Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n abhor_v faithful_a good_a 19 3 2.0653 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 25 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

their Services are precious mean works done in faith excell the Victories of a Caesar or Alexander Their teares are precious Psal. 56.8 their names are precious Proverbs 20 7. Psalm 112.6 and their death is precious Psalm 116.15 when one ask't Master Fox whether he knew such an honest poor man I tell you said he I forget Lords and Ladyes to think on such We should love them Intensivè appretiativè majore affectu effectu with the choycest of our affections and shew it in our Actions We should doe good to all but specially to the household servants of God Gal. 6.10 we should more freely and fully communicate to their necessities si caetera sint paria then to any others As God then delights in his Saints so must we for Grace puts a lustre on them which makes them lovely to the godly and terrible to their enemies So that there is more comfort and safety in the society of a few good men then in strong confederacies of the wicked Psalm 48.2 3 4. for God dwells amongst them by his speciall presence Psalm 76.1 2. and walks in the midst of them Revel 2.1 his speciall hand of protection is over them lest any should hurt his Vineyard he keepes it night and day i. e. continually Isay 27.3 It will be our wisdome then to be familiar with them they will help us Consilio Prece opere by Direction Prayer and Practice Their good Example will quicken us and be as a Starre to direct us so that by acquaintance with them we may come to be acquainted with God himself As Iron sharpens Iron and one living coale sets his fellow on fire and one couragious souldier quickens another so good company is a great incouragement against those discouragements which we meet with from an ungratefull world and a speciall meanes to keep u● from Apostasy Heb. 3.12 13. Green wood will hardly burn alone but put drye wood amongst the green and all will flame When the disciples were altogether in one place with one accord in an holy communion then the spirit came on them Acts 2.3 4. where Brethren are united there 's the blessing Psal. 133.1.3 VERSE 4. Traytours THE last dayes will be perilous in respect of the many Traytours which will then abound who shall ascend to that height of wickednesse that they will betray their dearest friends like Iudas who betrayed his Master and is therefore justly called the Traytour by way of eminency Luke 6.16 So themselves may be safe they care not who suffers They 'l spy and pry into the wayes of others that they may betray and destroy them and reveale their secrets No bonds of friendship can hold them but Brother will deliver up the Brother to death the Father will rise against his children and children against their Parents and cause them to be put to death Matth. 10.21 Christians will betray their fellow-Christians into the hands of persecutors Luke 21.16 and people will betray their Pastors and put them to death as did their fore-fathers of old Acts 7.52 Now of these Traytours there are three Sorts 1. Traytors Politicall 2. Ecclesiasticall 3. Domesticall 1. Some are Politicall State Traytors such as betray the land of their Nativity into the hands of its enemies Subjects are bound by Oath oft times to preserve their native country to their power But if they were not sworne yet naturall and common right calls for it our hands If the body be in danger all the parts and members of it will act for its defence and therefore great is the sin of those unnaturall children which betray their native country which like a Mother bred and bare them to ruine and to misery Of this sort are those who betray their trust in delivering up Castles and Garisons into the enemies hands 2. There are Ecclesiasticall Traytours such as betray the truth of God which he hath committed to his Ministers primarily and then to all the faithfull to be kept as a sacred depositum and choyce treasure 1 Tim. 6.20 esteeming every particle of it above the filings of the finest gold Now when men through feare and cowardlinesse dare not professe the truth of God in the midst of a perverse generation that oppose it God esteems this a betraying of his truth into the hands of its enemies Such are false Prophets Formalists and Time-servers which for a time make a shew but in time of tentation fall away 3. Domestick Traytors who betray the lives and estates of their dearest relations into the hands of their enemies Psal. 55.12 13 14. Matth. 10 21. So that the Poets complaint was never more true Non augenda fides potiùs minuenda videtur Vix cum sint homines tot quot in orbe fides Sortitur sibi quisque fidem sibi quisque Magistrum Nunquam plus fidei perfidiaeque fuit It behoves us then to stand upon our Guards and to watch against false Brethren If ever the counsell of the Prophets were in season 't is now Trust not in a Neighbour a Brother a Friend no not in thy dearest friend the wife of thy bosom how many have been drawn aside to errors in our dayes by their wives for a mans enemies still be those of his own house Ier. 9.4 5. Micah 7.5 6. In all ages Gods servants have been infested by Traytors David had not only open enem●es that conspired his ruine Psal. 35.20 21. but which was worst of all his familiar friends did so Psal. 41.9 Christ was betrayed by Iudas and Paul by the Jewes his kinsmen in the flesh Sampson by his wife Dalilah Iudg. 14.18 and David by his son Absolom 2 Sam. 1● 14 This may comfort us when we fall into the hands of Traytors and Tyrants 't is no new thing So did Christ so did the Prophets so did the Apostles and so may we 1. Consider such cannot escape the revenging hand of God his Justice wil find them out Zimri had no peace who slew his Master Nor Sheba that rebelled against his Soveraign 2 Sam. 20.22 Nor Absolom who rose against his Father 2 Sam. 18.9 10. nor Corah Dathan and Abiram who rose against Moses Nor Iudas that betrayed Christ. Matth. 26.24 and 27.5 nor the Papists with their proditorious practises and principles 2. They are oft punisht by men who though they love the Treason yet hate the Traytour Though they love the Artifice yet hate the Artificer and when he hath done his work he hath oft-times an halter for his paines or at best he hath the honour never to be trusted more when Baanah and Rechab had treacherously slain Ishbosheth one of Sauls sons David commands them both to be slain 2 Sam. 4.9 to 13. As for our selves let us walk as becomes the Gospel in all simplicity and godly sincerity abhoring all Treachery falsenesse and perfideousnesse Let us be faithfull to the truth of God faithfull to the land of our Nativity and faithfull in all our Relations
Reprobates for 't is one thing to be Reprobate concerning the faith pro tempore at present and another thing to be a Reprobate Manasses Paul and those 1 Corinthians 6.11 were lewd enough for the time yet at last were called These that are now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reproveable and unapproved as the word signifies 2 Cor. 13.7 Heb. 6.8 1 Corinthians 9.27 yet in Gods due time they may be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 accepted and approved This must teach us to keep our judgements pure and our understandings clear for 't is our guide and if that mislead us we must needs fall into the ditch Corruption in judgement in some respects is worse then corruption in manners especially when the mind hath been enlightned with the knowledge of the truth for this is the root of those corrupt manners that are amongst us In the time of the Law the Leprosie in the head was of all other Leprosies the most dangerous and destructive the man that had it in his hand or feet was unclean but if it were in his head then he was to be pronounced utterly unclean Lev. 13.44 Hence the scripture gives so many caveats against errors and erroneous ones Deut 13.3 Philip. 3.2 Colos. 2.8 2 Pet. 3.17 Matthew 7.13 Beware of false Prophets the word implies a diligent study and singular care lest we be caught by such subtle adversaries Keep your judgements pure then the pure Word of God will delight you Micah 2.7 you will delight to come to the truth that your deeds may be discovered Iohn 3.21 Part not with a good conscience and a good conversation lest you make ship-wrack of the faith and a gap be opened in your breasts to all sinne and errour that the Lord knowes where you will rest it may be not till you come to the highth of sin and depth of misery Count therefore a corrupt judgement a sore plague and if God have given thee a sound judgement able to discern the truth and a mind ready to receive it and approve of it when 't is propounded this is not a common mercy but calls for speciall Thankfulness Psal. 16.7 Proverbs 28.5 1. Observe There have been false Teachers in all Ages to oppose the Truth and the Professors of it As Iannes and Iambres here oppose Moses a meek a learned a faithfull servant in all Gods House So there were four hundred and fifty fals Prophets against one zealous Elijah four hundred against good Michaiah 1 Kings 18.18 and 22.6.14 Hananiah against Ieremy Amaziah against Amos 7.10 false brethren against Paul Hymeneus Philetus and Alexander oppose him 1 Tim. 1.20 The Church shall never want enemies to war withall whilest the seed of the Serpent abides in the world As Pharaoh had his Magitians who hardned him in his sin and deluded him to his destruction so the World will ever have its false Prophets to blinde and harden them in sin to their ruine Thus in the Primitive times there was a Simon Magus Scribes Pharisees Sadduces Essens Herodians Nicolaitans Elymas Ebion Cerinthus the Gnosticks and many others 2 Peter 2.1 Thus when Luther began to reform thirty severall Sects arose to hinder the worke We should not therefore be despondent or discouraged as if some strange thing had happened to us but comforted rather in that we are made conformable to Christ the Prophets and Apostles Matthew 5.11 Luke 6.22.23 This was is and will be the condition of the Church Militant from her youth up she must looke to be plowed and persecuted by malicious men Psalm 129.2 3. Besides 't is the condition of Truth in this World to meet with opposition we can no sooner publish it but it's enemies appear Galathians 4.16 Truth brings hatred men cannot endure to have Vngues in Vlcerre they are unsound and would not be touched Truth is a Light which discovers the intents of mens hearts Hebrewes 4.12 and layes open the evill of mens wayes and this makes the wicked not simply to oppose but to rise in open rebellion against the Truth Iob 24.13 which reproves their deeds and exposeth them to the view of themselves and others Hence they have alwayes been esteemed the Pests and troublers of a Land that publish Truth as we may see throughout the Acts of the Apostles where we finde some disputing against the Truth Acts 6.9 others blaspheming Acts 13.45 some secretly undermining it and seeking to draw men from embracing it Acts 13.8 others openly rayling against it Acts 17.18 19. and 24.5 Some have opposed it out of ignorance and blind devotion as Paul before his conversion 1 Timothy 1.13 and some of the Jewes Acts 3.17 and 13.50 Others deliberately against conviction and out of malice have resisted the Truth as Alexander 2 Timothy 4.15 these are given up to a reprobate sense the Devil having blinded their eyes 2 Corinthians 4.4 Some oppose it for their gain and for their bellies Rom. 16.17 18. 1 Tim. 6.5 2 Pet. 2.3.15 16. Others from fleshly lusts 2 Peter 2.18 and 3.3 Others out of pride loving the preheminence 3. Iohn 9.10 1 Timothy 6.3 4. yet should not we distaste the Truth because of those oppositions which are made against it for however some prophanely scorn at the name of Truth and say with Pilate what is Truth Iohn 18.38 Yet wisedome is justified of her children and they that are of the Truth hear his voyce who came into the world to beare witnesse of the Truth They come with love and teachable hearts to it and so are made to know the Truth Iohn 8.52 Let not the great host of Truths enemies make us despair but know there are more with us then are with them 2 Chronicles 32.7 8. and the more they are that oppose the Truth the more illustrious will our conquest be If I must have an adversary let it be a wicked one and then be he never so potent he cannot stand long because God is against him Iob 27.7 Truth may be opprest but never conquered Praemi potest opprimi non potest yea oppositions advance and clear it Veritas impugnata magis elucet Bern. 2. Observe That as the Devill hath his Iannes and Iambres to oppose the Truth so God hath his Moses and Aaron to uphold it As the Devill hath his Domestick Chaplains so God hath his armed Champions and as the Devill raiseth up oppressors so God sends Saviours Obadiah 21. If he raise hornes to gore the Church God will raise Carpenters to saw off those hornes Zachary 1.19 20 21. The same day that Pelagius was born in Brittain the same day was Saint Augustine born in Africa that did confute him God hath an Athanasius to oppose Arrius Chrysostome against the Manichees Basil against Macedomus Prosper against the Massilians Salvian against the Libertines Fulgentius against Faustus Christ against the Pharisees Simon Peter against Simon Magus Paul against false Apostles Luther Calvin Beza c. against the
down and he had gotten his pension for life stroaked his belly and cryed Modò hîc sit bene if all went well there 't was well enough This is with the ●illy bird to mind nothing but the building of our own nests when the tree is cutting down and to take more care of our private Cabin then of the ship it self when it is a sinking 3. There is a carnall corrupt inordinate Self-love when a man admires himself his Wayes his Works his Opinions Contemning and Vilifying others When a man so loves himself that he loves neither God nor man truly and as he ought but prefers himself and his own private interest before Gods glory and his brothers good Now this vitious and inordinate Self-love is the great and Master-sin of these last and worst times 'T is an evill disposition that is naturall to us all and so moves us strongly delightfully constantly as naturall things use to do and this makes it so hard even where there 's Grace to subdue it and keep it within its bounds Hereditary diseases are hardly cured Self-love is hereditary to us we are apt to have high conceits of our selves from the very birth till Grace humble and abase us all our Crowes are Swans our Ignorance Knowledge our Folly Wisdome our Darkness Light and all our owne Wayes best though never so bad Even the Regenerate themselves are in part tainted with it and have fallen by it David to save himselfe acts a weak part and counterfets before Achish Peter to save his life denies his Saviour Let us therefore set our selves with full purpose of heart against this Epidemical Soul-destroying Land-ruining sin To this end take these few considerations 1. Consider this Inordinate Vitious Self-love is the Root of many great evils Covetousnesse Contention Unthankfulnesse c. are all Virtually Seminally Originally Fundamentally in this cursed Self-love This is morbus complicatissimus a disease that hath many other diseases included in it and so is more hard to cure Hence spring all those Errors and Heresies which are so rife in these last dayes men have too high a conceit of themselves and their own opinions they imagin they can see more then all the Churches of God in the World There 's more hope of a poor silly fool then of such Self-conceited persons Prov. 26.12 This made the Donatists think themselves spotless and the Pelagians to cry up Nature and cry down Grace As a man that is in love doth think the very blemishes in his love to be beautiful so those that with Narcissus are in love with themselves and doat on their own opinions think their Heresy to be Verity and their Vices Vertues This will bring Vexation at last it troubles us to be cheated by others in petty matters but for a man to cheat himself wilfully and that in a matter of the highest concernment is the trouble of troubles to an awakened conscience 2. 'T is a Sin that blinds men so that they cannot see the Truth Let a Minister never so clearely convince them yet they will not be convinced their deceitful hearts have a thousand evasions no Jugler in the World hath so many tricks to deceive as they have many are blinded and deluded by Satan he perswades men that they are in a good condition and highly in Gods favour Where he dwells he labours to keep all in Peace by himselfe by false friends and by false Prophets who are his agents Thus deluded Ahab by false Prophets who bid him go up and prosper when they might more truly have said Go up and perish but usually men deceive themselves wittingly and willfully 2 Pet. 3.5 No wise man will trust a known Cheater yet such fooles are men that they trust too much to their own deceitfull hearts which is the Grand Impostor of the World Ier. 17.9 10. the heart of man i. e. the whole Soule the Understanding Will Affections c. is Gnacob crooked crafty deceitfull and desperately wicked It tells men of gold but gives them counters it makes them dream they are Kings when they are beggars like a hungry man that dreams he eates but when he awakes he is hungry Isay 29.8 This makes men so indulgent to themselves their sins and errors must not be toucht these Absolon-like must be dealt gently withall and which is the height of misery it makes men insensible of their m●sery they think themselves at the gates of heaven when they are in the Subburbs of hell This Self-indulgence spreads a vaile over the eyes and blindes the judgement that it cannot see what is amiss in it self Isai 44.20 a deceived heart hath turned him aside that he cannot deliver his soul nor say Is there not a lye in my right hand A Self-conceited heart is a self-deceiving-heart it cannot endure any Self-Examination Self-reflection Self-judging it cannot endure to put the question to it self concerning it self he cannot he dares not say Is there not a lye in my right hand What have I done Ier. 8.6 a gracious soul reflects upon himself and cryes Lord is it I Mat. 26.22 and 't is I that have sinned and brought this judgement saith David 2 Sam. 24.10 but let a wicked mans sins be never so visible yet he pleads innocency and Not-guilty still Ier. 2 34 35. The Priests and People in Malachies time were very corrupt yet when the Lord by the Prophet tells them of it see how impudently they cry three times together Wherein have we done am●sse Mal. 1.6 and 2.6 and 2.17 and 3.8.13 See to what a height of shamelesnesse Self-excusation of the heart of man may transport him even then and in those things when and wherein he is most guilty and though we think this prodigious in them yet it is but an instance of the over-weening partiality that is in us all by nature towards our selves This makes so many to pervert the Scriptures and to apply the promises to themselves instead of threatenings 3. This sinful Self overthrows Christian Society and Community if one member be sick the rest of the members will sympathize with it we are members one of another Rom. 12.4 and should be sensible of the afflictions of Ioseph Like Bees when one is sick the rest are sad But Self-love hardens the heart and makes it cruell to Father Mother Wife Children and Neighbours whereas true love seeketh not her own but the good of others 1 Cor. 13.5 it makes us love our neighbours as our selves now every man wisheth or at least ought to wish his own eternall good heartily and sincerely 'T is therefore an ungodly Proverb which is used by too many Every one for himself and God for us all But where every one is for himself only there the Devill is for all We must therefore change the Proverb every one for his own and for his Brothers eternall good and then God will be for us all Psal. 133. ult There God commands the blessing
