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A97360 The works of the judicious and learned divine Dr. Thomas Taylor, part 1. sometimes preacher of Aldermanbury, London. Published by himself in his life time, in several smaller volumes, now collected together into three volumes in fol. two of which are here bound together. The first volume containing, I. An exposition on the 32. Psalm ... The second volume containing, I. An exposition of the parable of the sower and seed, on Luk. 8. ... The third volume is in the press, and will containe in it, I. The progress of sts, to full holinesse ... Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1659 (1659) Wing T560A 683,147 498

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should eat they should dye and yet hee labours to make them doubt of that truth which both hee and they knew too well This was ever his practice Reasons 1 Because of his great malice to God who hath every way set himself to confirm his word that his own truth might shine in his word to all the world Therefore hee hath outwardly confirmed it by many powerful and glorious miracles such as the Devil could never make shew of as raising the dead the standing and going back of the Sun the division and standing of the Sea and rivers and the bearing of a Virgin and inwardly his holy Spirit perswades testifies confirms and sealeth up the Word in the hearts of Gods Children 1 John 2.20 2 Cor. 2. Now to make God a lyar and to shew himself most contrary to the Holy Spirit hee contradicts and opposeth stormeth and rageth 2 Hee hateth the word of God because it is the greatest enemy to his Kingdome every way resembling God the author and carrying his image It is light and no marvel if the Prince of darknesse resist it it discovers his subtilties and fenceth the Christian against his policies it discerneth spirits that let him come as an Angel of light hee shall bee uncased As hee prevaileth in darkness so hee worketh in impurity now here the word resembling God himself crosseth him it is pure in it self and a purifyer as Christ saith Yee are clean by my word Further his chief power being in the Sons of disobedience and in the hearts of infidels here also the word clips his wings being the word of faith and John 17.20 Christ prayed not onely for his disciples but for all those that should beleeve in him by their word In a word seeing hee exerciseth his chief power in the sons of perdition who are given him to rule at his will here the word is his enemy because it converteth sinners and saveth soules called therefore a word of salvation 3 He opposed Gods word through the malice he beareth Gods children for hee ever opposeth true professors casts them into prison and would never let them have a good day in the world if hee might have his will and follows them with temptations and with outward afflictions But this is the sword of Gods mouth and the sword of the Spirit by which they cut thorow his temptations and make them forceless it is that which comforts them and sustains them in their troubles and directs them happily to heaven so as no way he can have his will of them 4 It stands him in hand to oppose Gods word for his long experience hath taught him that so long as men hold to the word they bee safe enough under Gods protection and hee could never win his Captain-sinners to such high attempts in sin were it not that hee had first shaken the truth of Gods word out of their hearts How could hee have brought Pharaoh to such obstinacy against God and his people as to say Who is the Lord and I will not let Israel goe but that he had brought the word in Moses and Aarons mouth into contempt further than the sting of the miracles forced him When Saul had once cast off the Word of the Lord Satan lead him as in a chain to hunt David to throw a dart at Jonathan to seek to the Witch against whom himself had enacted a severe law The like of Ahab Herod Nero Domitian c. 5 The Word of God is the sentence and rule of righteousness which condemneth Satan and therefore no marvel if he cannot endure it and wish it false and love it no better than the bill of his own condemnation and death eternal Vse It is a note of a man foyled by the temptation of Satan and of a devillish spirit to call Gods Word into question either to deny it as false or doubt of it as uncertain either of which if Satan can perswade unto he hath his wish for he knows they are no subjects to God that will not acknowledge his Scepter but doubt of the rod of his mouth he can easily blind-fold them and lead them whither he will that deny the light hee can easily vanquish them and lead them captive to all sin if he can get them to cast away their weapons Yet what a number of men hath the Devil thus farre prevailed with in this violent kind of temptation Some call in question whether the Scripture be the Word of God or no swarms of Atheists and Machevillians that hold the Word but an human devise and policy which is to open a door to all carnal and brutish Epicurism and to confound man and beast together Others doubt not of all but of some Books and others not of some Books but of some places of the holy Scripture But we see that Satan would have Christ but to deny or doubt of one sentence and what Eves calling into question of one speech of God brought on all our necks all we her posterity feel And it is in our natures when God speaks plainly against that sin we make ifs and pervadventures at it and so turn it off As for example 1 Our Saviour teacheth plainly that whosoever are of God hear his Word and his sheep hear his voyce Either men must beleeve it or deny it and yet how few can we perswade conscionably to hear the VVord all who must plainly either make the voyce of Christ false or themselves none of Gods none of Christs sheep for not hearing it 2 Our Saviour saith expresly He that heareth you heareth me Luk. 10.16 and that God speaks in the mouthes of his Ministers 2 Cor. 5.20 and that they have an heavenly treasure in earthen vessels But how few are of this mind never did any Heathens so despise the voyce of their Priests and the answer of their Oracles as Christians in general despise our voyce in which God and Christ profess they speak 3 Christ plainly saith this word is the immortal seed of our new birth the sincere milk to nourish the soul the bread of life heavenly food But who beleeve him for generally men have no appetite no desire to it and can well be content to let their souls languish in grace and be starved to death And whereas they would goe as farre or farther into other Countries as Jacob and his Sons into Aegypt when there was no Corn in Canaan to supply their bodies with food this they will not stirre out of their doors for VVell take heed of calling Divine truths into question No Divine truth to be called into question for three reasons stand not in them upon thy reason and understanding which are but low and shallow suspect them in things thou canst not reach rather than the truth of Scripture and make good use of these rules 1 In the rising of any such temptation know that Satan seeks advantage against thee and would bring thee into the same condemnation with himself by the same sin and
searched whether the things spoken were so We take no coin without due tryal Quest How shall I try the spirit that brings a sentence of Scripture Answ 1 By diligent study and reading of Scripture diligently searching out the truth for the determination of every truth must bee by scripture Dubiu●● and though scripture seem to bee opposed to scripture wee must not with Papists draw determination of matters from scripture so saith the Apostle in Eph. 4.14 Let us not bee carried about as children with every wind of doctrin how should wee do other but follow the truth in love Examine the places circumstances antecedents and consequents confer with other scriptures to all which it must agree 2 Follow and frequent the Ministery as not content with the knowledge of the scriptures without the true understanding of them Non in legendo sed in intelligerdo Hieron for they consist not in the bare letters but in the pithy sense said the Father And this true understanding wil help us to lay it to the Analogy of faith wherunto it must bee agreeable and will make our senses exercised in the word 3 Adde hereunto prayer which procureth the spirit to lead us into all necessary truth David never ceased to Pray to bee taught as we may see through the whole 119. Psalm 4 Consider the end and scope of the scripture alledged If it lead thee into an action condemned by the law of nature or against other direct scriptures or principles of religion it is of the Devil the father of Lies for Gods Spirit never alledgeth scripture but to lead us into the knowledge and practice of some truth This is Moses his rule Deut. 13.1 If a false Prophet rise up see what hee aimeth at if it bee to draw thee from the Lord his worship or word take heed of him so if Satan by any instrument of his shall bring the word and pretend great zeal if the end bee to draw thee to superstition Idolatry or Popery beware of him his scope discovers him If a doctrin or scripture be alledged to nourish any fleshly delight or to hold men in sin though the words bee Gods the allegation is the Devils as At what time soever a sinner repenteth c. and the Theef was saved at the last hour and therefore if thou canst say two or three good words at thy death all shall bee well here is the Devil saying It is written for all scripture truely cited by Gods Spirit aims at mortification and the furtherance of Repentance If a Scripture bee alledged and urged to threaten and discourage such as fear God and shew forwardness in good waies or to animate the sinner promising him peace and life it is Satans allegation for if Gods Spirit alledge scripture that word is good and comfortable to him that walks uprightly and the threats of the law are fit provision for impenitent persons Vse 2. This teacheth us not to content our selves to know the Scripture and bee able to speak of it or to alledge it for the Devil knows the word and can alledge it readily yea hee is expert in it Many men deceive themselves in their estate and think themselves sure of salvation if they can get a lirtle knowledge of the scripture above others as though Satan could not alledge it or as though the wicked could not preach it as Judas did or ungodly men profess it who take the word into their mouth and hate to bee reformed Psal 50.16 17. Use 3. But let us take heed wee come not behind the Devil himself while wee thus highly conceit our selves for 1 Are there not a number of ignorant men almost as ignorant as if the scriptures had never been written and shall not the Devil condemn these who hath gained so much knowledge in the word which containeth not one word of comfort for him but judgement that makes him tremble Yet these whom they would make wise to salvation and to whom they offer the joyes and comfort of life eternal are utterly ignorant of them 2 Many read the Scripture but as Satan not to inform or reform themselves nor to make themselves better but both themselves and others far worse as not only Hereticks and learned Papists who bend all their knowledge to suppress and hide the truth but all such as by the scripture se●k to maintain their own errors and sins which they will not part with And these are no better than the Devil 3 Others will read Scripture and hear and know it but without all special application and grace in the heart wherein they should differ from the Devil and wicked men who know the word but affect it not do it not nay cannot abide the special application of it to do them good and this doth nothing but increase sin and judgement sin Jam. 4.17 to him that knoweth to do well and doth it not it is sin a great sin without excuse or cloak Joh. 15.22 judgement for such shall bee beaten with many stripes 4 Others brag of their knowledge they read the Bible at least Davids Psalmes and they know as much as any Preacher can tell them But stay the Devil reads the Psalter as well as thou and can quote Davids Psalms more readily than thou hee can read the Bible hee knows as much yea more than any Preacher can tell him what sayest thou more of thy self than the Devil can do of himself and more truely And what hast thou gained by all this challenge but thine own conviction of great sin without excuse but not without witnesse Is not thine own mouth thy judge who professeth so much knowledge and so little grace love practice To sin wilfully and presumptuously against the light is an extraordinary conformity with Satan Rules of reading and hearing the word religiously 1 Consider the excellency of the Word above all pretious things and how dangerous it is to take Gods name in vain which is then when the word is frustrate of his right end 2 They are called holy Scriptures not only in regard of that holy truth contained in them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but because they are instruments by which the Elect are sanctified and made holy John 17.17 and therefore are never to bee used without holy affection nor without indeavour to grow up in holiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3 They are the Word of faith therefore wee must mingle the Word with faith and lay up the precepts and promises thereof to beleeve it 4 The Scriptures being the rule of life wee must submit our whole man to the obedience and practice of it with all sincerity and constancy Hereby we shall go beyond the knowledge of the Word in Devils and ungodly men NOw for the place it self wee must consider it two waies 1 As abused by Satan in his allegation 2 As wee find it holily set down by the Spirit of God In Satans abuse of this Scripture wee may see many particulars 1 Hee wrongs
