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A45335 A practical and polemical commentary, or, exposition upon the third and fourth chapters of the latter epistle of Saint Paul to Timothy wherein the text is explained, some controversies discussed, sundry cases of conscience are cleared, many common places are succinctly handled, and divers usefull and seasonable observations raised / by Thomas Hall ... Hall, Thomas, 1610-1665. 1658 (1658) Wing H436; ESTC R14473 672,720 512

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give him for all those successes and deliverances which he hath given us will not this provoke him to repent of all the mercies he hath shewed us and to consume us after he hath done us good These are worse then Papists denying the Trinity Sacraments Old Testament and New Testament affirming that there is no word but only the word Christ so did the Swenck●feildians in Germany herein betraying their grosse ignorance that cannot distinguish between the word Christ and the word of Christ Colos. 3.16 so called because it hath Christ for its Authour Christ for its Object and Christ for its end between Christ the coessential and coeternall word of the Father Iohn 1.1 2. Heb. 1.3 the substantial word of God 1 Iohn 5.7 Rev. 19.13 and the expresse Image of his Father and the written word of God which is contained in the Old and New Testament and is called the written word of God Luke 8.11 12. and 11.28 Acts 4.31 and 6.2 7. and the Bible or Book as being the book of books i. e. the most excellent book in the world 2. As the Papists when they are Non-plust fly to Traditions so do these fly from Scripture to Revelations As the Jews have their Talmuds and the Turks their Alcorans so the Anabaptists have their vain Visions and etraordinary Revelations whereas the Scripture is a surer Guide then a Voyce from heaven 2 Pet. 1.19 for that may be more easily counterfeited Satan can with ease transform himself into an Angell of light See this more fully cleared by the Authours in the Margin 2. We have those that cry up a Light within them and extoll it above the word of God like false Tradesmen that preferre false Lights before the clearest Sun-shine He that takes the light of nature for his Guide hath but a blind deceitful Guide which will lead him into a thousand bogs and ditches of filth and errour The natural man cannot endure the light of Gods word Iob 21.14 Isay 6.10 and 30.10 2 Tim. 4.3 he raiseth cavils against it and hates the light that discovers him He 's dead in sin and cannot once discern the supernatural things of God 1 Cor. 2.14 hence he 's called not onely dark but darknesse it self in the Abstract Ephes. 5.8 and therefore great is the sin of those that tell men they have need of no other teacher but onely the light within them 1. This overthrowes all Scripture in vain did God bid us search the Sciptures if this natural light within us were sufficient to lead us to salvation 2. This is the way to make men Heathens and to set up a natural light instead of a supernaturall 3. This would overthrow the Ministery and all their gifts which Christ gives them for the edification of his Church Ephes. 4.11 4. This would overthrow the Magistracy for to what end are his Laws and sword if every man had a light within him sufficient to direct him thus if Aaron go down Moses cannot long endure Ministery and Magistracie usually fall together Numb 16.10 13. 5. Religion hath mysteries and depths in it which no natural man can fathome 1 Cor. 2.9 14. 6. The Scripture speaks onely to Saints when he saith Christ is in you the hope of glory Colos. 1.27 but to the world he 's a stumbing-block and rock of offence 7. Christ calls them slow of heart who believe not all that the Prophets have spoken it seems they were to look to the Scriptures without them and not onely to a light within them 8. The Beraeans are commended for searching the Scriptures Acts 17.11 and not for harkening to a light within them and we are commanded to try the Spirits by the Touchstone of Gods word and not by a light within us 3. Great is the sinne of the Socinians who make not the Scripture but Reason the Judge in matters of Religion and will believe no more in Religion then they can comprehend by Reason whereas we make not our Reason a Rule of faith added to the word but we use it as that light which God hath given us wherewith to search into the meaning of his word and by studious inquisition and observation to discover it and by good Reason out of the Text to convince others of its truth Reason raised and rectified is the candle of the Lord and good Prov. 20.27 so long as 't is subordinate to faith but when it goeth about to judge it then it quickly overthrowes all as we see in the Socinians who abound with such grosse Heresies that Divines Question whether we may call them Christians 4. Others boast of the Spirit in opposition to the Scripture these are certainly led by the spirit of the Devill Gods word and Spirit go together as you may see Prov. 1.23 Isay 59.21 Galatians 3.2 Gods Spirit teacheth us to try the spirit and doctrines of men by Scripture Isay 8.20 and if they speak not according to this word 't is not because they have New-light but no light in them Christ who was full of the Spirit of the Lord yet doth not go about to prove things by the Spirit within him but he sends men to the Scriptures as their Rule Iohn 5.39 and when he disputed with men and Devills he doth not appeal to the spirit or light within him but he cites Scripture without them against them for though Gods Spirit do enlighten the Saints on earth yet it is but in part this illumination is imperfect and mixt with much darknesse within them so that they have need also of a light without them which is the Scripture And if Timothy who was inlightned by the spirit in a more then ordinary measure he being an Evangelist yet must give himself to reading the Scriptures how much more have we need to read and study them who have not that measure of the spirit as he had And if the spirit were our Rule how many would be deluded with Satanical spirits but God hath given us a surer word of prophecy so that we must not trust onely to the Testimony of the spirit concerning it self but we must bring every spirit to the Trial and Touchstone of Gods word 1 Iohn 4.1 2 3. yea though they pretend to have the Spirit of God yet must it be tried by the word of God Object The Scriptures are for Novices and young beginners but after men are regenerate and grown up they must leave these external rudiments and be guided onely by the Spirit Answ. This is a most pernicious and dangerous opinion for take away the Scriptures and you take away the Rule both of good life and sound doctrine and so open a gap to all Heresie and profanenesse 2. Neither is the Scripture onely necessary for young beginners but also for the regenerate and most holy men as appeares by the Inscriptions of almost all the Epistles which are written even to the Saints themselves Rom. 1.7 8. 1 Cor. 1.2 and
to send a gift to the end that Justice may be perverted the eye blinded and the Innocent condemned so to send a gift and so to receive a gift is both a sin in the one and the other He that would see more against Bribery let him peruse Mr. Iohn Downam's 4. Treatises against Swearing Drunkennesse Whoredome and Bribery Willet on Exod. 23.8 Doctor Downam on Psal. 15.5 2. It unfits men for the Ministery Covetousnesse is odious in any man more odious in a Magistrate but most odiou● in a Minister who by his life and doctrine ought to witnesse against it It troubles us to be abused by strangers but to have our menial servants and such as are near to us to preferre the trash and drosse of the earth before us that is the highest and horridst ingratitude insomuch that a dull Asse reproves Balaam for it 2 Pet. 2.15 16. With what face can a man reprove that in another of which himself is guilty therefore 't is made one speciall Qualification of a Gospell-Minister he must not be greedy of filthy lucre 1 Tim. 3.3 Titus 1.7.11 1 Pet. 5.2 The man of God must not only go or run but Fly from this Vice 1 Tim. 6.10 11. for a Minister to be a Mercenary man or a Market-man or by flattery and dawbing to curry favour and get riches this is that filthy lucre so oft cendemned in Scripture Such are called greedy insatiable dogges Isay 56.11 who for a slight reward prophane the Name of God Ezek. 13.19 Paul knew what a blemish this would be to his calling and therefore he was alwayes carefull to shunne the very appearance of it He oft parted with his right for Peace demanded not what was his due but laboured with his hands in the Churches infancy and low condition that he might not be burdensome to any 1 Cor. 9.6 7. 1 Thess. ● 5 6.9 We are souldiers and therefore we must not entangle our selves in these low things 2 Tim. 2.4 Caution yet let no man accuse us of Covetousnesse for demanding those dues which by the Law of God and the Lawes of the Land are due unto us The labourer is worthy of his hire saith Christ Matth. 10.10 this Paul proves by many Arguments 1 Cor. 9.7 8 9. 1 Tim. 5.17 18. Many would have us Preach for nothing when souldiers will fight for nothing and Trades-men work for nothing we will Preach for nothing In the mean time let them know that 't is one thing to preach for money and another thing to take money for preaching Though we receive pay for our paines and may justly demand it for our great labour yet we do not make that our end The conversion of soules and not money is the ultimate end of all our labours but I have spoken fully to this point in another Treatise which is now Printed 3. He cannot be a good souldier that minds money more then the cause of God such a one will betray his trust or plunder and use violence This S. Iohn foresaw and therefore commands souldiers to do violence to no man but to be content with their allowance Luke 3.14 It 's an ill Trade to go up and down killing men for eight pence a day such fight with an ill conscience and so will fly in a time of triall As the man must be good and the cause good so his end must be good else he marres all 4. He 's unfit to govern a family he 'l make slaves and drudges of his children and servants Better be some mens beasts then their servants for those rest on the Sabbath while these are drudging for their covetous Masters These men either cannot pray with their Families or else the cares of the World will not suffer them they savour nothing but Earth they are meer Earth Earth Earth Ier. 22.29 They are Earth by Creation Earth in their Conversation and return to Earth in their dissolution They have earthen bodies and earthen minds too and so are meer Earth and have their names written in the Earth which shall be their Hell as some conceive Ier. 17.13 He that would see more Disswasives from this sin let him peruse Mr. Boltons Directions for walking with God p. 289.288 c. where you shall find 12. excellent considerations against it and Mr. Palmers Memorials p. 10.3 c. Observ. We are free from this sin say most men though most men are guilty of it yet few will acknowledge it 'T is a secret subtle sin that hides it self under the Cloak of good husbandry frugality and thrift 1 Thess. 2.5 I shall therefore give you some signes and characters of a covetous man This sin may be discerned By our Thoughts Words and Works 1. Try your selves by your Thoughts this is the best way to know what you are for as a man thinketh so is he Prov. 23.7 By these the Lord tries us Psal. 139.23 2 Sam. 16.7 Iob 42.2 and therefore by them we should try our selves they are the peculiar acts of Gods eye and greatest in his esteem 't is not so much our words and works as the bent of our hearts and spirits which he ponders Prov. 16.2 and if he find them irregular it displeaseth him Gen. 6.6 Prov. 6.18 Isai 65.2 3 5. Zach. 8.17 Ier. 4.14 Rom. 2.2.21 not only the works but also the Thoughts of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord. Prov 15.26 and though Thoughts are free in respect of the Courts of men yet they are not free from the All-seeing eye of God Isai 66.18 I know their thoughts 2. They are not free from Gods word it takes hold of them Heb. 4.12 Exod. 20.17 3. They are not free from his revenging hand Ier. 6.19 Rom. 2.21 Revel 2.23 2. We should try our selves by the thoughts and devices of our hearts because they are the more immediate issues of our hearts and cannot so easily deceive us as words and works may A man cannot so well judge of the goodnesse of a spring by the water which runs 7. miles off as he may by going to the Fountain head so we cannot judge so well of our selves by our actions which are as streams as we can by our Thoughts for there are many Occurrences between the Act and the thought These are the Master-wheeles and first movers in the soul and from them issue either life or death Prov. 4.23 Isai 59 7. Mat. 15.19 if a man be Malicious Murderous Covetous c. first his thoughts are so and thence come evill acts These are the Root and those the Fruit these the Mother and those her Daughters In the time of the Law the Lord required the first-fruits and the first-born Exod. 22.39 he calls not now for the first-born of our flocks or bodies but of our soules these must be kept more especially for him 3. They are the Universal Acts of the heart which discovers it self most clearly by them 4. They are the swiftest acts of the heart
his own net nor kiss his own hand Iob 31.17 he arrogates nothing proudly to himself but gives all the glory of all his Goods Gifts and Graces to the God that gave them 2. There is a lawful Boasting for necessary defence being urged thereto by the slanders of wicked men on this account Christ apologizeth for himself and defends his innocency against his adversaries In Matth. 12.6.41 42. So Iob spends some Chapters in Apologizing for himself against the false accusations of his friends Iob 29. and 31. So Nehemiah 13. Paul spends 17. Verses at least in a forced commendation of himself in relating his Service and Sufferings for Christ. 2 Cor. 11.16 to 33. 3. There is a Vain-glorious Boasting and Ostentation of what we are and what we have done that the world may take notice of us and we may be admired as some great men in the world Thus Simon Magus gave out that he was some great man Acts 8.9 he made himself his own Idol and therefore he expected that all the beholders should fall down and worship it which they are ready to do V. 10. Thus when men set a high rate upon their own Parts and Perfections they be very impatient and discontented if others will not come to their price and because other men will not they will Canonize themselves for Saints So did the proud Pharisee when he boasted of his own perfection and contemned the Publican Luke 18.11 So Matth. 6. and 23 5. Iohn 12.43 and this is the Boasting which the Apostle here and the scripture elsewhere oft condemnes Prov. 27.2 and 20.6 2 Cor. 10.18 4. There is a Diabolical Boasting when men boast of their wickednesse like that Tyrant who boasted what mischief he could do Psal. 52.1 So did Stockly B. of London who lying on his death-bed rejoyced that he had burnt 50. Hereticks These declare their sin-like Sodom openly and impudently Isay 3.9 and rejoyce to do wickedly Prov. 2.14 Ier. 11.15 The Idolater glories in his Idols Psal. 97.7 Hos. 10.5 The fornicator of his Harlots the Drunkard of his Dozens and how many he hath laid asleep Impudent beasts that instead of being ashamed of such glorying they glory in their shame and are ashamed of grace which is their glory their end is destruction Phil. 3.19 These are ascended to the highest degree of wickedness It 's dangerous to excuse and defend sin but to boast of Vices as if they were Vertues is the height of Villany By the abounding of this sin amongst us 't is evident we are fallen into the last times How is the land over-spread with impudent insolent Boasters from Dan to Beersheba from North to South they swarm amongst us like the flyes in Egypt The Papist boasts of his Traditions and M●racles the Anabaptist of his Revelations the Quaker of his Perfection extraordinary Sanctity and Sufferings never did any Hereticks speak greater swelling words of Vanity and more cry up themselves and cry down others then this generation of perfect Pharisees They boast of themselves that they are equall to the Apostles of Christ yea to that blasphemous impudency are they ascended for want of Punishment that some of them say they are Christ himself and that their Iames is become a Iesus the King of Israel the Judge of the world and therefore they worship him kisse his feet and strew their garments before him c. Whither will not Toleration and impunity lead people Others boast of their own Sincerity Sanctity Innocency Amiableness and Moderation they call themselves men of a Choyce anointing the only spiritual people the close walking ones the meek and quiet of the earth Reall Saints are humble modest men and dare not give themselves such high Titles Isai 6.5 Dan. 2.30 Prov. 30.2 they are content that another mans mouth should praise them and not their own Prov. 27.2 they are sensible of so much sin and corruption in themselves that they are little and low in their own eyes Others boast much of their extraordinary Gifts and ●ll to Preach when upon triall they have neither the one nor the other but are meerly stuff't with ignorance and impudence like those self-confident ones that thought themselves fit to be guides of the blind before they had learned themselves Rom. 3.19 20 21. They boast much of the spirit I they are as full of it as a Barrell is of wind This is the Basis of their Pride and the shelter for their Sin Ask them how they dare presume to Preach without a Call their Answer is ready They are called extraordinarily by the Spirit and yet they cannot sh●w it by so much as ordinary Gifts Let us therefore try these Spirits by the Touch-stone of Gods word and they will appear to be Satanicall deluding spirits For those that are Sensuall and Separatists as these men are have not the Spirit of God Iude 19. Against the sinne of Vain-glorious Boasting take these few considerations 1. Consider that all such Boasting is evill evill in its own Nature and the cause of much evill Iames 4.16 God will not have the wise man to glory in his wisdome as the Phylosophers did nor the strong man in his strength as Lamech did Gen. 4.23 nor the Rich man in his Riches Psal. 49.6 Luke 12.19 nor any man in men 1 Cor. 3.21 but he that glories must glory in this That he knoweth experimentally and savingly the Lord his God Ier. 9.23 24. 2. Consider the Judgements of God on such as have boasted of their own strength and power as Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3.15 and 4.27.30 31. and the Israelites Amos 6.13 12 So the Gentiles and Philosophers that gloryed in their own wisdome were punisht with spiritual judgements and given up to a reprobate sense Rom. 1.22 23 24. Remember Gods judgements on vaunting Pharaoh Exod. 5.2 Senacherib 2 Kings 19.23 Haman Hest. 5.11 Goliah 1 Sam. 17.8 Absolon 2 Sam. 15.4 and generally God hath threatned that all such as glory in Idols and such are all those that glory in creatures shall be confounded Psal. 97.7 Now as Judges hang up some in Gibbets to make others fear so Gods Judgements on those should make all to fear 3. 'T is a Sign of a Proud Heart out of the abundance of the heart doth the mouth speak Our discourses are discoveries of what is within 4. It makes men like the Devill who boasted what great things he had to give Matth. 4.9 when he had nec ditionem nec dationem neither right to them nor power to dispose of them Mens gifts they boast off are none of their own what have we that we have not received 1 Cor. 4.7 5. When mens mouths are so full of their own praise it argues an emptinesse of Grace within full Vessels make little noyse when empty ones sound loud Empty Carts make a great rattle when the loaded ones go quietly by you your poor Pedlars that have but one Pack do in every Market
