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A17310 The anatomy of melancholy vvhat it is. VVith all the kindes, causes, symptomes, prognostickes, and seuerall cures of it. In three maine partitions with their seuerall sections, members, and subsections. Philosophically, medicinally, historically, opened and cut vp. By Democritus Iunior. With a satyricall preface, conducing to the following discourse. Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. 1621 (1621) STC 4159; ESTC S122275 978,571 899

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hated the name of a King and Caesar was an Emperour to which divers things may be answered First that though the present Governour was an Emperour yet the Apostle knowing that the most monarchies in the world would rest in the title of King in all ages therefore he useth that title that may concerne the most of the Elect in all ages Secondly that though amongst the Romans the title of King was not used yet the Grecians in whose language hee writ did familiarly use the word which we translate King Thirdly the Apostle might have respect unto the signification of the word as unto a word which was most effectuall to note the highest dignitie among men For it notes him that is the stay or foundation of the people or the Common-wealth and though ambitious men sought new titles as higher yet the Apostle knew that this was most majesticall and honourable for the tearme of Emperour in the signification of it may agree to any subordinate ruler who governes or commands other men Fourthly it may be that the Apostle knowing the hypocrisie of those Emperours who onely disclaimed the name of Kings to avoid the hatred of the people and yet sought the full right of Kings a●d so to destroy the liberty of the people giveth the name they sought in substance though not in tearme Where by the way we may note how hatefull hypocrisie is to God and how vaine it is God will unmaske even Kings if they d●ssemble with him Hee that trieth the hearts and reines judgeth according to truth and will not be deceived with pretences Though men durst not charge Caesar to affect the Kingdome yet God dares and will require at his hands the ambition of his heart And if God will not beare with dissimulation in Kings much lesse will he beare it in meaner men hee hates hypocrisie and fained pretences and painted shewes wheresoever he findes it which should teach us all to labour for a plaine and upright heart in all things to direct our words and carriage according to the true intent of our hearts For besides that God will plague men for their dissimulation which cannot be hid from him it fals out usually that such as use dissembling are perpetually suspected all their faire pretences notwithstanding as those Caesars were Lastly the Apostle may name Kings to prevent rebellion in the subjects which either should feare such as affected the title or live under such as professed themselves to be Kings and so the meaning is that he would have them obey even Kings how hatefull soever naturally that kinde of government did seeme unto them It may be that the Apostle mentioneth Kings as the last kinde of government a Monarchy being in many respects the most excellent forme of government as being such a forme of government as comes neerest to the similitude of God who is not onely one in nature but in government also and is most agreeable to nature which doth affect unity as well in the body politick as in the body naturall But I let this passe as a question belonging rather to the Politicks than to Divinity to be discussed at large Thus conjecturally of the reason why the Apostle useth this tearme Concerning Kings I propound these things to be considered of First the originall of Kings Secondly the excellencie of Kings both these tend to worke in man the care of obedience to them and their Lawes Thirdly the indefinite manner of propounding the tearme shewing that this submission belongs to all Kings Fourthly the uses of all For the first It is not unprofitable to consider how men came by degrees at length to subject themselves to this government of Kings First man by the instinct of God and by the nature given him tends to society Of all creatures man is unaptest to live alone Mans language shewes that he was made to society and mans disposition shewes that it likes not any estate that must be removed from the knowledge and conversation of other men He that can live without society is either better than a man as is God or worse than a man as is a beast The first kinde of society was oeconomicall as houshold society where was first a society betweene man and wife and thence by propagation grew the society to a full houshold by the comming in of children and servants And hence was the first forme of government where the father of the family was the Head and Ruler The second kinde of society was a Village or Towne which contained in it the government of divers houses or families and this was occasioned either by increase of posterity or for prevention of harmes or out of necessity for supply of necessaries At the first a Village or Towne contained as is thought onely the severall branches of the same family that is when men lived so long such as were descended of their bloud and were ruled by the chiefe and first of their bloud Afterwards strangers of other families that were fewer in number mingled with them to avoid the danger of wild beasts or the injuries of other men yea one of the words used for a village is derived from a word that signifies a Fountaine and so importeth that necessity drew men to dwell together that so they might enjoy the benefit of nature for water which in the Countries first planted was not universally to be had but one Well must serve divers housholds and so the Springs of water was one cause to bring men to this kinde of society and dwelling together The third kinde of society was a City which consisted of the people of many Villages and into this society men came both for commodity and necessity For commodity as namely for trades and the education of children and the exercise of Religion and the administration of justice for necessity that so they might be strengthened against their enemies and to this end they walled and ditched about their Cities as also to keepe in offenders that they might not flee and to keepe out such as were banished that they might not returne and in this society first began the government of Kings For from the beginning it is thought that every City had a King as a Monarch to rule and defend it as appeares in Genesis There was a King of Sodome and Gomorrah and so every of the other Cities had their different Kings Fourthly when men increased so fast that one City could not hold the people which lived in it then began Countries and Provinces and at length the whole Nation consisting of many Cities became subject to one King and afterwards by conquest or marriage diverse Nations yeelded obedience to one King Now the ends why humane societies became subject to Kings and to superiour Powers were the Common-weale and the benefit of the people so united for power was given to Kings that so men might bee protected in the practice of vertue that peace might be preserved among
the generall First that Gods last workes are his best works which should teach us to imitate God and never feare the forbearance of God time cannot change him he will be never the worse or the colder for delay Secondly if woe marke what daies these last daies are wee may also note that God doth his best workes when men doe their worst For of these last daies it is that the Apostle speaks that they should be such wicked and perillous daies and this we should learne of God also to let our piety and patience then shine most when impiety and violence doe beare most sway Thirdly there is a time when God will at once fully deliver and save his servants and judge for them and therefore wee should not be weary of well-doing Fourthly Gods servants must not think to be fully delivered till these last times and therefore they must walk circumspectly redeeming the time and alwaies stand upon their guard seeing the daies will be ever evill wee should remember and hold fast and lay up provision for many daies Fiftly it is the will of God that the day of Judgement should not be known to any man or Angell for the moment of it and therefore it is here described by ages not by dayes and howers which may confute curiosity and teach us to watch at all times Sixtly the world shall have an end there is a last time there will be an end of all perfection and therefore we should learne to use the world as if we used it not and therefore woe is to them that so greedily mind transitory things and that place all their happinesse in the things of this life Why is the time of the last Judgement called the last time It is called the last time 1. because time shall thenceforth be no more 2. Because after that day there shall be no space left for repentance or salvation for wicked men 3. Because Christians shall be delayed no longer but then all their wrongs shall be righted all their sinnes shall be pardoned all their wants shall be supplyed all their infirmities shall be removed all their promises shall be fulfilled all their graces shall be perfected all their desires shall be satisfied 4. Because all things shall then be fully determined ended and finally ordered But why is this time deferred so long First to demonstrate Gods wonderfull patience and to cleare his justice in that eternall vengeance shall then be exercised on the wicked For by this deferring it will be made manifest that hee did it not suddenly or passionately or privately or before hee had used all other meanes Secondly it is forborne till all Gods eternall decrees in the government of the world be accomplished especially it is stayed til the number of the Elect be gathered and the fulnesse both of Gentiles and Jewes be come in And thus much of this verse and so of the first part of the consolation that is to say the proposition of arguments now followeth the confirmation Verse 6. Wherein ye rejoyce greatly though now for a season if need require ye are in heavinesse through manifold tentations IN this Verse and the rest to the 13. is contained the confirmation of the proposition and that is performed two waies 1 By prolepsis or the answer of objections vers 6 7 8. 2. By propheticall testimony ver 10 11 12. For the first the Apostle labours to confirme them especially against two objections whereof the first might be taken from their crosses For they might say they were so pressed with the multitude of tentations inward and outward that they were much disheartned in the contentation of their estates Now unto this the Apostle answers that Christians have no cause to hang down their heads for their afflictions and that for foure reasons 1. Because one may have many crosses and yet have exceeding much joy 2. The molestation that comes by tentations or crosses is but for a season 3. That a Christian is not bound alwaies to trouble himselfe or be grieved at his troubles It is but when need requires 4. Because great profit comes by afflictions and tentations that is to say the tryall of our faith ver 7. Secondly they might object that they know not whether the former consolation doe belong unto them And to this he answers Verse 8 9. by shewing that there were three things in them by which they might know that those comforts did belong unto them 1. The first was their love of Christ. 2. The second their faith in Christ. 3. And the third their unspeakable and glorious joyes the consequent end of all which would undoubtedly be the salvation of their souls this answer is contained in the 8. and 9. Verses and thus of the order of those words Now whereas all these Verses containe answers to secret objections in the minds of men before I come to the opening of the particulars in the answers I note divers things briefly from the generall and which is here implyed First that God seeth the secret thoughts of mens hearts he seeth all the risings of their thoughts and affections and the inclinations to object any thing any way whatsoever which should make us carefull to looke to our selves for the very thoughts and risings of our hearts especially if there be in men a wicked rebellion against the truth let them not deceive themselves For certainly God will judge them for their very inward boilings and indignations against the truth even those which they doe not or dare not utter For contrary thoughts aswell as contradictions Secondly not onely God seeth but the word of God meeteth with the very secret thoughts in the heart or life of man though they were never knowne or uttered it ransacketh the spirit of man and will search strangely into the secrets of mens courses There can hardly be an objection in a mans minde but if hee constantly attend the Word it will meet with it which may encourage humble Christians to rest upon the Word for it will heale them of all sorts of spirituall diseases The Lord can strangely be their Physitian when no creature knowes it and withall it confutes their stomack that being met withall in the word think the Preacher aimes at them and that it comes of very spleene against them wilfully being ignorant of this that the Word would search them though the Preacher never knew their faces For it is the Word of him that knows all the hearts of men and was framed of purpose by the all-seeing Spirit of God that it might discover what was hid and converse secretly in the very bosomes of men Thirdly wee see here that there may be objections in the minds of the very Elect even of such as have true grace we may not imagine that they are absolutely freed from all doubts and feares Fourthly objections In that the holy Ghost is so
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.
is urged from the example of Christ Heb. 12.3 4. 2 Cor. 4.17 18. Rom. 8.17 That your faith and hope might be in God In these words the eighth point is contained viz. the end of our redemption viz. that our faith and hope might be in God that is that knowing our debts to be paid in Christ and God to be well pleased in him we might for ever relie upon God for present favour and future salvation Faith and hope are not all one Faith lookes upon Christ exhibited and made present in his ordinances Hope lookes upon Christ hereafter more fully to be revealed Faith beleeveth the promises to be true Hope expecteth performance Faith beleeveth eternall life is given us and Hope waiteth when it will be revealed Faith is the mother of Hope and Hope is the nurse of Faith Faith takes notice of present prerogatives and Hope chiefly looks to things to come The doctrines that may be observed from hence are divers Though we doe truely beleeve yet we doe need to be often stirred up to faith and hope still For 1. We beleeve but in part 2. We need faith all our life long 3. We are hard of beleefe in our selves 4. There is nothing the devill more opposeth 5. There is nothing God or Christ more desireth as the coherence shews 6. Nothing more glorifieth our profession and daunteth our adversaries then an unmoveablenesse of hope 7. Nothing more provides for us A Christian could live by his faith if he had nothing else The Vses also are divers for therefore 1. We should stir up one another and be examples one to another in beleeving and receive the exhortation one from another 2. Especially every one of us should be carefull to increase in faith and provide to beleeve in God at all times Quest. But what must we doe that we may doe so Answ. 1. Desire the sincere milk of the word 1 Pet. 2.2 2. Be frequent in the use of the Sacraments 3. Pray to God to increase thy faith Luke 17.5 4. Practice holinesse and be diligent about those graces mentioned 2 Pet. 1.10 in the coherence Quest. But how can we beleeve still For 1. We have not alwaies meanes to accomplish the good we desire Answ. Doe as Abraham did Rom. 4.10 beleeve the promise above hope Quest. 2. God himselfe sometimes fights against us Answ. Say with Iob Though he kill me yet will I trust in him Iob 1.3 Quest. 3. But our crosses are desperate Answ. Yet say as David did Psal. 23.4 Though I walke in the shadow of death yet c. Quest. 4. But we have sinned Answ. Christ hath prayed that thy faith might not faile Luke 22.32 Quest. 5. But our faith is so weake we feare we cannot beleeve still Answ. There are comforts for that in these places Esay 42.3 2 Cor. 12.9 and God hath received the weake in faith Rom. 14.1 3. Quest. 6. But I have so many hinderances and have so many things to passe through Sol. Yet be perswaded as Rom. 8.38 and say with Paul Through Christ I can doe all things Phil. 4.13 3. All this adoe about faith and hope should make us carefull to informe our selves of the things by which faith is assaulted that when such things befall us we may be armed against them Now besides such things by which faith is assaulted intimated before there are many things without us to omit our owne doubts and Sathans tentations within us that have assaulted and tryed faith 1. False doctrines 2. Contentions in the Teachers of the Church 3. Treacherie of brethren 4. Prosperity of the wicked and impu●ity of wickednesse 5. The small number of beleevers 6. The deformity and oppression of the Church 7. The falling away of many from the faith 8. The delay of Gods promises 9. The tokens of Gods wrath 10. The scoffes of mockers 4. Lastly hence wee may gather a reproofe to our selves for our marvellous neglect in faith and hope how might the Lord justly have left us for ever as a people without Christ and without hope in the world There is one faith and hope in all Gods servants Your faith Eph. 4.5 The use is therefore to love one another seeing we have all one faith one I say in respect of the Author meanes object and end 2. It should comfort poore Christians whatsoever difference God hath put otherwise yet they have the same faith that Abraham David the Martyrs or any had Here is implyed that all faith and hope in other things besides God is vaine Hope in the wedge of gold is vaine The Hypocrites hope in credit is vaine Trust in the arme of flesh is vaine c. And the truth is a Christian is never perfectly well till he can place his faith and hope onely in God It is good for him sometimes to be stripped of all other things that he may put his confidence in God Verse 22 Seeing you have purified your soules in obeying the truth through the Spirit to the unfained love of the brethren so that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently THE fourth reason to inforce the exhortation in the 13. verse is contained in these words and is taken from that relation and respect wee beare unto the godly it is in effect this By repentance and holinesse we are all made brethren and in repentance and reformation of our lives one main thing we aime at is the advancement of our happinesse and holinesse in the love of the brethren whom we prefer before all people in the world and resolve to rest in the contentment of their communion and therefore wee ought so to resist the impediments within us or without us and to order our lives with such holy sobriety and so to stir up our hearts in the hope of the happinesse to come that we may in all purity of nature and life and earnestnesse of affections cleae unto them in this world as the onely people we shall live withall in the world to come There are two things in this verse 1. A proposition of doctrine 2. and an exhortation by way of Use. The proposition is this Ye have purified your soules in obeying the truth by the spirit unto unsained love of the brethren or brotherly love The Use is therefore see that ye love one another with a pure heart fervently The proposition properly and in it selfe concerns sanctification which is here described in five things 1. The nature of it imported in that metaphoricall tearme purified 2. The subject of it their soules 3. The forme of it in obeying the truth 4. The cause of it which is twofold 1. The principall the Spirit of God 2 The cause in some respect is themselves ye have purified 5. The end is brotherly love amplified by the speciall property of it viz. unfained Before I enter upon the particulars in generall and for the coherence divers things may be noted The Coherence is double 1. both with
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
might give over our trades c. For answer hereunto let all such know that though it be true that some men are waxt great rich by such courses yea though they be fat and shine yet the Lord will visit them his soule will be avenged upon them Jer. 5.28 29. For wealth gotten by vanity shall be diminished Prov. 13.11 and the tabernacles of bribery and deceit shall be desolate Mic. 6. 10. to the 16. All such as conceive with guile by that time they have reckoned their moneths aright though they grow never so big shall bring forth nothing but winde and vanity Job 15. ult What shall be given thee or what shall be done unto thee O thou lying and deceitfull tongue thou shalt be smitten with some strange and strong hand of God as with the arrows of the mighty so as thy stroke shall be incurable and deadly and thy destruction shall be as with the coales of I●niper that is both fierce in respect of thy selfe and pleasing in respect of others For men are wonderfully well pleased when they observe that ill gotten goods doe not prosper This hand of God smells like the burning of Juniper Some others might say we are servants and we must lie and defraud others to satisfie our masters The Prophet Zephany reports that the Lord will punish all those very servants that fill their masters houses with violence and deceit the servants I say as well as their masters But might some others say my courses are so secret that my deceit shall never be found out Let such m●n learne that the Lord found out this sinne in Ephraim Hos. 11. and will punish it though Ephraim said he was growne rich and in all his labours they should finde none iniquity in him that were sinne Hee thought himselfe sure enough for being discovered and therefore he would contest vehemently and cry out upon such dishonesty in men as to use false words and waights besides it is worthy to be observed that God many times doth not onely discover these secret fraudulent courses but discovers them openly so as their wickednesse is shewed before the whole congregation Prov. 26.26 But others may say in others things am I just and besides I am forward in religion and therefore this offence is not so great Shall I account thee pure saith the Lord with wicked ballances Mic. 6.12 as if he would say all the shewes of religion in the world will not serve the turne if sinnes of deceit raigne in a mans dealing And therefore the consideration of all this should in the second place instruct us and that three wayes First to look to our owne cariage and as we desire to live long and to see good dayes to refrain our tongues from evill and our lips that they speak no guil in all our dealing to detest lying and deceit Psal. 34.13 and so to live as we may be alwayes ready to put our selves upon Iobs triall Iob 31.4 5. Secondly to lay to heart the consideration of the horrible inundations of deceit that hath over-flowed all states and callings of men and so it should work in us both lamentation and supplication before the Lord. For lamentation we may take up all the old complaints of the Prophets Our times have reacht to the measure of iniquity then reproved or rather men now overpasse the deeds of those wicked men wickednesse is in the midst of us deceit and guile depart not from our streets Psal. 55.11 Treasures of wickednesse are in the house of the wicked wicked ballances the bagge of deceitfull wa●ghts and scant measures which are an abomination to the Lord and for which he threatneth vengeance every where to be found Mic. 6.10 11. Men lay wa●t as they that set snares they let traps to catch not beasts or fowle but men As a cage is full of birds so are mens houses full of deceit and deceivers It is now the usuall course for men to waxe great and rich withall Ier. 5.26 27. yea this sinne so spreadeth that we may truly say From the least of them to the greatest of them they are given to deceit and will deale falsly Jer. ● 13. Every brother will supplant and every neighbour will walke with lies and slanders They will deceive one another and not speake the truth A man can dwell no where but his habitation is in the midst of deceit and therefore certainly God hath a resolution to stretch out his hand still by publike judgements How can it be but God must visit and be avenged for these great abominations What should be else doe but melt his people in the common furnace of great judgements for such common sins Ier. 9.3 to 10. And as it should teach us lamentation so it should teach us supplication too even to goe to God and that in two respects First to implore his help and mercy for the Church that he would be pleased to spare his people and keepe them from the infection of these vile sins and if it may stand with his good pleasure to worke a repentance in mens hearts that are guilty of these crimes and withall to beseech him for our selves to keepe us that wee fall not into the hands of deceivers for as it is a sinne to deceive so is it a misery to be deceived Psal. 12.1 2 c. and to give us wisdome to beware of men Jer. 9.4 Mat. 10.17 and to deliver us from the men of deceit Psal. 43.1 Thirdly it should teach us seeing the world is so full of guil that it is so hatefull a sin therefore to honour and esteeme such as wee finde to bee true hearted Plaine men with Iacob without tricks and subtlety and true Israelites with Nathaniel in whose hearts and mouthes is no guile Wee should I say love them delight in them and stick to them never to forsake them but to account them the very ornaments of the world and great lights in this great and generall darknesse and to account our selves wonderfull rich and happy in their fellowship and friendship Thirdly this prohibition of Guile may informe us and by intimation shew us the hatefulnesse of the doctrine of the Papists and practise in the point of aquivocation contrary to the expresse Scripture that forbids all lying and deceiving of others and commands us to speake truth and that every one Priest and people and that so his neighbour how much more to the Magistrate Ephes. 4.25 And Iob sheweth that we ought not to talke deceitfully no not for God to speake for him what is not right Iob 13.7 Lastly this may be implicitly a singular and secret consolation to honest and upright hearted men that hate this hatefull sinne of Guile that speake the truth in their hearts and make conscience of their words I meane those true Nathaniels of whom Christ speakes And for the better imprinting of this use I will shew