as any chaff and as easily destroyed as any stubble that it is not consumed But 1 This fire is not kindled against the bush cut of the sparks of Gods wrath Heb. 12.29 Heb. 12.10 and indignation which is indeed a consuming fire but of his Fatherly affection and love not for the hurt of the bush but for the profit of it not to destroy the persons but the sin for the persons sake Wee have indeed kindled and blown up our selves a violent and devouring fire Heb. 10.27 which God might send into our bones Lam. 1.13 Psal 83.14 Lam. 3.22 to burn us up as fire burneth the forrest and as the flames set the mountains on fire But the mercy of God is as water to quench this fire for else would it burn to the bottome of Hell and instead of a Furnace of fury which melteth away his enemies Ezek. 22.22 he setteth up in Zion Isa 27.9 a furnace of favour only to melt the metal consume away the dross and refine his chosen ones to become vessels of honour 2 Because the fuel of the consuming fire of Gods wrath are slaves not sons those wicked brambles Ezek. 15.7 which if they escape one fire saith the Prophet they fall into another which shall consume them but not this bush which is only made brighter and better by the flame but not blacker not worser The chaff and stubble must feed the fire of wrath never to come forth more but the pure metal is cast into the furnace to come forth so much the purer as it hath been the longer tryed Exod. 3.2 3 Because the Angel of God is in the bush This Angel was Jesus Christ the Lord of the holy Angels and the great Angel of the Covenant For Moses saith expresly of this vision ver 4. The Lord appeared unto Moses and God called unto him out of the middest of the bush and S. Luke recording the same vision Act. 7.31 2. greeing with Exod. 3.6 after that hee had called him an Angel bringeth him in saying I am the Lord of Abraham c. This same presence of the Son of God was noted the cause why the three children in that furious furnace of Nebuchadnezzar Dan. 3.25 being cast in bound walked loose in the midst of the flames why not they but their bands were burnt and why not an hair of their cloaths vers 27. and much lesse of their heads were touched no nor smelt of the fire Isa 43.2 Behold the bush burned but not consumed because the King saw four men walking loose having cast in but three bound and they have no hurt for the form of the fourth is like the Son of God Because God is in the midst of it saith David of the Church it shall not bee moved No● potentia urendi sublata ab ig●e sed operatio tantum ut Dan. 3 for God shall help it very early How partly 1 by restraining the natural force of the fire 2 partly by obfirming and strengthening the bush against it 3 partly by watching it that it spread not too far for himself as it were sits by the fire to tend it 4 partly by slaking and cooling it when it groweth too hot lest the heat smite the bush as the worm did Jonas his gourd By these means Jonab 4.7 the bush in the flame becometh like the Gem Amiantus Amiantus g●●●a ig●● non absumitur sed lucidi●● ac ●urior redditur Dub. Chytr●●s Isa 53.3 which is not consumed by fire but becomes brighter and purer than before This most holy and comfortable truth is fully assured unto us in the person of our Lord and Head as well as in the body who in the daies of his flesh was 1 A bush most able to peirce and wound his enemies in himself most desplicable and base in all outward appearances and in this bush God dwelt not in any visible sign of his presence but as never in any before essentially and bodily 2 A bush in the fire partly of Gods wrath Col. 2.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isa 53.10 Matth. 26.38 Mat. 27.46 Lam. 1.14 True first in the head and then in the members in inward passion and suffering in his soul the sorrows of the second death which made him cry My God my God why hast thou forsaken me into which flame had the bush of the Church been cast it had been utterly consumed Partly of mans wrath in outward passion and misery such as whereof hee complained that no sorrow was ever matchable to his And partly of Satans wrath in most fiery and furious temptation the which hellish fire was renewed and blown up against him in most violent sort three several times as in the Treatise following we shall by Gods grace discover 3 A bush in the fire not consumed but came forth of the hotest Furnace that ever was kindled more bright and glorious than the Sun in his strength For easy it was with him to convince his temporal adversaries by the mighty raising of himself from the dead through his own Divine power Rom. 1.4 when hee had overcome the wrath of God his Father and not difficult for him that had in his life overcome Satans Temptations and in the wilderness spoiled him of his power and weapons in part Col. 2.15 upon the cross by his death openly and perfectly to destroy his Forces and as on a glorious Chariot to triumph over him This bush burnt but not consumed As he is the end of all the Scriptures so also of the exposition of them in whom and for whose glory I have published this Exposition at the importunate request of some Friends Notwithstanding many discouragements that was on the one hand and sundry godly lights in our own tongue opening the same Scripture on the other Mr. Udal Mr. Perkins Mr. Dike 2 Sam. 23.13 The truth is magnified in the mouth of many witnesses and a poor man may give in as true an evidence as a rich If I may hold Benajahs place in the Church of God and stand for God among the thirties and the many of his Worthies it shall well content me although I attain not unto the first three What ever this labour is I have presumed to dedicate it unto you noble Sir as a testimony of my true and unfeigned affection and duty 1 Because God hath made you a worthy instrument in this place which as well by your authority and care as through your godly affection and countenance of good men and causes hath a long time enjoyed much comfort assistance and refreshing 2 Your sound love to the truth hath invited this truth to run under your patronage 3 As he which hath been once friendly bid welcome will boldly come again so your good entertainment of this doctrin in the delivery of it assures it you will now bid it as welcome to your eye as it was to your ears at the first offer of it
our own justification out of the deep with David yea out of the Whales belly with Jonah and in darkness with Job to see light 2 To see things invisible to make things absent present yea God absent present and to set him continually at the right hand Moses feared not the wrath of the King because he saw him that was invisible Heb. 11.17 Elisha being in Dothan feared nothing when his servant cryed out because his eyes were open to see the Angels as fiery Chariots protecting him 3 Faith is never so working as in perillous times because then there is most need most use of it then it sets it self a work and mingles it self with the promises of God by which it quickens and puts life unto a man when he is half dead as Psal 119.49 Remember thy promise wherein thou hast caused me to trust it is my comfort in trouble for thy promise hath quickned me Now it bestirres it self to make Gods faithfulness and truth his shield and buckler Notable is that example of the three Children Dan. 3.16 17. who were in present danger of their lives and cast into an hot Furnace In this danger now their faith bestirres it to provide for their safety not by any yeelding or blanching or buckling to the unjust command but by furnishing their mouthes with a resolute answer Be it known unto thee O King that wee will not worship this Image and by preparing their hearts through their confidence in God who was able to deliver them rather to yeeld themselves to the fire and raging flames than to any part of that commandement And were faith and Gods fear working in the heart it would destroy false fears and infidelity which Satan prevaileth in mightily causing men to seek help by unlawful means if the lawful bee never so little set out of sight Command these stones to be made bread Here is an inference upon the former words If thou be the Son of God upon a true ground Satan raiseth a dangerous consequence Christ was the Son of God true Must he therefore needs make stones bread Satan inferteth mischievous conclusions upon true premises Doct. It is an ordinary temptation of the Devil to inferre mischievous conclusions upon true premises God had no respect to Cains Sacrifice as to Abels Whereas now Cain should have offered of the best as Abel did and have brought faith with his offering by which Abel offered a better Sacrifice Heb. 11.4 Satan inferres upon it Therefore kill thy brother Saul received no answer of God that was true but that therefore he should goe to the Witch of Endor was Satans inference both against the Law of God and Sauls own law God is a merciful God a true premise and the scope of all the Scripture but that Jonah should therefore fly to Tarshish and not goe to preach the destruction of Ninivie was a Satanical inference A man must pity himself and doe what he can to repel evil from him and avoyd danger but that Christ should therefore not goe up to Jerusalem to suffer was a dangerous consequence of Satan in Peters mouth whom therefore Christ calleth Satan Reasons 1 Satan is cunning and seeketh by mingling good and evil truth and falshood to justifie that which is false and to draw it on with the truth If hee should never speak truth he could never deceive half so much therefore hee speaks many truthes to give credit to his lyes and the same hee hath taught all his agents Do we think that a false teacher or heretick could doe any great hurt if he should not lay his leaven in a lump of truth would not every man at first reject him if he should bring never a true doctrin but therefore that his heresie may spread like a gangrene he comes with a fair pretence of many truthes which cannot be denied Doe wee think that the Church of Rome should have so prevailed in the world or that Antichristian state should have been endured or could any Papist bee suffered in ours or any well-ordered Country if they did not colour all their abominations and false religion with some general truths if they should not in word and shew hold and recite the Articles of faith and principles of our religion concerning God in unity of essence and trinity of persons concerning Christ the Church c. were it possible that any Christian state could bear them while indeed and in truth they reverse the whole foundation of religion and are limbs of Antichrist No their deceit is a mystery and walks in darkness and the mask and vizards of truth with pretence of holiness hath held the Swords of Princes from them which else had long since been sanctified in their overthrow 2 Satan can doe no other who cannot speak truth for truths sake for being a Lyar from the beginning he loves not truth and therefore if hee speak truth it is to corrupt the truth or to stablish some lye Lying is the Devils mother tongue Joh. 8. 1 Sam. 28.17 18. Lying the Devils mother tongue Satan in the habit of Samuel spake many truths as that the Lord had rent the Kingdom from him and given it to David because he had so spoken hee would doe it and because Saul obeyed not the voyce of the Lord nor executed his fierce wrath against the Amalekites and that the Lord would deliver him and the Israelites into the hand of the Philistims the next day c. But all this was to feed Saul in his delusion and hold him in his sin as though he were Samuel as vers 17. the Lord hath done it even as he spake by mine hand and vers 19. to morrow shalt thou be with me c. So in the New Testament we have the Devils confessing Christ to be the Son of God the Holy One the sum of the Gospel and Paul and Silas to be the servants of the high God Act. 16. but both Christ and his servants put them to silence and would not have them to speak the truth because it was to deprave and slander the whole truth as though Christ and his servants had been in league and agreement with the Devils and so their doctrin had been not Divine but Diabolical Thus Satan like a Bargeman looks one way but ●owes another 3 Satan sees how our nature is easily carried away through a general shew of good or truth to take in with it error and falshood hand over head without trial or discerning For though our blessed Saviour would not confound stones and bread yet we easily take stones with bread and Serpents with Fishes The whole Masse-book is but an heap of Idolatrous prayers and Ceremonies but yet because there is some shew of good in it many Scriptures and some tolerable and good prayers with many devotions it is wholly received without trial of millions given over to delusion 4 Satan the Prince of darkness can transform himself into an Angel of light 2 Cor. 11.14 and
he hath told thee thou shalt meet him And this desire if it bee sincere will vent it self in earnest prayer to be taught of God Teach me thy statutes O open mine eyes that I may see the wonderful things of thy Law And it hath a promise to bee answered Joh. 14.21 I will love him and shew my own self to him 3 Hee must have a conscionable indeavour and industry to obey that part of Gods will which he revealeth unto him Joh. 7.17 If any man will doe his will he shall know whether the doctrin be from God or no. III. The third part in the answer is the matter of it a testimony of Scripture It is written Christ might have oppressed the Devil by his Divine power but being as man to be tempted he would as man overcome 1 To magnifie mans nature 2 To torment Satan the more and 3 To teach us how to overcome him And by this his practice he gives to understand that Doct. 1. The Word is a principal weapon of our Spiritual warfare Reasons The word written is a chief part of our spiritual armour to foyl Satan by yea indeed the principal weapon of our spiritual warfare is the VVord of God 1 Ephes 6.17 Take unto you the sword of the Spirit which is the VVord of God and therefore as a sword it serves 1 To defend us 2 To wound Satan 3 To cut asunder all his temptations so it did serve Christ here Neither is it a Carnal weapon but the sword of the Spirit that is a Spiritual weapon as the fight is spiritual not made by man but tempered framed sharpned and put into our hands by the Spirit of God himself for whose VVord else is it or whence hath it power but from Gods Spirit Revel 1.16 It is called the two-edged sword which goeth out of the mouth of Christ because it is sharp and piercing to wound all his enemies it pierceth to the very bones and marrow VVith this sword he slayes the wicked Isa 11.4 with this he visits Leviathan and slayes the Dragon that is the mightiest enemies of his Church Isa 27.1 with this sword he consumes Antichrist 2 Thess 2.8 and with this sword he soyls the Devil here with the same he slayes corruptions and Satanical temptations in the hearts of his own children 2 This part of our armour was signified by the Shields wherewith Salomons Temple was hanged Cant. 4.4 and by the smooth stones whereby David smote the Phitist●m 1 Sam. 17.40 here the Sons of David and Davids Lord smites the Goliah of Hell with a deadly wound Sauls Armour is here refused worldly weapons wisdome and subtlety and one stone is taken from the fountaines of holy Scripture out of the bag of his holy memory and by it Satan falls Yea it is the armory of the Church whence all other parts of Christian armour are to bee had 3 All the contention and fight of Satan is to fasten some error and falsehood upon us now therefore the onely fence from error is to bee girded with the girdle of truth now the title of truth is often given to the word of God Psal 19.10 The judgements of the Lord are truth and