie censure in the Church is not mortall but medicinable For as a surgeon cuts off armes and legges that the bodie and heart may be saued so in this bodie parts and members are cut off that themselues may be saued as well as the whole bodie Paul excommunicateth the incestuous person that his spirit might be saued Himineus and Philetus were cast out to Satan that they might learne not to blaspheme Those whom Iude wisheth to be pulled out of the fire by violence must be saued thereby If any obiect against this that in 1. Cor. 16.21 If any man loue not the Lord Iesus let him be had in execration to the death and therefore edification and saluation is not the ende of this censure I answer It is one thing for the Church to excommunicate another to curse and execrate the one is an ordinarie censure the other verie extraordinarie and rare the one against those who may be freinds of the Church the other only against desperate enemies and open and obstinate Apostates euen such as Iulian whom the Church iudgeth to haue sinned the sin against the holy Ghost and therefore execrateth and accurseth So as that place nothing impeacheth the truth of the doctrine Vse 1. Much more ought Ministers in their sharpest rebukes aime at the conuersion of men what a sharpe reproofe was that of Peter to Simon Magus Act. 8.21.25 Thy mony perish with thee and thou art euen in the gall of bitternesse and yet he addeth repent therefore and pray vnto the Lord c. So is it the part of all Peters successors to whom the care of the Lords flock is committed so to reprooue not as those who would shame mens persons but disgrace their sinnes neither as insulting ouer mens euills nor delighting in their falls nor despayring of their rising but as imitating good Surgions who whilest they seare or cut or cut off still shew compassion and gently entreate the patient euer perswading him that this rough course will make to his health and soundnes 2. While Ministers thus dispense Christian seueritie in their reproofes and denunciation of iudgements the bearers must not mistake them as many doe and much lesse say vnto them as Corah and his company to Moses and Aaron yea take too much vpon you or as the Egyptian to Moses who made thee a iudge who gaue you the keyes of heauen to open and shut it vpon whom you please when did God make you of his counsell to foretell my damnation c. conceiuing that in our menacies and threatning we quite cut them off from all hope of mercie and that we take vpon vs to shut the doore of grace vpon them and to shorten the arme of the Lord that he cannot saue them Whereas the truth is while we thunder out damnation against the sinner which verie many desperately rush into while they auoid the mention of it in our mouthes it is not that we despaire of your saluation or would haue you so to doe nor we doe not admonish you to shame you but you must if you will be saued by the word we preach conceiue with vs that we desire your soundnes of faith and therefore we deale with you as with sickemen who commonly will take nothing to doe them good but what is forced vpon them which if you doe not we are not in your hearts the Surgeons of your soules but rather your executioners 3. This reprehendeth those whose rebukes tend altogether to discourage godly courses in their people and bring them from soundnes in the faith making heauie the hearts of them to whom the Lord speaketh peace 2. Those that malitiously thunder their bolte of excommunication against those that professe Christ sincerely Thus did the Iewes excommunicate whosoeuer durst confesse Christ as that blind man Ioh. 9.34 so the
word of God is both the immortal seed wherof we are begottē to God that food which daily preseruet● vs that we perish not 1. Pet. 1.23 and 2.2 if it be purely and incorruptly preached all the sound members of the Church by the power of the spirit turning it into good blood and nourishment are sound and strong but if it be adulterated and corrupted with mans deuises if it be blended poisoned or leauened hence are all sorts of spirituall diseases ingendred and fedde which ouergrowe the soules of men so as they are soone brought to the gates of death 2. The Apostle wisheth vs to consider the ende of the commandement 1. Tim. 1.4.5 that is either the morall lawe or that commandement and lawe of Christ Ioh. 15.20 The ende of the commandement is loue that is both towards God for himselfe and man for God but this loue must not be vnsound not in word and tongue onely but in deede and in truth from a pure that is a sincere heart a good conscience and faith vnfained But how is this soundnes o● grace wrought in the heart the verse going before telleth vs that fables and vanities of men are so farre from this worke that fire is not more contrarie to water then those be to godly edifying the which plausible wittie conceits while men desire they are soone turned saith Paul to vain iangling And Satan hath made vse of this truth to the ouerthrow of many soules whose ancient practise euer was to pester the Church with infinite toyes and tales fancies and fables that mens sences might be taken vp therein least they should by the searching of the truth get out of his chaines of darkenesse wherein hee detaineth them 3. From the righteous iudgement of the Lord the sencence hath passed that when hee hath affoarded men his word to call convert strengthen and direct them but they hauing wandring hearts and itching eares loath that wholesome word he giueth them ouer to strong delusions to beleeue lies and to this ende according to their owne hearts lusts he sendeth them an heape of teachers to turne them away from the truth 2. Tim. 4.4 And what can be more iust seeing the Lord hath enioyned vs to captiuate all our senses vnto the simplicitie of his word but we wil vntie them to raunge after strange glosses comments and words of no profit he hath separated the wheate from the chaffe but we will mingle them he hath deliuered a perfect rule of faith and life but we by seeking out other rules from men argue it of imperfection he hath offered vs the pure riuers and streames to drinke at but we will digge puddles to our selues or drinke out of the cisternes of strangers shall not men now despising so great grace neglecting so great saluation offering such open iniurie to the Lord and his ordinances as iustly as dearely buy their owne woe and be giuen ouer to delusion Vse 1. Ministers must so teach as they may be able to professe with the Apostle 2. Pet. 1.16 We haue not followed deceiueable fables but the power and comming of our Lord Iesus Christ that is concerning the exhibiting of the Messiah the accomplishment of promises the abolishment of shadowes and his mightie power in word and action in his resurrection and ascension these are the things which we haue opened vnto you not wearying you or our selues in vngrounded fables vncertaine doctrines or deceiuing you with any shewe of words nor any thing whereof we were not occulate witnesses Other things haue a shewe of wisedome but if the word of the Lord be forsaken what truth of wisedom can be in them Ier. 8.9 other things may seeme to bring glorie but the true glorie of Gods messenger is that of the Apostle 2. Cor. 1.12 namely in simplicitie and godly purenes and not in fleshly wisedome he conuerseth in the world 2. Hearers must beware least any spoile them or carrie them away thorough Philosophie the speach is taken from theeues who come secretly to carrie away sheepe out of the fold to whome the Apostle compareth vaine teachers for they are no better to whom if thou wouldst not be a pray keepe from their snares mens wisedome will here betray thee curb the vanitie of thine owne heart in which thou art borne else will it make thee drinke in vanitie as the fish doth water be diligent in learning and keeping such doctrine as concerneth life euerlasting heare him willingly that telleth thee of Christ of his doctrine of his actions of his suffering this shall feed thee to saluation as for doctrines of quaint deuises and conceits of humane wisedome turne away thine care from them els wil they breede to more vngodlines 3. The seuerall doctrines of Turkes Iewes Papists are so many bad humors feeding so many diseases amōg whom if there be any faith at all yet can there be no soundnes in the faith because all of them are patched together of fables to passe ouer the former as too blasphemous to be once named among Christians the verie name of their Alcaron is suffitiently detestable The Iewish fables whereof their Talmud is full we haue seene in part besides that their Cabala is full of humane deuises but euen in the things which primarily were the Lords owne institutions they are become the embracers of fables If now they vrge as they doe distinctions of persons he is a Iew not who is one outward or in the letter but he that is one within If circumcision a note of that distinction now that is circumcision which is not in the flesh but in the heart If distinction of daies seeing Christ our Passeouer is sacrificed we must not keep feasts with old leauen neither with the leavened bread of maliciousnesse but with the vnleavened bread of sinceritie and truth If distinction of meates that which goeth into the bellie defileth not a man and whatsoeuer is sold in the shambles we may eate asking no question for conscience sake For the Popish fables we need goe no further then there liues and legends of many of which delusions they are now ashamed But if we adde their Canons constitutions decrees and humane traditions vrged as things necessarie binding the conscience concerning daies meats garments orders and such voluntarie worship we might easily see their whole religion placed in such outward obseruations neglecting and deprauing whatsoeuer is of substance to the true and spirituall worship of God as though Christian religion stood in things corruptible or in things indifferent or bodily exercise and not rather in things spirituall necessarie and premanent Hath the holy Ghost said in the Scripture that the kingdome of God is not meate and drinke but righteousnesse peace and ioy in the holy Ghost and that meat and cloth are for the bellie and back and perish with the vse for God shall destroie both Let the blinded Papist keepe his coard and cowle at his backe cloath
be as carefull to maintaine them for otherwise we loose most pretious things purchased with the pretious blood of the Sonne of God the commandement is to stand fast in the libertie in which Christ hath set vs free we must suffer no cauiller to infringe our charter nor bind vs where Christ hath loosed vs. If the Lord haue pronounced all things that is indifferent pure free to the pure beleeuer let a Popish spirit come boast of his vowe of voluntarie pouertie of single life of abstinence from flesh c. we haue learned otherwise from this Scripture that not onely all estates bondage or libertie riches or pouertie marriage or single life are alike vnto God but also that all creatures are sanctified to the sanctified receiuer and consequently that all their vowes besides that they are out of the power of him that voweth doe nothing else but reuoke and abolish Christian libertie And lastly we are to testifie our thankefulnes for such liberties purchased especially by abhorring the wickednesse of Poperie which bringeth vpon men a more detestable bondage then that of Egypt 1. by binding them to seeke for righteousnes and iustification before God by the workes of the lawe 2. by impos●●● a masse of traditionarie precepts and commandements of men 〈◊〉 by 1. they steale away this dearely purchased libertie 2. hold the Church vnder rudiments now after that faith is come 3. robbe Christ of his honour by lessening his benefits and darkening his grace 4. set themselues in the roome of Christ in making lawes to bind the conscience vpon paine of damnation although God is the Lord of it Thus much of the former branch of this 15. verse But vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing is nothing pure but euen their mindes and consciences are defiled This opposition sheweth the truth of the exposition of the former words for as by the pure were meant the regenerate and beleeuers so by the impure person the Apostle affirmeth that he meaneth the vnregenerate and vnbeleeuer who wanting faith whereby he might partake with Christ and all his benefits whose righteousnesse and innocencie is the onely lauer of the Church by which also he might haue his heart within him purified in part and his outward conuersation cleansed from dead workes wherein he walketh he is no better then a leper in Gods eyes ouerspread with naturall corruption and outwardly spotted and speckled like the leopard and in regard of the whole man like a blackeamoore who cannot change his hewe for such an impuritie is here asctibed to the vnbeleeuer as not onely outwardly runneth vpon him but such a one as hath taken and corrupted both the inferiour and the most supreame and excellent faculties of his soule euen his minde and his conscience By the minde is meant the whole vnderstanding part of the soule which beeing the eie of the soule carrieth with it reason iudgement and election The pollution of which is to be taken vp with darkenes and blindnes 1. Cor. 2.14 to be filled with vanitie Eph. 4.17 with fleshlinesse Colos. 2.18 in so much as all the naturall wisedome of man is fleshlie and deuillish By conscience is meant that facultie of the soule which by applying particular things iudged of and done doth determine them either with or against them which depending vpon the former must necessarily be ledde into the errors of it no otherwise then one blind man is ledde by an other into a ditch The pollution of it is when it is either idle or ill occupied the former when it is sleepie sensles or feared doing nothing at all neither accusing nor excusing the latter when it doth both these but neither of them as it ought but accuseth where it should excuse and excuse where it ought to accuse Now both these being thus polluted let the vnbeleeuer turne himselfe to any thing in generall without himselfe as all things in generall fall vnder the vnderstanding or turne him to any particular thought word action concerning himselfe which onely the conscience hath to doe with in all these he is polluted so as nothing to him can be pure So as we must here conceiue of an absolute impuritie ascribed to the vnbeleeuer which is the onely difference in the opposition for whereas puritie was in the former branch attributed to the beleeuer in some respect onely for 1. the best are encombred with originall sinne 2. but in part and not fully regenerate 3. ouertaken not seldome with actuall transgression which may and doth make them still crie out with Dauid Lord create a cleane heart within me This impuritie is absolutely and without any restraint ascribed to vnbeleeuers and vnconuerted men And in this branch also the Apostle bendeth himselfe against the error of the Iewish teachers who were verie strict and curious least they should be outwardly by this or that meate day garment or otherwise be defiled for he would haue them conceiue that he spake of no such thing neither were these the subiects wherein their impuritie did so much consist but in such a thing as stucke nearer them then any outward thing yea then their verie skinnes euen in vnbeleefe and consequently in such a power of sinne in their hearts as made all things though in their nature and institution neuer so good yet vnto them and in their vse no otherwise vncleane then a fustie vessell corrupteth the sweetest wines that can be powred into it And therefore would he haue these ceremonie-masters to turne their eyes into themselues and looke into their inside and then they shall see themselues bootelesly to employ al their paines in keeping themselues from outward pollution so long as they carrie that within them which defileth euery thing they meddle withall Whence wee learne sundrie instructions Doct. 1. We haue here a good argument of the diuinitie of Scripture in that it can and doth as God himselfe enter vpon and iudge the thoughts of men and of men themselues not as men from things without but from things within euen according to their cleannes or vncleanes before God From this argument the Apostle prooueth the same thing Hebr. 4.12 the word of God is liuely and mightie in operation and deuideth and cutteth a sunder the soule and spirit that is it worketh not only vpon the inferiour faculties which are lesse pure but vpon the purest and most supreame part of the soule called the spirit and the minde and by Paul the spirit of the minde for nothing is so secret in the soule but it lyeth vnder the stroke of the word which pearceth as farre as the eye of the author of it to whom all things are naked and open vers 13. No Anotomist can by cutting vp one part of the bodie after another so manifestly discouer to the eye the seuerall parts of man as doth the word and the spirit therein discouer and reprooue the most inward thoughts such a light carrieth with it as chaseth away the darknesse
of the soule letteth a simple man see the secrets of his heart laid open bringeth him to the sight of his sinne and to breake out into the acknowledgement and confession of the truth saying God is there indeed Now nothing but the word can tell a man his thoughts nothing else can pronounce sentence according to that which is in the heart and therefore cannot but come out from God whose only priuiledge it is to search the hearts which he hath made Vse 1. Let Ministers gird this sharp sword vpon their thigh and strike downe the high thoughts of men speaking rather to the conscience then to the eares of men for else the word which is spirituall and most directly worketh vpon the heart and spirit looseth in his hand the proper worke and powerfull vse of it This alone is that two edged sword in the mouth of Christ whereby he gets the victorie as Dauid said of Goliahs so more truely may we say of this there is no sword to this Philosophy Poetrie and profane things are too blunt to peirce the spirit too weake to conuert soules too dull to giue sinne and corruption deadly blowes or deaths wounds Whosoeuer would turne men from their wicked way and from the euill of their inuentions must stand in Gods counsell and declare his words to his people And the note of a true Leuite is to haue the law of truth vnder his lips Malac. 2.6 2. Labour in hearing the word to find it thus diuinely and powerfully working in thy heart finde thy soule stricken with the sence of death eternall find it the sacrificing knife to cut the throate of thy sinnes and lustfull affections find it to shake and astonish thy soule for this is the onely way for thee to finde rest in the day of trouble if it slay not thy sinnes it slayeth thy selfe insensibly for it neuer returneth in vaine 3. Be patient to suffer thy hypocrisie vncleannes yea thy most close and inward sinnes to be discouered in the Ministery and when thou seest this light of the Lord searching out all the bowells of thy bellie say of it surely God is in it for although I find not this presence by thunder lightning earthquake as in the mount yet by a still voice the Lord commeth and speaketh to my soule no voice but his can cast downe such strong holds as I see shaken within mee none but he can bind my conscience none but he can summon my thoughts none else but he that made it can worke my flintie heart like waxe The woman at the well conceiued nothing aboue ordinarie of Christ till he came neere her and told her of her secret vncleane course then could she acknowledge him a Prophet then could she aske her neighbours Is not he the Messias that hath told mee all that euer I did euen so is it not the Lord Iesus that in his word telleth thee of all thy waies come thy selfe call thy neighbours with thee to learne where such instruction is to be had When Christ told Nathaniel that he saw him vnder the figge tree where he thought he had not then could he say surely thou art the sonne of God the King of Israel euen so when thou findest the word discouering that in thee which thou thoughtest was hid from euery eye thou maist say truely this is the word of the Sonne of God herein it resembleth him it findeth me out of my figge leaues and calleth mee out of my bushes where I had hid my selfe Thou maist be bold to affirme surely he is a Prophet of the God of Israel that can discouer the secrets of the King of Syria and the words which he speaketh in his priuie chamber and as truely this is a man of God that can tell me the thoughts and counsells which I take in the most priuie chamber of my soule yea in the secret and most retyred closet of my heart Many not acquainted with this lesson storme and rage at the word when it pricketh them and thinke that the Preacher is informed and beginne to suspect some intelligencers the truth is we haue an intellengencer euen a spirit which goeth after Gehezi and stayeth by Ananias and Saphirah till their most secret conveyances be discouered and reuenged to whom day and darknes are alike and for such let them in time beware to spurne against preuailing truth least one day teach them to their cost what it is to despise such a word as this is 4. Iudge of thy selfe and actions as this word doth that is not according to thy shew in the world but according to thy purenes or vncleannes before God to whom a poore man in his vprightnesse is better then a froward person be he neuer so rich yea a poore wise child more accepted then an old foolish King This is the truest touchstone whence thou maist iudge certenly of thy estate and not be deceiued If this word reprooue or approoue any of thy waies or thy whole course thou maist safely pronounce of it Lord if I be deceiued in this thou and thy word hath deceiued me and if by thy word I erre I erre willingly for I know that this is according to Gods iudgement and that is according to truth Rom. 2.2 Doctr. 2. We learne further what is the estate of a man vnregenerate whom the Apostle setteth out thus 1. He is one that is vncleane 2. an vnbeleeuer 3. one to whom nothing is pure 4. his minde 5. his conscience is polluted in all which respects he is a most odious person in whom is nothing but filthinesse of flesh and spirit the which th● pure eyes of the Lord cannot abide All which will more easily appeare if we consider that by our fall we were not only depriued of that grace and goodnes which was set in our nature but there succeeded a foule and monstrous prauitie and euill opposed directly to the former good and that through the whole frame of the soule The minde which as a pure eye was able strongly to behold the brightnesse of God and the things of God is now not only destitute of that light of vnderstanding and reason but is couered and vailed with a black darknes of ignorance that the light of the glorious Gospel of Christ which is the image of God though in it selfe neuer so cleare yet cannot shine out vnto them The will which was most conformable to Gods will is not only spoiled and robbed of the rectitude and freedome it had to good but is become rebellious and resisting the will of God Matth. 23.37 how often would I haue gathered thee but thou wouldest not Ioh. 5.40 yee will not come vnto mee that yee may liue yea and is a seruant of sinne Rom. 7.14 the inferiour parts called the flesh are not onely spoiled of that conformitie which all the affections and appetite had with the law but resist with hostillitie and enmitie against God yea and cannot
that many who now stand not in the last ranks of professors if times should serue would play but an Hazaels part or stand at open defiance of the truth if once the chaffie profession should be blowen away no man euer saw the change and alteration of religion but he saw also this truth verified The third point in the words is the miserable condition of the hypocrite He is an abhominable person Where note that men of corrupt mindes taking vpon them the names of Christians and doing the works of Atheists are worthely abhorred of God and if they could be discerned ought to be an eyesore to men who should not with patience behold them They are abhominable to God which appeareth both 1. in their persons 2. their actions 3. their punishment For their persons they are but halfe Christians neither hote nor cold and therefore the Lord cannot digest them compared to cakes but halfe bakte Hose 7.10 and not turned on the other side below they are hote that is either in their owne superstitions or in smaller trifling matters or else in forme and outward appearance they seeme so zealous as though the zeale of Gods house would consume them but aboue in matter of spirit and truth in the inner man in the soule and heart remaine vnbaked impenitent vnturned the fire of the spirit hath not once touched them and so they remaine a mixt lump still neither hote nor cold Seeing therfore they are such as withdraw their best part from God the soule of God can take no pleasure in them Their actions although neuer so good in themselues neuer so specious vnto others neuer so behoofull to the societie where they liue yet are abhominable vnto God yea in their most deuout seruices they doe nothing but as Ephraim compasse the Lord with lyes and deceit Hose 11.12 Their punishment sheweth them to be euery way abhorred of God for as men deale with things they hate so the Lord 1. casteth them out of his sight Iob. 13.16 The hypocrite shall not come before him the workers of lies shall not enter within the walls of that holy Citie yea sometimes they are cast out of his presence as Caine was euen out of the visible Church as they are euer out of the inuisible to shew that they shall neuer be endured hereafter 2. Destroieth them for their destruction from the Lord sleepeth not but shall surprise them perhaps while they are in the bodie as Ananias and Saphirah but certenly hereafter and the damnation of such is no ordinarie damnation but a more ample and abundant iudgement is reserued for them then others and it is worthy obseruation that when the holy Ghost would rouse vp the slouthfull seruant he threatneth him his portion with hypocrites Matth. 24.51 and for both together it is said Matth. 13.41 that the Angels shall gather out of Christs kingdome all that offend and cast them into a furnace Ioh. 15.6 those that abide not in Christ though they cleaue a long time to the visible Church yet are seperated from the true inuisible Church and cast out like withered branches and men gather them and cast them into the fire how shall then such abhominable persons in Gods eyes avoid the damnation of hell it is almost an impossible thing for such a viperous brood of professed hypocrites euer to be saued And ought not such persons also to be an abhomination to good men in whose eyes euery vile person ought to be contemned yes surely could we discerne them or God discouering them we should be affected towards them as Elisha was towards Iehoram who in his straitnesse could seek to Gods Prophet and otherwise to Baal as the Lord of hostes liueth were it not that I regard the presence of Iehosaphat I would not haue looked towards thee nor seene thee Vse 1. If these be the notes and this the estate of an hypocrite then must it needs be very hard to know who is an hypocrite because it is a lurking sinne and so masked as there is litle yea often no outward difference betweene the sound and vnsound and consequently it cannot but be verie dangerous to lay this imputation vpon any man till the time least we iudge our brethren rashly and condemne the iust which is as odious a sinne as the iustifying of the wicked And this is rather to be noted because it is become so rise a practise to range euery professor vnder this title and marke him with this blacke cole of hypocrisie But as it is true that an hypocrite must be a professor so is it false that euery professor must be an hypocrite And as for all other notes here obserued or elsewhere in Scripture they are such as whereby the owne heart of a man and his owne spirit within himselfe may iudge of himselfe rather then the heart or eye of another man Many are so like vnto the deuill that they make no bones of accusing the godly as Satan did Iob of hypocrisie beeing led by that same spirit which is an accuser of the brethren but not by the spirit of God which is the spirit of loue which thinketh no euill but hopeth all things euen the best of the worst which is not iudging neither dare it enter into the counsell of God nor iudge the person of another mans seruant who standeth or falleth to his owne Lord which is so farre from carping at or misconstruing things well done in appearance as that maketh the best and giueth most fauourable construction of things and actions which are in appearance euill as well knowing that the searching of the heart belongeth to the maker of it and that no man can know with what intention vpon what grounds or causes this or that is done by another And much lesse yet doth that spirit of Christ which vseth not to quench smoaking flaxe but cherisheth euen good shewes as in the young man discourage better proceedings by deeming those who exercise themselues most diligently in the courses prescribed by the word the most worthy to be abhorred of God and man And yet where can a man goe but he shall meete with the spirit that beareth rule in the word which conceiueth not speaketh not so bitterly against whooremongers theeues drunkards c. as against many sound hearted professors of Christ and of his truth thus with the wicked Iewes preferring Barrabas before Christ himselfe Oh that men knew what they did and then would they not thus crucifie the Lord of glorie in his seruants who will fearefully reuenge such indignitie done against them When Dauid sent his seruants to Hanun to visit him and he euill entreated them vsing them as spies and not as visitors sent from a freind how hotly doth Dauid prosecute the reuenge of their wrongs he destroied seauen hundred charrets and slew fortie thousand horsemen beside the forte insomuch as he forced other Kings to make peace with him how much more will the Lord more