11. They are Blessed men Matth. 5.3 4 5. Blessed are the poor in Spirit who are sensible of their own wants and weakness of their own nakedness and nothingnesse these have the promise of Heaven and Earth And if Heaven and Earth be taken up for the Humble in what place think you shall the proud be billetted not in Heaven for it will receive no proud person they must be like little children for Humility that will come thither Matth. 18.3 Now by serious Meditation work these eleven considerations on thy heart till they have wrought out pride and made thee universally Humble In Vestures Gestures Heart Words Works A man may have it in his Tongue and be full of complement as your Servant Sir c. and yet be full of craft But the most proper seat of Humility is the Heart We must learn of Christ to be Humble not onely in Words but in Heart Mat. 11.29 For if the heart be once humbled all will be humble if there be a Treasury of Humility within it will quickly appear in the Words and Works without Such will stoop to any employment whereby God may be glorified They can well be content to be dishonoured so God may be honoured to decrease so Christ may increase Iohn 3.30 This made Paul to become all things to all men and make himself a servant to all that he might gain the more 1 Cor. 9.19 20. How low did Christ stoop that he might glorify God in the work of our Redemption he made himself of no reputation but laid aside his glory for a time and took upon him the form of a servant Phil. 2.6 7. he conversed with sinners talkes with women heales the sick washeth his Disciples feet Many could be content to serve in places of Honour Pleasure Credit but a gracious soule can stoop to the meanest service and lowest place so God may be honoured yea the Saints in their highest condition carry humble hearts David when a King yet is as lowly as a weaned child Psal. 131. we need not levell good men they will levell themselves and carry low mindes in high estates The more they have or have done and suffered for God the more humble they be they lay all their Honours Learning Riches Excellencies c. at the feet of Christ as the twenty foure Elders cast downe their Crownes before the Throne saying Thou art worthy to receive Honour and Glory and Power Revel 4.10 Even Agathocles King of Sicily being a Potters sonne would alwayes eat his meat in earthen Vessels the better to mind him of his Originall Fictilibus coenâsse ferunt Agathoclea Regent That you may learn this choyce Lesson 1. Be familiar with Humble men make them thy bosome companions for as he that toucheth pitch shall be defiled so he that meddles with rich perfumes will smell of their sweetnesse 2. Remember thy last end remember thou art dust and must to dust again we dwell in houses of clay and our foundation is in the dust Iob 17.14.16 when the house is clay and the foundation dust such a house cannot long endure What made Ierusalem so proud and filthy Why She remembred not her last end Lam. 1.9 Pray that you may know in good earnest that you are but men Psalm 9.20 i. e poore fraile feeble creatures what ever thy endowments be yet this consideration that thou art Enosh a poore wretched miserable man will humble thee Remember what thou art by sin and what thou shalt be in thy Grave and thy Plumes will fall Every proud man forgets himself 3. To keep thee from pride in Externalls and Naturall excellencies consider how the creatures excell us therein the Lion in courage the Horse in strength the Birds in singing the Lillies in Beauty the Spider in spinning the Bee in working the Eagle in Seeing the Hare in running the Dogge in smelling c. 2. In obedience every creature excells man in his pure Naturalls All creatures are Gods servants and are ready to do whatsoever their Lord and Master shall command them Even the Winds and the Seas obey him Hence the Lord sends us Dullards to learn Industry of the Ant. Prov. 6.6 Prudence of the Stork Crane Swallow Ier. 8.7 and Gratitude of the Oxe and Asse Isa. 1.3 Against Pride see Alsteeds Encyclop Ethic. lib. 21. cap. 12 13. Vol. 2. in Folio p. 12.77 Perkins 2. Vol. on Gal. 6.14 Bernards Thesaurus in the end p. 134. Mr. Trapps Common-place on Arrogancy in the end of his Comment on the Epistles Mr. Woodwards childs Patrimony 2. Part. c. 4. Sect. 1. p. 50. c. Mr. Clerks Mirruor cap. 102. B. Hall's Ser. on Prov. 29.23 Vol. 2. Fol. p. 399. For Humility see Mr. Henry Smith's Serm. on 1 Peter 5.5 p. 203. Mr. Rogers of Dedham his Comment on 1 Pet. 5.5 Bernards Thesaurus in the end p. 136. D. Ier. Taylor 's Rule of Holy Living c. 2. Sect 4. Sibelius in Psal 132. Mr. Cawdry Humility the Saints Livery D. Featly on Matth. 5.3 3. Blasphemers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This sin is fitly linkt to the former Sins go not single but they beget one another Self-love begets Covetousnesse Covetousnesse Pride aud Pride Blasphemy So that Blasphemy is the genuine daughter of Pride when men have high conceits of themselves they are oft punisht with a fall and Pride being properly a spirituall sin is punisht with spirituall judgements God gives them up to a reprobate Sense so that they fall from one sin to another till at last they become Blasphemers 2. Proud persons are impatient discontented persons they can beare nothing if God crosse them or curse them as he delights to resist the Proud they presently fly in his face with Blasphemies Revel 16.9.11.27 as Iobs Wife would have had him do Iob 2.9 As a vile person utters Villany Isay 32.6 So a proud Atheist utters Blasphemy Quest. But what kind of Blasphemy doth the Apostle here mean when he saith Men shall be blasphemers Answ. Blasphemy in Scripture is taken many wayes but especially two 1. Largely and generally for any contumely or indignity which is done to men so reproachfull speeches tending to the disgrace of another mans name is in Scripture called Blasphemy Titus 3.2 that they speak evill of no man in the Originall 't is To blaspheme no man and so much the derivation of the word imports viz. to hurt the good name of another 2. 'T is taken strictly and most properly for opprobrious words which are uttered to the reproach of God his Word his Works his Spirit his Ordinances his Ministers his People Now though some learned men do take the words in the former sense viz. for defamers and slanderers yet our Translation renders it truly from the Originall Blasphemers as relating to the highest kind of evill speaking even to all manner of Blasphemy against the God of Heaven In all ages there have been such but in the last dayes men
cap. This Text I may call the Drunkards Looking-glasse wherein they may see the woe and sorrow that attends them To whom is woe to whom is sorrow i. e. who draw all manner of sorrow upon soul and body but drunkards They meet to be merry but the end of such mirth is heavinesse It 's dear bought that hath so many curses attending it What madness is it for a few moments of pleasures here to endure eternity of sorrow hereafter Fur the enjoyment of a little wine here to drink the Vialls of Gods wrath and lye in Seas of misery for ever 2. To whom is strife and wounds without a cause q. d. Drunkenness breeds contention quarrelling and needless wounds 3. It hurts the Body and brings Diseases Rheumes Dropsies Apoplexies and Redness of eyes by reason of abundance of hot humours How many have shortned their dayes and extinguisht the Radicall moysture much water poured on a little flame doth soon extinguish it This makes even Kings sick Hos. 7.5.2 Verse 30. Solomon tells us how we may know a Drunkard 1. He loves to tarry at the wine he spends houres dayes and years at it 't is his Trade and Calling 2. He goes and seeks mixt wine q. d. He goes from house to house to inquire after the strongest Liquor 3. But how may we shun Drunkenness V. 31. look not on the wine when 't is red i. e. Shun the occasions and allurements to this sin set a watch over your eye and stay the beginnings of it 4. What hurt will it bring upon us V. 32. In the end 't will bite like a Serpent q. d. Though for a time it may seem pleasant yet at last 't will sting thee very sore it will bring upon thee troubles Internall Externall Eternall Wherefore fly from it as from a Serpent 2. 'T will hurt the soul and fill it full of noysome Lusts. The soul is the best and noblest part which if corrupted becomes the worst V. 33. It breeds adultery and lust Thine eyes shall behold strange women i. e. Harlots Drunkenness and Whoring oft go together A belly filled with wine foameth out filthiness Rom 13.13 Lot though a holy man yet addes Incest to his Drunkenness And though Adulterers are not Drunkards yet there are few Drunkards but are Adulterers V. 33. It breeds evill speeches Thy heart shall utter perverse things i. e. preposterous foolish filthy matters V 34. It makes men stupid and fearless secure and careless in the greatest dangers He 's as one that sleeps on the top of a Mast in the midst of the Sea Though he be in great and continuall danger yet he 's insensible of it He 's in great danger that sleeps in the midst of the Sea for he 's soon overwhelmed with waves and he 's like to fall suddenly that sleeps in the top of a Mast yet such is the Drunkards Lethargy that he cannot feel when he is stricken nor know when he is beaten V. 35. which is the height of misery it makes men desperate incorrigible and incurable They become impudent in sin those sins which men tremble to commit when sober yet they 'l venture on when drunk I will seek it yet again saith the habituated Drunkard q. d. Notwithstanding all these dangers and mischiefs I will not leave my drunkenness As perseverance in goodness in despight of all opposition is the height of goodness so perseverance in wickedness in despight of Judgements is the height of wickedness That 's our misery which attends on drunkenness that it 's usually accompanied with impenitency Hos. 4.11 4. It robs men of their good name Call a man drunkard you need say no more Hence when the Pharises would accuse Christ as a great sinner they call him a Wine bibber Mat. 11.19 of old they were accounted sons of Belial 1 Sam. 1.14 15 16. when Eli thought Hannah mas drunk count not said she thine hand-maid for a daughter of Belial i. e. for a lawless loose disordered person It takes away the man and lays a beast in his room yea it makes a man worse then the Beasts that perish for you cannot force them to drink more then will do them good 5. It wastes and weakens the Estate and so disables men for works of Piety and Mercy Prov. 21.17 He that loveth wine shall not be rich Not he that drinketh wine but he that loves it so as to set his heart upon it such lose both Temporal and Eternal Riches 6. It layes Kingdomes waste Isay 5.11.13 14 15. as a good man is a publick good so such a wicked man especially is a publick evill 7. The loveliness and beauty of Temperance and sobriety should make us loath excess luxury How sweetly doth the sober holy man enjoy himself his soul 's in Peace his house is in Peace his goods are preserved his family is the better for him he 's a blessing and ornament to the place where he dwells His judgement is clear his memory strong his affections regulated he 's fit to pray read hear meditate c. He hath a healthfull body and a comely countenance wise discourse In a word he enjoyes himself and sees God in all the blessings he enjoyes There 's no sin but hath some pretences and so hath this 1. Object Ioseph made his Brethren drunke Answ. That 's false for Ioseph was a holy man and one that feared God and therefore durst not do such a thing for a world God puts a Spirit of ingenuity in the hearts of his people and writes the Law of love there which constraines them to be pure and sober in all their actings and undertakings they are born of God and cannot sin viz. deliberately wilfully and habitually 2. The word Shacar is taken in Scripture in a good sense for a free and liberall use of the creature ad hilaritatem non ad ebrietatem for mirth and not for madness for chearfulness and not for drunkenness So the word is used Hag. 1.6 they shall drink but not to drunkenness i. e. not plentifully So Cant. 5.1 drink ye drink abundantly to an holy inebriation So Ephes. 5.18 be not drunk with wine wherein is excess but be filled with the Spirit q. d. If ye will be drunk let it not be with a bodily carnall divellish drunkenness but let it be with a spiritual holy ebriety do not sip or taste of the Graces of the Spirit but be filled with the spirit of Joy Love Peace Temperance Patience Acts 2.13.15 compared with V. 4. spiritual joy is there likened to wine which revives and quickens dead and drooping spirits So Cant. 1.2 thy love is better then wine This is Crapula sacra The word is likewise used in the New Testament Iohn 2.10 for a more free and liberal use of the Creature for mirth and comfort not for excess and riot God hath given wine to make glad the heart of man Psal. 104.15 and so far as
scriptures vilify Prayer and all Ordinances never give Thanks at their meales Rayle on Magistrates and Ministers dishonour their Parents out-run their wives neglect their families being full of Lying Rayling Idlenes● and all unrighteousnesse If these be Saints who are Scythyans These sin not through weakness but through wilfulness not through Passion or precipitation but deliberately electively resolutely they tell the Magistrate to his face that they will seal their high and horrid blasphemies with their blood 't is time such corrupt blood were let out of the body they devise mischiefe and set themselves in a way that is not good Psal. 36.4 as the liberall man deviseth liberall things and by them is establisht Isay 32.8 so the wicked man deviseth wicked things and by them is ruined V. 7. Though favour be shewed to the wicked yet are they so wedded to their sin that they will not learn Righteousness Isay 26.16 'T is the height of misery when men have sinned so long that they have brought themselves into a necessity of sinning These are not only in a dangerous but in a damnable condition what Solomon saith of the Harlots guests is true of them they are in the depths of hell Prov. 9. ult all such for present are far from salvation such as frequent the Ordinances and live soberly though they be not yet alive yet they sit in the winds way and there 's more hope of them as Christ said of the discreet Scribe thou art not far from the Kingdom of Heaven Mark 12.34 Now if a man may live civilly soberly religiously confess his sinnes Fast Pray frequent Ordinances give Almes and reform many things and yet come short of Heaven where then shall the wicked and ungodly appear who come short of those that come short of Heaven 2. Let us shake off this foul murthering sin and awaken our selves that we may awaken God if ever there were a time to cry aloud 't is now when the Lord seems to be asleep the work of Reformation seems to go backward children are come to the birth and there wants strength to bring forth By our Prayer let us play the Midwife and help the Man-child of Reformation into the world let us give the Lord no rest till he make Ierusalem the praise of the world Isay 62.1 See how the Church expostulates the case with God and by an holy violence doubles and trebles her suit the better to awaken God Isay 51.9 10. Awake O Arme of the Lord awake awake and put on strength God by his judgements hath made many gaps in the Nation let us humble our selves and lye in the gap and make up the breach when the Sea hath made a breach so long as the breach continues the water overflowes the land but the way to stop it is not to murmur or quarrell one with another but we must fall every one to his work and so make up the breach Remember our time is short our work is great and our wages unspeakable we serve a Master who will not let any man serve him for nought He 'l reward every man according to his works such as sow liberally shall reap liberally and the more active we have been for God the greater our reward shall be Let us not then give Satan occasion to insult and say Lord my slaves and servants are more active for me then thine are for thee mine can spend their Time their Estates and their Lives for me and in my service but thine grudge at every thing they do or suffer for thee Let us by our selfe-denying lives confute this slander let the zeale for Gods honour consume us and all that we have And if ever there were a time to rowse up our selves out of our formality 't is now when sin is grown so impudent and insolent 1. Let us sweep before our own dores and stirre up our selves against our own personall sinnes against that Atheisme Hypocrisy and Formality that sticks so close unto us Let 's know the Plague of our own hearts and arm against the sins of our complexion constitution vocations So did David Psal. 18.23 2. Let 's stirre up our selves against the sins of the age we live in The Apostasies Heresies Blasphemies that we daily hear of should be as a sword in our bones we should be deeply affected with them and shew our dislike of them Neh. 13.11.17 Ier. 13.17 Ezek. 9.4 Rev. 2.2 We must out of an holy singularity witnesse against the sinfull courses of the world Rom. 12.2 we must do more then others Matth. 5.47 the way of the righteous is on high above the reach of carnall men Prov. 15.24 and therefore when we Pray it should not be pro forma but with life and quickening Hence David prayes Psal. 80.18 quicken us O Lord that we may call upon thy Name We should stirre up our affections in this duty fire not stirred dyes but stirred gives heat 2 Tim. 1.7 there 's no stirring in formality and so no heat Hence Christ baptizeth all his not only with water but with fire Matth. 3.11 which makes them full of activity and zeale 2. Take heed of Formality in Hearing attend as for your lives with Life Faith Obedience come to these lively Oracles with lively affections Acts 7.38 be transformed into the Image of the word Rom. 6.17 act the Graces of the spirit in Hearing when you hear of Judgements tremble of the Promise believe of the Commandements obey 3. In observing the Lords-day we must not barely do the duties of it in a flat and formall way but we must make them our delight Isay 58.13 we should rejoyce that we have such a day wherein to glorifie God and to meditate on his word and works we should esteem it as an Honourable day it 's one thing to keep a Sabbath another to keep it as an high day a day of honour laying aside all worldly thoughts words and works as too base and meane for so high a day 4. In works of Mercy we should not barely shew mercy but Love mercy Micah 6.8 God loves a chearfull giver Wee should be glad of an opportunity to expresse our Love and Thankfullnesse to God We should think nothing too good for God who hath thought nothing too dear for us Bring costly services put him not off with light aud slight duties which cost you nothing David would not offer to the Lord of that which cost him nothing 2 Sam. 24.24 The fat and best must be given to him Levit. 3.9 Numb 13.12 Learn of worldly men see how active they be in Seed-time and Harvest for a little temporall gain consider how active and stirring the devill is to do mischiefe Iob 1. 1 Pet 5.8 and if Heathens have been so resolute to walk in the name of their Dung-hill-Gods Micah 45. we should much more resolve to walke in the name of our God for ever who is a better Master hath better work and better wages 2.
