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A17385 A commentary upon the three first chapters of the first Epistle generall of St. Peter VVherin are most judiciously and profitably handled such points of doctrine as naturally flow from the text. Together with a very usefull application thereof: and many good rules for a godly life. By Nicholas Byfield preacher of Gods Word at Isleworth in Middlesex. To which is now newly added an alphabeticall table, not formerly published. Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622.; Gouge, William, 1578-1653.; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Commentary: or, sermons upon the second chapter of the first epistle of Saint Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the ten first verses of the third chapter of the first Epistle of S. Peter. aut; Byfield, Nicholas, 1579-1622. Sermons upon the first chapter of the first Epistle generall of Peter. aut 1637 (1637) STC 4212; ESTC S107139 978,571 754

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It should teach us by all means to labour about assurance that we might with boldnesse and confidence goe unto God and cry Abba Father 2. That he that is the Father of the Elect will be the Judge of the world Though it be hard for a pittifull man to be strict in punishing yet with God his mercy and justice doe not fight one against another The Use is to warne wicked men to take heed how they apply the promises and prerogatives of the godly to themselves for God will certainely judge them according to their estate 3. Constant prayer is a great meanes of comfort against the feare of judgement in this life and against the hurt of it in the last day Luke 21.34 The Use is to shew us how wee may remedy the feare of death and judgements much prayer and calling on the Name of God will exceedingly availe 4. That to call on God as a Father will not serve turne unlesse our practice answer our prayers unlesse we passe the time of our sojourning in feare it is not any pattering our of words will serve the turne nor praying for customes sake it must be such a prayer as makes us afraid to sin before such a Father 〈◊〉 such a Judge 5. Wh●n he saith if we call it imports that many professe God to be their Father who yet doe not shew it to be so by daily and constant calling upon his name It is a great question whether many that professe God and his truth doe indeed conscionably pray unto him which should awaken us and make us settle close to the practice of daily prayer 6. It is a lawfull prayer that is directed to one of the persons of the Trinity in the outward forme of words I meane that though we should name onely the Father and not mention the Son or holy Ghost yet the prayer were lawfull so as 1. We doe not exclude the other persons in our judgements and affections 2. That we desire upon the present occasion to compell our hearts to a more speciall meditation of the glory of one of the persons as the occasion of the matter requireth But the maine and principall doctrine is that God as he is our Father shall be our Judge If any aske How then is Christ commonly said to be our Judge Act. 17.30 I answer that the last judgement being a work ad extra is common to all the three Persons and is so attributed in Scripture but in different respe●ts for the authority of the last judgement is in the whole Trinity but the execution of it is in the Sonne This doctrine must needs be comfortable to the godly who would feare the tryall when his owne Father is Judge yea and law-giver and hath before promised infinite mercy and is an everlasting Father 〈◊〉 compassion never failes for so is God to us and hath given pledge and seales and earnest of assurance that it shall goe well Thus of the person who shall judge The manner followeth Without respect of persons The●e are 〈◊〉 downe many admirable praises of the justice of these last Assises whereof this is one that here shall be no respect of persons It pleaseth God in so great mysteries as this is not to set downe all at once but to distill some few memorable things and those severally both to excise diligence in the study of the Scriptures and to imply the disability of our na 〈…〉 comprehend much at once of such dreadfull things Not to respect persons in judgement hath divers things in it It is to judge without 〈◊〉 ●t is to judge without care how the judged takes it it is to judge without respect of their strength or disgrace it is to take no reward 〈…〉 accept the persons of great men for their greatnesse or riches sake it is to be led with no colours or vain pretences it is to judge according to truth and not according to opinion or the common voice and t●us much and much more is imported in this justice of the Lord at that day The Use is 1. For humiliation and terror to wicked men This should wonderfully pierce them ●o hear how they must speed at that day their judgement shall not be to amend them but to confound them the same God that hath dealt with other men in justice will judge them also and this may increase the terror that there will be no taking of rewards nor can riches availe in the day of wrath Iob 36.18 19. unlesse it be to increase their judgement Iam. 5.1 3. 2. For instruction it may teach divers things 1. To chase out all evill conceits and secret boilings of the heart against God Iob. 34.19 2. To humble our selves now in the dayes of our flesh and make our peace with God before this day come Deut. 10.17 Iob 34.19 32 33. 