and that according to Gods owne heart he hauing for this purpose receiued his calling gifts and approbation of God 2. Otherwise he peruerteth the whole course of his life and calling and is no better then those false Apostles who turning themselues from sound teaching to vnfruitfull discourses called vaine iangling are said to roue and erre from the right aime like vnskilfull darters or shooters Now what a fearefull thing is it for a man to wander all his life long from that station and seruice in which the Lord hath set him Quest. But how shall any Minister attaine this end of his calling Answ. Hereunto two things are required 1. abilitie 2. affection both which prouoke diligence and faithfull abillitie 1. of learning 2. of iudgement For the former he must be able to feed with wholesome doctrine We will not put forth our children to nurses whose brests want milke vnlesse we would starue them so the Lord neuer committeth his children to drie nurses though often in iudgement he leaue and permit them vnto spirituall famine Seeing therefore the Preists lips should preserue knowledge and the Pastors breasts should be like Iosephs granaries stored with all prouision against the time of famine let all idle and idoll Ministers that thrust themselues in for Pastors and can onely feed themselues consider of their danger betimes least too late repentance cause them to know what it is to starue the Lords people and murther so many soules the meanest of which the whole world cannot counteruaile For the latter he must be of able iudgement and wisedome to know the nature and constitution of his people the state of his flock whether they be of weake or strong stomaks and so whether they need milke or stronger meate 2. He must be able like a skilfull cooke to know how to season the food he deliuereth he is not presently fit to be a cooke that can put on a white apron or conforme in a ceremonie but as he must be a man of skill in his qualitie so must he be a man of a good tast and haue experience of that he prepareth for others wisely deliuering points not onely profitable for the persons present but things also proper to the present occasions and be fitting occurrences 3. He must not onely know when his prouision is well seasoned but also when it is seasonable like a good steward who altereth the dyet of the house according as the seuerall seasons seuerally furnish the market for as euery one must haue his portion so must he haue it in due season a word in time to him that is wearie is a fruit of a learned tongue and to feed the impenitent with iudgement is wisedome seeing an humble soule is broken with threatning a secure heart is h●rdned with promises But to the further furnishment of the Minister the second thing must be added namely the affection of loue Which must looke three wayes at once 1. to God 2. to man 3. to the truth The glorie of God must be prized aboue all things which will make him speake onely for God and he that speaketh onely for God cannot but be wholesomely conuersant in his word Ioh. 7.18 For loue of Gods glorie effecteth two things both concurring to wholesome doctrine 1. conceiuement of humane wisedome 2. demonstration of the spirit 1. Cor. 2.4 that is a secret power and authoritie of the spirit going with his word enlightning with his owne other mens vnderstandings and heating by his owne other mens affections this made a graue Diuine of ours say that euery true Minister hath after a sort a fierie tongue giuen him Secondly this affection of loue must be extended to his people Paul loued his countrimen and this stirred vp his heartie desire that Israel might be saued The mother seeing her child in danger is carefull out of her loue to prouide any cordiall or restoratiue that may be gotten to doe it good the prosperitie of the child is the ioy of the mother so the profit of the people is the Pastors crowne of reioysing 2. Cor. 3.1 Thirdly vnto the truth it selfe he must affect to know nothing and this will cause him to affect to deliuer nothing but Christ and him crucified this sincere milke of the word maketh Gods children to thriue and prosper whereas the vnwholesome milke mingled with error or puddle water of mens deuises bringeth sickenesse diseases and consumption into their soules Vse Let all Ministers who haue a care of profiting their people and so furthering their owne account acquaint them with this wholesome doctrine fetched out of the pure fountaines of the Scriptures and rightly deuide it vnto them as workemen that need not be ashamed Alas what vanitie is it out of opinion of wit or reading to seeke out strange speculations among the starres to search out genealogies peregrees to dote about fables to set himselfe to tie hard knots onely to vntie them againe as the dogge leaueth soft meat to gnaw vpon bones to mingle the word with the leauen of traditions what a dangerous thing is it to heale the hurt of Gods people with sweete words or to handle the word either deceitfully or deliuer it phantastically with vnseemely and rude or affected words of humane wisedome eloquence all this may puffe vp the soules of men for a time as though they were wholesomely fed but indeed Paul sheweth the proper worke of them that they breed diseases and ingender strife rather then godly edifying and when the fire commeth that shall trie euery mans worke his worke shall burne let him scape if he can who though he teach no false doctrine yet if he build haie and chaff vpon the foundation for he hath not stood in Gods counsell read the curse denounced against false Pastors Ier. 23. Secondly hearers are hence taught sundrie duties As 1. to desire only this wholesome food that their soules may be well liking laying aside their itching eares which hunt after nouelties for the Ministerie is not appointed to beate the eare as musicke but to sinke into the soule as the food and medicine of it by becomming the meanes and rule of life In populous places are running auditories in which the most gape for painted phrases prettie wittie sentences out of some Sage or other or some sentence of Scripture which yet they least care for but it must be turkist and mishapen out of his natiue simplicitie like cattell forsaking the greene pastures to broose vpon leaues and boughes These nice hearers are like the daintie gentelwomen of our times who scorning standing dishes on their tables which are the wholesome fit and strengthning nourishment set them at the low end of the table and themselues onely glorying in their art and cookerie feed vpon forced dishes and cookt conceits though the ground in comparison be not better then a bootshanke as we vse to say and the sauce trebling the cost of the meat it selfe How good a sauce
and therefore necessarily supplieth it with moysture and heate of grace And the promise is that those that waite vpon the Lord shall renew their strength they shall lift vp their wings as the Eagles they shall runne and not be weary they shall walke and not waxe fainte Secondly The comfort of old age dependeth hereupon the tedious and diseased daies of which whosoeuer would comfortably passe they must prouide themselues of this supplie For who is it that can say he hath pleasure in those daies when for the darknes and miserie of them the sunne and the moone and the starres seeme to fall from heauen vnto whom Christ the Sunne of righteousnesse hath not risen and vnto whose heart that bright morning starre hath not discouered his brightnes the least beame and glims of whose sauing grace farre surpasseth the sunne in his strength What comfort can be to him whose strong men that keepe the house that is whose armes tremble for weaknes and whose thighs bow themselues as too weake to beare the weight of the bodie vnlesse the Lords arme and right hand become his strength and as a staffe to leane vpon as he was to Dauid 2. Sam. 22.19 What ioy remaineth vnto him whose age hath worne away most of his senses that now hath his eyes dim as Isaaks that with Barzillai he cannot discerne between good and bad he hath no tast in that he eateth and drinketh he cannot heare any more the voice of singing men and women vnlesse he hath attained the eyes of faith to see God in Christ and so with Simeon he can behold his saluation vnlesse he find rellish and tast in the bread of life vnlesse he can heare the sweet note of Gods spirit consenting with his owne that he is Gods child together with that sweet harmony of a good conscience kept before God and men in all things which is heauenly musick vpon earth In a word what solace or reioysing can be to him who hath one foote in the graue that seeth death so neere him daily threatning him and no way to escape him vnlesse herein also the spirit sustaine his infirmitie by assuring him that Christ is his life who hath bereaued that serpent of his sting poyson and venome so as he shall doe him no more harme then helpe him towards his happines Thirdly why should not we thus prouide against that rainie day and furnish our selues against the euill of it seeing the heathen were by nature taught to prouide for themselues such props of their age as they thought would most bestead them both for their vtilitie and delight there is no man that finding his eyes decaying needeth to be vrged to prouide spectacles nor he whose loynes faile him to prepare him a staffe to leane vpon and much more should grace teach euery Christian that when with Dauid through age or otherwise he findeth his flesh fayling him and his heart also then to make the Lord his hope and his portion for euer Fourthly the recompence of this dutie is beyond all our thoughts seeing the blindnes of the bodie is made vp by the vision of the Lord Iesus and God the father appeased in him bodily weakenesse supplyed by spirituall strength corporal death abated yea exchanged with heauenly life all which not onely quell the feare of death approaching but euen whet the desire of it For if Simeon seeing Christ in his armes praieth for his peaceable departure If Moses seeing the land of Canaan from the toppe of mount Nebo could willingly submit himselfe to die If the three famous Patriarchs who neuer sawe the promises accomplished to their owne persons but a farre off promised to their posterities could willingly die in faith how much more shall they be able to wish their desolation who by the eye of the faith shall behold that heauenly Canaan and that celestiall Ierusalem of which the other were but darke shadowes Vse This doctrine cries shame vpon many old men that are as weake or weaker in soule then they be in bodie farre more blind more staggering euery way more sensles more dead they perceiue their faces and eyes looke drooping to the earth and yet their spirits neuer a whit more lifted vp vnto heauen they see the world forsaking them as not able to cherish them any longer and yet cannot they be drawne to forsake the world they cannot but behold the earth casting them off it and making a way fot the next age their posteritie and yet they cast care away and neuer prouide themselues of a continued citie The eie of their bodie seeth how they are growne into yeares and striken in age but the eye of their mindes see not the gray haires here and there vpon them no more then Eprhaims did Euerie man can see and say they are come euen to the period of their dayes and yet no man can say they are come to the beginnings of any true grace Thus although multitude of yeares should teach wisedome vnderstanding faith application yet may young Elihu truely obiect to the reproach not of a fewe that olde age is not alwaies wise Further vrging of this point although carried further in the deliuerie I purposely omit The Lord graunt all of vs whome it concerneth to learne thus much as is said In loue This second vertue beseeming the elder sort not onely as olde men but auncient Christians is brotherly loue which casteth eie vnto all the duties of the second table as faith principally to the duties of the former and most fitly ioined with faith as being the inseparable companion of it and such a marke as freeth it from imputation of deadnesse or vnsoundnesse Which vertue is inioyned euerie Christian olde or young both because it is the newe commandement of Christ as also a note of a Christian and true disciple of Christ Ioh. 13.35 and is besides the bond of vpright dealing in humane societie without which men were little better then wolues or wilde beasts But it is here rather commended to elder men who in this vertue as in the former and following graces must be more at the last then at the first and in whome this grace of loue must be proportionable vnto their faith for this may not be an infant if the former be of riper age but according to the proportion and growth of faith must loue abound And it must be obserued that our Apostle requireth not the vertue simply or in remisse degree or small measure but soundnesse in loue in such a degree and measure as that age seemeth of it selfe to call for Now if we would knowe wherein the soundnesse of loue consisteth it is then sound when it hath soundnesse 1. in the ground 2. order 3. seate 4. worke 5. durance of it First the true ground of all the loue of the creature is the loue of the Creator all the loue of man must issue from the loue of God and all duties of the second table must
and preseruatiue of many graces a bond of her owne and others peace a setler of the comfort of her life an ornament of her head and of her house which once let her be disrobed of she may bid farwell to her families welfare for let any vile affection beare sway but for a little while as of anger impatience excessiue griefe intemperance or any such how is the whole house in a kind of tumult which as a Common wealth in the commotion and rising of some one rebel cannot be composed and setled till the rebel be subdued which they finde too true who in their match were left vnto thēselues to make choise of such as wanted then and yet haue not attained with the feare of God the practise of this vertue Now then seeing this vertue is so necessarie for all parts of life that it ought neuer to be wanting many womē who want not many good parts of nature and grace may yet see hence their error who conceiue that if they be generally well reputed of both for their religious and honest course and can in good manner please their husbands in the administring of the family that then they may be dispensed with in some predominant indiscreete and intemperate affecton especially if it be more priuate as now and then in extraordinarie vnquietnesse and bitternes not seldome in some bitter roote of couetousnesse drawing on iniustice towards their husbands perhaps to breake out into some prodigall and idle expense another way in lashing out libertie of speech against some that cannot answer for themselues in becomming for some dayes the greatest strangers at home c. all this while thinking that these things if seldom will stand well enough with religion but they are to knowe that all Salomons wisedom could not reconcile two things so abhorring together the giuing of the heart vnto wine or any one lust and the leading of it in wisedome and it will prooue starke vanitie to make triall of it after him neither can it be other then the shuffling out of a religious course for man or woman to giue way to any one inordinate lust More of this vertue see in the places forenoted Chast or pure The Apostle by permitting the three former vertues hath made way vnto this fourth which is a fruit of them issuing from the loue of their husband and children and from tending and watching against inordinate affections And this puritie or chastitie is not that of the virgin or single estate but it is a marriage vertue the keeper of the mariage faith and may thus be described It is a puritie both of soule and bodie in regard of vnchast lusts abandoning all vnlawfull and strange pleasures which description is wholly couched and abridged in 1. Cor. 7.34 where the Apostle calleth it the holynesse of bodie and spirit of spirit when it is either not tempted to vncleannes or beeing tempted yeeldeth not or yeelding is recouered by repentance of body also when it neither exciteth nor beeing incited executeth not vncleannes Now how equall and reasonable is it that women especially such as haue the remedie of marriage against impuritie in whome the want of it is more sinnefull and dangerous should be prouoked to the preseruing of such a sweet grace as this is First if we consider how the Lord approoueth and vrgeth it 1. By his commandement 1. Thess. 4.3 this is the will of God that ye should abstaine from fornication and euerie one possesse his vessell that is his body which is the instrument of the soule and containing it as in a vessell in holynesse and honour 2. In that the Lord here interposeth himselfe and though many husbands and wiues thinke of nothing but a mutuall stipulation betweene themselues yet the Lord challengeth the couenant to be made to himselfe as it proceeded first from himselfe so as she that forsaketh the guide of her youth forgetteth the couenant of her God that is of marriage of which God is the author and whose name was or ought to haue beene invocated in the match making 3. In that the Lord professeth that he narrowly watcheth and clearely seeth when this couenant is broken that although the fact be done in the darke and neuer so charily and cautelously yet day and darkenesse are alike vnto him If the husband see it not nor any eie of flesh yet the Lords eie findeth it out and will set it in the cleare light before men and angels This is made a reason of the precept Prou. 5.15.17.20.21 for the wayes of man are before the eies of the Lord. Ioseph might haue sinned secretly enough but that his eie was happily lifted vp toward this pure eie of God which cannot abide to behold such iniquitie 4. In that he declareth that he watcheth the sinner of this kinde to bring destruction vpon his bodie and soule to shut him out of heauen and to roote him as a loathsome weede out of the earth The former appeareth Prou. 5.22 the sinner of this suite destroyeth his owne soule 1. Cor. 6. no fornicator shall inherit the kingdome of heauen Reuel 21. no vncleane thing shall enter within the gates of the citie but shall bee kept without with dogges enchanters and lyers The latter seeing the law of God is that the adulterer and adultresse should die both because he would not haue the land defiled nor the guiltie person to liue as an eyesore vnto the innocent nay more if a man were deceiued in the qualitie of the person he hath taken to wife thinking to find her a maid but he findeth her virginitie bruised and another man hath humbled her it is lawfull for him to put her away and the Magistrate to put her to death as an adultresse Further how strictly the Lord watched ouer this sinne appeareth by that law Numb 5.21 If the husband were but ielous whether iustly or iniustly himselfe was accounted guiltie if he did not bring her to triall and this triall was not to be made by man but was Gods owne triall by the bitter cursed water by which himselfe from heauen would reuenge so greiuous a sinne against so holy an institution as marriage is And in comparison the word of God accounteth this sinne farre more wicked then some of those which mens lawes punish with death we thinke theft a great sinne because it bringeth malefactors to the gallowes and so it is but not comparable to this for Salomon himselfe by comparing these two sinnes putteth them almost out of comparison a theefe steales for hunger to saue his life but he that committeth adulterie sinneth against his owne life the former is not alwaies to be despised but this is neuer to be spared the former may make satisfaction by restitution of the thing and fowre fold for the sinne the latter can make no restitution at all the satisfaction of the theefe may be accepted of the owner or if he cannot satisfie with all the substance of his
house yet his necessitie may plead for him and he obtaine pittie but here as no satisfaction can be made so if it could it could neuer be accepted the owner that is the husband is enraged he will not spare he will not beare the sight of any ransome although the gifts be augmented Secondly if we consider how vile and odious the sinne is 1. in regard of humane societie 2. of the parties offending 3. of Gods curse vpon the offence 1. For the first this is a sinne directly corrupting the fountaine of honest ciuill and godly life which is the inuiolable preseruation of Gods ordinance of marriage whereby alone he intended to raise vp to himselfe an holy seed and for the three societies what an infamie is it to the Church to be thought an assembly of harlots which ought to be the Lords holy ones the vndefiled doues of Iesus Christ what a confusion bringeth it in the Cōmonwealth to haue bastard broods inheriting whereas the Lord would not haue them come within his congregation to the tenth generation what an iniurie to the familie to bring in vnlawfull and vsurping heires Secondly for the parties offending 1. Whereas all other sinnes are without the bodie this is against the bodie the bodie is not onely an instrument as in other sinnes but the obiect against which the sinne is done and not any one part of it but the whole is violenced 2. Whereas all other sinnes may be perpetrated and done by one partie this windeth two into the sinne and therefore be it that one of them heartily repent of it yet cannot that partie be assured of the true repentance of the other whom he drew with him into the same so it cannot but lie for euer as a heauie load vpon the conscience both in that respect as also that he hath beene so exceeding seruiceable to the deuill not comming alone but bringing companie with him to hell out of the case of vnfained repentance 3. There is an high sinne against the price of Christs blood wherewith these bodies were bought to be members of Christ which now are become the members of an harlot and horrible sacriledge by which Christs owne is taken out of his hands and giuen vp to the seruice of the deuil and that bodie which was made to glorifie God vpon earth and after death shall rise out of the graue and be presented before Christ to iudgement hath dishonoured God dishonoured it selfe and prepared it selfe to receiue according to the vncleane workes of it the sentence which shall be pronounced against the vessels prepared vnto destruction Thirdly the curse of God followeth this sinne 1. in the soule of the sinner Heb. 13. Whooremongers and adulterers God will iudge him that destroieth the Temple of God will God destroie 2. In his bodie Prov. 5.11 he shall mourne hauing consumed his flesh and bodie 3. In his name which precious thing is irrecouerably lost ver 9. 4. In his estate it bringeth him to a bit of bread Prov. 6.26 it is a fire which consumeth all his substance Iob. 31.12 The prodigall sonne spent all he had on harlots 5. In their bastard brood we neuer read that euer any of them came to good saue onely Iephthe and yet what a number of men be there that care not to make their first borne bastards By these two considerations the sinne of impurity is sufficiently descried to be most hatefull Vse 1. Marriage is no abolisher of chastitie for then the Scripture would not haue enioyned the same person both to loue her husband and children and also to be chast against all Popish doctrine to the contrarie 2. Let euery woman preserue this puritie of bodie and spirit euery way expressing it in a modest countenance as Rebecca was abashed at the presence of Isaack in a shamefast eye in a chaste eare not intertaining impure communication in a pure tongue by graue and holy speach exempt from lightnes and rottennes Quest. How may we preserue it Answ. The best meanes of preseruing chastitie are these following First because from the heart issue adulteries get a pure heart to be the ground of it make the inside cleane first actions will not be cut off first but first become a beleeuer let the soule become a pure spouse of Christ loue him and cleaue to him this is a good beginning Secondly preserue in thy soule the feare of God Eccles. 7.28 He that is good before God shall be preserued this is no goodnes of nature of education no learning but Gods learning can preserue a man or woman Prov. 2.8.16 If knowledge enter into the soule thou shalt auoid her snares turne thy eye vpon Gods presence who seeth thee and wouldst thou then commit that from which in the presence of a child of fiue yeare old thou would abstaine Thirdly loue thy husband as formerly thou wast enioyned it is not so much the hauing as the louing of an husband that is a fence of chastitie Fourthly auoid occasions of wantonnes As 1. Idlenesse one of Sodoms sinnes standing puddles purrifie walke diligently in the duties of thy calling least Satan find thee as Dauid on his gallerie 2. Intemperance and delicacie in meate and drinke the more fewell the greater flame especially beware of accustoming thy selfe to wine and strong drinke for they are mockers Auoid intemperance in sleepe in apparell let thy dyet be sober and thy sleepe seasonable so as thy bodie may rather be beaten downe and kept vnder by fasting and watching which are fit medicines to tame the bodie 3. Auoid much companie and the sight of persons which may become snares as Ioseph went and kept out of his Mistris presence death often entreth by the windowes of the bodie and if thou makest not couenants with thine eyes adulterie is easily committed in the heart beware of amorous readings pictures speaches all which suddenly corrupt good manners Fifthly vse all good meanes appointed by God for this purpose As 1. resist lustfull thoughts at the first by occupying the minde with holy thoughts 2. Consider thy calling of a Christian and profession of Christianitie by both which thou art called vnto holines and not to liue in bruitish lusts as the Heathen did Rom. 1. 3. That the pleasure of the sinne is short but the gnawing of the guiltie conscience and the poyson of it will worke in thy bowells all thy dayes 4. Applie the word the sword of the spirit a speciall part of Christian armour and such places of it as directly encounter against it 5. Flie to God by prayer and if thou beest strongly assaulted make the matter knowne to God for the best way for a woman thus sollicited to be rid of the tempter is to tell her husband Keeping at home As chastitie is the maine marriage dutie and the vndefiled bedde the honour of it in like manner doth our Apostle bring it in like some honourable Ladie who is not seene abroad without her attendance some making
rules 1. So to exhort as that the consciences of men may conclude that euen there where he perswadeth and entreateth he hath power to command and terrifie though in his loue he lay downe that power for the present 2. That he doe not there exercise lenitie where the case requireth seueritie nor mildnesse when the case requireth the worke of seruent zeale As first where sinne waxeth bold the Minister must put on boldnesse If a calfe stand before Moses it is a case wherein the mildest man vpon the earth must forget his meekenesse and cloath himselfe with zeale for the glorie of God Sometimes the Minister is to deliuer the word as it were in a soft and still voice and sometimes he must change his coppie and lift vp his voice like a trumpet to shewe Iudah his sinne and the people of God their transgression Secondly when admonition and exhortation will not serue to cut off sinne but there is rather a reioycing in it Here Paul himselfe will put on his authoritie 1. Cor. 5.2 13. put away from you that wicked man Thirdly when the ministerie is or is like to be drawne into contempt then especially must it put on power and authoritie This was the practise of the Apostles who were forced often partly by the low estimation of the simple and ignorant who esteemed of the preaching of the Gospel but as foolishnes and partly by the malitious oppositions of the false Apostles who depraued their ministerie as weake and vnlearned to be long in the challenging of their calling power and authoritie see 2. Cor. 10.2.8 c. Vse 1. Ministers must labour wisely to discerne betweene persons and actions as Ioseph did betweene the persons and causes of Pharaohs butler and baker and speake differently to the tractable and stubborne children and seruants must not be dealt with alike Christ spake not to the Priests and people alike nor Iohn Baptist to the Iewes and Scribes alike nor Paul to the Galatians and Ephesians alike but Gods mouth must separate the pretious from the vile Compassion must be had vpon some but not all others must with feare be pulled out of the fire neither may the Publican and Pharisie looke for the same sentence and iudgement 2. Whereas men cannot endure preachers who leaue exhortation to thunder out damnation let them know that if their sinnes be growne bold as an harlot and the word of meeknes cannot preuaile against them we must then come with a rodde and not the spirit of meeknes otherwise as Christ was most meek in his life and doctrine so should his Ministers be also The third point in the verse is the vertue commended to the practise of young men and that is the grace of sobrieeie which moderateth the minde in the lusts and affections in generall and is not to be restrained to that outward sobrietie which is opposed to intemperance in meat and drinke for it is taken for graunted that intemperance must be nipt in the head and broken in the shell before it be hatched and outwardly produced into the life This appeareth 2. Tim. 2.22 where Paul in other words prescribeth the same dutie vnto Timothie flie the lusts of youth not meaning thereby such vncleannes and lasciuious filthinesse wherewith gracelesse young men were carried away for Timothie was now of such grauitie as befitted an Euangelist but he would preuent in him all that violent course and carriage of affections vnto which that hotter age is more propense not fearing that Timothie would breake out into filthy vncleannes of lusts so much as least his youth should carrie him to rashnesse pride selfe conceit and so cause him to fall through too much confidence Now how fitly is this precept directed to young men the sinne of whome is the strength of lusts Salomon himselfe ascribeth this to their age to carrie much indignation wrath griefe in the heart and much euill in their flesh that is many noysome and troublesome lusts wherewith through their heate they are assayled Of their presumption and ouerweening themselues wee haue instance in the young man All these haue I kept from my youth Of their want of consideration and experience in another young man who heedlessely went on to destruction as an oxe to the slaughter or a foole to the stocks euen so went he Of their rage and heat with vnadvised rashnes in Rehoboams yonger counsellers stirring vp their master to needles terrors and threats Of their prodigalitie and vncleannes in the younger brother called the prodigall sonne who spent all vpon harlots all which things are not spoken to free other ages from such inordinate lusts for naturall corruption is not idle in any age but incessantly is hatching euill motions and actions but of all ages youth is most fertill and abounding as the fattest grounds with weedes with all wicked inclinations vicious and raging affections and there is no vice vnder the sunne vnto which it is not after a speciall sort subiect that it is a singular fauour of God for a youth so innocently to passe ouer his younger yeares as that some notable blot or inconuenience cleaue not to him which perhaps long after craues his seruice or addeth vnto his sorrowes But if these be not reasons weightie enough to drawe young men to this grace of sobrietie we might adde many moe As 1. to satiate ones selfe with his owne wayes argueth an heart declined from God Prou. 14.14 2. The Lord himselfe mocketh vnbridled youth Eccles. 11. which is a most seuere iudgement for God neuer laugheth at vs but we haue cause to weepe that which men laugh at as a tricke or touch of youth or some light slippe the Lord laugheth at because it is to be brought to a more righteous iudgment and consistorie 3. What a fearfull sinne and iudgement it is to be giuen vp to a mans owne hearts lusts se● Rom. 1.26 and Ier. 9.14.15 4. The commandement of God Eccles 11. Put away anger c. Oh but we shall depriue our selues of the pleasure of our liues but the wise man hath an answer readie that youth and morning is but vanitie that is soone gone and without great heed lost irrecouerably Now the meanes to attaine this vertue First beginne at the heart be sober minded get an humble heart which will frame to an humble carriage in behauiour speech apparell for the smalnesse of a man in his own eyes crosseth those ouerweenings and ouerdeemings of youth whereby they thinke they knowe more can doe more and better then the auncient it will make them suspect all their counsells which if Rhehobams young men had done they had preuented that great rent of the kingdom at that time it will make them sit silent before the elder and suffer themselues to be lead by their experience Secondly consider that these inward lusts are great sinnes though they neuer breake out into externall actions which naturall men see not so to be and therefore