Joh. 17.17 Thy Word is truth to shew that so long as wee hold to the word wee are sufficiently armed against all falshood and error both in judgement and practice And the like may bee concluded from that it is called light discovering and chasing before it all mists and darkness The word a compleat armour 4 The Word is a compleat armour covers every part of the soul gives fence and direction to the minde understanding memory thoughts all the affections and all the faculties of the soul it covers every part and member of the body teacheth the eye to look the ear to hear the tongue to speak the feet to walk It directs us in all our conversation and actions of life towards God and men even to all conditions of men superiours equals inferiours poor and rich further it guideth us in all conditions of life in all times in all places in all ages prescribing rules to children and men young and old in all exercise and use of things indifferent as meat drink apparel recreation in a word in all things concerning this life or the life to come So as here is a sufficient defence for all occasions 5 Never did any man receive any hurt from Satan or his own corruptions or from this evil world but either because hee did not draw out this sword or did not ●ightly use it What other was the cause of the deadly wound of our first Parents and ours in them but that they drew not out this sword of Gods word but suffered the Serpent to wring it out of their hands How could Peter have been so greivously wounded in the High Priests Hall but that hee forgat the word of Christ which had admonished him of it the power of which was such as it healed his wound as easily as it had done Malcus his ear which hee had struck off and therefore wanted no power to have preserved him if he had remembred it What a fearful wound befell Lots wife because shee cast off this armour and forgate the Word charging her shee should not look back The like of Solomon all his wisdome could not sence him if hee cast off the word of God which had charged him not to meddle with out-landish wives but neglecting that must fall by them Vse 1. This is a confutation of Romish Teachers who disarm men of the Scriptures and wring this special weapon out of the peoples hands Papists by suppressing the scriptures w●ing the weapon out of mens hands common people may not have the Scripture in their vulgar tongue for this saith Harding is heretical But this place is sufficient to prove the contrary whence I conclude thus The weapons whereby people are senced from Satans temptations are not to bee taken from them but the scriptures are the weapons of defence against Satans temptations and again if all the common people bee assaulted and wounded and all have to do with Satan then all have need of this fence and cover against this most capital and deadly enemy But the assault is made against all and Satan seeks without exception whom hee may devour and therefore all without exception need the fence of the Scriptures And further whosoever turn the people naked unto all Satans temptations and disarm them so as they cannot but bee overcome are guilty of all the wickedness of the people to which Satan draws them and also of their destruction unto which they be drawn But Popish Teachers by destituting the people of the Scriptures turn them naked into temptation and disarm them and therefore are guilty of their sin and damnation But this practice of theirs is 1 Against the Scriptures This practise 1 against the scriptures for God would therefore have the scriptures written and commended to men in
Satan here but proceed in mischief And what are the reasons 1 Because the godly in their courses doe oppose themselves to the darkness of this world now there is no fellowship between light and darkness no way to reconcile them as we may see in the example of the wicked Sodomites against Lot first he resisted their wickedness when they came about his house to abuse the two men he gives them fair words I pray you my brethren hee convinceth their consciences Doe not so wickedly and out of his weakness he offers them his two Daughters but being a righteous person whose soul was daily vexed with their uncleaneness neither his piety nor humanity nor intreaty no nor his weakness and sin could please them but Away with him hence he is a stranger shall he judge and rule now we will deal worse with him than with them Gen. 19.9 2 Christ gives another Reason Joh. 8.44 You are of your Father the Devil for his works yee do In that Chapter Christ plainly teacheth the Jews that hee is the light vers 12. they tell him hee bears record of himself and therefore his record is false vers 13. hee tells them hee shall go from them and carry the light with him and they shall seek him and not find him what say they will hee kill himself vers 22. hee tells them that hee that keepeth his word shall never see death then said they Now wee know thou hast a Devil vers 25. Hee tells them before Abraham was I am and they take up stones to stone him Here were the Children of the Devil who was a man-slayer from the beginning And of these Christ said Yee go about to kill mee a man that hath told you the truth vers 40. and Yee do that which you have seen with your Father and not only seen but felt him moving and stiring in their hearts so he worketh mightily in the sons of disobedience Eph. 2.2 3 The more light and grace the Lord manifesteth in any of his children the more must the darknesse of wicked ones fight against it It is not their innocency their holinesse their wisdome their peaceable course of life that can fence them nay these bring all the malice of the wicked on them and lay them open to their rage Stephen a man full of faith and power whose enemies were not able to resist the Wisdome and Spirit by which hee spake Act. 6.8 yet drew they him to the Councill and subordened false witnesse against him where what should hee do They might and did see his face thine as the face of an Angel vers 15. In his Apology hee begins as a person at the bar with a loving and moving speech Men Brethren and Fathers hearken afterward in the course of his speech as a faithful servant of God and true teacher hee freely reproves them chap. 7. vers 51 52. calls them resisters of the Holy Ghost betrayers and murtherers of the just hee could convince them out of all the Scriptures as Christ did Satan here But the more full of the Holy Ghost hee was the more were they filled with devillish fury like so many Devils or furies their hearts brast for anger they gnashed with their teeth more like fell and savage beasts than men they shouted with a loud voice stopped their ears upon upon him cast him out of the City and stoned him 4 The incestant malice of the wicked against the children of God is a running stream from this of the wicked one against the natural Son of God the Devil would still if hee could tempt and molest Christ himself in his own person but that hee cannot hee will therefore bee sure to molest him in his servants hee would obscure the glory of Christ in himself but seeing hee cannot do that he will do what hee can by himself and all his members to extinguish that glory of Christ in those beams wherewith his servants are graced and honoured And this makes this war so irreconcilable Use 1. Therefore let us not marvel when wee see good things and good men resisted nor condemn that presently which wee may see opposed but 1 Turn our eyes upon that natural enmity which is between the seed of the woman and of the Serpent 2 Upon mens stubbornness against the truth and malice by which the sinner given up by God to Satan is obfirmed and hardened 3 Upon the powerful work of Satan in men of great gifts that being convinced in conscience even against that light can resist godly and innocent men 4 Upon the love of mens sins profits and pleasures which sets on forward this hatred against their conscience What could Christ himself do to conciliate Judas his favour Did not hee know that Christ was the Messiah did hee not preach him did hee not work miracles in his name did not Christ make him one of his family and prefer him to be the Steward of his house did hee not warn him of his sin and bear him most patiently Yet his heart being upon covetousnesse for a small commodity hee will betray Christ and that against his conscience 5 Other personal and private occasions may force men of great gifts to malign and hate against their consciences most innocent persons The Jews knew that Christ was the Messiah that hee was most powerful in Doctrin and most holy in his life yet they loved their own praise and therefore thrust down Christ If wee let him alone all will beleeve in him They thought themselves so much dishonoured as Christ was honoured Sometime fear of great men or some loss or check may cause this obstinate opposition Pilate knew Christ was an innocent man he washed his hands and would have no hand against him hee pronounced him innocent saying I find no fault in him his wife being troubled in a dream sent him word he should have nothing to do against that just man Yet against his conscience and his own words hee proceeded to condemn him Why how could hee bee so blind and wicked surely it was fear of Caesar and of some cheeck for hee had heard them say If thou let this man go thou are not Caesars friend Vse 2. It should teach us to go on undaunted in our godly course making no account of all the malice that the Devil or his instruments can create us and never offer to shake hands with them wee shall never have done if wee go about to please them wee can not do it unless wee will bee as bad as they if wee retain our favour of goodnesse it doth but provoke them Vse 3. Many men may hence see what spirit rules them who when they hear Scripture against their sinnes and unwarrantable courses they go on still as a chafed colt that cares neither for pale nor hedge but flings over These men would bee loath to bee compared to the Devil but wee shall see them for worse and the Devil not so bad as many of them When hee hears Christ
by Zachary chap. 11.13 and not by Jeremy Many learned men trouble themselves more than needs in reconciling this place 1 Some say that Saint Matthew joynes together both one place in Jeremy chap. 18.1 2 3. of the potter and this of Zachary 11.13 But there is little or no agreement between them 2 Some say that it is not in Jeremies writings that are Canonical but in some Apocryphal writings of Jeremy which the Jewes had and which Chrysostome confesseth he saw wherein these words were But it is not likely that the holy Evangelist would leave a Canonical text and cite an Apocryphal or give such credit to that or seek to build our faith upon it And by our rule that Book should be Canonical 3 Some say that Matthew forgat and for Zaehary put down Jeremy but with more forgetfulness that holy men writ as they were moved by Gods Spirit This error Erasmus takes hold of from Augustine who in his third Book concerning the consent of the Evangelists Chap. 7. defendeth and excuseth this error 4 Some think it the error of heedless Writers who might easily so erre but all the oldest Copies and the most ancient Fathers have the name of Jeremy 5 Some say that Zachariah being instructed and trained up with Jeremy did deliver it by tradition from Jeremy and so Jeremy spoke it by Zachariah which might be true because it is said in the text As was spoken by Jeremy not written But 6 The most compendious and likely way of reconciling is this that Zachary and Jeremy was the same man having two names which was very usual among the Jews as Gedeon was called Jerubaal and Jerub●sheth Salomon was called Jedidiah Jethro was called Hobab and Revel Jehoiacim Ieconias and Coniah Hester was called Edissa Simon Peter Cephas and Bar-Jona Matthew was called Lev● Jerusalem Jebus and Salem c. 4 These are such rules as not only the Learned who besides these have the benefit of Arts and Tongues the knowledge of Phrases the benefit of Disputation and the like but even the simplest may make good use of 1 To understand the Scripture aright and so discover the subtilty of Satan and seducers 2 To convince error and let others see their errours and so gently lead them back into their way again 3 They be great means to justifie the truth and glorifie God 4 Practisers of them have comfort in themselves that they are lovers of the truth and desire to find it even with much labour and industry 5 The want of this diligence and study of Scripture is the very cause that so many stagger and doubt of our religion and are so indifferent that they cannot tell whether to leane to Papists or Protestants and so hold doubtful to their death Yea and many goe away and fall off from us and depart to Antichrist which is a just judgement of God upon them because they were so farre from receiving the truth in the love of it as they would never take pains to search into the Scripture which witnesse of the truth VVE are now come to speak of the allegation it self and the force of the reason taken out of Deut. 6.16 where the Israelites are forbidden to tempt the Lord as in Massah How they tempted him in Massah is set down in Exod. 17.7 being in want of water and distress they contended with Moses and said Is the Lord amongst us 1 They doubted of his power and so would try whether he could give them water in this their want for the word nasah properly signifies to make trial as David is said to have tried and proved before to goe in armour 1 Sam. 17.39 where the same word is used 2 They doubted of the truth of his promise not beleeving him to be amongst them as he had promised unless he would shew them in all haste some sign of his presence in present supply of their necessity and therefore they say I● God amongst us Now mark how aptly and wisely our Lord and Saviour applieth this place I. In his choyse he is now on the pinacle and in a dangerous place and well knows that this prohibition was a fitter place to study and meditate on than those large promises in that most comfortable Psalm For howsoever all Scripture is profitable and Divine yet some Scriptures fit some persons and some occasions better than other It is a true and comfortable promise Isa 1.18 Come let us reason together though your sins were as red as scarlet c. But for a man not truely humbled the threats of the Law are fitter to meditate on neither doth the Lord so invite the Jewes till they be humbled It is true God hears not sinners but such a place is not so fit to bee meditated on and applied by such as are seriously beaten down already in the sight and sense of sin He that provideth not for his family is worse than an Infidel a true and holy speech but if a covetous man apply it it hurteth him hee hath other places to study on as Beware of covetousness and covetousness which is Idolatry is one of the sins which shuts out of heaven The holy heart of Christ could equally meditate and apply all Scripture but by this his choise hee would teach us to make choise according to occasions II. In direct meeting the Devils drift which was to move Christ to vain confidence and make trial whether he was the Son of God or God his Father by throwing himself down Comparing this place with the former he shewes him that it gives him no leave to cast down himself for this were not to trust God but to tempt God as the Jewes did in Massah but I doubt not of my Fathers power and therefore I need not try it I distrust not the truth of his promise and presence with me what need I make trial of it I have a Commandement which I must not separate from the promise as thou doest Thou pretendest a promise but no promise extends to the breach of any Commandement but hath his ground and dependance upon some Commandement or other Thou wouldest have me cast my self down and promisest help but no promise can secure him that attempteth that wherein he tempteth God as this action would In the words are 1 The person that must not tempt Thou 2 The person that must not be tempted The Lord thy God 3 The action of tempting not tempt I. The person Thou Some think that the pronoun Thou is to bee referred to Satan and the Lord thy God to Christ himself as though Christ had said Thou shalt not tempt me But 1 It was never written that Satan should not tempt Christ if it had it had been false 2 It is a negative Commandement of God directed to his people which bindes all persons at all times in all places and not to bee restrained to this occasion 3 Satan was irrecoverably fallen from the Covenant of grace and so although Christ was his Lord