you two things First the signes and markes of a man without Guile even of a true Israelite Secondly the encouragement and comforts that belong to such men c. For the first a true Nathaniel hath these praises and especiall markes 1. He shunnes Guile in his spirit as well as in his words or workes Psal. 32.2 What hee accounts vile to speake hee accounts vile to thinke 2. His praise is of God and not of men Rom. 2.26 Hee more strives to doe good then to get credit and applause and if God accept him hee cares not though all the world deride him 3. When he confesseth his fault to God he will not hide his sinne but confesseth all his sins that is all sorts of sins and his sin without extenuation or excuse Psal. 32.2 5. 4. If he offend it is of ignorance and he will not receive doctrine of trust and if he be shewed the truth he quietly yeelds and gives glory to God Iohn 1.46 47 48. 5. He is a plaine man and speakes the truth in his heart What hee saith he saith without fraud or dissembling he saith it from his heart his heart and his words agree he hateth lying and all deceit Psal. 15.2 Zeph. 3.13 though he might gaine never so much yet will he practise no untruth 6. He is a constant man just of his word he will performe his promise though it be to his owne hinderance Psal. 15.4 He will not deny the truth though it be to his extreame danger Such men as these have many encouragements to hold on their courses It was a chiefe praise of Christ that he was without Guile 1 Pet. 2.7 and so was it in the Martyrs and Saints Rev. 14.15 It is one of the signes and markes of Gods houshold servants Psal. 15.2 Of a true Convert Zeph. 3.13 These men are faithfull with the Saints and rule with God Hos. 11. 12. Such as these will abide the Balance to be weighed and God will acknowledge their integrity Iob 31.5 The wealth of these men gotten by labour and just dealing shall increase when riches gotten by vanity shall diminish Prov. 13.11 And those lips of Truth shall be established for ever when lying tongues shall be but for a moment Prov. 12.19 And thus much of Guile Onely before I passe further it is worthy the noting that he sayes of these two first sins that all Malice and all Guile must be laid aside which imports that howsoever some other infirmities bee in the godly yet they should be found farre from all Malice and Guile not a jot of either of them should be found in them Malice must bee in them in no kinde nor in no measure neither secret nor open Malice neither grudge nor desire of revenge neither at home nor abroad neither in civill things nor in matters of Religion neither in any of the aggravations nor in the least drop of it And the like may be said of Guile It were a shamefull thing that any kinde of Guile should be found in a Christian in any of his dealings at any time with any sort of men or in any measure For if but a drop of Malice or Guile bee left in us it may breake out againe and our hearts prove like a festered sore Malice is like leaven a little of it will sowre the whole lumpe It is like Poyson a drop may spoile us It is like a coale of fire within it wants nothing but the devill to blow it and then into what a flame may it kindle And therefore we should all looke to our hearts to see that we be free from Malice and look to our wayes that we be guilty of no kinde of Guile Such as are reconciled should note this point to see to it that they keepe not the least drop of the poysonfull grudge in their hearts It is not enough that they say daily they will forgive or can receive the Sacrament For if they cannot respect them with a free heart without reservation they are still infected with the disease of Malice Hypocrisie The third sin to be avoided is Hypocrisie Concerning Hypocrisie I propound two things to be considered First how many wayes men commit Hypocrisie Secondly what reasons there are to disswade us from Hypocrisie For the first the Scriptures discover many wayes of the practise of Hypocrisie In the 23. of Matthew our Saviour notes eight wayes of being guilty of Hypocrisie 1. To say and not doe ver 3. 2. To require much of others and plead for great things to be done by others and not at all doe it our selves as we prescribe it to others ver 4. 3. To doe what we doe to be seen of men ver 5. This is at large opened Mat. 6.1 to the middle of the chapter 4. To affect greatnesse in the respects and entertainments of others ver 6. to 12. 5. To doe duties of Religion of purpose to hide some soule sinne ver 14. 6. To be curious and strict in small matters and neglect the greater duties ver 23 24. 7. To be carefull to avoid outward faults and to make no conscience of the inward foulnesse of the heart ver 25 27. 8. To commend and magnifie the godly absent or of former ages and to hate and abuse the godly present and of our owne times verse 29. to 36. There are divers other Hypocriticall practices noted in other Scripture As 9. To serve God outwardly and yet our hearts to be caried away with vile distractions Esay 28.13 This is a chiefe Hypocrisie to be avoided in such as come to the word 10. To pray onely in the time of sicknesse or danger when we are forced to it and to shew no love of prayer or delight in God in time of prosperity or deliverance Iob 27.8 9. 11. To judge others severely for smaller faults and to be guilty themselves of greater crimes Mat. 7.5 12. To be just overmuch I meane to make sins where God makes none Luke 13.15 13. To be convinced in his owne conscience and yet not confesse it nor yeeld though they know the truth Luke 12.56 57. c. Thus of the divers wayes of Hypocrisie There are many reasons to declare the hatefulnesse of this sin of Hypocrisie I will instance onely in the reasons from the effects The effects of Hypocrisie are either first to others Or secondly to the Hypocrite himselfe First to others the Hypocrite is a continuall snare He walkes in a net that converseth with an Hypocrite Iob 34.30 Secondly to himselfe the effects of Hypocrisie in the Hypocrite are both privative and positive The privative effects which the Scripture instanceth in are chiefly three The first is that the Hypocrite loseth all his service of God In vaine doe Hypocrites worship God Mat. 15. Secondly hee infecteth all his gifts and praises Hypocrisie is like leaven Luke 12.1 It sowreth all gifts and graces a little of it will marre all his praises and gifts whatsoever for the
without testimony of his favour For by his word of promise and by his Spirit bearing witnesse to our spirits hath hee manifested even from heaven his acceptation and in particular when the beleever stands before the Lord with his sacrifice duly offered when the Lord doth suddenly fill his heart with the cloud of his presence or warme his soule with the joyes of the holy Ghost what is this but the signe of his acceptation Quest. VVhat if we be accepted in our service of God what great thing is that to us Answ. VVhen God accepts thine offerings thou maist be assured of three things First Tha● all thy sinnes be forgiven thee God hath purged away thine iniquity he hath received an atonement in Iesus Christ Psal 65.2 3. Secondly God is exceedingly delighted in them Thy sacrifice is a sweet smell unto God he rejoyceth over thee with joy Phil. 4.18 Thirdly It is a pledge unto thee that God will supply all thy necessities out of the riches of his glory in Iesus Christ our Saviour Phil. 4.19 Verse 6. Wherefore also it is contained in the Scripture Behold I put in Sion a chiefe corner-stone elect and precious and he that bele●veth therein shall not be ashamed HItherto of the proposition of the exhortation The conformation followes where the Apostle gives reasons why we should make our recourse to Christ to seek holinesse of life from him and the reasons are two The first is taken from the testimony of God verses 6 7 8. The other is taken from the consideration of the excellent priviledges of Christians unto which they are brought by Christ verses 9 10. The testimony of God is both cited verse 6. and expounded verses 7.8 In the testimony of God observe first where it is to be found viz. In Scripture secondly how it is there It is contained there thirdly what is testified Now the matter testified concernes either the giving of Christ for the good of the Church or the safety of the Christian that by faith receiveth Christ. The giving of Christ is exprest in these words Behold I lay in Sion a chiefe corner sto●e elect precious the safety and happinesse of the Christian that receiveth Christ in these words And bee that beleeves in him shall not be confounded First of the place where this testimony is found viz. In the Scripture By the Scripture is usually meant all the Books of the old and new Testament written after an extraordinary manner by inspiration of the holy ghost But here he meanes it of the Books of the old Testament but yet so as the word doth agree to all the Books of both Testaments Now this very word gives us occasion to consider of the nature of these Books and of their use and of their excellency and of their harmony These Books are called Scripture because they containe in writing the whole will of God necessary to be known of us they are the Treasures of all truth The doctrine which was before delivered by tradition for 2000. yeares was afterwards written downe and explained in these Books so as nothing needfull was left out or omitted Secondly this word imports the excellency of the Bible above all other bookes because it is called Scripture as if no other writings were worthy to be mentioned in comparison of these The Scripture exceeds all others in divers respects First because these vvritings vvere inspired all of the holy ghost 2 Tim. 3.17 2 P●t 1.21 so vvere no other vvritings Secondly those vvritings containe a vvisdome far above all that that can be had by the Princes and men of this vvorld the platform of the wisdome that is in God himselfe 1 Cor. 6.7 Thirdly they vvere penned by more excellent men then any other vvritings the greatest vvisest holiest men Moses David Salomon the Prophets Euangelists Apostles c. Fourthly they have such properties as no other vvritings have they are more perfect pure deep and immutable then any mans vvritings These containe all things necessary unto faith and a good life 2 Tim. 3.17 18. These vvritings onely are pure vvithout fault or error or any corruption in them and for depth ●nd majestie never any vvritings came neare them and for unchangeab●nes Heaven and earth must passe away but a jot of Gods word shall not passe away Matth. 5.24 1 Pet. 1.23 Fiftly if we consider the effects that must be acknowledged to the praise of the Scriptures vvhich can be true of no writings besides no writings can describe God so fully to us no writings do so bring glory to God no Scripture but this can convert a soule to God Heb. 4.12 13. Other writings may shew us some faults to be avoided but give no power to subdue them Ps●l 19.8 These writings onely can minister solid comfort to us in adversity and these onely can make us wise to salvation and perfect to every good word and work The consideration whereof should work in us a singular love to this booke above all other books in the world yea above all the treasures in the world we should account them with David more sweet then hony and more precious then gold Psal. 19.11 Psal. 119.14 15 27. Thirdly the third thing may be noted from hence is the harmony of all these books they all agree as if they were but one writing yea but one sentence yea one word though the books were written by divers men yet they agree so perfectly that they all sound one thing for they were all inspired by the same Spirit of God which should teach us when wee meete with doubts or objections or scorning contradictions to condemne our owne ignorance and to be fully resolved that there is a sweet harmouy though we doe not see it And secondly and especially it should knit our hearts to the Scriptures wee should be affected as with the most delightfull musick of the world or in the world Fourthly The fourth thing concernes the use of Scripture and so we may note two things First That wee must receive no opinions but what can be proved by Scripture To the law and to the testimony if they speake not according to these it is because there is no truth in them Isaiah 8. Secondly we may note hence that the best men must prove what they teach by Scripture If the Apostles did it who were men priviledged from error then much more must other men we must beleeve no man above what is written 1 Cor. 4.6 and hee is accursed that teacheth other things then what is written Gal. 1.7 though he were an Angell from heaven Which should teach us to get proofes into our heads for all that we beleeve and to take heed of receiving traditions even from good men For there be traditions on the right hand as well as on the left Ioh 5.30 Acts 17.1 Thes. 5.21 Secondly Thus of the place where this testimony is The manner how it is there is in the word Contained It is contained in Scripture Contained 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
it is not unprofitable to consider some motives that might beget in us an earnest desire after it and care for this true pious and filiall fear●of God First if we respect our selves we should strive to be such as feare God For if we were never so good subjects to Princes or never so courteous and faire-dealing men in our carriage towards all sorts yet if wee did not feare God we were but vile creatures that had not the qualities of a man in us For to feare God and keep his commandements is the whole property of a man Eccles. 12.13 And the feare of God is the beginning of wisedome Hee is not a compleat man that doth not feare God that is all in all Iob 28.28 Secondly if we consider what God is Hee is our Master and therefore where is his feare Mal. 1.6 He is our praise our good God hee worketh fruitfull things and wonderfull and shall we not feare him Ier. 5.22 Deut. 10.20 Thirdly if we consider but the benefits will come unto us if we be religious persons and truly fear God Great is the Lords mercy towards them that feare him Psal. 103.11 whether we respect this life or a better life whether we looke for temporall or spirituall things For temporall things such as feare God have a promise of great prosperity Deut. 5.29 Eccles. 8. 13. If any thing be welcome as prosperity in this world it is Religion and the fear of God For to him that feareth God is promised wealth and riches Psal. 112.1 3. and honour and long life Pro. 10.27 and 22.4 protection from the pride of men and the strife of tongues Psal. 31.19 and strong confidence Pro. 14.26 and they shall want nothing Psal. 34.9 And for spirituall things the secrets of the Lord are with them that feare God and he will shew them his covenant Psal. 25.14 and the Sun of Righteousnesse shall rise unto them that feare God and there shall bee covering under his wings and they shall goe forth and grow as fat calves Mal. 4.2 and the Angels of the Lord shall pitch their tents round about them that feare him Psal. 34.7 And for eternall things there is a booke of revelation to such as feare God where God keeps the records of them and all the good they say or doe Mal. 3.16 and at the day of Judgement they shall have a great reward Revel 11.18 Great are the priviledges of such as feare God in this life but who is able to expresse how great the goodnesse is as the Psalmist saith which God hath laid up for them that feare him Psal. 31.19 And if it should so fall out that God should not see it fit to give us any great estates in this world yet a little is better with the feare of God than great treasures and those troubles therewith which the sinne of man or the wrath of God will bring in with them But if we would have these benefits wee must be sure that we doe indeed and truly feare God For there are many men in the visible Church that beare the name of Gods people which yet God protests against as such as doe not feare him indeed as First they that pity not men in affliction feare not God Iob 6.14 Secondly they that oppresse their neighbours by any cavill or unjust dealing as by usury or the like feare not God Levit. 25.17.36 Thirdly they that make no conscience to pay their tithes or at least will not give first fruits or free will offrings such as will pay no more for religious uses than they are forced unto these feare not God Deut. 14.23 Mal. 1. Fourthly they that account it a burthen and a course of no profit to serve God or to be so religious Mal. 3.14 15. Ios. 24.14 Fiftly they that make no conscience of secret sinnes or hypocrisie in Gods worship these feare not God because they set not the Lord alwayes before them nor feare to omit or doe such things as the world cannot take notice of Sixthly they that meddle with the seditious or changers how forward soever they seeme in religion yet such as are set to be so inclinable to be led by changers have not the true feare of God in them Pro. 24.21 Seventhly they that live in any knowne sinne and make no conscience to depart from iniquitie Prov. 3.7 and 14.2 Such are they that are mentioned in the Catalogue Mal. 3.5 Sorcerers Adulterers c. especially the men that blesse themselves in their hearts when they are guilty of hatefull sinnes Psal. 26.1 2 4. On the other side such as truely feare God may bee knowne by these signes First they make conscience to obey God in their lives and keepe his ordinances Deut. 6.2 They shew that they feare him by serving of him Secondly they doe beleeve God and his servants speaking to them in his name This was a signe the Israelites feared God because they beleeved God and his servant Moses Exod. 14.31 Thirdly they that truely feare God doe depart from evill and dare not live or allow themselves in any knowne sinne whether it be sin in opinion or in life In opinion they that fear God will give him glory though it be to change for the opinions not only they but all the world have held Revel 14.7 And so in practice he that truly feares God hates all sinne in some measure It is a foule signe one doth not fear God when he will not forsake his errours or faults though he be convinced of them Fourthly they that make a conscience of it to obey God in all soundnesse of practice in their conversation and so not only in worshipping him with reverence Psal. 5.8 but in striving to doe all the good duties God requires Psal. 5.8 And that this signe may bee applyed effectually wee may try our selves by our obedience to God whether our feare of him bee right or no First if wee obey in secret and dare not leave undone such things as no man can charge us withall and doe withall strive against and resist the very hypocrisie of the heart and stand infeare of Gods offence for the evil● are found in our very thoughts this will prove us to feare God soundly in truth and uprightnesse of heart Ios. 24.14 Col. 3.22 When we set the Lord alwayes before us and with desire to approve our selves to him it is an excellent signe Secondly when we heare the Word of God and are told what to avoide or doe we are then tried whether we feare God soundly or no. For if wee dare not delay but make Conscience of it to practise Gods will as fast as we know it it is a good signe but otherwise it is a foule signe that many Christians that make a faire shew are not found because they are not afraid to live in the sinnes God reproves by his Word nor to leave still unperformed the precepts counsels and directions are given them from day to day The Religion of