not seeing the vglinesse and bitternes of them cannot come to detest them And this is the reason that they are swallowed lightly and carelesly of the most and men take entire acquaintance with them because Sathan and our owne corruption haue caused vs to tast little else then the apparant sweetnesse of them Thirdly because Dauid taketh it for graunted that these filthie lusts must be cleansed by the word thou must be subiected vnto the word which as pure water washeth the soule from such impure lusts and this is when the spirit by meanes of the word rippeth vp the secrets of a mans heart discouereth the loathsomenesse of such ghests as haue taken vp the roome causeth him to flie them and himselfe for them and giueth some newe strength to purge this filthie stie and vncleane cage of his by mortifying his flesh and the lusts of it with the word therefore ioyne effectuall prayer for the powerfull working of the spirit Psal. 51.10.11 Fourthly fence thy selfe with the feare of God that beeing once washed thou maist not returne againe to foolishnesse the feare of God onely is a welspring of life to make a man auoide the snares of death It kept Ioseph a young man from sinning against God bridled Dauid from hurting Saul when it was in his power restrained Ionathan from selfe loue 1. Sam. 20.13 14. To the same purpose maketh that counsel of the Apostle 2. Tim. 2.22 flie the lusts of youth Timothie might aske how should I be able the answer followeth followe after righteousnesse c. that is get to thee such vertues as may be speciall preseruatiues against them among the which the feare of God is most excellent for beeing the beginning of wisdome it teacheth wisedome to looke vnto and order the heart in the first risings and motions of any lust Fifthly vse sparingly Gods creatures of meate and drinke walke in thy calling beware of delicacie excesse riot which are mothers and nursers of these lusts and yet so frequent and bold that they may be read in the foreheads of many of our youth Thus much I thought good to adde to the things which were formerly spoken of this vertue Ver. 7. Aboue all things shew thy selfe an ensample of good workes with vncorrupt doctrine with grauitie integritie 8. And with the wholesome word which cannot be reprooued that hee which withstandeth may be ashamed hauing nothing concerning you to speake euill of Hauing propounded the seuerall precepts fitted to all ages of men and women the last whereof was vnto young men our Apostle here inserteth a precept vnto Titus himselfe whence it is probably gathered that Titus was now a young man as Timothie also was in the same office of an Euangelist and beeing a Minister in him he closely againe instituteth euery Minister notwithstanding he hath beene most ample in that argument as though Ministers could neuer sufficiently be instructed In these two verses we will consider two things 1. a precept 2. an inforcement of it The precept is That Titus shew himselfe an example to others for as all the persons formerly taught so more especially the last sort namely young men for the slipperines of their age need the benefit of good example aswell as good doctrine and counsell And this exhortation is enlarged by setting downe wherein Titus must become an example which is done First more generally In all things we read it aboue all things others aboue all men which readings may be true and grounds of good instruction but I take the first aptest to the place Secondly by a more particular enumeration of shining vertues as 1. vncorrupt doctrine 2. good life fruitfull in good workes and these not one or two or now and then in good moods but there must be a constant trading in them throughout a graue and pure conuersation 3. there must be ioyned gratious speaches and words for I take it fitliest interpreted of priuate communication described by two necessarie adiuncts 1. it must be wholesome 2. vnblameable or not liable to reproofe The inforcement of the precept is taken from the end or fruit of it which is twofold 1. shame 2. silence to the withstanders and opposers And thus the generall scope of the verses is as if he had more largely said That this thy doctrine O Titus thus aptly applied to all sorts of men may carrie more weight and authoritie with it see thou that considering thou art set in a more eminent place and clearer sunne and hast all eyes beholding and prying into thee thou shew thy selfe a patterne and expresse type wherein men may behold all these graces shining in thine owne life let them looke in thy glasse and see the liuely image of a graue and pure conuersation which may allure them to the loue of the doctrine which thou teachest let them heare from thy mouth in thy priuate conferences and speach nothing but what may worke them to soundnesse at the least keepe thou such a watch ouer thy tongue as that nothing passe thee which may be reprehended and hence will it come to passe that although thou hast many maliciously minded men seeking by all meanes to oppose thy doctrine and life and to destroie the one by the other these shall either be put to silence and haue nothing to say or if they take boldnesse to speake any thing it beeing vniust the shame shall be remooued from thee and fall iustly vpon themselues and all the reproach shall returne home to their owne doores In the precept I will briefly note one or two things because all the particulars of it haue beene handled in the former Chapter In generall therefore obserue that Doctr. 1. In euerie Minister there ought to be such an harmonie betweene good doctrine and good life as the latter may be a strong euidence of the former and both of them exemplarie to his people in publike and priuate First there must be doctrine else let his life be neuer so good it is a dumbe shewe should not the sheepheard feede the flocke saith the Lord the first thing in that strait charge to Timothie is to preach the word to be instant in season out of season herein is the Minister a debter vnto God 1. Cor. 9.16 a necessitie is laid vpon me and woe vnto me if I preach not the Gospel a debter also vnto his people Rom. 1.14 and therefore as much as in him lyeth he must make conscience of discharging this debt And this consideration by the way may put ignorant and dumbe ministers in minde of their wofull estate in that they want these letters of orders whereby the Apostle prooueth himselfe to be a Minister of God 2. Cor. 6.7 among other notes whereby he iustifieth himselfe to be an approoued Minister of God this is one that he carried the word of truth And againe it stoppeth the mouthes of many ignorant people that plead strongly against themselues in the want of a preaching Minister We are well enough we haue
life vpon no other condition but of workes doe this and liue and these must be such as must be framed according to that perfect light and holinesse of nature in which we were created which wrappeth vs vnder the curse of sinne and infolds vs in the iustice of God without shewing any mercie at all What a yoke is it that is euer galling vs for sinne partly shewing it partly not as a cause indeede but occasionally increasing it it beeing the strength of sinne 1. Cor. 15.56 Now to be vnder grace is to be freed from all this bondage not onely from those elements and rudiments of the world but especially 1. When the yoake of personall obedience to iustification is by grace translated from beleeuers to the person of Christ our suretie so that he doing the lawe we might liue by it 2. When duties are not vrged according to our perfect estate of creation but according to the present measure of grace receiued not according to full and perfect righteousnesse but according to the sinceritie and truth of the heart although from weake and imperfect faith and loue not as meriting any thing but only as testifying the truth of our conuersion in all which the Lord of his grace accepteth the will for the deed done 3. When the most heauie curse of the Law is remooued from our weake shoulders and laid vpon the backe of Iesus Christ euen as his obedience is translated vnto vs and thus there is no condemnation to those that are in him 4. When the strength of the lawe is abated so as beleeuers may send it to Christ for performance for it cannot vexe vs as before the ministerie of grace it could which is an other law namely of faith to which we are bound the which not onely can command as the former but also giue grace and power to obey and performe in some acceptable sort the commandement And this is the doctrine of grace which we are made partakers of Vse 1. Euerie Christian ought to take vp that exhortation 2. Cor. 6.1 We beseech you that you receiue not the grace of God in vaine not that the sauing graces of faith and loue c. may be receiued and lost againe which is the Popish collection from the place which speaketh only of the doctrine of grace and faith which may be receiued in vaine and is of all such hypocrites who neuer knewe what neede they stood of this grace and therefore some receiue it into their eares not into their hearts into their profession not into their practise into their lippes and tongues but neuer into the loue ioy and other affections of their hearts Whereas could they see the glorie of this ministration they would exceede that people in their acclamation and crie grace grace vnto it Quest. But how may a man knowe whether he receiue this grace in vaine or no Answ. By these notes 1. Whosoeuer receiueth this grace in truth he receiueth together with the commandement a power which enableth him in an acceptable performance of it for howsoeuer the law is a dead letter yet the Gospel beleeued is a quickening spirit the words of it are spirit and life in conferring the spirit of life whereby the beleeuing soule is quickened in the wayes of righteousnesse The first thing then to be examined is whether the Gospel be in word or in power for if it beget onely to a forme and outward profession of pietie and religion it is receiued in vaine 2. As he receiueth a power so doth he also a will to obey the precept of the Gospel he is not now constrained so much by the bond of the law to obey God but the Sonne hauing set him free from such compulsion he becommeth a lawe vnto himselfe and of loue and a free heart if there were no law nor curse he seeketh to please God the gracious working of the spirit bendeth his heart to delight in the lawe concerning the inner man and this maketh the yoake easie and the commandement not grieuous The next thing then to be examined is whether thou serue God in the newenes of the spirit or oldnes of the letter that is by vertue of the spirit renewing the soule and so working the will and not by the compulsiue power of the lawe if thou findest not this change and work of grace in thy will which carrieth euer a readinesse with it to obey God in all his commandements thou hast receiued this grace in vaine for Gods people are a willing and free people and bring free will offrings their hearts incourage them and their spirits make them willing euen there where often power and strength faileth them 3. Whosoeuer is not stirred vp to thankfulnesse of heart and life for his free righteousnesse by the only merit of Christ neuer as yet knew what this grace meant in truth for let a man receiue but a small benefit of his freind looke how he is affected vnto it and prizeth it accordingly doth he testifie his thankfulnes to the giuer shall we be thankfull to a mortall man suppose a Prince that sheweth vs a little grace aboue others in some fauourable speach countenance or other benefit and can the Lord power all his grace into an heart which prizing it can possibly be vnthankfull and where this thankfulnesse is it will make a man in his heart to loue God to feare before him to reuerence his name and his ordinances to affect his house his children his houshold seruants and much more his tokens of speciall loue namely his graces in his owne or other mens soules In his life it will make him beware of all sinne which may prouoke so gracious a God to displeasure yea striue in the subduing of all sinne for grace will not stand with the regiment of sinne nor sinne cannot raigne in him that is vnder grace to conclude it maketh him fruitfull in all weldoing which well beseemeth the spirit which he hath receiued for can either such grace as this deserue lesse or can grace which fitteth her owne habitation frame the heart it taketh vp to lesse then the endeauour in all these The further application of these notes I will forbeare and come to the other instructions Vse 2. Is the doctrine of the Gospel a doctrine of grace then vse carefully the meanes to haue thy part in it for hereby only thou art vnyoked from the curse and tyrannie of the law from Gods consuming wrath and iustice and all the feareful fruits of his displeasure hereby only thou commest to see God in Christ accepting thy person and with thy person thy workes sparing thy weaknes euen as a man spares his sonne that serueth him entertaining willingnesse where there wanteth strength and endeauour where there is no power remitting thy own vnrighteousnesse imputing the righteousnesse of his owne sonne and beginning to frame such an image in thy soule as tendeth to a more happy conditiō then euer thou
the Scriptures see 1. Pet. 1.17.18 If you call him father passe the time of your dwelling here in feare knowing that you were redeemed c. And the reason is of great force for gifts and good turnes haue great power to hold mens harts to the bestower that a man is scarce his owne but as the borrower is a seruant to the lender so much more doth the giuer binde the receiuer but if the gift be no trifle but of great price and necessarie vse the receiuer is much more straitly bound then before Salomon saith that a gift prospereth where euer it goeth noting the great power that gifts haue to sway the heart to good or euill and this latter so effectually as they can make a man who hath eyes of his owne to shut them vp see with other mens yea force euen wise men to peruert iudgement Ioseph when he wrastled with the wicked attempt of his impudent mistris how did he fortifie himselfe against such a shamlesse motion hee considered that his Master had committed all into his hand and aduanced him aboue all in the house saue his Mistrisse how should I then saith he commit a fact of such indignitie against him for besides the wickednesse of it against God shamelessnes it selfe would be ashamed of it And as he was withdrawne from this sinne so by the same motiue would the Apostle draw on euery Christian to the performance of euery Christian dutie for hauing disputed of free iustification by faith and shewed both from what estate and vnto what condition beleeuers were brought he laieth this for a ground to build his exhortation vnto holy life Rom. 12.1 I beseech you brethren by the mercies of God euen by these mercies of God be perswaded to g●ue vp your bodies a liuing holy and acceptable sacrifice vnto God and fashion not your selues like vnto this world Vse In any temptation vnto sinne say to thy selfe as Ioseph what was I a bondman before I came to my master nay was I vnder damnation before as the bringing of saluation implyeth was I without God without Christ held vnder chaines of darkenesse was sentence passed against me not to die on a gibbet but to be held vnder euerlasting death with the damned hath the Lord by the word of his grace giuen mee a free pardon and deliuered me from all this wofull estate Oh how can I do this wickednes against such a master against my God who hath not onely freed me from my miserie but aduanced me to such dignitie as no man is in the house aboue me and made me not steward onely but heire with Christ to partake in the same glorie with him Oh I could neuer answer such vnthankefulnes Would God men in temptations would lay such considerations to heart and then could they not be so headlong carried into the common sinnes of the age of swearing drinking sabbath breaking vncleannes and such like Againe if the Lord make any suit vnto vs as he maketh many in the ministerie of the word the motions of his spirit and the counsels and exhortations of his children either to call vs forward in grace or recall vs from some sinne here is a strong motiue for the good speed of it euen the laying to our hearts the great things he hath done for our soules he can command vs nothing but we are sure he hath done farre more for vs say then with thy selfe oh I was attainted of high treason against God the King of glorie cast and condemned by the law my necke was vpon the block and the streak of death was euen a giuing and then did this great King send me a most vnexpected but a most welcome pardon he hath put away my offence abolished the staine of it and restored me by act of parliament kept in heauen to my blood nay more aduanced mee to an honourable office neere himselfe that none is in greater grace then I am shall this King now command mee any thing that shall seeme burdensome can he command any thing so soone but I must needs call to minde such free grace formerly bestowed Nay doth he enioyne me but some small peece of seruice for mine owne good and vrge me thereto with the remembrance of his former grace towards me Oh what an vnthankfull creature were I if so equall a suit should not preuaile with mee but goe vnrespected In a word let vs be glad of such a gentle schoolmaster which inuiteth vs by such allurements which if they be not of force to mooue and preuaile with men there remaineth nothing but that the terrors and curses of the law returne againe vpon them and these shall schoole and tame them well inough Now we come to the former of the lessons which grace teacheth namely to denie 1. vngodlinesse 2. worldly lusts By vngodlines is meant properly euery transgression of the first table namely all irreligion and open despight of God and his ordinances all negligent also and deceitfull seruing of him an inbred and mother sinne hauing so many sinnes sucking vpon her as there are wayes whereby any or all the fowre first commandements are transgressed And more indirectly the sinnes of the second table are included so farre as they proceed from the neglect of the former By worldly lusts are meant two things 1. the lust of vnlawfull things which tend to our owne hurt or our neighbours in bodie goods name c. 2. the vnlawfull or immoderate lust of things lawfull which are brought to three heads 1. The lust of the flesh that is desire to liue softly to fare daintely and deliciously euerie day and that the soule may take the ease and much more the fruits of these as vnchast desires lustfull and rouing affections and looks loose and vncleane words and practises 2. Lust of the eyes the couetous and crauing eye the euill eie which can see nothing but it wisheth it the excessiue seeking and holding of earthly things immoderate desire of riches Achan will haue the cursed Babylonish wedge and garment and Ahab will fall sicke on his bed for Naboths vineyard 3. Pride of life ambition thirst after preferments state credit popularitie blind selfe loue contempt of others boasting rash confidence c. All these are called worldly lusts because 1. they are not of the father but of the world that is either in the best vse of these things so affected they are of the world and respect the present life they are not diuine things but tend vnto the world wholly and are corruptible with the world which passeth away so as it were madnesse to place the kingdome of God in such things as meate drinke honours pleasures though neuer so lawfully vsed Or else these lusts are the desires of worldly men for naturally mens hearts feed vpon these lusts till grace worke some change in them that they can see God in Christ become their father who contenteth them with better and sweeter portions 2. They are
then that they enioy vpon the earth and can scarsely endure to heare of any exchange 3. These lusts are fitter for the course of nature vnmortified Ephes. 2.3 We had in time past our conuersation among the Gentiles in the lusts of the flesh but now c. which let such professors thinke off who frame themselues too much to the fashion of the world in meat drinke apparell sports and other things perhappes more vnlawfull then these For thus to walke argueth little or no conscience or feeling either of sin or grace and the gentlest name the Apostle giueth it is a sleepie walking Such may indeed carrie the title of Christians but the worke of Christianitie is not present where there is a fight of lusts against the soule but not of the spirit against lusts and much lesse where these furnaces are fed and fewelled and the flames are not daily dying and extinguished Vse 2. This teacheth that only true religion teacheth true mortification and suffereth not a man to walke after his lusts though he walke in the flesh yet he cannot walke after the flesh All false religions carrie indeed pretences of the spirit as Zidkiah smote Michaiah and said when went the spirit from mee to thee but the true religion only hath the promise and presence of the spirit which indeed mortifieth the deeds of the flesh Euery water in Iudea could not heale the lame but only the water of the poole of Bethesdah in which the Angel stirred Arbanah and Pharphar the riuers of Damascus although in shew much more excellent then Iordan cannot cure the leprosie of Naaman No more can euery religion or any but this which alone is from God cure the vncleannes leprosie of our soules The religion of the Pharisies was outwardly exceeding glorious and very strict yet Paul who had liued according to the most strict sect of them all professeth that before he knew Christ he was not crucified to the world At this day Poperie which carieth with it a great shew of humblenes of mind and bea●ing downe the bodie yet is farre from teaching true mortification for what doctrine the Turkish not excepted goeth further in clayming iustification and life as the merit of their owne obseruances yea take the strictest sort of them as their heremites anchorites c. that goe barefoote pine and imprison themselues lie on the ground couer their skinnes with sacke cloath c. are they not such as the former looking for heauen as a reward for the strictnesse of their liues doe they not then as one Philosopher said of an other contemne the pride of the world but with more pride Euerie shewe of humilitie is not true mortification for not onely the Epicures who were sold ouer to pleasure were enemies to Paul but those strait and seuere sects also of the Pythagorians and the Stoicks did mightily oppose him In a word among what sort of men doth the lusts of pride vncleannes Epicurisme and couetousnesse more raigne then in the teachers of that doctrine their Monks Prelacie Cardinalls and their father the Pope himselfe so as the truth is cleare that onely true religion in which the spirit delighteth to manifest himselfe is the teacher of true mortification And that we should liue soberly Now we are come to the second lesson which the doctrine of grace teacheth namely that such as entertaine it should lead their liues in the practise of three vertues contrarie to the former vices of vngodlinesse and worldly lusts the which as they are directed either against God or our brethren or our selues so the first of these prouideth against the disordered carriage of our selues in requiring sobrietie the second cutteth off hatefull and vncharitable lusts against our brethren in requiring iustice or right dealing man with man Christian with Christian especially the third represseth impious and vngodly lusts more directly against God himselfe in requiring godlinesse to shine out in the liues of professors For all these three must be practised in the due circumstance of time euen in this present world Doctr. 1. The doctrine of grace teacheth not onely to abstaine from euill but also to doe good and is the mistris of true sanctification in both the parts of it both the mortification of sinne as also quickning in righteousnesse For as it is in the lightning of a darke house first darkenesse must giue place and light must succeede so is it in the shining of this light of grace the night must passe and then the day must come the olde man must be cast off with his lusts and then the newe man put on That the Gospel is the teacher of both these it appeareth in the ende of Pauls conuersion who for this purpose was appointed a minister of the things he had heard and seene and sent to the Gentiles that he might turne them from darkenes to light and from the power of Satan vnto God and also in the whole scope of his doctrine and ministerie from the first to the last as himselfe professeth that when he taught first at Damascus then at Ierusalem after through all the coasts of Iudea and then to all the Gentiles he reduced all his doctrine in all these places to these two heads namely that they should repent and turne to God and then doe workes worthy amendment of life Hence is it that his Epistles are full of such exhortations as these cast off lying and speake truth euerie man to his neighbour walke not after the flesh but after the spirit Be not drunke with wine but be fulfilled with the spirit The same is to be noted also in the other Apostles 1. Pet. 2.12 I beseech you as strangers and pilgrimes abstaine from fleshly lusts and haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles and cap. 4.2 henceforth so much time as remaineth in the flesh wee should liue not after the lusts of men but after the will of God Vse 1. This doctrine confuteth profane Libertines who as Paul speaketh of some in his time because grace hath abounded continue in sinne they will be saued by such a grace as quitteth them from all holy life and conscionable obedience God is mercifull and Christ died for all here is grace but the fruit and effect of it is to cleaue vnto vngodlinesse and lusts and growe euerie day more foule and deformed then other Whereas the wisedome from aboue is pure and as he that calleth is holy so must he that is called be holy also in all manner of conuersation and if we cal him father we must passe the time of our dwelling in feare The dogges shall be without when as onely the vndefiled in their waies shall obtaine blessednesse 2. Such are iustly hence reprooued who take themselues to be tolerable schollers if sometimes they make shewe of obedience vnto God and his word that they may appeare to men to pray to heare to reade to giue almes c. and yet
vnregenerate men can performe and glorie in yea and that also which many of the heathen haue beene famous for seeing this must be a frui● of the true knowledge of God reuealed in his word and performed by 〈◊〉 in the doer This vertue is the maintainer of all humane societie ●hen no mans bodie goods name are depriued of their due but haue all offices of loue performed them according to Gods will when superiours deale iustly with inferiours and inferiours acknowledge the superioritie of the other in and for God so masters with seruants equals with equals buyers with sellers and sellers with buyers which shall suffice to haue noted in generall seeing the particular workes of it are infinite The second point is the rules of practise the chiefe of which are these fowre First that rule of Christ which is the whole lawe and the Prophets Whatsoeuer ye would that men should doe to you doe ye likewise vnto them and on the contrary wouldst not thou then be circumvented deceiued by false waights or measures detracted in thy name c. doe not thou so to others the verie light of nature bindeth this on thee Secondly let no man seeke his owne things but the common good rather as euerie member in the bodie serueth to the good of the whole A deuillish rule is that euery man for himselfe and God for vs all for it is an enemie to all iustice which bindeth me to tender my neighbours yea mine enemies bodie goods name comming in my way as well as mine owne and farre different from Pauls rule let euerie man be seruant to an other for good Thirdly be readie to distribute and lend freely to the poore looking for nothing againe for there is iniustice as well in with holding that which Gods word hath made an other mans due as in purloyning his right from him Now the word commanding to giue to the poore according to euerie ones abilitie and to lend to the poore members of Christ if neede require freely to be hard hearted and straite handed in these cases is to be vniust in deteyning from the right owners that which God hath made theirs Let rich men especially thinke that they are not Lords but stewards vnder the Lord to distribute to the necessities of their fellowe seruants Fourthly walke diligently in thy calling idlenes is an open iniustice and the idle person should not eate for he eateth and drinketh other mens Beware here of excessiue pastime and recreation a neare friend to idlenes calling a man out of that calling wherein he is bound to walke diligently through the sixe dayes Besides the encrease of goods by gaming is a notable kinde of theft for it is the encreasing of a mans selfe with the damage and hurt of others by such a meanes as God neuer sanctified to such purpose so also he that decreaseth his wealth thereby is a starke theefe both to himselfe as also to his wife children the Church the poore whom hereby he robbeth of their right That rule of the Apostle must be remembred as a speciall meanes of righteousnesse Let him that stole steale no more but rather labour that which good is Now that we might the better practise these rules we haue sundrie motiues in the word of God 1. God hath appointed his kindnes vnto vs thus to be recompenced and herein will haue vs manifest the estimation we haue of his grace seeing therefore he hath set ouer his whole grace thus to be answered in our righteous dealing we in buying selling reporting and hearing reports in magistracie and subiection must shew what price we set on Gods mercie and this we do when all our dealings with men are a part of our obedience vnto God himselfe 2. This righteousnesse is called a brestplate whereby the heart is defended both against the assaults of Satan for euen hereby we make our election sure and lay vp good foundations as also against the slanderous tongues of men Hence Iob accused of hypocrisie cleared himselfe through the whole 31. chapter of his booke professing that he would neuer part with this righteousnesse which both proceeded from and ●estified the faith and vprightnesse of his heart 3. God hath made one man the store-house of an other and caused men not to liue as beasts euerie one to shift for himselfe but in societie for a more publike good for which cause he hath distinguished the seuerall callings and conditions of life in which he hath laid a peice of euerie mans welfare out of himselfe in some other so as he that liues not to others as well as himselfe liueth out of a lawfull calling For example in the magistrate the fatherles haue the right of a father the widowe of an husband the blind of eyes the lame of feet and so in other callings although not so publike 4. Whosoeuer would haue Gods image restored and renewed vpon him must exercise righteousnesse God is truth it selfe his image standeth in righteousnesse inward and outward wouldst thou be like vnto God practise this vertue in word and deede And this was Satans sinne he stood not in truth and righteousnesse but was a lyer and murtherer from the beginning vnto whome vniust dealers or speakers conforme themselues And godly First the proper worke of pietie will appeare in this definition Godlines is a grace whereby God is rightly worshipped both inwardly and outwardly I say rightly worshipped that I might both include the knowledge of the true God as he hath reuealed himselfe in his word and faith loue and a sincere heart as also exclude all false worship either of a false God or of the true God in a false manner whether in Pharisaicall hypocrisie or Laodicean coldnes and lukewarmenes I adde both inwardly For 1. God is a spirit 2. the inside must be washed first 3. all oblations sacrifices fasts almes vowes are reiected as abhominable without this Isai. 1.10 And also outwardly For 1. God requireth the whole strength 2. himselfe hath instituted diuerse outward actions of religion as the hearing of the word receiuing of Sacraments prayer obseruation of his Sabbaths wherein we must professe our selues to be his and wherein we cannot be wanting without some degree of contempt against himselfe 3. God hath created redeemed gouerneth and giueth his law to the whole man yea to euery member how it should be ordered both in his worship and out of it also The second point is the rules of practise and the principall are fi●e 1. Learne to knowe God as he hath reuealed himselfe in his word and reioyce more that thou knowest God shewing mercie iudgement and righteousnesse in the earth then in wisedome wealth or strength for all such reioycing as this is not good and will not hold out 2. Walke with God and this is done two wayes First by the light of his word Secondly by the sight of himselfe To doe the former thou must giue vp thy owne reason will wisedome affections