of his love so every promise of Satan is a token of his malice An example of the Devils faithfulness we have in our own Chronicles In the reign of Edward the first when the Welch-men rebelled their Captain resorted to a Conjurer for counsel whether he should goe on in the intended warre against the King or no yes said the Devil goe on in thy purpose for thou shalt ride through Cheap-side with a Crown on thy head and so he did indeed but it was cut off and he was carried in triumph as a prey to the King This may justly reprove and shame many professed Christians that will scarce give Gods promises of grace and life the hearing though they are founded in Christ in whom they are all yea and amen flowing from his love and tending to our eternal happiness with himself Many will not bee brought to hear them many hardly when they have nothing else to do and many hear them as things not concerning themselves for then would they take more delight in them But if Satan promise any earthly Kingdome or profit hee hath our ears our hearts at command all our speech runs upon the World our desires and hopes are for earth and earthly things and being thus earthly-minded how expose wee our selves to Satans assaults and offer our selves to bee won by his most treacherous promises Vse 2. This teacheth us what to think of that Doctrin and Religion that teacheth men to be Promise-breakers what may we think of it but to bee a treacherous unfaithful Diabolical Religion But such is the Romish Religion as wee may easily see in two or three instances 1 In that Article of the Council of Constance That Faith is not to bee kept with Hereticks that is Protestants and so brake promise with John Hus who had not the Emperours onely but the Popes safe-conduct Against the Examples of good Joshua who kept Promise though rashly made with the Gibeonites and with the Harlot of Jericho and of David who kept Truth and Promise with Shimei a seditious and cursing wretched Traytor 2 The Church of Rome teacheth by the Doctrin of Equivocation to break the Promise of a lawful Oath before a lawful Magistrate and teacheth the lawfulness thereof But the Scripture condemneth a double heart and the deceitful Tongue and proclaimeth woe against them that trust in lying words In lib de fide cum haretic is servanda Jer. 7.8 and that make falshood their refuge Yea Molanus a great and learned Papist concludes syncerè faedera juramenta sunt intelligenda all leagues and especially Oathes are sincerely to bee understood and condemns plainly such mockeries and dalliance with Promises and compacts by one or two instances as of him that made truce with his enemy for thirty daies and wasted his Enemies Countrey and Camps only in the night and of Aurelianus the Emperour who comming afore a Town Tijana and finding the Gates shut to animate his Souldiers with great anger said I will not leave a Dog in the Town they hoping for the spoil beestirred themselves to Ransack the Town but being won hee would not give them leave to spoil it but bad them leave never a Dog in it and let the goods alone This was but a dalliance condemned by the Papist himself and yet had more colour of truth than Popish Equivocation can have 3 The Romish Church teacheth men to break Promises and Oaths with lawful and Christian Princes exempting subjects from obedience and putting Swords Dags Daggers Powder and all deadly plots into their heads and hands against the Lords anointed A treacherous and Devillish Doctrin Vse 3. Wee see also what house treacherous and deceitful persons descend of such as care not how much they promise and how little they perform men most unlike unto God and resembling their Father the Devil who is most lavish and prodigal in his promises when hee knows hee hath neither power nor purpose to perform men of great tongues which swell as mountains but of little hands not performing mole-hills Of these Solomon speaks Prov. 25.14 Hee that glorieth of a false gift that is speaketh of great things that hee will do for his Neighbour but failes in the accomplishment is like a cloud and wind without rain A Cloud seems to offer and promise Rain but the winde takes it away and frustrates a mans expectations And the same is true of all windy Promises Which wee must carefully avoid and use these rules against slipperiness in promise 1 If a man would bee like God who cannot lye in his promises hee must strive against it But Satan is a Lyar from the beginning and the Father of Lyes and Lyars 2 Faithfulnesse in contracts is the sinew of humane society which Satan would have crackt that hee may bring all to confusion 3 The Heathens that were given up by God to a reprobate sense are branded with this mark they are truce-breakers Rom. 1.31 4 It is a mark of a man in the state of grace who hath obtained remission of sins that in his spirit is no guile Psal 32.2 5 A note of a man that shall dwell in Gods holy and heavenly mount is this hee speaks the truth from his heart Psal 15.2 and Revel 14.5 They onely shall stand on Mount Sion and sing before the Throne who have no guilt in their months Especially wee must bee careful of two promises whereof God and the Congregation have been witnesses as 1 That of Baptism which wee must have a special care to look unto for if wee fail in keeping touch with God no marvail if wee fail with men 2 That of Marriage which the Prophet calls the Covenant of God Mal. 2.14 THE second thing in this profer is the reason annexed Luk. 4.6 For it is delivered unto mee and to whomsoever I will I give it The Devil like a desperate man that is sure in this bout to kill or bee killed laies about him with all the skill and strength hee hath yea hee is put to his shifts so as no base or mischievous devise comes amiss by which hee may either in fair combat or cowardly attempts oppress his adversary and that which hee cannot do by strength and power hee will attempt by falshood and lies which hee heaps up here together most like himselfe the Father of lies that stood not in the truth And here he challengeth the power and glory of the World to bee his 1 In Possession 2 In disposition First Hee affirmeth it to bee his but not directly but indirectly by Gift It is delivered unto mee But this is a most notorious lye for the earth is the Lords and all that therein is the world and all that dwell therein Psal 24.1 and Deut. 10.14 Behold the Heaven of Heavens is the Lords thy God and the earth with all that therein is And where read wee that ever hee committed these into the hand of the Devil Object 1. Joh. 14.30 Hee is called the Prince of
of words and sharp reproaches unless there bee added also a direct answer and satisfaction to the matter in hand he therefore most fully answereth by the Scriptures even the Devil himself not contenting himself by his power to repel him which Satan now beginneth to feel unless also by the power of the Word hee convince him and thereby award the dart and break the temptation into pieces Which must bee our rule in dealing with vain and jangling adversaries not to answer them according to their foolish disposition or provocation not to bee like them in frowardness or stifnesse in heat and perversnesse but to answer them with words of Wisdome with sound matter and moderation both to convince them and beat down self-conceit in them which is the meaning of those two Precepts Prov. 26.4 5. which seem contrary but are easily reconciled by the due respect of persons places times and other circumstances Ever remember one rule that no adversary suppose the Devil himself is to bee answered by affection or passion but by judgement and sound reason Yea if wee have no hope to win our adversary or do him much good as Christ had none of the Devil yet wee must testify to God and his truth for the confirmation of our selves and others The testimony alledged is out of Deut. 10.20 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God thou shall serve him and Deut. 6.13 An universal and affirmative precept by which every creature is bound to his Creator and him alone to perform Divine worship unto him And it is aptly applyed by Christ to this dart of Satan For it implyeth 1 That hee himself as now standing in this conflict with Satan is a creature of God as hee is man though otherwise as God hee hee equal to his Father As man hee is subject to the Law and to this precept among the rest 2 That Satan is not God as hee pretendeth by his unjust claimes nor any way equal to God 3 That therefore neither must hee being a creature give the least divine worship from God nor hee that thus claimes it can by any means bee capable of it 4 That the Scriptures of God reserve unto God his due worship and forbid that any creature shall share with him Christ stands not to dispute whether the sight presented were a shadow or substance nor whether hee would give it him or no but holds him to the Scripture which upholds his Fathers right Quest But why doth our Saviour change and adde to the text of Scripture as not regarding that terrible woe denounced against such as adde or take away from the word and contrary to that in Deut. 12.32 Here our Saviour 1 Changeth Moses saith Thou shalt fear Christ saith Thou shalt worship 2 Addeth for Moses hath not the word only which is of Christs putting to that text Answ 1 Here is some difference indeed in words but not in sense and therefore it is no corruption of the Text nor letting out the life of it which stands not in the words but in the true sense 2 Our Lord both in great wisdome changeth the word fear into Worship and just cause for 1 Moses useth fear which is a general word in which is contained all such Divine duties as godly men ought to perform unto God and our Saviour mentions one special which is included in that general which thing Moses speaks as well as he in the general as he that commands a whole commands every part inward and outward 2 Hereby our Saviour aptly meets with Satans temptation If thou wilt worship me he useth the same word not tying himself to Moses his words but keeping the sense but to Satans word and 3 He noteth the nearness and undividedness of Gods fear and his worship as where the cause is there will bee the effect so true fear and worship goe together where one is there will be the other and for this cause one is put for the other not here only but elsewhere as Isa 29.13 Their fear toward me was taught by the precept of men Christ alleadging it Mat. 15.9 saith You worship me in vain As for the word only added which is not in the Law it no way addeth any contrary or diverse sense to Moses but only expoundeth or giveth a fit commentary to the text and speaketh that plainly in one word which Moses doth in more as Deut. 2.13 Thou shalt fear the Lord thy God and serve him and walk after no other gods which is all one with our Saviours Thou shalt serve him only As he that saith The King is the supream Governour and none but hee saith in effect The King is the only supream Governour 3 Christ and his Apostles had a priviledge in alleadging Scriptures without error and were in●a●●ble expounders as well as alleadgers 4 This alteration of words is made by Christ to warrant us that Scriptures alleadged by teachers according to their right sense although with alterations and additions are to be taken as true expositions and allegations we being not tied so strictly to words as to sense For otherwise all our Sermons and Expositions which serve to beat out the true sense of Scriptures and apply it to several uses might be condemned as idle additions to Scripture which is blasphemous 5 To warrant us that Principles of Religion expounded by warrant of Scripture are truly interpreted though the Scriptures in so many formal words express them not As for example In the Doctrin of Justification by faith we say we are justified by faith only before God here the Papists exclaim on us as accursed Hereticks because we read not the word only in all the Scripture But we read it in effect and in true sense Rom. 3.28 and Ephes 2.8 By faith without works which exclusive is all one as to say only by faith as our Saviour interprets the exclusion of other gods by the word only As if I should say I did such a thing without help is it not all one as to say I only did it If Christs interpretation be true and warrantable so must ours in the point of justification And if the Devil himself had not yeelded to Christs allegation he might have said Thou thrustest in the word only and addest to Gods Word and therefore art not the Son of God But the Papists deal more impudently with us than the Devil did with Christ who said no such thing but yeelded to evidence of truth which they will not In the precept it self are three things 1 The person 2 The matter 3 The object 1 The peson thou the whole man and person which consisteth of a body and soul thou any reasonable Creature that challengest God to be thy God 2 The matter shalt worship and serve Worship is two-fold Civil or Divine I. Civil is a prostrating or bowing of the body or any outward testification of an high and reverent respect of man And this is due to men two ways 1 Of duty when men are to bee