is taken out first 't is all black b●t stay till it 's finisht and furbisht and then it 's beautiful The Lord hath been doing a great work in England for many years past his wayes have been in the clouds and where we are yet whether at the borders of Canaan or going into the Wilderness again we cannot tell it will be our wisedome by Prayer and Patience to wait on the Lord and then in the conclusion we shall see that all things shall work together for good unto Gods people Rom. 8.28 VERSE 10 11 12. But thou hast fully known my Doctrine manner of life purpose Faith Long-suffering Charity Patience Persecutions afflictions which came to me at Antioch at Iconium at Lystra what persecutions I endured but out of them all the Lord delivered me Yea and all that will live godly in Iesus Christ shall suffer persecution WEE are now come to the Second Part and Period of this Chapter wherein the Apostle prescribes the Meanes how Timothy and all the godly may be preserved against Seducers and their Seducements viz. 1. By imitating a●d confirming thmselves to Pauls 1. Doctrine 2. Conversation 3. Purpose 4. Faith 5. Long-suffering 6. Love 7. Patience 8. Persecutions 9. Afflictions 2. By considering Gods sore judgements on Seducers how they are given up to a Reprobate sense increasing still in all kinds of wickednesse Verse 13. 3. By a constant adhering to the Scriptures Verse 14 15. But thou hast fully known my Doctrine Lest Timothy should be drawn aside by the subtleties of seducers Paul propounds his own example to him as a pattern for his imitation and so much the rather because Timothy had experimentally known the truth of his doctrine and the sincerity of his conversation both in Doing and Suffering for Christ. Now since we are more easily led by Presidents then by Precepts the Apostle propounds his own example for our imitation wherein we have the lively pattern and Pourtraiture of a faithfull Pastour whose office it is not only to preach sound doctrine but also to practise what he preacheth in his own life that so he may be able to speak from the heart to the hearts of his people and may not bring his food as birds do to their young ones in their Beakes not in their Breasts The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is emphaticall and signifies not a a simple single notionall knowledge but a singular peculiar intimate experimental knowledge of the secrets counsells and conversation of a man So the word is used Luke 1.3 it seemed good to me having had perfect understanding of things Luke being guided by the speciall instinct and direction of Gods Spirit had full and infallible knowledge of the things which he writ So Timothy did not barely know but as our Translations render it he fully knew the doctrines vertues of Paul and therefore none more fit to follow his Example q. d. O my beloved Son Timothy there is none that knoweth me better then thou Thou throughly knowest not onely what I have taught did and suffered but also how I was minded and disposed Thou knowest what my will and desire was my Faith Love Patience and Perseverance are not hid from thee thou being an Eye-witnesse and inseparable companion to me in many of my afflictions wherefore since the time of my departure is at hand and I must shortly be offered up as a sacrifice by my Martyrdom for Christ I now expect all those things from thee which a tender Father may expect from his beloved Son or a caref●ll Master from his obedient Schollar 1. Observe In that Paul propounds his own Example for Timothy to consider and follow That the Pious Example of the godly must be imitated by us Younger Ministers especially must observe the doctrine and conversation the pious wayes and walking of the elder and graver Ministers and must follow them Aged Paul propounds his vertues to young Timothy for imitation Many young men praise the gravity solidity wisdome industry mortification and self-deniall of ancient Ministers but they do not follow them They deal by them as the world doth by Honesty they praise it but they never practise it Probitas laudatur alget Juven As Gedeon said to his souldiers Iudg. 7.17 look upon me and do likewise so you that are young and unsetled rash and conceited look upon the Doctrine Discipline Haire Habit wayes and works of the Holy and the Grave follow them now you are young and then you will be good long Great is the power of the Example of superiours when one praised the Lacedemonian souldiers for being so orderly who before had been so injurious one of them answered No the praise is not ours that we are thus changed for we are the same men still but we have now another Captain and he it is that ordereth us How oft doth God command us to follow our faithfull Guides Heb. 13.7 1 Cor. 4.16 Philip. 4.9 Iames 5.10 and commends it 1 Thes. 1.6 As we must follow Christ so we must follow all the Saints Prophets Apostles Martyrs c. So far as they follow Christ. God hath set them before us as our Copy to write by and our Pattern to live by and we must answer not only for sinning against the light of the word but against the light of good Example also It will be one day said you had such and such to go before you in Paths of Piety and yet you would not follow The faithfull are called witnesses Heb. 12.1 Rev. 12. now if we walk contrary to their light they will witness against us as Noah and Lot did against the sinners of their age but if we walk answerable to their Light they 'l witnesse for us Their practice may comfort and confirm us in Gods way they declare the possibility of obtaining such a grace and make it thereby the more easie when we have seen it done before us If a man have a Torch to light him in a dark and dangerous path how glad is he the godly shine like lights in the midst of a crooked generation Phil. 2.15 16. their life is a Commentary on the Scripture Now since the nature of man is apter to be guided by Example then Precept and to live non ad rationem sed ad similitudinem therefore God hath prepared abundance of glorious examples for our imitation and thus the Saints that are now at rest and triumphant in glory their lives are to be our Looking-glasses to dresse our selves by our Compasse to saile by and our Pillar of a cloud to walk by Object But doth not the Scripture propound Christ as our pattern for our Imitation Matth. 11.29 1 Pet. 2.21 Answ. Christ is a Pattern of Patterns he 's instead of a thousand Examples he 's an Example that had no sin in him so that we may and must follow him in his Morall Vertues absolutely other patterns be imperfect and defective but Christ
consider that these persecutions and trials come not upon us by chance or fortune or according to the pleasure of men or devils but by Gods Decree and fore-appointment and special providence There is no evil in this kinde but it comes from God Amos 3.6 Deuteronomy 32.39 2 Samuel 16.10 11. Psalm 39.9 Iob 1.21 Isay 45.7 Hosea 6.1 I create evil not the evil of sinne but the evil of punishment which to our apprehension and feeling is evil Sin is simply per se evil but these sufferings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in our apprehension onely whatever the Instruments of our troubles are yet God is the Orderer and disposer of them Iosephs Brethren sell him into Egypt I but God disposed it unto good Gen. 50.20 the Assyrian is but Gods rod which can do nothing without the hand that moves it Isay 10.5 they have onely a dispensative power from God As our Saviour told Pilate so we may say to all the wicked they have no power to take a hair from our heads unlesse it be given them from above Iohn 19. Herod Iudas Pilate and the Iewes and the Devil had all ends of their own in persecuting Christ yet did they nothing but what God had fore-ordained and decreed should be done Acts 4.28 God hath fore-ordained the Beginning End Quantity and Quality of our Sufferings Romans 8.18 1 Thessalonians 3.3 God deals with us as a father doth with his children turning all to their good Romans 8.28 There is nothing will still the Soul like this viz. that 't is the Lord who in wisedom and love is pleased thus to try us we shall never be dumb and silent till we see 't is the Lord that doth it 2. We must not onely beare these Trials Patiently so as a Heathen may doe but Ioyfully When we suffer for Righteousnesse sake we must be exceeding glad and even leap for joy Luke 6.22 23. Though the flesh repine yet God would have us to mount it Joy all Joy when we fall not into one or two but into Varietie of Tentations viz. banishment imprisonment losse of goods Friends c. Iam. 1.2 We must glory in Tribulation Romans 5.3 Rejoyce even to Gloriation The Apostles went from the Council rejoycing that they were counted worthy of that Honour to be dishonoured for Christ Acts 5.41 45. Paul oft glories that he was a prisoner for Christ and that he bare in his body the mark of the Lord Jesus Galathians 6.17 He had been whipt and stoned and stocked and he carried the marks of these as so many badges of honour Yea he chose rather to glory in tribulation and sufferings then in his Revelations and raptures into the third Heavens 2 Corinthians 11.23.24 30. His Glorying was in the Crosse of Christ Colossians 1.24 2 Corinthians 7.4 Ephesians 3.13 Philippians 2.17 Iohn did not boast that he was an Evangelist or of his Revelations but that he was a brother in Tribulation Revelations 1.9 'T is said of the Primitive Christians that they rejoyced in loosing their goods for Christ Hebrewes 10.34 and the Thessalonians received the word in much affliction and joy 1 Thessalonian 1.6 and Paul exceedingly desired to be made conformable to Christ even in his sufferings Philippians 3.10 Ignatius cryed Let sire crosse breaking of my bones come quartering of my members crushing my body and all the torments that Man and Devil can invent so I may but enjoy my Lord Jesus Christ. When the Emperour threatned Saint Basil with death He boldly answers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 O that I might die for the Truth When Eudoxa the Empresse threatned Chrysostom He sent her word that he had learned to fear nothing but sinne A noble spirit knows not what discouragement means but like the valiant horse he breaks through dangers Iob 3.22 23. He triumphs in the midst of Trials and in an holy securitie he laughs at troubles Iob 5.22 Psalm 46. Romans 8.37 38. They onely are the Men that in a Spirituall sense doe tread on the Lion the Aspe and Adder Psalm 91.13 The water in Wether-glasses riseth highest when the Wether is foulest So Gods People when at worst then are they best when they have nothing in the creature they have most of God Habakkuk 3.17 18. Sense can say if we want Figges yet we have Wine to cheer us and if the Vine should fail yet the Olive may help for a time or if these should fail yet we have Corn in our Fields to support us or if a Famine should come yet if the Pastures abound with Flockes that will be some help or if the Flocks abroad should fail yet the Herds of the stall at home may support us Thus far Sense may goe But when all these fail and no outward comfort can be seen yet then can a Beleever rejoyce in his God This is the Happynesse of Gods People let things goe how they will or can yet he either doth or may comfort himselfe in his God When nothing but darkenesse is upon the Creature then Habbakuk hath an Yet and David a But wherewith to comfort and encourage themselves 1 Samuel 30.6 It may shame us who are cast downe by every light Affliction when we consider Davids condition at that time he comes to Ziglag which was given him for a Refuge He findeth the Citty burnt the Inhabitants taken Captive and amongst the rest his Wives and his Souldiers which should have ayded him they speake of stoning him yet in the midst of all these difficulties David corroborates himself in the Lord his God We use to rejoyce in gifts especially if one should give us a whole kingdom but 't is a greater Honour to be a Martyr for Christ then to be a Monarh of the world Heb. 11.26 'T is a great priviledge and a high Prerogative to suffer for the Gospel 't is no common gift but 't is a gift of free-grace and speciall love All the elect are called to be believers but not to be publick sufferers Suffering for the Gospel is in some respect a priviledge above believing the Gospel Phil. 1.29 such are the house and habitation of Gods Spirit there he rests and desires to dwell 1 Pet. 4.14 the Spirit of God will bring them to glory or the glorious Spirit of God will dwell in them in a glorious manner aud fill them full of Joy and Peace in believing This made the Saints so forward in the Primitive times to suffer for Christ that the bloudy Emperours were fain to make Decrees to hinder their Martyrdome I have read of a woman that in the time of Valens the Emperour ran with her haire loose about her eares and her child in her armes to the place where the Martyrs were slain and being askt whither she ran she answered Crownes are given to day and I will be partakers with them Thus in the reign of Charles the ninth when the Duke of Subaudia misused aud persecuted the men of the Valleyes burnt
understanding Ieremy 6.16 Psal. 78 10. Isay 30 9.15 and 42.24 Ieremy 5.3 and 8.5 Zach. 7.11 Rom. 8.7 12. Gods Spirit will not alwayes strive with sinfull rebellious man Ge● 6.3 but when he hath used all means to reclaim them and they will not be reclaimed he will give them up in judgement to their own hearts lusts so that he who is filthy shall be filthy still Revel 22.11 and since they would not be purged they shall not be purged from their sin till they dye Ezek. 24.13 13. Such sin against the Attributes of God 1. They sin against his Wisdome as if God knew not which were the fittect time for them to repent in 2. They sin against his Iustice whilest they say in their hearts God will not punish though they be impenitent Deut. 29.19 20. 3. They abuse his Goodnesse and Patience which should lead them to Repentance Rom. 2.5 Hence those that have favour shewed them and yet will not learn righteousnesse are charged with this that they will not behold the Majesty of the Lord Isay 26.10 14. Such sin against equity and common Reason Reason it self bids us speedily obey such as counsel us for our good especially if they be our superiours If a Prince should send a Pardon to a Rebel provided he humbled himself and submit Reason it self tels us that such a one were very unwise if he would not accept of mercy upon such easie terms 15. Consider what an exceeding hard thing it is to Repent 'T is no less then the change of nature old customs and habits which are very hardly broken Ier. 13.23 To change a Lion into a Lamb fire into water darkness into light is a work of omnipotency and such is Repentance 't is not in our power 't is Gods free gift and must be accepted of when he offers it 2 Tim. 2.25 16. Consider the vile nature of sin 1. 'T is the Poyson of the soul. Rom. 3.13 now the sooner we vomit up this poyson by a free and full confession of it the better 2. Sin is the souls sickness it stabs and wounds the conscience now diseases and wounds the longer they go undrest the ●●rdlier are they cured 3. It 's a Thief to us and a Traytour to God It robs us of our strength Peace and comfort now the longer a Thief keeps possession the harder 't is to cast him out and to entertain a Traytor to our Soveraign is Treason 4. 'T is a Debt Matth. 6.12 Psal. 51.1 now the further a man runs in debt the harder it is to get out again 3. 'T is Folly madnesse darknesse blindnesse filth c. and therefore with all speed to be opposed and purged out 17. We would have God to hear us speedily Psal. 131.2 and 77.7 then 't is but Reason that we should hear him speedily and if we may not say to our Neighbour Go and come again to morrow much lesse to God Prov. 3.28 18. We shall cause joy in Heaven Luke 15.7 1. God himself rejoyceth that he hath a new son he esteems more of one poor humbled repentant sinner then of ten thousand proud Pharises who in their own conceits need no Repentance 2. Christ rejoyceth to see of the travel of his soul and that he hath a new member added to his mystical body 3. The Holy Ghost rejoyceth that he hath a new Temple to dwell in 4. The Angels in Heaven rejoyce that they have a New Fellow-servant to sing praises to their Lord. 5. The Church rejoyceth that one more is added unto their number 19. 'T is a point of the highest wisdom to know and improve the day of our Visitation 'T is only the wise mans heart that discerneth times and seasons Prov. 22.3 Eccles. 8.5 ●phes 5.15 16. he is wise to redeem the Time past with repentance the time present with diligence and the time to come with providence He observes the fit time of doing Gods commads 'T was the high commendations of the men of Issacher that they were men that had understanding of the times and knew what ought to be done 1 Chron. 12.32 'T is one of the highest acts of Practical wisdom rightly to improve the seasons of Grace 20. Lastly the neglecting and squandring away these seasons of grace brings Ruine to a person or Nation God hath appointed a season wherein to call and convert men and those that slight these seasons undo themselves when the harvest of grace is past and the summer ended no wonder if men be not saved This very sin ruined Ierusalem the not knowing the day of her Visitation Luke 19.42 44. when God gives people space to repent and they will not repent then he casts them into a bed of sorrow Rev. 2.21 22. Upon the well or ill spending of these seasons of Grace depends our eternal Weal or Woe Let then these Considerations Quicken thee to a speedy improvement of them that thou mayest have cause to blesse God that ever thou readest these lines and they may never be a witnesse against thee for thy negligence in that great day of the Lord. God records every Sermon he sets down the day and year when 't was preacht Isay 1.1 Ier. 1.2 3. Hag. 1.1 and he will one day reckon with us for them and therefore we had need to live up to our Means and Mercies and to answer them with an holy and obedient conversation that our Sermons may rise for our Justification and not for our Confusion Let us sow to the Spirit betimes for as men sow so shall they reap he that in the Seed-time of his youth sowes nothing but Tares and wild Oates in the harvest of his age must not expect a crop of corn But he that sowes to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting See more Reasons Madens Ser. on Luke 19.42 c. 14 15 16. D. Prideaux Ser. on Mat. 5.23 p. 20 21. Fenner on Prov. 1.28 Gen. 6.3 Luke 23.42 Dyke on Repent c. 16. p. 150. c. Mr. Ier. Dyke's select Ser. on Prov. 23.23 p. 359. and on 1 Thes. 5.19 p. 27. D. Preston on Sacram. Ser. 3. p. 326. Tayler on Titus p. 47. c. Mr. Obad. Sedgwick Rev. 3.20 Mr. Grosse Ser. on Luke 19.41 p. 242. Mr. Wheatly's Redemption of Time Mr. Ant. Burgesse Spi. Refining 1. Part. Ser. 75. and Mr. Iohn Downams Warfar l. 2. c. 29 c. p. 184. Fol. Mr. Sangars Morning Lect. Rev. 2.21 p. 211. Mr. Froysel his Gale of opportunity Mr. Beesly Ser. 8. on Eccles. 12.1 Mr. Chishull on Luke 19.42 From a child thou hast known the holy Scriptures 2. Observe Young Timothies should read the Scriptures betimes Those that are devoted to the work of the Ministery should bee seasoned betimes with Scripture-Learning they must even suck it in with their Mothers milk 1 Tim. 4.6 They must not give themselves to the Reading of Tristlers as many young men that first begin with School-men Controversialists