that which all the Prophets and Moses said should come to passe that Christ should suffer and be the first that should rise from the dead For what other thing could any of the Prophets write concerning Christ but either touching his humilitie or his glorie and how could himselfe haue beene raised but after or we but by his abasement Let not therefore both thine eyes be fixed as the Iewes are vpon the basenesse of his first comming but let one behold as a Christian the glorie of this second appearing which shall abundantly counteruaile the humilitie of the former Vse 2. The glorie of this second appearing is a terror to all the vngodly who haue despised his humilitie and his still voice in the Ministerie of the Gospel For whosoeuer now in this his appearance of grace will not tremble at his word to frame their soules to the obedience of it shall at this second appearance of glorie tremble to dust at his greatnesse and not be able to abide the brightnesse of his glorie Those that are now ashamed of him and that contempt and dishonour that followeth his profession shall then be ashamed of themselues when the Sonne of God shall be ashamed of them And as for such as daily pearce him with the speares and nayles of their sinnes they shall be sure to see him thus glorious whom they haue pearced when themselues shal be pearced with shame and sorrow to their endles confusion Vse 3. To comfort the faithfull seeing there is a time when they also shall appeare in glorie they must be content first to suffer with Christ before they can raigne with him and weare the crowne of thornes before this crowne of glorie the Lord dealing herein with them as a father with his children who though they be borne to neuer so great places and estates yet in their minoritie subiecteth them to such discipline as befitteth their yeares before he bestow their portion vpon them God hath his children now in the world the world knoweth them not nor seeth their glorie nay they themselues cannot in any clearenesse behold their owne glorie for no eye can see the full glorie of the Saints till the fulnes of Christs glorie appeare but when this time commeth the least of them shall be knowne to be Kings sonnes so as the Deuil himselfe and his wicked instruments who can now accuse them and say there goes an Hypocrite there goes a Precisian a Puritane a dissembler and are offended at the low base estate of the Saints here shall change their note and be compelled to say there goes a child of God there goes the Kings sonne there gos an heyre of the kingdom and shall gnaw their tongues for greif to see them exalted in glory shine in the brightnesse of Gods image and themselues vtterly and eternally excluded from God and his kingdome Let vs not then iudge our selues or others according to the flesh nor walke by sight but by faith no● altogether looking on our selues or others as we now are but as we shall be for although indeed we are now the sonnes of God yet it appeareth not what we shall be so long as our life is hid with Christ yea let vs lift vp our eyes to that glorie of our head that shall be reuealed and distributed to vs his members and our hearts in the earnest requests of faith alwaies praying Lord let thy kingdome come cause these shadowes to flie away and that day to breake wherein thy glorie which now is obscured may be manifest and shine out in the first place as is meete and then the glorie of thy seruants whose bewtie shall be made perfect in thy glorie and bewtie Doctr. 4. The Apostle doth not mention Christ without magnifying him in his titles both of power and mercie teaching ●s by his example neuer to speake of God or Christ but in a iust and weightie matter and occasion and for the manner with feare and reuerence and to such ends as we ought and are warranted by the word Now for our direction we haue the Scriptures insisting in magnifying God and Christ and the blessed Spirit in their titles and attributes especially for these three ends First to shew what a one God is in himselfe as here to shew what a person Christ is namely full of glorie might and mercie our Apostle is much and large in his stile and attributes To this purpose the Prophet Isay in one place giueth him fiue titles His name shall be called Wonderfull Counsellor the mightie God the euerlasting Father the Prince of peace Secondly not onely for the glorie of God but for the benefit of the Church 1. That hereby they might acknowledge him to be the true God so the Prophet Ieremie opposing the true God against all idols and false gods speaketh most highly of him There is none like vnto thee O Lord thou art great and thy name is great in power and in the next verse he calleth him King of nations and challengeth all dominion to belong vnto him And our Apostle when he would bring the Athenians to the acknowledgement of the onely Lord ascribeth many and great things vnto him as that he made the world and all things else that he is Lord of heauen and earth that he giueth to all life breath and all things that he made of one blood all mankind that he assigneth their times and the bounds of their habitation that in him we liue mooue and haue our beeing vers 28. 2. That after this acknowledgement we might prouoke our selues to answerable duties for example In consideration of his mercie to breake out into his due prayses Psal. 3.3 Thou Lord art my buckler my glorie and the lifter vp of mine head Isa. 12.2 Behold God is my saluation I will trust and will not feare for the Lord is my strength and song he is also become my saluation In regard of his omnipotence to studie for vprightnesse Gen. 17.1 I am God all sufficient walke before mee and be vpright In meditation of his omnipresence to be euery where reuerent because of his eye Act. 10.33 We are all here present before God c. In respect of his truth to relie our selues vpon it 1. Chro. 17.27 Thou hast blessed and it shall be blessed Exod. 3.14 Moses must tell the children of Israel that I Am hath sent mee that is who giueth beeing to all things and especially to this couenant of your deliuerance out of Egypt now at the end of 400. yeares Thirdly another end of Gods titles in Scripture is that we should not onely glorifie God and edifie our selues but also stirre vp others to the praise and worship of the true God who hath thus made himselfe knowne vnto vs Psal. 95.3.6 Come let vs worship c. for the Lord is a great God namely in beeing knowledge mercie and power Psal. 40.9 I haue declared thy righteousnesse in the great congregation I haue not hid it
their owne sinnes and then for the peoples as the legall Priests did and the Papall doe Nay more it ouerthroweth it selfe for whereas the Papists say that the sacrifice of the masse is the verie same sacrifice which was offered by Christ himselfe vpon the crosse and that verie Christ is offered by them this is against all reason seeing the sacrifice vpon the crosse was offered by himselfe alone without the helpe of any ministers except they meane such as Pilate Caiphas Iudas and the souldiers and such ministers we will easily graunt their secondarie ministers to be 3. The nature of this sacrifice will not admit of that foolish distinction seeing it cannot be offred by any but the high Priest euen he that was the high Priest of things to come who was not euerie yeare to enter once into the holy of holies with the blood of beasts but once for all hath he entred into the holy place and obtained eternall redemption for vs and if eternall redemption be obtained where there is no remission of sinne there is no more neede of oblation for sinne 4. Whereas they say that Christ indeede is the onely Priest to offer a bloody sacrifice and that is but once done and cannot be repeated but yet ought daily to be offred in an vnbloodly manner by their Priests for the sinnes of the quicke and the dead The Apostle taketh away that euasion affirming that without blood there is no remission and that if Christ be offered any more he must of necessitie suffer againe Heb. 9.22.26 The second thing of any moment obiected is that although Christ by his one oblation once offered merited redemption and remission of sinne yet is it necessarie for our saluation that this oblation of his be applyed vnto vs and this cannot be done but by a secondarie daily offring of him in the masse by the masse-priest and hence is their second distinction of the offering as the former of the offerer into primarie and commemoratiue or significatiue Answ. Where by the way note how they wound themselues and thrust their swords into their fellowes sides The councel of Trent saith that the Masse is the verie selfe same oblation which was offered on the crosse the difference is onely in the maner and some small respect now other Papists teach vs that in the masse is not the verie same true and reall oblation but onely a commemoration and signification of it Now who seeth not that the remembrance of a thing is a farre diuerse thing from the thing remembred yea necessarily argueth the absence of the thing remembred Now which of these must we beleeue truely both alike tha● is neither seeing the word one oblation destroyeth both 2. We graunt that there must be an application of this oblation but not by such wicked meanes as they haue deuised namely by the multiplication of it selfe as if a man should in stead of applying one plaister doe nothing else but make infinite plaisters whereas one truely applyed to the sore were better then they all but he who was the sacrifice beeing the wisedome of his Father hath deuised a wiser meanes to apply vnto beleeuers his oblation namely by the outward and ordinarie meanes of the word and Sacraments as also inwardly by his spirit working by those meanes effectuall faith in our hearts whereby we lay hold vpon all our good vnto saluation And if there were no meanes to apply Christs merit vnto beleeuers then by daily offring himselfe with it then were there no meanes to apply vnto vs the fruit and benefit of his incarnation death resurrection or ascension vnlesse he should be borne die rise and ascend euerie day for the reason is the selfe same Vse 2. In that it is said that Christ gaue himselfe we may note that Christ gaue himselfe wholly both his bodie and soule in sacrifice and spared neither for we had deserued a double death which it was meete that Christ by a double death should destroy by his bodily death pull out the sting of the death of our bodies and vtterly abolish the death of our soules by the death of his soule and to this purpose that our consolation might be full the Scripture sheweth how that his soule was heauie vnto the death and that a little before his suffering his soule was sore troubled And Isai expressely affirmeth that his soule trauelled in his death and that he made his soule an offering for sinne and powred out his soule vnto death and that he made his graue with the rich in his deaths where note that he speaketh in the plurall number to note this double death of Christ and what other thing did himselfe proclaime with such a loud voice vpon the crosse when he cryed My God my God why hast thou forsaken me for what other is the death of the soule but to be separated from God the fountaine of life which point helpeth vs to vnderstand such places of the Scripture as affirme that Christ suffered and died according to the flesh Ioh. 6.51 and that Christ offered his bodie Heb. 10.10 and all those which ascribe all our saluation to the blood of Christ. All which must be synechdochically vnderstood vnder one kind comprehending all his suffering and neuer excluding any part of it euerie of them beeing equiualent to this speach of the Apostle who gaue himselfe that is both his bodie and soule or wholly vnto the death neither can the death of the crosse be other which is ioyned with the malediction of God from which we by it were wholly deliuered Vse 3. Where it is said that Christ gaue himselfe it may be further noted that his whole passion and death was voluntarie for what is more free then gift and this appeareth in that he was wont to say before hand that he must goe away vnto his father that he must leaue the world and his disciples that he had power to lay downe his life and take it vp againe and that no man could take it from him for who could take that life from him whose sinneles nature of it selfe was not obnoxious to death it beeing the stipend of sinne And further it is briefly to be obserued how the holy Ghost thorough the whole historie hath noted speciall circumstances which confirme the same truth As 1. when the time drewe neere that he should leaue the world he foretelleth to his disciples that he must goe to Ierusalem and suffer many things and be crucified and yet he went yea when Peter tooke him aside and entreated him to fauour himselfe he checked him more sharpely then we reade that euer he did any of the rest Get thee behind me Satan he would not patiently heare any thing which might worke the least vnwillingnes in him 2. When he came to Ierusalem did he withdrawe himselfe when he knewe the Iewes sought to apprehend him as he at some other times had done no verily but knowing that Satan had put
God nor Baal they can well away with either religion but care greatly for neither 3. And a third sort goe so iust betweene a ciuill and religious life that euen while they professe religion it is verie hard to say whether nature or religion giueth the stroake to their actions but zeale to the truth haue they none vnto which lukwarme Laodiceans being neither hote nor cold that coūsell of the holy Ghost is fit Be zealous and amend for else the Lord will spue them out of his mouth 4. Some are zealous but either without knowledge or beyond the right vnderstanding of the word affection leading it and not iudgement at least rightly enformed and this tendeth but to their owne and the hurt of the Church 5. Some are zealous in and for wickednesse Zealous persecutors as Paul before his conuersion on such fellowes as were those fortie that tooke an oath that they would not eate nor drinke till they had slaine Paul Zealous railers against God against his word his ministers and seruants against the strict obseruation of the Sabbath against the most conscionable duties of watching against sinne or of working of righteousnesse vnto which they are sworne enemies themselues and in others account it mere follie and madnesse all their zeale is against zeale But let vs whome God hath taken into his schoole to teach vs better things be careful to raise this grace out of the ashes of it and consider 1. how zealous the Papists be in their owne inventions and for the traditions of their fathers and shal not we for the truth 2. the more resistance it hath the greater is the glorie to hold it out 3. how that cold Christians haue but cold comfort from God in themselues and from their best workes because they come short of this precept which requireth that euerie C●ristian be zealous of good workes Vers. 15. These things speake and exhort and rebuke with all authoritie See that no man despise thee The Apostle here repeateth the precept which he gaue to Titus in the beginning of this chapter contracting and reducing the speciall offices of a faithfull minister to three heads 1. doctrine These things speake 2. exhortation and exhort 3. reproofe and rebuke Secondly he prescribeth the manner how he shall performe all these with all authoritie Thirdly because Titus was young and want of yeares might seeme to denie him that authoritie which was meete for an Euangelist he backeth him herein in the last words let no man despise thee Which words although they may be conceiued as a charge to his hearers yet I take it rather to be a precept to himselfe that he should not suffer any to contemne him Quest. But how could Titus or how can any other Minister hinder men from despising them seeing the world is euerie where so full of mockers Answ. There will indeede alwaies be mockers of the best Ministers and despisers of their persons yet must the Minister so carrie his doctrine with power and authoritie and his life with grauitie and integritie as he giue no cause of iust contempt of himselfe nay rather that hereby he get himselfe reuerence that not the best onely but euen those which are not the verie worst who with religion and conscience haue put off all forehead and humanitie may beginne to feare and stand in awe of him which course seemeth to be closely commended to Titus So was Timothie commanded to free his youth from contempt 1. Tim. 4.12 Let no man despise thy youth but how shall hee effect this the next words shewe vs But become vnto them which beleeue an example in word in conuersation in loue in spirit in faith in purenesse Hauing spoken before of teaching exhortation and reproofe in their seuerall places we will onely note in this former part what it is that the minister is tyed vnto in his teaching exhortation and reproofes and in the performance of euerie part of his ministeriall office namely vnto the word These things saith our Apostle for this purpose hath the Lord in great wisedome furnished the Scriptures to make the man of God able both to teach instruct and improoue so as he neede goe no further to seeke for profitable things Which teacheth such as will stand in Gods counsell to fetch from hence all their doctrines all their proofes all their exhortations and all their reproofes for so shall they be iust so shall they be powerfull to worke a worke of edification and so shall they be vnresistable in the consciences of men These things if men would tie themselues vnto they should encrease men with the encreasings of God in spirituall wisedome watchfulnesse and the feare of God Then should we not meet with so many pretors for sinne and libertie to the flesh straining their wittes to legitimate bastardly broods of opinions which the Scripture neuer acknowledged hers Nor so many who in their reproofes glad the hearts of the impenitent and make heauie the hearts of those to whom the Lord hath spoken peace who strike at the best things and men and so as soone as euer they haue deliuered a truth in thesi least they should leaue it while it is true misapply it in the hypothesis girding at godlinesse as too much scrupulositie and precisenesse accounting conscience an hypocrite and the feare of God dissembling before men Hence are discouered as sinnefull all reproofes of sinne by iesting enterluding and stage representations in which fooles make a mocke of sinne and open a publike schoole of all lewdnesse and iniquitie and if any deuill or sinne be cast out there it is by Belzebub the Prince of the deuils Further all reproofes by satyrizing and by slanderous libells and secret calumniations all which commonly wrecke themselues rather vpon the persons then sinnes of men are here reprooued which although they be indeede sharpe and biting meanes yet hath the Lord appointed fitter and sharper arrowes to smite his enemies withall euen sound and sufficient conuictions out of the word which is able to wound and daunt kings themselues and prescribed them also to be publikely drawne and shot in such graue reuerent and seemely sort as is befitting 1. both the persons and calling of the reproouer 2. the things themselues which are weightie and serious as also 3. the presence of God and his congregation whose matters are debated and whose sentence against sinne is in denouncing and executing Small wisedome therefore it is for men in these cases of the saluation and damnation of men to suffer their wits to play vpon sinne so lightly and iestingly as becommeth rather some vaine spectacle or professed iester then either the errand of the Lord or a messenger from the Lord of hosts The second point is the manner of deliuering doctrine exhortation and reproofe with all authoritie Doctr. The word of God must be deliuered in such manner as the maiestie and authoritie of it be still reserued vnto it 1. Pet. 4.11 If any man
speake let him speake as the word of God and the embassadors of Christ must speake his message euen as himselfe would vtter it 2. The soule of the word is the presence of the spirit which euerie Minister must striue to make demonstration of for else it is but a dead letter or sound it is the spirit that quickeneth it and maketh it liuely and mightie in operation it is not the demonstration of the person nor manifestation of the man that getteth authoritie to the word but when out of good conscience a man faithfully striueth to make it appeare to the consciences of others that not he but the spirit of God speaketh in him that when simple men shall perceiue the secrets of their hearts made manifest they may fall on their faces and worship God saying God is in this man indeede 3. The Prophets and Apostles haue gone before vs as presidents in this behalfe Micha 3.8 I am full of power by the spirit of the Lord and of iudgment and of strength to declare Iacob his sinne and Israel his transgression Before Isai was sent on his message his lippes were touched with an hote coale from the altar The Apostles accordingly were not sent to witnes of Christ vntill the spirit had descended vpon them and that in the forme of fierie tongues to signifie that themselues beeing kindled with zeale and feruencie in the Lords businesse they should also by their doctrine enflame others and that their speech should not light any where but it should kindle and enflame the hearts of the hearets But the most perfect patterne of imitation herein we haue in the cheife doctor of his Church who not onely after his resurrection could and did make the hearts of the disciples burne within them euen in his ordinarie talke but all the time of his humilitie it is truely verified of his whole doctrine that he taught with authoritie and not as the Scribes Indeed neuer man spake so nor can speake by the confession of his verie enemies for neuer man spake so in his owne name verily I say vnto you neuer man confirmed his speaches with such powerfull and proper miracles neuer man spake with such peculiar grace zeale libertie and command of the spirit in the conscience but yet all his Ministers are to imitate him in zeale in power in libertie of speach and spirit for the glorie of God and come as neere this copie as they can Vse Ministers must take heede of coldnes in their ministerie of liueles and spiritles preaching of powerlesse and a frozen manner of deliuering the word alwaies preseruing a fire of zeale and conscience in themselues mettals we knowe will not worke without fire no more will the steely and stonie heart of man melt or soften without the spirituall fire taken from the altar And yet here I must not be vnderstood as condemning all coolenesse or moderation of speach for doctrine may be ponderous and weightie where the speach is calme and treatable still waters often runne the deepest and Salomon saith that a man of knowledge spareth his words but yet it followeth that he must be of an excellent spirit so there must of necessitie be at the least a soft fire in these distillatiōs But the thing iustly condemned is when men by their owne default beeing giuen ouer either to pride sensualitie or worldlynesse haue benummed their spirits and are become frozen without power or life in their ministerie and so bring forth their doctrine as many women doe their children stil-borne teaching as the Scribes onely of forme without zeale or conscience or experience of that they speake And before I leaue this point it must be knowne that whereas I require heate and authoritie in the deliuerie of the word that therefore euerie heate should be warrantable for some is iustly condemned as 1. all heate of humane affection proceeding from perturbation and passion 2. all inconsiderate heate of youth 3. all heate not well guided although in good men full of godly affections but suffered to boyle ouer so farre as a man looseth his memorie and interrupteth his doctrine and whole discourse 2. A flattring Ministrie is an enemie to this authoritie for when a Minister must sing placebo and such sweet songs it is impossible for him not to betraie the truth 3. To withstand this authoritie or to weaken it is a fearefull sin whether in high or low and the Lord will not suffer his messengers feet to be cut off 4. Hearers must 1. pray for their Teachers that they may deliuer the word with authoritie with boldnesse and with open mouth Ephes. 6.19 Coloss. 4.4 2. Not deeme this authoritie in Ministers humor or anger or bitternes and much lesse madnesse with Festus and least of all to cast them in prison as men rauing as Ieremie was cap. 29.26 3. Not to refuse to yeeld subiection vnder this authoritie nor be angrie when it beateth down some practise which they are loth to part with seeing it is iust with God to reprobate put out the light of such as refuse the conuiction of the light offred The third and last precept of this Chapter and verse Let no man despise thee teacheth two things First how people and hearers should entertaine the Ministers sent them of God seeing they cannot without great sinne despise them for seeing the Lord who could by himselfe worke the saluation of men yet is pleased to vse as his helpers herein weake and base men whom he assumeth into fellowship with himselfe to become coworkers with him although not in the act of conuersion yet in the Ministrie of it who dare despise such whom the Lord so farre honoureth and therefore calleth them his white horses horses in that he vseth them in his battailes against sinne Satan the world and wicked ones and white for the puritie of their doctrine and integritie of their liues yea his Angels namely such as by whom he reuealeth his good pleasure vnto vs and his owne voyce by whom he beseecheth men to be reconciled Secondly how carefull is the Lord to preserue his Ministers from contempt when he affirmeth that such as despise them despise himselfe that sent them In which sence we read that the posteritie of Caine contemning the preaching of Noah dispised and contended against Gods spirit so Israel murmuring against Moses and Aaron Moses saith he hath heard your murmurings against the Lord for what are we that yee haue murmured against vs. Thirdly how vnnaturall a part were it for children to despise their Fathers and what seueritie hath the Lord shewed against it in his law but godly Ministers are the Fathers of their people I am your Father saith Paul and Onesimus yea and Titus here begotten by him vnto the faith he calleth his sonnes Let no cursed Cham presume to scorne them which is not so hurtfull to them as dangerous to themselues beeing the next way to bring themselues vnder
could delight in Gods statutes they would not forget them 3. They neuer vse the right meanes of remembring the word and yet they complaine of forgetting it for before they heare they prepare not themselues by repentance nor by prayer for the spirit to teach them nor after they take no paines by meditation repetition or conference to make the word their owne it is not worth any such labour and therefore complaine no longer of thy memorie but of thy sinnefull securitie negligence and profanenesse accuse thy selfe and bewayle thy sinne who hast suffered thy memorie and mind to be taken vp with olde worne lusts and delights with reckonings of summes of money with earthly profits and commodities and thus hast spent thy dayes in the forgetfulnesse of God And for time to come performe the forenamed duties carefully and although thou canst not remember euerie particular thou hearest yet God by his spirit will fasten so much in thy memorie as shall be meet for thee to practise and sufficient for thy comfort especially when thou shalt stand in greatest need of it as in temptation danger distresse in the day of thy death and iudgement But suffer now in thy prosperitie the things belowe to take vp thy senses it shall be iust with God in the day of thy darkenesse and miserie to leaue thee without the comfort of any one place of Scripture that what thou wouldst not take vp into thy mind when thou mightest thou shalt not be able then when it is offered and thou gladly wouldst So much of the manner of deliuering this doctrine now we come to the matter of it In the matter consider 1. the duties required which are two 1. subiection 2. obedience The difference I take to be this The former is an acknowledgement of subiection vnder which Gods ordinance hath necessarily put a man which therefore he cannot resist for it is vsed in Scripture commonly not only to note that inferioritie which the Lord hath laid on wiues seruants children inferiours and subiects which in verie naturall light cannot but be acknowledged Gods ordinance but also that powerfull subduing euen of such as are vnwilling and resisting for the same word is vsed there where it is said that Christ subiected and subdued all things vnder his feete and the Apostle Rom. 13.5 fastneth this necessitie vpon it it is necessarie to be subiect The latter rather intendeth a free and voluntarie obedience vnto the lawful commandements then such necessarie subiection vnto the persons which may be considered as an effect of the former and a branch of the same roote for where there is a conscience of subiection there will be cheerefulnes in obedience The second point in the matter and substance of the precept is the persons first to whom the duties belong namely all Magistrates who are here distributed into 1. principalities 2. powers The former of which two meaneth those who haue primarie and plenarie power vnder God and by their proper power and command administer within their seuerall dominions such are Kings Cesars and cheefe gouernours in free states The latter signifieth such as exercise delegated authoritie and hold from those higher powers such are vicegerents or viceroyes vnder the King presidents of prouinces Le●f●enants ouer countries Mayors of citties or townes c. Thus are Magistrates ranked into Kings and those that are in authoritie 1. Tim. 2.2 and into Kings and those that are sent of them 1. Pet. 2.12 Thus subiection and obedience is due to them both euen to the latter aswell as to the former and because these are sometimes meane men as the other are often bad men the text calleth vs to turne our eyes from the persons and fixe them especially vpon the ordinance of God which maketh these duties their right for here is a metonymie of the adiunct it is not said let them be subiect to Princes as those that haue power from them but to principalities and powers as though he had said let them not looke so much to the men exercising rule and power as vnto the power and ordinance it selfe and seeing there is no power but of God let them submit themselues vnto euery ordinance of man for the Lords sake Secondly the persons from whom these dues must be paid are all Christians in generall without exception for the Apostle includeth them all in the word them and therefore clergie as well as laytie yea euery soule must be subiect to the higher powers if euery soule then the clergies as well as others Doctr. 1. Christianitie eateth not vp Magistracie nor destroyeth gouernment and ciuill authoritie but ratifyeth confirmeth it for Christians are here called to subiection and obedience to ciuill authoritie The reason is 1. the kingdome of Christ is not of this world his authoritie deuideth not ciuill inheritances his crowne and scepter detract not from earthly crownes and scepters his weapons are not carnall the keyes of his kingdome are no temporall iurisdiction he could both be the true lawfull King of the Iewes and yet conuey himselfe away when they would haue giuen him his right 2. For one ordinance of God to destroie another would argue want of wisedome in God the ordainer the very thought whereof were blasphemous The orders of Christ in his Church then cannot bring confusion in the commonwealth for then the Lord should not be a God of order but of confusion nay on the contrarie for the Churches sake which he loueth he keepeth order and maintaineth gouernment in common wealths that his Church while it is a gathering in the world might find safe harbour therein and this doue of Christ haue place where to set without danger the soale of her foote 3. Moses so wisely from God constituted both ecclesiasticall and politicall ordinances as that the one was so farre from violencing the other as one of them could not stand without the other and was Christ the Sonne any lesse wise a law-giuer in his Church then was Moses a seruant Vse 1. This doctrine meeteth with that wicked opinion of Anabaptists and Libertines who hold that Christians need no Magistrates nor ought to be subiect vnto any and why so 1. Because they are the Lords freemen 2. They are the iust who need no laws but are a law to thēselues 3. They need no protection but the Lords 4. Their badge is loue which suffreth and couereth all things and therefore they may not reuenge nor resist euill by carrying before the Magistrate But for the first the libertie of the Lords free men in this life is spirituall and inward and no●●utward and bodily till the life to come For the second if the law be not made against them yet it is for them and their good for suppose they do no euill yet may they suffer much wrong and euill without defence of law so as the old saying will here be true Kings were ordained for men and not men for