3. To imitate this praise in God not to know men after the flesh or to judge of things according to outward appearance or the opinion of the world especially not to give titles to men Iob 32.21 and especially Judges and such as rule others should looke to this 2 Chron. 19.7 Col. 3.25 4. To long to see that day every body delights to be at the Assises and we see how men are pleased and that wonderfully when Princes doe justice upon great persons we gladly hearken after it and continually talke of it how then should we long to see this last and greatest judgement the like to which never was in the world scarce any glimpse of it 3. It may serve for singular consolation to all the godly especially it may incourage the poore and all inferiors to doe their duties since here they shall be assured of acceptation and the oppressed shall here be righted Act. 10.34 Col. 3.11 Eph. 6.9 Rom. 2.11 Iudgeth The manner of propounding the time is to be obserued There is a threefold judgement 1. The first judgement was that executed upon Angels and men fallen in the beginning of the world 2. There is also a middle judgement even that by which God in this life judgeth the righteous and the wicked every day 3. Now there is also the last judgement to be performed in the end of the world and that is here meant yet the Apostle well expresseth it in the present tense to note 1. The speedinesse of it he will come to judgement wonderfull quickly either by particular or generall judgement Phil. 4. Iam. 5. 2. The suddennesse of the judgement he many times comes on a wonderfull sudden Iob 36.33 and at the last he will come as a theefe in the ●ight 1 Thes. 5.2 3. But principally it noteth the certainty of it it is as sure as if it were now a doing certainty I say in freedome both from inconstancy and impediments There are many things may assure us of the certainty of the last judgment 1. The constant doctrine of it before the Law Iud. 15. under the ●aw by David Psal. 50.
redeeming the holy Ghost by calling The word of God is the sampler or patterne of our obedience for if ever wee would bring our lives into order we must resolve not to follow mens examples wills lusts or our owne reasons inclinations or conjectures but only to have recourse to the Law of God this must be the light to our feete and the lanthorne to our pathes Psal. 119. 19.2 Tim. 3.15 to the end we must obey them that have the over-sight of us and doe instructs out of the word and observe the forme of doctrine into which wee are delivered Rom. 6.17 Heb. 7.18 and receive such teachers as the Corinthians received Titus 2 Cor. 7.15 we should get an eare of obedience Prov. 25.12 2. The causes within us are either 1. generall the sanctification of our spirit or 2. speciall and so it is Faith For the first the coherence shewes that unlesse our hearts be sanctified our lives can never bee framed to true holinesse and obedience and for faith it is certaine before ever we can practise true obedience to the Law we must have the obedience of Faith that is we must be perswaded of Gods love to us and receive his promises in Christ and repenting of our sinnes beleeve the Gospell Rom. 1.5 10.16 2 Thess. 1.8 The faith of the Truth is generally the chiefe guide of all our actions whether they be workes of reformation or of our generall calling or particular cariage 2 Thess. 3.16 For we must beleeve Gods threatnings power promises assistance and reward or else our worke will goe slowly forward 2. Now for the second there are sixe things to be observed in the maner of our obedience without which our life will never be brought into order 1. The first is care The Apostle saith we must yeeld our selves as servants to obey Rom. 6.16 which notes that wee must doe the workes of God and s●ew our obedience to him as the servant doth his worke that is with great heed forecast and care God doth not only require we should obey but obey as servants obey 2. The second thing required in our obedience is Wisdome It is not enough to doe good but we must be wise to that which is good and simple concerning evill This the Apostle shewes Rom. 16.19 3. The third is Constancy our obedience must bee fulfilled 2 Cor. 10.16 We must not be weary of well-doing 1 Thess. 3.13 4. The fourth is abnegation In obeying Gods will we must throughout the course of our lives be contented to deny our selves so as we would doe Gods will with patience though crosses follow Luke 8. A signe of the seed sowne in good ground it bringeth forth fruit with patience and besides it imports that if we meane to reforme our lives aright we must live soberly shewing our moderation in diet apparell recreations and the like yea we must not thinke it much to be crossed in our reason desires ease profits or preferments but be contented to be that we may be with a good Conscience Heb. 11.8 Gen. 22.18 5. The fifth is sincerity and the sincerity of our obedience appeares both when we shew respect to all Gods Commandements as well as one obeying in all things as also when we obey without corrupt and carnall ends and respects Gen. 26.5 Phil. 2.12 6. The sixth thing is peace wee must lay our projects so for holinesse as we follow after peace as much as is possible and that with all men much more with the Church and people of God Rom. 12.19 Heb. 12.14 so as our conversation be without division or offence Rom. 16.18 19. 