heart so that such men seldom Repent So long as men have any thing to trust in they will not care for God when people are grown to be Lords they will not come near God nor be ruled by him Ier. 2.31 therefore the Lord outs his of their creature-confidences and makes them sensible of their lost and fatherlesse condition before he shewes them mercy Hos. 14.3 other sins which are carnal and sensual are more easily discovered and conquered but covetousnesse is a more close cloaked 1 Thes. 2.5 spirituall sin and so is more hardly discerned and more hardly cured And this amongst others is one Reason why for one covetous person which returnes there are twenty prodigals which brings me to that Question Whether a Covetous man be worse then a prodigal Answ. We must distinguish of prodigals 1. Some are compounded ones and have many other foul enormities mixt with them as Idleness Whoredom Drunkenness c. and these aggravated by long continuance in them now there 's more hope of a Temperate young Worldling then of such a compounded Prodigall 2. There is a single and simple prodigal one that only spends beyond his estate and wastes his means excessively now caeteris●paribus there 's more hope of such a one then of a covetous man and that for these Reason● 1. The prodigal man doth good to many but the covetous man is not good to himself 2. He gives though he gives too much and so comes nearer to liberality whose act is giving is nearer to blessednes according to that of our Saviour Acts 20.35 't is a more blessed thing to give then to receive But the Covetous man will part with nothing willingly 3. The prodigall hurts himself yet benefits others but the Covetous mis●r defrauds both himself and others 4. The prodigall is more tractable and sooner reclaimed by reason of his poverty misery and affliction his eare is opened to discipline and he more ready to hearken to good counsell Luke 15. But a covetous man the more he hath the worse he is and the older he growes the harder 't is to reclaime him other sins age may bereave a man off the acting them but covetousness increaseth by age How long may we preach to such before we can stir them we speak to stones and call to dead men Hence our Saviour tells us that a Camel may sooner go through the eye of a needle then a rich man because so apt to trust in his riches can enter into the Kingdom of heaven Mark 10.24 25. 9. It unfits a man for any employment whether it be Magistraticall Ministeriall Martiall or Domestical 1. He 's an unfit man to be a Magistrate such a one will transgresse for a morsell of bread any base reward will byas him and therefore Iethro describing a right Governour tells us Exod. 18.21 that he must be 1. A man of Courage a magnanimous man one that fears not the faces or frownes of any be they never so many or mighty else he 'l soon be daunted and discouraged The want of this made fearful and faint-hearted Rehoboam to be branded for a child viz. in heart and courage 2 Chron. 13.7 though he were then above 40. yeares old as appears 1 Kings 14.21 therefore God commands Ioshua 1.7 to be strong and of good courage and the like counsell David gives to Solomon 2 Kings 2.2 2. He must fear God or else he will fear the face of man Deut. 1.17 the great fear of God will devour all base inferiour feares Micajah fear'd not two great Kings sitting on their Thrones in Pompe because he saw a greater then they 1 Kings 22 10.14.19 no man can be truly valourous but he that is truly Religious as we see in Ioseph Nehemiah Daniel The feare of God is the Foundation of all Vertue without it non sunt verae virtutes sed Vmbrae they are meere shadowes 3. He must deal justly and truly sifting out the truth that the poor be not opprest 4. He must ●ate covetousnesse Publick persons must have publick spirits not seeking themselves but the common good else he 'l take bribes which blind the eyes of the wise so that they cannot discern betwen a good cause a bad it makes them partial perverts judgement making men passe sentence on his side from whom he received the bribe Hence the Lord so oft condemnes it Exod. 23.8 Deut. 16.19 27.25 1 Sam. 8.3 Isai 5.23 and 't is made a note of a wicked man Psal. 26.9 his right hand is full of bribes These stop the eares tye the Tongue and manacle the hands No Vice so foul as this in a Magistrate the bottle and the basket will make him to do any thing So that if a Iudge should aske me the way to Hell saith B. Latimer I would shew him this way First Let his heart be poysoned with Covetousnesse Secondly Let him then take bribes and at last pervert judgement there lacks a fourth thing to make up the Mess which so God help me saith he if I were Iudge should be Hangum tuum a Tyburne Typpet to take with him if it were my Lord chief Iustice of England or my Lord Chancellour himselfe to Tyburne with him As birds are caught with bird-lime so are men with gifts and therefore men deale with such as we do by dogs throw them a crust that they may not bark or bite This was one of those sins that helpt to ruine Jerusalem Ezek. 22.12 Micah 3.11 12. Isai 1.23 24. many build them brave houses with their bribe but God threatens to bring a fire on those houses Iob 15.34 though bribes may build them yet bribe-takers cannot protect them for God hath said it who is able to performe it that the Tabernacles of Bribery shall be consumed This hath made Gods servants carefull to keep themselves pure from this sinne 1 Samuel 12.3 Acts 20.33 and the Lord hath promised Life and Happinesse to such Psalm 15.5 Prov. 15.27 Isai 33.15 Quest. Are all gifts unlawfull and may a man never take a gift Answ. We must distinguish of Gifts There are six sorts of gifts 1. Gifts of Piety to promote Gods worship 2. Gifts of Charity to the Poor 3. Gifts of friendship to preserve amity 4. Gifts of duty and gratitude from inferiours to superiours to testify their Obedience and Thankfullnesse 5. Gifts of bounty and favour from superiours to inferiours to testify their love to them Now there is no danger in such gifts because they increase love and help to preserve humane society 6. There are Gifts of iniquity that tend to the destruction of our Brethren and the perverting of Iustice and this is that Bribery and those Gifts which Gods word condemns It doth not simply condemn the taking of a Reward but the taking of a Reward against the Innocent Psal. 15.5 So that 't is not sinfull by way of Gratitude either to send a gift or to receive a gift but
shall attain to a higher Degree in this Devillish Art of Blasphemy That the word is thus to be restrained is cleare from the Context both before and after The Apostle useth a kind of Gradation 1. He tells us men shall be Self-lovers Silver-lovers Boasters Proud insulting over their Brethren and which is worse they spare not God himself but are Blasphemers of him 2. The Apostle in V. 3. mentions false accusers slanderers and despisers of good men which he would not in all rationall probability have done if the word Blasphemy had been here restrained onely to slanderers So that I take the word here to signify Blasphemy against God himself and this hath many Branches 1. Gods name is blasphemed Addendo by adding or attributing that to God which his soul abhorres As that he is the Authour of sin and approves of sinne Psal. 50.21 Mal. 2.17 or that he is cruel unjust improvident not regarding how the affaires of the world go This is the blasphemy of Epicures 2. Detrahendo by denying God that honour which is due to him as when we deny his Omnipotence and say God is not able to deliver this was the blasphemy of the King of Assyria 2 Chron. 32.17 or when men deny his Omniscience Omnipresence Eternity Immensity Immutability and so upon the point deny all Gods Attributes as the Socinians do who hold that the Attributes are not Essentiall but Accidents and Qualities in God So when men give the Honour due to the Creator to the Creature as the Israelites who called their Golden Calfe God this is called a great provocation and in the Originall Blasphemy Nehem. 9.18 3. When men abuse the glorious Names and Titles of God by prophane cursing swearing forswearing murmuring fretting and storming a● Gods dispensations this is to set our mouthes against Heaven Psalm 73.9 and with Sennacherib to rage against God 2 Kings 19.28 Levit. 24.11 25. Iob 3.1 Ier. 20.14 4. When men raile on Christ and revile him as the Jewes did who lookt upon him as a meer man and a sinner as one that was mad and had a Devill Mat. 27.39.63 Iohn 9.24 and 10.20 5. Gods Name is blasphemed when men speak contumeliously and d●sgracefully of the Word of God as if 't were false imperfect and no Rule for our lives Or of the Workes of God saying This might have been otherwise this might have been mended c. 6. When men revile the Magistrate vvho is Gods Vice-gerent this is called Blasphemy 1 Kings 21.10 Naboth hath blasphemed God yea and the King So 2 Peter 2.10 speaking evill of dignities Blaspheming them saith the Originall i. e. They make it their work it is their Trade to goe up and downe reviling those in authority So much the Participle of the Present Tense implyes this is forbidden Exod. 22.28 7. Such as slander and Disgrace the Ministers of Christ not so much for any personall defects but because of their office because they are Ministers of Christ now Christ takes the contumelies done to his Embassadours as done to himselfe Luke 10.16 They are Christs Organs and primary instruments to promote and propagate his Glory in the world they are his Heralds to proclaim his Name and Truth unto the world and he will not suffer any to abuse them unrevenged Thus when the Apostles were defamed it was called Blasphemy 1 Cor. 4.13 Rom. 3.8 8. When men calumniate and traduce the servants of God meerly for serving him when they scorne and scoffe at Saints for their sanctity this is called blasphemy 1 Pet. 4.4 they speak evill of you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blasphemeing you Such were those Iob 17.6 and 30.9 Psal. 69.12 and 71.9 Ezek. 5.15 Lam. 3.16 Nahum 3.6 Mat. 11.18 1 Cor. 4.9 9. When men traduce and reproach Gods Ordinances as low empty mean things so did those false Teachers 2 Pet. 2.2 by whom the way of truth shall be evill spoken off 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blasphemabitur the Christian Religion is the right way to salvation yet those by their calumnies laboured to turn men from it So Acts 13.45 and 18.6 Iames 2.7 Revel 2.9 10. When such as professe Christianity live loosely and licentiously when they live not up to their principles nor answerable to their holy profession they cause Gods Name to be blasphemed 2 Sam. 12.14 Ezek. 36.22 23. Rom 2.24 and so do those that apostatize and fall from the truth to Idolatry they do in an high degree cause Gods to be blasphemed Levit. 18.21 Isay 63.7 Ezek. 20.27.28 they disparage the Lords Pastures and do interpretatively say There is no lovelinesse truth or goodnesse in the wayes and worship of God and therefore they forsake it what greater blasphemy Thus Hymoneus and Alexander making shipwrack of Faith and a good Conscience are said to blaspheme 1 Tim. 1. ult and if those whom Paul peresecuted that did out of fear renounce the Faith are yet said to blaspheme Acts 16.11 oh how sad is their condition and how high their blasphemy who do electively deliberately and wil●ully forsake Christ and his truth without any such tentation and triall These come near to that irresistible blasphemy and upardonable sin against the Holy Ghost When men through Ignorance for want of Light shall persecute Christ and his people this blasphemy is pardonable as we see in Paul who was a persecuter a blasphemer but he obtained mercy because he did it ignorantly 1 Tim. 1.13 So did many of the Jews Acts 3.17 But when men shall wittingly willingly maliciously and despitefully oppose Christ and his truth as the Scribes and Pharises did this is that blasphemy which shall never be forgiven Luke 12.10 Mark 3.29 Let us now apply this Character of the last times to our times and see if all these 10. kinds of blasphemy may not be found amongst us The Lord is my Record that I take no pleasure in the Devils victories now in raking in this loathsome dung-hill I desire to write with Teares what I have read with trembling I could heartily wish that the Land were clear of all those blasphemies with which it is charged But alas if we go about to plead not guilty in this kind we shall but double our guilt Our blasphemies and blasphemers our Copps and Coppins our Colliers and Nailers our Foxes and Farme-worths our Biddles and Bests I might say Beasts are taken notice of by Forreiners as well as by Natives There needs no secret search or digging for these abominations they are Publisht and Printed to the view of all so that they cannot be concealed or denied Had they kept their blasphemies in secret we had been silent but since they have been so impudent as to Print blasphemy it can justly offend none if we Print against them 'T is fit the Remedy should be as large as the Malady Since Generalls are no charge let us descend to particulars 1. Are there not some amongst us that have Printed that God is
28.4 4. These Impostors do not onely deceive these silly women but they bring them under the Devils yoke they make slaves and prisoners of them they bind them with the cords of error and then they lead them whither they please They deal with their Proselites as the Devil doth with witches he promiseth them liberty but brings them to prisons promiseth them pleasures yet gives them pain promiseth them Riches yet keeps them poor promiseth them life but gives them Death They ensnare them with their Pythanalogy and hold them as fast with their lyes and flatteries as a Jaylor doth his Prisoner which he keeps in bondage 2 Tim. 2. ult or the fisher his fish which hath swallowed his bait 2 Pet. 2.14.18 These Satanicall fishers of men put on the Visors of Piety and preach liberty pleasure ease as other fishers cozen sometimes the eye and sometimes the taste of the silly fish so these have variety of baits but none so catching as that of carnal liberty Hence they are said to bewitch men Gal. 3.1 to enchaunt and delude men Rev. 18.23 and make them drunk Revel 17.2 It will be our wisdom then to submit our selves to the word of God and from the heart to obey its commands so shall we know the truth and the truth will keep us free from the power of sin and error Iohn 8.32 the keeping of a good conscience is the way to keep faith and sound doctrine 1 Tim. 1.19 get the heart once establisht with Grace and then you will not be carried about with every wind of doctrine Heb. 13.9 get Gods fear once planted in your hearts and then you will never depart from him Ier. 32.40 VERSE 7. VVhich Women are ever learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth THe Apostle goeth on to shew what women they are which are brought into bondage by seducers viz. such as are unconstant unsetled and given to seek after novelties and curiosities they are not content with plain truth revealed in the Scripture they must have novum aut nihil some new light some new-found doctrine or else 't will not down with them this unsettles them and makes them run hither and thither after this and that man but all in vain They make a great adoe but to little purpose they are alwayes learning yet learn nothing which they should learn Now the Reason's of their Non-proficiency are 1. Either because they have no better Teachers they follow false Prophets and blinde Guides and when the blinde shall lead the blind no wonder if both fall into the ditch These may seem wise in their own eyes when in truth they know nothing because they know not the truth which is the foundation of all knowledge 2. They thrive not for want of a right disposition within They love their lusts better then the truth and this barres the heart against holy Learning Intus existens prohibet alienum When their judgements are blinded with lusts and their hearts hardened through sin how should such thrive 2 Tim. 4.3 3. Or else they seek not after sound and saving truth but all their enquiry is after some curious novelty they love to heare and learne nothing else in this point being true Athenians Acts 17.21 Well they may toyle and take a great deal of pains for some aery notions and empty speculations that they may come ad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to some kind of knowledge but never ad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word in the Text to such a knowledge as brings forth an acknowledgement of the truth in the power of it 4. Oft times they are meer Scepticks in Religion they are ready to question every thing but they believe nothing they have no foundation no resting place they lay out their mony but not for bread and therefore 't is no wonder if they spend their labour without being satisfied Error cannot satisfy the soul we must enquire for the good old way of truth and Holinesse if ever we would find rest for our souls Ier. 6.16 God who is the great Lord of all will have his commands obeyed not questioned He loves Currists and not Quaerists He prefers obedience before disputes We have disputed so long till we have almost disputed all Religion out of doores We should study rather to live well then dispute well therein lyes our happinesse Mat. 7.24.25 Iohn 13.17 The Spirit of God writes not Notions but Assertions in our hearts it establisheth them so with grace that the gates of hell cannot prevaile against it though such may by the violence of a tentation be moved yet are they like Mount Sion which can never be removed out of its place Heb. 10.23 and 13.9 Against Scepticks and Seekers See that excelent Tract of Mr. Gelaspy his Miscelanies cap. 10 11. yet how many delight in giddinesse and count it a bondage to fixe a belief affecting free-will in thinking as well as in acting And though the Sect of the Phylosophers of that kind be gone yet there remain certain discoursing wits which are of the same veines though there be not so much blood in them as was in those of the Ancients The Scepticisme and Affectation of Novelties is the great sin of England at this day As many are much taken with new Fashions so many are much taken with new Opinions new Doctrines new Teachers and new Expressions Yet the Apostle doth not blame these women simply for seeking after knowledge for the wiser sort of Heathens have commended that but he blames them for hunting after Novelties and vain speculations and in the meane time neglecting the sound and saving truths of the Gospel This is celeris cursus extra viam a swift running to destruction 'T is true all the godly are learners the knowledge of the truth is not Innata but acquisita not born with us but attained by means yet they are not ever learning they know the truth in which they firmly rest and from which they suffer not themselves to be moved and never till then have we profited in our learning when we are made so able to discern the truth as that we are satisfied with it and our consciences are at rest by it even in the saddest dangers Ephes. 4.13 14. 1 Thes. 1.5 6. 2 Pet. 1.12 2. I wish this were not the sin of silly men as well as of silly women to be alwayes learning yet never come to the knowledge of the truth how many are men in yeares yet children in understanding 1 Cor. 14.20 and when for the time they might have been Teachers they had need to be taught the elements of Religion Heb. 5.12 though the knowledge of the best in this life be imperfect and we are alwayes learners here yet we must strive forward toward perfection and not alwayes stick in the place of bringing forth Hos. 13.13 nor be like a horse in a mill still going round in