his office he is carefull to prove that he hath given knowledge to the men God gave him to prepare them for eternall life Iohn 17.6 7 8 26. Fifthly by the relation it hath to God himselfe it is a part of the image of God in the new man Col. 3.10 Sixthly by the contrary it is accounted a great sinne and a curse to want knowledge Hosh. 4.11 and other gifts or services are rejected as vaine if this grace be not had as Zeale Rom. 10.2 Sacrifice Hos. 6.6 and therefore such as want knowledge should shake off profane sluggishnesse and vaine objections and seeke to be rich in knowledge as the men in the world doe to abound in wealth Pro. 4.7 2.4 And such as have knowledge should strive to encrease it and be thankfull to God for his great mercy in giving them knowledge and the meanes of it Doct. 2. Knowledge is required of all sorts of men Not of Ministers only but of private men of all husbands yea and of all men before they be husbands because so soone as they have wives they are charged to shew their knowledge Iohn 1.9 1 Cor. 8.1 1 Tim. 2.4 This condemnes the sacrileg●ous humour of those persons that are like the wicked Lawyers our Saviour speakes of Luke 11.52 which take away the key of knowledge from private men either by their opinions hindering others from seeking knowledge with their errours mudding the cleere fountaine of Gods Word or by their power restraining the meanes of knowledge from the people And withall this should stirre up all sorts of men to seeke knowledge and use all meanes to attaine it as they will give their account unto God of the use of their time at the last day Doct. 3. Knowledge is given us for use and practice not for idle speculation it is given as other gifts of the Spirit to profit withall it is a light to lighten our paths Our knowledge should be after godlinesse Tit. 1.1 It should some way help forwards the worke of godlinesse that we get by hearing should be shewed by practise Iames 1.22 23 24. They that have knowledge and will not use it shall have that knowledge taken from them Mat. 13.11 Nor is the use of knowledge only for discourse but for conversation The words of knowledge or utterance is given to some Christians onely 1 Cor. 12.8 And such as cannot talke much may yet have comfort if they have knowledge to stay their hearts in faith and that they can shew their knowledge by a good conversation Doct. 4. The knowledge seated in our minds should have a commanding power of our actions all should be according as a mans knowledge faith Those parcels of divine truth put into our minds should rule us and dispose of us and make us ordered according to them Those lawes in our mindes should make us master all that rebels against them and make the members be subject to them to obey them Our knowledge should be lively and indued with soveraigne power This is the honour we should give to the light that is in our minds to let it rule us in all things And this point may much humble all sorts of Christians for want of stirring up their knowledge or for want of obeying it Most Christians have their knowledge so feeble that the Divell or the world may lead them aside to all sorts of temptations and yet their knowledge makes not opposition and doth not take arms to subdue what exalts it self against the light of it as it should do 2 Cor. 10.4 Now if men would hearten and give life and power to those notions of knowledge are in their minds and would have their knowledge to have full power they must observe these rules 1. They must daily wound and mortifie and resist the law of the members that is such humours in them as are w●nt to be incorrigible Most persons have some faults in their natures that they are guiltie of with a kind of wilfulnesse such faults as must be allowed such as if they be crossed in there will be no peace but open rebellion such faults as sticke so fast to them as if God and man must let them alone in them these members must obey them as a law Now these men must find out and be sure they resist them or else the lawes of the minde will be but feeble and sacred notions infused will starve and wither and never appeare in their life and power 2. Men must be sure they study profitable things and avoide such knowledges as are fruitlesse as belong not to them 1 Tim. 6.20 2 Tim. 2.23 Tit. ● 9 There is knowledge that will puffe up 1 Cor. 8 1. But men must be wi●e for themselves and strive to understand their owne way Pro. 9.12 3. They must pray God to put a spirit and life into their knowledge and give them grace to shew all good conscience in their obedience and withall they must pray hard for their Teachers that their word may be a word of power to give fire to the sparkles of light are already in their minds Finally let all men that professe the knowledge of Gods word remember that their knowledge should make them differ from all other men Their lives should excell others according to the knowledge in which they differ from them A man must hold forth th● life and light of the knowledge he hath Phil. 2.15 They have a great taske to doe that have received much knowledge much is required of them if they doe ill their example may doe much mischiefe 1 Cor. 8.10 11. Doct. 5. True knowledge makes an impression upon every part of a man● life it makes him better in all his wayes both towards God and man as here true knowledge makes a man a better husband He must carrie himself● as a husband according to his knowledge he hath of Gods word Tru● knowledge enricheth a man in every thing 1 Cor. 1.5 The favour of our knowledge should be manifest in every place 2 Cor. 2.14 The knowledge that will not doe thus is falsely so called 1 Tim. 6.20 There is use of knowledge in the most ordinarie things of the life of man as meats marriage and the things of our calling 1 Tim. 4.3 and therefore this should stirre up all godly Christians to shew this proofe of their knowledge and to pray that they may abound in kno●ledge and all judgement Phil. 1.9 C●l 1.9 and gives cause to Christians of ill behaviour in their callings or private carriage to mistrust that their knowledge is no● tight and in particular wives should pray God to give their husbands knowledge of his Word and to blesse all meanes to that end for that will make them the better husbands Doct. 6. It is an ill thing for men to transgresse against their knowledges when they doe things that are not according to their knowledge or leave undone things they know they should doe The servant that knowes his masters will and
trespasse against 〈◊〉 And that we shall be i● we soundly 〈…〉 r●les If we know any fault by our brother and feele that it doth tempt us to alienation we must then remember the charge given Levit. 19.17 which is not to suffer our hearts to hate him but give a vent unto our hearts by a plaine and discreet reproofe 2. We should be soundly settled in judgement that there are infirmities in the best though we know them not and so to looke for it as when they doe breake out we should shew our selves ready to beare their infirmities and forbeare them if they be meere frailties choosing rather to crosse our selves than to irritate or provoke them in their weakenesse Rom. 15.1 2. 3. If any brother trespasse against us we should shew our selves easie to be entreated and willing to practise the rule given by our Saviour even to forgive him if he offend unto seventy times seven times when he saith it repenteth him Mat. 18.21 4. If we have done any wrong we should make haste to be reconciled and seeke it with willing acknowledgement and readinesse to make satisfaction Mat. 5.23 24. Only we must remember about this doctrine of the love of the brethren that there are three caveats to be looked to 1. That we misplace not our affections upon false brethren for there are false brethren that will creepe in privily many times for corrupt ends Gal. 2.4 2 Thes. 3.13 2. That if any brother be scandalous or walke inordinately or will not be subject to the forme of doctrine and the publike ministerie then such a one is to be avoided only he must be admonished as a brother 2 Thes. 3.6 15. 3. Servants are charged to looke to it that they be obedient and subject notwithstanding this doctrine that their Masters are brethren 1 Tim. 6.1 Pitifull The word rendered Pitifull in the Originall signifies rightly bowelled or such as have true or right bowels and so it is to be referred to mercy and is more than other Scriptures expresse when they require bowels of mercy for here it is required that these bowels be right In Mat. 25. men are sentenced to condemnation for not shewing mercie In other Scriptures it is shewed that though they doe shew mercy yet if some things be not looked to it will not be accepted as Mi●h 6.8 there is required not only mercy but the love of mercy and Mat 6. the Pharisees did workes of mercy and yet our Saviour finds fault with them because they were done to be seene of men and in 1 Cor. 13.2 the Apostle saith If a man give all that he hath to the poore and want love it is nothing So here the Apostle requires not mercy only but that their bowels be right in mercy and about this rule therefore two things are to be explicated 1. What bowels of mercy means 2. What right bowels imports For the first Bowels of mercy imports 1. Truth in shewing mercy that it be not in ceremony or word only but in deed that the heart shew mercy as well as the tongue 2. Love that our mercy proceed from hearty and Christian affection to the partie 1 Cor. 13.2 not of constraint nor with wicked thoughts or griefe of heart Deut. 7.7 8. to 12. 3. Tendernesse of affection that we be affected as if our selves were in want Rom. 12.16 4. Cheerefulnesse in expressing our mercy to such as are in misery who are sometimes as much refreshed with the respect we shew to their persons as with the supply we bring to their estates Men in misery should be comforted as well as relieved 5. The practice of secret mercy as well as open even to thinke of them and provide for them and to provoke others to mercy and to pray for them when they know not of it even when wee are gone from them still to shew them mercy For the second our Bowells are right in shewing mercy 1. If we be prepared unto such good works and so both our eares should be prepared that they may be open to the cry of the poore Prov. 21.13 and the matter of mercy should be made ready And to this purpose it were an excellent course if Christians would lay up weekly a part of their gettings which they would consecrate to God that it might be ready when there were need 1 Cor. 16.1 2. and further if we be as God is mindfull of mercy and doe exercise it speedily without delay Prov. 3.27 28. 2. If we looke not for too much beholdingnesse from them that are relieved The rich must not rule over the poore nor the borrower become a servant to the lender Prov. 22 7. 3. If we have a good eye Pro. 22.9 and shew it by dispensing of our mercy to such as have most need and to such as are best affected in religion if there be choise 4. If wee doe workes of mercy out of goods well gotten for God hates robbery though it were for burnt offerings Esay 61.8 5. If it bee for right ends as not for merit or the praise of men Mat. 6. 2 Cor. 9.19 6. If we be full of mercy rich in mercy much in mercy abundant in mercy not onely to our power but sometimes and in some cases beyond our power Wee must open our hands wide Deut. 15.8.1 Tim. 6.18 2 Cor. 8.2 9. good measure and pressed downe Luk. 6.8 if we give not sparingly 7. If we be discreet so to ease others as we burthen not our selves 2 Cor. 9.14 15. 8. If we exercise our selves in every kind of mercy both spirituall and corporall in giving lending visiting clothing feeding instructing admonishing comforting c. 9. If we be constant and not grow wearie of well-doing Gal. 6. The use may be first for reproofe and confutation of divers sorts of men 1. Of the Papists that brag of their good workes in this kind to whom it may be granted that they shew workes of mercy and perhaps have bowels of mercy but they are not right bowels both because with the Pharisees they doe their works to bee seene of men and with opinion of justification and salvation by the merit of their workes and besides though they shew compassion to the bodies of men yet are they without all true compassion to the soules of men 2 Of the house keeping of many Protestants that brag of their great Hospitalitie and good house keeping when their entertainment is either spent upon the rich or else in the profane abuse of the good creatures of God by drunkennesse or else in the entertainment of disordered and lewd persons 3. Of the great neglect of mercy in the most men that either shew not mercy at all or not bowels of mercy or not according to the rules given before especially such as hide themselves from the poore Esay 58.7 and use shifts and excuses to avoide such supplies as are necessary for the furtherance of the reliefe for the poore in such places as
it was revealed th●● not unto themselves but unto us they did the things which are now reported unto you by them which have preached the gospel unto you with the holy ghost sent down from heaven which things th Angels desire to looke into Verse 13. Wherefore gird up the loynes of your minde be sober and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Iesus Christ. Ver. 14. As obedient children not fashioning your selves according to the former lu●●s in your ignorāce Verse 15. But as hee which hath called you is holy so be yee holy in all manner of conversation Verse 16. Because it is written Be yee holy for I am holy Verse 17. And if yee call on the Father who without respect of persons judgeth according unto every mans worke passe the time of your sojourning here in feare Verse 18. Forasmuch as yee know that yee were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold from your vaine conversation received by tradition from your fathers Verse 19. But with the precious blood of Christ as of a lamb without blemish and without spot Verse 20. Who verily was fore-ordained before the foundation of the world but was manifest in these last time● for you Verse 21. Who by him doe beleeve in God that raised him vp frō the dead and gave him glory that you● faith and hope might be in God Verse 22. Seeing you have purified your soules in obeying the truth through the spiri● unto unfained love of the brethren see that yee love one another with a pure heart fervently Verse 23. Being borne againe not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the word of God which liveth and abideth for ever Verse 24. For all flesh is as grasse and all the glory of man as the flower of grasse the grasse wi●hereth and the flower thereof falleth away Verse 25. But the word of the Lord endureth for ever and this is the wor which by the Gospell is preached unto you The scope of the Epistle The parts of the Epistle The parts of the salutation Who Peter was a Mat 4.15 b Mat. 3.16 c I Cor. 10.3 d Iohn 1.42 e Gal. 2. f Mat. 4. Ioh. 1. g Mark 3. h Iohn 21. i 1 Pet. ● ult Seven sorts of men transgresse about their Callings k I Cor. 7. l 2 Thess. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Advenis dispersionis Ly●a m 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beda Gl●ss Heming Ares Man is a stranger in five respects n Ephes. ● 12 4.17 o Psal. 69.8 p 1 Pet. 4.12 Doctrine Vses 14 Things wherein wee should be like strangers 2 Cor. 5 6 7. The good that comes by the dispersion of the godly q Tertull Cyp● Cassiod r Beza Heming s Beda Gloss A fourefold Election t Deut. 4.37 u Ephes. 1.4 5. * Iohn 15.19 x Iohn 6.70 From what they are elected y Deut. 7.7 How they may be knowne z 1 Cor. 1.27 Iames 2.5 a 1 Sam. 16.7 b Mat. 20.16 8 Priviledges of Gods chosen Vses c Psal. 106 3 4 5 Distinctions about praescience Praesci●●tia 1. abso●u●● 1. specialis approbationis How God knowes things Vses How the fore-knowledge of God may comfort us in divers distresses Doctrine Vses Comforts to the godly as God is their father Object Solut. Object Solut. Object Solut. Object Solut. Object Solut. Vse 2. How we may live like Gods children Vse 3. 1 Ex non sancto privative 2 Ex minus sancto 3 Ex non sancto negative Thomas Aquinas What need our spirits have to be sanctified Wherein the sanctification of the spirit lyeth Of cleansing the spirit of man from what and how Answ. 8 Things to cleanse the spirit of man Of the adorning of the spirit Three things which adorne the minde in sanctification The light of the minde hath 5. things in it Humblenesse of minde hath 6. things in it Purity of imaginations The heart adorned with 8. graces 11 Things wherein a sanctified heart rejoyceth The Conscience adorned with 9. things Vses Of obedience in generall Of the causes of our obedience Rules or sixe things to be observed in all true obedience Motive to obedience Of obedience in words Our estate in Christ better then our estate in Adam here in this life The benefits flowing from the blood of Christ. Vses An explication of the whole Ceremony of the sprinkling of the blood of the red Heifer Numb 19. Coccus bis tinct●● Of the sprinkling at the Passeover Exod. 24. Of the sprinkling at the ratification of the Covenant Of the sprinkling Levit. 16. Vse The forme of the Salutation Vses What we must doe that grace and peace may be multiplied in us The order of the body of the Epistle 2. Observation from the coherence a Psal. 129.8 b Psal. 67.1 Man blesseth God 3. wayes c Psal. 1 16.12 d 1 Cor. 10.16 Reasons of blessing God e Psal. 50.23 f Psal. 67.3 Vse g Psal. 145.10 11 12. How God is the God of Christ. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How God is the Father of Christ. How Christ is without father or mother A threefold generation Per se de se extra se. N●● de se sed per se i● se. Three things wherein Christs generation is not like ours Vses h Iohn 5.18 6.42 8.19 i 1 John 4.15 In three things we should learn of Christ to carry our selves towards God as towards our Father k Io● ● 17 1● 6. ●8 l Iohn 10. ●6 m M●● 4.3 n Heb. 2.10 o Heb. 5.7 8. p Iohn 13.1 q Rom. 1.4 1 Iohn 3.8 r Iohn 14.12 13 14 16 23 24 26 27. The necessity of the new birth s Iohn 3.5 2 Cor. 5.17 The honor of the new birth Gods mercy is abundant t Psal. 145.8 9. u Psal. 36.5 6 7 1. In the fountaine 2 In the stream●s to all * Psal. 33.5 Mat. 5. 2. To all the godly and that three wayes x Psal. 32.10 y Exod. 20. z Esay 55.4 Acts 13. a Psal. 86.5 b Psal. 100.4 c 2 Cor. 1.3 d Psal. 123.2 3. e Luke 6.36 f Exod. 34.6 7 Mich. 7.18 Esay 55.8 Zeph. ● 17 Object Solut. How mercy is no occasion of liberty either to godly or wicked men g Psal. 89. h Exod. 34.7 i Deut. ●9 19. k Psal. 62.12 l Prov. ●8 13 m Ionas 2.8 n Esay 27.11 o Ioel 2. ●2 13. Quest. Answ. What mercy God shewes to the wicked The meanes of the new birth The lets of the new birth Foure signes of new birth p Iohn 3.5 q Ti● 3.5 r Mat. 19.28 s Luke 9.24 Iohn 15.18 Rom. 8.29 1 Iohn 5.4 t Mat. 11.29 u 1 Iohn 3.14 5.1 * 1 Iohn 5.2 x Phil. 1.5 y Rom. 12.16 z Psal. 16.3 a 1 Pet. 2.2 The Vse a Iob 5.16 b Zach. 9.11 c Ephes. 1.18 d Rom. 5.3 e Ephes. 2.12 f Iob 8.13 g Iob 11. ult h Eph. 4.3 4 5. The differences
power can keepe us to salvation His worke it is to preserve whose will it is to save Mans naturall life stands not in the abundance of the things he doth possesse neither is our spirituall life sustained by the bare having of abundance of meanes Thirdly it may serve for instruction and that divers wayes 1. First we should beg of God the spirit of wisdome and revelation to shew the exceeding greatnesse of his power that we might discerne it and beleeve it by faith seeing we doe not observe it by sense and reason 2. Secondly we should daily ascribe power unto God even acknowledging continually his power in keeping us from day to day as our Saviour Christ teacheth us in the Lords prayer when hee teacheth us to ascribe kingdome power and glory to him and with Peter wee should learne to put off praise from our selves unto God as hee did in the cure of the Cripple saying not by our power is this man made whole 3. Thirdly wee should particularly of God seeke the experience of his power As for example we should not rest in the forme or shew of godlinesse but seeke the power of it wee should not only get a little faith but strive with God by prayer till he fulfill the worke of faith with power we should not thinke it enough to pray but we should seeke the spirit of prayer and to doe it with power even to be made by the annointing of Christ Priests after the power of endlesse life so we should seeke the power of conference and utterance in the confession of the truth in admonition instruction consolation or propounding of our owne doubts for the kingdome of God is not in word but in power 4. Fourthly we should hence learne to be undaunted in afflictions though it were to adventure all even life it selfe for the Gospell seeing we are kept by Gods power we may say in any distresse as Paul did I know whom I have beleeved and he is able to keep that which I have committed unto him till the day of Iesus Christ. If God keep our soules it matters not what else be in danger 5. Fifthly Ministers should hence learne to preach with power and strive after it For it is not the ordinance of God but the power of God that preserves the hearers It is not preaching but powerfull preaching that keepes the soules of men till the day of Christ. 6. And lastly the people should learne to place their faith not in the wisdome learning paines or graces of men but in the power of God Lastly this serves for consolation to all Gods servants against all their feares troubles adversaries temptations or what else might make them doubt their perseverance For God is able to doe above all that they can aske or think according to his power which worketh in them The divine Power gives us all things needfull to life and godlinesse and though they have but a little strength yet the Lord can open a doore of knowledge and grace and comfort unto them which no man nor devill can shut and therefore let us from our hearts give praise unto the onely wise and strong God that is able to support us from falling and to present us faultlesse before the presence of his glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ By faith or through faith The meanes in us to preserve us is our faith and that this will keepe us through the power of God is apparant by the scriptures Hee that beleeveth on the sonne of God hath everlasting life he is as sure of it as if he had it and he shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life Christ is the bread of life for nourishment and he that commeth to him by faith shall never hunger nor thirst He that commeth to Christ shall in no wise be cast out Christ will be so far from losing any one soule that beleeveth in him that not so much as his flesh or any part thereof shall bee lost but the whole body that is delivered to the grave shall be raised at the last day whosoever beleeveth in Christ shall never die For hee that confesseth with his mouth and beleeveth with his heart shall be saved God will keep that which by faith is committed to him and Christ will bee at the last day made marvellous in all that beleeve but that this point may bee more plainly understood I propound three things 1. First what faith doth for our preservation 2. Secondly how it doth it 3. What kinde of faith doth it and then the uses For the first there are tenne things which faith worketh by all which and every of which wee are greatly helped and furthered in our preservation First it inflames in God a singular tendernesse of care to remove out of the way what might be an occasion of falling and therefore our Saviour Christ shewes that God so loveth the weakest Christian that is truely humble and beleeveth that if any whosoever shall offend him that is cast any stumbling block in his way in respect of the sore judgements of God upon those by whom such offences come it were better a milstone were hanged about their neckes and they cast into the bottome of the Sea 2. Secondly as it procureth the healing of the soule of temptations even of all the wounds of the serpent quenching his fiery darts by shewing us Christ the true brazen Serpent of our recovery 3. As it is the daily hand and mouth of the soule by which we feed upon Christ the bread of life and so are by the strength of that precious nourishment kept to life everlasting 4. As it lighteth us the way to heaven For as there is a light apprehended by sense and a light of reason so there is a light of faith by vertue of the promise of Christ who said I am come a light into the world that whosoever abideth in me should not abide in darknesse 5. As it bringeth us within the compasse of Christs intercession For when hee prayed the father to keepe them from evill hee expounds his meaning to be to extend that his intercession not onely to his Apostles but to all that should beleeve through their word 6. As it procures the pardon of all sins according to that of Peter to him gave all the Prophets witnesse that through his name whosoever beleeveth in him shall receive remission of their sins 7. As it will excite and compell a Christian in all suits to seeke his owne help If a man beleeve his faith will make him speake both by confession and prayer to God and by inquiry and counsell and reproof to men 8. As it procures the seale of the holy spirit of promise and the earnest of the inheritance purchased Faith opens such a fountaine of joy and incouragement within a