Prophets as if it should vanish for then he should contradict himself Acts 26.27 and Christ Luke 24.27.44 and Peter Acts 10.43 but he speaks expresly of the Ceremonial Types and Sacrifices which he calls V. 5. Shadows of Heavenly things but Christ the Substance being come those shadows are gone Colos. 2.16.17 2. Objection Matthew 11.13 All the Prophets and the Law continued say they but till Iohn Answ. We must distinguish of these Terms the Law and the Prophets 1. Sometimes they are taken Generally for the whole Body and Canon of the Books of the Old Testament 2. Sometimes for those Legal Sermons and Types of the Messias to come and in this latter sense the words are hear to be taken q. d. The things which the Prophets foretold of Christ and the Types of him in the Law began to be fulfilled in the time of Iohn and therefore there needed now no more predictions but a manifestation of the Messias to Israel which was Iohns Office to doe Iohn 1.29 the Prophets shewed that Christ was to come and Iohn shews that he was now come So that here the Anabaptists run into the former fallacy which Christ speaks of the Types and part of the O. T. they apply to the whole in which are many Evangelical Sermons of the Prophets 3. Objection 2 Corinthians 3.11 The Vail is taken away by Christ. Answer By the Vail is not meant the Law of Moses as Socinus would have it but the blindness and hardness of the Jews which by their conversion should be taken away V. 16. 2. Suppose he should speak of the Ceremonial Law must therefore all the Law be abrogated 3. Suppose he should speak of all the Lawes of Moses which will not be granted shall we therefore cast off all the Old Testament as the Prophets Psalmes c. God forbid The New Testament doth not abrogate but illustrate the Old and makes things clearer Christ is the substance of both all the Sacrifices were but Types and shadows of Christ the true Sacrifice 'T is necessary therefore to read both for many things in the Old Testament help to illustrate the New and many things in the New Testament help to illustrate the Old 4. Objection Isay 54.13 All thy people shall be taught of God Ergo there is no need of the Old Testament Answer Nor of the New neither if these words should be taken Simply according to the Letter If the single teaching of Gods Spirit were sufficient as the Quakers say the Light within them is then farewell Old and New Testament both and such high attainers there are in their owne conceits that have cast off both But the words are to be taken Comparatively In Gospel times they shall not be so much taught by men as by God himself he by his Spirit will bless and water the labour of his Ministers and will teach us effectually the mysteries of salvation Now what is here to overthrow the Old Testament because in Gospel times Gods Spirit shall accompany his Ordinances and make them fruitful Ergo the Old Testament is abolished This is Anabaptists Logick 2. I answer ad Hominem Is not this an Old Testament proof and if it be abolisht why do you make such use of it against the Scriptures and the Ministery 5. Objection Christ is the End of the Law Rom. 10.4 Ergo 't is now abolished Answer Christ hath put an End to the Ceremonial Law because 't was but a shadow of him who was the Body Truth and Substance Iohn 1.17 Col. 2.17 but he hath not abolished the Moral Law Matth. 5.17 'T is still to us a Rule of Obedience Christ is Finis Legis perficiens non interficiens the perfecting and consummating end but not the destroying and abolishing end thereof 6. It may be profitable say the Socinians but 't is not necessary to read the Old Testament Answer Whom shall we believe blasphemous Socinus or our blessed Saviour 1. Christ commands us to search the Scriptures of the Old Testament so that 't is necessary to read them Necessitate praecepti 2. T is able to make us wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 and so is necessary Necessitate medii 3. Necessitate Signi 't is a sign we are Christs sheep when we hear his voice and that we are blessed indeed when we can meditate in his Law night and day Psal. 1.1 2. Object There is sufficient for our salvation revealed in the New Testament Ergo there 's no need of the Old Answ God knowes what is sufficient for man better then we he could have comprized his word in a lesser Volume then the N.T. but since in his wisdom and goodnesse he hath provided not only sufficiently but abundantly for our direction and comfort we may not quarrel at his goodnesse but do our duty and answer his bounty with obedience These are the chief Socinian Cavils if any would see more he may peruse Brochmand C C. Tom. 1. de sacra Script Q. 5. p. 77. 83. Altingius loci com Tom. 1. P. 2. p. 281. Hornbeck contra Socin l. 1. c. 4. Sect. 1 2 3. Arnoldus cont Socin cap. 1. p. 4 5 c. and Mr. Lyford Plain mans Senses exercised cap. 2. p 40 c. Vse 1. Serves for reproof to those Manichees Marcionites Valentinians Carpocratians Arminians Socinians Anabaptists and Libertines of our time who decry all arguing from Old Testament proofs as Legal antiquated and childish This is and should be matter of deep Lamentation to us Psal. 119.136 'T is time for the Lord to arise when men shall destroy all his Lawes Psal. 119 126. The Court-Bishops went about to destroy the second and the fourth Commandements in their Practice especially and God hath cast them out a Sect are now risen that go about to destroy all Gods Lawes they will certainly fall The more they oppose and disgrace it the more by an holy Antiperristasis we should love it Psal. 119.127 So shall we have Peace and nothing shall offend us Psalm 119.165 As our Saviour prayed for the persecutors of his person Father forgive them for they know not what they do so shall I pray for those that oppose his Truth revealed in the Old Testament Father forgive them for they know not or at least consider not what they do Why what do they They open a gap to abundance of sin and profanenesse for how many sins are there which are expressely condemned in the Old Testament which yet are scarcely mentioned in the New E. g. How oft is the prophanation of the Sabbath forbidden in the Old Testament and the profanenesse of it threatned with death and the due observers of it blest and encouraged Now if the Old Testament were abrogated we should be at a great losse in this respect since the New Testament speaks very little to this point and one great reason is because so much was said for it in the Old Testament which still stands unrepealed 2.
of God 2 Pet. 1.21 3. In respect of their matter they treat of the holy things of God they teach nothing that is impure or prophane They teach us Holinesse in Doctrine and Practice They call upon us for Self-denial Universal obedience and teach us to do all things from holy Principles and for holy ends 4. In respect of their End and Effect viz. our sanctification Iohn 17.17 by reading hearing and meditating on Gods word the Holy Ghost doth sanctify us Psalm 19.8 9. The word of God is not onely pure but purifying not onely clean per se but effectively a cleansing word 5. By way of distinction and opposition they are called Holy to distinguish them not onely from humane and prophane but also from all Ecclesiastical writings They have their naevos and must have their graines of allowance but the holy Scripture is pure and perfect 1. This must teach us to bring pure minds to the Reading hearing and handling of Gods holy word The word is pure and therefore calls for a pure frame of Spirit in him that reads it for as no man can rightly sing Davids Psalmes without Davids spirit so no man can rightly understand the word of God without the Spirit of God Carnal sensuall hearts and such divine spiritual works will never agree A vessel that is full of Poyson cannot receive pure water or if it could yet the vessel would taint it 'T is not for unclean beasts to come nigh these sacred fountains lest they defile them with their feet 2 Take heed of prophaning the holy Scriptures by playing with them or making jests out of them It 's a dangerous thing Ludere cum sacris See 7. sorts of prophaners of the holy Scriptures condemned in Mr. Trapps true Treasure Chap. 4. Sect. 1. to 8. 3. Love the Scriptures for their purity as God is to be loved for his purity so is his word Many love it for the History or for novelty but a gracious soul loves it for its purity because it arms him against sin directs him in Gods wayes enables him for duty discovers to him the snares of sin and Satan and so makes him wiser then his enemies Which are able to make thee wise unto salvation In these words the Apostle commends the Scriptures from the effect viz. because they are able to make us wise not only in Temporals but in Eternals they teach us not earthly but Heavenly wisdom even such as will never rest till it have brought us to salvation q. d. O Timothy I am now dying and ready for Martyrdome thou must therefore expect no more teaching from me this may trouble thee as the losse of Elijah troubled Elisha when he saw his Master taken from him into heaven yet be not despondent for though thou lose me yet thou hast a better Teacher in my stead viz. the Holy Scriptures which are able to make thee truly wise and to furnish thee with all Ministeriall requisits Observe The word of God alone is able to make us wise unto salvation Psalm 19.7 Luke 16.28 29. Iohn 5.39 and 20.31 Iames 1.22 25 No other knowledge can bring us to salvation but only the knowledge of the holy Scripture This excellency is proper and peculiar onely to the word of God Aristotle Plato Socrates Epictetus Seneca Plutarch may teach us Moral wisdome but not a word of Christ or salvation by him to be found therein But the knowledge of the Scripture brings us directly to Christ and by consequence to salvation which is the only true wisdome Iohn 17.3 Acts 4.12 it will save a man and his house Acts 11.14 This made the Apostle preferre the wisdom of God in the Gospel before the wisdome of this world 1 Cor. 2.6 7. the Virgins that walked according to this Rule are called wise Matth. 25. True wisdome consists in finding the way to blessednesse and walking in that way to the end Psalm 2.10 11 12. Deut. 4.6 Prov. 15.24 and 19 20. Ier. 6.16 Ephes. 5.15 16. they dye fooles and beasts how politick soever they have been for worldly ends if they have not provided for eternal salvation Psal. 49. ult Prov. 5. ult Ier. 8.8 9. and 17.11 Luke 12.20 This Doctrine like a two-edged sword cuts both wayes 1. It cuts down the Papists on the one hand who deny the Scriptures to be a perfect Rule of Faith and Manners and therefore they adde many old mouldy moath-eaten superstitious Traditions to be believed as necessary to salvation and so come under the curse of Adding to Gods word Deut. 4.2 Prov. 30.6 Revel 22.18 They also deserve sharp reproof for keepinng the Scriptures from the common-people and by consequence from salvation contrary to Gods expresse command who would have all without exception of rich or poor to read his word Deut. 6.6 7 8. and 31.12 Iohn 5.39 Colos. 3.16 2. It cuts down the Sectaries on the other hand who deny the perfection of the Scripture and cry up up their own perfection their own dreams and fancies If the Scripture be able to make us wise to salvation to what end then serve these Ignes fatui but to lead men out of heavens path such have no true light in them Isay 8.20 and if Paul durst not publish any New-light besides or beyond the Scripture but kept close to the Rule and preached only such things as were revealed in the Prophets Acts 26.22 how great then is the presumption of the Pharises of our time who dare do that which Paul durst never do 2. It may be a singular encouragement to us to be much in Reading and Meditation on the word 'T is not Plato Plutarch c. that can make us wise to salvation though they are useful in their kind and we may learn many excellent lessons from them yet since we cannot find the name of Christ there it must abate our delight in them as it did Saint Austins in the reading of Tully If you will be wise indeed Read the Holy Scriptures they will make you savingly wise they will teach us all things necessary to salvation and what can we desire more See how the knowledge of Gods word excells all other knowledge in sundry particulars Hildersham on Iohn 4.21 Lect. 34. Doct. 3. and Lect. 36. Doct. 6. Through Faith which is in Christ Iesus That is by faith whose Foundation and Object is Christ with all his benefits The holy Scriptures though they instruct us sufficiently unto salvation yet cannot save us without faith Observe The word of God cannot save nor profit us without faith Such is our blindness deadness dulness yea enmity against the Word that without Faith we cannot see conceive or receive it 1 Cor. 2.14 Rom. 1.16 Heb. 4.2 Iohn 3.19 20. If a man offer us never so good an Almes yet u●less we have an eye to see it with a hand and heart to receive it we are never the better for the tender of it So that no Faith no
them for salvation the same word is used for sufficient 1 Tim. 4.8 3. Objection Though All the Scripture be thus profitable yet the whole is not saith Bellarmine Answer Who so blind as they that will not see what is this but to seek a knot in a bulrush and to make doubts where there are none at all This is to trifle and not to dispute for who knowes not that All Scripture and the whole Scripture are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 equivalent and the same So All is taken in other places Collectively and not distributively as 1 Cor. 13.2 Colos. 2.9 Ephesians 2.21 and 3.15 and 4.16 These rubs being removed the sense of the place is this q. d. Great is the Dignity and Authority the Majesty and Utility of the Holy Scriptures That Gift of Gifts which have not Angels or Men but God himselfe for their more immediate Autho●r It is he that hath given them to informe the ignorant to recall the erronions to correct the vitious and to direct and comfort the Pious So that by reading and studying this Word of God the People of God and specially the Teacher of Gods People may be made every way fit and compleat for all the services of his calling Observe That the sacred Scriptures are the very word of God Holy men were but the Instruments 't is God that is the Authour of them they were but the spirits amanuenses to write what he should dictate to them Hence it is called the word of God Mark 7.13 2 Cor. 2.17 and 4.2 1 Thes. 4.15 the Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 and is ascribed solely to the Spirit of God without mentioning any Authour Heb. 10.15 what was uttered by the mouthes of the Prophets God spake what they delivered was by direction and inspiration from above Hence the Holy Ghost is said to speak by the mouth of David Acts 1.16 and 4.25 and 28.25 and the word of the Lord is said to come to Hos. 1.1 and Ioel 1.1 Ier. 1.9 Ezek. 1.3 Heb. 1.1 2. and as the Old Testament so the New is the very word of God for the whole Scripture is given by inspiration from above and the Apostle tells us that he had received from the Lord what he delivered to them 1 Cor. 11.23 and Rom. 1.1 and 15.18 this made the Apostles stile themselves the servants of Christ. Philip. 1.1 Titus 1.1 Iames 1.1 1 Pet. 1.1 Iude 1 the foundation of the Church is said to be the Prophets i. e. the Old Testament and the Apostles i e. the New Testament Ephes. 2.20 So that the Authority of Scripture is greater then of an Angels voyce and of greater perspicuity and certainty to us for besides inspiration 't is both written and sealed This is fundamentum fundamentorum a fundamental point very necessary to be knowne for we can never profit by the scriptures till we believe and are perswaded that they are the very word of God he that believes not this believes nothing and the very ground of all that Atheisme and profanenesse both in Doctrine and Manners which abounds amongst us springs from hence Have at the Root then and have at all lay the Axe to it and the branches will soon wither To prove the Divine Authority of the Scriptures See 18. Reasons in Bishop Vshers Body of Divinity and 18. Reasons in Ward on Matthew 1.1 p. 1 2 c. Stock on the Attributes chapt 4. Mr. Iohn Downams Warfar l. 2. c. 21. p. 160. Fol. Capel on Tentat l. 4. c. 4. Sangar's Morning Lect. p. 4.20 Mr. Leighs Body of Divinity l. 1. c. 2. Walaeus loc com p. 124 125. Wo then to those Blasphemous Hereticks and Atheistical Scepticks the Anti-scripturists of our age that cry up their own perfection and cry down the Scriptures as imperfect that cry up themselves as Gods and cry down Christ as man that cry up their own dreams and cry down the word which condemns those dreams even as the Malefactor exclaimes against the Judge which he knowes will condemn him O hellish pride O hideous horrid blasphemy Wo is me that ever it should be told in Gath and published in the streets of Askelon that England which was sometimes the glory of Nations should now for such blasphemies as those become the scorn and reproach of all the Nations round about us Yet such there are perhorresco refereus that say the Scriptures are not of Divine but of Humane authority and invention that the Pen-men wrot what pleased themselves that they are no foundation of Christian religion c. Strange it is to me to find Mr. Iohn Goodwin a man of such knowledge and parts so well versed in Scripture a Preacher and expounder of it so long yet now in his old age to fall into that ragged Regiment of Anti-scripturists Yet thus it is when once men give way to sin and error they know not when nor where they shall rest Whither will not Pride and Selfe-conceit lead men As Christ was crucified between two Theeves so are the Scriptures vilified by two sorts by Papists on the one hand and Atheistical Sectaries on the other but all in vain for magna est veritas praevalebit The Truth still gets ground against them all Many Libertines cry out against us Ministers as Antichristian but whether come nearer Antichrist we or they the ensuing Parallel will declare for though their Heads took severall wayes yet like Sampsons Foxes they are tyed together with firebrands at their tayles Papists call the Scriptures 1. A Nose of wax or Rule of lead which may be bowed every way as men please 2. Inky Divinity 3. They are fallible 4. They are insufficient without unwritten Traditions 5. They prefer the Church before them 6. To defend their errours they wrest the Scriptures and make them Allegorize without a cause 7. Sometimes they take the bare Letter and will admit of no exposition 8. What blasphemous nonsensicall expositions the Friers made of the Scripture former ages can testify See Willets Tetrastilon Pillar 3. Synops. p. 1296. Atheisticall Anti-scripturists say 1. They are uncertain 2. A dead Letter 3. They are not infallible 4. They are insufficient without Revelations 5. They prefer the dark light within them before them 6. So do these yea some have turned all Scriptures into Allegories 7. So do these 8. What Non-sensical ones these make who lists may see in Mr. Brinsley's Virtigo p. 133 134. and Mr. Firmin against the Quakers Should these men have spoken but half so much against the Higher Powers as they have done against God and his word they would quickly have been apprehended for Traytors yea if a man steal above thirteen-pence half peny 't is death by the Law but if a man blaspheme the God of heaven revile the Scriptures and overthrow the very foundations of Religion there 's little or nothing done to such a one Do we thus requite the Lord O foolish and unwise Is this the thanks we