Now subtle seducers resemble Frxes in 10. particulars 1. The Fox is a very subtle creature so the Churches enemies are subtle Foxes Exod. 1.10 2 Sam. 15.4 Nehem. 6.2 to 10. if Tobiah and Sanballat cannot hinder the work by threatning and force then they put on the Fox skin and try what promises will do They are Wolves but in Sheeps cloathing the better to deceive Matth. 7.15 Dragons but with Lambs horns Revel 13.11 Vipers which hide their teeth in their gummes Matth. 3.8 They are like their father the Devill who is an old Fox having his Methods and Depths as he hath mille nocendi artes a thousand devices to do mischief withall so are these as full of all subtlety as the Devill can make them Acts 13.10 2. 'T is a wild creature and so are these wild unteachable untractable men Nomine tenus Christiani re bellua 3. It s a ravenous creature night and day he 's ravening for his prey he goes from fold to fold making foul spoyle where-ever he comes So these are active to do mischief they run from Parish to Parish making foul havock amongst the flock of Christ doing evill with both hands earnestly Micah 7.3 4. The Foxes skin and out-side is better then his flesh So these Hypocrites have a form and out-side and that 's all within they are full of guile and rapine 5. Foxes love to live in Deserts and Wildernesses where none may disturb them Lam. 5.18 So these delight in ignorant places where there is no light to discover them nor preachers to disturb them 't is the dark places of the earth that are habitations for such Psal. 74.20 6. The Fox is all for it selfe it flayes but never feeds the flock So these feed themselves but destroy the flock Ezek. 13.4 5. 7. 'T is a stinking creature ore ano foetet so these have rotten stinking hearts words and works and when they are dead their memoriall stinks and rots Prov. 10.7 8. It never goeth in a strait path but turns and winds in and out So these go not in the strait path of Gods commands but in the crooked paths of sin and errour Psal. 125.5 Prov. 2.15 Philip. 2.15 like Thieves they keep not the ordinary road but now they are in the way and anon they crosse it 9. When caught in a snare they look pitifully they seem to he gentle whilst in a chain but let them loose and they are Foxes still and none play such Rekes as the tame Fox that hath broke loose and is turned wild again So these when in prison or in distresse they 'l submit recant do any thing but no sooner are they at liberty but they play the Fox again worse then ever 10. It 's an hard thing to catch a Fox especially an old one Birds are caught with chaffe wild beastes in grinnes at annosa vulpes haud capitur laqueo but an old subtle Fox is not so easily caught if you pursue him he hath many holes and dens to hide himselfe in Matth. 8.19 if you lay for him at one hole he hath another to creep out at So these when convinced of their error yet will not be convinced but have their holds and distinctions and evasions to creep out at Now lay all these together Seducers are Sorcerers Thieves Wolves Cheaters Dogs Foxes and the point is clear That seducing Hereticks are very dangerous and may help to take off that plea which many Sectaries make for themselves viz. That those of their way are Holy temperate Religious men Answ. So have many Hereticks been seemingly but pull off the sheep-skin and you shall find a Wolfe under it Thus Arrius Pelagius Laelius and Faustus Socinus with Arminius were Satans messengers transformed into the Ministers of Christ. The Devill never deceives more dangerously then when he appeares like an Angell of light 2 Cor. 11.14 nor is he ever more a Devill then when he seems a Saint even those that came to apprehend our Saviour pretended holinesse and feined themselves to be just men Luke 20.20 The Donatists seemed pure in their own eyes yet held desperate Doctrines The Anabaptists in Germany pretended they were Saints yet at last proved to be fire-brands The glosse of Profession without sincerity will soon fade as we see in the Scribes and Pharises and in the Monks Nuns Hermites and many Sectaries of our time 'T is a sign men are unsound when they Trumpet out their own abilities Sanctity Sufferings Strictnesse that they may get the more followers Rom. 16.18 the Apostle there gives us two marks of false Prophets 1. They give out that they are the servants of Christ but saith the Apostle they serve not Christ but seek themselves 2. They have fine words and fair speeches to deceive the simple out of their mouth comes nothing but Gentlenesse Meeknesse Love Liberty Free-Grace that one would think that God and goodnesse were even confined to their lips This Sanctus Satanas this white Devill hath deluded many Many follow such as Asoloms followers did him in the simplicity of their hearts But if you will walk wisely and safely you must live by Rule not by Example To the Law and to the Testimony Isay 8.20 The Bereans judged of Pauls doctrine by comparing it with the Scripture and not by Pauls life Acts 17.11 Let mens lives be never so seemingly pious and Angelicall if they bring not purity of doctrine with it count them accursed Gal. 1.8 9. yet how many are carried away with the bare names of men chusing rather to erre with them then to speak truth with others Whereas we should not pinne our Faith on another mans sleeve because we know not whither he may carry it The best men are yet but men still and have too often their failings and observable imperfections They know but in part they believe but in part and they are sanctified but in part and therefore the best may erre and be deceived 1 Cor. 13.9 Peter an eminent zealous Apostle yet was not in all things imitable nor did he walk up to the truth of the Gospel but by his example which seemed a Law to others he compelled the Gentiles to be circumcised Gal. 2.11.13 14. and Christ called him Satan Matth. 16.23 Origen Tertullian Austin Apollinaris all learned men yet had their naevos and failings Let us therefore take heed how we have mens Persons Parts or Performances in too great admiration Love them we may but not Idolize them prize them for their gifts and graces but prize the truth above them all though they be never so great or good 'T is great folly to promise our selves more from the creature then ever we shall find in them 5. Observe That false Prophets may be known Hence the Lord gives us here so many Characters and Notes of them And since the land swarms with such I shall give you twenty marks by which you may know them and the better shun them 1. The
not 5. Armies that can save us 'T is not 6. Carnal policy nor sinfull shifts that can save us 1. Idolls cannot help us They are vanities teachers of lies Hab. 2.18 Ionah 2.8 Nothing in respect of any divine power or vertue 1 Cor. 8.4 though it be something in respect of mens vain Imaginations who honour it as their God yet 't is nothing in respect of vertue or value for it can neither help nor hurt Ier. 10.5 They cannot save themselves from fire and plunder Micah's Gods were stollen Iudg. 18.18 24. They are cursed that worship them Psal. 97.7 they shall have sorrow that follow them Psal. 16.4 and be greatly ashamed that trust in them Isay 42.17 great then is the folly of the Papists who fly to S. Loy for their horses S. Anthony for their pigs Saint George for their warres S. Apollonia for their teeth S. Steven for the night S. Iohn for the day according to the manner of their necessities so are their Gods 2. If God be against us Riches cannot help us They oft hurt us in a time of trouble The finger many times is cut off for the gold Ring and the souldier enquires not for the poor but for the rich man Riches avail not in a day of wrath Prov. 11.4 Ezek. 7.19 Zeph. 1. ult they flye from us when we are dying or in trouble and have most need of help Prov. 23.5 Hence they are called uncertain riches they are like a broken reed that not onely faileth but wounds him that trusts in them Isay 36.6 he that trusteth in them shall fall Prov. 11.28 and be reproached for his folly with a Lo this is the man that took not God for his strength but trusted in his riches Psal. 52.7 Luke 12.20 3. Friends cannont help be they never so many or mighty the greater they be the worse and the sooner we are deceived by them because we are apt to trust in them men of low degree are vanity but men of high degree are worse they are not onely lyars but a lye in the abstract Psal. 62.9 Hence we are forbidden to trust in them be they never so great Psal. 146.3 4 5. Trust not in Princes yet if any men can help us 't is they why so for in them is no help they dye or change their minds and then all thy plots perish 4. Strong holds cannot save us if God be against us They shall all drop as ripe figs which with a shake or summons come down Nahum 3.12.14 though wicked men build walls as high as heaven and make ditches as deep as hell yea and make their nest in the starres yet sin will bring them down Ier. 49.16 Obad. 4. if sin raign within all the fortifications without are but vain Lam. 4.12.17 Isay 22.8 to 14. 5. 'T is not Armies Charrets Horses c. that can help A King is not saved by a great host Psal. 33.16 17 they fall that trust in them Psal. 20.7 8. many trust in their long sword and think that it should save them but God tells those that work wickednesse yet stand upon their Sword that the sword shall destroy them Ezek. 33.25 26 27. 6. 'T is not carnal policy nor sinful shifts that can help us Achitophels policy ended in folly And so did Pharaohs working wisely Exod. 1.10 become his bane Hence Henry the third of France forsaking the truth turned Papist thinking thereby to get the Monks on his side he was killed by a Monk yea he became contemptible to his people Paris and his great Townes revolting from him There is no power or policy can prevaile against God Prov. 21.30 many turne with the times forsake the truth make lies their refuge and under falshood do they hide themselves Isay 28.15 this is the basest refuge of all others Sin never did good to any it 's an ill refuge which makes God our enemy Isay 47 10. thou hast trusted in thy wickedness What followes Verse 11. therefore evill shall come ●pon thee 2. Affirmatively and inclusively all our help is onely in the Lord. He is the salvation of his Israel Ier. 3.23 the creatures answer in this case as they did concerning wisdome Iob 18.12.14.20 where shall wisdom be found the depth sayes 't is not in me and the Sea sayes 't is not in me So where shall help in trouble be had Parliaments say 't is not in us and Armies say 't is not in us and Riches say 't is not in us c. But 't is God onely who is El-shaddai All-mighty All-sufficient Gen. 17.1 who is a strong Tower Prov. 18.10 and a present help in trouble Psal. 46.1 when trouble is present then God is auxilium praesentissimum most present by his Wisdom to direct us by his Power to protect us and by his Spirit to comfort us Quest. How doth the Lord deliver his people when we oft see them lye under sad afflictions Answ. Deliverance is two-fold 1. When the Lord doth actually deliver his people as he did the three young men from the fiery furnace Dan. 3. Daniel from the Lions den and Peter from prison 2. Sometimes he lets the trouble continue but upholds the Spirit under it Thus Ioseph was in prison but the Lord was with him Paul had not the tentation removed but he had strength given him to bear it 3. If God do suffer the wicked to take away their temporal life yet he gives them eternal life for it change we say is no robbery but this change is a great advantage so that sometimes the Lord removes the Crosse sometimes he mitigates it but he alwayes works patience in the hearts of his people and gives a happy issue and event if not by life yet by death which is best of all Philip. 1.23 neither can any Tyrants take away their lives from them till they have run their race and finisht the work which God hath given them to do Luke 13.32 Iohn 17.4 5. David was oft pursued by Saul yet dieth not till he served Gods will in his generation Acts 13.36 Peter died not till he was ripe for Martyrdome 2 Pet. 1.14 Paul escapes abundance of dangers both by Sea and Land till his time was come that he was beheaded at Rome by Nero. 2 Tim. 4.6 Queen Elizabeth was cursed by many Popes yet she out-lived nine or ten of them and when she had finisht her course she died in her bed in Peace God hath numbred our dayes which we cannot passe nor our enemies abridge us of Iob 7.3 our times are in Gods hands and not in the hands of our enemies Psal. 31.15 Quest. But why doth not the Lord deliver his people out of trouble Answ. 'T is not either because he cannot or will not but for good Ends. 1. To draw out the Graces of Gods people that their Faith Love Patience and Constancy may be made more perspicuous to the world we had never heard of the Chastity of Ioseph the Patience of Iob the Zeale
at that great day Matthew 10.32.33 and as you have suffered more for him then others have done so you shall have a higher degree of Glory Matt. 19.28 29. See more Yongs benefit of affliction cap. 1. Sibs Cordials p. 160. Calvins Instit. l. 3. c. 8. S. 7.8 Bifields Mirrour Treat of Promises cap. 8. p. 336. and Gods Treasury c. 28. Objection But I see my persecutors flourish in health wealth prosperity whilest I am poor persecuted and low Answer Fret not your self because of prosperous wicked men for they shall soon come down Psalm 31.1 2.13.35 36. and 73.19 20. 't is a righteous thing with God to render tribulation to them that trouble you 2 Thes. 1.6 and though they be many that rise against the Church yet the Lord hath said he 'l make Ierusalem a burthensome stone to All people be they never so many or mighty Zach. 12.3 they shall but wound and cut themselves that meddle with her they shall all have enough of it who ever they be as we see in Pharaoh Saul Senacherib Iesabel Haman Herod the Moabites and the Iewes who persecuted Christ and his Apostles are to this day a cursed dispersed people Be not therefore terrified by your adversaries Phillippians 1.28 though they be great yet there is a greater then they though they plot yet God hath a plot above their plots he sits in Heaven and laughs them to scorn Psalm 2. they are ludibria coeli though terrores mundi Psalm 37.12 the wicked plot Verse 13. God comes between the plot and the execution and mars all He snares the wicked in their own devices Psalm 9.16 Higgaon Selah This is a matter worthy of our chifest meditation God will punish all wicked men but persecutors of his people especially As the Martyrs shall have the highest joy so their persecutor shall have the deepest sorrow There is a neere Union between Christ and his Church he is the Head and and they are his Members he the Vine and they the branches he the husband and they his Spouse Col. 1.18 Eph. 1.22 4.15 16. 3.30 and therefore he must needs be sensible of the wrongs which are done to them Acts 9.4 5. Isay 63.9 Zach. 2.8 Christ and his people have common friends and common foes Francis the first after he had commanded the destruction of the Protestants was never his own man after Winceslaus King of the Bohemians within 18. dayes after he had marked out the names of some Christians to death was smitten himself Though wicked men may forget their wickedness yet God will not Amos 8.7 he can tell Amilek 400. years after what he did against Israel and punisheth him for it 1 Sam. 15.2 3. God will destroy the destroyers of his people If Pharaoh persue Israel God will pursue Phara●h If Mount Seir slay Israel God will destroy Mount Seir Ezek. 45. per totum If Pashur smite Ieremy God will smite Pashur If Ieroboam stretch forth his hand against the Prophet that hand shall wither If Herod vex the Church Vermin shall vexe him And however persecutors may escape in this life yet they are sure to pay for it in the next Phillippians 1.28 2. Thessalonians 1.6 7.9 Rev. 19.20 and 20.10 let us comfort our selves with the remembrance of that great day Here many times they live longest who deserve not to live at all Here the Israelites make brick whilest the Egyptians dwell at ease David is in want whilest Nabal abounds Here Sion oft'times is Babylons captive and they that deserve nothing are Lords of all yet this is our comfort the day of the Lord will come and then we shall be above and our enemies shall be beneath Now they cite us to their bar and we cite them as Ierom of Prague did his adversaries to Gods Bar. I summon you all to answer me shortly before the great and just Judge of all the world They prepare evils for the Church and God prepares rods for them God is jealous over Ierusalem for the wrong that is done to her Zach. 1.4 and though he bear long yet he will not alwaies bear Tempus erit Turno There 's a time when they shall pay full dearly for medling with such holy things Ier. 2.3 God hath prepared arrowes for to shoot at persecutors Psalm 7.13 and rather then fail he will make their own arrowes to wound themselves and fall on their own pates Psal. 37.14.13 The fire that should have burnt the 3 young men Daniel 3. burnt those that threw them in and the Lions which should have devoured Daniel devoured his enemies Daniel 6. Lastly Prepare for trials look for storms as sure as now we live so sure a change will come how soon we know not We should therefore with Ioseph in those years of plenty prepare for years of scarcity and in the highest prosperity remember the dayes of adversity for they may be many so did Iob. 3.23 Rules That we may be Real Martyrs and suffer rightly 1. The man must be good The person must please before the suffering can please Uprightnesse breeds boldnesse and the Holiest men have ever proved the happiest Martyrs as we see in Paul Latimer Bradford c. 2. The End must be good 'T is that which denominates the Action a man may seem to die for the Truth yet not in Truth nor out of love to Christ and his Truth but for ambition and vain glory 1 Cor. 13.7 such suffer Iactatione magis quàm delectatione for selfe ends and not out of love to Christ and so loose all 3. The matter and cause for which we suffer must be good for 't is not the suffering but the cause which we suffer for which makes a Martyr We are never blest unlesse we suffer for Righteousnesse sake Matth. 5.11 When men suffer as murtherers malefactors blasphemers and disturbers of the Peace of the Nation as the Quakers do this is cause of shame but if a man suffer as a Christian its cause of rejoycing 1 Peter 3.14 and 4.15 16. When men hate and persecute us not for any evil that we have done but because we will not do evil but study to please God and serve him in sincerity when 't is for Christs sake that we are killed Rom. 8.36 then our sufferings are the sufferings of Christ and reflect upon him so that he takes them as done to himself Matt. 25.45 Acts 9.4 Heb. 11 26. 4. The manner of our sufferings must be right 1. It must be patiently without murmuring or repineing loose this and you loose the reward of all your sufferings 1 Peter 2.19 20. if when ye do well and suffer for it you take it patiently this is acceptable with God or as the Original renders it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God will thank you for this This is stupenda condescentio a wonderful condescension that God should account himselfe gratified and as it were beholding to such sufferers To make you Patient