as an other Some there are that seeme very religious can come to Church go in the count and companie of Christians and religious persons but verie vnmercifull ouergrowne with couetousnesse and in priuate for a pennie aduantage discharge all religion till Church time againe Others are mercifull inough but carelesse of religion altogether some are iust in their dealings but vncleane or intemperate others are temperate but vniust lyars swearers and no fidelitie in them The Apostle Iames meeteth with all these teaching vs 1. that pure religion standeth not onely in harmelesnes and keeping ones selfe vnspotted but in visiting the fatherles and widow that is the frequent practise of workes of mercie and charitie many say if I were rich I would do thus and thus but art thou a Christian art thou religious then though thou beest poore thou art mercifull Paul commended the Macedonians that beeing but poore yet they were rich in liberalitie toward the Saints 2. in cap. 2.10 that he that offendeth in one point of the law is guiltie of all and he that saith thou shalt not commit adulterie saith also thou shalt not kill now if thou dost no adulterie yet if thou killest thou art a transgressor of the law Vse 3. If a Christian must employ himselfe in euery good work then must men so cast and contriue their courses that neither duties of pietie hinder the duties of their calling nor these stand in the way of the other And he that hath the heart of the wise to know time and iudgement forecasteth both wisely and knoweth one of these to be subordinate but not opposite vnto the other Hence must Christians forecast and remember the Sabboath before hand and so order and husband their times and seasons that there may be place and time and oportunitie for euery good worke in the week-day and especially for the best workes whether publike exercises of religion or priuate prayers and exercises in the family Which wise managing of affaires because men are wanting in therefore sometimes the Sabboath must be encroched vpon and Gods seruice iustled out for some carnall matters other times weeks exercises are neglected because this inconuenience or losse in the calling was not seasonably and prudently preuented the priuate seruice of God also in the family must now and then be laid downe for a time or turne because some other domestical distraction hath deuoured the time allotted for it Let no man then seperate those duties which the Lord hath coupled if thou beest readie to the duties of thy particular calling forget not the duties of the generall if thou wouldst be seruiceable to men forget not in the meane time thy seruice of God If thou canst be diligent to prouide for thy selfe and thy family set sometime apart to looke out to enquire into and releeue the necessities of Gods children family abroad But woe to such knots of companionship tied fast by the deuil to sporting gaming or other vngodly lusts that neither the duties of their calling on the weekeday nor religious exercises on the Sabboath can obtaine them Doctr. 2. That euery Christian ought to keepe in himselfe a fitnes and readinesse to euery good worke is plaine in the Scriptures For 1. in duties of pietie we are enioyned not only to come to the house of God but to take heede to our feete and to wash our hands in innocencie before we compasse the Altar and first to sanctifie our selues before God and reconcile our selues to men and then bring our gift If we preach we must doe it readily and of a readie minde for then we haue reward If you heare you must be swift to heare and readie to heare rather then offer the sacrifice of fooles 2. In performance of duties of loue and mercie vnto men we are called to readinesse in distributing 1. Tim. 6.18 and mindfulnesse to distribute Heb. 13.16 3. In priuate duties when God giueth vs peace and opportunitie we must serue him with cheerefulnesse and good hearts Deut. 28.47 4. In priuate iniuries we must be ready to receiue yea to offer reconciliation and to forgiue which is another good worke and so in the rest Reasons 1. We herein become like vnto God whose nature is to accommodate himselfe to our good whose readinesse to giue bountifully and forgiue freely is hereby shadowed 2. Hereby we also bewtifie and as it were guild our duties when they come off without delaies without grudging murmuring or heauinesse but as from men inu●ed to weldoing 3. Hereby we may laie hold of Christian consolation in that this readie and willing mind is accepted where often power of doing good is wanting and indeed the regenerate often want power and abilitie vnto good but to want will and desire is dangerous Vse Whosoeuer would finde this grace in himselfe must trie it by the companions of it As 1. there must be a good heart cheerefully and willingly disposed vnto and in the doing of good 2. Thess. 2.17 The Lord must first mooue and perswade the heart for so the word signifieth as well as to comfort and then establish his to euery good word and worke Hence are we exhorted to do euery thing heartily as to the Lord. The Lord would haue none to offer any thing to the building of the tabernacle but whose heart incouraged him and whose spirit made him willing If thou findest not thine heart accompanying thy duties but thou doest thy religious duties for necessitie law fashion or for some sinister end and thy duties of loue with a straite heart or an euill eye thinking any thing bestowed too good or too much thou hast slaine thy action before the birth it was neuer quickned it hath no life no● soule God who loueth only a cheerefull giuer will not endure it 2. He that is continually readie to euery good worke cannot but be abundant in good workes the phrase little differing from that 1. Tim. 5.10 The widow that hath beene continually giuen to euery good worke for else this readinesse could not be other then an idle preparation Dost thou continue in prayer in all things giue thankes hast thou bin diligent in trayning vp thy family in Gods feare hast thou with Onesephorus often refreshed the Saints doth the loynes of many blesse thee and the blessing of the poore and widow returne vpon thee shew me the ●oats and garments thou hast made shew me the knowledge and feare of God in thy family expresse the faith thou professest by such fruits of faith as these are and then hast thou profited in this precept els thou as yet commest short of it 3. In such a partie will be a forgoing and departure with things of price yea the best thing he hath will not be too deare to purchase that dutie which he seeth God requiring at his hands which if it be wanting because many good works are costly a man cannot be ready to euery good worke Now to apply the
or detract from publike iustice or publike peace which are as the heart and braine of the common wealth which is an other common extremitie which carelesse and inconsiderate men fall into who beeing called to be seruants to iustice as to iuries fearing least in following the letter of the lawe they should be iniurious doe not remit and moderate but maime and wound the lawe and common wealth and either finde and execute no forfeits or penaltie● vpon some outragious offenders against whome the lawe should be whetted or such as rather turne to the disgrace of iustice then the administring of it Vse Let vs consider then whereunto we are here called euen to the practise of that propertie of wisdom which is from aboue which is peaceable and gentle and to buckle vnto vs as the elect of God tender mercie kindnes humblenesse of mind meeknesse long suffering forbearing one an other and forgiuing one an other The benefit will be exceeding great For 1. this wisedome teacheth vs to be soft in our speaches as they that knowe how a soft answer breaketh wrath a rare example whereof we haue in Iudg. 8.2 when the men of Ephraim were incensed against Gedeon and chid him sharpely because he called not them with him against the Midianites your gleaning saith he is better then our vintage as though he had said the glorie of the action belongeth as much or much more to you then to vs we Abiezerits did not halfe so much good by discomfiting the host as you did by pursuing after it and by this soft answer the text saith their spirits were abated ver 3. The like must we doe in our reasonings whether students or others whether by conference or disputation by word or by writing we must passe by some hastie words which flesh in the heate of it will be casting in to the hindering of the worke of edification for whereas men thinke it a point of pregnancie of wit to returne quips nimbly and giue his aduersarie as good as he bringeth we must knowe that heauenly wisedome teacheth no such thing 2. It teacheth vs softnesse in our whole conuersation and exercise of our personall and generall callings it suffereth not the Magistrate to be so sterne that an inferiour should come to him as a man that were to bring a bottle to an elephant which he is a fraid of which timiditie Augustus reprooued in a petitioner It suffereth not the Minister to be Lordly in his doctrine or discipline but compassionate and tender in both It suffereth not the father or master to be a lyon in his house but causeth them to gouerne sweetly and to dispense seueritie and waigh out correction as physicke to the children and seruants 3. It teacheth euen the superiour to yeeld some part of his right to his inferour as Abraham to Lot If thou take the right hand I will turne to the left nay as Christ himselfe beeing God and Lord of all yet for peace sake and to auoide offence did pay tribute vnto Caesar. Further how necessarie a vertue this is cannot but appeare to him that considereth how fraile our flesh and blood is how full of infirmities how lying open to offences how needefull of much forgiuenesse at Gods hand and mans and yet no forgiuenesse at Gods hand but on condition of our forgiuenesse of men for so is the petition in the Lords prayer nor at mans for what measure ye mete out to men shall men measure to you againe How sweete a grace it is appeareth also in that it preserueth the outward peace of a man and especially the peace of a good conscience that he can pray with a good heart with cheerefulnes performe good duties towards God and men in that also it winneth mens hearts to a man and maketh his good name like a sweet smelling oyntment and in that it so much tendeth to the honour of Gods name as it doth by drawing many to the loue and embracing of the Gospel of God which they see is so pure so innocent and so peaceable And hence it is that Paul would haue this grace to be knowne and manifested to all men for this ende Let so many therefore as professe the Gospel of peace hereby shewe themselues the sonnes of peace and because many sinne not onely in doing but in not suffering wrong let vs beware of pinching and wringing men by extremitie as such as are resolued not to pocket the least iniurie nor yeeld an inch of ground but if the offence be neuer so little are bent to make men heare of it againe on both sides as we say here is spirit indeede but of pride and malice and that spirit that beareth rule in the world and sonnes of disobedience Some men are of ●uch maligne constitution as that they haue nothing in their hearts ●eads or lippes but lawe and iustice euerie tri●●le euerie word euery pe●●●e iniurie sendeth them before the Magistrate for reuenge against such a● perhaps are verie desirous of peace satisfaction and agreement and whereas law is a kind of warre and so ought to be the last procurer of peace it is the first course of many distempered spirits before euer their aduersarie be aduertised or warned of it But such persons forget that iustice and mercie are sisters and that iustice without mercy is but crueltie 2. here is lawe but no equitie for equitie is the breeder of vnitie and mother of peace but their law filleth the world with brabling contentions and 3. what is their lawe for most part but some qui●ke or tricke of lawe tending to extremitie of wrong and proouing in the end but cousenage and dishonest craftines as may daily appeare in a number of men who like the flesh-flies feede altogether vpon ●esters and wounds or like the souldier that cannot liue by peace but by warre not hauing that estate of their owne which their great thoughts and high conceits carrie them vnto nor yet Gods blessing vpon the little they haue would gladly pray vpon others and by some quirke of law hooke in that which equitie would neuer affoard them but the issue sheweth that all their pretences are but cloakes of their iniquitie Others plead why it is my right and why should I not haue it I will not loose it if the lawe will giue it me and when they haue a man on the hippe as we say and at advantage they follow him with all extremitie euen to the making of dice of his bones It is true that men that demand no more but their right are counted very honest men and it is esteemed but a reasonable thing if a man aske but his owne although he demaund all that but yet it is as true that he that is a strict stander for his right alwaies cannot but sometimes goe beyond the bounds of equitie which must yeeld some part of the right and of loue which seeketh not her owne that is not all her owne And whosoeuer thou art that
become a pillow for securitie in many which are Gods spurres in the ●●anke of the godly to pricke them vp and rouse them from their drowsinesse and yet many determine hence and conclude without further ground the Lords loue towards them because of long and durable afflictions of which they could neuer come to make good vse nor take any profit by them whom God loueth say they he chasteneth and we are iudged of the Lord that we should not be condemned of the world and when they are exceedingly crossed in the world and indeed cursed in their counsell and attempts they thanke God they haue their punishment here in this life so secure themselues from all future paines But this is but a guile and stratageme of Satan to cast his poyson into the Lords cup and bane and destroie men with that which might be a speciall meane of their good euen a speciall prouocation to make them seeke reconciliation with God in Iesus Christ which many men who will not much murmur at affliction but generally can confesse it a fruit of their sinne little thinke of the affliction it selfe is a token of loue inough alreadie though no amendment accompanie it nor any sorrow for sinne feare of offending or diligence in good duties follow it Thus by all these meanes securitie eateth vp the soules of infinite professed Christians who are all miserably deluded and not yet gotten out of their naturall corrupted estate but for the present are the children of wrath The fourth and last sort of men who are deceiued and wander out of the good way are some that seeme to themselues and others to be very good Christians at least none of the worst and yet many of them little better then some of the former And these are of two sorts some are deceiued in regard of their sinnes others in regard of their graces or vertues Of the former sort There be some who because they are not carried to such sinnes as they see others they conclude presently that they are in the right way to heauen whereas there may be a worke of the word and spirit forcible against many sinnes where there is no sauing grace in the soule Hence is it that many 1. before sinne are vexed at it and affraid of it and are loth to be too bold with it but hating the punishment more then the sinne they goe through stitch at length as Herod against Iohn and Pilate against Christ. Others can auoide sinne as swearing drinking vncleannesse c. but haue a false finger that hath laid hold vpon some one or moe which shall bee dearer then to forgoe for naught so as all sinnes shall not be left nay they will in some cases be very commendable euen aboue good Christians in repressing corruptions and yet not bee clensed from their filthinesse Thus Haman could a long time refraine himselfe from Mordecay 2. After sinne many moe can deceiue themselues with a counterfeit repentance whereby they can feele it crie out vpon it and confesse it vvith griefe d●●sembling Saul cursed Cain treacherous Iudas and hard hearted Pharaoh 〈◊〉 doe thus much and yet this is all the repentance of many vvho think that hereby they haue receiued a sound cure Hence haue vve many that after their sinne vvith a Lord haue mercie or saying ouer of a prayer vvith a forced sigh dravve a skinne ouer their consciences and for the time there is peace And others vvho haue spent their vvhole liues in oppression and grinding the faces of the poore euery pennie of vvhose vvealth is vvorse gotten then other if about the time of their death they giue a little trifle to the poore or be liberall for a sermon or set apart some small thing to some good vses they rest herein as a sufficient acquittance from all their vnrighteousnesse vvhereas they neuer thinke of ●●tisfaction and restoring againe that they haue robbed according to the ●avv of repentance Let such punish themselues pray fast giue almes and yet the Lord vvill neuer a vvhit regard for here are no bands of vvicnednes loosed Others by some short humiliation in a seruile kinde of flatterie of God proceeding of slauish feare and selfe-loue vvill come and confesse their sinne and promise they vvill no more so transgresse but yet they dissemble with their double hearts for how many haue we knowne whose extorted righteousnesse hath been as the morning dew In their sicknes and distresse they haue humbled themselues but with the Iewes for corne and wine they haue howled and cried vpon their beds but they returned not to the most high they affected deliuerance not repentance nor further fawned vpon God then to get out of his hands By these wordly sorrowes infinite men deceiue themselues and rest in them as sufficient repentance The latter sort are they that deceiue themselues in turning their eyes from their sins to some vertues or graces which they find in their soules Hence haue we men that can be diligent in hearing the word and that gladly with Herod and thinke that enough to dispence with their holding of their Herodias some sweet sinne or other Others can reioyce and be affected as we haue knowne soft hearted Protestants that could melt at sermons into teares with great affection and yet haue made little conscience of their wayes but not mortifying the deeds of the flesh haue yeelded to their lusts the raines in all libertie Others can receiue the word talke of it yeeld a seemely obedience vnto it any man would say they were surely good Christians yet as bad ground they giue it not depth enough they giue it the vnderstanding and some affection but the will and the whole ioy is not carried vnto it If they talke of it it is but as such as onely haue tasted it with their tongues as cookes do their seruices but they haue not filled their bellie with it as they for whom it is prepared Their sightly obedience is like Herods who did many things because Iohn was a good man In a word they can be reuerent liberall to Ministers kind to professors forward in good motions can lend their hands or purses to helpe the godly out of trouble yet in all these commendable duties are like a deceitfull bow which being cast crooked let the eye aime neuer so right at the marke it casteth it quite besides all the way euen so all these proceeding frō deepe hypocrisie done not purely but sinister respects furthering them deceiue the soule keepe it farre from the happinesse of it I graunt that in a good heart naturall hypocrisie will be mingling it selfe in the bringing forth of such fruites but yet it swayes not the heart it is resisted and mastered so as the maine sway of a good heart is sincere choosing good things and doing them purely for God and themselues but thus it is not in the former Vse 1. All this so large a doctrine sheweth what a number of men and women
who seeme good Christians are yet in their naturall condition and haue not a●tained the first degree of their renouation but deceiued they were borne so they liue so without Gods great mercie are they like to die And ●he miserie of this condition is like that of a man that hath a thousand deadly diseases on him and yet is sencelesse of them all whose case euerie man will say is remedilesse Let euery man and woman enter into the narrowe examination of themselues and neuer be at rest till they finde themselues renewed in the spirit of their minds 2. If God haue let any man see his error hereby that he can truely say that he hath beene deceiued but now hath the path of life reuealed vnto him let him acknowledge all this to be the finger of God and still pray with Dauid open mine eyes that I may see further into thy lawe for so I shall see mine owne errors the better and hide not thy commandements from me 3. If thou seest any man goe on in any of these deceiueable courses pitie him pray for him counsell him deale meekely and tenderly with him for thou wast also in time past deceiued Seruing the lusts and diuerse pleasures Hauing spoken of the corruption of mind in men vnconuerted now we come to the depravation of their wills the which is liuely described in two degrees 1. In that it is a seruant and hath lost the freedome wholly 2. In that it is a seruant to lusts and that not to one but diuerse pleasures The word whereby the former is expressed is borrowd from seruants who at that time vsed to be sold and bought and were meere vassals wholly at the appointment of their Masters without all power in themselues Wherein we haue the true portraiture of euery naturall man who in his will is a most base seruant to sinnefull lusts and pleasures and cannot but obey and fulfill them but without the least power to will the least morall diuine good Now that we may come rightly to conceiue of the bondage of will we must first restraine it to the right subiect and then to the right obiect First according to the subiects it is diuersly considered 1. In some subiects the will is confirmed and free to nothing but good and that either by nature as in God himselfe or by grace as in the good angels and in men who are renewed in the highest degree that is the Saints departed who immutably will onely good and onely well 2. In some other subiects the will is ob●●●med and hardened in euill and free to will nothing else as in the wicked angels and damned men 3. In some other it is more indifferent as in men on earth whether renewed or in the state of corruption In the former of which as the subiect is but in part freed from the power of sinne so is the will it is so farre as flesh and sauouring of the old man free to will things belowe according to the corrupt nature and as farre as it is spirit and hath a worke of renovation it is freed to will supernaturall and diuine things But all these subiects are remooued as not that which our Apostle speaketh of who not obscurely speaketh of naturall men and their wills so farre as vnchanged Secondly for the obiect of this bondage 1. We denie not in the will of vnconuerted men a passiue power vnto good that it can posse velle but by this I meane a capablenes or abilitie of willing that which is truely good not by any principle in it selfe but when God shall send out the grace of conuersion 2. We denie not in such a will an actuall freedome from all coaction and compulsion which the nature of will cannot admit for it is not will vnlesse it be thus free And therefore while it willeth euill it willeth it most freely and when it commeth to will good it assenteth to the word and spirit it is not now purely passiue as a blocke nor yet forced but worketh according to the nature of will freely for beeing mooued by God it selfe mooueth and becommeth not onely as before a subiect but an instrument of the spirit Where by the way lyeth the answer to that Popish obiection that will cannot be free vnlesse it be inclinable alike to good and euill for will is not properly free in regard of the obiect to which it is mooued but of the efficient moouing it and what say they to the will of God they cannot denie it to be most free and yet cannot without blasphemie affirme it to be equally inclinable to euill as well as good 3. We denie not but that the vnconuerted will hath a more full freedome in naturall actions as to eate drinke walke speake which without this speciall grace although not without generall it can commendably but not holily performe 4. We denie not to this will a maimed power and freedome in morall humane vertues as of prudence chastity fortitude iustice which are bestowed in great measure by the cōmon grace of the spirit not onely to some within the Church as Saul who was changed into an other man but euen without as to Cyrus Alexander Aristides Socrates but yet in the actions of these vertues this will is halfe dead and wounded I call it a maymed power and freedome because it is a certaine kind of libertie in some externall obedience and discipline towards the lawe of God and yet vtterly separated from the internall and spirituall obedience of it Which meeteth also with an other chiefe obiection of the Papists that many vnregenerate men doe and haue done many good and glorious actions and that not by the speciall grace we speake of but by the freedome of will To which hence is answered that although these things are materially good yet are they wanting in the formall righteousnesse which the lawe requireth and therefore haue beene farre from pleasing God and properly nor good actions but rather goodly and glistering sinnes the defects of them beeing euident 1. The persons doing them are out of Christ. 2. The deede it selfe done not of faith 3. Not hauing perfection either in it selfe or in the Mediator 4. not directed to right endes namely the pure honour and worship of God Now to such incompleat actions beeing no better then ciuill men can performe in abundance we denie not some libertie of will in the vnregenerate 5. We denie not to such a will freedome and libertie in spirituall actions but in such as are altogether euill vnto which as it selfe is most free so can it determine itselfe most freely And therefore where the Apostle affirmeth it a meere seruant it must be meant of morall good secundum gratiam Whence the conclusion ariseth That in such things as pertaine to God and true godlinesse the vnregenerate hath no power nor freedome of will at all no not so much as to will his owne conuersion Obiect But the will