or Tittle of Gods word shall perish Mat. 5.18 Hence it 's called a more sure i. e. a most sure word 2 Pet. 1.19 'T is a certain infallible word it hath been often tried yet never failed nor deceived those that trusted in it Psal. 12.6 we love faithfull friends and such as will stick to us in our misery oh then love the faithful and sure word of God which will never leave you nor forsake you but in the very pangs of death will minister strong consolation to you 'T is in the word that we find the everlasting Covenant even the sure mercies of David i. e. of Christ who in respect of the flesh descended from David Isay 55.3 there we find by whom our sins are pardoned our Natures healed our Soules are saved these are called sure mercies 1. In respect of performance they are as sure as if already done 2 Sam. 23.6 2. Sure in respect of continuance they shall never be taken away his mercy endures for ever Once adopted justified fanctisied and for ever so 2 Sam. 7.13 Iohn 13.1 Let us not then sit down content with those low perishing uncertain things but get interest in those sure desireable and soule-satisfying mercies Pray with Saint Au●l●● Da mihi nummum nunquam periturum Lord give me those riches which will never perish 4. It maketh the simple wise and that to salvation Many that are sensible of their ignorance and simplicity are discouraged from reading the word when the promise runs to such as being sensible of their own silly bruitish condition and come with humble tractable teachable hearts that they shall be taught wisdom Prov. 1.4 and 19.4 Psal. 119.130 and become wiser then the ancient who by their long experience oft times get much wisdom 2. Wiser then their Teachers who usually excell their Schollers 3. Wiser then their enemies who yet by their continual diving and searching into the wayes of their opposites grow very subtle and cunning Psal. 119.98 99 100. 5. The word of the Lord is right and strait having no crookednesse nor perversenesse in it Wicked men go about and fetch a compasse in wayes of sin but the godly run the way of the plain and out-run them as Ahimaaz did Cushi 2 Sam. 18.23 6. It breeds joy in every soul that orders his life according to it V. 8. the godly find 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 somewhat of kin to them in the word which makes them delight in it Though the wicked can find no joy there yet an upright-hearted David finds it sweeter then hony and more pretious then gold they are even the joy and rejoycing of their hearts Psalm 119.111 this breeds solid serious substantial spiritual joy in the deepest afflictions and tentation Psal. 119.92 I had perished in my affliction unlesse thy Law had been my delight It was not onely delightfull but even delight in the Abstract yea delights in the Plurall number he found delight upon delight i. e. great and sure delight in Gods word It upholds the heart from sinking under affliction 'T will make a Paul and Silas sing Psalmes in prison when Creature-comforts faile yet faith can feed upon the Promises Habbak 3.17 Hebrews 13.5 The word affords us presidents of greater trialls then ever yet we have undergone and so comforts us in our distresses Do thy children rise against thee so did Davids Do Princes speak against thee and thy famliar friends betray thee so did his Psal. 55. Hast lost all so did Iob. Art cast into some loathsome prison so was Ieremy c. besides the word comforts us by shewing how all things work together for good unto us Rom. 8.28 and that God afflicts us for good ends 7. 'T is pure not onely formaliter in se being free from all the dross and dregs of sin a corruption but effectivè because 't is a special meanes to purify and cleanse us Iohn 17.17 Purity is or at leastwise ought to be the Object of our love God is pure his word is pure his works are pure and therefore do the Saints love them so did David Psalm 119.140 thy word is very pure What followes therefore doth thy servant love it 8. It enlighteneth the eyes V. 8. 't is a light and a lamp to us Psalm 119.105 to have our bodily sight restored is a mercy but to have our dark understandings enlightened to see the deeps of our misery and the riches of Gods mercy this is the mercy of mercies Now the word is the meanes by which the spirit conveighs both sight and light to us by it he calls us out of our dark and doleful condition into marvellous light 1 Pet. 2.9 The light of the Sun is a pleasant thing but oh how sweet and pleasant is this spiritual light which leads us to eternal happinesse naturally there is a Vaile over all our hearts and therefore before we read we should beseech the Lord to remove the Vaile else we shalll never see the divine and supernatural mysteries of Gods Law Psalm 119.18 9. The fear of the Lord is clean V. 9. The world is called the feare of God effectivè from the effect of it because it both teacheth and worketh in us the true fear of God 'T is clean 1. in se it hath no sin nor approbation of sin in it 2. Quoad nos 't is a meanes to make us clean helping to purge out that froth and filth of sin which makes us loathsome to God and his Saints 10. 'T is eternal and perpetual the Lawes of men are changed and abrogated but the Law of God is like God himself it endures for ever maugre the malice of all opposers The grasse may wither and the flower fade but the word of the Lord abides for ever Psal. 119.89 Isay 40.8 1 Pet. 1.24 25. We use to prize durable things lasting cloaths and long enduring Leases men desire oh set your hearts on Gods word which endures and will make you endure for ever if you obey it 1 Ioh. 2.17 11. 'T is not only true but Truth it self V. 9. Iohn 17.17 the judgements of the Lord are Truth He calls Gods word by the name of judgements either because in it God denounceth judgements against wicked men or else because we must judge of our actions according to this Rule There 's no fraud nor falshood in them therefore they are called by way of Eminency The Scriptures of Truth Dan. 10. ult Colossians 1.1.5 As God is Truth so is his Word He is not like man that he should lye Not a Threatening in the Scripture but shall fall on the wicked and not a blessing promised but shall be fulfilled to the righteous 12. 'T is Righteous altogether as God is just and righteous so is his word Rom. 7.14 the Law is holy just and good three Epithets which can be applied to no Law but Gods only There 's no unrighteousness nor injustice in them Mens Lawes oft times are harsh hard
unrighteous so are not Gods they are perfectly just and righteous altogether 13. 'T is precious 1. In respect of profit 't is better then Gold ● In respect of pleasure 't is sweeter then hony By gold David notes all riches and the things of greatest worth in the world and by much fine Gold he meaneth all gold how pure or precious soever even the finest refined gold that hath been oftnest tried in the fire No riches like the word Hence David calls it his Heritage and Portion Psal. 119.11 as if he had nothing else in the world to trust to and therefore he prefers it before all worldly excellencies Psal. 119.72.127 the Law of thy mouth is better to me then thousands of gold and silver It excells Gold in five respects 1. Gold is but an Earthly good but the riches which the Scripture brings is Spirituall 2. 'T is but a common good wicked men as Esay Ahab Nabal the Turk the Pope have it in abundance a man may be outwardly great and yet inwardly miserable 't was great Caesar that said I have been all things and yet am never the better But the Grace which the Scripture brings is a speciall blessing peculiar but to a few 3. Gold cannot comfort a man in the day of distresse whether it be personal or national 'T is rather a snare then an Helper then Proverbs 11.4 Ezek. 7.19 Zeph. 1. ult But the word of God hath breasts full of consolation for the people of God in all their distresses Psalm 119.92 4. Gold cannot breed contentment yea the more men have oft-times the more they covet But the word teacheth men godlinesse and this in the power of it breeds contentment which is better then gold 1 Tim. 6.6 5. Gold may be lost Thieves may rob us of it rust may consume it and especially when death comes we must part with it But true Grace which is wrought in us by the word and spirit of God can never be lost Where ever we go it will go with us 'T is fidus Achates a faithfull friend which will never leave us till it have brought us to glory Rev. 14.13 Oh that I could convince men of the truth of this viz. that the saving knowledge of God in his word is better then Gold Tell men where they may have gold and we see how they ride run dig delve and all for a little perishing gold which cannot satisfy them Isay 55.2 But this true Treasure which is hidden in the word of God very few labour for and the Reason is mens hearts are earthly carnal sensual and savour not the things of God Oh that such would hearken to the counsell of Solomon Prov. 8.10 11. receive instruction and not silver and knowledge rather then choice gold Prov. 3.14 15. and to a greater then Solomon Revel 3.18 Buy of me gold i. e. the Graces of the Spirit as Knowledge Faith Obedience c. Build not on the Hay Wood Stubble of mens fancies and inventions but build on the pure sure sound doctrine arising from Gods word this is called Gold 1 Cor. 3.12 and one day will be better to us then all the gold in the world 14. For delight and pleasantnesse Gods word is sweeter then Honey yea then the purest finest honey which flows from the comb Prov. 24.13 14. and 16.24 the lips of the spouse are said to drop as the honey comb i. e. her words are very pleasant sweet and grateful Cant. 5 3. and when the Scripture would express the sweetnesse of any thing it borroweth this allusion sweeter then honey Ezek. 3.3 Revel 10.9 10. Old men are all for profit and young men for pleasure here is gold for the one and honey for the other Gods word brings more true pleasure to the soules of those that obey it then the sweetest honey doth to the taste Quest. If the word be thus precious and sweet how comes it to passe that most men in the world see not the preciousnesse nor taste the sweetnesse of it Answ. The God of this world hath so blinded their eyes that they cannot see the Excellencies of the word The Sun is full of light and lustre but the blind man for want of sight cannot discern it The word is full of sweetnesse but mens hearts are so taken up with the enjoyment of present things that they cannot taste nor relish the things of God 'T is but lost labour to put a cordial in a dead mans mouth The fault then is not in the word which is as precious pure delightfull and sweet as ever but the fault is in our corrupt minds which are so blinded and hardned with sin that we cannot perceive nor receive the word Let 's beseech the Lord to spiritualize our hearts and then we shall be able experimentally to say How sweet are thy words unto my taste yea sweeter then Honey to my mouth Psal. 119.103 As none know the sweetnesse of honey but such as have tasted it so none know the sweetnesse of Gods word but the people of God who experimentally know the worth of it To them and to them onely 't is more precious then gold and sweeter then honey To them the most excellent and delightfull things in the world are base and bitter drosse and dung loathsome and noysome in comparison of Gods word 15. 'T is a speciall preservative against sin V. 11. and Psal. 119.11 't is one speciall piece and part of our spiritual armour whereby we defend our selves against sin and Satan Ephes. 6.17 by this Christ Steven Paul and the Martyrs defended themselves and offended their enemies Matth. 4.47 This will Antidote and arm us with invincible arguments against sin and Satan Doth the Devill tempt thee to covetousnesse cruelty Usury the word will tell thee that no such person shall come into Gods Kingdome Psal. 15.5 Gal. 5.22 Art given to fornication adultery uncleannesse the word will tell thee that God will judge such Heb. 13.4 Art tempted to Apostasy remember Heb. 10.38 Mark 8. ult Rev. 21.8 Art tempted to pride remember God resists the proud Iames 4.6 1 Pet. 5.5 Art tempted to hypocrisy remember Hypocrites have the lowest place in hell Matth. 24.51 Art tempted to defraud and over-reach thy neighbour remember the Lord is an avenger of all these things 1 Thes. 4.6 though men may carry many things so subtilly as to escape the justice of men yet they shall never escape the hand of God Art tempted to break thy Covenant the Scriptures still tell thee what befell Zedekiah for this sin Ezek. 17 18. The very root of all that Atheisme and Profanenesse that is amongst us is this that either men do not know the Scriptures or else they do not believe them 16. It brings a great Reward not to those that onely hear it know it praise it but to those that practise it V. 11. yea the very obeying of Gods commandements is a reward it self
not that strong imployment be excused See helps to strengthen Memory Manton on Iames 1.25 p. 204. Barlow on 2 Timothy 2.8 Baine on Revelations 2.4 p. 13. Fenner on Revelations 3.1 Rogers of Dedham on Love p. 3 4 c. Doctor Reynolds on the Passions p. 13 c. 3. Medit on the word Do not only taste it but eat it digest it concoct it for then it will nourish you Ier. 15.16 This made David to excel Ps. 119.99.100 'T was one of Luthers Masters by which he profited so much Meditation Tentation and Prayer This will make us know things experimentally we shall taste of hidden Manna we shall be constant and setled in Gods wayes This layeth open to us all our losses by sin the losse of Gods favour losse of Peace of conscience and losse of Reward and so imbitters sin to us By this we converse with God 't is our Mount Nebo out of which we may behold the heavenly Canaan Though our bodies be on earth yet by Meditation our soules may be in heaven Resolve then to spend one houre in 24. every day in this duty Satan will lay many rubs in your way for of all duties he cannot endure that we should reflect upon our wayes yet like another Sampson you must break all the cords of these Philistines the benefit Peace and comfort you will find by it will abundantly pay for all especially on the Sabbath day we must be much in this duty Rev. 1.10 As the rich man thinks it not sufficient that he hath Gold but he loves to think on 't to see it to count it soe should we not content our selves with a notionall knowledge of God and his works but by meditation we should recount and ponder the wayes and works of God that we may experimentally tell what God hath done for our soules See more for Meditat. Barlow on 2 Tim. 2.7 D. Holsworth's Ser. on Psal. 119.48 p. 321. Downams Guide to Godlinesse l. 5. c. 14. Mr. Stoughton Davids Love to the word p. 295. to 434. Mr. Ambrose his Medita cap. 7. Sect. 1. Mr. Baxter's Saints Rest. Part. 4. p. 147.179 to 203. Let us then with all Thankfulnesse acknowledge this mercy of mercies this gift of gifts what grosse Ignorance Profanenesse Superstition and Idolatry did overspread the world 500. yeares agoe for want of this light which we enjoy Oh what excellent Helps Expositors Treatises Practical and Polemical on all Parts of Divinity do we enjoy what would not our forefathers have given to have seen this day and yet we foolish ungrateful people know not our own mercies nor do we prize the things that concerne our everlasting Peace As ever we desire to prosper let us with all readinesse of mind receive the word none ever yet lo●t by entertaining it it payeth for its entertainment where ever it comes 'T will return Mercy for Duty and brings with it a sure Reward Every line of it runs Wine Milk and Honey to the due observers of it We should therefore esteem it above our dearest lives When the Sanctum Sanctorum was taken saith Iosephus in the last destruction of Ierusalem the Jewes desired rather to dye then to live What crying yea what dying was there when the Ark was taken 1 Sam. 4.18 20 21 22. if the Lord will take his word away we should desire that he would take us away for our lives will not be worth the enjoying if we cannot have the Tokens of Gods love and favour with them There is not a surer signe of a child of God then this sincere love to the sincere milk of Gods word 1 Pet. 2.2 Moses esteems it above all the learning of other Nations Deut. 4.6 David spends the whole 119. Psalm to shew his intimate affection to it He preferres it before Gold Solomon his son preferres it before Pearles Proverbs 3.15 Iob 23.12 preferres it before his food and Ieremy 15 16. makes it his joy In a word all the children of God have been great lovers of the word of God They look upon it as a Rich Mine of Heavenly Treasures and a store-house of all spiritual consolations The Bible is Promptuarium sacrum a common shop of medicines for the soule full of rich priviledges promises and large Legacies to the people of God 'T is a staffe and stay to the old an ornament and guide to the young Here you may read the Love which God bare to his children from all eternity and will continue to them when time shall be no more here are to be found the Leaves of the Tree of Life which God hath ordained for the healing of the Nations In a word here is a Hammar for Hereticks a Touchstone for doctrine a Rule for our lives a comforter counsellour to us in this house of our pilgrimage We should then read Gods word not only as our duty but as our priviledge singular happinesse Rejoycing that we have them to read the child delights to read his fathers Will and Testament that he may see what is bequeathed to him Denizons delight to read their Charters and to know their Priviledges The Malefactor acquitted delights to read his Pardon and the Prodigal that is received into favour delights to read the Affectionate Letters of his father to him If we be born of God we cannot but love the word of God And it is profitable c. Observe Such as meddle with Gods word must profit by it We abuse the word when we read or hear it onely for Speculation Novelty and Curiosity but not for Practice that we may know love and fear God and so be happy for ever God gave them for this end that we might profit by them Those Ministers then are to be blamed that play with Scripture and feed their people with the chaffe of aery Notions frivolous Questions Idle distinctions and foolish controversies seeking their own ends and praise and not the benefit of Gods people Let such remember that the Scripture was given to Profit us but not play withall 'T is said of Bernard that preaching one day Scholastically the learned thanked him but not the godly but when another day he preacht plainly the good people came blessing God for him and giving him many Thanks which some Schollars wondring at oh said he Heri Bern●rdum hodie Christum Yesterday I preacht Bernard but to day I preacht Christ. 