of subjection to the thing adored and a note of inferiority in deed or in will by this gesture this person makes himself inferiour to a Creature and giveth worship and preheminence to that which in his knowledge hath neither life nor sense which is sensless and against common reason 5 A plain difference between Civil worship and Divine is that all Divine worship is absolute and immediate which is plain in this instance God in all his Commandements must be absolutely and simply obeyed with full obedience never calling any of them into question never expostulating or reasoning the matter with God seem they to us never so unreasonable As Abraham against the Law Moral and even against the Law of Nature without all reasoning riseth up early to kill his own son when God bids him who will be simply obeyed for himself But all obedience to men is respective to God in God and for God and as farre as God hath appointed them to be obeyed and no further God must be obeyed against the Magistrate the Magistrate not against God but so farre as his Commandements are agreeable to Gods Man as man is not to be obeyed but because God hath set him over us in the Church Common-wealth or Family Whence we see that Civil worship hath his rise and ground in the worship of God and what is the cause that so little reverence is given to superiours whether Magistrates or Ministers Masters or Parents in these dissolute and unmannerly days but because Gods worship decays and is not laid in the hearts of inferiours the force of whose Commandement would force reverence to superiours What other cause is there that inferiour impudent persons of both sexes take such liberty without all respect of conscience truth or manners to chatter against Gods Ministers and the Kings towards both whom God hath commanded more than ordinary respect yea with all bitterness to scoft rail curse threaten with horrible damnable and incessant Oathes more like Furies than men even to their faces but that Gods fear is utterly shaken out of their hearts and where Gods fear is absent how can we expect any fear of men The Heathen Priests were honoured because Heathen gods were feared which shall condemn Christians among whom neither Gods Priests and Ministers nor the Ministers of the King Gods Vicegerent and consequently not God himself is feared and honoured Doct. All religious worship whether outward or inward is due to God only For inward worship it is most express Joh. 4.24 God being a Spirit hee must bee worshipped in spirit and truth And it might be proved in all the parts of inward worship as 1 Love Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy soul 2 Fear Isa 8.13 Let him be thy fear and dread Fear him that is able to cast both body and soul into hell 3 Trust and confidence Prov. 3.5 Trust in God with all thy heart 4 Faithful prayer Psal 50.15 Call upon me in the time of trouble and How can they call on him in whom they have not beleeved But of this there is little question As for outward worship if religious all of it is his due only Psal 95.6 Come let us kneel before him and bow down to God our Maker Whence it is manifest that all the gestures and signs of religious worship as bowing of the body of knees lifting up of eyes or hands and uncovering the head with religious intention is not to bee yeelded to any but the true God 1 A reason hereof is in the text because he only is the Lord our God Reasons our Lord of absolute command and we his servants whos 's our souls are and our bodies also to be at his beck in religious use and none else and our God by the Law of Creation and daily preservation as also by the Covenant of Grace and Redemption he hath not only created but preserveth yee redeemeth our souls and bodies also and no Creature hath any right unto us as David saith Christ refuseth here to bow to the Devil not only because he is a Devil but because he is a Creature 2 In our text wee see that Satan will yeeld God is to be served but not only he would have a little service too Nebuchadnezzar would bee contented God should be served but he would bee served too if they would but fall down and bow to his Image he desires no more Let Christ be as devout towards his Father as he can inwardly Satan desites no more but a little outward reverence But the three fellows of Daniel tell the King they will worship their God only and Christ tells Satan the chief Idolater of all that hee must serve God only even with external and bodily service 3 If outward religious worship were due to any Creature then to the Angels the most glorious of all but they have refused it and devolved it only to God as his Prerogative Judg. 13.16 Manoah being about to worship the Angel that appeared to him the Angel hindred him saying If thou wilt offer any sacrifice offer it to God And Paul condemneth an outward humility in worshipping of Angels Col. 2.18 Revel 19.10 the Angel refused Johns worship and chap. 22.8 when he fell down at his feet to worship him being amased and perhaps not knowing whether hee might not bee the Lamb himself of whose marriage he was speaking and the reason in both places why he refused even that outward reverence was 1 Taken from the Angels condition hee was but a fellow-servant 2 Because it was proper to God Worship God who is there opposed to all Angels good and bad 4 Idolatry may bee committed onely in the gesture neither can wee set our bodies which ought to bee presented as living and reasonable sacrifice● to God before Idol-Worship without the crime of Idolatry no external dissembled honour can be given to an image with safe conscience for which cause Origen was excommunicated by the Church for offering a little incease to an Idol though hee were forced thereunto by a suddain fear 5 Some things must bee had alone and admit not of a second No man can serve two Masters One woman cannot have two husbands at once her Husband is jealous of any partner or corrival Now God alone is our Master and Husband and therefore hee alone must have religious honour This serves to confute the Popish doctrin and practice of their image and Saint-worship and of giving many other waies Gods peculiar worship clean away to the Creatures not onely bowing to images of wood and stone and metal but invocating them vowing unto them offring gifts unto them lighting candles before them offring incense dedicating daies fasts feasts unto Saints departed c. Wherein they commit most horrible idolatry against this express Commandement which commandeth the service of the true God onely As wee shall see further in these grounds Grounds against image Worship 1 No image may bee made of God Thou
and a good Conscience and faith unfeigned And when the Lord bids David seek his face Davids heart answereth I will seek thy face Psal 27.8 Those that serve bodily Masters must not serve with eye-service but as the servants of Christ Eph. 5.6 how doing the will of God from the heart and ver 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in simplicity of heart What man can abide a servant that deals deceitfully with him if he know that hee outwardly pretends service but his heart is not with him but he dissembles Love Truth Faith and Reverence No more can God Men cannot see into the hearts of their servants but the Lord doth and cannot bee deceived The fountain of all our Obedience must bee a pure and sincere heart or else if the well-head be corrupt share all the waters that issue thence 3 It must bee ruled and squared by God himself Hinc obed●re ad audire for God must bee served as hee will bee served and not as wee think good for God knows what is best and what pleaseth him best All Obedience is to go by rule not our own or others but Gods As the eyes of the hand-maid is upon the hand of her Mistrisse so in our service must our eyes bee upon Gods direction Ps 123.2 which is implyed in that phrase Luke 1.75 That wee should serve him in righteousnesse and holinesse before him all the daies of our life An earthly servant must not take up his own work nor do other mens business but depend upon his own Masters mouth and direction Now God ruleth his whole service in respect of the 1 matter 2 manner 3 end I. For the matter Whatsoever I command that do onely saith the Lord. Thou shalt not do that which is good in thine own eyes but what I command thee And so wee are taught to pray Thy will be done II. For the manner It must bee 1 Absolute 2 Total I. Absolute without all condition on our part whereas all service to men must bee conditional The reason hereof is because God being holiness it self can command nothing but what is most just and holy but men may II. Total both objective and subjective 1 It must bee total in respect of the object all Gods Commandements all which call for our obedience Partial and delicate service when wee list or at leisure as the retainers of great men on feast-daies is not that which liketh him but a constant diligence in all his Commandements and a conscionable indeavour in all General service was holy Davids aim Psal 119.6 Then shall I not bee confounded when I have respect to all thy Commandements Not that wee can perfectly serve him unlesse wee were perfectly sanctified but that we must make conscience of all Gods Commandements even the least 2 It must bee total in respect of our selves we must be wholly imployed in his service in all our parts and powers the whole heart and all the strength is here challenged Wherein there is a notable difference between the service wee owe to God and that to men Wee are to bee serviceable to men only in part not wholly for the soul and Conscience are not subject to men which God especially taketh up and looks for Gods priviledge it is to bee the father of spirits for although wee take our bodies from our Parents yet our souls are immediately from God Men therefore have no power and authority over our souls but God hath power both over soul and body and is the Lord of our conscience and spirit and therefore of due must we subject our selves wholly in his service III. God ruleth his service in respect of the end which is twofold intentionis termini 1 The proper aym and end of our service must be 1 Gods glory directly If all our service of men must be for God as we saw it must much more must Gods immediate service 2 The good of our brethren and of Gods Church which we must not scandalize but build up for God will be served in our service of men 2 Wee must serve our God without end he requires such an heart in his people as to fear him always Deut. 5.29 and 6.13 Thou shalt serve the Lord and cleave unto him Wee allow not our servants to cast up our work and make holy-day at their pleasure much less most Gods servants think it lawful at any time to give any service to Satan Sin Lust the World or any Creature against the Will of the Lord. Vse This should provoke us to tender unto God this service with heart and good will thus squared by God for the matter manner and ends of it The Apostle Ephes 6.5 6 7 8. perswadeth servants to obey their Masters according to the flesh by three arguments all which are much more strong to perswade our service to our Master in heaven First saith he it is the will of God Gods institution and the ordinance of Christ It is enough for a servant to know that such a thing is the ordinate will of his own Master The second reason of the Apostle is taken from the honour of their service that in serving men they served the Lord Christ which was an honourable thing Now we serve a great Lord and as good as great If a servant were bound to a wicked and froward Master he must obey him in all lawful things How much more are we to yeeld service to so good a Lord who can command nothing but that which is most just holy and honourable Hee sets us not about any base or ignoble service to work in brick or clay as Pharaoh commanded the Israelites but our work is the practice of piety and righteousness of prayer and praise And besides it is most beneficial to our selves for what gaineth he by our service our goodness reacheth not to him to adde a grain to his perfection Psal 50.9 10. I will take no Bullock out of thy house for all the beasts of the forest are mine and the sheep on a thousand mountains If I were hungry I would not tell thee But it is our honour and profit as when a noble man takes a poor Sneak near him to serve him such a mean man is more honoured and pleasured than the noble man to whom he retains The third reason of the Apostle is drawn from the expectation of reward or wages which if their Masters should fail God would not fail to repend unto them knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doth that same he shall receive of the Lord. Now if the Lord so liberally reward faithful service done to mean and even wicked men how rich and royal a reward gives hee to the faithful service of himself It gifts then may move us to serve God the Lord truly saith All these doe I give thee and more also my Christ my Spirit my self and life eternal No man gives such wages no servant ever had such a pay-master To these might be added sundry other motives