better by it we must be led to loue him more for his goodnesse and a shame it were that this bountifulnesse of God should not lead vs vnto repentance Besides none are partakers of it but such as being borrowers become seruants vnto the lender for although the Lord be boundlesse in all bountifulnes yet is he not so regardles in conferring it as that he looketh not for answer of loue for loue and if he be kinde to the vnkind what is it else but the heaping of coales on the heads of those who are in fitting to destruction for any man then thus to reason God is full of goodnesse and abundant in mercie and therefore I will doe as I list it is the abusing of his patience and the treasuring of wrath against the day of wrath Let such knowe that as with the vpright he will be vpright to bring on them all his promised goodnes so with the froward he wil deale as frowardly and that there is not a more seuere plague abiding the reprobate then to haue all the goodnesse of God turned to his euill and hurt by his owne sinne to whome let mercie be shewed yet in the land of vprightnesse hee will do wickedly let the Gospel be preached it is the sauour of death yea let Christ himselfe be offered the greatest gift of loue that euer was giuen hee will be but a rocke of offence and a stone to stumble at 5. In regard of others we must learne to communicate our goodnes euen to the helping and winning of them that as yet are not called so also must this bountifulnesse of our Master withhold vs from taking our fellow seruants by the throate for hauing beene forgiuen ten thousand talents we may well forgiue an hundred pence Thus shall we manifest our selues to be the children of our heauenly father by resembling that goodnes of his which worketh in the winning and sauing of sinners and in shewing mercie and remitting of manifold debts The second point in the efficient of our saluation noteth the time when God saued vs namely when his bountifulnesse and loue appeared and shined out in the Gospel then came this blessed saluation vnto vs when God the inexhaust fountaine of all goodnesse by the tidings of the Gospell shewed that he was become our friend in Iesus Christ when this cleare sunneshine and dayspring began to shine in our hearts then beganne our saluation Doctr. 1. Then are we saued when we are sanctified and changed by the word and spirit for as no sooner are we in the first Adam but we are in the state of damnation so no sooner are we in the second Adam but we are in the state of saluation The Scriptures are plaine to this purpose Rom. 1.17 The righteousnes of faith is revealed by the Gospel and by this faith the iust man liueth which place hath relation as well vnto the life eternall at this temporarie 1. Cor. 2.9 10. The great things which eye hath not seene c. the spirit reuealeth vnto vs yea more the spirit maketh vs knowe the things that are giuen vs of God Now what be these things that are giuen vs but grace iustification and saluation reached out vnto vs in the ministerie of the Gospel and receiued of vs by faith and hope the which also are wrought and confirmed by the same meanes But more expresse is the Apostle Iohn wee are now the sonnes of God and Eph. 2.7 by grace ye are saued through faith and Ioh. 10. I giue to them life eternall he saith not I will giue but noteth a continued act begun in the present The euidence of this truth appeareth also in the contrarie for if the wicked be condemned alreadie as the Scriptures affirme namely both in the counsel of God and 2. the word of God which pronounceth the sentence 3. their owne consciences which speake bitter things against them 4. present execution of inward and outward plagues which are the beginnings of hell then it will not be hard to conceiue that on the contrary the beleeuers are saued alreadie and passed from death vnto life both in the counsell of God and in the Gospel which pronounceth the sentence of absolution in their owne consciences which haue peace with God through Iesus Christ and in respect of the beginning● of life eternall which make them happy men while they are yet euen absent from the Lord. Obiect If it be here said that we cannot be said to be saued so long as we carrie this flesh about with vs subiected and tending to death and corruption yea subiect to become an instrument of sinne and besides those phrases of the Apostle that we are now saued by faith and by hope seeme to denie our present saluation seeing neither of them are of things present but both of things not seene and both in the fruition of saluation must cease Answ. We must consider our saluation two waies First in Christ our head in whom we haue not attained one or moe parts but full saluation Secondly as it is in our selues his members and this in two degrees The former as it is only inchoate and begun which is when beeing regenerate and adopted into the number of the sonnes of God we haue attained in Christ remission of sinne freedom from the seruitude of sinne and Satan and deliuerance from the curse and condemnation of it so as although sinne as a poyson will be in our flesh so long as we are in the flesh yet is there no condemnation for it to those that are in Christ neither is there a raigne of it vnto death but a ●alking after the spirit and as for the reliques of sinne which are left in their mortall bodies they are not deadly no nor the last enemie that shall be destroied their death it selfe Now in this first regard we are not as we were before the sonnes of wrath but truely and properly may be said to be iust reconciled heyres of grace and saued from wrath The latter degree is the perfect consummation and finall accomplishment of our saluation which is nothing else but a putting off of death and corruption and the putting on of full glorie of bodie and soule Now we may not conceiue this another saluation in kind then the former but another degree of the same which as certainely shall follow the former as the former is certainely begunne And thus are we saued by hope not that by our hope we expect another saluation then that which now in Christ we haue in our hands but for that we certainly waite for a further and more full degree of that we haue A man that lyeth sicke of a desperate disease is restored and recouered by two degrees the former when the force of his disease is by the skilfull application of physicke broken the humors purged a temperature in part procured now the disease is not deadly hee beginneth to eate to drinke to sleepe to walke here if we say
regard meete to be done by the whole 2. Euery one ought to tarrie to helpe the congregation in prayer for the infant and to ioyne in the praise of God for the ingrafting in of another member into the bodie of Christ. 3. Euery one ought to helpe himselfe both in calling to minde his owne baptisme his promise and ingrafting into Christ as also to examine what fruit he reapeth of the death and resurrection of Christ into which he is set and so to be either humbled or thankfull as he findeth his estate 4. Lastly how much so euer vsed yet is it a most vnreuerent part towards this ordinance what an vngodly contempt were it to runne out from hearing the word and why is it not also in running from the Sacrament which is the seale of that couenant as if men were loath to be present where the blessed Trinitie presenteth it selfe to such a gratious purpose as this is namely to seale such benefits to one of that congregation And more it is a disordered thing for the good of the Church requireth that the Congregation should come in together and goe out together wherein the Lord is so strait that the King might not depart till all was ended Ezek. 46.10 He shall goe in when they goe in and when they goe forth they shall goe forth together Let euery man make more conscience of this dutie hereafter and seeing Christ himselfe disdaineth not to come to Iohns baptisme let vs take heede of running from Christs And the renewing of the holy Ghost Now we come to speake of the inward means of our saluation wherby the Lord setteth vs into this new condition here called the renewing of the holy Ghost wherein to vnderstand it better we will consider two points 1. what this renewing is 2. why it is called the renewing of the holy Ghost and so come to the instructions For the former It is a grace of God whereby the corruption of nature in beleeuers is by the power of the holy Ghost daily renewed vnto the image of God I say 1. it is a grace of God 1. Pet. 1.3 Who according to his abundant mercie hath begotten vs to a liuely hope 2. by which the corruption of nature which is the proper obiect of it called in Scripture the flesh the old man not the substance of bodie or soule which were not decaied or perished but the corrupt qualities which by the fall tooke place in them 3. is renewed this is a word of relation and opposed to that olde corruption drawne from the old Adam for so is the new birth by the spirit opposed to that old natiuitie which is of the flesh Ioh. 3. Againe the word importeth a compleat worke vpon the whole subiect for as in the birth of a child not one or moe parts and members but the whole child is borne so in the new birth the whole man must be borne againe the whole man must be a new creature in which is not the framing of something out of something but of something out of nothing For if the Popish doctrine were true that there were some power in nature whereby the holy Ghost a little freeing it it could of it selfe will and performe that which is truly good then were man but in part new and so could not be called a new man a new creature or be said to be borne againe neither raised vp from the death of trespasses sinnes but reuiued and recouered as out of a swoone or some desperate disease nor renewed but a little repaired and mended But because the corruption of nature is gone ouer the whole man as we haue a little before heard so this renewing must be in the whole man and in the same order 1. It must begin in the spirit of the minde Rom. 12.2 the first worke in this new creation also must be to make the light to banish the darknes and blindnes of minde vnder which are comprehended the vnderstanding will and affections 2. It must proceede to the outward man and conuersation that euen the members of the bodie may become the members of Christ and obedient vnto the law of the mind renewed and so the whole may become a liuely reasonable and acceptable sacrifice vnto God In these two standeth the renewing of the whole man required 1. Thess. 5. The God of peace sanctifie you throughout and I pray God your whole soule bodie and spirit be kept blameablesse where is mention of the spirit as the very soule and life of a renewed person and is no other then the grace of sanctification opposed to the corruption of nature which is seated both in soule and bodie 4. I adde In beleeuers because regeneration is the vndeuided and inseparable companion of faith which is called the faith of the elect as we haue heard 2. Thess. 2.13 Chosen you to saluation through the sanctification of the spirit and the faith of truth whence it followeth that as faith is not of all no more is regeneration neither is this grace further tied to the Sacrament then where it meeteth with a faithfull receiuer 5. I say daily for although the beleeuer be renewed in euery part yet all is but in part it is so compleat in the subiect as that it is yet a continued worke and not consummate vntill we all meete in the vnitie of the Sonne of God when that perfect is come for so long as we are here below this righteousnes of God is revealed from faith to faith and we are changed from glorie to glorie and we walke from strength to strength In all things growing vp in him which is the head he that is iust must be iust still and he that is holy must be daily more holy and thus encrease vntill the perfect day 6. I adde vnto the image of God Eph. 4.24 Put on the new man which after God that is after Gods image is created in righteousnes and holines see also 2. Cor. 3.18 We are changed into the same image of God for as Adam was created in the image of God so must euery beleeuer be renewed vnto that blessed condition In a word looke what the image of God was which was giuen vs by our creation vnto the same must we be wrought now by the grace of the second couenant but that stood not in the substance of the soule and naturall faculties of it so much such as vnderstanding free will memorie c. but 1. in the knowledge and illumination of it Colos. 4.10 Put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge 2. in the righteousnes and integritie of the whole man Eph. 4.24 Put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnes and true holines The second point in the meaning is why this is called the renewing of the holy Ghost Answ. Not that it is not wrought as well by the other persons beeing a worke without themselues for the Father reneweth as beeing the foundation and
fountaine not of the Deitie alone but of all diuine actions and good things whatsoeuer and the Son reneweth as the Mediator and meriter of it But it is here ascribed to the holy Ghost because he is the immediate and next applyer of it to the conscience and therfore is more properly said to renew And yet wher I say that in regard of the other persons he doth more immediatly applie this grace it must not be so conceiued but that he ordinarily doth worke it by meanes vnto the which also often the Scriptures ascribe the worke of renewing As 1. the Ministers are his instruments by whome he begetteth men vnto God so Paul I haue begotten you by the Gospel that is ministerially 2. The word and Sacraments are outward meanes which the Spirit vseth to the same purpose And the word is hence called the immortall seede of regeneration and baptisme called the washing of regeneration in the words before because the Spirit in these outward meanes washeth and regenerateth 3. Faith is the inward meanes which the holy Ghost working and exciting in vs vseth by it to bring home to our hearts that which properly reneweth vs Act. 15. by faith he purifieth our hearts Thus we see how both the Father the Sonne the Spirit the ministers the word and Sacraments and our owne faith renew vs and how in their seuerall senses they are to be truly and plainly conceiued Doctr. 1. All the worke of inward grace in or out of baptisme is from the holy Ghost The thing that giueth force vnto washing by water is the renewing of the holy Ghost and this is regeneration indeede 1. Pet. 3.21 Baptisme saveth but not the washing of water but the interrogation of a good conscience that is the answer of a beleeuing heart acknowledging these sacraments to be seales and pledges of the righteousnesse of faith and that inward baptisme which indeede saueth Act. 2.38 Amend your liues and be baptised euery one in the name of Iesus Christ for remission of sinnes but all this will not serue the turne vnlesse the promise following be made good and ye shall receiue the gift of the holy Ghost 1. Cor. 6.11 Such were ye but ye are washed ye are iustified ye are sanctified but by what meanes by the waters of baptisme No they will not serue to iustification or sanctification but by the spirit of our God and if we would see this truth of both the Sacraments in one place we haue it propounded 1. Cor. 12.13 By one spirit we are all baptized into one bodie therefore not the water but the spirit setteth vs into the bodie of Christ by baptisme and wee are all made to drinke into one spirit and therefore the efficacie of the cuppe in the supper is to be ascribed to the spirit of God which spirit when he withdraweth himselfe we may truely say of the water in baptisme as the Apostle speaketh of the blood of bulls and goates that they cannot take away sinne The true materiall cause hereof is the blood of Christ the holy Ghost inwardly applying it vnto the soule and so inwardly indeede baptizing and washing the conscience Vse 1. This doctrine further ouerthroweth that Popish doctrine that the water in baptisme carrieth in it a force and efficacie of washing and sanctifying the soule And as for all those figures which Bellarmine produceth to this purpose we shall in few words see them conclude directly against himselfe Out of Gen. 1. The spirit of God mooued vpon the waters he concludeth that as the waters concurred necessarily to the making of all naturall things so the waters of baptisme necessarily concurreth to the conferring of the grace of regeneration in this second creation But who seeth not that these waters were dead without the spirits moouing and who seeth not that the spirit it is in baptisme which regenerateth and not the element vnlesse a bodily thing could properly worke vpon a spirituall 2. As for that in Gen. 7.17 The waters bare vp the Arke whence he concludeth that as the waters had a proper power to saue Noah and his familie euen so the waters of baptisme properly saue Besides the generall answer that similitudes prooue nothing but illustrate could Bellarmine if he had looked into the text so boldly haue detracted from the glorie of God which saith that Noah found grace in the sight of the Lord Gen. 6.8 with thee will I stablish my couenant verse 18. that the Lord bad him goe into the Arke cap. 7.1 that he shut him in the Arke 16. that he remembred him in the Arke and brought him out of the Ark cap. 8.1.16 all is ascribed vnto the grace couenant commandement hand and remembrance of God and not to the water and if Noah had beene saued by the clemencie of the waters and their power of sauing Noah was mistaken when he built an altar to the Lord vers 20. for hee should haue built his altar to the waters And if we would follow here the Iesuite we might make him wearie of his comparison If we should say 1. that the waters of the flood did for euery person and creature that they saued drowne a million therefore the waters of baptisme for one they saue drowne and damne a number which will not stand with their deuise of opus operatum 2. Noah was found righteous before he entred into the Arke cap. 7.1 and therefore both children and men of yeares may be sanctified before baptisme whence will follow that children of beleeuers dying before baptisme haue right both to the kingdome of heauen and Christian buriall vpon earth 3. It is said Heb. 11.7 By faith Noah prepared the Arke not which saued but to the sauing of himselfe and his houshold and that by faith he was made heire of righteousnesse without which faith neither the waters nor the Arke had done him any good and therefore neither without faith do the waters of baptisme saue or regenerate Lastly a poore reason it is of a Cardinal that because Moses or Noah is saued out of the waters therefore the waters saue him A third instance is in the waters of Iordan which saith he truly healed Naaman and was no seale of the promise and euen so the waters of baptisme truly confer grace But the truth is that water had no such power of healing of and in it selfe but only at that time in that institutiō and from the word of God which appeareth euen in Naamans indignation who neuer knew any more vertue or power in it then in Arbanah or Pharphar Againe Naaman being healed acknowledged not the vertue from the water but from God and therefore professed that he would henceforth neuer worship any other then the God of Israel and if it be lawfull for any Sophister from euery resemblance to conclude what he pleaseth why concludeth he nor for he may aswell that we must be baptised seauen times ouer for Naaman must wash seauen times ere he be cleane In
a word the very scope of this washing in Iordan directly concludeth against that Popish collection of his for why doth the Lord command him to goe and wash in Iordan rather then as he expected that the Prophet should lay his hand vpon him or by a word heale him Surely no stronger reason can be giuen then this that he should not attribute any power or vertue of the cure to the Prophets hand bodie or person but seeing he must doe that in which there is no such power at all but is so vnlikely a meanes of cure as Naaman almost scornefully reiected the whole glorie of the worke might returne to the God of Israel As vnlikely yea more that water should wash the leprosie of sinne from the conscience as the outward leprosie from the bodie of Naaman and indeede the worke in both is from the spirit of the Lord. The like may be said of the poole of Siloam wherein the blind man must wash and for that place in the 5. of Iohn concerning the poole of Bethesda which healed all manner of diseases the text saith plainly that it was the Angels stirring of the water and without it nothing was done and if the power had beene proper and naturall or inseparably tyed to it it would haue healed the second and third that had stepped in as well as the first So we say when the spirit of God mooueth these waters of baptisme there followeth a cure without which if a man were euery day baptized it would be vnavaileable to regeneration and sanctification Thus not to followe the rest and wast time in them we may see that when men willingly blind themselues it is iust with God to giue them vp to all delusions that in seeing they might not see nor vnderstand Vse 2. As to magnifie and reuerence these sanctified waters as the outward meanes in the right vse of which the spirit worketh and exhibiteth that which they represent so also to beware least wanting this inward worke of the spirit which giueth all efficacie and comfortable fruit of baptisme it become not a barren and a naked signe the rather in that the Lord himselfe obserued this corruption among his owne people that they stood too much vpon outward institutions as the Temple the law circ●mcision the fathers c. and therefore in many places charged them not to trust in such lying words but to get the foreskinne of their hearts circumcised as well as the foreskinne of their flesh and not to rest in the title of a Iewe which was to be one but outwardly and in the letter nor that they were descended of Abraham according to the flesh except they were Iewes within and descended of Abraham according to the faith also so as by doing his workes they might resemble him So when we see Christians stand so much vpon outward baptisme and are well contented without the inward vertue of it when we see them glorie in the bare title without the power of Christianitie it is our part to imitate the Lord and his Prophets and call our people to get the circumcision not made with hands but by the finger and spirit of God which is more then to wash the foulenesse of the bodie for it is to put off the sinfull bodie euen the wicked corruption of the heart for so it is expounded to be the resemblance of Christ in his death and buriall first and then in the life of grace and glorie to which he rose againe Boast not then of thy baptisme without this change of thy heart and life for then thou boastest of a broken vowe call it not thy Christendome vnlesse by it thou beest set into Christ and transplanted by it into the similitude of his death thou art no better before God then an heathen o● Turke notwithstanding thy bodie hath beene washed in this lauer if thy heart still remaine foule and filthy and as good neuer a whit as neuer the better And this I speake of good ground and in the language of Scripture Do we not see the Iewes charged as not circumcised although they had the skinne of their flesh cut Isai. ●4 57.3 and Steuen goeth not as we say behind the doore to call them st●ff●necked and vncircumcised so why may not we speake the truth retaining in our hearts and stile the reuerence of that holy ordinance that the water in baptisme further then ioyned to the word and applyed to this holy ende authentically to seale that which God hath engrauen vpon it is no better vnto the vnbeleeuer then ordinarie pumpe water It is too Iewish and yet too common that the religion and profession of Christiās standeth for most part in outward shewe and glorie and such things as are made by the hands of men wanting that spirit and truth which is indeede the crowne of Christianitie and yet alas what will the representation of Christs death and resurection doe good if the vertue and power of it be wanting in the soule Vnto thy outward baptisme get the heauens opened as in the baptisme of Christ and see that the spirit hath descended vpon thee to the conuerting of thy soule and begetting thee to a newe life for this is the soule of baptisme without which it is a dead letter and a fruitlesse ceremonie Vse 3. As it is with baptisme so is it with all other ordinances of God no outward meanes of saluation can be effectuall vnlesse the inward worke of the spirit be added We haue power to come and heare the word but vnlesse the anoynting teach vs we shall remaine vntaught yea let the Apostles themselues preach the Lord must worke with them also or nothing will be done These two the spirit of the Lord vpon vs and his word in our mouthes make vp a sweete harmonie And how is it else that men after so long powerfull preaching and frequent hearing remaine ignorant hard hearted rebellious surely the reason is because the Lord giueth not an heart to perceiue and because the spirit bloweth not there to giue the seeing eye and hearing eare which where it is wanting a man may sit out as many summons as Pharaoh did and neuer the better yea the more hardned So in afflictions and corrections which are durable and lingring on many why do men profit so little why doe they not open the doore of discipline why are not the roddes of correction the tree of life to a number surely because the spirit boareth not the eare he teacheth not the right vse of them Obiect But what can I doe withall if the spirit teach me not Answ. The spirit would not be wanting if men would come preparedly to be taught But 1. men come without beleefe and mingle not the word with faith and so it becommeth vnprofitable or 2. without repentance whereas the humble shall be taught in the way onely or 3. without praier and the spirit powreth not out these waters of grace but vpon thirstie
grounds or 4. laden with lusts and then the spirit will not sowe among thornes And thus all the meanes of saluation enioyed out of their holy vse are turned to greater condemnation Who art thou then that contentest thy selfe to come to Church to heare to pray to reade keepest the Sabbaths professest the Gospel to haue the countenance of religious persons whereas in the meane time thou wantest the inward master the spirit of supplication the power of the Gospel All is wrong with thee thou hast embraced a shadow for the substance and found a● it were the cloathes of Christ but the bodie is risen and gone Begge at the hands of God therefore in all thy duties publike and priuate the presence of the spirit who alone can worke thy heart wait for Gods teaching for this is the way to become vvise to saluation Doctr. 2. God in sauing vs from our miserie reneweth vs vnto his own image of righteousnes and holines for he saueth vs by giuing vs vnto his sonne and if any be in Christ he must become a new creature which new creature is called the new man which after God is created and which must be renewed on vs in knowledge after the image of him that ereated him Colos. 3.9 The Apostle Peter teacheth vs that great and precious promises namely of life and saluation are made vnto vs. But how come we to ●nioye them the next words shew by beeing made partakers of the diuine nature and flying corruptions which are in the world through lust This diuine nature is nothing else but the renewing of vs vnto the image of God by which beeing freed from the corruption of the world we become of earthly and fleshly heauenly and diuine like vnto our Father practising those heauenly qualities which God by his spirit createth in vs such as are the hatred of sinne loue of pietie the contempt of the world and the breathing after life eternall by all which we seeme and after a sort put on his nature and image The same truth haue we confirmed by Zachariah in his song where he maketh this part of Gods image standing in righteousnes holines a fruit of our redemption and iustification Vse 1. This doctrine letteth vs see the absolute necessitie of our renewing without which there can be no saluation Ioh. 3.5 Except a man be borne againe of water and the spirit he cannot be saued And the reason is because by it as by an inward meane the Lord setteth vs into the state of saluation That washing of the Disciples feete was not only an example of humilitie but a symbole and representation of this washing away of sinnes in this our renewing by the blood of Christ and therefore Christ saith vnto Peter If I wash thee not thou hast no part in mee And indeed who can haue part in Christ that will not part from his foule sinnes that he may be cleane which if it be true how farre doe men delude themselues who thinke they can walke with Christ and haue part in him and yet haue neither hand nor foote head nor heart washed from guile Euery Simon Magus will thinke to haue part in this businesse as well as Simon Peter and yet inwardly nourish a bitter gall of iniquitie But let no man henceforth deceiue himselfe for the sinner that will not be washed hath no part in the kingdome of God and of Christ. 2. It affoardeth a triall whether a man be in the way of saluation or no hee that is a new creature is in the way of life Obiect But this is a secret worke of the spirit and how can we know it Answ. First thou must be borne againe to which is required that God become thy Father in Christ the Church thy mother the word the immortall seed of which thou art begotten there must be a conception wherein Christ must be formed in thee a birth wherein by the helpe of Ministers as midwiues thou must be brought into this spirituall world a desire of the sincere milke of the word drawne out of the two Testaments the brests of the mother and after a desire of stronger meat to grow stronger by Now thou art borne vnto God but what a parable is this to many euen old men Masters and Teachers and Rulers in Israel who know no natiuitie but one of Adam and Eue no progenie of God and his Church know no parents but such as beget earthly children vnto naturall life base borne sonnes of the earth not knowing any heauenly Father neither principall nor ministeriall begetting them to any heauenly life of grace or glorie Secondly after this birth all old things must passe away and euery thing must become new he that is washed is all cleane And therefore there must be 1. a new light in the minde and vnderstanding conceiuing the things of the spirit of God For as the further blinding of men is a note and brand of a reprobate so is it a note of one begotten to God to be renewed in knowledge Col. 3.9 Secondly there must be a newe qualitie in the will readie to heare the voice of Christ in all things and obey it The Scripture noteth it a marke of an vngodly wretch to be further obdurate and hardened but he that is borne of God heareth his words Ioh. 8.47 he carrieth a flexible heart vnto the word and 1. Ioh. 2.29 he that doth righteously is borne of him Thirdly there must be a new conuersation manifesting the workes and fruits of the spirit a life lead in the practise of raigning sinne and making shewe of the works of the flesh is a note of him that is lead by the flesh but he that is borne of God sinneth not 1. Ioh. 3.9 he hath sinne in him but not raigning Rom. 6.4 he doth sinne also but 1. it is not he but the sinne in him 2. it is against his heart and intention 3. he lyeth no● in his sinne but his course is according to the commandement and a walking after the spirit Fourthly There must be new affections as the loue of God hatred of all sinne especially in himselfe loue of good men of pietie of puritie of the light the whole first Epistle of Iohn bea●eth vpon this point for it is a note of one in darkenesse to hate the light to hate the brethren c. men thinke it a sound plea when they ouershoote themselues in affections speaches or actions to say they are flesh and blood and they must hate and speake their minds c. but if thou beest no more then flesh and blood thou shalt neuer come in heauen Christians are of the blood and flesh and bone of Christ and therefore must subiect themselues in all things to be ruled by his spirit Fiftly there must be meanes vsed to preserue all these as namely the spirit of prayer and supplication Zach. 12.10 a child new borne into the world crieth presently and that which doth