'T is not Learning but Teaching not the wisdom of words but the evidence of the Spirit that is pleasing to the Saints For Doctrine for reproof c. Observe The word of God containes in it all things necessary to salvation what is there in the whole body of Religion but it may be referred to one of these Heads either Doctrine Reproof Correction or Instruction in Righteousnesse All things necessary to life eternal are here to be found Ezek. 20.11 Iohn 5.39 and 20.31 This will inform our Judgements reform our manners convince gainsayers and
committed in the world Those sins which are now written as it were with the juice of Lemmons shall by the fire of that last day be made visible and legible to all There 's nothing so secret but shall be then revealed all things shall be brought to light even the hidden works of darkness Luk. 12.2 Eccles. 12.14 Rom. 2.16 1 Cor. 4.5 These secret plots of villany which men would not have made known to the World for a World shall then be written as with a beam of the Sun upon their foreheads and shall be fully with all its circumstances disclosed and layed open before all the world And if it be a shame to have ones sins publisht and ript up before a Congregation tho it be for our amendment and where there are many that pitty us and pray for us oh what confusion will seise on men in that great day when not one or two but all their sins shall be layd naked to the view of the world where there shall be no eye to pitty them nor any to pray for them The eminent and signal work of the day of judgement is to bring secret things to light viz. Heart-pride Heart-adultery Heart-murder Hypocrisie c. These secret lusts which no eye but Gods can see shall be brought into the open light and the more craft and subtlety and secret contrivance there hath been in thy sin the greater shall they shame be in that day when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed 1 Cor. 4.5 Amongst men thoughts are free but God will bring all the thoughts and devices of men to light Prov. 15.26 Not only the acts but the thoughts of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord and therefore go not about to commit any sin under pretence of secresie for we see how even in this life secret sins have bin brought to light as Davids murder adultry 2 Sam. 12.12 Thou didst it secretly but I will publish it before all Israel q. d. I will publish it openly and at noon-day that I may bring upon thee that shame and disgrace which thou didst more carefully avoyd then my displeasure 2. Men must then render a strict and particular account of their words Then men must answer for idle much more for filthy and hard speeches against God and his People Matth. 12.36 37. Iude 15. God hath given us tongues to bless and glorifie him and if we abuse them to cursing and dishonouring of him how shall we answer it in that day 3. Then much more shall men answer for their evil works God will bring every work to judgement whether it be good or evil Eccles. 11.9 and 12.14 Iude 15. Then shall thy conscience be suddenly clearly and universally irradiated with extraordinary light to look upon all thy life at once as ' t were Then must thou give an exact account for every thought of thy heart for every lust full glance of thine eyes for every word of thy mouth for every moment of thy time for every motion of Gods Spirit which he hath made to thy soul for every office thou hast born and how thou hast discharged it in every point and particular We are all Stewards and must shortly give an account 1. De bonis commissis 2. De bonis dimissis 3. De malis commissis 4. De malis permissis 1. We must give an account of all these Talents of Time Truth Wit Riches c. which have been committed to our trust and how we have improved them to our Masters praise Matth. 25.14 15 c. Then must you account for Personal mercies and National mercies for the houses you have dwelt in for the creatures that have died for you and toyld for you for the cloaths on your back the meat in your mouths for every Sermon thou hast heard and what benefit thou hast reaped by it for every Sabbath thou hast spent c. 2. You must answer for the good which hath been omitted and neglected by you Matth. 25.42 43. I was hungry and ye did not feed me c. He doth not say ye robbed me ye persecuted me ye cast me into prison but he condemnes them for omitting the duties he required of them Many civil men bless themselves in that they are no drunkards adulterers theeves c. but a negative Christian is no Christian 'T is not sufficient we do no evil 't is damnable not to do good Isai. 1.18 Psal. 34.14 and 37.27 1 Pet. 3.11 3. For sins committed then shall the book of mens consciences be opened and all their works of darkness be brought to light Rev. 20.12 4. For all the sins which thou hast suffered to be done and hast any way been accessary to either by commanding commending conniving c. Now this particular and strict account implyes that the day of judgement will be longer then some imagine tho happily not so long as others imagine Some say it is called a day and therefore it shall last no longer but this doth not follow for the day of the Lord is not taken for a day natural consisting of four and twenty hours but for time indefinitely it being frequent in Scripture to put day for time as Isai. 49.8 Luke 19.42 Iohn 8.56 Others say that God can in a moment inlighten and dilete the conscience so that a man presently shall see all that he hath done this is true but yet God will not onely have men themselves to know but all the world shall know and see the Justice of that day and therefore it is very probable 't will take up some considerable time As the day of grace consists of many years so will the day of judgement saith M. Cotton There shall be a day of publick hearing things shall not be suddenly shuffled up saith Mr. Sheapard as carnal thoughts imagine No it must take up some large quantity of time that all the world may see the secret sins of wicked m●n and therefore it may be made evident saith he From Scripture and Reason that this day of Christs Kingly Office in judging the world shall happily last longer then his private administration now wherein he is lesse glorious in governing the world Tho I cannot assent to these opinions yet that matters of such great and publick importance will take up a considerable time I think no rational man will deny who either considers the number and nature of the things to be judged and how strict and particular the Scripture affirms that judgement shall be But positively to affirm that it shall last so many hundred years or so many thousand years is to be wise above what is written 2. Since the day of Judgement is of such general concerment both to good and bad and since there is no Doctrine so powerful to awaken secure impenitent sinners out of their sins it may teach us Ministers to be much in preaching and pressing this day upon the consciences of people As King Iames
Matthew 3.3 He proclaimed the coming of Christ into the World Thus Paul was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Herald to publish the Gospel Be instant The Word signifieth to stand over it stand close to it or to stand much upon it To be instant in Preaching implies a standing to it with diligence and earnestnesse hence Tindal renders it Be fervent in Preaching We must rouse up our selves to the work we shall meet with many dangers difficulties discouragements we must expect many Temptations from within and from without us from profits pleasure ease so that if we be not Instant and Urgent in the work offering a kind of holy Violence to our selves we shall fail in the duty and though for the present we see no fruit of our labours yet must we not give over but be instant and unwearied in the work of the Lord and even compell men to come in to Christ Luke 14.33 In season out of season Q. D. Preach the Word on all occasions take all Opportunities be active in the duty he that will be a Bishop must be apt to teach 1 Timothy 3.3 1. We must Preach in season i. on the Lords Day that is the ordinary time set apart by God himself for this duety This season Christ and his Apostles usually observed Marke 6.1 Luke 4.16 Acts 2.46 and 13.14 and 20.7 2. There are times and seasons when the Word may be most acceptable and most profitable to the hearers as when Gods hand lies heavy upon a people and they are broken with some great affliction then is a time to speak a word in season then they will hear our words for they are sweet Psalm 141.6 2. Out of Season Not that the Word is ever out of season in it self for it is the Bread of Life all other meats have their times and seasons but Bread is the Staffe of Nature and is never out of season There is no season unseasonable for so seasonable for so necessary a duty in the Opinion of a Natural man and in the eye of carnal reason it seems sometimes to be out of season as when it is preached on the week day when Pastor and people have profits and pleasures and worldly imployments to draw them off Now a Sermon seems like snow in Harvest to such earthly souls it is out of season with them yet even these seasons which the world judgeth unseasonable must a Minister redeem for preaching Thus Christ himself did not onely preach on the Sabbath day but on the week dayes also Luke 8.1 and 19.47 We must not to favour our selves preach once a moneth or once a day but we must be diligent labourers in the Lords Vineyard if we expect our penny So that there is no contradiction in these commands both may and must be done by a faithful Minister who must Preach in season when God gives the opportunity and the people desire it Nehem. 8.1 Acts 13.42 and out of season when peoples hearts are so distracted with worldly cares that they have no desire after it Now if Ministers must preach the Word in season and out of season then People must hear the Word and be instant in season and out of season Preaching and Hearing are Relatives if there lye a Necessity on us to Preach by the same Rule there lieth a Necessity on you to hear you must redeem time from your worldly affairs to attend on this Ordinance not onely on the Lords day but even on the week day It will not repent you when you come into your Kingdome The comfort and peace which you will gain by a right attendance on this Ordinance will abundantly recompence all worldly losses you shall incur by it Let thy bodily affairs wait on thy Spiritual and the lesser give place to the greater we have a notable instance for this in the men of Bethshemesh who were busie at their Harvest till the Arke came and then for joy they lay by all and goe to offer Sacrifice 1 Sam. 6.13 14 15. Question But would you have us cast off our callings and doe nothing but follow Sermons Answer By no means for he that commands us to be swift to heare Iames 1.19 commands us also to be diligent in our callings yet whetting is no letting the oyling of the wheels doth not hinder the going of of the Clock An houre spent in hearing a Sermon is no hinderance to our particular calling We can spend two or three houres in Visiting our friends and think it no impediment to our Temporal imployments So that in Cities and Towns especially where people may meet conveniently in respect of cohabitation it will be their wisedome to improve these opportunities for their spiritual advantage as they did Acts 13.42 who desired the Apostles to preach in the space between that and the next Sabbath on the week day saith Diodat Reprove Rebuke Exhort Having spoken before of Preaching in General now he comes to the particular branches of it whereof the first is to reprove such as are erroneous in Judgement by Scripture demonstrations to confute and confound them and put them to silence Titus 1.9 2. Rebuke and chide such as are exorbitant in their manners and corrupt in their lives others may doe it ex Charitate Leviticus 19.17 Ministers ex Officio with all authority Titus 2.25 1 Timothy 5.20 Isay 58.1 Many call it Rayling when it is onely Rebuking by this means some may be reclaimed others restrained and the wicked left without excuse 3. Exhort such as run well to persevere Comfort the dejected quicken the slothful the words of the wise are as goads to rouse men out of their dulness Eccles. 12.11 people then must suffer the word of Exhortation to work on their Affections without quarrelling or fretting against it Hebrewes 13.22 q. d. Reprove all errours rebuke all sins and exhort to all Duties yet still with the spirit of Love and meeknesse that we may convert and not exasperate them so that the Apostle here repeateth and presseth again these Ministerial Dueties before mentioned 2 Tim. 3.16 With all Long-suffering Here is the manner how all these must be done viz. with a great deal of Patience and lenity least we become dispondent because we see not the present fruit and success of our rebukes and exhortations Our reproofes never work kindly unless people see that they come from a patient and a loving mind We must doe all in Love and in the spirit of meeknesse mourning for their folly and endeavouring their restauration We must doe nothing proudly superciliously or Tyrannically but do all with a Paternal affection without malice wrath bitternesse If a man have broke his bones or lost his sight we do not use to revile him or rage against him but we pitty him we pray for him we bemoan his condition A little Patience will not serve a Ministers turn who hath to doe with all sorts of persons he must get a