deliverance it is with us according to our faith Faith makes us whole faith delivers us as soone as we can get our hearts to trust upon God the Crosse is gone the Lord staied but till we would beleeve in him with all our hearts Now is this so doth God stand so much upon our faith in affliction How is it then that wee doe not beleeve Oh unbeliefe unbeliefe is ever worse than the crosse it selfe There is nothing the tempter would rather deceive us of then our faith Oh how is the heart of man turned away from true faith there are a great number of us as it were ●eprobates concerning the faith we are of no judgement wee are altogether blockish in this point of beleeving in God But in the second place let this doctrine perswade with us when wee feele impatiency or any other perturbation rising in us to check our selves and say to ●ur own soules where is my faith now and with the poore man in the Gospell let us run to Christ with teares in our eyes crying and saying I beleeve Lord help my unbeliefe and with the Disciples let us still pray Lord increase my faith Yea thirdly since the Lord accounts so much of our faith wee should strive after perfection even to get a strong faith and to shew our selves unmoveable in affliction and to this end wee should be much in the Apostles prayer that God would so fulfill the Counsell of his owne will that hee would be pleased to fulfill the work of our faith with power But some one may say what is it in affliction to shew our faith or what must we doe to approve our selves to God that we doe beleeve He that would approve his faith in affliction must doe foure things 1. First if he be conscious to himself of any evill that he hath too much favoured hee must speedily repent and give glory to God and make his peace with God Dan. 12.10 2. Secondly he must be sure he hold fast his assurance so as he call not the love of God into question For as the Lord will still owne his people in all their adversities saying they are his people so must they still stick to this the Lord is my God This is to beleeve to hold fast this assurance whatsoever befall us Zach 13. ult 3. Thirdly hee must be sure to lose no ground either in the affections of godlinesse or in the confession or profession of the truth No affliction must abate his love to godlinesse or the Word or Gods children nor hinder his free profession of the truth 4. Fourthly hee must commit his way to God and rely himselfe and all his a●tions upon God putting his trust upon Gods promises and goodnesse Psal. 37. Phil. 4.6 But especially the praises of faith in affliction will be greatly enlarged if we can adde these things following 1. First if wee can trust upon 〈…〉 ●●mmit ou● waies unto him resting upon his promise though we see no meanes to accomplish it Rom. 4. 2. If patience may have her perfect worke so as we could goe through afflictions with that firme unmoveablenesse that we would resist all perturbations and that in all sorts of trials 3. If we would beleeve though God himselfe did seeme to withdraw or to neglect us This was the great faith of the woman of Canaan 4. If we can hold out without hasting to use any ill meanes or unlawfull courses to deliver our selves Esay 28.16 5. Fiftly if wee can in affliction be wise to sobriety resting contented though God doe not discover the reason of his proceedings with us Rom. 12.3 6. Sixtly if wee can preserve a tender sense of our owne vilenesse being glad of smaller favours rejoicing when God is pleased to give us but a little help thankfully acknowledging any degree of succour not seeking great things for our selves But might some one say What should move us thus in affliction to rely upon God and to approve our faith in him Seven things should perswade us to trust upon God in all adversity 1. First Gods promise Heb. 13.4 Psal. 50.15 Iob 34.23 Esay 30.18 20. Psal. 94.12 13 14. Psal. 97.11 Psal. 125.3 Psal. 126.5 6. and it is certaine we may trust God upon those promises For Gods words are pure and sure words and have been tryed in the fire seven times 2. Secondly the liberty of asking what wee will of God Wee have reason to beleeve in him when wee are sure to have whatsoever wee aske of him 3. The consideration of Gods unchangeable counsell and decree wee are appointed unto all our afflictions 1 Thes. 3.2 3. 4. Fourthly the example of all the worthies of God as a cloud of witnesses should perswade us with faith and patience to run the race of godlinesse set before us For these all lived by faith Heb. 12.1 Their afflictions were as great as ours and they rested upon God and were not disappointed therefore we should be followers of them Heb. 6.12 5. Fiftly the speedinesse of our help and succour For yet a little while and he that shall come will come and will not tarry and therefore the just should live by faith their tentations shall not last long 6 Sixtly our owne experience Did we ever lose by resting upon God Was he not a help in trouble ever ready to be found Can wee say that wee ever beleeved in God and were ashamed of it afterwards Or can wee tell the time that by our care wee could ever adde one cubit to our stature Matth. 6. Rom. 9.33 7 Seventhly the recompence of reward proposed to them that will glorifie God by beleeving in him He will be made marvellous in them that beleeve 2 Thess. 1.11 A crowne of life is prepared for them that by faith and patience prove their love to God in enduring tentations Iam. 1.12 Lastly in that the Lord stands so much upon faith in the time of tryall it may serve for singular comfort unto us if the Lord be pleased so to leade us through afflictions that our faith hath proved unmoveable unto the end This is in a manner all that God would have of us certainly he is happy in whom Christ may finde faith when he comes to try him in the furnace of tribulation Thus of the effect of tentations as is briefly propounded in these first words of the Verse Now followes the amplification of it and that first by comparison with gold More precious than gold These words more precious then gold may be referred eyther to the persons of Gods children tryed or to affliction by which they are tryed or to faith that was tryed For the first it is most certaine that Gods servants are most precious in his sight He esteemes them more then all treasures They are his portion and inheritance He bought them at a high price and accounts of them at a wonderfull high rate They are his peculiar people and his jewels
conjecture hope remember or affect It is to doe all that with affiance assent or perswasion and that is more plaine i● we note the phrase of speech in God for we may be said to beleeve foure waies 1. To beleeve that God is 2. To beleeve God 3. To beleeve of God 4. To beleeve in God for this latter doth import a casting of our selves upon God There are also foure things distinctly in faith 1. The understanding of the Doctrine of the promise of grace 2. The second is the ●●●ent unto the tender of grace signified 1. By earnest desire after the happinesse revealed in the Gospell 2. By a willing base estimation of all earthly things in comparison of the excellent knowledge of Gods love in Christ. 3. The third is the relying upon God or the resting of the heart upon the truth of Gods promises as having found the chiefe good in which wee will trust and beyond which we desire no more All this is imported in this phrase if we note it 4. The fourth is the resolution to acknowledge and avouch this confidence in God both by our cleaving to Gods promises in all estates and by our profession of the doctrine of Gods free grace herein The Use is a gaine for tryall If the Lord have enlightned thee to see the doctrine of his grace in Christ if he have gotten thy consent to his truth especially if he have wonne thy affections so as thou canst with love and ioy and affiance take his word and rest in his love to thee as perswaded of his mercies toward thee and that thou canst also vow thy selfe to the profession of it assuredly thou dost beleeve 2. This doctrine confutes the Papists and carnall Protestants that thinke faith is no more then to beleeve the story of Christ and to hope well for the rest whereas to beleeve in God doth evidently import more then to beleeve that God is and to beleeve God to say true The opinion of those that think that to beleeve that Christ is the Sonne of God is enough to salvation hath more charity then authority in it Many places of Scripture prove we must beleeve that Christ is the Son of God and it is a charectiristicall difference betweene the true Church and divers false assemblies but yet the Scripture shewes we must beleeve more then that or else we may perish For the condition Ioh. 3.16 is not to beleeve that he is the Son of God but to beleeve in him which is to receive and apply him Iohn 1.12 4. The fourth thing is the cause of faith By him It is by Christ that wee beleeve in God and that for divers reasons 1. As he is the expiatorie cause of Gods favour to us For did not he satisfie for on● sins we had no reason to beleeve that God should regard us Our faith is in his bloud Rom. 3.15 2. As by his intercession hee covers the weaknesse of our faith and appears before God for us 3. As he is the giver and worker of our faith Eph. 2.8 10. 4. As he is Protector of our faith and preserves it Heb. 12.3 he is called the author and finisher of our faith 5. As he crownes our faith it is he that gives power to every beleever to become the son of God Ioh. 1.12 It is he that gives them eternall life Ioh. 17.2 3. The Use is first for confutation of merit not onely of works but of faith we nei●her could obey the law nor yet beleeve the Gospell of our selves Eph. 2.8 therefore there is no boasting of our selves 2. It should teach us to keepe our faith with all diligence and to continue grounded and established in it seeing it is a treasure Christ hath intrusted us withall 3. Thirdly if wee finde any sicknesse or weaknesse in our faith at any time runne to Jesus Christ for succour he that is the author of it will be the finisher of it also The last thing is the time Doe beleeve It is to be observed that he speaks of faith in the present time which imports divers things 1. That there was a time wherein they did not beleeve 2. That a Christian hath continuall use of his faith the just live by faith Habac. 2.4 1. He cannot goe into Gods presence without it 2. He cannot heare the word without it Heb. 4.2 2 Tim. 3.15 3. He cannot use well his calling but must live by faith Mat. 6. 4. He cannot beare afflictions without faith 1 Pet. 1.7 3. That there is no time wherein a Christian beleeveth not this must be understood thus 1. There is a twofold man the old man and the new man In respect of the new man hee alwaies beleeves for faith is the life of the new man Gal. 2.20 2. That a distinction must be made betweene the act of faith and the habit of it the habit can never be lost the act may cease 3. We must distinguish betweene faith and the Concomitants of faith Actuall joy peace in beleeving may be intermitted but not beliefe it selfe 4. Distinguish betweene faith sick and faith found Faith sometimes in spirituall diseases may have a Lethargie a palsie a swone a traunce c. and so for the present is but not discerned The Use is therefore 1. First for consolation to such as are afflicted under the want of sense of faith it doth not follow thou hast not faith because thou feelest it not because there is no time wherein thou beleevest not Quest. But what should one doe for comfort when the sense of faith is gone Answ. First looke to time past thinke of the times wherein thou didst stand and rejoyce in the grace of God 2. Looke upon the present fruits of faith and by that thou maiest discerne that faith hath roots though they be under ground those fruits are 1. An unfained desire to forsake all sin 2. Griefe because we have not faith as we would have it 3. Love of such as feare God even the meanest of them 4. The hatred of such as by following foolish vanities forsake their owne mercy 5. Griefe for the evill of our best works though never so secret joyned with the abhorring of our selves so as we are confounded for our sins which seeme to us to be as so many abominations Ezech. 36. 6. By the desire of Gods favour above all things 3. Pray to God to help thy unbeliefe and make thee sound in the faith instead of froward complainings that thou hast not faith goe to God and make thy humble moanes unto him and hee will heare thy teares and give thee faith For it is his gift and he will be fought unto Psal. 143. the whole 142.3.7 4. Know that this will be but for a short time Faith will revive and be found unto praise and glory 1 Pet. 1.6 7. Psal 30.6 David said in his haste he was cast out of Gods sight yet hee found that God even then heard the voice of 〈◊〉 cry
119 2● esteeming it above all riches Ps. 119.14 72 110. exercising our our selves in it day and night redeeming some time constantly to be imployed in it labouring most for the foode that perisheth not Ioh. 6.27 Amos 8. 12. being resolved to deny our reasons profits pleasures credits and carnall friends and all for the words sake Marke 10.2 Thus in generall In particular two things may be noted in this verse First the praise of the word for the continuance it abideth for ever Secondly the explication of the kind viz this is true of the word which we preach unto you The first thing thē is that the word abideth for ever which other scriptures with like plainnesse avouch Ps. ● 17.2 Mat. 5. 24. Two things would be explained 1. how the word abideth for ever 2. of what word of God this is true For the first the word of God abides for ever in divers respects 1 In the Archetipe of it in God the plotforme in the minde of God though all Bibles were destroyed yet the word of God could not because the originall draught of it is in God himselfe 2. In the very writings of the word it shall last for ever that is till time be no more If all the power on earth should make warre against the very paper of the scriptures they cannot destroy it but the word of God written will be to be had still It is easier to destroy heaven and earth than to destroy the Bible 3. In the sense of it all that is said in scripture shall be performed the counsell of the Lord shall stand not a word of Gods promises or threatnings shall faile Psal. 33.11 12. 4. It abideth for ever in the hearts of the godly the impressions made in the mindes of the godly are indelible every godly man hath the substance of Theologie in his owne heart which seed will abide in him 1 Ioh. 3. 5. Lastly it abideth for ever as it makes us abide for ever and so it abideth in the gifts of the minde wrought by it in the life of grace quickened by it and in the fruits of righteousnesse to which it perswaded men Rom. 11. The gifts of God are without repentance and the word begets an immortall seed in us and the fruits of the faithfull will remaine and their righteousnesse for ever Ps. 111. 3. 1 Pet. 2.3 Ioh. 15.16 1 Cor. 3.14 1 Cor. 13. ult 2. Now for the second It is true of every word of God of every jott or tittle of it that it abideth for ever The Law and the Gospell by the law I meane the morall law for the ceremoniall law lasted but for the Jewish eternity which was till Christ repaired the world and made all things new The Use may be First for information and so in five things 1. Concerning the vanity of all outward things the perfection of them doth come to an end but of Gods word there is no end Psal. 119. 2. Concerning the estate of hypocrites and such whose righteousnesse is but as the morning dew Hosh. 6.5 this shewes they have not received the power of the word in that it doth not abide in them 3. Concerning the misery of all wicked men heaven and earth shall passe away before one tittle of the curses and woes denounced against them shall faile or be unaccomplished yea it will remaine to judge them at the last day Ioh. 7. 4. Concerning the morality of the Sabbath For since this is one of the ten words of Gods law even this word of the Lord must abide for ever else more then a tittle of it should faile before heaven and earth faile 5. Concerning the madnesse of two sorts of men 1. Such as account all diligence in preaching reading and hearing to be foolishnesse 1 Cor. 1.18 2. Such as are scorners and jest at the threatnings of scripture and say with them in the Prophet let the word of the Lord come that wee may see it Ezech. Secondly for instruction and so it should teach us all to adde to ●ur cares and desires after the word as that which will doe us good another day since in the lasting profit of it it will indure above all things else and therefore is better then all treasures yea to get this perpetuity of good wee should not thinke much to be at any labour or cost for it and the rather seeing it is such a sufficient portion or heritage Lastly this is comfortable to the godly divers waies 1. Against their unbeleefe when they are in distresse especially of spirit they thinke the word of God was wonderfull comfortable to David and such like but they cannot beleeve it should be so to them this doctrine assures them that the word of the Lord endureth through all ages and is as able to save their soules and sanctifie and comfort them as ever it was 2. Against the weaknesse of their memories The word will abide for ever some seeds of holy truth will never be lost and the spirit will lead them to all truth and bring the sayings of the word to their mind when they shall have need 3 Against the scornes of the world though men deride their counsell in making the Lord and his word their refuge yet they may be well pleased in themselves and resolve with the Psalmist still in God to praise his word For the profit of it will last to them when riches and honor and pleasures fade like the flower of the grasse to wicked men 4. Against their feare of falling away For the word of God in effect abideth for ever and it makes them abide for ever This is the word which is preached unto you These words explaine the sense of the former and direct mens minds to that use of the word which is most proper and powerfull to effect immortality in us and so there is a threefold limitation 1. That the word of God doth then cheefely beget in us eternall graces and abiding fruits when it is preached to us The intent of the Apostle is to exalt preaching not to deny efficacy to the translation or reading of the word but to shew that then it is most lively when it is in preaching fitted and applied to us and this may both instruct us what to doe and informe us what to thinke It should teach us especially two things the one is to depend upon hearing as the especiall meanes by which our soules may live for ever Heare and your soules shall live Esay 55.4 2. and it should also settle us in the resolution to heare if this be so let him that heareth heare Ezech. 3.7 It may likewise informe us in two things 1. of the misery of all such as have not the benefit of the word preached how doe their soules perish for ever 2. of the honor God doth to his poore servants the Ministers of the word when he tre●●● about eternall life he sends the people to their Ministers as if he would tell
Apostle here exhorteth and withall we should bring with us faith to beleeve that God● word shall turne to our nourishment Shall we trust nature for the goodnesse of milk and shall we not trust God for the efficacy of his word when he tels us it will nourish like milk And the rather should wee make our recourse with gladnesse to the word because it is so cheap a food we may buy this milke without money that is without merits only if we will heare our soules shall live Esay 55.2.4 yea let us for ever be thankfull to God for his word in this respect Was it so great a blessing that God brought the Israelites to a land that flowed with milk and hony for their bodies for the greatnesse of which blessing God doth so often put them in minde of it How great then is the marvellous goodnesse of God that hath made us to live in these times of the Gospell when the Land flowes with this spirituall milk and hony Let us labour to be thankfull and bring forth fruits worthy the bounty of God left the Lord send the men of the East to dwell in these palaces and to eat our milk and wee be cast out as it was said in the Letter Ezech. 25.4 Oh that we could see our happinesse in these daies of salvation this is that milke of the Gentiles prophecied of which wee enjoy and sucke now from the breasts of Kings living under Christian Magistrates that command the preaching of this sincere word of God Esay 60.16 Sincere The word may besaid to be sincere in two respects First in it selfe secondly in effect in it selfe it is sincere because it is without error without sinne and there is no deceit in it at all Prov. 8.7.8 Psalm 19.8.9 And because it hath no composition in it but is the very pure word of God as it came from God himselfe at first there is not a word in it but it was written by men inspired immediately by the holy Ghost 2. Pet. 1. ult And as it is in it selfe so it is by effect It makes men sincere It makes crooked things straight It purgeth out hypocrisie and all leaven out of the minds and hearts of men it both teacheth and worketh in the godly a spirit without guile Psalm 19.8.9 The Use may be both for instruction and reproofe For instruction both to the people and to Ministers To the people and so men should here learne First to love the word and long after it for this very reason because it is so pure and sincere so void of harme or danger so did David Psalme 119.146 Secondly when we finde our natures crooked and corrupt and deceitfull and tending to hypocrisie we should bring our hearts to the word to be mended For this you see is a property of the word it will make men sincere Psal. 19. 8 9. and 119. Iohn 17. 20. and as any men have more betaken themselves to the word the more sincere they have alwayes growne Thirdly to receive the word with full assurance we may trust upon it it cannot deceive us what we finde for comfort or directions in Scripture we may build upon it Never man was disappointed of his expectation that trusted upon the word of God but in God they have ever praised his word 2. Pet. 1.20 Psal. 56.10 and 10.1 Fourthly as the Ministry of Gods servants doth more declare the sincerity of the word so we should bee more in love with it wee should like praier preaching I meane not witlesse and unlearned preaching but such preaching as maketh demonstration to the conscience out of the pure word of God in things that concerne the good of the soules of men and the glory of God the word doth ever profit men most when it is most sincere that men onely speake the words of God Fiftly to stick to the word of God without going to the right hand or the left there can be no sinne but what is condemned in the word nor can there be duty not commanded therein nor can there be matter of faith not propounded therein Oh how happy were we if we could stick to the old foundation even the sincere word of God and not adde nor diminish the hatefulnesse of departing from the word on the left hand is in most places discovered But Oh the deceitfulnesse of mens hearts and the wretched pronenesse of men to sinne by finding out many inventions Men runne out and that very fast on the right hand we have new opinions and strange fancies coyned every day Little doe the better sort of people many of them think of traditions on the right hand their faith is led into bondage when they can yeeld no better reason than it is such a mans judgement or else he thinketh so himselfe or the reasons brought are urged without any demonstration from the word of God and Scripture Happy above the most Churches under heaven were this nation if this point were understood and carefully observed if we could sticke to our first grounds in parting from the Church of Rome viz. to admit no opinions nor charge our conscience with more obligations but out of the word of God Ministers also may learne from hence what and how to preach that is the best preaching which is eminent for two things First that tends to beget sincerity clearnesse of judgement distinct evidence of assurance and strict holinesse of life in the hearers Secondly that shines in the native lustre of the word in it selfe without mixture when men know no matter no stile no wisdome comparable to that which may be had in the word This also may serve for reproofe First of such Ministers as preach not sincerely and such are they that preach for corrupt ends though they preach true doctrine Phil. 1. 17. and they that preach obscurely and carelesly and strive not to set out the glory of the truths they propound and they that are like lewd Vintners which mixe the word with the errour of their owne braines or with the tradition● of men or with a manifest strife to bring in mans wisedome to Gods word more desiring to shew their owne wits and learning than the glory of the scriptures 2. Cor. 4. 2. and 1. Cor. 1. 17. and 2.4.5.13 2. Of the people for that great wan● of appetite to Gods pure word and the plaine preaching of it Thus of the second reason the third is taken from the effect and the profit which will follow viz. they shall grow thereby That ye may grow thereby This point of the growth of a Christian is of singular use and meet to be fully and particularly opened and therefore I will observe five things concerning it more especially First that we ought to grow in grace Secondly in what things we should labour to grow and abound Thirdly what are the rules to be observed that we might grow Fourthly the signes of growth Fiftly the uses of the whole First for the first Christians