them 'T is a great felicity not to be overcome by felicity and it argues strength of grace when we can carry low sayls in a high condition and like Pigeons when they fare best fear most The only way to have our mercies continued is to devote them to Gods praise he never repents of doing good to those who speak good of his name Now in the summer of prosperity let 's lay up something against the winter of adversity Iob 3.25 with the prudent man foresee the storm and arm for to meet it Prov. 22.3 and 27.12 As sure as now we live so sure a change will come which we should wait for and expect Iob 14.14 summer lasts not always the Sun doth not alwayes shine we should therefore in health prepare for sickness in Peace for war in life for death and in dayes of spiritual plenty prepare for scarcity laying up a good foundation against the time co come that we may obtain eternal life See Directions how to use prosperity in Scudders daily walking cap. 12. Chanon of Wisdom l. 2. c. 7. p. 313. Downams Guide to Godlinesse l. 3. c. 33. p. 343. VERSE 14. But continue thou in the things which thou hast learned and hast been assured of knowing of whom thou hast learned them WEE are now come to the third and last part of this Chapter in which the Apostle exhorts Timothy to constancy and perseverance in the truth which he had taught him q. d. 'T is true in these last dayes seducers shall arise who shall have successe for a time in their seducing drawing many into errors with them yet let not these things affright thee do not thou maligne malignants nor envy the successe of the erronious chuse none of their wayes but since thou hast a better Master and hast been taught better doctrine and that from a child be not despondent my son but constantly and couragiously keep the truth committed to thy charge as becomes a faithfull Pastor against all opposers and Impostors whatsoever Now since man is a Rational creature and so is better led by Reasons then forced by Rigour therefore the Apostle presseth his Exhortation to perseverance upon Timothy by Arguments drawn 1. From his Master and Teacher 2. From Timothy who was the Schollar 3. From the matter which he had been taught The first Argument is drawn from the Authority of the person from whom he had received the doctrine viz. from Paul who was an Apostle of Christ guided and inspired by his Spirit and had taught him nothing but what he had received from Christ and therefore his message was to be regarded as if Christ himself had spoken to him Gal. 4.14 Knowing of whom thou hast learnt them See how modestly and sparingly the Apostle speaks of himself and how unlike the language of the Sectaries of our times is Pauls language here 2. From the fidelity which is required in those to whom the truth of God is committed Since this heavenly doctrine was committed to him to be kept as a sacred Treasury and choyce depositum therefore he ought with all care and courage to preserve it For what things we are intrusted withall those things we must faithfully keep this even nature teacheth us But the Truths of God are committed to thee O Timohy to be faithfully kept and as occasion requires to be publisht to the world 1 Tim. 1.11 and 6.20 and 2.1.14 The words are diversly rendred our Translators render it And hast been assured of But Tindal Calvin Beza Aretius Espencaeus and the Vulgar Latin with others render it And have been committed to thee or with which thou hast been entrusted And the Originall seems to favour this last Translation for the words are not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quae credidisti which thou hast believed or been assured of but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quae tibi credita commissa sunt conservanda promulganda Keep the things which have been committed and commended to thy charge with all care and diligence that thou mayest be able to give a good account to him whose these truths are and who hath committed them to thy charge 3. From his long acquaintance with the Scripture by reason of his good education viz. from his childhood what we learn when young takes a deep Impression so that we cannot easily unlearn it but thou O Timothy hast learned the Scriptures from thy infancy and therefore it were a shame for thee who hast been taught so early the way of the Lord now to turn from it and forsake it Continue therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the things which thou hast learned I exhort thee to no new or hard thing all that I beg of thee is that thou wouldest keep the truth which hath already been taught theee for it would argue want of judgement and folly in thee now to forsake it 4. His last argument is drawne from the Excellency of the Scriptures V. 15 16 17. But continue thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But do thou abide keep thy station and maintain the doctrine which I have taught thee against all opposition whatsoever thou must certainly look to be put to it be therefore resolute and constant The Apostle lays a But in Timothies way to keep him from wandring q. d. what ever others do though they fall away more and more and grow worse and worse yet do thou continue stedfast in the truth thou hast received Hence Observe Whatever others do yet Gods faithful Ministers and servants must not depart from the truth Though Israel play the harlot yet Iudah must not sin Hos. 4.15 will ye also go away saith Christ. Iohn 6.67 though Temporaries may fall away yet it becomes not you who are my disciples indeed so to do Let others serve Idols if they please yet we must resolve that we and ours will serve the Lord. Iosh. 14.15 So did Noah Lot Ioseph Elijah Obadiah Nehemiah and the Church of Pergamus which held fast the truth even where Satan had his Throne Rev. 2.13 and the Saints in Nero's Court. Phil. 4.22 We must not follow a multitude to do evill Exod. 23.2 nor erre with others though they be never so good Ne cum Platone errandum est We must get an Holy not a fantastick singularity we are the Salt of the Earth and the Light of the World and must therefore do more then others Matth. 5.47 Christ expects more from us then he doth from Formalists Moralists and Hypocrites The righteous excells his wicked neighbour Prov. 12.26 We must not be like children tossed to and fro with every wind of doctrine but like the righteous we must be an everlasting foundation Prov. 10.25 We must be singularly Pure Holy Humble Self-denying c. Men love to be singular in every thing save Piety they would be singularly Wise singularly Rich singular fine but oh that men would turn their singularity the right way and become singularly
are but Truths twinnes Civil Truth is good but the least Evangelical Truth is of more worth then all the Civil Truths in the world that are meerly so 3. Naturally wee desire Liberty now Truth is the Parent of all true Liberty whether it bee Political or Personal so much Untruth so much Thraldome so much Truth so much Liberty Iohn 8.32 4. If you preserve the Truth it will preserve you in the hour of Temptation as Solomon sayes of wisdom Prov. 4.8 exalt her and she shall exalt you So keep the truth and it will keep you from falling as it did the Church of Philadelphia Rev. 3.10 so thou shalt stand as an impregnable rock when others fly as the Chaffe before the wind The Truth of God in judgement is one of the Eyes of the soul he that wants it is blind and cannot see afar off Now as a clear eye is a very great help for the discerning of a danger before it comes so a clear distinct knowledg of the truth is a very great help to us to discern a Temptation before it be upon us and to discover the Methods and Depths of Satan that he may not surprize us unawares 5. 'T is a great honour to a person or Nation to be the Conservators and Preservers of the Truths of God 'T is not only our Duty but our Glory This honour formerly belonged to the Jewes to them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 and 9.4 God hath now entrusted us with this choyce Treasure the Lord help us to keep it pure both in Judgement and Practice lest it be taken from us Let us all in our places preserve it from violence with all our might There are many spiritual Cheaters abroad the greater will our honour be in maintaining Gods Truth against them all 'T was Shammahs honour one of Davids Worthies that he kept his ground and got a great victory when others ●led 2 Sam. 23.12 Say not I am but one and a weak one too but remember what great things the Lord did by Athanasius and Luther when they had all the world against them One man holding forth truth shall be too strong for all the world for truth unites us to God and God to us it ingageth God in our quarrel and so makes us invincible for if God be with us who can be against us so as to hurt us and destroy us Rom. 8.31 Bradford writing to his friends tells them never shall the enemy be able to burn the truth or prison and keep it in bonds us they may prison bind and burn but our Cause Religion and Doctrine they shall never be able to burn The story of the man in the Councill of Nice is well known where a Christian of no great Learning converted a Learned man whom all the Bishops with their skill and eloquence could not perswade so long as the matter went by words he opposed words with words but when instead of words power came out of the mouth of the speaker words could not withstand truth nor man stand out against God Many wonder why Ministers are so earnest and zealous in defending the truth why 't is a dep●situm which God hath entrusted us withall and 't is well observed that it 's a greater sin to imbezill or alter that then any thing we have borrowed because this is committed to our justice but a depositum to our faithfullnesse the deposition doth rest upon us as trusty men Let Gods truth then be dearer to us then our dearest lives our lives will not be worth the enjoying if God take his truth from us let us beseech him rather to take our lives away rather then take the light of the Gospel away And hast been assured of If you read the words so The Observation will be this That Ministers should be assured of those things which they teach to others They should not only have a Head knowledge or an aery empty notionall speculative knowledge but an experimentall practical knowledge They must believe before they speak Psalme 116.10 that so they may speak from the heart to the heart and may bring their meat in their breasts and not as birds do in their Beaks Knowing of whom thou hast learned them 1. Observe That gracious men are modest men The Apostle doth not boast of himself to Timothy nor proclaim his Learning gifts c. He onely tells him in brief Thou knowest of whom thou hast learnt them 2. Observe The excellency of the Teacher makes the Doctrine the more taking This we see even in Humane and Moral Learning the Platonick Doctrine grew famous because it was profest by Socrates and the Peripatetick by Aristotle The Schollars of Pythagoras did so confide in the Dictates of their Master that when any one askt them a Reason of what they held they would give no other answer but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ipse dixit our Master said so yet these were Heathens but when we have an aged holy Paul for our Master who was an Apostle of Christ the Pen-man of the Holy Ghost and guided more immediately by the Spirit of God then we must with constancy adhere to what they teach us and attend to their doctrine as if Christ himself taught us Gal. 4.14 for his Ambassadours they are and he that heareth them heareth him Young Timothies especially should hearken to the instructions of aged Pauls who have born the heat of the day and by experience can teach us the ways of God Years should be heard speak Iob 32.7 Young Ministers should suspect their own judgements when they vary from an Holy aged Calvin Beza and all the Churches of God As young Lawyers and Physitians observe the Principles and Practices of the serious and grave Professours of their way especially when grounded on Maxims and Rules of Art So should young Divines It ill becomes a young raw Physitian to contradict a whole Colledge of Physitians or a Puny Lawyer a Bench of Judges or a young Divine a whole Assembly of Divines 'T is the looseness of the times that makes young men so bold When Government is settled they will either change their note or be made ashamed of it VERSE 15. And that from a Childe thou hast known the Holy Scriptures which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through Faith which is in Christ Iesus THese words contain a third Argument by which the Apostle presseth Timothy to perseverance viz. because he knew the Scriptures not onely from his Childe-hood but even from his Infancy and from a suckling i. so soon as ever he was able to learn the Scriptures he was presently taught them 1. Observe Parents ought to instruct their Children betimes in the Word of God It s good seasoning the Vessel betimes with goodness Lois Timothies Grandmother and Eunice his Mother taught him as soon as he was capable the way of the Lord 2 Timothy 2.5 Timothies Father was a Greek and Gentile but his
Mother being a believing Iewess seeth to the instructing of her son Acts 16.1 for the Iewes were very careful to teach their children the Old Testament betimes so that their skill therein saith the Learned Buxtorfe was more at 17. then our men at 70. and they were able to answer any Question in the Law as readily as to their own names saith Iosephus Hannah devoted her Samuel whilest he was very young to God 1 Sam. 1.22 and 2.11.24 He began his service in the Tabernacle in his Childhood that he might the better be instructed in Gods Law and be acquainted with all the Parts Passages and wayes of Divine Worship from his tender youth that so in his age he might keep the closer to it 'T is a singular mercy to have good Parents and specially a good Mother for she being much about her children hath many opportunities of dropping good things into her little Lemuels as Bathsheba did into Solomon Proverbs 31.1 The Mothers of the Kings of Israel are constantly mentioned and as they were good or evil so were their Children Partus sequitur ventrem the Birth followes the belly and such as the Mother such usually are the children Ezekiel 16.44 Question But at what age would you have Parents begin to teach their children Answer So soon as ever they begin to learn wickedness we should teach them goodness so soon as ever they begin to curse and swear we should teach them to bless and pray When Children can mock Elisha and call him Bald-pate it is time to change their Language and teach them to cry Hosanna to Christ so that we should endeavour to sow the Seeds of Piety and Religion in their hearts so soon as they are able to speak and are come to the Use of Reason and Understanding endeavouring that as they grow in years so they may increase in Grace and Knowledge Objection This is in vain say prophane lazie Sectaries to teach children the Words and Termes of Piety since they doe not understand them Answer Though Children whilest very young cannot come to much understanding yet the having of Scripture Phrase and Texts by heart is very usefull and will much steed them when they come to years of discretion and are able to dive deeper into the meaning of those things which they retain perfect in their memories from their Childehood We should therefore nurse and nourish them up betimes in the knowledge of Gods Word as Timothy was 1 Tim. 4.6 There are many Reasons why Youth should be seasoned betimes with good Principles 1. In respect of that Natural rudeness and ignorance which cleaves so close unto them Eccles. 3.18 Iob 11.12 Ieremiah 4.22 and 10.14 We are all by Nature like wild Asse-Colts Unteachable Untractable An Asse is the dullest and foolishest of all creatures and a wilde Asse is the dullest and most unteachable of Asses yet such a wild ●●sse-Colt is man by Nature lewdness and folly is bound up in his heart it is rooted and settled there till instruction and correction fetch it away Proverbs 22.15 2. The Lord oft blesses this seasoning in youth with good success as we see in Solomon whom his Father and Mother taught betimes Prov. 4.3.4 and 32.1 and here in Timothy who after became an Evangelist and a choyce pillar in Gods House for the good of many So Samuel who was given up to God betimes what an excellent instrument was he in the Church of God Abraham that taught his children and servants the way of the Lord Genesis 14.14 and 18 19. what obedient Children and servants had he 2. It is usually blest with continuance and perseverance such as are good young are oft good long what the 〈◊〉 is first seasoned withall it will have a taste of it a long time after What we learn whilest young it will last with us so that we seldome or never loose it Prov. 22.6 and therefore to incourage Parents God promiseth if they will faithfully discharge their duty that he will preserve their Children from Apostacy Psal. 71.5.6 9.14.17.18 3. This is an excellent means to propagate goodness to Posterity as we see here Timothies Grandmother teacheth his Mother and his Mother teacheth him and he teacheth the Church of God c. So if you teach your children they will teach their children and thou mayest be a means to propagate Gods Truth and Honour from one Generation to another So that you may comfort yourselves when you come to die that yet your Piety shall not die but shall survive in your posterity who shall stand up in your steed to profess Gods name and truth before a sinful world 4. Such well-bred and timely-taught Children are usually great comforts and ornaments to their Parents Proverbs 23.15.16 24 25. as we see in Abel Ioseph Samuel Iosiah 2 Chron. 34.3 Obadiah 1 Kings 18.12 David Daniel Ieremy All of them began betimes to serve God and were men of renown in their generations which may help to take off that Satanical slander which is so rife in the world viz. that young Saints will be old Devils they cannot hold out Whereas the contrary is commonly most true viz. that young Devils will be old Beelzebubs when those that are good betimes usually persevere in goodness Proverbs 22.6 But such as are fondly bred and left to themselves are the Parents shame and sorrow and oft come to untimely Ends Proverbs 29.15 as Absalom Esa● Adonijah 5. Children are the Seminary and Nursery of the Church and common-wealth now as our Seminaries and Seed-plots are such is the Nation as the Parents House and School are such are Towns and Cities Our seasoning in youth hath a great influence upon our lives and therefore the Devil and the world strive for youth for look what people are between 18. years of Age and 30. such usually they are all their dayes Drunkards then and Drunkards for ever lewd then and lewd for ever 6. Youth is most Teachable and Tractable like soft wax or clay fit to be formed and framed to any thing ready to take any Impression Like a tender twigg ●ou may bend it which way you please but let it grow to be a tree and you may sooner break it then bend it We should therefore take this fit season of seasoning youth betimes with sa●ing Truths and killing the weeds of sin which begin to appear in their lives It s good bearing Gods Yoke whether of Correction Doctrine or Discipline in our Youth Lamentations 3.27 No creature so wild but it may be tamed if taken whilest young We see those that would teach or tame Horses Lions Hawkes Dogs Bears they begin with them betimes the Horse is broken whilest a Colt and the Lion tamed whilest its a Whelp c. Vse This must stir up Parents to season the tender years of their Children with Principles of Grace This is a duty of Great consequence and therefore the Lord 〈◊〉