●farre off whilst your Country shall be reaping the encrease and your self the comfort of those hopeful seeds which every one that know you acknowledge with gladness in you Thus humbly craving pardon for my boldness I commend this Book to your Worships acceptance which for the whole argument containing a plain unfolding of the most grounds and main pillars of our Religion is worthy your respect and your selves with your vertuous Ladies and hopeful Children together with all your studies and endeavours for the Church or Common-wealth to the rich blessing of God who fill your hearts with heavenly wisedome and preserve you both blameless till his appearing Amen Your Worships to be commanded THOMAS TAYLOR Watford July 20. AN EXPOSITION UPON S. Peters Sermon BEFORE CORNELIUS ACTS 10.34 c. Vers 34. Then Peter opened his mouth and said Of a truth I perceive that God is no accepter of persons 35 But in every nation hee that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted of him 36 Yee know the word which God hath sent to the children of Israel preaching peace by Jesus Christ which is Lord of all 37 Even the word which came through all Judea beginning in Galilee after the baptism which John Preached 38 To wit how God annointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power who went about doing good and healing all that were oppressed of the Devil for God was with him 39 And wee are witnesses of all things which hee did both in the land of the Jews and in Jerusalem whom they slew hanging him on a tree 40 Him God raised up the third day and caused that hee was shewed openly 41 Not to all the people but unto the witnesses chosen before of God even to us which did eat and drink with him after hee arose from the dead 42 And hee commanded us to preach unto the people and to testify that he is ordained of God a judge of quick and dead 43 To him also give all the Prophets witness that through his name all that beleeve in him shall receive remission of sins THe occasion of this worthy Sermon breathed not only by an Apostolike spirit but from such an instrument also as was worthily accounted a Pillar of the Church Gal. 2.9 is laid down in the former verse which containeth an abridgement of the most of the Chapter going before included in these three points 1 Cornelius his obedience in sending for Peter Then that is having so good a ground even a Commandement from God by the ministery of an Angel vers 5. I sent for thee to Joppa which was somewhat above thirty miles from Caesaria Immediately as soon as ever I had received the Commandement Cyprian without delay yea or deliberation which being dangerous divine things admit not of Secondly his kind entertainment of Peter to encourage him and thou hast well done to come Thirdly his preparation and readiness of himself and his to heat whatsoever God by Peters ministery shall enjoyn them Now therefore wee all hee would have that holy doctrin communicated to his family friends and kinsfolks here present before God the place of Gods pure worship is the place of his presence to hear with attention understanding affection and obedience for all these go to the hearing ear all things for that is sound obedience which is universal to one Commandement as well as another every one being of like authority and necessity that are commanded thee of God for Peter himself m●st bee confined within his Commission and speak onely what God commandeth neither are hearers bound to receive any thing else The Apostle Peter by this speech perceiving both the occasion and scope of their meeting as also the readiness and attention of his hearers addresseth himself to speech Then Peter opened his mouth and said The phrase of opening the mouth some think to bee but a more full kind of speech Pleon●smus as wee say I heard it with mine ears or I saw it with mine eies But wee must conceive it rather to bee fetched from the Hebrews who in this form of speech signifye not the uttering of any trivial or vulgar matter or in a slight or carelesse manner but the relation of some excellent matter of great moment and that in grave and serious manner and not without premeditation and preparation such as is fit to attend things of worth and weight Thus is it used Psal 78.2 I will open my mouth in a Parable I will declare sentences of Old Job 33.1 Behold I have opened my mouth my tongue hath spoken in my mouth my words are in the uprightness of my heart and my lips shall speak pure knowledge Yea our Lord Jesus himself when hee begun his most heavenly Sermon on the Mount Matth. 5.2 is said to open his mouth and say Whence 1 wee have the Doctrin in the Sermon following commended unto us to be for the matter of it grave and high and neerly concerning the salvation of men wherein are laid down the main grounds of all Religion and whatsoever wee are to beleeve concerning Christ unto salvation as wee shall see when wee come to open the several points 2 Wee are secretly incited that seeing the Holy Ghost hath opened the mouth of such a worthy instrument wee are also to open our ears yea our hearts to let in the matter following that as it proceeded out of the treasury of a good and sanctified heart so wee also may hide it in good hearts as in good treasures to bring it forth as our needs and occasions shall require 3 Ministers must come with their mouthes open and not onely not to be dumb dogs which cannot or seal up their lips and will not protest against the sins of the times but also must have care to speak the words of wisdom judgement sobriety for if the holy men of God Prophets Apostles nor the Son of God himself did not preach without preparation and due consideration both of what how and to whom they spake how much more should ordinary ministers use all diligence in fitting themselves to speak from God and for God and even as God himself would speak to his people 4 Every Christian may hence also take up his duty namely that hee never open his mouth but to edification For it is attributed to every iust man that his mouth speaketh wisdome and his tongue talketh of judgement Psa 37.30 he judgeth of his speeches before he let them pass the doo● of his lips and of the vertuous woman it is said Shee openeth her mouth with wisdome and the law of grace is in her tongue Prov. 31.26 Now the Sermon following consisteth of three parts The parts of the Sermon three The first is an entrance or preface in the two first verses 34 35. 2 The Proposition or Narration that Jesus Christ was the Messias now exhibited in the flesh and Lord of all vers 36. 3 A confirmation of that narration partly from the Apostles and
The Herodians could say that Christ taught the way of God truly because he respected not the face of man Mark 12.14 What a straight charge giveth the Apostle Paul to Timothy that he should preferre no man in his ministry and doe nothing with partiality 1 Tim. 5.21 It was a worthy commendation of Levi that the law of truth was in his mouth iniquity was not found in his lips he walked with God in peace and equity and so turned many from iniquity Mal. 2.6 Whereas on the contrary what a wicked thing it is to preach for hire reward favour and yet lean upon the Lord See in Micha 3.11 3 Ordinary Professors may not accept persons 1 Not in civil things For when elections offices and common benefits are passed and bestowed partially for friendship money kindred favour or entreaty this is the ruine of all societies and a bringer in of all corruption especially when men have taken oathes to a Corporation to the contrary the sin is like an infolded disease more incurable and dangerous 2 In matters of religion much less notwithstanding this sin be many ways committed As 1 To have the faith of God in respect of persons which the Apostle James noteth in this instance Jam. 2.2 When a man with a gold ring or goodly apparrel be he never so wicked is magnified and advanced above another who is not so outwardly gaudy but inwardly arrayed with the white garments of Christs righteousness and adorned with the Jewels of faith love holiness and sincerity which the world taketh little knowledge of 2 To accept the word because he is a man of pomp that bringeth it a rich man or a friend the Corinths were justly blamed for partial hearing and holding some to Paul some to Apollos some to Cephas 1 Cor. 3.4 who is Paul who is Apollos who is Cephas are not they all Ministers by whom yee beleeve Ahab will not hear Micah because he hateth his person but he shall justly fall for it at Ramoth Gilead 1 King 22.37 3 To reject the profession of religion because it wanteth countenance and credit at most hands and a few poor ones only receive it Many Protestants can hear us justly confute the Popish doctrine and practice in that they embrace their religion in respect of persons that is of the outward appearance of it because they pretend a perpetual succession consent of Councils defence of Princes antiquity universality the most part of Europe having generally taken the mark of the Beast in their hands and foreheads and yet the same men see not how themselves are slipt into the same Popish error that refuse one course because it wants outward supporters and props and chuse that by which they may swim with the stream they hate Popery because the Laws hate it and love religion because it is now crowned established and establisheth their prosperity 4 To disdain the persons of poor professors which is so general and common a sin as that nothing can they doe or speak but it passeth much unjust censure nay things by them exceeding well and holily performed are so farre from being drawn into example as that thereby they can bee traduced Wherein yet they are conformed unto the Son of God the head of their profession whose powerful doctrine and mighty works were carped at and depraved because they knew his Father his Mother himself at the best but a Carpenters Son not brought up at study and learning For example how was that great work of healing a man miraculously so farre from affecting the Jews as that they fell very foul and were angry with him and the reason is rendred by our Saviour Christ Joh. 7.23 24. Because they judged according to the outward appearance and not with righteous judgement concerning him 5 For professors themselves to look too bigge upon some meaner ones as they conceive but by the Gospel members of Christ and his Kingdom as well as they Isa 65.1 Christ who preached to the poor as well as the rich hath spoken to their hearts as well as their own and hath equalled them or perhaps made them superiour in graces to the other Now should not those that profess God herein resemble him who though he bee high and excellent inhabiting eternity and dwell in the high and holy place yet he looks to the humble and lowly yea and dwels also with him that is of a contrite and humble spirit Isa 57.15 To think too basely of him whom God chuseth is to erre from Gods righteous judgement and what can the blind world doe more disgraceful to the profession than to pass by the graces of God as not knowing what they mean 6 Not to speak here of Popish spirits who seek to disgrace our Religion because Artificers and simple women are as they say Scripturers not considering that in Christ neither male nor female are rejected Gal. 3.23 and that God chuseth even weak and foolish things to confound the wise and mighty and the poor ones of the world to be rich in faith 1 Cor. 1.26 27. Vse 2. If God accept not persons for outward respects If outward things could bring us into acceptance with God we might see our hearts on them why should any outward thing gain our hearts our affections our studies seeing if we could gain them all we are never the further in Gods books Many are ready to say oh God loveth them and judge themselves highly in savour because he suffereth his light to shine upon their habitations their hands find out wealth they are encreased in possessions and prospered in their labours peaceable in their houses without fear therefore doth pride compass them as a chain But with one word doth the wise man shatter down all the pillars of this foolish erection Eccles 9.2 No man knoweth love or hatred of all that is before them And if outward things could commend a man to God Antiochus Nebuchadnezzar Nero and such wicked Tyrants had been highest in favour with him whose feathers hee pluckt whose pride hee brought low making them spectacles of his vengeance to all the world who for their outward greatness had been the terrours of the world And yet much less should these things swell the hearts of men with pride above others who perhaps have a better part in Heaven than themselves The proneness unto which sin the Lord perceiving he hath expresly charged that the rich man should not glory in his riches nor the strong man in his strength Jer. 9.24 but if any man glory let him glory in this that he understandeth and knoweth me All other rejoycing is not good that is is hurtful and perilous besides the vanity of such vain boasting common experience shewing that the higher scale is always lightest We must stand naked in Gods Iudgement seeing no outward thing can commend us to him Vse 3. If God accept no man for outward things then when we enter into Gods judgement we shall appear naked stript of all outward
which they are daily toyled so many discouragements without them to cast them down or back at the least against all which this one consideration shall bee able to bear them up that the eyes of the Lord are upon them that fear him and by these eyes he seeth their wants to supply them their injuries to releeve them their sorrows to mitigate them their hearts to approve them and their works to accept them 2 Those that fear God must also be accepted and respected of us We must accept them that fear God because God himself doth as they be of God and it cannot be that those who love God should not love his Image in his children Davids delight was wholly in the Saints and such as excelled in vertue Psal 16.3 so must wee frame our judgement and practice to the Saints of God before us who have made but small account of great men if wicked and preferred very mean ones fearing God before them Thus that worthy Prophet Elisha who contemned not the poor Shunamite fearing God told wicked Jehoram King of Israel that if he had not regarded the presence of good Jehosaphat he would not so much as have looked toward him or seen him 2 King 3.14 Nay even the Lord himself hath gone before us herein for example who for the most part respecteth poor and mean ones to call them to partake of his grace pass●●g by the great noble and every way more likely of respect if we should judge according to the outward appearance David the least of his brethren was chosen King Gideon the least in all his fathers house Judg. 3.15 appointed by God the deliverer of his people and indeed the meanest Christian being descended of the bloud of Christ and so nobly born deserveth most respective entertainment in the best roome of our hearts 3 This doctrine teacheth all sorts of men to turn their course from such earnest seeking after honours profits preferments and such things which make men accepted amongst men and as eagerly to pursue the things which would bring them to be accepted of God such as are faith fear of God love of righteousnesse good conscience and the like which things bring not only into favour with God but often get the approbation of men at least so farre as God seeth good for his children Rom. 14.17 18. The kingdome of God is not meat and drink that is hath not such need of such indifferent things as these are but righteousnesse peace and joy in the Holy Ghost those are the essential things to be respected of all such as are the subjects of that Kingdome of grace And to urge the godly hereunto mark the Apostles reason in the next verse for whosoever in these things serveth Christ is ACCEPTABLE unto God and approved of men such a mans ways please the Lord and then he maketh his enemies become his friends Vers 36. The which word he declared or sent to the children of Israel preaching peace by Jesus Christ which is Lord of all OF all other readings I follow this not only as the plainest but because it most aptly knitteth this verse with the former as a clear proof of it For having said that now he knew that whosoever whether Jew or Gentile did now purely