are bound not onely to get grace but they must labour to encrease in the gifts they have received it is not enough to begin the worke of God but we must labour to abound in it and increase in well doing we must goe on and finish the measure of the worke required of us these places evidently prove that God looks for growth at our hands 2. Pet. 3.18.1 Cor. 15.58.1 Thessa. 4.1 Prov. 4.18.1 Cor. 14.12 Secondly for the second before I number particulars I might tell you of divers kindes of growth or increase in the kingdome of Christ. Christ himselfe is said to increase Ioh. 3.10 The word is said to grow Act. 6. and in other places and Christians are said to grow and so either first joyntly in the mysticall body Ephes. 4. 16. Col. 2. 19. or secondly severally every one by himselfe Christ was said to increase not onely in stature and the declaration of his gifts Luke 2. 40 but also in the glory of his kingdome and the advancing of his dominion amongst men The word grew when the number of faithful labourers was increased and when the light of the truth was more glorified received by the people Christians are said to grow chiefly in two respects First in the number of beleevers when there are daily added to the church Secondly in the power and practice of their gifts and this last is here intended the word rendred Thereby might be read either in him or in it or as it is thereby In him that is in Christ In it that is in the word or thereby that is by the word this last is intended here in all probability Now then to the point there are certaine things wherein a Christian should strive to grow it is true wee should grow in every good gift and worke but if we marke the Scriptures these things in particular are especially to be laboured after as being things that doe wonderfully honour God and credit the Gospell and bring a singular increase of happines to a Christian mans life and it is wonderfull profitable to keep a Catalogue of these particulars still before us that wee may every day bee put in mind of what we should especially labour after These are the things then we should distinctly labour to grow in First we should labour to grow in wisdome Gods people should appeare to be a wise people above all the people of the earth Christ grew in wisedome Luke 2.40 Now wisedome hath two things in it First knowledge and secondly discretion In both these we should grow For knowledge the word of God should dwell plentiously in us Col. 3. 16. and we should encrease in the knowledge of God Col. 1.10 and for discretion we should abound in knowledge yea and saith the Apostle in all judgement too Phili. 1.10 Secondly we should grow in faith that which is lacking to our faith must be made up 1. Thess. 3.10 and we should still bee praying with the Apostles Lord increase our faith Luke 17.5 2. Thess. 1.11 Now there bee two things distinctly which we should grow in about faith viz First assurance and secondly the exercise of it For assurance we should he●eunto give all diligence that we might get the full assurance of faith and hope to the end we should never be quiet till it bee established and rooted and soundly grounded in our particular assurance of Gods favour in Jesus Christ and our owne eternall salvation Heb. 6.11 Col. 2.6 7. And for the exercise of faith we should strive to learne every day to live by faith in all the occasions of our life spending the remainder of our lives in the faith of the Sonne of God holding fast our confidence and not withdrawing our selves Heb. 10. Gal. 2.20 yea we should strive to be examples one to another in our faith in God 1. Tim. 4.12 Thirdly we should abound in love one to another and towards all men this the Apostle praies earnestly for and this we should shew by all diligence in preserving peace and unity amongst our selves so as there should bee but one heart and mind amongst us to this end bearing and forbearing and supporting one another wee should grow also in the tendernesse and heartinesse of our affections one after another longing one for another and delighting one in another yea our love should grow even in seeking to enlarge our acquaintance with such as feare God but especially in the labour of our love to doe good to such as feare God should we grow c. Fourthly we should grow in mercy and that both in the bowels of pitty and in the abundance of the fruits of mercy Col. 3.12.2 Cor. 8.2 7. and 9.11 Iames 3.18 Fiftly we should grow in patience and meeknesse and lowlinesse of mind Patience should have his perfect work and it wonderfully would become us if we could increase in the image of Jesus Christ for meeknesse and lowlinesse to be free from passions and pride oh how it would adorne us It is that one grace Christ so much urgeth upon us and was most eminent in himselfe Matth. 11.29 Iames 1.4 Sixtly We should grow in praier and the gifts that concerne our communion with God we should labour to be mighty and powerfull in praier able to wrastle with God himselfe and overcome him as Iacob did and to this end we should pray alwaies and learne to pray all manner of praiers in all things making our requests knowne to God with supplication especially we should strive to abound in thanksgiving to God in all things giving thanks this is the greatest honor we can doe to God 1. Thessa. 5.18.19 Philip. 4.7 Psal. 50.23 Col. 1.11 Ephes. 6.18.2 Cor. 4.15 Seventhly we should grow in the contempt of the world and the lesser estimation of the things of this life we should strive more and more to expresse a mortified conversation using the world as if we used it not setting out affections on the things that are above and having our conversation in heaven confessing our selves to be strangers and pilgrims and with all eagernesse embracing the praises of a better life Hebrews 11.13 Philip. 3.20 in nothing being carefull Philip. 4.6 hastning to the comming of Jesus Christ. 2. Pet. 3.11 Eighthly We should exceedingly strive to grow in the holy and reverent use of Gods ordinances striving to come with more feare and sense of the glorious presence of God This is a wonderfull hard lesson and little heeded of the most Oh that we could get it to serve the Lord with feare and to rejoice but yet with trembling Oh blessed is the man that can feare alwaies and worke out his salvation with feare and trembling Ninthly there is another gift we should grow in and it is marvelously necessary and comely and yet extreamely neglected and that is utterance of which the Apostle makes mention in his short Catalogue 2. Cor. 8.7 Utterance I say to be able to speake one to another with profit and power
fully cleere the secret of that place about the sin against the holy Ghost and therefore wish that these things be observed First that it doth not follow necessarily that whosoever hath that taste there mentioned shall not be saved for men may have that taste and finding it ineffectuall goe on till they find a true taste That taste is dangerous if men fall away else there may be good use of those tastes For it brings men neare the kingdome of God and makes preparation for true Grace Secondly that the sinne against the holy Ghost cannot be committed but by such as have beene enlightned and have set themselves to attend upon the Word either by solemne profession outwardly before men or by inward attendance upon it Two sorts of men in our times are in danger of this sin that is Hypocriticall professors and those they call the wits of the World who afterwards fell to all Epicurisme Thirdly that the failing away there mentioned is not to bee understood of any particular falling into some one or a few sinnes but of an universall falling away from the care of all godlinesse and into such a condition as to dislike no sinne as it is sinne and to believe from the heart no part of the Gospell nor be afraid to wallow in the sinnes which formerly hee in a sort repented Fourthly there is in them a personall hatred of the Sonne of God they doe with the Iewes as much as in them lieth crucifie him againe loathing him and inwardly swelling or fretting against the doctrine of Christ and striving as farre as they dare in his Ordinances and people to put him to shame by scornings and reproaches or what way else they can Heb. 6.6 and Chap. 10.29 Fiftly they abhorre from their hearts the graces of the Spirit and loath them in the godly despighting the Spirit of grace Heb. 10.29 so as they persecute to their power the truth being carried with incurable malice against it And thus of the third Doctrine The fourth Doctrine that may be gathered out of these words is that it is but a taste of the sweetnesse of God we can attaine to in this life we cannot reach unto the thousand part of the joyes of Gods presence and favour in this world These are part of his waies but how little a portion is heard of him Iob. 26. ult Eye hath not seene nor Eare heard nor heart of man perceived the things which God hath prepared for them that love him 1 Cor. 2.9 The comforts we feele in this life may well be likened to the taste both because wee have them but in small quantity and because they are quickly growne out of sense they are but of short continuance There may be three uses made of this point First it may quiet them that complaine out of Scruple of Conscience that their joyes they have be not right because they are so quickly lost whereas they must bee informed that the comforts the best men can get in this World are but a little 〈◊〉 given out of the Rivers of Gods plea 〈◊〉 Secondly it should make us the more out of love with this life and kindle in us the love of the appearing of Jesus Christ. Why desire wee to live so king o● Earth where we must drinke downe continually the bitter 〈…〉 and ●o●row and can get but now and then the taste of the comforts of a better life Why long we not to enjoy those pleasure● for evermore Psal. 17. ult Yea we may know how good it is to be in Heaven by the taste we have sometimes on Earth If it doe us such unspeakable ease and joy to 〈◊〉 of the s●eetnesse o● God for a little moment Oh how great then is that goodnesse God hath 〈◊〉 up from them that feare him Psal. 31.19 The smalnesse of the quantity and shortnesse of the continuance of our tast of the graciousnesse of God on earth should make us to use the meanes of communion with God with so much the more servency and frequency and humility Doct. 5. A fifth doctrine is that many in the Churches of Christians never so much as tasted of the sweetnesse of Gods grace and word and that may bee a cause why the Apostle speakes with an If as knowing it was a great question whether many of them had had experience of the sweetnesse of the Word Question Now if any aske what should be the cause that many Christians have so little sense of the sweetnesse of the word and Gods graciousnesse and goodnesse in the Word Answer I answer that it is First with many so because they want the ordinances of God in their power and life of them They want powerfull preaching some congregations have no preaching at all and many that have preaching have it not in the life and power The spices of the word are not beaten to the smell as they should be 2 Cor. 2.15 16. Secondly In others because the tast of the pleasures and profits and lusts of the world are in their hearts when they come to the word and so by the cares of life all sense of sweetnesse is beaten out Mat. 13. Luke 14.24 Thirdly It is in the most because they consider not their misery in themselves nor remember their latter end A man never knowes the sweetnesse of Christ crucified till he be pricked in his heart and afflicted for his sinnes and forlorne estate in himselfe by nature and till men know how to number their dayes they will never apply their hearts to wisdome Psal. 90.12 Fourthly some men are infected with superstition and the love of a strange god They prepare a table for the troope and therefore are hungry when Gods servants eat and vexed when they sing for joy of heart They cannot feele the sweetnesse of the Gospell their hearts are so poisoned with secret popery Esay 65.11 13. Fiftly Some men tast not of wisdomes banquet because they leave not the way of the foolish All sense is extinguished by the evill company they keep Prov. 9.6 Sixtly Too many Christians are poisoned with some of the sins mentioned in the first verse of this Chapter and that destroyes both tast and appetite in them Seventhly Some are fearefully delivered to a spirituall slumber the Justice of God scourging their impenitency and disobedience that made no use of his judgements and the remorses they felt before and so are in the case of the Jewes Rom. 11. Eighthly Because God doth for the most part reserve these tastes as the onely portion of his owne people and therefore never wonder though the common multitude attaine not to it Psal. 36.8 9. Lastly the best Christians are often much restrained in their tast of the sweetnesse of Gods favour and presence because they are not carefull enough to attend upon God in his ordinances they doe not seeke God and strive to finde Gods favour and presence in the meanes they heare and pray loosely with too much slacknesse and remisnesse
same First then of the description of Christ. And therein the first point of doctrine that offerethit selfe to our consideration is that Christ is a gracious Lord. He is a Lord and Master to all true Christians and such a Lord and Master as never men served for wonderfull graciousnesse That he is a Lord to the faithfull is evident by other Scriptures also 1 Cor. 1.2 Hee is said to be a Lord to all that call upon him in every place Thus David cals him My Lord Psal. 110.1 And great Apostles confesse themselves to be his servants Rom. 1.1 I●●● 1.2 Pet. 1.1 And that he is most gracious the Apostle shews when he tel● that all Ages have cause to wonder at the marvellous kindnes that God hath shewed to men in Christ. The use may be both for information instruction and consolation First we may 〈◊〉 be informed that Christ is God with the Father For the which the Prophet David Psal. 34. whence the words of the for 〈…〉 borrowed Give to God the Apostle applies here unto Christ and the reason of the application may in the second place informe us that God is gracious to men onely by Jesus Christ. It is impossible ever to feele or taste of Gods graciousnesse but in his Sonne And thirdly wee are here told as it were that Christ is God visible God is made visible and sensible 〈◊〉 men by Jesus Christ This is that mystery of godlinesse God is manifested in the flesh Secondly is Christ our Lord and Master then these things will follow 1. That we must live and die to Christ Rom. 14.7 8 9. wee are not our owne men we must live to him that died for us 2 Cor. 5. ult The love of Christ must constraine us and all old things must bee passed and all things must become new unto us If Christ be our Lord where is his service he must rule us and rule over us If wee walke in the vanity of our minds according to the deceiveable lusts of our old conversation wee have not yet learned Christ nor the truth that is in Jesus Eph. 4. And therefore letus 〈…〉 looke to his wayes as hee that must one day give account of 〈…〉 Christ which will be judge both of quick and dead Rom. 14. 2. That every 〈◊〉 bow at the name Christ and every tongue must 〈◊〉 his 〈◊〉 to the glory of God Philip. 2.1 Rom. 14. Wee must all take motion of 〈◊〉 supreme authority and forme in our hearts all possible reverence toward him 3. VVee must not judge one another For what have wee to doe to judge another mans servant He stands or fals to his owne Master Rom. 14. 4 9. Thirdly it ought to bee the singular joy of our hearts that wee serve so glorious a Master Never servants served such a Lord as it may appeare by the enumeration of divers particular differences As First other masters are not wont to die for their vassals Christ shed his blood for us one drop of whose blood was more precious then all the bloods of all the men in the world and this he did onely to ransome and redeeme us that wee might be a peculiar people unto him Titus 2.13 Secondly never Master had such power to preferre his servants Christ hath all power in heaven and in earth Mat. 28. and all that to enrich us Thirdly we serve the best Master because we serve him that is King of Kings and Lord of all other Lords Revel 19. Fourthly in the service of other masters there is wonderfull difference of places and many of the servants serve in the lowest and basest offices without hope of any gaine or respect But in Christ Jesus there is no difference bond and free male and female Iew● and Grecian c. in Christ are all one Col. 3.11 Fiftly other Lords may advance their servants to great places but they cannot give them gifts to discharge them but Christ doth enrich his servants with every needfull gift for the discharge of their callings 1 Cor. 1.30 Eph. 1. ult Sixtly other servants know that their Lords may and doe die and so they leave their servants usually unpreferd But Christ lives for ever as the Author of eternall salvation to them that obey him Seventhly other Lords may take offence and doe often put away their servants But whom Christ loves he loves to the end so as whether they live or die they are still Christs Rom. 14.8 Eightly no Lord can give such sure protection to his servants as Christ gives to his No man shall pluck them out of his hands Efay 4.5 6. Iob. 10. And whatsoever wrong is done unto them he takes it as done to himselfe and therefore the afflictions of his servants are called the afflictions of Christ 2 Cor. 1.4 Ninthly and lastly never Lord was so boundlesse in his favour Christ makes his servants his fellowes 1 Cor. 1.9 They sit with him there in heavenly places Eph. 2.5 6. He is not ashamed to owne them as his brethren Heb. 2. His servants he makes sonnes and heires too yea heires with himselfe unto God Rom. 8. Never man was so fond of his wife as Christ is of his servants Rom. 7.4 and all the booke of Canticles shewes it Finally they shall all mign with him and be partners with him in his glory after they have laboured and suffered a little when hee appeares in glory they shall bee for ever glorified with him Secondly The second thing affirm'd of Christ is that hee is said to bee a living stone A living stone A stone and a living stone The holy Ghost is used in Scripture to liken God and Christ unto a stone so Gen. 49. 24. God is said to be the shepherd and stone of Israel and Revel 4.3 God is likened to a jasper stone and Psal. 118.22 Christ is said to be the stone which the builders refused and so in many other places Christ is said to be a stone three waies First For hee is either a rock or stone for refuge because in Christ men may safely rest against all the surges and waves of affliction in the sea of this world Psal. 18. Secondly Or else hee is a stone of stumbling as the Prophet Esaiah called him long since Chap. 8.14 And the Apostle Paul acknowledgeth the same Rom. 9.33 and this Apostle in verse 6. following Because wicked men take occasion from this doctrine of Christ to fall into sinne and mischiefe and because if Christ may not be the meanes of their salvation hee will bee an occasion of their falling but in neither of these senses is it taken here Thirdly But Christ is here likened to a foundation stone to signifie that it is hee upon whom all the Church must bee built This is that stone which was cut out of the mountaine without hands Dan. 2.45 that hard stone of which the Prophet Zach●ry speakes Chap. 4.7 10. He is said to be a living stone and some thinke to liken him
or in particular it should note the sinnes of the stubborne Jewes who offended in word when they blasphemed Christ and denyed him But I rather take it as here it is translated and so it notes the causes why many men fall into scandall and from thence into despaire viz. because they bring ill hearts to the Word of God they have mindes that are rebellious and will not be subject to the Gospell but intertaine it with diseased and cavilling mindes Those persons are likely not to receive any good by Christ that quarrell at the word of Christ. Now that this may not be mistaken or neglected I will shew first what it is not to stumble at the Word le●t some weake ones should be dismayed then secondly how many waies wicked men stumble at the Word For the first To be grieved in heart for the reproofes of the Word is not an offence but a grace so wee are troubled not with dislike of the Word but of our owne sinnes Secondly to inquire of the truth and that which is delivered and to trie the doctrine by turning to the Scriptures as the Bereans did this is not condemned here nor is it a stumbling at the Word to put a difference betweene the teaching of Christ and the teaching of the Scribes and Pharisees Secondly but men are said to be offended at the Word when their hearts rise against it or they ensnare themselves through their owne corruption by occasion of the Word To speake distinctly wicked men are offended at the Word with a threefold offence First with the offence of anger when they rage and fret at the Word or the teachers thereof because their sinnes are reproved or their miseries foretold And this offence they shew either when they envie the successe of the Word Acts. 4.2 or raile and revile Gods Saints as Ahab did Michaiah for telling him the truth or when they mocke at the Word as the Pharisees did Luk. 16.14 Secondly with the offence of scandall when they take occasion from the doctrine they heare to fall off from hearing or from the true religion or from the company of the godly Thus they stumbled at those hard sayings of Christ that departed from him for that cause or reason Ioh. 6. Thirdly with the offence diabolicall when men pervert the good word of God to inflame themselves the more greedily to sinne making it a doctrine of liberty or taking occasion to commit sin from the Law that rebukes sinne Uses The use may be first for information and so two wayes For first we may hence see the reason why many hearers profit not by the Word It is not because the Word wants power but because they stumble at it They nourish cavils and objections against it they oppose reason to faith Secondly we may hence take notice of the difference of a regenerate and unregenerate heart To the one the Word is a savour of life to the other it is a deadly savour and full of offence to them And withall this may humble wicked men For this is a sure truth that so long as they are offended at the Word so long they have no part in Christ and withall it may comfort all those that love the Word and receive it with joy constantly For that is a meanes and signe of their interest in Christ. Being disobedient These words containe another cause why Christ was no better rellished by them and why they found such an ill taste in the word of Christ it was the wickednesse that was in them Sinne had marred their tastes Sweete meates have but an ill rellish with those who have corrupt and diseased stomackes and the cause is apparent the ill humors in their stomackes and nothing in the meates they eate But of their disobedience before and therefore this shall suffice in this place And thus of the cause in themselves The cause in God followes Whereunto they were appointed There is much difference of the reading of the originall words in the translations Some read thus They stumble at the Word and beleeve not in him in whom they are placed or set and expound it thus In whom they live move and have their being some read in stead of disobedient They beleeved not but for these words read them as here But then their meaning is that the Jewes beleeved not though they were thereunto appointed that is though they had the promise of salvation and were a people separate thereunto and so it is an aggravation of their unbeliefe This sense and reading is not to be despised But I take it as I find it in the translation and so the sense is That these men whether Jews or Gentiles that are here spoken of were appointed to this misery by the decree of God and so they are words that expresse the substance of this part of Gods decree which Divines call Reprobation And so it is to bee observed from hence That wicked men are appointed from everlasting to the enduring of the miseries which are inflicted upon them in this life or in hell This is a doctrine which is extreamly distasted by flesh and blood and proves many times more offensive to the common people and is alwayes to be reckoned as strong meat and therefore that I may fairely get off this point I offer two things to your considerations First the proofes that plainly avouch so much as is here observed Secondly I will set downe certaine infallible observations which tend to quiet mens minds and perswade them against the seeming difficulty or absurdity of this truth For the first the Apostle Iude saith that the wicked men he treateth of were of old ordained to this condemnation Iude 4. and the Apostle Peter saith that the ungodly were reserved unto the day of judgement to bee punished 2 Pet. 2.9 and vers 12. he saith that they are naturall brute beasts made to be taken and destroyed and it is manifestly implied 1 Thess. 5.8 that God hath ordained wicked men to wrath so Rom. 9.22 For the second though this doctrine seeme wonderfull hard yet to assure us there is no hard dealing at all in God there be many things may confirme us and ease our mindes though for the present we cannot understand how this should be and perhaps are much troubled about this point and therefore seriously consider First for thy selfe that if thou have truly repented and doe beleeve in Jesus Christ and hast in thee the signes of a child of God for thy part thou art free from this danger and out of all question art in safe estate and therefore oughtest not to grieve but rejoyce with singular praise to God Secondly seeing God hath comforted us with many doctrines and trusted us with many cleere points of knowledge can we not be contented that God should speake darkely to us in one point especially when wee are told beforehand that there is an Abyssus a depth yea many depths in this doctrine Shall we bee wayward because