man to marry before five and twenty nor a young woman till twenty My Reasons are 1. Because the married Condition requires people that have some experience in worldly Affaires and specially in Religion 1 Peter 3.7 the Apostle would have the Husband to be a man of Knowledge Now this Knowledge how to govern a Family wisely and religiously cannot be attained without a considerable time Adam was a Man of full Age and Eve a Woman not a Childe when God brought her to Adam Of all people that we read of in the Scripture Kings did use to marry soonest that so they might have Heires betimes yet we reade of few of the Kings of Israel that married before twenty 'T is not for Children and green-heads rashly to run upon such weighty undertakings they that marry in such haste shall repent by leisure 3. Mutability and unconstancy they be not settled nor stayed in their judgements 'T is the younger sort that usually are led away with errour Old Birds stayed Professours are not so soon caught with this Chaffe Hence the Apostle Exhorts young Timothy to continue in the Truth 1 Tim. 4 16. 4 Rashness Headiness and Revenge such were Rehoboams young Counsellours 1 Kings 12.6.10 Youth is voyd of judgement Prov. 7.7 and apt to fly in the face of a Reprover 5. A disesteeming and sleighting of old Age. They were young ones that mockt the Prophet 2 Kings 2.24 and despised Iob 30.1.12 'T will be our wisedome to fly these lusts betimes It s a comely sight to see mortified and self-denying young people They are subject to stronger Temptations and more violent Affections there is a greater propensity to sinne in youth and therefore the Obedience is the more excellent and acceptable when out of love to God we can break through all these Young persons have many suiters the World the Flesh the Devil all cry be mine be mine They all ly in wait for the flower of our dayes The Flesh casts baits the World digs pits and the Devil sees snares So that unless we be magnanimous and resolute we shall be foiled and overcome 6. A sixth sinne of Youth is Neglecting the seasons of Grace not knowing the day of their Visitation a sleighting the tenders and offers of Gods Grace unto them There is a time when the Lord cometh a wooing to the Soul and by the motions of his Spirit knocks at the doores of our Hearts for entertainment Revelations 3.20 The Devil doth his utmost to hinder the match and therefore he perswadeth young persons that they are too young to be godly and too young to deny themselves in point of pleasures and carnall delights he tells them they may believe and repent time enough hereafter when they are Old He dealeth with them as the Philosopher did with the young man that came to him desiring him to tell him when he should marry Oh said the Philosopher thou art too young not yet not yet at last he grew old and then he came to know when he should marry Not at all now said he The Application is easie 1. Let such consider that there are thousands and ten thousands now in Hell that thought to have repented Hereafter Many have an Intentionall but no solid Repentance they resolve to repent but they resolve not when and so delay till the day of Grace bee past 2. Consider it is not in our power to repent when we please God must give us the Grace 2 Timothy 2.25 they way of Man is not in himself It is God must turn us or we shall never be turned Iremiah 31.18 He must draw us or we shall never runne after him Canticles 1.4 Iohn 6.44 We must observe Gods time or we loose all 3. How dost thou know that thou shalt live till thou art old younger and better then thou are gone Shorter graves then thine may be seen 4. Suppose thou shouldest live till thou wert old yet thy heart may then be so hardened that thou canst not repent and because when God called thou wouldst not answer therefore thou shalt cry and shalt not be heard Prov. 1.24 Ier. 22.21 22. 5. If it were in our power yet we may in no wise deal so dis-ingeniously with our God as to give the Devil the Marrow of our Youth and reserve the dry bones of our old Age for God It is no wisedome to lay the greatest load on the weakest Horse Old Age though in it selfe it be a Blessing yet is accompanied with many troubles sicknesses and diseases they are the Dreggs the Lees the Winter of our dayes As all Rivers meet in the Sea so all diseases meet in Old Age Hence it is called the evil day Eccles. 12.3 4 5 c. then the Eyes grow dimme the Eares deafe the Hands tremble and the Leggs are feeble and the Memory failes 'T is a time of spending not of getting and such compulsive Repentance is seldome true They are cursed that offer the blinde and the lame in Sacrifice Malachi 1.8 ult and if the blinde and the lame were abhorred of Davids soul much more of Gods 2 Samuel 5.8 'T is the greatest Wisedome in the World for young persons to know the day of their Visitation and to improve the Seasons of Grace seeking the Lord while he may be found Isaiah 55.6 and opening when he knocketh 'T is good sayling whilest the Ship is sound the Pilot well the Marriners strong the Gale favourable and the Sea calme The onely way to finde the Lord when we seeke him is to seeke him in due time even Now 2 Corinthians 6.2 Behold Now is the acceptable Time Now he calleth all men every where to Repent See how the Holy Ghost prevents Objections I 'le repent hereafter No it must be now Acts 17.30 31. Object I am rich or I am poor I am a Iew or a Gentile and cannot repent Answ. He calls All men Object I dwell amongst ill neighbours Answ. He calls all men every where The time present is the only time the Time past is gone the time to come we have no assurance of the time present is our time Hence we are called upon so oft to obey whilest 't is to day Psal. 95.7 8. Heb. 3.15 and to return i. e. presently Isai 21.12 In all obligations say the Lawyers where no time is specified there the condition is presently to be performed So Ier. 13.15 16. Zech. 1.4 Zeph. 2.1 2. Now because we are naturally averse and backward to this special duty I shall give you 20. Considerations to Quicken you 1. Consider that this speedy repenting and turning to God in our youth is Comfortable because 't is a good evidence of the Truth of our Repentance as late Repentance is seldome true so speedy repentance is seldome false It 's a good sign we have made God our God indeed when with David we can seek him early Psal. 63.1 and with Zaccheus we make hast to receive him joyfully Luke 19.6 This
Fathers Postilers c. This breeds so many Arminians Socinians and Hereticks they are given up in judgement to believe lies for contemning the Scriptures of Truth As for the Schoole-men they bring forth Cobwebs fine for Threed but of no use They torture their Reader with abundance of vermiculate rotten hollow Questions with many needless Queries and Ut●ums One compares them to a man that hath bread and good wine hanging on both sides yet himself sits hungrily gnawing a flint stone One Austin amongst the ancients and one Question amongst the modern Divines will yield more solid Divinity then all the School-men with their vain disputations Jejune distinctions Quodlibetical idle curious Sceptical Queries and meer speculations Yea Bucer affirms that there is more Holinesse to be found in Seneca then in most of the School-men They darken the Truth by framing all Religion according to the platform of Philosophy confounding the principles of Divinity and Philosophy together Yet by men that are solid seasoned sanctified some good may be picked out of them which shewes the folly of the Papists who cry Plus apud se valere unum Lumbardum Scholasti●ae disciplinae Patrem quàm centum Lutheros ducentos Melancthones tre●ent●s Bullingeros quadringent●s Martyres quingentos Calvinos 2. Others prefer the reading of the Fathers before the sacred Scriptures Though we Reverence the ancient Fathers and blesse God for their Light yet the Ancient of dayes is more ancient then they and his word is to be preferred before all their writings for they were men and had their naevos their failings and infirmities as other men One ●ound reason drawn from Scripture is of more worth and weight then the saying of a thousand Austins Origens Chrysostomes c. Men had need to be well grounded in the Scriptures before they read the Fathers for we should try the Fathers by the Scriptures and not the Scriptures by the Fathers He that will not believe Moses and the Prophets will not believe though one arose from the dead See Rules for Reading and citing the Fathers Perkins 2. Vol. Problem 1. p. 486. D. Hills Serm. on Ier. 6.16 p. 24 25. Mr. Trapps Com. on 2 Tim. 3.16 Weemse Vol. 1. l. 3. c. 1. Reynolds against Hart. cap. 5. Sect. 1. p. 184. Luthers Colloq English cap. 29. It is well observed by a Pious and experienc't Divine that it is a most worthy travail for Students in Divinity to refer all their study first for the true sense of Scripture which onely will make a man a grounded Divine able to teach the truth and confute error 2. For the right use of it in himself and others for amendment of life and all good duties This course have I by experience saith he found profitable and resolved upon viz. to be diligent in reading the holy Scriptures and of them at the least 4. Chapters daily in like manner for the increase of my knowledge to spend 3. houres in the fore-noon in searching out the sense of the hardest places as two in the after-noon in searching out the propriety of the Tongues and other two in perusing the Tracts and Commentaries of learned men one in Meditation and Prayer and what time remains to spend the same in brotherly conference 3. Observe That women and children may and must read the Scriptures Timothy a child knowes the Scriptures and his Grand-mother and his Mother taught him Priscilla a woman instructs eloquent Apollos Act. 18.26 God commands men women and children to hear and learn his law Deuteron 6.6 7 8. and 31.12 and God promiseth it as a special priviledge that in Gospel-times all shall know him from the greatest to the least Ieremy 31.34 All that expect eternal life are commanded to read the Scriptures but women and children expect eternal life as well as others therefore they must read the Scriptures Iohn 5.39 God would not have us strangers to his word he would have it not barely lodge for a night but dwell in us and that not onely sufficiently but richly and abundantly Colossians 3.16 and therefore 't is that he blames his people that when he had preacht to them the Magnalia legis the great and choyce things of his Law yet they accounted them as strange things Hos. 8.12 4. Observe That the Scriptures are not so dark as some would make them if women and children must read them then sure there 's something plain in them As there are Depths in them where the Elephant may swimme so there are Fords where the Lamb may wade The plainness and perspicuity of the Scripture is so fully proved by others that I shall refer you to them for satisfaction See Mr. Leighs Body of Divinity l. 1. c. 8. p. 99. B. Vshers Body of Divinity p. 21. Hildersham on Psalm 51.6 Lect. 102. and Lect. 144. p. 768. Camero de controvers Iudic. cap. 10. pag. 598. Folio Walaeus Loci com p. 143. c. The Holy Scriptures By the Holy Scripture is here meant principally the Old Testament For the New Test. at least all of it was not written when Timothy was a child the Canon was not then compleated Hence Observe That the Scriptures of the Old Testament are the word of God and so are useful for us still Many Sectaries cry out of the Law and the Old Testament as a low poor mean thing when the Holy Ghost here calls it The Holy Scripture which is able to make us wise unto salvation How contrary is the Language of these profane men to the Language of Gods Spirit This is a great Controversie in our dayes I shall therefore 1. By Arguments prove the Old Testament to be Authentick and still in force 2. I shall answer all the Anabaptistick Cavils that are raised against it 3. I shall make some brief Application 1. The Scriptures of the Old Testament are of Divine Authority Canonical a Rule of Faith and good Life which appears thus 1. that which Christ and his Apostles have commended to us as a Rule of Faith and good Life must needs be of Divine Authority and ought still to be observed by us but Christ and his Apostles have commended the Old Testament to us as a Rule of Faith and good Life Ergo The Major no Sober man will deny The Minor I prove First from Iohn 5.39 Christ sends us to the Old Testament and bids us search those Scriptures for the New Testament was not then written Now to what end should we search them if they were of no validity So Paul tells us Romans 15.4 Whatsoever things were written afore-time viz. in the Old Testament they were written for our Learning Apollos is commended for his admirable dexterity in opening the Scriptures of the Old Testament Acts 18.24 2. Christ and his Apostles to shew the Divine Authority of the Old Testament even in Gospel times did fetch Arguments out of the Old to confirm many points of Doctrine and Practice when some doubted whether Christ
salvation this is the condition of the Covenant of Grace without which we have no interest in Christ as is clearly and learnedly proved by a Reverend Divine of ours Oh then make much of this Grace preserve her and she will preserve thee exalt her and she will exalt thee to Honour As David said to Abiather so Faith saith to us abide you with me fear not for he that seeks my life seeks thy life but with me shalt thou be in safety 1 Samuel 22. ult This is the Mother of all our Graces the Fountain from which they flow All Grace is in Faith Originally Radically Fundamentally Virtually 'T is the primum mobile which sets the other wheels agoing 'T is that work of God which contains all other good works in it Iohn 6.28 29 40. All duties all doing and suffering without Faith are displeasing unto God Romans 14. ult we must pray in Faith Iames 1.6 Hear in Faith Heb. 4.2 communicate in Faith by this we feed on Christ and lay hold on him crede manducasti Aug. This makes all we do to prosper 2 Chron. 20.10 'T is a Grace of perpetual use in prosperity and adversity in sickness and health in prosperity it keeps us watchful and humble Iob 3.25 in famine feares wants it keeps us cheerful Heb. 3.17 18. such righteous ones excell their wicked neighbours Prov. 12 26. they are the onely excellent of the earth Psalm 16.3 God accounts them too good to live in such a wicked world Heb. 11.38 This is that golden grace which makes us truly rich a well tried faith is more pretious then gold 1 Pet. 7. Rev. 3.18 This brings plenty and propriety in all All is yours to believers Christ gives his choycest blessings as Justification and Sanctification Peace of Conscience Victory over the world sin and Satan Rom. 3.30 and 5.18 and 9.3 Acts 15.9 and 16.31 Luke 7 50. 1 Cor. 1.3 Gal. 2.16 1 Iohn 5.12 freedom from death Natural in respect of its sting 1 Cor. 15.55 from death spiritual Iohn 5.29 and from death Eternal Iohn 3.16 To a believer Christ is all in all Colos. 3.11 1 Cor. 3.22 23. All comfort and salvation is terminated in him Zach. 9.9 In him doth fulness all fulness dwell Iohn 1.16 Col. 1.19 and 2.3 in Christ is a fulness of wisedom to answer for our folly 1 Cor. 1.30 a fulness of life to deliver all believers from death Iohn 14.6 We are dead till Christ by his Spirit quicken us Ephesians 21. hence he is called a quickning Spirit 1 Cor. 15.45 a fulness of Liberty to free us from our Spirituall bondage to sin and Satan Iohn 8.36 2 Cor. 3.17 He is that Valiant Ioshua which frees us from the Tyranny of our spiritual enemies going forth conquering and to conquer 1 Cor. 15.37 Rev. 6.2 In Christ is a fulness of Glory a man without Christ is a Tohu Vabohu without form or beauty an Ichabod in whom is no glory like Reuben he can never excell Genesis 49.4 but being clothed with Righteousness we are wholly fair and there is no spot in us Cant. 4.7 Ephes. 5.27 the Church and Spouse of Christ is actually and presently fair 2. She is Universally fair in all parts though considered in her selfe she may erre doctrinaliter in matters of Faith and moraliter in respect of manners yet consider her in Christ whose righteousness is imputed to her for righteousness and so she is wholly fair and albeit the law accuse her of blots and spots yet the Law is answered by the Gospel and the Wife cannot be sued so long as the Husband lives Though in our selves we are black yet in Christ we are comely though poore in our selves yet rich in him though black in the worlds eye and black in her owne eye by reason of sin and misery yet she is fair in Christs eye who is a faithfull friend and soul-solacing Ionathan to comfort his in all their distresses Iohn 15.14 15. A Physitian to heal them of all their maladies Mal. 4.2 a Rock to support them 1 Cor. 10.4 and Mannah to feed them So that now believers with Paul may challenge all their enemies to do their worst Rom. 8.33.34 For the excellency of Faith See D. Reynolds Vanity of the Creature p. 476. Rogers of Dedham of Faith chap. 4. D. Bolton in folio 18. Royalties of Faith on Iohn 3.15 M. Perkins on Heb. 11. Doctor Preston on Faith Doctor Sibbs third Volume on Hebrews 11.13 Dykes Righteous mans Tower p. 32.33 and on Sacrament Chap. 11. Boltons Directions for walking page 52. Barlow on 2 Tim. 1.5 Watsons Charter chapter 20. M. Sam. Ward Sermon 2. p. 43. and 131. Master Ioseph Symonds sight and faith chapter 11. Master Ieremy Burrowes Treatise of Faith Vol. 8. and Saints Treasury page 68. Dan. Dyke on Matthew 4.3 Doctor Holydayes Nature of Faith Smith on the Creed p. 2. and Ambrose his Media page 162. VERSE 16 All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for Doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousness 17. That the man of God may be pefect throughly furnished unto all good workes THe Apostle the better to incourage Timothy to study the Holy Scriptures goeth on to prove that they are able to make one wise unto salvation and that by an Argument drawn from a full and suffici●nt enumeration of those things which are necessary to salvation Where he commends the Holy Scriptures upon A three-fold account 1. For their Dignitie and Authoritie 2. For their Vtilitie 3. For their Perfection 1. He commends them for their Dignity and Divine Authority as coming more immediately from God Verse 16. All Scripture is given by Inspiration of God 2. For their singular Utility which is foure-fold First For Doctrine to teach the Truth Secondly For reproof of Errour and false Doctrine Thirdly For correction of sinne and evill manners Fourthly For Instruction in Righteousnesse and good Workes 3. From their compleat perfection enabling a Minister for his Office verse 17. especially those foure Parts of it before named v. 16. 1. The Apostle commends the Scrpitures in respect of their Divine Authority they have not Angels or men for their Authour the Prophets and Apostles were but the Penmen Secretaries and Instruments of the Holy Ghost to write what he should Dictate to them So the Angels were but Gods Messengers to declare the Law to his people Galathians 3.19 The Scriptures have God himself for their more immediate Authour All Scripture is given by Inspiration of God i. all and every part of Scripture is Divinely inspired or breathed by God both for Matter Order Style and Words Those Holy Men of God did not onely utter their words by the Holy Ghosts immediate Direction but by the same Direction did commit them to Writing that they might be a standing Rule to the Church for ever For the bare memories of men would not have kept them for
give him for all those successes and deliverances which he hath given us will not this provoke him to repent of all the mercies he hath shewed us and to consume us after he hath done us good These are worse then Papists denying the Trinity Sacraments Old Testament and New Testament affirming that there is no word but only the word Christ so did the Swenck●feildians in Germany herein betraying their grosse ignorance that cannot distinguish between the word Christ and the word of Christ Colos. 3.16 so called because it hath Christ for its Authour Christ for its Object and Christ for its end between Christ the coessential and coeternall word of the Father Iohn 1.1 2. Heb. 1.3 the substantial word of God 1 Iohn 5.7 Rev. 19.13 and the expresse Image of his Father and the written word of God which is contained in the Old and New Testament and is called the written word of God Luke 8.11 12. and 11.28 Acts 4.31 and 6.2 7. and the Bible or Book as being the book of books i. e. the most excellent book in the world 2. As the Papists when they are Non-plust fly to Traditions so do these fly from Scripture to Revelations As the Jews have their Talmuds and the Turks their Alcorans so the Anabaptists have their vain Visions and etraordinary Revelations whereas the Scripture is a surer Guide then a Voyce from heaven 2 Pet. 1.19 for that may be more easily counterfeited Satan can with ease transform himself into an Angell of light See this more fully cleared by the Authours in the Margin 2. We have those that cry up a Light within them and extoll it above the word of God like false Tradesmen that preferre false Lights before the clearest Sun-shine He that takes the light of nature for his Guide hath but a blind deceitful Guide which will lead him into a thousand bogs and ditches of filth and errour The natural man cannot endure the light of Gods word Iob 21.14 Isay 6.10 and 30.10 2 Tim. 4.3 he raiseth cavils against it and hates the light that discovers him He 's dead in sin and cannot once discern the supernatural things of God 1 Cor. 2.14 hence he 's called not onely dark but darknesse it self in the Abstract Ephes. 5.8 and therefore great is the sin of those that tell men they have need of no other teacher but onely the light within them 1. This overthrowes all Scripture in vain did God bid us search the Sciptures if this natural light within us were sufficient to lead us to salvation 2. This is the way to make men Heathens and to set up a natural light instead of a supernaturall 3. This would overthrow the Ministery and all their gifts which Christ gives them for the edification of his Church Ephes. 4.11 4. This would overthrow the Magistracy for to what end are his Laws and sword if every man had a light within him sufficient to direct him thus if Aaron go down Moses cannot long endure Ministery and Magistracie usually fall together Numb 16.10 13. 5. Religion hath mysteries and depths in it which no natural man can fathome 1 Cor. 2.9 14. 6. The Scripture speaks onely to Saints when he saith Christ is in you the hope of glory Colos. 1.27 but to the world he 's a stumbing-block and rock of offence 7. Christ calls them slow of heart who believe not all that the Prophets have spoken it seems they were to look to the Scriptures without them and not onely to a light within them 8. The Beraeans are commended for searching the Scriptures Acts 17.11 and not for harkening to a light within them and we are commanded to try the Spirits by the Touchstone of Gods word and not by a light within us 3. Great is the sinne of the Socinians who make not the Scripture but Reason the Judge in matters of Religion and will believe no more in Religion then they can comprehend by Reason whereas we make not our Reason a Rule of faith added to the word but we use it as that light which God hath given us wherewith to search into the meaning of his word and by studious inquisition and observation to discover it and by good Reason out of the Text to convince others of its truth Reason raised and rectified is the candle of the Lord and good Prov. 20.27 so long as 't is subordinate to faith but when it goeth about to judge it then it quickly overthrowes all as we see in the Socinians who abound with such grosse Heresies that Divines Question whether we may call them Christians 4. Others boast of the Spirit in opposition to the Scripture these are certainly led by the spirit of the Devill Gods word and Spirit go together as you may see Prov. 1.23 Isay 59.21 Galatians 3.2 Gods Spirit teacheth us to try the spirit and doctrines of men by Scripture Isay 8.20 and if they speak not according to this word 't is not because they have New-light but no light in them Christ who was full of the Spirit of the Lord yet doth not go about to prove things by the Spirit within him but he sends men to the Scriptures as their Rule Iohn 5.39 and when he disputed with men and Devills he doth not appeal to the spirit or light within him but he cites Scripture without them against them for though Gods Spirit do enlighten the Saints on earth yet it is but in part this illumination is imperfect and mixt with much darknesse within them so that they have need also of a light without them which is the Scripture And if Timothy who was inlightned by the spirit in a more then ordinary measure he being an Evangelist yet must give himself to reading the Scriptures how much more have we need to read and study them who have not that measure of the spirit as he had And if the spirit were our Rule how many would be deluded with Satanical spirits but God hath given us a surer word of prophecy so that we must not trust onely to the Testimony of the spirit concerning it self but we must bring every spirit to the Trial and Touchstone of Gods word 1 Iohn 4.1 2 3. yea though they pretend to have the Spirit of God yet must it be tried by the word of God Object The Scriptures are for Novices and young beginners but after men are regenerate and grown up they must leave these external rudiments and be guided onely by the Spirit Answ. This is a most pernicious and dangerous opinion for take away the Scriptures and you take away the Rule both of good life and sound doctrine and so open a gap to all Heresie and profanenesse 2. Neither is the Scripture onely necessary for young beginners but also for the regenerate and most holy men as appeares by the Inscriptions of almost all the Epistles which are written even to the Saints themselves Rom. 1.7 8. 1 Cor. 1.2 and