3. For the third point we may remember that it was long since noted by Samuel that obedience is better than sacrifice 1 Sam. 15. This obedience is the end of the writings of the Apostles and Prophets If we be not trained up by the Scriptures to good workes we doe nothing with generall profession of the name of Christ. Rom. 1.5 2 Tim. 3.15 c. If we obey not we are the servants of sinne and it will be our ruine we shall dye in our sinnes The Ministery had never been broken open but that the Nations might bee brought to obedience Rom. 16.26 If you obey not you breake the hearts of your teachers it is not good words and liberall pensions will serve the turne you must yeeld obedience to our Ministery in your lives or else you doe nothing Phil. 1.15.16 2 Cor. 7.15 Vengeance is ready against all disobedience every whit as ready in Gods hand as in the Ministers mouth 2 Cor. 10.4 5. In this text we may see God delights to receive the obedience of his people from all eternity and all the benefits purchased by Christs blood shall be given to them that obey he is author of eternall saluation to them that obey Heb. 5.9 Thus of obedience in generall Externall obedience which is here entreated of is distinguished by the Apostle Rom. 15.18 into two kindes For either it is obedience in word or obedience in deed Quest. Here might some one say what need the obedience of the tongue our tongues are free Answ. It seemes some men thinke so Those hypocriticall flattering and wicked men mentioned Psal. 12.3 say their tongues are their owne and yet it is certaine the Lord will have the tongue bound to the good behaviour Iam. 3.3 Quest. What great hurt can there be in the tongue if men live honestly otherwise It seemes there can be no great offence in the tongue Answ. Men are extreamely deceived that think they cannot commit dishonesty impiety by their words There is a world of wickednes in the tongue Jam. 3.6 There are many sins which are most vile and hatefull which have their principall seat in the tongue or are practised in words as blasphemy murmuring desperation lip-service swearing cursing perjury charming reproaching persecution by the mocking of the godly bitter words silthy speaking lying backbiting slandering flattery and false witnesse bearing together with divers sinnes of deceit hypocrisie heresie c. And on the other side excellent graces and duties depend much upon the service of the tongue Gods glory our owne Callings and other mens good are much furthered by the tongue By the tongue men preach pray confesse their sins give thankes comfort exhort rebuke sweare vow c. and therefore great reason wee should shew our obedience even in the tongue Under the obedience of conversation are comprehended duties of piety to God of mercy to the distressed of justice to all men of temperance to our selves The catalogues of the sinnes we should avoid in our conversation or of duties we should doe I omit here having some purpose if God will to handle them more largely in Treatises by themselves And thus of obedience And sprinkling of the blood of Iesus Christ. Before I come to the more particular and full opening of these words these things may be touched in the generall 1. There was blood
hearts are washed by the Word Eph. 5.25 Psal. 119.9 the law in their hearts Psal. 37. 119.80 4. Keep still in Gods presence walke before him thou darest not then come in thy uncleannesse 5. Avoid the beginnings of pollution dally not with sinne 6. Informe thy selfe throughly of the vanity of all the things unto which thou art likely to be tempted 7. Come not neere uncleane persons 2 Cor. 6.18 8. Get the assurance of faith Act. 15.9 Heb. 10.22 Promises to such as labour for a cleane heart Mat. 5.7 ●say 1.16 20. 2 Pet. 1.3 Prov. 22.11 Psal. 24.4 125.5 Rom. 8.34 38. Hitherto of the subject of sanctification The manner of exercising or expressing this purification followes In obeying the truth Foure things must be considered 1. What is truth 2. What it is to obey the truth 3. How their hearts are said to be purified in obeying the truth 4. The observations and uses which may be here gathered 1. Truth is taken diversly in Scripture 1. Sometimes it signifieth the verity of our words as opposed to lying 2. Sometimes faithfulnesse in performing of promises and so mercy and truth are given both to God and men 3. Sometimes for uprightnesse as opposed to hypocrisie and so it is to doe a thing with all our hearts 1 Sam. 12.24 4. Sometimes for the substance of a ceremonie I●h 1.17 5. Sometimes for Christ Ioh. 14.6 6. Sometimes for the word of God and so here The word of God is called the truth Ioh. 17. ●1 Ps. 119.142 1. because it agrees with the eternal pattern of Gods will 2. because there is no error nor falshood in it 3. because it shews us a true way for the infallible attaining of blessednesse 4. because it effects truth and uprightnesse in us 2. Now to obey the truth is to conforme and subject our selves in practise and workes unto the will of God revealed in his word 3. The heart of man is said to be purified in obeying the truth inasmuch as there is an inward obedience to the truth required in the hearts of men as 1. the obedience of the Gospell in beleeving this is called the obedience of faith When a man from his heart doth assent to and relye upon the promise of God in Christ thus to beleeve is to obey 2. In the practise of all outward duties there is required the inward purity of the heart and the exercise of the grace of Gods Spirit without which all mens workes are impure Besides by the outward obedience of the truth men shew that their soules are purified There are foure things may be observed from hence 1. That the word of God must be the rule of all our actions as wee were begotten by the word of truth Iam. 1.18 so we must live by it Gal. 1. 