not is still borne or a dead child and vnder this I comprehend a cheerefulnesse to all the parts of the publike and priuate worshippe of God whereas the Prophet maketh it a note of a wicked man that he calleth not vpon God that is he casteth off the whole worship of God Wouldst thou then finde thy selfe to be a newe creature finde this change that the clouds of darkenes and ignorance are remooued that thou hast an heart of flesh that thou findest an abatement of thy sinnes and lusts that thou hast heauenly motions that thou vsest meanes carefully of thy spirituall life that thou growest by the nourishment of the word Sacraments prayer reading conference and other exercises of godlines and repentance this is the way of life which thou hast happily found thou art now much nearer saluation then when thou first beleeued Vers. 6. Which he shed on vs abundantly through Iesus Christ our Sauiour To come to the right meaning of this verse we must explane fowre things 1. the gift bestowed which that is the spirit as the former words import 2. the person bestowing him he that is God the Father 3. the measure of the gift 1. powred out 2. plentifully or shed on vs abundantly 4. the person meriting this gift that is Iesus Christ described here to be our Sauiour through Iesus Christ our Sauiour First the gift is the spirit or holy Ghost Quest. How can the spirit be bestowed Answ. In the spirit two things must be considered 1. his essence and person 2. his gifts and effects The former cannot be conferred for neither can his essence or person be concluded in the whole frame of heauen and earth and much lesse in the narrow corners of mans heart he beeing an infinite God equall with the father and the sonne But the latter may for so 1. Cor. 12.11 the Apostle speaking of sundrie operations and gifts ●aith all these things worketh the same spirit and this phrase must be vnderstood by an other Act. 2.17 where Peter alleadging the place out of Ioel 1.28 I will powre out my spirit thus explaineth it I will powre out of my spirit that is the sauing gifts and graces of my spirit such as here the renewing of the spirit by iustification and sanctification of which we shall heare m●re in the next ve●se The second thing is the person bestowing the holy Ghost he that is the Father as ver 4. who as he is the fountaine of the deitie so of all good actions and operations Ioh. 14.26 But when the comforter shall come whom the Father shall send Obiect But Christ saith that he will send the spirit from the Father Ans. This maketh no difference in the thing the spirit proceedeth first from the father as the first in the Trinitie and from the Sonne as from the second in order in the Trinitie and he onely expresseth this order when he saith whome I will send from the Father for when the Father sendeth the holy Ghost it is by the Sonne in whom all our good is deriued but not as by an instrument but as from a principall efficient with the Father onely the second in order from the Father Thirdly the measure of the gift is noted 1. In that he is said to shed or powre him out he saith not he gaue or communicated or dropped or showred but powred him out which noteth the liberallitie and plentie of the thing conferred namely of the graces of the spirit called by the name of the Spirit himselfe that we might conceiue of the bountifulnesse of our God who seemeth rather to communicate the verie fountaine it selfe of grace then the streames and riuers of it In which Metaphor note by the way that the graces of the spirit are here compared to waters which most properly are powred out and that not vnfitly For 1. as water washeth the filthinesse of the bodie so these graces as the pure waters of sanctification wash and cleanse the soule from the corruption and sinne of it Ezek. 36.25 I will powre cleane water 2. water hath a naturall qualitie to extinguish heat and quench the thirst of man and beast so onely these waters bring with them refreshing against the hotte wrath of God which otherwise would prooue a consuming fire for he that drinketh of this water shall neuer thirst more that is he shall neuer wish that grace sooner whereof he shall not drinke to sacietie 3. water softeneth the earth and maketh it fruitfull so these graces of the spirit mollifie the heart so fitteth it vnto all good works which are the fruits of the spirit without which we should be as the heath in the wildernes and as a parched land which seeth not when any good commeth But the second word whereby this immeasurable grace bestowed is signified is the aduerb abundantly or if we wil goe nearer the original richly and so when the Apostle writ this Epistle the spirit was indeed abundantly powred out and that in three respects First in regard of the diuerse kinds of gifts then powred out as 1. The common gifts of the spirit which all good and bad partake in were in greater abundāce thē euer before bestowed such as the gifts of illumination outward calling profession of the truth common generall faith 2. The more especiall gifts of sanctification the which our text most aimeth at as of faith regeneration loue hope c. for so the Apostle seemeth to restraine the graces he speaketh of saying on vs who are renewed by the holy ghost As both the prophet Ioel and Peter speaking the same thing seeme to doe the one mentioning my seruants my handmaids the other speaking of such as inuocate and call vpon the name of the lord and to this purpose we might shew what a number were daily conuerted and how in those dayes the kingdome of God was taken by force 3. More extraordinarie and miraculous gifts which were more proper to those times and in great abundance distributed are here included as the gifts of tongues of healing diseases casting out deuils porphesying command of death after a sort to take and leaue mens bodies and sundrie such other very frequent then aboue all times before or since Secōdly these gifts were plentifully powred out in regard of the persons people vpon whom they were conferred not now vpon some few Iews or handfull of people as before Christs ascension but vpon all flesh saith Ioel 2.28 vpon euerie nation vnder heauen saith Peter Now both Iew and Gentile bond and free circumcision vncircumcision all respect and acceptation of persons remooued haue equall part and promise in these graces Thirdly in regard of the meanes in which the spirit now conueled these graces that is the word Sacraments and ministerie of the new Testament which farre exceeded in glorie all that ministerie that euer was before it For in former time they sawe in their ministerie things a farre off in types shadowes clouds but
If we obserue in the multitude the high atheisme contempt of God and his word his Sabbaths Sacraments Ministers and his whole worship if we listen vnto the cursed oaths and imprecations if we cast our eyes vpon the iniustice pride riot hatred and earthlinesse which dwelleth euerie where with men can we now conceiue other but that the wicked spirit which ruleth in the world of the disobedient is abundantly powred out rather then this pure spirit here mentioned And if we behold the numbers of men who scorne and powre contempt on such as haue receiued the smallest measure of these graces can we thinke that such abundant grace is powred vpon men on earth seeing the most seeke vnder the titles of schisme or heresie to hunt it and banish it from off the face of the earth Or yet if we further looke vpon men that make shew of receiuing competencie of these waters who are yet neuer a whit washed nor euer a whit the cleaner they come to Church and heare they seeme to like good things and walke in ciuill conuersation but in regard of the soundnesse of their hearts we wash bricks or Aethiopians and loose all our labour may we not now well aske where is the abundance of this grace we speake of Or if we looke at such as haue receiued true grace howsoeuer the Lord will bring it to something in the ende yet we can scarse see on them or in them any such abundance but like strait necked vessels they receiue it but droppe by droppe although it be powred on them with full buckets We seldome see professors like trees of righteousnesse laden with the fruits of the spirit or walking or standing in Gods orchyard of the Church in a constant course of fruitfulnes but now and then in good moodes some works of pietie and mercie may be fou●d in their hands and the best of men come farre short of their watring in their encrease If the spirit were powred out from aboue would it not make our wildernesses fruitfull fields oh let vs bewaile our owne vncapablenesse in the sence of our wants and euerie man vrge his owne heart Is the spirit powred out on my soule he is the spirit of light and illumination I should then be filled with all knowledge of God he is the spirit of grace compunction and compassion I should therefore be much and often in the exercises of repentance and a broken heart he is the spirit of sanctification I should therefore abound in all holy conuersation he is the spirit of consolation I should therefore exceede with true and sound ioy and peace of good conscience he is the spirit of loue and therefore I should powre out workes of loue and mercie aboundantly if he were abundantly powred out on my soule Thus should euerie man examine his owne heart 2. If vpon this examination we feele not this plentie of grace we must ware of accusing God but condemne our selues in whom all the fault is as who refuse and despise so great grace If any aske how it can come to passe that such excellent grace should be refused I answer there are three maine causes of it 1. ignorance and blindnesse of minde 2. hardnesse of heart 3. securitie which three destitute vs of so abundant grace as is offered First we see not know not and therefore affect not these graces Ioh. 4.10 If thou hadst knowne the gift of God thou wouldst haue asked and he would haue giuen thee waters of life Water is so necessarie a creature as nothing can be more dangerously or vncomfortably wanting to the life of man this euery man seeth by the eye of his sence and so are much more these spirituall waters of life vnto the heauenly life which because men cannot discerne with the same eie they neuer affect nor thirst after them whence it commeth to passe that as the Poet in the fable men stand as it were vp to the chinne in these waters and yet die for water euen in the midst of those sweete streames die eternally for want of them If we want them therefore it is because we thirst not after them for onely he that thirsteth is called to them and Christ will giue onely to him that thirsteth to drinke of them Enlarge thy heart therefore wait vpon the Lord open thy mouth wide and he will fill it Samson readie to die for thirst called vpon the Lord and the Lord opened a chawbone and a riuer came gushing out so if thou seeing the necessitie and that there is no way but eternall death without these liuing waters and thirst after the Lord and call earnestly he will before thou shalt want euen by miracle abundantly supply thee but if thou esteemest of grace as a thing thou maist best want there is good reason thou be without it The second let is hardnesse of heart and worse then the former for that cannot affect because it knoweth not this will not though it know but keepeth the soule drie and barren without the least droppe of grace powre a sea of water vpon a rocke it remaineth a rocke still neuer a drop sinketh in and so is it with many a man he setteth himselfe by yeares together vnder the preacher he heareth gratious doctrine but the invinsible hardnes of his heart suffereth not one droppe of these dewes of heauen to sinke into his soule but as the light of the sunne shineth onely on the outside of a tree so doth this sunne of the Church on such a man but neuer getteth within him The third let is securitie ioyned with extreame neglect of meanes wherein the spirit vsually conveieth these graces A man that meaneth to be rich will not neglect his calling nor the meanes ●e seeth offered but he that meaneth to die a begger casteth vp al foldeth his hands together putteth them in his bosome care away let the squares goe as they will Art thou minded to bee rich in grace then must thou vse the meanes frequent the places and pipes where these waters flowe Quest. Where shall we haue them Answ. They runne from vnder the threshold of the Sanctuarie and the ordinarie pipes wherein the Lord in greatest abundance conueieth them are the word and Sacraments in their right and reuerent vse The Prophet Ioel hauing spoken of these abundant waters leadeth his hearers by the hand to the quickspring wher they rise In that day shall all the riuers of Iudah runne with waters and a fountaine shall runne out of the house of the Lord and water the valley of Sittim where the choice Cedars were betokening the trees of righteousnesse within the pale of the Church of God Here then is the place where thou maist drawe with ioy waters out of the wells of consolation all in the plurall number waters wells because here is promise made of more abundant blessing And yet while thy plough goeth abroad thou maist not be idle within doores for the Lord would
in your callings and seuerall conditions of life then look abroad into the field of my Church and there you shall not want wherein to employ your strength counsell exhortation mercie loue zeale diligence and all the graces yee haue Neither is it harder to set Christians on worke then to hold them vnto it The profits and pleasures of this life call them often from the speciall busines of Christianitie because they enquire not whether in such seuerall actions they seeke God or themselues What am I a beleeuer I should in euerie action glorifie God testifie my faith beautifie my profession edifie my brethren I ought to winne the ignorant bring on the weake or at least stoppe the mouth of the enemie who will be readie to say You may see what a slight excuse will serue any of them all to misse a sermon what a slight profit will make them forget themselues their father whom they professe and their Fathers house what a slender busines will interrupt and breake off for the time their family duties what a trifle will make them at oddes and suites with others yea themselues for they can be as contentious as any other Alas am not I a Christian a beleeuer am I not called to better things haue I not promised better should I make the deuill glad his instruments reioyce Gods spirit sad his children heauie should I occasion profane ones through my sides to wound all my profession should I open a Papists mouth or harden him against the truth should I cast backe weake ones by such fruites in me a professor should I cast off the care of my brethren and bring shame on all my fathers house Haue I faith or are these the fruits of it would it not rather be fed still in the ministerie would it not vpon all good occasions be working by loue can a beleeuer be so slacke so heauie so idle so secure so couetous so contentious so scandalous as I am oh I must looke better to the matter When I first entred into the wayes of God I said I promised I would looke to my waies I would not offend in my tongue in my hand in my eye in my life and conuersation and by Gods grace hereafter I will pay these vowes to the Lord in the sight of all his people Now for watching opportunities seeking occasions of doing good we feare them we flie them we avoid charitable motions and repute it our wisdome not to heare them selfe loue and selfe ease slaieth our profession deadeth our faith and burieth our loue to God and to men can working faith be so idle or beleeuing persons so workles or trees of Gods orchyard so fruitles shall greene leaues make vs good trees or good words good Christians Let vs pull out our hands out of our warme bosomes and fall to worke and leaue idle iangling It would bee more for the honour of God and his Gospell if professors would either doe more or say lesse practise something like or professe nothing at all Where is the communion of Saints become when doe professors meet together to edifie themselues by godly conference when enquire they one of an other where is a poore christian either sicke or in other distresse that we may gather him a little releefe were not such a fellowship as this likest vnto the purest Primitiue Church in the dayes of the Apostles themselues and were it not now fitter for beleeuers then liue so priuately minded as many as though we could not be religious vnles as of olde we cloister our selues like Monks liuing within our priuate wals feeding vp our selues storing vp for ours but forgetting Iosephs affliction And surely what is the cause we see not such a comfortable communion but because those that beleeue in God are so heauie vnto good workes the richer sort which should be as great wheeles to set forward the poorer either looke bigge vpon them or for other employments haue not so much leasure as they their own ploughs must forward whatsoeuer become of Gods and the poorer sort want both meanes and example Doctr. 3. In that the Apostle willeth Titus to affirme these things deliuered and addeth this as a reason because they are good and profitable we obserue that Ministers in their teaching must haue respect to these two things 1. That they deliuer true sound and good matter in it selfe 2. That it be profitable for the hearers First it must be true and sound else are they not of Gods sending for whom he sendeth he furnisheth with a word of truth as on the contrarie Satan is a lying spirit in the mouthes of seducers Now then is it true when it is deuided aright and then deuided aright when it is truly and properly grounded on the place whence it is raysed as also when it is truly and rightly applied Ayming 1. to please God and not men or the times 2. to beate downe sinne and not open a doore to libertie or licentiousnesse 3. to comfort and encourage such as walke vprightly and not make the hearts of those heauy to whom the Lord speaketh peace Let the doctrin be neuer so true if it be misaplied it ceaseth to be Gods who alwaies speaketh to the heart of his children Secondly it must be profitable as well as true For 1. euery thing in the Church must be done to edifie and consequently spoken also 2. All assemblies are appointed for the profit and for the better of the Church 1. Cor. 11.17 3. The commandement is to deliuer nothing but what may breed godly edifying 1. Tim. 1.4 and not to striue about words to no profit 1. Tim. 2.14 bounded with a threatning that the Lord will come against such Prophets as seeke out vaine things and such as bring no profit to his people Ier. 23.32 4. examples Paul professeth of himselfe that he kept nothing backe which was profitable Act. 20.20 Nay the Lord hims●lfe setteth himselfe a worthy example hereof to all teachers and preachers Isa. 48.17 I am the Lord thy God which ●eacheth thee to profit and leadeth thee the waie thou hast to goe Vse 1. It is not inough that a Minister be a great scholler but hee must be a true teacher too Many a learned man is a false Prophet wherof we haue pregnant example in the Church of Rome in whom we see the speach true that in Gods matters the greatest clearks are not euer the wisest men It is obserueable also in the Scribes Pharisies and Rabbies of the Iewes that depth of learning hath not alwaies the truth cheyned vnto it but that the Lord according to his accustomed manner working in and by weake things often reuealeth more sauing wisdome to some poore contemned humble soule then to all the great clearks who may otherwise professe that they haue the very key of knowledge which is not spoken that any should hence be emboldned to contemne so excellent an ornament as lea●ning is but only to shew that the Lord
tyeth not himselfe and truth vnto it Obiect But we haue no teachers who teach not the truth Answ. We are to blesse God that the truth of religion is so happily taught and protected as it is and Satan wanteth of his will that it is so and yet can we thinke that his mallice now towards the end is so abated or that the state of the Church is now aboue all times so priuiledged as that he hath not his instruments still labouring to corrupt and depraue the truth broaching so farre as they dare their priuate opinions for which the truth is little beholding vnto them The Prophet Ieremie speaketh of Prophets who prophecied lyes in the name of the Lord and saith they prophecied false vision and diuination and vanitie and the deceitfulnesse of their owne hearts why what was that in that they said Yee shall not see the sword and famine shall not come but I will giue you assured peace in this place If we shall heare such sweet inchanting voyces all is well with vs we haue the most flourishing and most reformed Church that euer was since the Apostles dayes and we may take a nappe and rest in our peace and prosperitie what way can we be mooued surely these words may seeme the visions of mens owne hearts the rather in that the Lord by his owne hand from heauen proclaiming the contrarie by durable plagues and lasting iudgements of plagues famines vnseasonablenesse of weather by yeares together and for the troubles and oppositions in the Church when or where were they stronger since the Gospel first entred If we shall here voyces whispering oh men are too precise too pure too forward and what need so much teaching so much running trotting to sermons and disgracing such as frequent the meanes of saluation more carefully with the tearmes of sermon-gadders and sermon-mungers and such Is the truth which desireth nothing more then the light beholding to such visions of mens owne hearts or can we here acknowledge the stile of the spirit and word of truth If we shall meete with doctrines giuing libertie to profane gaming and pastimes on the Lords sabboath and then hauing gotten in a finger go on to make it an indifferent thing to keepe or not to keepe but only the times of Church required by law and further make it questionable whether we ought to keepe this present Sabboath or devise some other is not this as great a blow to the truth as she can receiue more then she looketh for in the house of her freinds which let it preuaile we shall see a poore staruen pietie among men in very few daies If we meet with other defences iustifying and approouing euery thing and any thing to be spoken in the pulpit besides the pure word of God which is profitable to teach improoue correct and instruct in all righteousnesse that a man may moyle himselfe and hearers in pudles I speake comparatiuely in regard of the pure word of God when in the meane time the sweet streames which run from vnder the threshold of the Sanctuarie are neglected how is the truth here honoured when the Scriptures the fountaine of it are so vnequally matched If it shall be affirmed that whosoeuer shall in name professe themselues to be Christians the Sacraments are not to be denied them although they be openly wicked because all men are subiect to sinne If men shall make a tush and a light or no falt to sweare by faith or trothe c. because it is but a custome of the tongue surely we may say if these be the voyces of Prophets they are of such as Christ speaketh of which deceiue many which make iniquitie abound and the loue to the truth grow key cold Vse 2. To people to pray to the Lord 1. To giue pastors according to his owne heart not such as may seeke out vaine and foolish things the froth of wit and learning but such things as may feed their soules with wisedome and vnderstanding 2. For the spirit of discerning to trie the spirits by which are of God for the guise of false teachers is priuily to bring in damnable doctrines and craftely to creepe into mens affections and men more easily run after them because they speake something pleasing to corrupt nature sometimes in the matter sometimes in the manner and therefore such as would not be deceiued by them must be prouoked to more warinesse 3. For the spirit of subiection that they may receiue the truth as truth for else it will be iust with God to giue them ouer to be seduced with false teachers and to beleeue lyes For those that despise his counsell shall eate of the fruit of their owne way and be filled with their owne devises those that regard not to know God shall by God be deliuered vp to a reprobate sence and those that will not beleeue one Micah but hate him shall fall into the hands of foure hundreth false Prophets to fall by them 4. Commend the cause of the truth vnto the Lords protection entreating him that it may be continued euen to this our Church and Land the which surely by the great contempt and abuse of the light and the bringers of it we haue iustly forfeyted and deserue to be plagued with all kind of illusions as Poperie profanesse Brownisme Atheisme the which fearefull iudgements haue made out great head alreadie and are forerunners of greater euills and beginnings of more bitter sorrowes without timely repentance And to what other ground can we ascribe all these euills but vnto the iust iudgement of God for our hatred and abuse of the light the candlesticks of it Vers. 9. But stay foolish questions and genealogies and contentions and brawlings about the lawe for they are vnprofitable and vaine Although Titus hath beene in the former verse commanded to teach and beat home such true and profitable points of doctrine as we haue heard yet must he know that he hath receiued but halfe his errand and is but halfe way in his dutie wherein if he would be compleat he must further circumspectly watch against and represse all vaine and fruitles teaching especially those kinds here mentioned either suffering them not to breake out at all or if they doe to nippe and blast them quickly and betimes if he can he must stoppe them in the head if he cannot do that he must stay them in the streame The verse standeth on two parts 1. a precept to stay foolish questions and genealogies and contentions and brawlings about the law 2. a reason of it for they are vnprofitable and vaine For the meaning of the words we must knowe that our Apostle condemneth not the moouing of euerie question in handling the word for there are many necessarie ones in diuinitie which for our instruction and edification we may enquire and dispute thus we reade that Paul disputed often and thus we are trained and furnished in the diuinitie schoole to defend
as if he be a leader a seducer or wilfull in his error as also of the degree of his offence and error as if it be a direct ouerthrowe of the foundation or an high blasphemie or such as may turne to the ouerthrowe of pure religion established or the disturbance of publike peace or otherwise according to the nature of the fact may and ought to proceede to a proportionall degree of punishment whether by mulcts or imprisonment or banishment yea in the extremitie of euill to the extreame remedie euen of death it selfe for there is no remedie but if a soare prooue a gangreene it must be cut off True it is that the charitie of the Church must aime at the cutting off of errors rather then mens persons but if the nature of the error so require euen the last punishment by death as it is in the hand of the Magistrate so will it be most iust and proportionall That it is in the power of the Magistrate to cut off incurable and invincible heretiks is cleare 1. by precept Deut. 13.5 of slaying the false Prophet and Deut. 17.5 of stoning the idolater 2. by example of Moses Exod. 32.35 slaying 3000. of the Leuites for the idolatrie of the calfe of Helias 1. Kin. 18.40 who slewe 400. of Baals Priests when there was no Magistrate to do it so of Iosias 2. King 23.6 of Iehu 2. King 10.25 yea wicked Nebuchadnezzar made a decree that whosoeuer blasphemed Daniels God should die the death The same might easily be prooued out of Imperiall constitutions and iudgements of Fathers and Councels Now that this is the fittest punishment for some heretikes we may gather by the instance of Arrius whom Constantine the great banished indeed but how much better had it beene for the world if he had taken such a monster from the face of the earth how much better had that sparkle beene with himselfe extinct before it had come to set the whole world on fire and if he that reuileth his Prince deserueth death as a traitor how much more he that blasphemeth the name of God or any part of his truth Obiect But Christ biddeth vs beware of false Prophets but not to slay them yea wisheth to suffer both to growe together till the haruest And Paul neuer giueth other commandement concerning them then to avoid them and withdrawe our selues from them And Musculus expounding the place in 1. Cor. 5. concerning the incestuous person hath these words he commaundeth not to kill him but to remooue him from among them Answ. 1. Some such places are such precepts as are di●ected vnto the Churches whose weapons are spirituall and hath no such power of life and death ouer the bodie or outward man 2. Some other institute and informe the Pastors of the Churches how to carrie themselues towards such offenders as this in hand and the like to Timothie but intend not to speake any thing of the Magistrates dutie So Bullinger affirmeth that here Paul enformeth Titus and not Sergius Paulus how to carrie himselfe towards an incurable and desperate heretike 3. These precepts were deliuered when there was no Christian Magistrate to performe the dutie and therefore the Chuches were more carefully vrged vnto theirs 4. They must all be vnderstood with respect 1. of the qualitie of the persons and offences which must be distinguished 2. of the Church as whether such tares can be plucked vp without apparant hurt of the Church for else they must be let stand and so must that place be meant least ye also plucke vp the good wheat and this is agreeable also to the doctrine of the auncient who aduised rather to tollerate some lesser euill then that a greater good should be hindered or a greater euill occasioned Vse 1. Seeing excommunication is such a grieuous censure it is not to be inflicted rashly or for trif●les but delibe●ately in matters of waight and much moment yea heauily and not without inward griefe that the Church is vrged to such seueritie For 1. if it be a greiuous thing to be disfraunchized and cast out of a wel ordered common wealth how much more to be cast out of the church the commonwealth of Israel Which made some of minde that this censure is not to be vsed but in such cases as wherein the Iewish lawe condemned to the death the which strictnes in that it may seeme to confound the Iewish Iudiciall lawe with Euangelicall discipline howsoeuer I will not maintaine yet surely as Musculus well noteth I thinke it ought not to be vsed but in such cases as more expressely shut out of the kingdome of heauen and such as the Apostle mentioneth 1. Cor. 6. because it is a declaration of that which is by God done in heauen who for a non apparance or not paiment of a trifling fee thrusteth not out of heauen Secondly it must be vsed as a last and desperate remedy euen as the Surgeon trieth all gentle meanes before launcing seating or cutting off Thirdly it must be done with griefe and sorrowe of the whole Church euen as a member in the bodie cannot be cut off without extreame paine to the whole This is a fitter affection then anger couetousnesse or any other such sordid and base selfe seeking in dispensing the iudgements of the Lord. Fourthly It must be done verie sparingly in wisedome and moderation whereof we haue a notable patterne in the Church of Geneva wherein such was the power of the word and wisedome of the Pastors in restoring offenders by the spirit of meekenesse that in the space of whole tenne yeares as M. Beza himselfe confesseth onely two persons were stricken with this censure Now of the fearefull abuse of this censure whereby it is daily turned into an idle scarecrow sold and bought at a vile price I neede not speake any thing seeing the thing it selfe speaketh so loud would God it were as well reformed as it is by a number of the godly learned discouered Vse 2. If heretikes must be avoided then it followeth that Protestants ought to avoid all communion and mixture with hereticall Churches persons namely with that hereticall Apostaticall Church of Rome and the members of it To prooue it an hereticall Synagogue I shall not neede to spend time after those two famous lights our learned D. Whitakers and Reynolds the former of whome hath prooued that the present Church of Rome is no particular Church but hereticall and ouerturning the foundation and grounds of faith as by eighteene seuerall points he instanceth and concludeth that whosoeuer would be saued must necessarily forsake her as an antichristian and Satanicall synagogue The other in his fifth Thesis of his learned booke defendeth that the Romane Church is neither Catholike nor a sound member of the Catholike Church in explaining the tearmes whereof he saith that the newe Romane Church is tainted with a gangrene of most pestilent heresies which euerie