so Tobit 6.7 with the smoak of the Liver of a Fish he drives away the Devil but the Scripture saith Fide non Fumo by Faith and not by smoke we must resist him So Tobit 12.9.12.13 he makes the Angel not Christ to offer up the Prayers of the Saints to God Ecclesiasticus 22.22 and 2 Maccab 12.43.47 there is offering sacrifice for the dead See strong Reasons against them Doctor Reynolds Lect. de Lib. Apochry Bishop Vshers Body of Divinity page 14.15 Master Leighs Body of Divinity l. 1. c. 5. D. Whitaker de script Controv. 1 Q. 1. cap. 3. Rivels Isagoge ad Script c. 7. Sharpii Cursus Theolog. Contr. to page 6. 5. Is the Scripture the Word of God Oh love it then for the Authours sake we usually esteem of writings according to the Eminency and Dignity of the Authour now all Scripture is given by inspiration from God and is to be prized as the Epistle and Love-Letter of the Great God to the sonnes of men 'T is one of the chiefest gifts which ever God gave it is a greater mercy then the Sun or the Light of Heaven 'T is this we must be judged by at the last day Iohn 12.48 Not a Chapter we read nor a Text that is expounded to us but will be a witness for us or against us for our comfort or conviction at that great day Be ruled then by it since you must be judged by it and chuse rather to die then to sin against it Set your affections on it see that you love it 1. Cordially not Superficially Write it not onely in your Heads or Note-Books but get it written upon your hearts and engraven on your souls then you will delight to do Gods Will Psalm 40.8 doe not onely read it but eat it and by Meditation digest it that it may be to you the Rejoycing of your hearts Ier. 15.16 We should as readily and willingly receive Gods Word as an hungry man doth meat 2. Love it Superlatively do not love it as you do your beast or other creatures with a low carnal sensual Love but love the Scriptures next to God Appretiativè intensivè Affectu Effectu with the highest intention of Affection even above riches Pleasures yea and our appointed food Iob 23.12 I have esteemed the words of his mouth more then my necessary food He loved it more then any food absolutely and preferred it before his necessary food without which his life could not subsist he had rather loose his meals then his meditations on Gods Word He esteemed it more not onely then dainties or superfluities but then substantial food without which he could not live and subsist As a Reverend Divine of ours hath well observed 3. Love it ●ractically Love it so as to obey it this is the end of all our Reading and Hearing viz. that we may doe it Deuteronomy 4.6.14 and 51. and 6.3 and 11.32 It is not knowing nor praysing but practising that bringeth blessednesse Iohn 13.17 Psalm 15. ult Iam. 1.25 Revelations 22.14 Though Obedience be not the Meritorious cause of our salvation yet it is a good Evidence of it It is Via ad Regnum non causa Regnandi Luke 11.28 Romans 2.13 At the last day Christ will demand not what have we read or said but what have we done Matthew 7.22 and 25.35 Many are bare hearers but not doers of the Word and so play the Sophisters in deceiving themselves and others with showes insteed of substance Iames 1.22 To obey the Word of God in our Life is our Wisedome Deuteronomy 4.6 Hence Christ calleth him a wise man that heareth the Word and doth it Matthew 7.24 These are Verba vivenda non legenda not barely to be read but practised Hereby we honour God and so shall be honoured of him again Iohn 15.8 One Practical Christian bringeth more glory to God then a thousand Notional formall Professours This made Paul commend the Romans 6.17 not for bare professing but for obeying from the heart that form of Doctrine which was delivered to them and Christ preferreth such as Doe his Will before his natural Kindred Matthew 12.47 Hereby we shall experimentally know the Truth of Gods Word Iohn 17.17 When men believe the Word submit to it and are content to be ruled by it in all things they shall Experimentally know the truth of it Knowledge helps much to Practice and Practice helps much to Knowledge It is not talkeing of Wine but drinking of it that comforts and chears the heart The Theory of Musick is delightfull but the Practice is farre more Excellent and Pleasant A reall good Man is Decalogus Explicatus a living Decalogue his Life is a Comment on the Commandements The Word is written in his Heart and held forth in his Life Philippians 2.16 Holding forth the Word of Life He doth not onely lay up the Word in Hearing but he doth hold it forth in ordering all his Actions according to it And this is an Evidence that we are truely Godly Iohn 14.15 1 Iohn 3.24 And serveth to distinguish us from all the Hypocrites in the World who onely talke of Religion and cry Lord Lord Matthew 7.22 23. they come and hear But they will not doe it Ezekiel 33.31 32. that But is a blot and spoils all As it was said of Naaman the Syrian He was a Valiant man But he was a Leper that but was a blemish So we may say of many formal Professours they can talk excellently and have good Parts But they are covetous cruel proud malicious censorious c. Fie on these Buts they are the Coloquintida that spoils all These are the Botches and blemishes of Religion and cause it to be evil spoken of as the Indians said of the Spaniards when they saw their cruelty Surely that God cannot be good that hath such wicked servants So Ezek. 36.20 the profane Iewes caused Gods Name to be profaned and evil spoken of by reason of their lewdness when the Enemy cried These are the people of the Lord and are gone forth of his Land q. d. These are the holy people see what kind of Inhabitants God had in his Holy Land On the contrary when Gods people walke up to their Principles and Priviledges answering their Gospel Light with Gospel lives being burning and shining lights and leading convincing lives 1. Either they shall convince the wicked and stoppe their mouths that they shall have nothing justly against them 2. Or else convert them as Iustin Martyr confesseth that the Holy lives of the Christians taught him the Christian Religion by seeing their Constancy Patience Humility and cheerfulness in suffering it won him to the Gospel Oh then let us be doers of Gods Will this is more pleasing to him then all Duties without it Obedience is better then Sacrifice 1 Samuel 15. A heart without words is better then words without an heart a grain of Grace is better then many pounds
thee Isaiah 51.2 1. Objection I am but a woman the weaker Vessel and therefore my zeal can doe but little good Answer Yet thou mayest doe somewhat for God we reade in Scripture what great things God hath done by women Deborah and Iael two excellent women The one ruled with an Heroick Spirit the other killed Sisera a valiant Commander Iudges 4.4 5.22 The woman of Abel by her prudence saved the City 2 Samuel 20.16.22 Abigail by her wisedome preserved her husband and family from an imminent danger The Shunamite that great good woman stirred up her husband to entertain Elisha to the great benefit of her family and Hester was a means to save the Jewes from ruine God loveth to hang the greatest weights on the weakest wyres and to doe great things by weak Instruments that his Name may have all the Glory 3. Objection It is good to be discreet and wise in what we doe Answer Discretion doth not hinder but further our zeal it doth not diminish it but directs it and therefore they are not to be Opposed but Composed and made subservient to each other Prudence doth not abate our Diligence but guideth it in its work it teacheth us not to doe lesse but to doe better Thus there is an Harmony amongst the Graces and we may in no wise set them at variance amongst themselves Yet 't is the property of the men of the world to accuse Gods faithful ministers who tell them discreetly and zealously of their sins for rash heady men and such as want discretion Thus when Bishop Latimer reproved the sins of the Court they would accuse him for lack of discretion It rejoyceth me saith he when my Friend telleth me that they finde fault with my indiscretion for by likelyhood the Doctrine is true for if they could finde fault with my Doctrine they would not charge me with lack of discretion c. 4. Objection It is good to be moderate Vertue consisteth in a mean Answer Moderation in our own causes and quarrels doth well Phil. 4.5 But moderation and indifferency in Gods Cause is not moderation but luke-warmness and coldness which God abhorreth and if wicked men will not content themselves with moderation in pursuit of their lusts and Idols Ier. 8.2 but will spend their estates lavish Gold out of the bag upon them Isay 46.6 shall not we in an holy prodigality spend our selves and what we have from God for his honour 'T is true in Moral Vertues which are circa res medias the mean is best But Religion admits of no mediocrity e. g. our love to God and our hatred against sin can never be too intense Yea no Vertue in its formal Reason can be too much intended nor admit of an excess that man that saith he hath zeal enough had never any true zeal at all The Apostle saith its good to be zealous in a good thing and is not zeal then best in the best things and are there any things better then God his Truth Worship People Is it good to be earnest for a friend and is it not much better to be zealous for God The things we strive for are so Excellent that no zeal can be too much 'T is for a Kingdome for an Heavenly Kingdome 't is for Christ for grace and glory and if thou canst finde any thing in the world that better deserveth thy zeal let it have it 5. Objection The Apostle would have Timothy to be gentle 2 Timothy 2.24 Answer True for he was imployed amongst the Gentiles who were newly converted to the Faith and therefore must be wisely and gently handled such bruised Reeds must not be broken but when men are obstinate they must be rebuked with all authority Titus 2.15 6. Observation If we be thus zealous we may loose all Answer True and yet be no loosers neither The Martyrs lost all and yet were gainers God will make up your losses in a better kind Matth. 10.37 Let us do our duty and commit the success to God Many like Ammaziah could be content to do Gods Will but they are affraid of looseing some hundreds of Talents by it but the Prophets answer may satisfie us The Lord is able to give thee much more then that 2 Cor. 25.9 7. Observation I may bring paine and sorrow on my selfe by my forwardness Answer Thou mayest bring greater sorrow on thy selfe by thy backwardnesse 2. Wee see what pain men will endure to preserve a Natural life and shall we endure nothing for our spiritual life 3. God will assist thee and in the multitude of thy perplexities he will delight thy soul Psalm 94.19 8. Observation The world will thinke us mad and out of our wits if we thus oppose their sinfull counsels Answer This is no new thing Christ himself was called mad and they said that he had a Devil Mark 3.21 the Disciple is not above his Master But of this see more in 2 Tim. 3.9 9. Observation I am of a dull and heavy constitution and therefore it cannot be expected that I should be so hot as others Answer See how 't is with thee in other things art full of life spirit and activity for profits and pleasures and yet hast thou no mettle nor life for God and his worship certainly the fault is not in thy cold constituti●n but in thy wretched corruption where thou lovest thou hast heat enough Let a man touch the coldest of you in your gains pleasures reputations and you have heat more then enough onely Gods honour lieth unregarded by you 2. Suppose thou art of a sad and heavy constitution yet Grace is above Nature it rayseth and rectifieth it 'T is like gold in the Mine which turneth every thing into the nature of it Hence the Spirit of Grace is compared to Oyle which is a Royal liquor and will be above all Now to quicken you take these Considerations and Motives 1. Consider this is no Arbitrary or indifferent thing but 't is that which God hath oft commanded That we should love him with all our strength i. zealously and sincerely Deut. 6.5 and do what we do with all our might Eccles. 9.10 Rom. 12.11 Striving and earnestly contending for the faith Iude. 3. The compound implieth an ardent and vehement defence of the Truth we must contend for it with our utmost strength Truth is a precious Jewel and heavenly Treasure which we must labour to preserve unto Posterity One grain of it is of more worth then all the world Malim ut pereat totus mundus quàm veritatis mica said Luther Little deviations from the Truth must not be suffered least they increase to greater as thin exhalations turn into thick clouds and little sparks make great fires God will not have his least commandments contemned Matth. 5.19 Hence Christ commands us not onely to destroy Vulpes sed Vul peculas even the litle Foxes that hurt his Vine Cant. 2.15 But we are not put to contend pro tricis
sweet and pleasant things or nothing They forbid Gods messengers to preach to them unless they 'l preach smooth and pleasing things of peace prosperity and pleasure though they walk in a sinful path and have no right to them Isai. 30.9 10. They say to the seers see not and to the Prophets prophesy not to us right things speak unto us smooth things prophesie deceits They love such as preach the visions of their own brain and sow pillows under mens elbows dawbing with untempered mortar Ezek. 13.10 11. When Prophets prophesy falsly and people shall love the lyes and flatteries of such Impostors better then Gods truth what will the issue and end of such practices be but misery and destruction Ierem. 5.31 and 6.12 13 14. Micah 3.11 12. But as for sound men they love sound Doctrine they desire it Psal. 43.3 They come to it Iohn 3.21 and bless God for it 1 Sam. 25.32 33. Observation 5. In the last dayes there will be many false Teachers There will not be one or two but there will be heaps of them the world will swarm with them Men will have variety of lusts and those call for variety of Teachers to uphold them Good Men and specially good Ministers are rare they are one of a thousand Job 33.23 But wicked ones abound there is much dross but little gold much chaff but little wheat many weeds few good flowers If the Devil have any work to do he wants no Agents to effect it If Ahab will not hearken to Micajah a true Prophet the Devil hath four hundred false ones ready to delude him 1 Kings 22.6 21 22. If men once set open their doors they shall not want Deceivers When Prophets prophesie falsly and people love to have it so 't is just with God to send them Teachers according to their own desire that he who is Heretical may be Heretical still and he that is profane may be profane still When men sleight truth they shall have Teachers which shall be Gods Executioners to bind them and blind them and lead them into error As God punisht the contempt of light in former ages by giving men up to Antichrist to be deluded by Monks Friars Lyars because they received not the truth in love so now he punisheth formality and contempt of the Gospel by giving men up in the hands of Socinians and such like Seducers which shall feed them with fables instead of truth Such as go to their Assemblies may say of them as Dionysius Calderminus said of the Masse Eamus ad communem errorem Let 's go to the shop and sink of errors Let us get our hearts stablisht with grace and then we shall not be carried about with these strange Doctors and their various doctrines Heb. 13.9 6. Observe as all other parts of man so amongst the rest the ear hath it's diseases Since the fall we are ●razed in our intellectuals in our morals and diseased in eyes and ears hence we read of a deaf ear Isai. 6.9 10. Micah 7.16 Rom. 11.8 an uncircumcised ear Acts 7.51 a dull eare Heb. 5.11 and an itching ear which is all for vain new curious things In the last dayes men will be so delicate that they will not endure common truths nor plain and profitable preaching but their Itching ears must have Clawing speakers which will speak sweet and pleasing things And this is the reason why one false Teacher prevails more in an hour in a corner then a Preacher of Truth can do in many years 't is because he preacheth Placentia and vents such things as are sutable to corrupt Nature Salt is fitter for such then Oyl though it be more searching yet it is more soveraign This Itching-disease was never so common as in our dayes we can meet with few but they have scabs upon them one hath the seal of Arminianism another hath the botch of Socinianism One hath the itch of Anabaptism another hath the scurff of Antinominianism Some have the itch in their feet they run after fools and fables some in their eyes they wander after vanities and others in their ears harkning after novelty We read in Scripture of a twofold itch A penal itch afflictive itch upon the body Deut. 28.27 The Lord shall smite thee with the scab and with an incurable itch Now this is nothing comparatively for though it be irksom to the body yet it may be good for the soul however 't is a judgement by which God is honoured but the itch of sin is the evil of evils there 's no goodness in it 2. There is a sinful spiritual itch upon the soul which is sevenfold viz. an itch of 1. Novelty 2. Curiosity 3. Singularity 4. Popularity 5. Flattery 6. Disputing 7. Quarrrelling 1. There is an Athenian Itch when men are all for Noveltie They must have Novum aut nihil Ordinary Truths will not down with them they must have New-notions which are extraordinary They are surfeted with old and wholesom Truths they must now hear some New Doctrine Acts 17.19 Not that a modest humble inquiry after Truth is to be condemned as Novelty as the Papists condemn us for Novelists because we have forsaken their by-paths to walk in the good old way which leads to rest Ier. 6.16 But 't is no wonder that pious paths seem new to them to whom the Gospel it self is new 2. An Itch of Curiosity when men will be wise above what is written Rom. 12.3 1 Cor. 4.6 And love to pry into Gods secrets and scan the Mysteries of Religion by carnal reason God oft plagues such curiosity with a fall when pride is in the saddle a fall is on the croop●r this pride is the mother of heresy Yet how many pry so long into the secrets of nature till they are past grace and seek so long after the Philosophers stone till at last they find the Devil himself God is displeased with such 1 Sam. 6.19 'T is his prerogative royal to have something in several that he might be the more admired in his deep mysteries we should not therefore desire a reason of his wayes beyond his revealed will Deut. 29. ult Rom. 9.20 In this our safety is to ●it still Exod. 33.18 20. And with the Apostle to adore those depths and counsels which we cannot fathom Rom. 11.33 See more in Church his Treasury p. 149 c. Granatensis p. 436 c. Tactica 5. Cap. 4. Sect. 4. p. 50.51 3. An Itch of singularity how many in our dayes for fear of popularity run into singularity they grow weary of sound solid savory and approved doctrine hunting after some aery speculations delighting themselves in some Terr● incognita in some untrodden paths of Divinity till thy fall into a snare This was the disease of the School-men like Nimrod to get themselves a Name they builded Babels to their own confusion I wish this scabies scalpenda this skurvy itch had onely infected the Vulgar but alas