Sancta sanctis these holy things call for holy Ones We must first take an holy Vomit and by a sincere confession of sin rid our stomacks and purge out of our souls those malignant peccant humors of malice guil hypocrisy filthiness and superfluity and naughtiness before we can receive the Word with meekness so as to grow thereby 1 Pet. 2.1 2. Iames 1.22 Iacob purgeth his family before he goes to Bethel Gen. 35.1 2. The husband-man first rids his ground of those bushes briars and brambles which stand in his way and then falls to plowing before he goes to sowing and so must we first rid our hearts of all inordinate cares which like thornes choak the good seed of the Word and then receive it into honest and good hearts Matthew 13. Ier. 4.3 when the people were prepared for the hearing of the Law Exodus 19. Then and not till Then doth God speak unto them Exodus 20.1 Our Translation reads it And but former Translations render it Then and so saith the Arabick Version Deinde then or after that viz. they were prepared Many come but like Rachel they bring their Idolls with them Genesis 31.19 like the Samaritans they will serve the Lord and their Idolls too 2 Kings 17.33 Such God disownes Ver. 34. They serve not me saith God he will have all or none at all and therefore he threatens to set himself against such Ezekiel 14 7 8. there is no standing with comfort or confidence before God in our sins Ezra 9. ●lt The prime cause of so little profiting after so long hearing is our unpreparednesse for the duety This hardens the heart Accidentally maketh it more blind Isay 6.9 10. The Sun softens waxe but hardens clay and if the word be not the savour of Life then contrary to its own Nature meeting with the rebellious hearts of men it hardeneth them and becommeth the savour of death unto them 2 Corinthians 2.16 2. Hear Atte●tively give heed to what is delivered Acts 5.16 There is no getting or keeping knowledge without attention Proverbs 5.1 2. Let a Minister preach never so powerfully if the people sleep talk gaze or come when ha●● is done they cannot profit We should rouse up our selves to attend as for our lives remembring it is for Eternity The people that heard our Saviour attended or as the word signifieth they hanged upon him Luke 19. ult as the young birds doe upon the Bill of the Damme every one openeth his mouth to see which can catch it and that bird which is not sed waits till his turn cometh They hung upon him as Bees on Flowers to suck out the Virtue that is in them so Luke 4.20 3. Intentively with the highest intention of Affection We must hearken diligently and encline our ears to hear Isay 55.2 3. We must set our hearts on the things we hear for it is our life Deut 32.46 Ezek. 40.4 The word must not swim in our Heads but sink down into our eares and Hearts Luke 9.44 we must mark it diligently and entertain it readily The Kingdome of Heaven must suffer violence and we must take it by force Matthew 11.12 4. R●tentively We must retain the Word and lock it up in our hearts as a Jewel of the greatest price So did Mary Luke 2.51 and so must we Deuteronomy 11.18 Iob 22.22 Proverbs 2.1 Iohn 15.20 an holy remembrance of Gods Word is an excellent preservative against sin Psalm 119.11 and a singular support to us in our trouble● Psalm 73.17 Hereby we shall be the better enabled to practice what we hear we cannot practice what we forget The sciens must be grafted into the stock before it can grow the Word must be graffed in our heads and hearts before we can bring forth fruit to Christ Iames 1.21 The Devil useth all means to steal the word out of our hearts and to make us forget it Matthew 13.19 For he knoweth it is the way to blessednesse when men hear the Word and keep it Luke 11.27 28. We should therefore pray for the Spirit of Grace which may lead us into all Truth and bring all good things to our remembrance Iohn 14.26 and 16.13 and pray with David that God would keep his Truth in the imaginations of the thoughts of our hearts 1 Chronicles 29.18 2. Love the Word we doe not easily forget the things which we love Ieremiah 2.32 If Rachel love her Fathers Idolls she will lay them up Genesis 31.34 Want of Affection breedeth want of memory If David delight in Gods Law hee will never forget his Word Psalm 119.6 3. Use the Meanes Reade Heare Meditate Conferre Apply the Word and write it as Baruc did Ieremies Sermons Ier. 36. 4. The Israelites must make them Fringes that they may not forget the Law Numbers 15.38.39 and above all be sure to receive the Word with all readinesse of minde Acts 17.11 It is a mercy that we heare the Word a greater mercy when we can approve of it but the greatest mercie is to receive it into our hearts in the Love of it 1 Thessalonians 2.13 When we can eate the Word Ieremiah 15.16 and receive its sharpest reproofes with submission and Thankefulnesse 1 Samuel 25.33 Psalm 141.5 5. Vnderstandingly We must not barely reade but we must search the Scriptures and labour to understand what we heare Matthew 15.10 Iohn 5.39 Praying for the Spirit of Illumination Ephesians 1. 17.18 6. Discreetly we must Try the Doctrine before we trust it Though it be Paul that Preach yet the Beraeans will trie his Doctrine by the Scriptures Acts 17.11 and Paul calleth on his hearers to Judge and consider what he said 1 Corinthians 10.15 and 2 Timothy 2.7 1 Thessalonians 5.21 and biddeth them Try the Spirits 1 Iohn 4.1 God hath given his People an Anointing to this end that they may be able to judge and discern of things that differ Colossians 1.9 10. We will not take gold but We will try it first and we will count Money after our own Fathers and shall we take Doctrines onely upon trust 7. Beleevingly we must by faith apply it to our selves whether it be for Humiliation or Consolation Iob 5.27 It must be engraffed in our hearts by Faith Iames 1.21 This is the way to make it effectual Romans 1.2.16 1 Cor. 1.21 Unbelief bars the heart against the Word and maketh it unprofitable to the hearers Heb. 4.2 8. Reverentially no service pleaseth God that is not mixt with Reverence and feare Psalm 2.1 Hebrewes 12.28 We must set our selves as in Gods presence and so heare as if God himselfe spake to us so did Cornelius though a Souldier and a great man Acts 10.33 So did the Thessalonians 1 Thess. 2.13 They received not the Word as the word of Paul but as the Word of God It is God that speaketh to us by the mouth of his Prophets Luke 1.70 and 10 16. Daniel 9.10 Micah 6.9 Iohn 1.23 2 Corinthians 5.20 We are Christs Embassadours and the words of an
my course I am come to the period of my dayes and to the end of my race I have not onely begun but grace assisting me I have finisht fulfilled and consummated my course or race He seems to allude to the course of his whole life which after his conversion was spent in the service of Christ and as it were wholly in running from place to place speedily to disperse the Gospel and now he was come to the last stage or Goal at Rome where he was to receive his Garland after the manner of those who ran for prizes 1 Cor. 9.24 25. And if the life of other men be called a course Acts 13.25 Surely the life of Paul may well be called a Race who so swiftly ran through so many places and Provinces and won them to Christ Rom. 15.19 Gal. 1.17 18. and 2. 2 Philip. 2.16 Heb. 12.1 q. d. I have accomplisht the course of my Ap●stleship of Christianity of my afflictions and combats as my Saviour when he was giving up the Ghost said 't is finished so may I say according to my measure and degree I have not onely begun but I have finisht the work of my Lord and Master I have kept the Faith 3. This third Metaphor say some is taken from Depositaries who faithfully keep the things committed to their trust without embezelment 2. Others say the Metaphor of a Souldier is still continued who promiseth fidelity to his commander and performs it to the death The sense is the same either way Fidelity is required of all servants but specially of Depositaries and Souldiers This Faith Paul had 1. He kept the grace of saving Faith which was committed to him as a signal gift of God in which he persevered to the end 2. He was faithful in keeping the doctrine of Faith what in him lay from corruption and in a faithful propagation of that choice Treasury to posterity in despite of the Legal Jew or the profane Gentile And thus the word Faith is often taken in Scripture 1 Tim. 1.19 and 3.9 and 4.1 So Acts 6.7 they obeyed the Faith .i. the Gospel which is the doctrine of Faith So Acts 24.24 Rom. 1.5 and 3.31 Rev. 2.19 So Saul is said to preach the Faith .i. the doctrine of Faith which sometimes he persecuted Gal. 1.23 so Phil. 1.27 Iude 3.3 The word Faith sometimes signifies fidelity and constancy in our promises and engagements So Paul saies of himself that he was a Teacher of the Gentiles in Faith and truth .i. he was a faithful and sincere Teacher of them 1 Tim. 2.7 I have not taught for gain or applause neither have I taught the fancies and inventions of men but I have plainly taught them the Faith of Christ. So Tit. 2.18 Though it be true that Paul kept the Faith in all these acceptations of the word yet Calvin conceives that the Apostle hath some allusion to military fidelity q. d. I have been faithful to Christ my commander to the last breath and have kept the Faith committed to my trust in despite of all the frowns and flatteries of its enemies 'T was a custome amongst the Romans that none should go to the wars till they had first taken the military Oath called the Sacrament to be faithful and true to the Emperour to observe all his commands never to flye from their colours nor to refuse any death so they might be serviceable to the Common-wealth Such an Oath we all take at Baptism we there renounce the Devil and all his works and devote our selves to God and his service for ever This is general and common to all Christians But there is a more special fidelity required in Ministers whom God hath in trusted with his Sacred Oracles and truths such stewards especially must be faithful 1 Cor. 4.2 such a one was Paul he was not onely faithful as a Christian in general but as a Pastor he faithfully distributed to all the bread of life without the leaven of superstition the poison of heresy or the chaff of mans inventions 2 Tim. 2.15 and therefore now he 's dying he cannot but glory in this and speaks of it with confidence and comfort I have kept the faith Now happy yea thrice happy are those who when they come neer their end and are within the Horizon of eternity can speak Pauls words with Pauls Spirit and can truly say I have fought the good fight c. Verse 8. Paul now looks upward to the Reward and there he sees heaven prepared for him yea he sees himself as 't were already there which makes him speak so confidently both of a safe deliverance from all miseries in this life v. 18. and of enjoying eternal blessedness after this life He still persists in the Metaphor taken from valiant wrastlers and strenuous runners which conquer in the Olympick games they had a crown either of Bayes Ivy Olive or Parsly bestowed on them by way of honour much more will the Lord bestow an everlasting crown of life on those spiritual Heroes who overcome the enemies of their Salvation Many take great pains to little purpose I have not done so saith Paul I have fought a good fight and am assured of a crown of life at last however it go with me now He had committed a depositum to God he trusted him with his Salvation 2 Tim. 1.12 and God had deposited his truth to him now Paul kept the truth which God had left with him and therefore he did believe that God would keep that which he had committed to him So that if I had three things to wish I should wish for Pauls threefold crown 1. The crown of Grace a great measure of Grace to do Christ much service 2. His crown of Joy a great measure of joy to go through with that service 3. The crown of Glory which he was here assured of In the words we have first the concluding Particle henceforth lastly as for that which remains 2. We have the Reward of the faithful no less then a crown not gold or fading flowers but a crown with an adjunct a crown of Righteousness which is a Periphrasis of Heaven and eternal happiness 3. The person Rewarding Christ who is here Periphrastically described by two Titles viz. Lord and Judge together with an adjunct a Righteous Iudge 4. Here are the persons Rewarded not onely Paul but also all the faithful who are here described by their affection to Christ they love and long for his coming to Judgment 5. Hence the certainty of this Reward 'T is laid up for them and he is righteous and faithful who hath promised 6. Here is the Time when they shall receive this Reward or the day of their Coronation and that is In that day .i. at that great and glorious day of the Lord when he shall come to Judge the quick and dead and shall give to every one according to his works The Explication Henceforth Lastly or as for that which
Master Henry Smiths Sermon on 1 Corinthians 9.24 and 5.35 and Doctor Taylors Sermon in Folio on the same Text in fine Pages 78 c. Master Hierons Sermon on Matthew 7.13 page 10. Folio Doctor Sibbs on Philippians 3.14 page 136 c. I have kept the Faith Hence Observe The Doctrine of Faith must be carefully kept It is a sacred Depositum which God hath intrusted us withall and we may in no wise falsifie our trust We are Stewards and fidelity is especially required in them 1 Corinthians 14.2 Paul kept the Faith both wayes 1. As a Christian in his Judgement Will Affections and in the whole course of his Life after his conversion 2. As a Minister he published it fully and faithfully and defended it with the losse of Liberty and Life He had rather die then any man should make his rejoycing in the faithful spreading of the Gospel vain 1 Cor. 9.15 He did not conceal for fear or favour any part or parcel of Gods truth from his people He taught the whole truth nothing but the truth in truth unto them To quicken us let us Consider 1. If we keep the Faith it will keep us what Solomon saith of Wisedom is true also of Faith Proverbs 4.8 Exalt her and she will promote thee to honour It will protect its Protectors and is its own reward they shall be Conquerours that embrace it Revel 12.11 2. We shall get such Riches as will goe with us to Heaven It will comfort us when we come to die if we can truely say with Paul I have kept the Faith A Faithfull Steward giveth up his account with joy and Christ will receive him with an Euge Matthew 25.21 For this Christ commendeth Moses Hebrewes 3.1 2. and the Church of Thyatira Revelations 2.19 I know thy Faith id est Thou hast faithfully served me in thy place and calling This was the honour of Tychicus Ephesians 6.21 and Timothy 1 Corinthians 4.17 that they were faithful Ministers of Christ such shall abound with blessings here Proverbs 28.20 and shall have a Crown of Glory hereafter Revelations 2.10 Let us then every one in our several places Magistrates Ministers Parents preserve the Faith of Christ and propagate it to Posterity as Abraham did Genesis 18 19. Let us keep a good Conscience which is the Cabinet of Faith he that maketh shipwrack of the one cannot long keep the other 1 Tim. 1.19 VERSE 8. Henceforth there is laid up for me a Crowne of Righteousness which the Lord the Righteous Iudge shall give me at the last day and not to me onely but unto them also that love his appearing Observe THe godly in this life may be assured of their salvation Paul had fought the good fight and now see his confidence and assurance of a Crown of Life many run in other Races and loose all but Paul was assured of his reward Romans 8.38 and least any should think he had this by extraordinary Revelation he telleth us that all believers have it this Crown is not onely prepared for me but for all that love Christs appearing id est for all believers They that believe know they have Eternal life 1 John 5.13 This assurance is common to them though not in a like measure to all The certainty of Faith is stronger then that of Sense because of Gods Power and Promise who is Faithful and cannot deny himselfe nor deceive his People This is that hundred fold which is given in this life which is of more worth then all the Riches of the World 'T is that better part which can never be taken from us Objection The grand Objection of the Arminians is That no man can be assured of his perseverance and by Consequence he can have no Assurance of his Salvation Answer I deny the Argument God hath by his Promises which are infallible assured them of their perseverance and by Consequence of their Salvation He hath promised to builde his Church and if he will build it it is not all the power and po●icie of Hell that can prevail against it Matthew 16.18 God who hath chosen them is stronger then all and none can plucke them out of his hand He hath promised to keep them by his Almighty Power through Faith to Salvation so that the Mountaines shall remove and the Hills depart before he will breake his Covenant of Peace with his People Isay 54.10 And because we are weak and unable of our selves to persevere therefore God hath promised abilities for that Ezekiel 36.27 I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walke in my Statutes to keep my judgements and doe them And I will plant my fear in their hearts that they shall never depart from me Jer. 32.40 So then this assurance is 1. Attainable 2. Tenable 3. Desireable 1. T' is attainable Paul here had it and all the Saints first or last David Iob Thomas and the Martyrs and if a man may know he believeth then he may know that he shall be saved for whosoever believeth shall be saved Iohn 3.16 the promise is general and includeth all particular believers as if they had been named Hence believers are said to have Eternal Life already begun Iohn 5.11 12. and 6.47.54 and 14.20 and that they are past from death to life Iohn 5.24 and that they assuredly know this à posteriori by the Effects of Vocation and the Fruits of Election for Grace and Glory are linked together Romans 8.30 1 Iohn 3.2.14.19 Hence they are said to have Assurance much Assurance and full ass●rance Hebrewes 6.6 11. and 10.22 23. Colossians 2.2 1 Thessalonians 1.5 If this were not attainable here why are we commanded to give all diligence to make our Calling and Election sure to our selves 2 Peter 1.10 Impossibility of attainment deadens endeavour no man will take pains for that which cannot be gained No wise man will seek after the Philosophers stone because it is impossible ever to be attained The first work therefore of the Spirit is to convince the soul that its sins are pardonable and that reconciliation may be had 2. 'T is Tenable a man that hath this assurance of his salvation may keep it whilest we walke circumspectly and answerable to our Principles none can hurt us Hence Paul challengeth all between Heaven and Hell to doe their worst Romans 8.35 c. Who shall separate us from Christ shall tribulation or distress or persecution c. The Apostles Interrogation is a strong Negation Q. d. Nothing whatsoever shall be able to separate us from Christ neither the pleasures of Life nor the pains of Death neither the heighth of Prosperity nor the depth of Adversity neither present nor impendent evils nothing can separate us from Christ. 1. The Elect cannot separate themselves from Christ they cannot sinne as the wicked doe because the seed of God abideth in them id est his Word and Spirit dwell in their souls besides Christ ever liveth to make Intercession