worship God according to the prescript of his Word the same is accepted of him he proveth this to be a truth because it is the self same thing which God himself had of old published to the Israelites when he declared unto them that peace and reconciliation was made between God and man by the means of Jesus Christ who is Lord not of any one people or Nation but Lord of all For the Apostle doth not secretly oppose the ministery of Moses and of Christ Moses was a Minister of the Law to the Jews only but Christ himself and the Gospel is the power of God to salvation to every beleever first to the Jew and then to the Grecian and now God is not the God of the Jew only but even of the Gentiles also according to that heavenly song of the Angels when Christ appeared to throw down that partition wall which stood between the Jew and Gentile wherein they ascribed not only all the glory unto God but proclaimed peace to all the earth In one word that Jesus Christ is our peace and Lord of all is the scope of this whole Sermon and of all the Prophets as after remaineth to be shewed in vers 43. The former part of this verse hath two general points to bee explained the former touching the peace here spoken of the latter concerning the preaching or declaring of it By peace what is meant In the former must be considered 1 What this peace is 2 How it is by Jesus Christ First by peace among the Hebrews and Greeks is meant all prosperity and happinesse for both of them in their salutations though with some difference prayed for peace to the parties saluted that is all good success from God the fountain of mercy And includeth in it 1 Peace with God 2 Peace with man both with a mans self and others 3 Peace with all the creatures of God so farre forth as that none of them shall bee able to hurt him further than God thinketh good for his exercise and in this peace standeth true happinesse 2 It must be considered how this peace is by Jesus Christ namely according to the former branches of it 1 Peace with God by three things First he wrought our peace with God from whom our sin had sundered and separated us three ways 1 By interposing himself between his Fathers anger and us who durst not come near him 2 By satisfying in our stead all his justice through his bloud thereby removing all enmity cancelling all hand-writings which might have been laid against us and bestowing on us a perfect righteousnesse in which God is delighted to behold us 3 By appearing now for us in Heaven and making requests for us in all which hee cannot but be heard being the Son of his Fathers love in whom he is well pleased and for him with us his members 2 Peace with men 1 Others Secondly he wrought peace between man and man 1 By demolishing and casting down the wall of separation whereby Jew and Gentile might not accord or meddle one with another his death rent down the veil that both Jew and Gentile might look into the Sanctuary that of two he might make one people one body yea one new m●n unto himself Eph. 2.13 14. 2 By changing the fierce and cruel disposition of men who are now become the subjects of his Kingdom that of Lions and Cockatrises they become as meek and tractable as Lambs and little Children having peace so far as is possible with all men with the godly for Gods Image sake and that they are members of the same body with them and with the wicked for Gods Commandements sake and because they may become members of
with him The words of the verse contain two things 1 The assertion of Christ his resurrection Him God raised up the third day 2 The manifestation or evidence of it and caused that hee was openly shewed The former part is laid down in four distinct points 1 The person raised him 2 The person raising him God 3 The action it self raised 4 The time when the third day First the person raised is Christ where First It will bee demanded how Christ can bee said to bee raised How Christ can be said to rise seeing neither his Deity nor the soul of his humanity arose seeing hee consisted of a Divine and a Humane nature whereof the first could neither fall nor rise and for the second that also consisted of soul and body the former of which being the principal part dyed not but was in Paradise Seeing then neither the Deity nor the soul of his Humanity nor his person did rise but only his body how can Christ bee said to bee raised Answ In sundry other places of Scripture besides this wee meet with such synechdochical phrases and forms of speech wherein somewhat is attributed to the whole which is proper but to one part and that ascribed to the whole person which belongeth but to one nature which cometh to pass by reason of that straight and personal union of the two natures in Christ Thus wee read that God purchased his Church by his own blood Act. 20.28 and that the Lord of glory was crucified 1 Cor. 2.8 of the sons being in heaven and in earth at one time Joh. 3.18 of Christs being before Abraham was Joh. 8.58 of his being omnipotent c. All which are spoken of the whole person but properly are to bee referred to the several natures to which they do agree Thus the Apostles sometimes expound them and teach us so to do 1 Pet. 3.18 Christ was mortified according to the flesh and quickened according to the spirit 2 Cor. 13.4 Hee dyed according to the infirmity of his flesh and was quickned according to the power of God and to help our conceit herein serveth that school distinction Lords Christus non totum Christi which saith that whole Christ is said to do this or that which the whole of Christ did not yea our own common form of speech saith a man is dead whose soul liveth and a man is asleep when his body only sleepeth 2 Wee have hence to note that the same body was raised which had been laid down in the Grave and no imaginary body neither any other body for it for never was any other laid there before Of all which himself against all Hereticks giveth sufficient evidence as in the manifestation following remaineth to be cleared 3 That this person raised was not a private person but the same who had as a publike person been abused accused condemned and executed and now as a publike person also raised from the dead in whom all his Church and every member of it rose again for whosoever have interest in his death have their part also in his resurrection 4 Here is a further thing in this person to bee noted than ever was in any the first Adam was a root also and a publike person when hee sinned hee sinned for himself and us and having sinned and we in him he dyed away and left us in that sin and being dead wee hear no more of him and the Scriptures though they record at large the Histories of the holiest men that have lived yet when once they come to this that such or such a man dyed wee hear no more of him but with Christ it is not so who was not onely as another Sampson who bewrayed the greatest power in his death but herein unmatchable and peerless that hee did greater things after his death than ever hee did in all his life Contra. Faust lib. 16. insomuch as Augustine was wont to say that the faith of Christians was Christs resurrection Wee must not then content our selves with common people that Christ is dead for all and no more but fasten our eyes upon his resurrection so much the more diligently by how much it is easier to beleeve that hee was dead than that hee rose again And what other thing can more fitly bee collected from that practice of all the Evangelists who in other things while some of them omit one History some another or else some of them briefly point at and lightly touch and pass over some other Histories all of them set themselves of purpose to bee copious and large in this of Christs resurrection that the faith of Beleevers might bee firmly grounded herein and the rather because no benefit of his resurrection none of his death and without the certain apprehension hereof all Preaching and Hearing and Faith were in vain and wee our selves were yet in our sins To which Apostolical practice this of our Apostle is not unsuitable in this place in hand 1 Cor. 15.17 18. who while hee almost in one word maketh mention of the death of Christ hee at large prosecuteth and proveth the truth of his resurrection The second point is to consider the person that raised Christ Him God raised that is God the Father Act. 2.24 And have crucified and slain whom God had raised 3.15 Ye have killed the Lord of Life whom God hath raised from the dead More plainly is this work attributed to the mighty power of the Father of glory working in Christ and raising him from the dead Eph. 1.17 20. and to him at whose right hand hee sitteth so Rom. 4.24 Wee beleeve in him which raised our Lord Jesus Christ from the dead Object But Christ raised himself Joh. 2.19 Destroy this Temple and in three daies I will raise it again and hereby was hee mightily declared to bee the Son of God by raising himself from the dead Rom. 1.14 In like manner is this resurrection of his ascribed to the Holy Ghost Rom. 8.11 If the Spirit of him which raised up Christ c. therefore the Father raised him not Answ Here is no contrariety the Father raised him and hee raised himself For 1 There is but one Deity of the Father Son and Holy Ghost which is the common foundation of all their actions 2 There is but one power common to them all three and this is the power that Christ challengeth hee hath to lay down his life and take it up again Opera ad extra communia tribus personis 3 There is but one common act in them all three for the putting out of this power unto any external action without themselves of which Christ speaking Joh. 5.19 saith whatsoever the Father doth the same things doth the Son also In these respects holdeth the speech of the Apostle These three are one 1 Joh. 5.7 that is these three 1 In the true and real distinction of their persons 2 In their inward proprieties as to beget to bee begotten and proceed
hee also seasonably deliver us What if wee seem to be dead in our graves despised neglected and forgotten one day yea the second yet the third day commeth Hos 6.2 After two daies hee will revive us and in the third day hee will raise us up and wee shall live in his sight This made Abraham hope above hope In waiting I waited saith David that is I continued waiting on God Job after darknesse hoped for light It may bee the third day is not yet come Thou art not yet come to the Mountain where God will provide nor thou art not yet in that extremity which is Gods opportunity Isaac must not sit at home but take a journey of three daies to bee slain hee must not bee sent back the first of second day but the third day yet not before hee bee bound on the altar and the stroke of death a fetching is hee taken from off the wood Is the Lord a killing thee yet trust in his mercy God seemeth indeed not to know his own Children sometimes but to bee deaf at their prayers to have broken the bottle wherein hee was wont to preserve their tears but hee knows us well enough saith Paul 2 Cor. 6.9 though wee think our selves unknown and therefore wee are sometimes as dying but yet wee live chastened but not killed yea killed but not overcome Hee seemeth now to know none better than the wicked but the third day commeth and putteth as great a difference between them as it did between Pharaohs Baker and Butler Gen. 40.13 19. the third day shall lift up the head of the one and restore him to his office but the same third day shall take the head from the other and shall hang the body on a tree for the birds to eat the flesh from it And caused that he was shewed openly Vers 41 Not to all the people but unto the witnesses chosen before of God even to us which did eat and drink with him after hee rose from the dead NOw wee come to the manifestation of Christ his resurrection Which is described first by the persons to whom hee was so manifested set down 1 Negatively not to all the people 2 Affirmatively but to us who were chosen of God to bee witnesses Secondly by the facts of Christ towards these witnesses which are two the former in this verse in that hee admitted them to eat and drink with him after hee rose from the dead the latter in the next verse in that hee sent out his Disciples with commandement to preach unto the people and especially to acquaint them with the Article of Faith concerning his comming again to judge the quick and the dead In which two actions namely of sending out his Disciples and judging of the world his Kingly office doth notably put for●h it self And caused that hee was shewed openly 1 It behoveth Christ to make open shew and manifest knowledge of his resurrection It was necessary that Christ should manifest his resurrection for these reasons 1 Because as hee had been openly put to death and openly buried that none could doubt of the truth of either so this being as main a beam as lyeth in all the frame of our Religion it was meet that it should bee as sufficiently cleared and as lit●le liable to exception as any of the former which it had not been if it had not been as openly confirmed and therefore he would for the space of forty daies Act. 1.3 by many bodily appearances to many credible persons at once and by many other infallible tokens make it evident that the same body which was crucified having the same hands feet and side which were peirced and wherein the prints yet remained even the same finite and circumscribed body which was to bee seen and handled and no other was now raised from the grave and loosed from all the bands of death 2 Because some things remained to bee done by Jesus Christ between his Resurrection and Ascension which craved his manifest presence As 1 Hee was further to instruct his Disciples in the things which appertained to the Kingdome of God namely in all the Doctrin they were to teach and all the Ordinances they were to observe in the external government of the Christian Churches unto the end of the World and therefore the Evangelist sheweth us how Christ begun at Moses and all the Prophets and opened unto them in all the Scriptures the things that were written of him Luk. 24.27 32. and not onely the Scriptures but their eyes and their hearts to understand and bee warmed and affected with the same 2 Hee was to establish and send out into all the world in his own person the Apostles to Preach the Gospel which hee pleased to defer till this time when by his glorious resurrection they might see that all power was given him in heaven and in earth Mat. 18.19 3 Hee was to confirm this their extraordinary Ministery by an extraordinary Sacrament namely breathing upon them and giving them the Holy Ghost Joh. 20.22 that is some smaller measure of gifts as a pledge for the time but directing them also when and where to expect the plentiful pouring out of the Spirit upon them after his departure as it was most miraculously performed in the day of Pentecost after they had a while waited at Jerusalem for the Promise of the Father Act. 1.4 4 Hee was by Miracle to confirm to his Disciples the truth of his Resurrection that they might bee the better fitted to the testimony of it as hee did by that miraculous draught of fish whereby they knew that hee was the Lord Joh. 21.7 12. 5 In that also hee was according to that which the Scriptures had foreprophecyed of him and himself also often foretold to ascend up bodily and visibly into Heaven whence he descended so to shew himself the Son of God and our High Priest lifted up higher than the Heavens Luk. 14.33 cum 51. to open Heaven for us and carry our flesh before hand thither where in the mean time hee maketh requests for us it was meet in the presence of all the eleven Act. 1.9 and they all beholding that hee should openly and according to his body bee visibly and locally taken up as the Angels witnessed Act. 1.11 Now though in these and other regards it was meet hee should shew himself openly yet would hee not so openly shew himself as to all the people but only to such as his wisdome thought fit to behold him Quest But why did not Christ after his Resurrection ride in an open triumph before all the People In all reason it would have made much to the confusion of his enemies and the comfort of his friends It could not have been but if he had risen in the sight of the Souldiers and had gone into Jerusalem among the Scribes and Pharisees into the Temple among the Doctors into Pilates Palace they would all have been stricken down and confounded in the