can resolve to suffer the extreamest things rather than forsake our innocency This makes men acknowledge the vertue of Christ in us Thirdly by the power of practice in our conversation and so to shew them forth is First to practise them to the life to make a cleere impression of them in our workes The word here rendred to shew forth signifieth to preach and so it may note that wee should practise those vertues so cleerly that our lives might be as so many Sermons upon the life of Christ. Secondly to practise them so as others may observe them and so it imports that upon all occasions in our conversations which are before other men we should be sure not to be wanting in those vertues when we are provoked to the contrary vices Quest. But may wee do things for the shew Is not that Hypocrisie and vaine glory forbidden unto Christians Answ. There are some vertues we can never offend that waies by shewing them as we can never shew too much wisedome we may be vain-glorious in too much shew of our knowledge we may offend in bringing our zeale too much to the shew but we can never shew too much true patience or meeknesse or moderation of mind Phil. 4.5 we may offend in making shew of divers duties of piety in the first table as almes prayer fasting Matt. 6. but those vertues here mentioned may on all occasions bee lawfully held out to the best shew But that I may expresse my selfe more distinctly outward shewes are then condemned as sinfull viz. First when sinfull things are shewed as carnall passions and railing in stead of true zeale Secondly when secret duties are done openly and for shew as when private prayer and fasting is so performed as that others may manifestly observe them Matt. 6. Thirdly when outward shewes are purposely affected affectation and hunting after applause is condemned Fourthly when care in lesser things is shewed and the care of greater things is manifestly neglected this hath grievous irritation in it and is Pharisaicall Matth. 23. Fifthly when the things shewed are done deceitfully such was the practise of Ananias and Sapphira Act. 5. Sixthly when men multiply the use of the meanes of holinesse but neglect the practice of it Esa. 1. Mich. 6. Seventhly when wee shew our gifts of purpose to the contempt and disgrace of others Rom. 12.16 Iam. 3.10 1 Cor. 8.3 The use briefly may be First for humiliation and so first unto ungodly men in the Church that professe the service of Christ and claime the priviledges of Christians and yet in stead of shewing forth the vertue of Christ shew forth the wickednesse of the divell by their lewd conversation causing the name of God to bee blasphemed by Papists and Atheists and all sorts of Heretickes and Sectaries by their whoredomes swearing malice drunkennesse and the lusts of their father the divell and those of all sorts These are they that carry Christ about in scorne to be derided of the enemies of the truth for when with their words they professe Christ by their workes they deny him themselves and cause him to be denied by others Were there not a remnant that beare the Image of Christ in sincerity who would ever imbrace a religion that were professed by men of s●ch wicked conversation Secondly it should exceedingly humble scandalous pro●essers that would have the world thinke better of them than of the former sort an● yet become grievous to men by their vile offences Thirdly unfruitfull Christians which lie in a continuall barrennesse whose ground is alwayes fallow have but little consolation from hence for though they are better than the former in that they are not openly wicked yet they fall short of their duty here because they do not more effectually shew forth the graces of Christ. And that there may bee a healing of this error they must amend first their ignorance and pray to God to teach them to profit secondly their slothfulnesse rowzing up themselves to more zeale of good workes and care to answer the opportunities of well doing Use 2. Secondly for instruction All that love the Lord Jesus should hence be perswaded to increase in all care of well-doing and study how to shew forth the light of their workes before men and the rather because First they have received such singular mercy from the Lord. Secondly they shallhereby glorifie their heavenly father and make religion to be well spoken of Phil. 2.15,16 2 Thess. 3.21 and put to silence the ignorance of the foolish we should be as tender of the honour of our profession as of our owne honour Thirdly they shall hereby wonderfully establish their owne hearts in the assurance of their calling and election 1 Ioh. 1.5,6 2 Pet. 1.5 to 10. and much increase their owne contentment and joy in the Lord 1 Cor. 15.58 Fourthly they shall have a full and plentifull reward in the day of the Lord Rom. 2.7,8,9,10,11 Fifthly the hearts of their teachers shall be hereby filled with joy when they see they have not laboured in vaine Phil. 2.16.2 Cor. 3.1,2,3 Of him that c. In the third place it may be here considered of why those vertues shewed forth by Christians are yet called the vertues of Christ. For answer whereunto we may be enformed that they are the vertues of Christ in divers respects First because they are such vertues as are had onely by such as bee in Christ by effectuall calling for all the wicked are strangers from the life of God Secondly because they are received from the Spirit of Christ of his fulnesse we have all received these graces Ioh. 1.14 Eph. 1.21 Thirdly because they are shewed forth for his glory All our gifts and services are devoted to the glory of Christ as they are in him so they are for him Lastly I thinke they may bee called the vertues of Christ because they resemble his vertues as the picture of a man is called by the name of the man himselfe And the consideration hereof should the more incite us to the care of these vertues seeing wee are here to follow no worse a patterne than the example of the Lord Jesus himselfe and withall we should be the more humble when we have had and done all we can seeing we have nothing but what wee have received And since all should bee for his glory we have reason to say at the best Wee are unprofitable servants And withall it should comfort us against the sense of our infirmities to consider how weake soever wee have beene yet our gifts are acknowledged for the vertues of Christ himselfe and by the benefit of Christs intercession are accepted of God as if they had been found in the person of Christ himselfe Thus of the third point He that hath called you The fourth thing to be noted is this Periphrasis here given of Christ. Instead of saying the vertues of Christ hee saith the vertues of him that called you which he doth of
speed better than the Apostles who in all places left thousands of people that would not regard them nor their Ministeries 2. Tim. 2.25 26. Lastly we should learne even of wicked men how wee should entertaine the truth for if it bee so hard a matter to get men to change their minds when they hold grosse errors and falshood how ought we to stick to the truth when wee have received it and not receive any other doctrine though an Angell from heaven should teach us otherwise than is written in the Word of God Gal. 1.7 Doct. 2. Wee may hence also note that God is pleased to suffer his children in this life to live amongst wicked men A godly man can live no where but there are some wicked living there the Tares will grow up with the Wheate There may be divers reasons assigned of this why God doth not gather his people altogether from the places where wicked men dwell as first God doth hereby try his people whether they will forsake the inticements of the wicked and cleave to him and his truth the more by-waies there are the more prayse to him that keepes the right way Secondly God doth by the wicked many times refine and purifie his servants by reason of the wicked he both keeps them cleane and if they gather any filth by them he washeth them Wicked men are many times God's Laundresses to godly men for if God appoint them to chasten his servants they will doe it throughly both by reproaches and other waies Thirdly the Kingdome of Christ must bee set up among wicked men because amongst them are many of God's Elect which are in due time to bee converted from their wickednesse Fourthly hereby the power of Christ is magnified that can set up and maintaine his Scepter in the middest of his enemies Fiftly by this course God's patience is prolonged for God is pleased for the godlie's sakes to forbeare those destroying judgements which else would fall upon the wicked The use should be to teach us to beare with patience the inconveniences which befall us in our places and callings by reason of the neighbourhood of wicked men as knowing that it is the condition of all the godly and hath alwaies beene so and is so in all places and therefore to resolve with our selves rather to learne how to carry our selves fairely and honestly among them than through impatience without calling to shift our places or without charity to make any schisme or rent in the Church Secondly since on earth it will be no better with us in respect of our habitation we should therefore learne the more to desire to be in heaven where all the people shall be righteous since there is so much unrighteousnesse in this Wourld we should long for these new heavens and new earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse We should be the more thankfull if God ease us in any degree of the molestations of wicked men either ridding out manifest Idolaters Pagans or Papists or restrayning those that are with us from unquietnesse and tumult and daily slander or comforting us with a large fellowship of the godly Fourthly it should teach us circumspection seeing the dayes are evill both to hold forth our owne light in the midst of their darkenes to take heed that we trust not every man nor beleeve every thing a holy reservednesse will become this Doctrine Fiftly the zeal of Gods house should the more overcome us to strive to winne men to God and provoke them as wee have occasion and ability to the love of God and the true Religion Sixtly we should cleave the faster to the society of the godly and strive together and contend for the faith seeing that we are alwaies in the midst of our enemies Lastly it may bee a great comfort to such as can quiet themselves well towards wicked men that can keepe their way and be still upright and undefiled that can also keepe peace and winne love from their very enemies that can doe valiantly in the winning men to the liking of Religion for their sakes To bee good among the good is not singular but to bee evill among the good is abominable and so is it an admirable prayse to be good among the evill Doct. 3. That in some cases the conversation of a Christian may extend it selfe even to wicked men Someone will say We are forbidden conversation with them how then can wee converse with them Ans. First our conversation may reach unto them by fame or report so the Christians conversed among the Gentiles in that what they did was discoursed of among the Gentiles But this is not all for in some cases we may goe among them lawfully even into their presence and company as first in case of negotiation in things of necessitie as trade publike service or the like Secondly in case of naturall or civill obligation to them as children wives servants subjects may not withdraw their attendance or service from them but may and must converse with them Thirdly in case of Religion men that intend to admonish confute perswade or winne them to the love of Religion may for that end converse with them But then two cautions must be observed first that the party that would so converse with them must be able to admonish or confute c. Secondly such an end must not bee made a pretence onely to cover needelesse society with them Lastly a difference must be put betweene the open enemies of God and such as give some hope of inclination to Religion though yet they be not manifestly religious There are some persons that are inoffensive so as they are not guily of any grosse and open crime and seeme to favour Religion and the exercises thereof and doe desire the society of the godly and take no pleasure in evill company now we must beware that we judge not rashly of these to account them as Gentiles and such as are without and with these wee may hold more sure society Doct. 4. It may be lastly hence observed That to convince or winne the Gentiles honesty of conversation is chiefly to be respected honesty I say not Religion To shew the practice of religious duties before them is a way to irritate them they must bee beaten with their owne weapons and overcome in the things they professe to bee good The way to amaze them that are without is to shew that religion formes in us such things as they confesse to be good yet cannot come to or not in such a manner or degree such as are faithfulnes chastity meekenes wisedome taciturnity mercy or the like The use should bee therefore to teach godly Christians in the places where they live to looke to this point not onely to live without offence but to strive to excell in the vertues that concerne outward honesty of life And to this end it were excellent if Christians would marke in what things the men of the world where they live doe strive to excell
and not rest satisfied till they can make all sorts of men discerne that Religion hath made them even in those things to goe beyond them And thus they should not suffer themselves to bee put downe by Papists or any carnall persons in workes of mercy or truth in their words and promises or quietnes of disposition or magnanimity or the like and the rather because their praise is of God whereas carnall men have onely the praise of men And besides the true Christian shall have a recompence of reward in heaven Ephes. 6.8 whereas the Pharisee hath his reward onely in this life And further we should bee more carefull to winne praise to our God and the true Religion than they are to get applause to themselves or a strange god And wee are in the light they are in darknes it were a shame they should do their worke better in the darke than we in the light Rom. 13. Thus of the first reason The second reason why they should be careful of their conversation is because the Gentiles are apt to speake evill of the Christians as evill doers That where as they speake evill of you as of evill doers From hence three things may bee observed First that it hath beene the lot of godly men to bee evill spoken of and traduced as wee see the Christian Churches in the primitive times were exposed to the infamous reports of the Gentiles Two things would be here explained First that it hath alwaies beene so And then the causes of it For the first that it hath alwaies beene so is cleare by instances of all times before the Law under the Law and in the time of the Gospell 1. Before the Law Ismael scoffes at Isaac● and Iosephs brethren scorne and revile him Iob was accused as an Hypocrite by his owne friends and scorned by the basest of the people Iob. 30.1 So was it with Moses and the Israelites Heb. 11.26 2. Under the Law David was slandered by many Psal. 31.12 The abjects tare his name and ceased not Psal. 35.15 the drunkards sang of him Psal. 69.13 he was a reproach of men a by-word a proverb c. So in the Prophet Esays time Esay 8.18 and 59.16 and 51.8 Ieremy complains that they consulted how to devise devices against him and to smite him with the tongue 3. Under the Gospell 1. Look to the Author and finisher of our faith Christ Jesus he was charged with gluttonie Mat. 11.18 blasphemy Mat. 26.65 madnes Ioh. 10.20 to bee a deceiver Ioh. 7.22 and to have a divel work by the prince of divels 2. The Apostles were made a spectacle to men and Angels and accounted as the off-scowring of all things 1. Cor. 4.9 10 13. 3. Yea it is foretold to be the case of all Christians Mat. 5.12 Gal. 4.29 The causes of those reproaches follow First in wicked men it is their naturall hatred of the truth and goodnes 1. Ioh. 2. and 3. Secondly in the divell it is his policy hereby 1. To keepe men from embracing a religion that is so traduced Acts 28. 2. To discourage and hinder the weake Christian and to make him fearefull in the way of God 3. To pull back certain men which were going towards the Kingdom of God Thirdly in Gods will hereby to trie the constancy of his servants ● and to make them live more watchfully Fourthly in Christians themselves it is Sometimes long of hypocrites that breake out into scandalous courses and so make the way of God evill spoken of Sometimes it is the indiscretion and weaknesses of some Christians which first set wicked men aworke But chiefly it is their goodnesse because they will not run with the wicked into the same excesse of riot 1 Pet. 4.5 Psal. 38.1 Ioh. 3. Thus of the first doctrine Doct. 2. The second thing may be noted from hence is That to speake evill of the godly is a property of wicked men of men not yet visited of God Such as dishonour godly Christians did never indevour to glorifie God himselfe 1 Cor. 6.9.10 Psal. 15. Rom. 1.29 30. and therefore their tongues that are given to reviling of the godly are said to bee set on fire from hell Iam. 3. Doct. 3. The third thing is That to speake evill of the good is a vice that all wicked men are guilty of as here hee supposeth it to bee the sinne of all the Gentiles so of all men by nature Rom. ● 12 13. It followeth that I should shew the uses may be made of the three doctrines together but first a question may be asked and that is Quest. Whether may not evill bee spoken of godly men at all and in no case I answer Evill may not at all be spoken of them in these cases following First in things that are hidden thou maist not judge them as thou maist not meddle with them for the thoughts and intents of their hearts 1 Cor. 4.5 Secondly in things doubtfull of which there is no proofe for in such cases all men must speake and judge the best Thirdly in things indifferent they may not bee censured either for their judgement or practice Rom. 14. Fourthly things secret though evill yet may not bee carried about or discovered for hee that reveales a secret goeth about as a slanderer Fiftly they must not bee evill spoken of for meere frailties and infirmities for love must cover a multitude of those evils and their nakednesse herein must bee covered Sixthly they must not be evill spoken of behind their backes for any evils unlesse it bee when they are incorrigible or may infect others or otherwise that their sinnes bee spoken of for some manifest glory of God Backbiting is directly condemned Seventhly not for any faults for which they have truely repented Eighthly not in any case so as to judge them with a finall sentence to pronounce absolutely of their estates that they are hypocrites or shall be damned Lastly evill must never bee spoken of them for weldoing no man may dare to call good evill Otherwise in things that are apparently evill they may bee reproved by Magistrates or Ministers or Parents or Masters yea and by any that is able to admonish so as their sinnes bee not spoken of with hatred or meere desire to disgrace them The uses of all this are for instruction and so both to wicked men and godly men And so it is needefull to bee attended because all of us either doe reproach or are reproached Wicked men should be warned if it be possible to repent of this sinne and forbeare it and that for many reasons First if they consider Gods commandement which forbiddeth all excesses of this kind Psal. 33.13 Tit. 3.1 Secondly if they consider the causes of their evil speaking which as was shewed before is the malice of their owne hearts against the truth and the especiall working of the divell who is the fire of hell that sets their tongues aworke Iam. 3. Thirdly if they consider that