betray the son too 4. Here is the Reason of this Caution why he should shun the society of Alexander viz. because of his desperate condition he being one that openly and maliciously opposed the Truth of God and greatly withstood Pauls words Alexander the Copper-smith c. There is a great Controversie amongst Interpreters who this Alexander should be and it is conceived by the most judicious that it was that Alexander mentioned Acts 19.33 Who was a Jew and dwelt at Ephesus who was on Pauls side at the first and sought to appease the tumult stirred up at Ephesus against him where he had like to have lost his life for appearing on his side yet now he maketh shipwrack of the Faith and opposeth the People of God revileing and traducing them which the Apostle calleth blasphemeing 1 Timothy 2.20 The Copper-smith A man of a mean Condition one that got his living by his hammer and hard labour in an inferiour Calling He was sometime Pauls Disciple and profest the Truth but now the scales are turned and of a Professour he is become a persecutor Hath done me much evil The word which we render hath done in the Original signifieth to shew It is an Hebraism they put shewing for doing Psal. 4.6 Who will shew us any good .i. who will effect our desires in that kind so Psal. 60.3 thou hast shewed thy people hard things .i. thou hast caused them to see and endure hard things probably he might by his agents and friends stir up Nero against him as a seditious person a broacher of strange doctrine and and enemy to the Jewish religion which was then tolerated at Rome What this evil was he shewes in the next Verse He resisted our words and opposed the truth which Paul delivered The Lord reward him according to his works which he hath done and still endeavours to do against me and the truth of God which I profess He now delivers him up to the Justice of God who is a righteous Judge and will reward every man according to his works The Vulgar to mollify this Imprecation have put the word in the future Tense and so would make it a Prediction and not an Imprecation The Lord shall reward him but the word is Optative in the Original and implyes a heavy Imprecation The Apostle by a prophetical Spirit saw manifest signes of reprobation in this man and thereupon denounceth this curse against him Quest. But how doth this Imprecation agree with that Apostolical sweetness and mildness which was in the Apostle Answ. The Apostle spake not these words out of any private spleen but o●t of Prophetical zeal he desires the Lord to execute his justice on this incurable Apostate So that it was an Imprecation darted by a particular motion of the Holy Ghost and so not to be imitated by us who have not that extraordinary measure of the Spirit as Paul had Of whom be thou ware also Observe him and take heed of him for he goeth up and down stirring up the Jews against the Gospel q. d. The reason why I mention him at this time is that thou maist shun him as an excommunicate person and one delivered up to Satan Since then he is an incurable Apostate avoid him as the Pest and Poysener of humane Society For he hath greatly withstood our words much more will he withstand thine q. d. He hath not onely resisted us but which is worse he hath Violently and Vehemently resisted the truth which I have preached to the world The one is but a personal persecution against charity the other is a doctrinal offence against piety and so far more hainous Observations 1. Great Professors may become grievous Persecutors This Alexander was a noted Professor and within the pale of the Church else the Apostle could not have excommunicated him and cast him out of the Church if he had never been in and if he had not profest the faith he could not have made ship-wrack of it 1 Tim. 1.19 20. Yea this man was neer to Martyrdom as Calvin conceives yet now he turns a desperate opposer of the truth The best things when corrupted become the worst The most generous wine makes the sharpest vinegar and the finest flesh when putrified becomes most fulsom These Apostates know the state of the Church better then others and so are able to do it more mischief besides God in judgment gives them up to a reprobate sense and the Devil comes with seven worse spirits and re-enters which makes the latter end of these men worse then their beginning Nicholas a great professor and one of the seven Deacons yet at last fell into foul errours pleading for community of wives and the lawfulness of adultery hence came the Sect of the Nicolaitans Rev. 2.6 Iudas went far yet at last sells his Master Be not then offended when you see Professors turn Blaspemers and Preachers Persecutors it should grieve us but not discourage us It was so in the Apostles time it is so now and it will be so to the end of the world There will be some such Tares mixt with Gods wheat and a Iudas amongst the very Apostles We must look to be hooted at as signes and wonders as mad-men and Monsters and that in Israel Isay 8.18 Quest. But doth not this prove the Apostasy of the Saints since Alexander is said to make ship-wrack of the faith Answ. Not at all There is no arguing from the shadow to the substance from the Meteor to the fixed Star because Hypocrites temporary beleevers and carnal professors fall away therefore real Saints and such as are effectually called may fall away is a manifest Non Sequitur 2. Observation 2. It is lawful sometimes and in some cases to name men Alexander a malicious incorrigible enemy is named that every one may shun him But of this before in Verse 10. 3. Observation 3. The enemies of Gods people many times are sordid men Alexander a Smith a man of no learning of mean education by professing not a Gold-Smith nor a Silver-Smith but a Copper-Smith and by disposition an open enemy to the truth This contemptible man opposeth the Preaching and Practice of chosen vessels an eminently learned Paul Thus it pleaseth God to exercise and humble his choicest servants by vile and worthless men Iob complains of such Iob 19.10 and 30.1 David complains that the abjects and dregs of the people made head against him Psal. 35.15 16. So Acts 17.5 And this was prophesied longe since by Isay 3.5 that such disordered times should come that every boy should behave himself proudly against the Ancient and the base against the Honourable and men of worth It is a trouble to ingenious natures to be molested by such disingenuous ones who want common humanity To fall by the hand of an Achilles or some eminent person for Learning and Valour is some honour But to be vext by such How 's and
p. 117 Healths unhealthful p. 94 Hereticks compounded must die p. 169 Preservatives against their poyson p. 170.171 They are limited Page 180 181. See Gods judgements on them p. 168 High-minded who p. 118 House-creepers condemned p. 146 147 Humility 11. Motives to it p. 54. with means p. 57 I. IDleness breeds sin p. 98 Idleness how dangerous P. 385 393 Idols cannot help p. 206 Ignorance breeds Pride p. 53 Imprecations when lawful p. 439 Infirmities how they differ from enormities p. 131 132 Ingratitude eight Reasons against it Page 69 70 Interpret doubtfull things in the best sense p. 85 Ioy in tribulation p. 220 Iudge Christ is a righteous Judge Page 399. Judges must be just p. 313. Christ is Judge of all the world p. 311 Itch sevenfold p 353 K. KIngs believers are such Page 398 L. LAst dayes perilous p. 3 4 Law must be Preacht p. 329 Lectures on week dayes lawfull p. 326 Liberty sinneful not to be suffered p. 103 Life short p. 37 Light within darkness p. 278. Eight Reasons against resting in it page 278 Love to Christ properties of it p. 309. Reasons for it p. 309 310 Love strong p. 81. It s Excellencie Page 196 Love must extend to All the Saints Page 113 Long-suffering how needful p. 195 Luke-warmness condemned p. 334 342 M. MAd-men who p. 183 184 Magistrates useful p. 33. to be honoured p. 67. they must be zealous p. 340 Maintenance due to Ministers Page 296 Marriage when young people should marry p. 250 Memory helps for it p. 292 Masters though carnal to be respected Page 67 68 Meditation how needful p. 293 Meekness its Excellency p. 110. Seven motives to it p. 110 Men we must not build on them page 161 Mercies must be carefully marked p. 203 204. No merit p. 381 382 Ministers must Preach Gods Word onely p. 329. They must be frequent in Preaching p. 338. They must be hardy men p. 366 367. Pray for them p. 388 Ministers must see to their flock p. 468. They must be studious Page 433 The Ministry is a work p. 368 The Millenarian fancy condemned Page 12 Mourn for the sinnes of others Page 13 14 Musick when lawful p 90 Millenarian reign a fancy p. 455 N. WAnt of Naturall-Affection condemned p. 75 Now-light condemned p. 165 O. OBedience commanded p. 359 Old Testament Authentick p. 261. Cavils against it answered Page 263 Oppressors wo to them p. 31 Ordinances to continue to the end page 138 139 Order its excellency p. 171 172 Our spirits to be carefully looked to Page 471 P. PArents to be obeyed page 65 66. they must teach their children betimes Six Reasons for it Page 247 248 Parliaments their Excellency p. 32 Patience how needful p. 191 Perfection what p. 299 Persecutors have misenable ends page 218 Persecution spreads the Gospel p. 201 Whether we may flie from it p. 201 It s the lot of all the godly p. 210 211. Comforts against it p. 217. Rules how to bear it rightly Page 219 Pilgrimes we are in this World Page 392 Piety brings Praise Page 465 Pleasures carnal how dangerous Page 119 120. Seven disswasives from them p. 121 Pleasures spiritual most excellent Page 120 Poore shew mercy to them p. 129 Popery its vileness p. 14 15 Poverty in some respect better then riches p. 44 45 Practice of Piety excellent Page 289 290 Prayer must be sincere p. 456 Precipitation dangerous p. 117 Preparation required before Hearing Page 356 Preaching belongeth to men Ordained Page 328 Preaching is no adding Page 280 281 Presbyterial Government its excellency Page 173 174. it excells Episcopacie and Independencie in many Particulars Page 176 177 178 Pride dangerous p. 49. it s the root of Heresie Page 50. Remedies against it p. 51 52 Profane whom p. 74 Prosperity more dangerous then adversitie p. 234 Prophesies to be observed p. 51 Providence and success no Rules to goe by p. 287 Parents good a mercy p. 427 Peter not at Rome p. 425 Professors may become Apostates p. 417 and Persecutors p. 437 Publick spirits in good men p. 424 Q. QVakers exceeding profane p. 128 296. They deny the Scripture Page 269 Quakers their blasphemy p. 392. and folly 410 R. RAke-hels who Page 83 Reason must keep its due place Page 279 Reward we may have an eye to it p. 399. Full reward of the Godly-is at the last day p. 404 Relations must not be forsaken Page 141 Remember what we hear Page 357 358 Repetition when and how to be practised p. 462 c. Repentance must be speedy p. 223. Twentie Reasons for it Page 224 c. Reprobates how farre they may goe Page 128 Reproofes not to be sleighted Page 359 Riches Vanity p. 41. False Notions about them p. 38. They cannot help in trouble p. 206 Resolution how necessary p. 242 Revelations dangerous p. 165 S. SAints God loves them dearly p. 113 Sacramental Oath what p. 378 Schoolmen how vain p. 259. Salutations lawfull p 458 Scepticks in Religion odious to God p. 149 166 241 Scriptures are the Word of God p. 276. They are to be read of all p. 260 They are Holy p. 267. See 16. Royalties of them p. 280. They are a perfect Rule p. 286.297 Nine false Rules p. 287. They are the Iudge of Controversies p. 287. We must read them p. 291. Love them p. 288. Remember them p. 292. Be thankeful for them p. 294. Their Excellency p. 294. Self-denial how necessarie p. 20 Self-love dangerous P. 16.17 20. Separation condemned P. 11 12.141 142 Sincerity our Glory P. 194. Its Excellencies P. 134 135 Singularity that is Holy commended Page 239 Sins seldome go alone P. 21. Sinne how hainous P. 308 Slandering vile P. 82 83. comforts against it P. 86 87 Soldiers must be free from Covetousness P. 23. All Christians are souldiers Page 387 Soul Immortal P. 371 383. The Cavils of the Mortalists answered P. 372. Have a special care of your Souls P. 373 Spiritual-Pride dangerous P. 49 50 Spirit and Word go together p. 279. Seducers boast much of the Spirit Page 165. Try them p. 171 Stoicks condemned p. 76 Stratagem lawful p. 116 Swearing when lawful p. 305 Speaking more powerful then writing Page 403 Sin blots mens names p. 418 Society of good men helpful Page 409 Sordid Mechannicks oft oppose Gods Ministers p. 437 Strengthening grace needful Page 448 Sickness may befal good men Page 446 Our Spirits to be carefully looked to Page 471 T. TAxes and Dues to be paid cheer-cheerfully p. 31 Temporal felicity no mark of a true Church p. 215 Thankesgiving Motives to it p. 71. Rules for it p. 72 Theft in some cases it may be punished with death p. 227 Thorns Riches are Thorns p. 39 Thoughts to be specially watched page 28 29 Titles of Honour may be given to men Page 296 Tithes convenient in Gospel times Page 369 Tobocco much abused Page ●9 102. Toleration when unlawful page 168 169 233.340 Tongue our Glory p. 63 Thoughts how dangerous p.
the Devil will not as Austin observes Arma lucis sunt opera fidei gratiae virtutum quibus veluti armis contra tres h●stes bello tam offensiv● quam desensivo depugnamus à Lapide Pulchrior inpraelio occisiis miles quàm fugâ salvus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ab 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 .i. viriliter strenue ago 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enim est certamen labor cum difficultate Miles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q. minimè mollis V●es animosque à vulnere sumit Pulchrámque petit per vulnerae mortem Vir. See what hardship Sou●diers endure Plutarch Moral Orat. 7. de fortun Alexandri Alexandri milites intenti fuere ad ducis non signum modò sed nutum Curtius lib. 3. Ordinatusexercitus aspectu jucundissimus hostibus molestissimus Xenophon See more in Master Robinsons Sermon at Pauls Hebr. 11.16 preacht 1654. Peregrini officium est colligi sub alieno tecto pacificè pertransi●e anhelare ad patriam Gur significat peregrinari habitare ut advenam pertinet ad hanc vitam sicut habitare ad futuram 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i Tricis laqueis implico Amor rerum terrenarum fit viscus spiritualium pennarum August See more allusions in Master Bernards Bible-battlers Ad agendum nati milites Cicero Inde dictus exercitus quòd melior fit exercitando Vario Xenophon Cyropaed l. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 .i me exerceo laboro q. d. T●tus sum in hac re ut inculpa●è Deo serviam nec homines effendam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Quem Diabolus occupatum non invenit ipse occupa● Greg. Otia si tollas periere cupidinis arcus Ovid. Anima est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. continuata perennis motio Arist. Otium est vivi hominis sepultura Seneca Nihili est qui piger est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contendite conamini omnibus vi●ibus So Lucan Pharsal l. 9. saith of Cato 〈◊〉 Monstrat tolerare laborem Non jubet Non est panis cujusquam proprius ne summi quidem regis nisi strenuè la b●ret in Vocatione suâ Roll. In operibus sit abundantia mea divitiis per me licet abundet quisquis voluerit Phil. Melanct. Nullus mihi per otium exit dies partem noctium studiis vendico non vaco sommo sed succumbo oculos vigiliâ fatigatos cadentésque in opere detineo Seneca epist. 67. Terra est domus militiae coelum laetitiae Delicatus es miles si putas te posse sine pugna vincere sine certamine triumphare Coronam parare potest qui indixit certamen vires subministrare non potest Deus autem quando spectat certatores sucs adjuvat eos Aug. de Temp. Serm. 105. Deus luctatur in nobis ipse congreditur ipse in certamine agonis nostii coronat pariter coronatur Cyp●ian l. 2. ep 2. ad Donatum Tu servus servorum es illis enim cupiditatibus quibus ego impero tu inservis Vt Diog●nes Alexandro See Mr. Rous his diseases of the time cap. 4. p. 121. folio Rectius recta rectè Legitimè certare est ad pugnam se praeparare animosè adversarium aggredi plagam cautem declinare masculè infligere quod qui faciebant coronabantur in ludis Olympicis Baldwin See my Tract de perseverantia Sanctorum * Corona non qualecunque praemium notat sed praemium victoriae id est pugnando vincendo partum Vbi durior pugna ibi gloriosior est Victoria Sculte● Turpe miles senex Ovid. Canities venerabilis est quando ea gerit quae canitiem decent Chrysost. * Rarò utilis Doctor invenitur in Ecclesia quin sit longaevus Origen Senectus ipsa in bonis moribus duclci●r in consiliis utilior ad constantiam paratior ad reperimendas libidines fi●mior infirmitas quoque corporis sobrietas mentis unde Apostolus cum infermor tunc potens sum Ambros. l. 1. Hexam c. 8. See more in Master Burroughs ninth Volume on Prov. 16.31 and Master Ash on his Sermon at Master Gatakers Funerall on the same Text and Doctor Andrewes on the fifth Commandment Chapter 9. Mihi p. 387. * Iill-hallech in conjugat Hithpael significat quod sese composuit ad ambulandum cum Deo For walkeing see Doctor Preston on Genesis 17.1 page 181. Doctor Hill on Ieremiah 6.16 Dyke on Conscience cap. 5. p. 54. Dyke Right receiving of Christ cap. 10.12 Godolphus Holy Limbecke page 42 Master Iacomb Master Vines Funeral Sermon page 5. Master Burroughes on Genesis 5.24 page 261. * Sic nota● certitudinem Diligentiam celeritatem ac perseverantiam à Lapide * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi in agone contendite Luke 13.14 Malae conscienscientiae poena est à recto defectio Hoc execrationis geuere hypocrism ulciscitur Dominus Talibus exemplis Evangelii Majestas palam vindicatur palam ostendit Deus se ejus profanationem nullo modo ferre posse In aliis ambitio in aliis avaritia sincerum Dei timorem obruebat Hinc errores ab exordio Ecclesiae mala conscientia harese●● omnium mater Calvin * Though every Faith hath not a full assurance and perswasion yet every true Faith hath assurance and certainty in it and tendeth hereunto more and more yea that Faith that is weakest hath certainty in it being built on certain grounds as the word and promise and witness of the spirit As a pur-blinde man seeth the Sunne as Certainly though not so clearely as the quicke sighted Rogers of Dedham of Faith Chapter 1. Page 23.24 Quis falli timeat cum promittit veritas August V. Bohemus Meditat. 10. Page 30.31 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 supervincimus vel supersuperamus Non ex su● natura sed ex Dei gratia ut Medici venena venenis ita Deus dolores doloribus tollit Aug. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 magis Studete festinate omnem adhibitote curam diligentiam In two cases God gives early assurance when he makes others wait longer for it 1. When he intends men shall die betimes he doth ripen their graces betimes 2. When he calls men out to great services immediatly after their conversion as he ●id paul Strong 31. Ser. p. 603. V. Dr. Prideaux Lect. 7. De certitudine salutis Tactica S. l. 2. c. 9. Finis dat amabilitatem facilitatem mediis Amor mercedis non est amor mercenarius V. Burroughs Moses Choice cap. 40 53. Contemplatus est Moses mercedem ut beneficium non ut de bitum ut haereditatem non ut salarium filial● affectu non mercenario non ut mercedem dandam ex commisso sed ut premium dandum ex promisso Vt acu●è Spanhem Dub. Evangel 88. Aliud est ad mercedem respicere aliud rantùm ad illud respicere Aliud primariò aliud secundariò ad illam respicere Vix diligitur Iesus propter Iesum Aug Solus est Dous summum bonum ultimus finis