apprehend and apply unto our selves Christ and all his merits for the very nature of justifying and saving Faith standeth in these two degrees 1 In apprehension and receiving of Christ for to beleeve and receive Christ are all one Joh. 1.13 2 In applying to ones self Christ and his merits particularly which is not only to know that Christ is God in himself and all other parts of truth necessary to bee beleeved but a full perswasion of the mercy of God through Christ to belong unto himself in particular so as hee bee able with Thomas to say My Lord and my God not onely confessing that Christ dyed for sinners which the very Devils beleeve but as Paul describeth the true Faith in the Son of God by the proper speech and voice of it Gal. 2.20 Who dyed for mee and gave himself for mee Further the description restraining this grace to beleevers giveth us to understand that faith is not of all 2 Thess 3. Faith is not of all nor so common as men take it to bee not every one that can say I beleeve in God hath faith nor every one that will boldly say Christ is his Saviour hath presently saving Faith For. 1 The Prophet Esay speaketh of a number that beleeved not the Prophets report and to whom the arm of God was not revealed Isa 53.1 The Evangelists and the Apostles also complain in their times how this prophecy was accomplished notwithstanding they heard the blessed word of truth from the mouth of truth it self and saw the wonderful Miracles in the hands of Christ himself and his Apostles for the confirmation of that truth 2 The end of Faith which is salvation belongeth not to the most and therefore not faith it self the means for there are few which shall bee saved 3 The Word the parent of faith is wanting to many people and where it is so neglected by the most as grace and Gods blessing is withdrawn from it besides that the unfaithfulnesse of Teachers and abundance of iniquity in all sorts of men provoketh the Lord to revenge with his fearful stroak of slownesse of heart to beleeve that in the midst of means men should wilfully perish now if there be no seed-time what fruit or harvest of faith can be expected 4 The Scriptures not only deny true and saving faith to the reprobate whose eyes the Lord blindeth and whose hearts he hardneth lest they should see and beleeve Isa 6.9 but impropriateth it to the elect whence it is called the faith of the elect Tit. 1.1 To them whom God hath predestinated to life for so many as were ordained to life everlasting beleeved Acts 13 48. to the sheep of Christ Joh. 10.16 But yee beleeve not for yee are not of my sheep to them that are regenerate by the Holy Ghost as 1 Joh. 5.1 Whosoever beleeveth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God Lastly the description addeth the final cause of faith to bee Salvation namely in regard of beleevers for the main end of all graces is the glory of God and so Abraham by beleeving is said to give glory to God Rom. 4.20 but the subordinate end of faith is the salvation of the elect and therefore is it called saving faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In salutem animae Be●● Faith never quite lost Heb. 10.39 we are not they which with-draw our selves unto perdition but we follow faith to the conservation of the soul 1 Pet. 1.9 Receiving the end of your faith even the salvation of your souls And from hence followeth it that saving faith can never be quite shaken out of the heart of him that once hath it being 1 but once given to the Saints Jude 3. and a gift of which God never repenteth him 2 A gift flowing from Gods eternal election as we have shewed out of Acts 13.48 3 A seed of God perpetually preserved in the regenerate who sin not because this seed of God remaineth in them 1 Joh. 4.4 4 It hath the promise of the Father to be the victory that overcometh the world the intercession of the Son of God that it fail not Luke 22.32 and the confirmation of the holy Spirit who by it sealeth up and giveth his earnest into the hearts of beleevers 2 Cor. 1.22 so as unless the mighty power of the Father Son and holy Spirit upholding it can bee shaken it can never be by all the gates of Hell so shaken out of the heart but that the end of it shall be salvation which could not be if the elect did not ever abide in communion and fellowship with Christ Popish doctrin teacheth not true faith to this day From which description of true justifying faith it is evident that Popish Doctrin knoweth not teacheth not nor suffereth men to be taught the true Doctrin of saving faith because it utterly disclaimeth the very essential form of it which is special application of Christ and his merits with affiance and resting only on them unto salvation yea and more they condemn this glorious work of faith as a mortal sin and stile it by the name of presumption and so by Gods just judgement they take up such a faith in stead of it as is common not only to Hereticks and Reprobates but to the very Devils themselves who beleeve as much as Popish doctrin requireth to salvation yea and more they tremble also For doe not they know and assent that there is one God that all that is in the Word of God is true and certain that all the Articles of the Creed are the true grounds of Christian religion and if you goe any further excepting the thrusting in of general Councils and Traditions which every good Catholick must take in with the former Popish faith leaveth you and biddeth you farewell and even those things which are absolutely necessary to salvation to bee beleeved by saving faith as that the Scriptures are Gods Word that the Articles of faith comprised in the Creed of the Apostles are of undoubted truth they embrace only by Historical faith by which yet was never man saved for if ever man were then might the Devils also by the same faith But justifying faith is another manner of thing it seateth not it self in the understanding only as the former but takeeth up the whole soul even the heart will and affections also all which lay hold and cleave unto Christ for salvation Neither is it a common and general work of the Spirit upon good and bad as the former illumination and assent is but a special favour and extraordinary grace proper to the elect as wee have heard and the stranger entreth not into this their joy The second point to be considered is the benefit or excellent fruit of this grace 1 It is the first stone to be laid in the building of a Christian Five excellent fruits of saving faith and therefore called a substance and foundation Heb. 11.1 and the Colossians are said to be rooted and built and
yeelding to any sin but give apparent tokens of dislike Object Why May wee not by yeelding a little to them draw them to us Answ No but the way to win them is a pure conversation with fear 1 Pet. 3.12 much less may wee flatter them in any evil Mica●ah would not flatter with the King though four hundred false Prophets did Fourthly Acknowledge thy self a childe of Wisdome which is justified of all her children Suffer not Gods glory to bee trodden down by thy silence Wisely break off fooleries by savoury Riddles or Questions as Sampson and in a wise and peaceable manner change the matter holding it a settled ground of Religion not to relinquish piety to keep peace with wicked men Heb. 12.14 Follow peace and holiness No corruption of man must drive us from our station Fifthly So soon as wee may depart from them Prov. 14.7 Depart from the foolish man when thou perceivest not in him the lips of knowledge And b●ware of falling into the like company again Joseph wisely declined the company of his Mistress when shee daily spake unto him Gen. 39.10 and Dav●● would not return with Saul when hee perceived his wilfulness against him 1 Sam. 26.25 CHAP. XXXII Rules to carry our selves wisely towards evil men evi●●y affected to us IF men bee not onely evil in themselves but also to us then it is either in evil purposes or in evil practices against us If they purpose evil the● our Saviours Rule is Beware of men Matth. Rules how to carry our selves to our enemies 10.17 for they will deliver y●● up to the Councils By men our Saviour means those whom in the former w●rds hee calleth Wolves that desire to make a ●●ey and spoyl of the sheep of Christ and in his Caveat adviseth 1 Wisely to prevent the plots and trains of ungodly men discreetly to prevent our own trouble so near as wee can 1 Wisely prevent their plots How wisely did Jacob prevent the fury of his brother Esau And as they watch to traduce us so must wee watch to cut off occasions of entrapping Luke 6.7 The Scribes and Pharisees watched whether Christ would heal on the Sabbath day or no to finde accusation against him our Saviour for all this omitted not to do good but its doing it by his question unto them cut off so far as hee could the matter of their malice by clearing the lawfulness of it So must wee And yet prepare stoutly to bear whatsoever the Lord measureth out by them 2 Decline their fury 2 Our Saviour would have us wisely decline their fury not without cause provoking them It is no wisdome to provoke an evil man It is no good discretion to stir up a Lion to take a Bear by the tooth or a Dog by the ears For they desire nothing more than matter to stir up their corruption by So Hezekiah commanded his servants not to answer Rabshecah one word 3 Joyn with Serpentine wisdome innocency of Doves 3 Joyn with Serpentine wisdome innocency of Doves Matth. 10.16 Nothing more vexeth and vanquisheth an Adversary than innocency no better brest plate than righteousness But if a man had the innocency of Christ himself the Adversary will watch advantages and play upon a mans simplicity therefore joyn Serpentine wisdome as Paul did Act. 23.6 hee testified his innocency and that with all good conscience hee served God till that day But what tell you Ananias of Doves innocency hee commands to strike him on the mouth the more innocent the less indured hee fared the worse for that and therefore hee joyns in season Serpentine wisdome For perceiving his greatest enemies to bee Pharisees and Sadduces hee professeth himself a Pharisee and the son of a Pharisee and that hee was brought in danger for the hope of the Resurrection which the Sadduces denied and so casting a bone between them and letting them by the ears hee escaped between them 4 Out of their evil ●raw some good 4 Out of their malice wee should draw our own good so w●rily to carry our selves towards them as that wee may finde that of the Heathen true An enemy often hurteth less and profiteth more than many friends Wee must both in their absence and presence especially take heed wee do not disadvantage our selves It was some disadvantage to Paul when in the Council although hee was provoked and unjustly smitten hee called the High Priest Whited wall hee was glad to excuse it by his ignorance Wee may not bee too bold or too forward to speak in a good matter 5 Having received wrong f om them do three things 5 If evil men have done us harm and wrongfully molested and persecuted us our Rule is 1 In respe●t of them to pitty pardon and pray for them If wee do them good wee shall either overcome their evil with goodness or heap coals on their heads 2 In respect of our selves possess our souls with patience and shew meekness and moderation and say as David in Shimes his railing It may bee the Lord will do mee good for his cursing of mee this day 3 In respect of our duty still to shew an undaunted constancy and resolution for the truth and all good wayes 1 Pet. 3.14 15. If yee suffer for righteousness blessed are yee but fear not neither bee troubled but sanctifie the Lord in your hearts and bee ready alwayes to give an answer to every man that asketh a reason of your hope Thus far of the Rules of Christian Wisdome of which I may say with Moses Deut. 4.5 6. These are the Rules and Ordinances keep them and do them for this is your wisdome CHAP. XXXIII Containing motives for Circumspect walking BUt because this accurate and Circumspect walking is grown out of request and men generally are too well contented to walk at adventure and as men that shoot at tovers secure themselves in a loose and neglected course and go on carelesly as if there were no danger in wandring from God and declining from the good way Motives to the former Rules wee will use some Motives to provoke every Christian that tenders either Gods glory or his own salvation to undertake this Christian course 1 In regard of God 1 Whose Commandement is That all our wayes bee ordered aright Prov. 4.26 and that the Saints walk worthy of the Lord and please him in all things Col. 1.10 2 Whose Word must bee our Rule to which wee must continually frame our whole course and every part thereof For first The moral Law is a perpetual Rule binding at all times without any intermission 2 The Precepts of it are to make the Word our continual Counsellor to binde it to us not to let it depart but to meditate in it night and day And what is it less than Blasphemy to charge the Saints with folly singularity and a Saintish purity in that wherein they were most acceptable to God As David set the Lord before him continually and when hee