Jesus standing at his right hand Act. 7.55 Thus we are said to appeare before the presence of his glory Iude 24. Sixthly in his Word and so the Word of God is the glory of God either in generall as it describes the excellence of Gods nature in his properties or attributes Psalm 26.8 Or in speciall the Gospel is called his glory as it sets out the goodnesse of God after a matchlesse manner relieving for lorne mankind Esa. 6.1 And thus that part of the Word of God that doth describe Gods mercy is called his glory Exod. 33.18 19.22 Ephes. 2.16 Thus also that way of shewing mercy by bringing in the infinite righteousnesse of his owne Sonne is called the glory of the Lord Esa. 40.5 Thus God glorifieth himselfe Secondly God is said to be glorified by us Man may make God glorious but that he cannot do by adding any glory to Gods nature and therefore we must search out to finde by the Scripture what waies man may glorifie God and so wee may bee said to glorifie God or to make God glorious three waies First by knowledge when wee conceive of God after a glorious manner thus we make him glorious in our owne hearts and this is a chiefe way of making God glorious and this is one way by which the Gentiles glorifie God and this God stands upon so as he accounts not himselfe to be knowne aright till we conceive of him at least as more excellent than all things Seeing we can adde no glory to Gods nature wee should strive to make him glorious in our owne mindes and hearts And we may by the way see what cause we have to be smitten with shame and horrour to thinke of it how we have dishonoured God by meane thoughts of him And hereby we may also see how farre man can bee said to have the true knowledge of God in him yea there is some comfort in it too to a Christian that humbleth himselfe to walke with his God for though at the best he come farre short of conceiving of God as he is yet God accounts himselfe to be made glorious by us when wee get so farre as to conceive of him above all creatures and that is when he comes into our hearts as a King of glory farre above all that glory can bee found in earthly Princes Psal. 14.7 9. And thus we make him glorious not when we barely judge him to be more excellent than all things but when our hearts are carried after the apprehension of him so as we love him above all and feare him above all c. And thus we make God glorious in our hearts by knowing him Secondly by acknowledgment when in words or workes wee do ascribe excellencie unto God and to glorifie him is to acknowledge his glory or as the phrase in Scripture is To give him glory and so there bee divers speciall waies by which we are said in Scripture to glorifie God as First when in words we magnifie God and speake of his praises and confesse that he is worthy to receive honour and glory and might and majestie so Rev. 4.11 Psal. 29. 86.9 Secondly when men confesse that all the glory they have above other men in gifts or dignitie was given them by God So David glorifies God 1 Chron. 29.11 12. And thus we make God the father of glory as he is called Eph. 1.17 Thirdly when men that are guilty of sinnes that cannot be proved against them yet feeling themselves to be pursued by God do confesse to Gods glory their own shame their secret offences Thus Achan gave glory to God Iosh. 7.19 And thus the penitent sinner glorifies God when he cares not to abase himselfe in the acknowledgement of his owne vilenesse that God may bee magnified in any of his attributes or ordinances by it Ier. 13.16 Mal. 2.2 Fourthly when the praise of God or the advancement of his Kingdome is made the end of all our actions This is to doe all to his glory 1 Cor. 10.31 Fifthly when we beleeve Gods promises and wait for the performance of them though we see no meanes likely for their accomplishment Thus Abraham gave glory to God Rom. 4. Sixthly when wee publikely acknowledge true religion or any speciall truth of God when it is generally opposed by the most men Thus the Centurion gave glory to God Luk. 23.47 Seventhly when men suffer in the quarrell of Gods truth and true Religion So 1 Pet. 4.16 Eighthly when on the Sabbath men devote themselves onely to Gods worke doing it with more joy and care than they should do their owne worke on the weeke dayes refusing to profane the Sabbath of the Lord by speaking their owne words or doing their owne wills Thus Esa. 58.13 Ninthly when men doe in particular give thankes to God for benefits or deliverances acknowledging Gods speciall hand therein Thus the Leper gave glory to God Luk. 17.18 so Psal. 113.4 Tenthly by loving praising admiring and esteeming of Jesus Christ above all men for when we glorifie the Sonne wee glorifie the Father Ioh. 1.14 and 11.4 Eleventhly when wee account of and honour godly men above all other sorts of men in the world and so these Gentiles doe glorifie God in that they praise the Christians above all men whom before they reviled This is one way by which the Gentiles glorified God Thus of the second way of glorifying God which is by acknowledging his glory The third way of glorifying God is by effect when men make others to glorifie God conceiving more gloriously of him or in praising God and his wayes Thus the professed subjection of Christians to the Gospel makes other men glorifie God 2 Cor. 9.13 So the fruits of righteousnesse are to the glory of God Phil. 1.10 So here the good workes of Christians do make new Converts glorifie God so every Christian that is Gods planting is a tree of righteousnesse that God may be glorified Esa. 61.3 So are all Christians to the praise of the glory of Gods grace as they are either qualified or priviledged by Jesus Christ Ephes. 1.7 Use. The uses of all should be especially for instruction and humiliation it should humble us if we marke the former doctrine in that it discovereth many deficiences in us for besides that it sheweth that the whole world of unregenerate men lieth in wickednesse and that as they have all sinned so they are all deprived of the glory of God and altogether delinquent in each part of making God glorious I say that besides the discovery of the generall and extreame corruption of wicked men it doth touch to the quicke upon divers persons even the godly themselves To give instance In the first way of making God glorious How meanly and dully doe wee for the most part conceive of God! How farre short are our hearts of those descriptions of God made in his Word What strange thoughts come into our mindes at some times Oh how have we dishonoured the most
hearts with comforts out of the word of God against the time of evill and trials Fourthly they should be made for that reason the more carefull of all their carriage that they give not occasion to people that are so apt to speake evill of them as was urged out of verse 12. of this chapter Fifthly all men should looke to their eares and take heed what and how they heare reports It is an ill signe of a vicious nature to be apt to beleeve scandalous reports of godly men Prov. 17.4 And God will plague men in hell not onely ●or making but for loving lies though they bee made by other men Revel 22.8 And therefore as the North-wind driveth away the raine so should their angrie countenance drive away the showres of reproach that fall from back-biting tongues Prov. 25.23 Thus of the first point Doct. 2. It may be hence also noted that reproaches are to bee avoided as much as lieth in us God would have us doe all we may to live so that wee might not be reproached Psal. 39.8 Phil. 2.15 We must strive to bee unrebukable And the reasons are first because every Christian is not able to beare rep●oaches when he shall finde himselfe to bee slandered David shewes himselfe very unquiet when he was slandered especially in some cases as divers Psalm●s ●hew and Ieremy fals into desperate extrem●ties about them Secondly because reproaches and slanders have diuers ill effect● for they are like swords and razors and a man should avoid the wounds of ●words and razors as much as hee can Thirdly and be●●des some kindes of slanders doe keepe many men off from embracing Religion as the Jewes would not receive Pauls doctrine because that way was every where ill spoken of And further many times in the best mindes that are perswaded the things objected are untruths the reproaches leave a kinde of staine and worke a kinde of suspition and lessen the estimation of the person traduced Fourthly it is to be avoided because it is so easily diffused slanders will run strangely A whole Countrey yea the whole Kingdome will bee in a short space filled with the slanders which must needs come to many persons that are destitute of all apology for the innocent And lastly the showres of slanders that are cast upon godly men many times are but fore-runners of grievous stormes of perfecution And therefore they doe very foolishly that desire to be reproached and by their indiscretions irritate the tongues of wicked men against them It is a grosse folly in some Christians that will of purpose doe things that bee crosse to the course of the world in things indifferent thereby to proclaime a wilfull opposition to the world And therefore also we should be very thankfull to God when hee gives us any breathing times from reproaches and slanders by all good meanes to keepe wicked men quiet if it may be Doct. 3. It may here be further noted that it is a hatefull thing to bee an ignorant foolish man in spirituall things they are mentioned here with a kinde of grievous scorne Many reasons make this point evident For first the sacrifices offered for the ignorances of the people shewed them that it was a vile thing to be ignorant Heb. 9.7 Secondly the very nature of ignorance shewes it to bee a vile thing for is it not a hatefull thing to us to bee blinde in our bodies how much more is it to have the eyes of our mindes out Thirdly because it argues that a man hath not the Spirit of God in him for Gods Spirit is given to men that they might know the things of God and therefore when a man cannot know the things of God it is a signe that he wants Gods Spirit 1 Cor. 2.12 14. Fourthly because when God would of purpose plague a man with a speciall or horrible curse upon his soule this is it to give him up to a sottish spirit Iob. 12.40 with Esay 6.10 Fifthly it may appeare by the effects of this sottishnesse when wee respect the sinnes it breeds or the punishment it brings upon the ignorant persons for sinne It is certaine that ignorance is the mother of vice and corruption an ignorant person may quickly make himselfe guilty of a world of sinnes yea there is no sinne so grossely absurd or abominable but this kinde of men may commit it and without sense or care too The Prophet Isaiah opens the dotage of Idolaters and shewes the root of it to bee their blockish ignorance Esay 44.18 20. As ignorant persons may bee made wilfull Idolaters and that easily so may they bee whoremongers Prov. 7.22 drunkards c. yea they would at some times kill Christ himselfe if hee come in their way Luke 23.34 Wee see into what sinnes ignorant persons fall into such as whoredome Sodomitry buggery stealing murther drunkennesse swearing and yet see not their danger but like brute beasts are senselesse and for the offences in respect of punishment they are fearefull whether wee respect this life or another world In this life their ignorance deprives them of the sight of all those things that have true glory or comfort in them To live in ignorance is worse for the wicked than it is for the body to live in a dungeon besides all their best works are lost all they doe is abominable Hosh. 6.7 Psal. 14.1 2. and it is in vaine to plead their good mindes and meanings For without knowledge the minde is not good Prov. 19.2 and if they were never so zealous yet they lose their labour Rom. 10.2 And further this sottishnesse brings many a curse upon men yea when it is generall it brings fearefull publique plagues Esay 1.3 c. and 5.13 Hosh. 4.1 2. and which is worst of all after all the miseries of this life they must goe downe to hell they are utterly undone for ever this is the place of all them that know not God Iob 18. ult and Hosh. 4.6 Uses The use may be first for to shew the lamentable estate of multitudes of Christians that frequent our assemblies and yet are still extreme sots in regard of spirituall things they favour nothing but the things of the flesh and rellish nothing but what flowes from fleshly wisdome Aske the Labourer of his worke or the Artificer of matters of trade or the Husbandman of the fruits of the ground or the Gentleman of his pleasures or the newes of the world or the Scholar of humane learning and you shall have an answer many times to admiration but aske of Heaven and heavenly things except a few generall sayings they can say nothing but froth or errour they are as blockish as if they had never heard of the Gospell How many Masters are there in Israel and yet know not the things that concerne sound regeneration and a true sanctified life David cals himselfe a beast in respect of the remainders of ignorance in some things being excellently qualified with true knowledge Oh how
in the very pulpits showers of reproaches which ambitious and malicious temporizers poure out to strengthen the hands of the wicked and discourage the hearts of the righteous they thinke they may revile securely because they heare that way every where evill spoken of that cause and language is the cause and language of the multitude Fifthly because many ignorant persons when they are confuted yet are so foolish that they will wilfully persist in their objections upon this pretence that though they cannot reply against the answer yet they thinke if such and such were there that have more experience and learning they would confirme and make good what they say Sixthly because malice hath no eares they hate the truth and godly men and therefore are utterly unwilling to abate any thing of the disgraces of the truth or godly persons If it be not as they say yet their malice would faine have it so and if it may disgrace the godly they care not whether it be true or no. Seventhly because many times God gives them over to such a reprobate sense that through custome and evill thoughts and evill surmises they think verily they doe not much amisse to oppose and hate such persons This was the case of such as reviled and persecuted the Apostles they thought they did God good service as Christ prophesied of them The Uses of this doctrine follow Uses First therefore we should not wonder if we see this daily come to passe that men of all sorts should reproach● the good way of God so unjustly so foolishly so pertinaciously Secondly it shewes that godly men had need to be circumspect and to watch their words and workes with all exactnesse and that they which will confute ignorant men must strive to be very able and throughly furnished with wisedome of words and abundance of good works Thirdly it shewes that ignorant persons are in a lamentable case that are so inwrapped in the snares and cords of their owne folly that so willingly and wilfully run towards the gates of death and ruine that are so hardly cured of this spirituall blindnesse Fourthly it imports that study self-will'd perverse Christians that cannot be diverted or advised are to be reckoned in the rank of these fooles what shew soever they make of a better estate Fifthly it doth comfortably import that when one is teachable and hates reproaching and will doe or say nothing against the truth and is not pleased with his ignorance but judgeth himselfe for it and useth the meanes to get the knowledge and love of the truth that such a person is escaped from the congregation of these fooles and is in some measure enlightned with true wisdome from above Sixthly it may warn all that love their owne soules hereafter to take heed and with care to avoid wilfulnesse and self-conceitednesse Let men take heed they be not wise in themselves but strive to frame themselves to be true workers of wisdome and withall to take heed of a multitude of words hee that cannot be silent cannot be wise of godly And thus of the fifth doctrine Doct. 6. Sixthly we may here note that wel-doing is the best way to confure wicked and unreasonable men A sound and fruitfull life is the likeliest and surest way to still them if any thing will doe it it is the best way for divers reasons 1. Because we see here it is a course of Gods chusing and he saith it will even muzzle them and binde up their mouthes and he will give successe to the obedience of his owne commandements 2. Because by a conversation full of good workes we doe not only confute them our selves but we make others able to answer for us in all places 3. Because if a man undertake to answer them by words he is in danger to be provoked to speake unadvisedly and so many prove like those fools whom he reproves Pro. 26.5 4. Because the naturall conscience of the wicked is as it were feared to take notice of a good conversation and will struggle and resist within the wicked man so as he cannot so securely vent his reproaches 5. Because it is a way that brings most peace and comfort to ones owne heart If he deale with them by words his heart may afterwards smite him for some absurdity or other he hath committed whereas he is safe that fights against them by his good workes 6. Because it is the surest way of revenge to overcome their evill with goodnesse especially if thou canst get but the advantages to doe good to them that reproach thee Rom. 12.18 19. Use. The sound consideration of this truth should subdue in us that over-eager desire of answering such as wrong us by bitter words or workes of revenge yea it should compell upon us a consultation whether it be best to deale with them at all by words Gods way is by works and thou must get a great deale of temperance and wisedome if thou think thy selfe able to confute them throughly by words It is true also that in some cases we may resort to the Magistrate to punish them that abuse us but yet still this counsell of God that bids us silence them by well-doing should intimate that other courses must be used with much caution and without rashnesse or confidence in them Secondly this may reprove that unquietnesse and impatience which is found in some Christians when they are reproached and wronged they are much vexed at the indignities offered to them think it strange that wicked men should not cease traducing of their names whereas perhaps if they examine themselves they may finde that they have not used the meanes to still them they have not muzzled these dogs and therefore no wonder if they bark and bite too and muzz'ed we see here they will not be but by their good works And therefore if they be barren and unfruitfull they must take notice of the fault in themselves There are other things that may be noted out of these words but I will only touch them as Doct. 7. That onely foolish men doe reproach godly men Such as revile and censure many are usually either openly carnall men as they were drunkards that reproached David and abjects Psal. 35.15 and 69.13 They were either fooles or the children of fooles but viler they were than the earth that had Iob in derision cap. 30.1,8 men that ranne into excesse of riot as the Apostle writeth 1 Pet. 4.5 or else hypocrites that have nothing in them but words and empty shewes Or if at any time there bee a sinne found in godly men it is in such as are but babes and looke like carnall men and have a great deale of their naturall folly and madnesse unsubdued in them 1 Cor. 3.1 2 3. But for the most part it is a fault found onely in wicked men Doct. 8. That it is a great paine to a wicked man to be restrained from reproaches Hee is as much vexed when hee cannot or dare not speake
murderer is in a fearefull case but thou art a murderer therefore thou art in a fearefull case Now that that reason which concludes thus in him is his conscience is most apparent For the minde gives only the first part of the Syllogisme which is that a murderer is in a fearfull case or that the minde sees either by the naturall principles planted in it or by the Scriptures The other branch the conscience takes out of the memory that is that thou hast committed murder Now the concluding of both and applying them to the murderer is the proper work of conscience conscience is that within us that so concluds upon our actions Now for the definition of conscience omitting the diversity of frames given by divers men I expresse that which I take to be the cleerer and fullest to shew us what it is Conscience is a divine faculty in the soule of all reasonable creatures applying the principles or propositions of their minde in their particular actions either with them or against them I say it is a faculty to note that it is more then the act or the habite of the minde judging or determining For acts and habits may be lost but conscience cannot Besides the Scriptures shew that conscience doth act as it excuseth or accuseth and therefore must be a faculty it selfe and not the act of a faculty I say a faculty in the soule because I dare not assigne it or confine it to any part of the soule as they doe that make it a part of the understanding for the understanding hath no parts properly and to make it a part Analogically is not to be borne in a definition as Logicians know I say moreover it is in all reasonable creatures to note that beasts that have only a sensitive soule have no conscience And whereas God also is no creature therefore he hath no conscience For God being holinesse it selfe needs no faculties to governe himselfe by nor any conscience to witnesse or prompt him And I say it is in all that none might imagine that some men have a conscience and some have none For every man hath a conscience either good or bad Secondly the proper worke of conscience is imported in the other words of the definition viz. applying the principles of the minde For the understanding whereof we must know that there are certain notions or frames of truth planted in the minds of all men being infused by God as a naturall law in their minds shewing what is good or evill and those principles are increased in the mindes of such as have the benefit of the Scripture more or lesse according to the degree of their knowledge Now that which conscience doth is this it repaires to these formes of truth or light in the minde and takes such of them as concerne the businesse in hand and with the force of them either comforts or affrights men according as the occasion is Note that I say it is a divine faculty I wanted a fit terme to expresse my meaning for that I would ●●ter I say that it is a wonderfull speciall faculty in us it is a most celestiall gift Conscience is so of God and in man that it is a kinde of middle thing betweene God and man lesse then God and yet above man So then Conscience concludes about a mans owne actions for if conscience trouble it selfe about other mens actions it is either the weaknesse or the errour of conscience and I adde particular actions because conscience never imployes it selfe properly about generals and lastly I adde for the successe or end it is either with a man or against him to note that conscience is such an Arbiter between God and us that sometimes it speakes for God against us and sometimes for us to God But that we may be more distinctly informed about conscience I therfore come to the second point which is to consider what conscience can doe or how it is imployed in us and conscience is imployed both for God and for man which worke I will consider first apart and then joyntly For God then Conscience works diversly and hath many offices under God and for God for it is Gods speciall spy set in the heart of man to watch him and his intelligencer and notary to set downe what man hath done it is Gods hand-writing the Law of God written in our hearts or rather worketh by the helpe of that body of the Law written by the finger of God upon the tables of mens hearts it is a co-witnesse with God Rom. 9.1 It is also Gods Lievtenant and a great commander placed within us that severely requires homage and service to bee done to God and especially diverts man from ill directing him in the carefull manner of serving of God for God will not accept any service that conscience doth not order 2 Tim. 1.3 It is a taster for God in point of doctrine of Religion for all doctrines must bee brought to the conscience to bee tried whether they bee of God or no 2 Cor. 4.2 And finally it makes a man endure grief and suffer wrong for God and his glory as this Text imports For man conscience is many waies imployed as first it is imployed in viewing and surveying the things of man especially the hidden things of man and here the power of conscience is wonderfull For other creatures may see the things without them but have no power to see the things within them only man he hath a knowledge reflexed The eye of a man too can see other things but without a glasse it cannot see it selfe But now conscience can discerne it selfe and the whole actions of man and so it differs from science or the knowledge of the minde for to know other things is science but to know our selves is conscience The soule then by conscience knowes it self it views the thoughts memory affections of the soule and can tell what wee thinke desire love feare hate c. Secondly in matters of Religion conscience is specially imployed for instance both in the Word and the Sacraments For the Wo●d the mystery of faith even all the grounds of Religion they are laid up and are in the keeping of conscience 1 Tim. 3.9 And in Baptisme where as God makes a covenant with us and likewise requires a restipulation or promise on our part conscience is herein imployed and without conscience God will do nothing in the businesse It was the forme in the Primitive times that the party which was to be baptised was to be examined before God whether he did beleeve t●e question was Credis Doest thou beleeve And he was to answere Credo I doe beleeve Now this answer God would not take unlesse the conscience would say that hee did beleeve as hee said this is the answer A good conscience is mentioned 1 Pet. 3.21 Againe a good conscience serves in all the offices of our life or affairs even in all things to be a