reasons also vpon which they are grounded As namely 1. some offenders are curable and what man in his wits will cut off his arme or legge so sonne as it beginneth to ake and paine him and not rather vse meanes of surgerie and cure is any member in the bodie so despised 2. Our selues must not be so vncharitable as presently to dispaire of any mans conuersion God may in time raise the most desperate sinner vnto repentance 3. The meanes vsed are not lost for if it attaine no other end yet shall it make them more inexcusable the censure more iust and the Churches proceeding more equall and moderate 4. Adde hereunto the Lords example who neuer striketh before he haue sufficiently warned he neuer precipitateth either sentence or execution but first commeth downe to see Gen. 18.21 and hearkneth and heareth Malac. 3.16 and accordingly passeth sentence 2. Note that when a sinner is knowne to sinne of obstinacie the best way is to auoid him and cast him out For 1. labour is but lost on such a one 2. He doth but tread holy things vnder his feete of which holy things the Church is the keeper and must be faithfull 3. He sinnes not only of iudgement and reason but of affection and this is the reason why verie few heretikes are conuerted when many vnregenerate men and outragiously wicked in other kinds are who sinne not of affection and wilfulnesse but of corrupt iudgement onely 4. The Lords example Hose 4.17 Ephraim is ioyned to Idols Let him alone he is incurable Obiect But if he be thus left vnto himselfe am not I accessarie to his condemnation or might not I by still following him be a meanes of his conuersion at length and ought not I to waite still when God will giue repentance Answ. No he so sinneth as the text saith himselfe condemneth himselfe and his sinne is vpon his owne head who wilfully and laboriously destroyeth him 2. As the ordinances of God are deare vnto himselfe so ought they to be also vnto vs so as we may not expose them to the contempt of a scorner 3. Thou hast not left him till he be apparantly desperate no otherwise then a Phisician hath left a desperate patient whose disease is not worse then his froward disposition in refusing all meanes of health and safetie 4. Euen the neglect of him may by bringing him to enter into himselfe prooue a nearer way of winning him then any familiar course or conuerse with him 3. Note hence also what vse the Lord maketh of a wicked conscience euen in desperate sinners It shall be the accuser witnesse and iudge to pronounce the sentence of death against his owne soule and so shall make way vnto the Lords most righteous iudgement Iudas himselfe beeing surcharged with conscience of his sinne read the sentence against himselfe there beeing no other to doe it saying I haue sinned in betraying innocent blood and then went and hanged himselfe For this purpose the Lord hath put into the soule not only a knowledge whereby naturally euen the wicked can discerne between that which is honest and dishonest yea between good and euill so farre as to make them excuseles but also an application of that knowledge vnto the seuerall actions of life From which two issue two other faculties which are the verie nature of conscience 1. A testification that such an action is done or not done yea although a man would not haue it so to testifie 2. A iudgement after triall whether it be well done or no the fruits of which iudgement are either ioy peace and glorying in things which the conscience saith are well done or else horror in soule as in Caine trembling in bodie as in Faelix fearefull dreams and visions as in Baltazer or despaire as in Iudas in the sence of sinne committed To this agreeth that of Salomon Prov. 20.27 The light of the Lord is the spirit of man and searcheth all the bowells of the bellie in which words mans conscience is compared to the Lords lanthorne that discouereth things to a mans selfe which are as secret as his owne bowells This obseruation affoardeth vs sundry speciall vses As Vse 1. It letteth vs see what an intolerable torment a wicked conscience is euen a gibbit and a rack set vp within the wicked to vex and torment them withall and as a fearefull hue and crie euery where ouertaking them that let them runne or ride where they will they follow themselues with a writ of apprehension which draggeth them will they nill they before the face of the iudge No sooner was Adam fallen but his conscience heard the voice of God ringing through Paradise which made him flie from God and hide himselfe No sooner had Cain slaine Abel but the voice of the blood filled heauen and earth and made his countenance fall No sooner did Paul dispute of iustice temperance and iudgement to come but Felix trembled And whence is that fearefull looking for of iudgement and violent fire which shall deuoure the aduersarie but from the worke of conscience fitting the wicked for the iudgement of the great day What meruaile is it then if the wicked would faine stifle and choke the noise of their conscience but that they cannot still doe it Which beeing so let euery one feare to sin against the light of his conscience and not dare to venture vpon or foster the least sinne for howsoeuer we may for the present thinke some sinnes light and little if the Lord neuer so little touch the conscience as the time commeth apace when he will awaken it we shall feele euery sinne euen the smallest to lie as heauy as a mountaine vpon our soules little do we thinke that that sinne which now we account as light as a feather should prooue so heauy vpon our shoulders as that our hearts shall not be able to sustaine vs from oppression vnder it And further howsoeuer men may thinke to carrie their sinne so close as the eye of the kite cannot pry into it yet know whosoeuer thou art that thy conscience is Gods booke take heed what thou writest in that booke for it carrieth a light in it selfe whereby it shall be read and discouered Vse 2. This further teacheth vs not to neglect the checks of conscience nor our owne hearts reproouing vs of our wayes as those men who are resolued to hold on their lewde courses let the word and spirit yea their owne spirits suggest what they will or can against it For the time commeth when thou canst not set the voice of thy conscience so light then that conscience which hath checkt thee shall iudge thee and that heart which hath reprooued thee shall torment thee and thou shalt neuer be able to turne off the charge of it but shalt by it be accused and conuicted to haue been a wilfull chooser of thine owne destruction This is that which is secretly implyed in the text that if these heretikes had listened
indeed his bowells were not straitned toward Titus and the Church committed vnto him seeing he wisheth the verie fountaine of grace to be opened vnto them for this word as we shewed in the beginning signifieth both the free loue and fauour of God towards vs in Christ as also all other spirituall blessings flowing from that fountaine such as are remission of sinnes reconciliation with God iustification sanctification life eternall and all the meanes tending thereunto 3. That beeing an Apostolicall prayer it might also be a meanes of obtaining and conuaying vpon them the grace requested and although he had made the same request for them before yet it is no vaine repetition for partly he prayeth for the encrease and further feeling of this grace for them and partly teacheth vs thereby that it is the only blessing to be prayed for the cheife if not only grace which our selues are to labour for and which we must by all meanes endeauour that others may haue their portion in with vs. 4. To shew that all our greeting must beginne and end in grace and that our formes of salutation should fauour of grace and not be profane gracelesse or formall as the most are 5. Beeing a Minister of grace he beginneth and endeth with it and teacheth Ministers that their first and last action of the day and of their Ministeriall dutie should be the commending of their people vnto the grace of God in their praiers and besides if ordinarie letters much more other more weightie actions of men must be vndertaken and performed with praier and praise Secondly in that he saith Grace be with you he sheweth that howsoeuer this Epistle was inscribed to Titus alone yet was it intended to be of common vse to the whole Church and therefore we haue not vnfitly applied the most of the doctrines to the vse not of Ministers only but of all sorts of men so farre as they concerned them Last of all in that he saith grace be with you all he meaneth all the elect and only they for only they are effectuall partakers of this sauing grace called often elsewhere the grace of our Lord Iesus Christ the treasurie and fountaine of it The wicked are indeede endued with excellent gifts of Gods spirit but they want this grace of God in Christ which is the only foundation of our election to the grace of life of our effectuall vocation to the grace of God wherein we stand and of that assured hope of that heauenly inheritance which he hath purchased of his grace By this grace we are happily reconciled vnto God and adopted to be heyres of grace hereby also we haue receiued the word of grace which is made fruitfull to the planting and watering of all other sauing graces in vs and so to the furthering and finishing of the whole worke of our saluation in glorie This grace be euer with vs and all them that loue the comming of our Lord Iesus Christ to their immortalitie Amen So shall it be And so be it To God the Father of lights and to Iesus Christ that eternall word together with that annoynting euen the blessed spirit the only one true and wise God who hath happily led vs through these labours be all praise and glorie in all the Churches for euermore Amen A SHORT VIEWE OF SVCH Doctrines as are enlarged with their reasons and vses A Man may sometimes lawfully change his name Pag. 4. Such names are to be giuen to children as may put them in minde of some good dutie Pag. 4 The name of a seruant of God is full of honour Pag. 6 The chiefe offices in the Church are for the service of it Pag. 10 God hath some who are elect and other are not Pag. 11 The elect haue a faith by themselues Pag. 13 The faith of the elect is ordinarily wrought by the ministerie of the word Pag. 16 The doctrine of the Gospell is truth it selfe Pag. 18 The knowledge of the truth is the ground of faith Pag. 19 The truth intertained in truth frameth the heart vnto godlinesse Pag. 21 The ende of the ministerie is to drawe vp mens mindes from earth to heauen Pag. 24 True faith neuer goeth alone but as a Queene attended with many other graces especially with hope Pag. 27 Life eternall is the beleeuers by free promise Pag. 30 God is truth itselfe and cannot lie Pag. 33 The free loue of God appeareth in that whatsoeuer he doth for his elect in time the same he decreeth before all time Pag. 39 The doctrine of saluation is more clearely manifest then in former times Pag. 43 The Lord effecteth all his purposes and promises in due season Pag. 44 Saluation is to be sought for in the preaching of the word Pag. 48 The office of preaching is an office of trust Pag. 52 Whosoeuer entreth into the ministerie must finde himselfe pressed by the calling and commandement of God Pag. 53 Ministers may be more or lesse in the commendation of their calling as the disposition and necessitie of their people require Pag. 55 Gods calling to grace is free and powerfull Pag. 56 Ministers ought to be spirituall fathers in begetting children to God Pag. 58 Faith is one and the same in all Gods elect Pag. 62 Euerie man must be carefull 1. whome 2. to what 3. how farre he commendeth an other Pag. 65 All are not naturall sonnes that are so accounted 66 The free and euerlasting grace of God is the foundation of all blessings spirituall and temporall Pag. 69 True peace is the fruit of Gods grace and mercie Pag. 71 Whosoeuer is called to labour in the Church must by all his care further the worke of the Lord. Pag. 75 He that would Christianly and comfortably carrie himselfe through his calling must euer haue the ende of it in his eie Pag. 76 Churches must not be condemned as no Churches for want of some lawes or gouerment if they ioyne in the profession of the truth Pag. 80 No Church is hastely brought to perfection Pag. 81 There is continuall bending of good ordinances euen in the best estate of the Church Pag. 83 Such an absolute necessitie of a setled ministerie there is where a Church is planted that without it religion cannot possibly thriue or continue Pag. 86 The ordering and gouerning of the Church is not left arbitrarie no not to an Evangelist but Apostolicall direction must guide him Pag. 89 How able soeuer a man is to teach if he be of a scandalous life he is vnfit to be chosen a Minister Pag. 92 Marriage of Ministers is a lawfull and holy ordinance of God Pag. 97 Polygamie was euer blameworthy euen in the best Pag. 103 He that would reforme others abroad must begin at home Pag. 110 To haue the blessing of gracious children thou must beginne at religion Pag. 111 The carriage of a mans children is a great credit or disgrace to his profession especially of the Minister Pag. 113 Riot is an hatefull vice to be
godly Ministers lade them with reproaches Pag. 419 Euery Christians care must be to stoppe the mouthes of the wicked Pag. 421 Seruants ought to be subiect to their masters 423 Theft of seruants neuer so coloured is condemned Pag. 429 Seruants are bound to shewe all good faithfulnesse Pag. 431 The meanest Christian may and must bring glorie to the Gospel Pag. 433 The Gospel is the doctrine of Gods grace Pag. 437 The doctrine of the Gospel is a sauing doctrine Pag. 440 The Gospel is a bright shining light Pag. 446 The Gospel is a schoolemaster as well as the Lawe Pag. 453 The doctrine of grace truely receiued teacheth to denie all vngodlinesse Pag. 458 A Christian must denie all lusts whatsoeuer may seeme to plead for them Pag. 463 The doctrine of grace teacheth both to eschewe euill and doe good Pag. 465 The Gospel looketh for some answearable return for the saluation it bringeth Pag. 467 The doctrine of the Gospel teacheth sobrietie of life wherein it standeth and rules of practise Pag. 468 The Gospel calleth for iust and righteous dealing at professors hands Pag. 471 The Gospel inioyneth a godly life the proper work of piety rules of practise Pag. 473 Godlinesse must be exercised in this present world Pag. 478 The Gospel receiued in truth lifteth vp the heart to wait for Christ his second appearing Pag. 482 The expectation of Christ his second comming is a notable meanes to prouoke to Christian duties Pag. 491 Christ his glorie shal shine out in ful brightnesse at his second appearing Pag. 494 Wee ought neuer to speake of God but in a weighie matter and reuerent manner Pag. 496 Christ gaue himselfe for his Church but not for euery particular man Pag. 505 Before Christ redeemed vs we were miserable slaues vnder sinne and death Pag. 511 The Sonne of God hauing once set vs free great is our freedome Pag. 514 Redemption and sanctification are inseperable companions Pag. 517 The members of the Church are Gods peculiar people Pag. 523 The worker must be good before any worke can be so Pag. 527 Iustified persons must needes bring forth good workes Pag. 527 The thing that God requireth in euery professour is zeale in weldoing Pag. 529 All proofes and reproofes must be fetched from the Scriptures Pag. 534 The word of God must be so handled as that the authoritie of it be preserued Pag. 535 To despise Gods Ministers is a grieuous sin Pag. 537 The doctrine of subiection to Magistracie must be often enforced and why Pag. 539 The scope of the Ministerie is to put men and keepe them in remembrance of Christian duties Pag. 540 The memorie ought to be taken vp with godly instructions learned in the Ministrie Pag. 541 Christianitie consumeth not Magistracie but confirmeth it Pag. 544 Euery soule must be subiect to the higher powers Pag. 548 Euery Christian must make account that euery Christian dutie belongeth vnto him Pag. 559 Euery man ought to preserue in himselfe a readinesse to euery good worke Pag. 563 The word condemneth as well vnbridled speaches as disordered actions Pag. 566 Euill speaking is a most hatefull sinne in Christians Pag. 568 A Christian may not be a common barrater Pag. 574 Christian equitie is a beautifull grace in Christians Pag. 579 Christian meekenes beseemeth euery Christian Pag. 584 The consideration of our common condition is a notable ground of meekenes Pag. 588 Whosoeuer is called vnto the faith hath experience of a change in himselfe Pag. 591 The whole course of an vnconuerted man is an vnwise walking Pag. 596 A marke of a man out of Christ is to resist and reason against the word Pag. 599 Before men bee brought to Christ their whole life is but a wandring from God Pag. 601 The spirit that is in man lusteth after envie Pag. 617 Then are wee saued when wee are sanctified Pag. 627 Before the Lord put forth his loue in Christ it could not bee reached of man nor angel Pag. 632 Workes of righteousnesse are excluded from iustifying vs before God Pag. 635 The Lord in baptisme not onely offereth or signifieth but truely exhibiteth grace Pag. 639 All the inward grace of baptisme is from the Holy Ghost Pag. 650 God in sauing men reneweth them to his owne image Pag. 655 The graces of the spirit are plentifully powred out vpon vs in the new Testament as not of a full mercie Pag. 660 Christ our Lord the onely fountaine of all our welfare Pag. 664 The righteousnesse of a sinner before God is not any qualitie in the beleeuer Pag. 669 The honour of the Saints is that they are heires of life eternall Pag. 674 All truthes must bee deliuered but some more stood vpon and vrged then other Pag. 680 A good worke cannot come but from a good man Pag. 684 Professors of the Gospel must be the first and forwardest in euerie good work Pag. 686 Doctrine must bee true and truely dealt withall Pag. 689 Sathan seeketh to corrupt the purest Churches by bringing in needelesse questions Pag. 696 There haue beene alwaies are and shall be heretikes in the Church of God Pag. 703 Euen heretikes and enemies of the Church must bee louingly dealt with by the Church Pag. 706 It is dangerous for the Churches to be left destitute of their teachers though for a short time Pag. 726 The Lord maketh good vse of the most wicked consciences Pag. 723 Christianitie enioyneth all kind of ciuill curtesie Pag. 731 Such as are in the Lords work must be carfully prouided for that they lacke nothing Pag. 732 Christianitie is no barren or fruit lesse prof●ssion Pag. 739 Religion is the strongest binder of man to man Pag. 748 OTHER PROFITABLE NOTES which besides illustration of Doctrines lie either in the explication of the sence or in application of the vses RVles to be obserued in changing of mens names in number three 4 Cases in which a man may forbeare to set his name to his writings 3. 5 Reasons to stirre vp ministers to diligence 5. 7 Reasons to stirre them vp to faithfulnesse 4. 7 Comforts for ministers in their seruice 4. 8 Priviledges of the Apostle aboue the ordinarie Pastor 3. 9 Men may be called elect of God 3. waies 11 Difference of sauing faith from all other 3. 14 Truth of faith discerned by 4. notes 15 Gospel called Truth for three reasons 18 Notes shewing the heart drawn vpward towards heauen 3. 26 Infallible properties of Christian hope 8. 28 Reasons why we must freely loue our brethren 4. 41 The doctrine of the Gospel called the common faith for 5. reasons 58 Duties to spirituall fathers 5. 61 Differences of the Apostolicall faith from the Romish Apostaticall 4. 63 Letters testimoniall not rashly to be giuen for foure reasons 65 The first person called father for 3 reasons 68 Christ called Lord for 4 causes 68 Men are called Sauiours 3. waies 69 The wickeds peace crazy in 3. respects 73 The power of the Magistrate and Minister doe differ in
of the blessed seede in whom all nations should be blessed Elizabeths speach sheweth the accomplishment thereof Blessed art thou among all women because the fruite of thy wombe is blessed which words she vttered beeing filled with the holy Ghost ver 41. or in generall looke to the whole old covenant of the old Testament it is after a sort ceased and a new established in stead of it see Heb. 8.8 In that he saith a new testament he hath abrogated the olde 2. Diuine vse was to signifie the inward circumcision of the heart wrought by Christ and therefore called the circumcision of Christ whereby he inwardly cutteth off the corruption of the heart iustifieth vs regenerateth vs setteth vs into himselfe communicateth all his merits and benefits of them vnto vs to all which purposes he once appeared in the flesh and now in his owne bodily absence sendeth out his spirit This Paul calleth circumcision made without hands Now how iust is it that when the circumcision without hands appeareth that the other made with hands should cease 3. Divine vse was to represent baptisme which was to come in place of it in the new Testament Coloss. 2.12 yee are circumcised in that yee are buried with him through baptisme Now then when baptisme which is Christian circumcision is once instituted necessarily must Iewish circumcision which was a type of it cease From which three ends we may answer that maine allegation for the continuance of circumcision in that it is called an eternall and euerlasting couenant But 1. the couenant is said to be euerlasting not simply but conditionally namely so long as the couenant of it lasted for gnolam signifieth not alwaies a time without all ende but such a time as after a long durance may admit determination and expiration 2. In respect of the thing signified that is grace in Christ it may be said to haue euerlastingnes 3. In regard of the perpetuall supplie thereof by baptisme which is to last as long as time but not in the ceremonie or shaddowe of it as the false Apostles taught much lesse with confidence in it as a meritorious cause of iustification All this hath hitherto let vs see the error and sinne of these seducers Now the danger will be descried if we consider that of Paul If yee be circumcised Christ will profit you nothing for what were this other then to denie the true Messiah and his appearing in fulnesse of time what were it but to reare vp againe the partition wall which is destroied what else then to renounce the new couenant of grace and establish againe the olde one of workes which was to giue place to the new so as truely saith the Apostle by establishing circumcision a man becommeth a debter to the whole law which cannot but be ioyned with the fall of all religion faith hope baptisme and consequently the losse of saluation it selfe Doctr. The plainnes of the Apostle in deciphering the seducers so manifestly as they might be knowne teacheth that where there is a common danger towards the Church by meanes of false teachers we are not to spare their credit but to laie them open as not onely their errors but their persons may be knowne and taken heed of in which regard Paul nameth these deceiuers And hereof are sundrie other forcible reasons 1. Because the saluation of the Church and members of it is more to be respected then all Satans synagogue 2. It is necessarie that such should be knowne for feare of infection for false teachers may do more mischeife in poysoning the flocke then a number of priuate men can doe 3. The Apostles tooke great libertie herein as Paul nameth Alexander the Coppersmith and wisheth Timothie to beware of him and Iohn in his third Epistle nameth Diotrephes for his ambition and promiseth to decipher him more plainely and so paint him out in his colours as that the Church might abhorre him But yet this text affordeth vs some conditions of such plaine reproofe which necessarily must be obserued to the right performance of the same As 1. the error must be certainely knowne as this was 2. It must not be euery small error but such a one as 1. greatly impaireth Gods glorie 2. greatly impeacheth mans saluation as we haue prooued this to doe For otherwise if their errors were either lesse dangerous in themselues or more dangerous to themselues alone although herein they must be made voide of excuse their wickednesse shewed them and their prepared damnation preached vnto them if they did not hurt others with themselues the true Pastors might with lesse danger dissemble their errors and let them rot away in their filthinesse but in the foresaid cases there must be no bearing of them 3. In the reproofe Christian loue must bewray it selfe as the minde and intention of the Apostle here no doubt was not to gall or vex these deceiuers nor to wrecke himselfe vpon them but carrie in his eye the care of the Church and the profit of Gods people Euery good action must be done well in a good manner and in a good intent and here especially the manner must discouer the intent and that is when such a spirit of meekenesse putteth forth it selfe that euen the parties openly reprooued may see their good sought in hauing their sinne discountenanced and their persons rather discouered then disgraced Vse 1. This doctrine noteth the simplicitie of some who thinke it very vncharitable so to note open offenders in open reproofs as men may carrie them leuell to the offenders or impute it to want of discretion or to some malitious intent of the discrediting of men whereas besides that no such thing is intended the propertie of charitie is more carefull to preuent the common hurt of the Church then to saue the credit of some few men of corrupt mindes 2. Whereas some idle and foolish heads haue set themselues on work to paint out some worthier men then themselues in their colours and to picture out some sort of men better then themselues men of sounder iudgement conspiring in all the maine points of true religion and of innocent and inoffensiue liues with the black coales of enuious and slanderous invectiues striuing to besmeare them these haue no colour of warrant for such a rouing and distempered practise For 1. they haue no calling God neuer setteth any man on worke to defame his seruants 2. Are such errors as are imputed to them knowne and conuinced or litigious and controuerted or are they such as ouerturne religion and saluation seeing they consent in the whole truth and substance of religion 3. Doe not all eyes which looke on such pictures see the intentions of the picturers to haue beene gall bitternes vexation and wrecking of mens persons so farre from the spirit of meeknesse that the spirit of malice hath suggested them with words as sharpe as swords and as Iob speaketh of the crocodile flames of fire goe out
of their mouthes and sparkles of fire leape out the smoke they send out is like a seething pot or caldron 4. As the spirit of truth is a peaceable and meeke spirit so neuer shall a man finde a bitter spirit conscionably vtter pure truths neither indeed will truth Gods darling dwell with such And what lowder lie then to charge Gods children with damnable heresies Let all antiquitie be searched and we shall finde three things which must concurre to make an heretike 1. The broching of something contrarie to the Articles of faith 2. A departing from the Church vpon it with profession of drawing Disciples 3. After solemne admonition a stiffnesse in such error and faction None of which if they can be found in such as to whome all are imputed Let euery man iudge whether such boldnesse in any man deserue not more open reprehension and censure whereby such might learne at length to spare the credit of such who are so farre beyond the reach of their enuie as that they iustly pittie their weaknesse and solly and not with them attempt any more the discouering of their fathers nakednesse which were a good way to couer their owne Vse 3. Let none looke to be spared in the Ministerie if they will be incorrigible no not great ones If any people might looke to be spared surely they of the circumcision might beeing a people of such prerogatiues But 1. Paul preferres the Churches good aboue their credit 2. As God hath no respect of persons no more hath his word 3. When great ones are more seuerely taxed inferiours will feare the more Doctr. 2. Note further who are to be reputed the chiefe plagues of the Church and the archseducers of the world euen they of the circumcision that is such as ioyne the lawe with the Gospel and works with faith in the act of iustification for they ●each such doctrine as abolisheth from Christ and maketh him profit nothing and that in such manner as men can hardly shift or auoide them for they slily glide into the extraordinarie commendation of that the Scripture also commendeth and attributeth too much vnto that which the Scripture ascribeth somewhat vnto As for example Circumcision in the prime of it was an ordinance to seale the righteousnesse of faith and for a time was worthily in such reputation as that death is iustly threatned against the neglect of it be it in Moses himselfe These seducers taking hence occasion goe one step further and will haue it a meritorious cause of saluation and consequently will not haue it dated when the Lord hath expired it but albeit the bodie hath appeared the shadowe must remaine The Popish teachers at this day are the iust heires of these seducers as appeareth in these particulars the Iewish teachers would professe and teach Christ but not alone for he must be ioyned with Moses and all the former rites and all these with Christs merits must be iumbled to iustification Euen so Popish seducers sit with Antichrist in the Church of God and professe Christ but together with Christ they must merit something themselues and so make themselues debters to the whole law And further they make the works of grace almes prayer fasting contrition yea their owne rites and traditions obserued meritorious causes of saluation for they promise life eternall to masses indulgences auricular confession vowes pilgrimages c. and so tread in the verie steppes of these seducers 2. Againe as the Iewish teachers dealt with circumcision so doe the Papists with our Sacraments which because by diuine institution they are signes and seales of Gods mercie and faithfull couenant they turne them into physicall not conduits but causes not containing onely but conferring grace euen by the worke wrought 3. Further as the Iewish teachers lead their disciples to stand vpon outward shewes and prerogatiues as that they were sonnes of Abraham had receiued the law circumcision in their flesh and were distinguished into diuerse famous sects as Scribes Pharisies Sadduces Essees c. The verie same things in effect doe Popish teachers force men to stand vpon as false antiquitie fained succession dissembled chastitie hypocriticall orders as of Francis Dominicke Benedict and an hundred more according to whose rules whosoeuer walke mercie and peace they pronounce vpon him such cannot faile of life euerlasting but as for beleefe in the Sonne of God seeking life by that means it is the least of their labour Thus doe they with those seducers publish lies and dreames of their owne hearts that Gods people may forget his name that is the grace and mercy of God in Iesus Christ. Vse 1. This point letteth vs see how pernicious and dangerous the Popish doctrine is which whosoeuer holdeth and maintaineth is abolished from Christ and fallen from grace Paul is not more confident in any thing then this that the ioyning of any thing with Christ as the matter of our righteousnesse is the cutting off of a man from Christ Gal. 5.3 Behold I Paul say and testifie that if yee be circumcised that is with opinion of righteousnes by it or confidence in it for else at this time the worke of circumcision hurt him not that kept himselfe from confidence of righteousnesse by it Christ profiteth you nothing so we testifie truely against the Papists that so many of them as will be iustified by the works of the lawe are fallen from Christ. Now because their doctrine teacheth this and he is not an absolute Papist that beleeueth it not we truely conclude that it is a doctrine leading from Christ and the absolute Papist hath no part in Christ. Obiect Doth not Iames make a cooperation of faith and works Ans. Yea but not in the act of our iustification nor in the matter or worke of our saluation but onely in the declaration of the sinceritie of our faith and truth of our conuersion which by fruits of righteousnesse we shew to be voide of hypocrisie so as let faith and works ioyntly concurre in the approbation of our iustification but in case of making vs righteous before God away with the works of the law if thou meanest to haue part in Christ these will neuer stand together here let Moses die and be buried and let no man euer knowe where he was laid to raise him againe This point shall be clearer when we come to those words of our Apostle Wee are not saued by the works of righteousnesse which we had done In the meane time dare Paul affirme of the lawe of Moses Gods owne lawe that he that holds vnto it to be iustified by it is fallen from Christ what would he haue said of their desperate and irrecouerable fall who looke for iustification out of their owne traditions vowes inventions the drosse and chaffe of their owne deuises of all which the Lord will say who required these things at your hands Let vs beware of dogges the propertie of whom is to returne to their vomit