16. Psal. 119. This is that light to our feete and lanthorne to our pathes The Use is for instruction Therefore first we should study this truth and buy it Prov. 23.23 2. Wee should pray to God to direct us in this truth Psal. 25.5 43.3 and never to take it out of our mouthes and lives Psal. 119.43 Yea hereby we may shew our selves to be truly sanctified if wee sticke to the word of God as our onely guide as these places shew Esay 26.2 Psal. 26.3 119.30 2 Cor. 13.8 and let us therefore come to the truth to know whether our workes are wrought in God or no Ioh. 3.21 And therefore woe unto them that are destitute of the truth both in respect of the meanes without and in respect of knowledge within these sit in darknesse and in the shadow of death Finally here we see our liberty wee are bound to obey nothing but the truth 2. That there can be no true sanctification without obedience God stands precisely upon obedience and practise It is not knowing the truth or praising the truth or hearing the truth or speaking the truth or thinking the truth or purposing the truth will serve the turne 1 Sam. 15.22 Ioh. ● ● 1 Ioh. 1.6 8. This should serve mightily to urge us to practise to be doers of the word Mat. 7. Iam. 1.22 c. to follow the truth and to expresse the power of it Without this obedience we can never prove our selves to be truly sanctified and ther●fore let us that have the meanes take heed wee examine our selves how we grow in the practise of it How miserable then is the state of such as onely give God good words Mat. 7. and such as resist the truth 2 Tim. 3.8 and such as blaspheme the way of truth 2 Pet. 2.2 and such as fall away from the truth 2 Tim. 2.18 Heb. 10.26 Oh who hath bewitched men that they should not obey unto the truth Gal. 3.1 ● That wee must exercise the inward purity of the heart in all the parts of outward obedience In all good duties we must looke to the obedience of the heart The heart must adde divers things to the manner of our obedience From the heart must flow judgement attention care and affections of all sorts This is true of all duties both to God and man The Use is therefore to teach us to set our hearts to worke when wee goe about well-doing and to looke to the inside as well as the outside 4. The indefinite propounding shewes that our obedience must bee without limitation for we must obey 1. A● all times Psal. 106.1 Gal. 5.7 2. To all truths both of Law and Gospell of piety and righteousnesse inward and outward c. 3. In all places absent as well as present in all companies as well as one at home as well as abroad before inferiors as well as superiors 4. All persons must obey learned unlearned rich poore high low c. This serves notably for the ransacking of hypocrites and unmasking them for here we may note divers things wherein they may be evidently taken tardy For either 1. They obey not at all they practise not but only give good words 2. Or they obey but in shew It is not true obedience that will leave the tryall o● Gods truth 3. Or they obey not out of conscience of the word of God but onely for fashion sake or other carnall ends not for the truths sake 4. Or their obedience is not from the heart for either it is constrained and not ready and voluntary or they doe not imploy the heart in the good worke they doe The affections of godlinesse they want 5. Or they obey not the Gospell in seeking ass●rance of Gods favour though they practise some things of the Law 6. Or they obey but for a fit Hos. 6.5 Demas returnes to the world 7. Or they obey but in some things Herod will not obey the seventh Commandement They will not crosse their profits lusts credit c. 8. Or they will obey but in some places and companies Quest. Now if any godly person should bee dismayed and aske How might I know
doctrines as this In the words of this verse then two things are to bee noted first the kinds of punishments inflicted upon the body of unbeleevers secondly the causes of it The kindes are two first God will deliver them up to scandall and then to despaire to scandall as Christ is a stone of stumbling to despaire as Christ is a rocke of offence These words are taken out of the Prophet Esay chap. 8. where the Lord intends by them to denounce the reprobation of the Jewes as some thinke or rather foretels the spirituall judgements which shall be inflicted upon them The Apostle in this place applies the words to the unbeleevers of his time among whom the obstinate Jewes were chiefe to shew that as the other Scripture was comfortable to the godly so were there places that did threaten the wicked and that as the former place did prove Christ a stone of foundation for the godly so this did shew that Christ was a stone in another sense to the wicked Christ is a stone of triall to all men in the Church because the doctrine of Christ tries men whether they bee elected or rejected good or bad so Esay 28.16 Againe Christ is a precious stone to the beleever and thirdly here a stone