those that are cloathed in scarlet are tainted with this du●ghil disease the Oaks of Bashan and the Cedars of Lebanon are become as so many Reeds shaken with every blast of strange Doctrine and every N●vel opinion is ready to transport them from the Truth to Fables 'T was Iohn Baptists glory and 't will be ours to be no such Reeds Matth. 11.7 An Itch of Popularity and applause they long to be in Print when they have been in travel with their New-notions they are even sick till they be publisht to the world They love to have it said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this is he that is in Print against Infant-Baptism against Magistracy against Ministery against the Trinity c. It 's pitty but some were better physickt for this Itch. Others have an Itch to be in the Pulpit and must in all hast be Teachers of others before they have learned themselves These would have some salt throwen on their Itch. 5. An itch after smooth pleasing preaching These itching ears love flattering Pr●●chers Isai. 30.20 They love to be clawed They have Musical-ears the Prophet's eloquence may delight them as some pleasing song but his wholesom direction they will not follow Ezek. 33.31 32. Plain-preaching is too harsh for their dainty ears they cannot endure to have those courses contradicted which they have pitcht upon and to which they have addicted themselves Neither can they endure to hear any one man long they must have an heap of Teachers They love to hear high-flowen-notions that they may discourse above the rate of their neighbours their curious Palats disrelish common food Priviledges when preacht please them but positive duties distast them These are high in their Notions but low in their practicals like children that have the Rickets grow in the head wither in the feet 6. An Itch of disputing We have many that love to question everything but they beleeve nothing They desire rather to dispute well then to live well This is the scab blemish of our age This Itch of Disputing hath almost destroyed all the Power of Godliness When men fall to wrangling they deal but truth as I have read many Suitors did by a Virgin one would have her another would have her tell at last they had pulled her all to pieces Luthers prayer therefore shall be mine From frivolous fruitless controversies good Lord deliver us Whilst men spend their strength and time about mint and cummin the weighty matters of the Law lye unregarded Better want a disputative-knowledge then that savory sanctifying affective-knowledge which will enable to die for the Truth though we cannot dispute for it 'T is holiness and obedience not disputing and wrangling which is the way to happiness 'T is well observed by one that disputations in Religion are sometimes necessary but alwayes dangerous drawing the best spirits into the head from the heart and leaving it either empty of all or too full of fleshly zeal and passion if extraordinary care be not taken still to supply and fill it anew with pious affections towards God and loving towards men 7. A quarreling contradicting itch which like a tetter the more it is rubbed the more it spreads it self They have critical ears they come to arraign the Minister at the Bar of their own judgment to judge that word by which they must be judged These come not to practice the Sermon but to quarrel with the Preacher Salamander like they love to live in the fire of contention God loves not saith Luther such Curists and Quaerists i. Such as are alwayes to their Cur why is it thus and thus and their Vtrums whether it be so and so We must believe and obey but not reason with God about his Commands there must be a quiet resignation of our wills to Gods Will. Thologia nostra est Pythagorica God hath said it and that 's sufficient to quiet a gracious soul. Fides est quietativa non disputativa Faith quietly and readily obeyes it doth not dispute Gods Command A beleever is not quarreling when he should be doing his duty It 's a good sign we are sincere when we do all things without murmuring and quarreling Philip. 2.14 15. We should therefore cast off all wranglings about toyes and trifles about niceties and novelties about things whereof we can neither have proof nor profit The cure of this Itch is 1. To acquiesce in the pure Word of God without any hunting after Novelties and Curiosities Love the Law and then ye will neither forget nor forsake it to follow Fables The root of Apostasy is want of affection to the Word when men serve not God with gladness of heart in the aboundance of spiritual mercies but grow weary of truth loath this Heavenly Mannah then 't is just with God to give them up to strong delusions to believe lyes Iob 12.16 Ezek. 24.4 9. 2 Thes. 2.11 When men will not be servants to Truth 't is just with God that they should be slaves to sin and error and when they will not serve God in the enjoyment of Ordinances they should serve their lusts in the want of them Amos 8.11 2. Take heed 1. Whom ye hear 2. How ye hear 1. Take heed whom and what you hear Faith comes not by hearing every Self-called-speaker but by hearing sent Teachers Rom. 10.14 15. Such as have Itching-ears love to hear all men many times grow out of love with all so that they can endure to hear none long If the Devil but can set the Itch upon thee of hearing New-teachers he 'l soon draw thee to believe lyes and fables His great design is to undermine the Ministery and steal peoples hearts from them if the Wolves but can get the Sheep from the Shepheards they will soon devour them If then you love your souls love your faithful Pastors and stick to them 2. Take heed how you hear as all the senses must be guarded so must this set a Watch-man on it and take heed how see to the manner as well as to the matter of your hearing Luke 8.18 The ear is an honourable part 't is sensus disciplinae the sense which conveighs instruction into the soul. For delight 't is an excellent sense therefore the ears are called the daughters of Musick Eccles. 12.4 By it Faith which is the Grace of graces is conveyed into the soul. Rom. 10.17 Faith comes by hearing and not by seeing Labour then for an intelligent obedient circumcised mortified ears which is a choice mercy Matth. 13.16 23. Rom. 2.29 To this end we must hear the Word 1. Preparedly 2. Attentively 3. Intentively 4. Retentively 5. Understandingly 6. Discreetly 7. Beleevingly 8. Reverentially 9. Affectionally with Love Desire Joy 10. Obedientially 1. There must be preparation before we hear and that not onely habitual but an actual washing of our hearts and hands before we come to Gods Altar Psal. 26.9 Ezra 7.10 Iob 11.13 14. Eccles. 5.7
Sancta sanctis these holy things call for holy Ones We must first take an holy Vomit and by a sincere confession of sin rid our stomacks and purge out of our souls those malignant peccant humors of malice guil hypocrisy filthiness and superfluity and naughtiness before we can receive the Word with meekness so as to grow thereby 1 Pet. 2.1 2. Iames 1.22 Iacob purgeth his family before he goes to Bethel Gen. 35.1 2. The husband-man first rids his ground of those bushes briars and brambles which stand in his way and then falls to plowing before he goes to sowing and so must we first rid our hearts of all inordinate cares which like thornes choak the good seed of the Word and then receive it into honest and good hearts Matthew 13. Ier. 4.3 when the people were prepared for the hearing of the Law Exodus 19. Then and not till Then doth God speak unto them Exodus 20.1 Our Translation reads it And but former Translations render it Then and so saith the Arabick Version Deinde then or after that viz. they were prepared Many come but like Rachel they bring their Idolls with them Genesis 31.19 like the Samaritans they will serve the Lord and their Idolls too 2 Kings 17.33 Such God disownes Ver. 34. They serve not me saith God he will have all or none at all and therefore he threatens to set himself against such Ezekiel 14 7 8. there is no standing with comfort or confidence before God in our sins Ezra 9. ●lt The prime cause of so little profiting after so long hearing is our unpreparednesse for the duety This hardens the heart Accidentally maketh it more blind Isay 6.9 10. The Sun softens waxe but hardens clay and if the word be not the savour of Life then contrary to its own Nature meeting with the rebellious hearts of men it hardeneth them and becommeth the savour of death unto them 2 Corinthians 2.16 2. Hear Atte●tively give heed to what is delivered Acts 5.16 There is no getting or keeping knowledge without attention Proverbs 5.1 2. Let a Minister preach never so powerfully if the people sleep talk gaze or come when ha●● is done they cannot profit We should rouse up our selves to attend as for our lives remembring it is for Eternity The people that heard our Saviour attended or as the word signifieth they hanged upon him Luke 19. ult as the young birds doe upon the Bill of the Damme every one openeth his mouth to see which can catch it and that bird which is not sed waits till his turn cometh They hung upon him as Bees on Flowers to suck out the Virtue that is in them so Luke 4.20 3. Intentively with the highest intention of Affection We must hearken diligently and encline our ears to hear Isay 55.2 3. We must set our hearts on the things we hear for it is our life Deut 32.46 Ezek. 40.4 The word must not swim in our Heads but sink down into our eares and Hearts Luke 9.44 we must mark it diligently and entertain it readily The Kingdome of Heaven must suffer violence and we must take it by force Matthew 11.12 4. R●tentively We must retain the Word and lock it up in our hearts as a Jewel of the greatest price So did Mary Luke 2.51 and so must we Deuteronomy 11.18 Iob 22.22 Proverbs 2.1 Iohn 15.20 an holy remembrance of Gods Word is an excellent preservative against sin Psalm 119.11 and a singular support to us in our trouble● Psalm 73.17 Hereby we shall be the better enabled to practice what we hear we cannot practice what we forget The sciens must be grafted into the stock before it can grow the Word must be graffed in our heads and hearts before we can bring forth fruit to Christ Iames 1.21 The Devil useth all means to steal the word out of our hearts and to make us forget it Matthew 13.19 For he knoweth it is the way to blessednesse when men hear the Word and keep it Luke 11.27 28. We should therefore pray for the Spirit of Grace which may lead us into all Truth and bring all good things to our remembrance Iohn 14.26 and 16.13 and pray with David that God would keep his Truth in the imaginations of the thoughts of our hearts 1 Chronicles 29.18 2. Love the Word we doe not easily forget the things which we love Ieremiah 2.32 If Rachel love her Fathers Idolls she will lay them up Genesis 31.34 Want of Affection breedeth want of memory If David delight in Gods Law hee will never forget his Word Psalm 119.6 3. Use the Meanes Reade Heare Meditate Conferre Apply the Word and write it as Baruc did Ieremies Sermons Ier. 36. 4. The Israelites must make them Fringes that they may not forget the Law Numbers 15.38.39 and above all be sure to receive the Word with all readinesse of minde Acts 17.11 It is a mercy that we heare the Word a greater mercy when we can approve of it but the greatest mercie is to receive it into our hearts in the Love of it 1 Thessalonians 2.13 When we can eate the Word Ieremiah 15.16 and receive its sharpest reproofes with submission and Thankefulnesse 1 Samuel 25.33 Psalm 141.5 5. Vnderstandingly We must not barely reade but we must search the Scriptures and labour to understand what we heare Matthew 15.10 Iohn 5.39 Praying for the Spirit of Illumination Ephesians 1. 17.18 6. Discreetly we must Try the Doctrine before we trust it Though it be Paul that Preach yet the Beraeans will trie his Doctrine by the Scriptures Acts 17.11 and Paul calleth on his hearers to Judge and consider what he said 1 Corinthians 10.15 and 2 Timothy 2.7 1 Thessalonians 5.21 and biddeth them Try the Spirits 1 Iohn 4.1 God hath given his People an Anointing to this end that they may be able to judge and discern of things that differ Colossians 1.9 10. We will not take gold but We will try it first and we will count Money after our own Fathers and shall we take Doctrines onely upon trust 7. Beleevingly we must by faith apply it to our selves whether it be for Humiliation or Consolation Iob 5.27 It must be engraffed in our hearts by Faith Iames 1.21 This is the way to make it effectual Romans 1.2.16 1 Cor. 1.21 Unbelief bars the heart against the Word and maketh it unprofitable to the hearers Heb. 4.2 8. Reverentially no service pleaseth God that is not mixt with Reverence and feare Psalm 2.1 Hebrewes 12.28 We must set our selves as in Gods presence and so heare as if God himselfe spake to us so did Cornelius though a Souldier and a great man Acts 10.33 So did the Thessalonians 1 Thess. 2.13 They received not the Word as the word of Paul but as the Word of God It is God that speaketh to us by the mouth of his Prophets Luke 1.70 and 10 16. Daniel 9.10 Micah 6.9 Iohn 1.23 2 Corinthians 5.20 We are Christs Embassadours and the words of an
and death is but a long sleep till the Resurrection Iohn 11.11 Acts 13.36 Let Atheists and Epicurean worldlings who have their portion onely in this life fear death because it puts an end to all their pleasures and hopes Iob 11. ult Hence Lewis the Eleventh King of France a bloody persecutor commanded his servants in the time of his sickness that they should never once name that bitter word death in his eares But Christ hath died to free his people from this slavish fear of death Heb. 2.15 by his death he hath sweetned our death unto us and changed the nature of it and hath made that which was sometimes a curse now to be a blessing of a foe he hath made it a friend of a poyson a medicine and of a punishment an advancement He lay in the grave to sweeten and season our graves for us so that now our flesh may rest in hope Psal. 16.9 Proverbs 14.32 Observation 4. 4. The soul of man is immortal Death is not an Annihilation but a Migration of the soul from the body for a time As soon as ever the soul departeth from the body it is presently in blisse Revelations 14.13 they are not onely blest at the day of judgement but also in the intermission The soul doth not sleep or perish but the souls of the Saints go to a better place and to better company viz. to Christ and to the spirits of just men made perfect Iosiah was gathred to his father in peace 1. to the spirits of his fathers who enjoyed peace for in respect of his Body he was slain in battle The soul never dieth but subsisteth still even when it goeth out of the body it returneth to God that gave it Eccles. 12.7 Hence Paul desires to be dissolved why so that he might be with Christ Philippians 1.23 and desires to be loosed from the body that he might be present with the Lord 2 Cor. 5.8 Christ telleth the thief on the Crosse this day shalt thou be with me in Paradice Luke 23.43 Steven when stoned cries Lord Iesus receive my spirit Acts 7.59 Christ hath prepared immortal mansions for it Iohn 14.2 and what should mortal souls do in ●mmortal dwellings and why is the Devil so serviceable why doth he make Covenants and Compacts with wicked men for their souls yea and why doth he offer the world in exchange for a soul if it be but a mortal perishing thing To what end are all those promises of Eternal life which are made to those that deny themselves if in this life onely they had hope Then all the Threatnings of Eternal death and all those sorrowes which the Scripture affirmeth shall light on the wicked would be false for here they have mirth ease and pleasure and if they had no punishment hereafter where were the Truth of Gods threatnings and where his Justice The Scripture is clear that the pleasures of good men and the pains of bad men are eternall then it must needs follow that the souls of men which are the Subjects of these pains and pleasures cannot be mortal But here our Mortalists Object 1. Objection If the soul of man be ex Traduce as some affirme then it is mortall for Omne generabile est corruptibile Answer The soul cometh not ex Traduce by Propagation from our Parents as the souls of Beasts which come è potentia materiae but the soul is created and infused by God and not propagated as appeareth Gen. 2 7. Eccles. 12.7 Zach. 12.1 See Doctor Reynolds on the Passions cap. 32. p. 392. Piscator his Annot. on Gen. 2.7 Baronius de Origine animae Exercit. 2. art 3. 2. Objection The dead are said to sleep and to perish Psalm 6.5 and 104.29 Isay 38.18 and 57.1 Job 14.7.10 Answer This is spoken in respect of their bodies not of their souls The dead do not praise thee saith David viz. not in the land of the living on earth but in Heaven they sing Hallelujahs Rev. 5.9 A tree when it is cut down may sprout again saith Iob but man dieth and giveth up the Ghost and where is he This will not help the sleepy Sadduces of our times for tho Physically and by the course of Nature man cannot revive again yet Hyperphysically and by a supernatural Almighty power he shall arise So that Where is is to be restrained to where is he in the world look for him in City or Countrey at home or abroad he 's not to be found Man gives up the Ghost and where is he with all his riches honours plots and purposes 3. Objection Eccles. 3.19.20 21. As the beast dieth so dieth man they have all one breath Answer 1. Solomon here as oft elsewhere in this Booke doth bring in the Atheist deriding the immortality of the soul he speaketh the opinion of other men and not his own Solomons own judgement you may see Eccles. 12.7 2. Take it in the Letter and then Solomon speaketh not of the soul of man but of animal and vital breath which is common to both he speaketh of mans mere natural condition else in respect of mans future condition his body shall rise again and come to judgement So that here is no comparison between the soul of man and that of beasts but between the death of the one and of the other q. d. both are liable to death pains and diseases 4. Objection Matth. 8.22 and 10.28 Ephes. 2.1 The soul is said to die Answer The soul is not said to die in respect of Existence and being but relatively in respect of Gods grace and favour 'T is a separation of the soul from God who is the fountain of life and is a living death and a ceasing not to be but to be happy 5. Objection 1 Tim. 1.17 and 6.16 God onely is said to have immortality How then are mens souls immortal Answer The answer is easie Immortality is twofold 1. Essential Absolute Natural and Independant and so God onely is immortal à parte antè from all Eternity he 's the onely Author and continuer of it 2. Derivative and by Donation communicated to man and so our souls are immortal and our bodies though subject to corruption yet by Divine Ordination shall be immortal after the Resurrection Wo then to those Atheistical Mortalists and Libertines which have sinned away conscience and have led loose lives and now are fallen to loose opinions Open but this gap and farewell Lawes Civility Religion and all that is good Grant but this and farewell all noble actions and all spiritual comforts then Christ died the Apostles laboured and the Martyrs suffered in vain If this Doctrine were true then all our Faith our Hope our Praying Preaching Fasting self-denial mortification sowing in tears and spiritual combats would be in vain and we should be in a worse condition then the beasts that perish If this were true then why did Abraham forsake all Ioseph forbeare his Mistress Moses refuse the pleasures of Pharaohs
in Prayer for their Ministers warriours had need of Prayers and if I must pray for mine enemy then sure much more for my Minister and if Christ prayed for them shall not we Iohn 16.26 and 17. 1. Consider we are men and so subject to like Passions as other men and therefore we have need of your Prayers 2. We are Brethren and in respect of this Relation we may justly challenge your prayers Whom will you pray for if you will not pray for your Brethren This made the Apostle so earnest with the Romans 15.30 I beeseech you Brethren for the Lord Iesus Christs sake and for the love of the Spirit that ye strive together with me in your Prayers to God for me See with what earnestness this great Apostle begs for Prayers So Ephes. 6.19 2 Cor. 1.11 1 Thess. 5.15 He doth not say Brethren commend us or Brethren maintain us but Brethren Pray for us In this the poorest may be helpful to us Pray that our number may be increased Matthew 9.35 Atheists cry it was never good world since there was so much Preaching I say the world would be better if there were more Pray that they may be continued it s a special mercy when our eyes can see our Teachers and they be not removed into corners Isay 30.20 Pray that we may be restored Hebrewes 13.18 19. Prayer hath a Vertue in it to bring back those banisht ones Pray for us in our Temptations and Afflictions that God would sweeten and sanctifie them and uphold us under them The Devil winnowes all but he sifts Christs Peters as men do wheat which they sift most accurately he shooteth his sharpest arrowes and chooseth out the smoothest stones to throw at these Leaders of Gods Host. Pray that God would give us abilities and hearts to improve these abilities that he would give success to our labours and enable us to persevere in despight of all discouragement whatsoever 3. Consider we are your spiritual Fathers 2 Kings 2.12 Nature teacheth men to pray for natural Fathers and grace for spiritual 4. They pray for you great reason then that you should pray for them Yea in praying for them you pray for your selves for they are your servants in Christ. Now if we must pray for those to whom we are related but as men how much more should we pray for our Ministers in whom all these Relations concenter and meet who are Men Brethren Fathers Watchmen Shepherds Nurses Warriours 1 Timothy 1.18 and 2.4 that fight for the Churches safety Woe to those that in stead of Praying for us they Carp at us and Curse us and cry they are covetous proud graceless giftless c. vain man when thou seest such thou shouldest pitty them and pray for them that God would give them free humble gracious spirits and thou revilest them because they cross thy sin and errours as if Meroz should curse the Angel because the Angel cursed him for his neutrality These shew what spirit leads them Now the life of man is compared to a warfare in eleven respects 1. In war there is watching souldiers must stand on their guard continually for fear of a surprisal to the loss of all So every Christian being surrounded with spiritual enemies must watch and pray continually Matthew 26.41 It is the way to blessedness Matthew 24.46 2. In warring there must be arming another man may go unarmed but he that is a souldier must be armed Capape as they say from top to toe if any part be unarmed it may cost him his life as it did Ahab who was wounded between the joynts of the harness 1 Kings ult 34. So a Christian must gird on his spiritual armour for the weapons of our warfare are not carnal such as swords staves crosses pictures c. but spiritual and mighty to throw down the Devils strong holds 2 Cor. 10.4 that is armour of darkness this is armour of light Romans 13.12 such as shineth to the glory of God and the good of our Brethren We must not content our selves with one or two pieces of this armour but we must put on the whole Armour of God which consisteth of six pieces Ephes. 6.11 c. 1. We must get the girdle of truth we must be all Nathaniels not onely Israelites in name and profession but Israelites in deed and truth There must be sincerity and truth in our judgement affections words and actions He that is thus ungirt is unblest and will never endure in a day of trial painted armour is good for little 2. The Breast-plate of Righteousness Get a gracious life and a good conscience this is armour of proof against all the assaults of the Devil 3. Patience V. 15. We must pass through many thorny temptations and persecutions so that unless we be well shod with patience we shall tire and faint in our warfar there is no running our heavenly race without it Heb. 10.36 and 12.1 4. The shield of faith V. 16. This grace leads us out of our selves to Christ whose righteousness covers all our unrighteousness and whose perfection covers all our imperfections and so defends us against all the fierce assaults and fiery darts of Satan 5. The Helmet of Hope This expects what faith beleeves and keeps the soul from fainting a head without an helmet is exposed to danger 6. The Sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God of all the peeces of armour this must not be forgotten no sword like this 't is two-edged 't is both offensive and defensive with this Christ cut off Satans temptaions thrice together Matth. 4. These are those weapons of righteousness on the right hand and the left with which we must war against all the enemies of our Salvation 2 Cor. 6.7 See more in Dr. G●wge on Ephes. 6. Mr. Gournall Mr. R●binson and Dr. Arrowsmith Tactica Sacra l. 2.1 to 11. 3. He must have Skill and knowledg how to manage his weapons his hands must be taught to war and his fingers to fight 'T was the commendation of Davids Champions that they were men of might fit for the Battle that could handle shield and buckler whose faces were like the faces of Lions and they were swift as Roes 1 Chron. 12.8 Here were men fitted and accomplisht with skill and courage for their work they were apti nati as we say cut out for Souldiers Raw untaught untrained men will either fly before the enemy or dy by his sword Solomon therefore would have us with counsel and good advice to make war Prov. 20.18 For wisdom is better then strength Eccles. 9.18 He must have the Art of fighting as there is an Art of Holy living and an Art of Holy dying so there is an Art of Holy fighting which every Christian must learn he must have skill to know the Methode depths and periods of that old serpent the Devil and his Agents the Jesuits and Sectaries who are as subtle as the Devil can make them their
Lord the Jehovah the true and the living God coessential and coequal with his Father Neither is the Title of God and Lord given to Christ Secundarily Improperly and Metaphorically as they are given to Angels and Magistrates as the Socinians affirme ● yea Catachristically and abusively Idols Devils and mens bellies are called their gods But the Title is given to Christ Primarily and properly as the Creator and Preserver of all things the Lord Paramount of all the World the King of Kings and Lord of Lords But of this at large before V. 1. And strengthned me 3. Observation 3. Strengthning grace is the gift of God He doth not onely give us Renewing grace and then leave us to our own free-will but he giveth us persevering grace also As he is the Author of our grace by Vocation so he is the finisher of it by preservation He confirmeth and establisheth us unto the end 2 Cor. 1.21 Hence David calleth God his Rocke Psalm 18.2 and we are commanded to be strong in the Lord and the power of his might Ephes. 6.10 It is he that doth enable us and strengthen us with all might in our inward man 1 Coloss 1.11 1 Timothy 1.12 A little strength will not doe because we have no little enemies to encounter but we must be strengthned with all might and with all Patience that we may doe all the good we can withstand all the evil we can and patiently suffer when we can withstand no longer Rest not content that you are Babes in Christ and have grace begun but grow till you become strong men in Christ. To this end we must be sensible of our own exceeding weakness nothing stronger then Humility that goeth out of it self nothing weaker then Pride that rests on its own bottom That by me the Preaching might be fully known 4. Observation 4. Whilest God hath any work for his servants to doe he will assist and uphold them in despite of all oppositions Though Nero rage against Paul and all men forsake him yet God will assist him that he may preach the Gospel to the world We need not fear the Foxes and Furies of the times we have our day and to morrow to work in and till that time which God hath allotted us be expired all the Devils in Hell and all the Dogs in the world cannot remove us Luke 13.32 How long was David vext with ungodly men yet he slept not till he had served his generation Acts 13.36 Herod sought to kill Peter but at the Prayers of the Church the prisoner is rescued out of his hands yet when he had finished his work and was ripe for Martyrdome then he falls with ease Ahab and Iezabel seek the life of Elijah yet was he preserved till he had finisht his work and then was he translated Luther was oft cursed by many Popes yet he finisht his course and died in Peace Queen Elizabeth was also cursed by many Popes but God turned the curses of those Romish Balaams into blessings for she outlived nine or ten of them and at last died in her bed full of dayes riches and honour Our comfort is that our times are not in our enemies hands but in the hands of a gracious God who best knows how long it is good for us to live and when to die Psalm 31.15 when we have finisht our course he will take us to himself in glory Iohn 17.4 5. Let us then faithfully discharge the duties of our several places and commit the success to God in whose hand is our life and all that we possess And that all the Gentiles might heare 5. Observation 5. God would have his Truth revealed to the sons of men He would have the Gospel known fully known to the Gentiles to all the Gentiles yea to all Nations whether Jewes or Gentiles Mat. 28.19 Truth is good and the more common it is the better where it getteth ground Satans Kingdome falleth like lightning from Heaven suddenly and irresistably Luke 10.18 Let none then hide their Talents but as the Sun freely communicateth its light and heat to us so let us freely impart our gifts unto others See eight quickning considerations to this duty And I was delivered out of the mouth of the Lion 6. Observation 6. The Churches enemies oft times are Lions Lions for Potency Lions for Policy Psal. 17.12 Lions for cruelty Lions for Terror Hence they are so oft in Scripture called Lions Psalm 10.9 and 22.13 and 35.17 Prov. 28.15 Ier. 2 15. Ezek. 19.2 Such we are all by Nature in our places and degrees till grace change us Isay 10.7 and then we shall be Lions for Christ i. magnanimous and couragious in his cause Prov. 28.1 the righteous are bold as Lions which good in the Creature we should imitate which evil shun Be Serpents for Policy and not for poyson Lions for prowess and not for rapine 2. Be not familiar with these Lious come not near their dens lest they make a prey of you have no fellowship with such unfruitfull works of darkness but reprove them rather 7. Observation 7. God many times suffers his dearest children to fall into the mouths of these Lions so that to a carnal eye they seem hopeless and helpless even as a Lamb that is in the pawes and jawes of a hungry Lion is given up for lost This was Pauls case he was not onely in the den but in the vere jawes of Nero that proud Potent furious Lion who killed his Master slew his Mother crucified Peter made foul havock of the Church and at last to save himself from the fury of the people he slew himself saying Dedecorosè vixi turpiùs peream My life was base and my death shall be answ●rable This was the case of Israel in Egypt the Jewes in Babylon the Primitive Christians in the dayes of the persecuting Emperours and ever since by Antichrist yea since the dayes of Abel to this day the people of God have been as so many Lambs encompassed with rageing Lions who on all occasions have laboured to make a prey of them yet the Lord maketh a Treacle of this Viper by this means he purgeth his people from their dross and fits them for his Kingdome as Ignatius said sometimes Dei frumentum sum c. I am Gods corn and I must be ground with the teeth of wild beasts that I may be pure Manchet for my Lord and Master Gods wayes to his Church are mysterious wayes Isay 45.25 He hath a wheel in the wheels and when we think they go backward and all makes against the Church yet he makes them go forward and promote their interest Ezckiel 1.16.21 8. Observation 8. That God will deliver his from this great danger He that brought thee into the mouth of the Lion will bring thee out again Dan. 6.22 God is omnipotent and omniscient he hath both skill and will to deliver his people though we know not which way yet it is sufficient
sight to see Old M●ason's old Cedars in the house of God old disciples whom no storms nor tempests can drive from the truth Acts 21.16 like the Church of Thyatira to have our works more at last then at the first Revel 2.19 like spiritual Sampson we must break the cords of difficulties forgetting what is past and pressing towards the work Like Heroick Luther whom men nor devils could draw or drive from the truth And like another Caesar not cease from doing till all be done Nil actum credens cum quid superesset agendum Instat atrux Lucan Pharsal l. 2. To this end we must first labour to know the truth for how can a man walk in a way which he doth not know 2. When we have found the way we must walk in it with full purpose and resolution Ier. 6.16 Acts 11.23 let the understanding be never so clearly convinct yet if the will resolve not to obey there is no good to be done 3. Lay a good foundation dig deep he that will build high must lay low Deny your own strength and wisdom for in his own strength shall no man be strong 1 Sam. 2.2 9. but we must be strong in the Lord and the Power of his might if ever we look to overcome Ephes. 6.10 if ever we would be able to do or suffer we must get vertue and strength from Christ. Philip. 4.13 We are never stronger then when we are most apprehensive of our own weaknesse 1 Cor. 12.10 nor ever weaker then when we trust most to our selves as we see in Peter and in the book of Martyrs the timerous trembling souls who suspected their own strength were faithful to the death when the proud and Self-confident basely turned with the times 4. Put on the whole armour of God and gird it close to you An ignorant unbelieving unarmed man hath no heart to fight 't is the man that hath the shield of Faith the helmet of Hope the breast-plate of Righteousnesse the girdle of Truth c. that like the valiant horse rejoyceth to meet the armed man Iob 39.19 20. the Apostles were armed with these graces and see how boldly they go on in despight of all opposition 2 Cor. 6.4 to 8. He that would see more of Constancy and perseverance let him peruse Dike on Conscience cap. 9. p. 130. c. Barkers Serm. before the Parliament 1648. on 1 Cor. 15. ult Gatakers Serm. on Revel 2.10 fol. p. 317. Downams Guide to Godlinesse l. 3. c. 1. and l. 4. c. 8 9 10 Hildersham on Psal. 51.7 Lect. 144. to 150. all those six last Lectures are very useful for our times M. Vennings Serm. on Rev. 2.5 In the things which thou hast learned Observe That even the best are learners here Whilest wee live in this world though we should live Methuselahs dayes yet we may learn something still We know but in part and the most perfect are imperfect here Object We have the Spirit to teach us Answ. So had David who yet desires to be taught still Psal. 119. So had Paul who yet prest forward toward the mark still Philip. 3.12 13 14. he disclaimes perfection and desires to know Christ more clearly Our learning doth not hinder but further the work of the Spirit in our souls Timothy that had a plentiful measure of the spirit for he was an Evangelist yet must give himself to reading and meditation still 1 Tim. 4.13 Such is the profoundnesse of the Scripture that he who knoweth most may still learn more and the more we know the more we shall acknowledge our ignorance And hast been assured of or as others read it which hath been committed to thee The truth was not barely delivered to Timothy but it was committed to him to be kept as a sacred Treasury with the greatest care Observe That the Truth of God revealed in the Scripture is a sacred depositum a choyce Treasure a precious Jewel which must be carefully kept by all Christians and especially by the Ministers of Christ. The Oracles of God and the doctrine of the Gospel is more specially committed to our care and fidelity that we may publish it to others 'T is true every private Christian in his Sphere and Calling ought to preserve the truth and contend for the faith Iude 3. we cannot keep the truth without strong contention the word signifies to strive with all our might or say some it's to strive one after another in our places and successive generations Insuper certare or certamen repetere it 's not enough to strive once and to assert the truth but we must doe it again and again after one another as oft as the Truth is opposed But the Gospel is committed primarily to the care of Christs Ministers they are his Heralds to proclaim and publish it to the world as appeares 1 Tim. 1.11 and 6.20 and 2.1 14. 1 Thes. 2.4 Titus 1.3 1 Cor. 9.17 Gal. 2.7 of all men Ministers must hold fast the faithful word Titus 1.9 we must hold it against all opposition and hold it with both hands hold it with all our strength hold it in our Judgements in our Affections in our Practice part with it at no rate to Schismaticks Hereticks false Prophets c. As Moses was faithfull and would not part with a hoof to Pharaoh so we must not part with a tittle of Gods truth to his enemies for all Truths even the least are precious truth is like gold which is glorious in the Ray and Spangle as well as in the wedge As 't is in Practicals he that makes no conscience of little sins will quickly be drawn to greater so 't is true and holds in Doctrinalls he that admits of a little error will soon be drawne to a greater Though every truth be not fundamental yet every truth is a guard to the foundation the outer skin of an Apple lyes remote from the heart yet if you pluck that off the heart will soon be rotten The finger is not a vital part but a Gangrene in the finger will in a short time reach to the very vitals and corrupt the blood with the spirits Not onely the garment of Truth but the fringes thereof are useful and must be preserved Numb 15.38 39 40. We experimentally see that those who forsake Truth in Discipline quickly fall to errors in Doctrine We shall hardly find a man that erres in the one to be sound in the other As therefore we must count no sin small so we must esteem no error small for the least truth of Gods Kingdome doth in its place uphold the whole Kingdome of his truth Take away the least Vericulum out of the world and it unworlds all Potentially and may unravell the whole Texture Actually if it be not conserved by an extraordinary power 2. Consider that truth is the choycest gift which God ever gave to the sonnes of men it is better then any created Ens or Bonum which