of stumbling to the unbeleevers Now that we may know what offence or scandall is we may be helped by the Etymologie of the originall words For scandall in the originall is either derived of a word that signifies to halt or else it noteth any thing that lieth in a mans way a stone or a piece of wood against which hee that runneth stumbleth so hurteth or hindreth himselfe It most properly signifieth rest or a certain crooked piece with a baite upon it in instruments by which mice or wolves or foxes are taken and thence the Church translated the name of scandall to note the snares by which men are catched as beasts are in grins and baites so the word it seemes is used So then a scandall is any thing which causeth or occasioneth offences by which a man is made to halt or is brought into a snare or made to stand still or fall in matter of religion or salvation And so the sorcerers were a stumbling blocke to Pharaoh and the false prophets to Ahab and the lying signes of Antichrist to such as love not the truth Now all scandall may be thus divided Scandall is either active or passive that is given or taken Scandall given is when the authour of the action is likewise the cause of the hurt that comes by it Thus Elias sonnes were scandalous thus David by his grievous sinnes gave offence 1 Sam. 2.17 2 Sam. 18.22 c. and thus Scandall is given either by evill doctrine first whether hereticall secondly or supersti●ious or else by wickednesse of life or by wilfull abuse of Christian liberty Offence taken is either from our selves or from others A man may be an offence a stumbling blocke to himselfe by dallying with some speciall beloved corruption of which our Saviour Christ saith If thine eye offend thee pull it out or thy hand or thy foot c. Matth. 3.29 Scandall taken from others is either that they call humane or that they call diabolicall Scandall taken which they call humane may either bee found in godly men or wicked men godly Christians that are weake may be offended or hindred in religion divers wayes as either by reason of the persecution and oppression of the godly or by the heresies or dissentions of men in the Church or by the flourishing estate and prosperity of the wicked as also by the liberty some of the godly take in things indifferent for the advancing of the Gospel in case of necessity As when Paul for the gaining of the Gentiles neglected Moses Law This was an offence to many beleeving Jewes contra c. Wicked men also take offence as here in this text is manifest Now the offence which they call diabolicall is that when men wilfully and perversly will provoke themselves to sinne freely because of the examples of the vices of godly men as when the drunkennesse of Noah the incest of Lot the adultery and murther of David the perjury of Peter or the like is alledged to maintaine themselves in a liberty of sinning It is the scandall of wicked men which is here meant Now wicked men make themselves miserable in this case of scandall both wayes By giving offence and by taking offence By giving offence and so Christ curseth them for offending his little ones Mat. 18. Wicked men offend them either by the subtilty of false and corrupt doctrine or by provocation and inticement or by evill example or by discouraging them with reproaches threats or oppositions or the like but this kind of offence is not meant here It is offence taken which is noted here as a grievous curse upon them and amongst offences taken this is their misery that they gather offence from what should have been the cause of their holinesse and happinesse even from Christ. Might some one say What should men be offended at in Christ The Jewes were offended First at the vilenesse of his person or his meane condition Secondly at the poverty and simplicity of his Disciples Thirdly at the obscurity of his Kingdome being without wordly pompe and glory Fourthly at his conversation because he kept company with sinners Fifthly at his doctrine partly because he reproved their superstition and hypocrisie and the traditions of their fathers and partly because he taught that justification could not bee had by Moses Law but must bee sought by beleeving in him as also by other particular directions as that man must eate of his flesh that he was the Sonne of God that he was older than Abram c. lastly at his miracles for they thought he did it by some Divell Thus in our times the Papists they take offence at the newnesse of our Religion as they pretend at the freenesse of the people that professe it at the doctrine of justification by faith alone c. Thus also wicked men in the Church are offended at the small number of such as are sincere at the plainnesse of the preaching of the Gospell or such like Quest. 2. Might some one say What if wicked men be offended is that such a great misery Answ. Yes for it is many times the occasion of their ruine For wee see many men keepe these objections in their hearts till their death by which they are hardned from all care of salvation by Christ at the best it is a notable hindrance for the time it frustrates them of the Gospel and of the communion of Saints c. ●se The use may bee first for information Wee may hence see what an infectious sorceresse unbeleefe is It can make things exceeding good to prove exceeding evill to them it can make God the Word the Sacraments and Christ himselfe all good to be occasions of extreme evill to