the case of prayer he is called a God that delighteth to heare prayer in the case of infirmities a God that takes away iniquity and passeth by transgression and in cases of great difficulty he is conceived of as Almighty and so forth Doct. 4. It is evident from hence that God is a Judge and this point is both terrible to the wicked and comfortable to the godly It is terrible to the wicked many waies First because he is Judge of all the world all must bee judged by him Gen. 18.25 Heb. 12.23 1 Sam. 2.10 He is not a Judge of some one circuit as Judges amongst men are Secondly because hee is a Judge that needs no evidence be brought in for hee knowes all causes and is witnesse himself Ier. 29.23 and so Judges among men are not Thirdly because he judgeth for all offences he tries the hearts and the reines as well as the words and works of men Psal. 7.9 11. Earthly Judges try malefactors but in one or some few cases Fourthly because hee hath Armies of executioners hee can call to the heavens or speake to the earth and have hostes of servants to doe his will and execute his judgements Dan. 7.9 10. Psal. 50.4 22. so as none can deliver out of his hands Fiftly because hee is Judge himselfe Psal. 50.6 and 75.8 He doth not doe justice by Deputies but will heare all cases himselfe Sixtly because his judgement is the last and highest judgement and therefore there lieth no appeale from it Seventhly because he can bring men to judgement without any warning hee standeth before the doore and often seizeth upon the offender without serving any writ or giving him any summons Iames 5.9 And therefore wicked men doe very foolishly that ruffle here in the world and lift up their hornes so high and speake with such a stiffe neck and walke on in their sinnes and injuries so securely Psal. 75.5 6 7 8. Againe if God be Judge it is comfortable to penitent sinners First because repentance will alter the judgement if it be after the fact and before the sentence even in such offences as deserve everlasting death as appeareth in the case of David and the Ninivites is notified to the world Act. 17.31 whereas earthly Judges must proceed in their judgement whether the parties be penitent or no. Again it is the more comfortable that God is Judge because all parties wronged or grieved may have accesse to God and put up their supplications at any time he is ready to be found and willing to hear which is seldome true of earthly Judges Thirdly because godly men know their sentence already God hath acquitted them by his Word and by his Sonne and by his Spirit and therefore they need not feare his last judgement Doct. 5. God will judge righteously Gods judgement is a most righteous judgement Psal. 9. 8. Rom. 2.5 2 Tim. 4.8 Hee is the righteous Judge by an excellency because there is no Judge but misseth it some way only Gods judgement is alwaies righteous and it must needs be so for many reasons First because he judgeth the high as well as the low Iob 21.22 Secondly because his judgement extendeth to every offender in the world Iude 15. Earthly Judges may punish some malefactors but they leave thousands of men that are as great as they I meane as great offenders as they as for other reasons it is because they cannot apprehend them Thirdly because he judgeth for the breach of most righteous Lawes Fourthly because he will take no gifts Iob 36.18 19. Fiftly because he hateth heartily what he condemnes severely so the day of judgement is called A day of wrath Rom. 2.5 whereas man may censure other men for such faults as they themselves commit or at least are not moved to the sentence simply out of the disliking of the fault Sixtly because he is not deceived with shewes and outward appearances but his judgement is according to truth Rom. 2.2 Seventhly because it is generall according to mens works 2 Cor. 5.10 Eighthly because in the day of his judgement hee will specially honour the righteous Rom. 2.7 c. Ninthly because when a man can have no justice from men hee shall be sure to have justice from God and this is especially here intended Tenthly because he doth not judge rashly but as we see after wonderfull patience and the many daies men have had of sinning he appoints his day of judging Uses The Uses may be divers for First it shewes the wofull case of wicked men that forget God and in the hardnesse of their hearts runne on in sinne and so heap up wrath against the day of wrath Rom. 2.4 5. Secondly it should teach all men that have any care of themselves to deny all ungodlinesse and worldly lusts and to live godly and righteously and soberly in this present world Tit. 2.12 13. Thirdly it should be a singular comfort to all such as suffer wrongs and injuries in this world whether in their names or bodies or states or any way let them but be patient God will doe them justice as these places shew 2 Thes. 1.5 Psal. 4.5 Iam. 5.6 7 8. Iude 15. Doct. 6. It is the duty of Gods servants in all distresses to commit themselves and their causes to God and to his righteous providence and judgement This the example of Christ here shews us there is reason for it First because God requires we should doe so as these places shew Psal. 37.5 6. Prov. 16.3 1 Pet. 4. ult Secondly because it is not in man to direct his owne way Ier. 10.23 Thirdly because God never disappointed the trust of them that committed themselves to him Nabum 1.7 Pro. 16.3 The Use should be to teach us as we would shew our selves to beare the image of Christ and to be true Christians to practise this duty in all cases of wrong danger affliction or temptation But then withall when we have committed our cause to God we must remember these rules First never to use ill meanes to get out of distresse Esay 28.16 Secondly not to limit God but to let him doe whatsoever pleaseth him Thirdly not to be impatient or troubled but quiet our selves in God and waite and trust in him and if we finde any difficulties wee must then roule our way upon the Lord as the Psalmist saith Psal. 37.5 6 7. Fourthly we must acknowledge him in all our waies and give him glory when he doth us justice Pro. 3.6 Verse 24. Who his owne selfe bare our sinnes in his body on the tree that we being delivered from sinne should live in righteousnesse by whose stripes you were healed HItherto of the manner of the suffering of Christ. Now follows in the fift place the matter he suffered viz. He bare our sinnes amplified by shewing how and that three waies first his own selfe secondly in his body thirdly on the tree He bare our sinnes Christ may be said to beare our
meant carnall Christians that had turned from Gentilisme and received the profession of Christian religion but yet followed their carnall courses we may then note that the bare change from a false religion to the profession of the true is not sufficient to salvation A man that hath professed a false religion had need of two conversions the one is from his false religion to the true and the other from profanenesse to sincerity in that religion The corne must be fetched from the field into the barne but that is not enough for so is the chaffe but it must then be taken from the barne into the garner To leave Popery and turne Protestant is not in it selfe sufficient unlesse a man turne from the profanenesse that is in the multitude in true Churches to embrace the sincere profession of the Gospel And there is reason for it for in changing from a false religion to a true a man doth but change his profession or his mind at best but he that will be changed effectually must change his heart and whole conversation and become a new creature So that then these words describe a carnall man viz. that he is such a one as doth not obey the word of God By the Word he meanes here the doctrine published by the Prophets and Apostles and now contained in the Scriptures Many Doctrines may be hence observed 1 The Scripture is Gods Word because God thereby doth expresse the sense of his mind as men doe by their words The Scripture is not the word which God the Father begate but is the word which God the Father uttered and is the word which God uttered to us bodily creatures God though he be a Spirit yet doth speake both to spirits and bodies to spirits by a way unknowne to us to bodies he hath spoken many wayes as by signes dreames visions and the like so by printing the sense of his mind in the minds of creatures that could speake and by them uttered in word or writing what he would have knowne Thus he spake by the Patriarks Prophets Christ and the Apostles They that deny that God hath any words either deny that God is as Psal. 14.11 or else that conceive him to be like stockes or stones or beasts as Rom. 1.23 or else thinke he can speake but will not because hee takes no care of humane things as Iob 22.23 These are Atheists 2. The Scripture is called the Word by an excellency because it is the only word we should delight in God since the fall did never speake unto man more exactly than by the Scriptures and we were better heare God talke to us out of the Scriptures than ●eare any man on earth yea or Angell in heaven yea it imports that we should be so devoted to the study of the Scriptures as if we desired to heare no other sound in our eares but that as if all the use of our eares were to heare this Word Let him that hath eares to heare heare 3. This Word of God now in the time of the New Testament belongs to all men in the right application of the true meaning of it Once it was the portionof Iacob and God did not deale so with other Nations to give them his Word but now that the partition wall is broken downe the Gospel is sent to every creature That is here imported in that unbeleeving husbands are blamed for not obeying the Word which should teach all sorts of men to search the Scriptures and ●o heare the Word devoutly and withall know that the comforts terrours and precepts co●●ained in it will take hold upon all sorts of men respectively 4. The Word of God ought to rule all sorts of men That is implied here in that fault is found with these unbeleevers that they obeyed it not It was given of God to that end to instruct reprove and direct men in all their waies 2 Tim. 3.16 17. It is the Canon or rule of mens actions Gal. 6. 16. It is the light and lanthorne God hath given to men it hath divine authority If we will shew any respect to God we must be ruled by the Scripture which is his Word 5. Unregenerate men have no mind to obey the Word and the reason is because they are guided by other rules which a●e false as their owne reason the customes of the world the suggestions of the divell and the like and because too the Word is contrary to their carnall desires and therefore they yeeld themselves to be guided by such rules as are most pleasing to their corrupt natures and besides too the light of the Word is too glorious for his eyes he cannot see into the mysteries contained in it because they are spiritually to be discerned and the naturall man therefore cannot perceive the things of God 6. It is a dangerous thing not to obey the Word of God they are accounted for lost and forlorne men here that doe not obey the Word Men be deceived if they thinke it is a course may be safe for to disobey Gods Word for Gods Word will take hold of them and destroy them and it will judge them at the last day Zech. 1.4 5. 2 Thes. 1.8 They are but lost men cast-awaies that care not for Gods Word 7. Nothing is to be reckoned a sin which is not disobedience to the Word That which is not contrary to some Scripture is no transgression and therefore men should take heed of burthening themselves with the vaine feare of sinning when they breake no commandement of God but only unwarranted traditions either on the left hand or the right 8. The constant omission of religious duties and good workes proves a man to be a carnall person as well as the committing of manifest injuries or grosse offences Here the Periphrasis of a carnall person is That he did not doe what the Word required 9. Men that obey not the Word may be won which should be a great comfort to penitent sinners It is true that disobedience clothed with some circumstances or adjuncts is very dangerous as when men have the means and love darknesse rather than light Iohn 3.20 and when men are smitten with remorse and have blessing and cursing set before them and see their sins and feele the axe of Gods Word and yet will on in transgression Deut. 11. 28. Mat. 3 10. or when men are called at the third or sixth or ninth houre and will put off and delay upon pretence of repenting at the eleventh houre Ma. 20. or when men are powerfully convinced and will raile and blaspheme and contradict the Word Acts 13.45 46. 18.6 and when God pursues men with his judgements and they refuse to returne Ier. 5.2 3 or lastly when men despight the spirit of God and sin of malice against the truth Heb. 10. 26 27 28 29 30. 10. The chiefe doctrine is That sound obedience to the Word of God is the Character of a true Christian a marke to distinguish the true
they desire to be as pure as he would have them to be 3. Sound mortification and judging of our selves for what impurity we finde cleave to our workes 't is Christian perfection to judge our selves for our imperfections 1 Iohn 3 3. 4. Freedome from the grosse impurities and vices and vanities of the time God accounts us pure when our spot is not as the spots of the wicked and when we are not infected with the corruptions which are usually in the world 1 Tim. 5.22 2 Pet. 1.4 5. Freedome from the reigne of hypocrisie in the heart and from hypocriticall courses in the life Thus Saint Iames accounts the heart to be pure when men are not double minded Iames 4.8 And in conversation he is a pure man that is like Iacob a plaine man without fraud trickes or dissimulation 6. Precisenesse circumspection or exactnesse of conversation when a man sheweth respect to all Gods Commandements and makes conscience to avoide lesser sins as well as greater Eph. 5.15 Mat. 5.19 7. Devoutnesse and zeale in matters of religion and Gods worship and glory and so a pure conversation is a religious conversation that expresseth zeale and conscience in the things of Gods service in a speciall manner seeking Gods Kingdome first and above all other things 2 Tim. 2.22 Titus 2.14 8. Chastitie in keeping the heart and life cleane from the impurities condemned in the seventh Commandement is one great part of Christian purity But before I come to entreat of chastity in particular I would apply this doctrine of purity in generall first to the Text and then to the times As for the Text a pure conversation is here considered only so far as it may fall into the observation of carnall men and so it comprehends of the former senses chiefly inoffensivenesse separation from impure men freedome from grosse impurities and dissimulation a Christian and wise strictnesse of life and devoutnesse and well ordered zeale in matters of religion Use. Now for the Use of it If these be applied to these times it shewes first how wicked and profane those sorts of people are who reproach godly men for the care and practice of these things as if to be a Puritane even in these senses were to be some vile man not worthy to live amongst men Secondly it shewes that worlds of people that beare the name of Christians are not true Christians because their conversations are not pure for their swearing or drunkennesse or whoredomes or sins of deceit or dissimulation or fashioning themselves to this world or the liberty they take to live as they list testifies against them to their faces that their workes are not pure and therefore unlesse they repent they will all perish Rev. 3.1 2. and the rather because they cause by their evill lives not only the hearts of the good to be grieved but the mouthes of the enemies of religion to be opened to blaspheme Thirdly godly men that find these cares in them should comfort themselves much in the testimonies of their owne consciences and the gracious acceptation of God who will shew himselfe pure with them that are pure 2 Cor. 1.12 Psal. 18. Thus of Purity in generall Now of Chastity as a part of a pure conversation and it may well be that which is chiefly here intended Chastitie is either of the mind or of the body and it is a most certaine truth that God requires a chaste minde as well as a chaste body and doth forbid unchaste thoughts and desires a● well as unchaste words or deeds For unchaste thoughts and desires are first foolish and noisome 1 Tim. 6.9 secondly they hinder the power of religion and true knowledge and grace 2 Tim● 4 thirdly they fight against the soule 1 Pet. 2.11 A man were as good have his body wounded with weapons as his soule wounded with lusts fourthly they cause many times many and monstrous sins in the life which arise at first from the nourishing of soule desires and thoughts in the heart The wickednesse that was in the lives of the Gentiles did in many of them spring from the l●sts which they harboured in their hearts Rom. 1. lastly if men repent not of them in time they will drowne them in perdition 1 Tim. 1.9 But it is the chastitie of the body which is especially here intended our Saviour Christ divides those chaste persons into three sorts some are termed Eunuches from their mothers wombe and so are disabled for bodily fornication some are made so by other men who by violence for their owne service made some men Eunuches Now the third sort are they that made themselves Eunuches for the kingdome of Heavens sake Of this third sort are all chaste persons who by a godly care and watchfulnesse keepe themselves from the sinnes of filthinesse as well as naturall Eunuches doe Mat. 19.12 Now these persons that are made chaste for the kingdome of Heavens sake are either single persons or married persons of chastity in single persons other Scriptures intreat as 1 Cor. 7. of chastity in married persons this place intreats Now this vertue of chastity is of purpose imposed upon godly Christians by the Apostle because the sins of fornication were so rife and common among the Gentiles who oftentimes defended their filthinesse to be either no sin or a very small sin But before I come to speake of chastity in particular some doctrines would be in generall observed as first Doct. 1. A godly Christian must shew the proofe of his religion especially in keeping himselfe free from the sins that are most common and rife in the world and even the more sinne abounds in the world the more strict they should be in resisting sinne as here even the more filthy the lives of others were the more chaste should the conversation of godly Christians be because their love to God should constraine them the more to be zealous for his glory by how much the more God is dishonoured by other men and because they are flatly forbidden to follow a multitude to sin and because God hath chosen them out of all other sorts of men to beare his name and to hold forth the light of the Word in the midst of a crooked and perverse generation and because thereby the conscience of wicked men may be the more effectually convinced and prepared to repentance Thus Lot is righteous in Sodome and Ioshua and his house will serve the Lord though all the Nation serve Idols This point as it should inflame the zeale of the godly to contend for the truth the more earnestly and to resist all the vices of the time so it shewes that they can hardly have any truth of grace in them that are so easily borne downe with the streame of evill example and are so apt to follow the fashion of the world Doct. 2. Chastity may be in married persons as well as in single persons as here wives are said to be chaste in conversation though they with-hold not
the dead that Christ might give them this light of life How should they unchangeably resolve to seeke Gods kingdome first above all things and above all gettings strive to get understanding What shall it profit them to win the whole world and lose their owne soules But especially the doctrine of life should melt the hearts of all the godly and imprint upon them the care of many duties as 1. They have cause to wonder at the exceeding riches of Gods kindnesse to them in Jesus Christ in providing such an inheritance for them Ephes. 2.7 2. They should pray earnestly to God to open their eyes more and more to see the glory of this life and effectually to take notice of the high dignity of their calling and riches of their inheritance in life Eph. 1.19 3. This should marvellously wean their hearts from the cares of this present life and from the love of earthly things seeing their inheritance lieth in spirituall and eternall life 1 Cor. 7.38 Heb. 13.4 5. 11.13 Col. 3.1 2. Phil. 3.20 4. Since they have found this precious life by the Gospel they should therefore take heed they be not carried about with divers and strange doctrine nor trouble themselves with doubtfull disputations or unprofitable questions They have found the words of eternall life and whither else will they goe Tit. 3.7 9. Heb. 13.9 5. This should make them love one another as such as shall be companions in life for ever Yea they should receive one another as Christ received them to glory Iohn 13.34 Eph. 4.2 5.1 Rom. 15.7 And in particular husbands should make much of their wives and masters of such servants as are heires with them of the grace of life as this Text shewes and Col. 3.14 6. They should strive to shew the power of this life and how much it excells naturall life and therefore the fruit of the Spirit should be in them in all goodnesse righteousnesse and truth Eph. 5.9 and they should so hold forth the Word of life that they should think on whatsoever things are true honest just pure lovely and of good report and if there be any vertue or any praise they should strive to act that being carefull in all things to maintaine good workes Phil. 4.8 Tit. 3.7 8. Oh what maner of persons should they be in all maner of good conversation 7. They should lift up their heads with joy and be alwaies comfortable considering the assurance they have of eternall life they have the spirit of glory resting upon them One would think they should be alwaies singing and making melodie in their hearts though they have crosses and wants in this life yet is not God their portion and is it not enough they are provided for in respect of eternitie and is there any comparison betweene the afflictions in this world and the glory to be revealed Grace Thus of the matter of their inheritance The cause followes and that is grace Grace is either a gift in us or an attribute in God Sometimes by grace is meant the gifts God bestowes upon men and if grace were so taken then would be implied this doctrine That dead men may have the grace of God There may be grace in men without life yea men may have excellent gifts and yet be not alive spiritually as gifts of government from the Spirit of God as Saul had and gifts for edification in the Church A man may be an excellent Preacher as Iudas was and may have the gifts of prophecying and working miracles as the Reprobates mentioned Mat. 7.21 a man may have the gift of knowledge of the Scriptures as St. Paul imports 1 Cor. 8.2 Heb. 6.4 a man may confesse his sins as Pharaoh and Saul did a man may be much grieved and sorrow and humbled for his sins as Ahab and Cain and may repent too as Iudas did and may make a great profession of true religion and be very forward as Demas and Hymeneus and Phyletus did a man may be very zealous for the truth as Iohn and the Galatians were a man may pray and cry hard and often to God and be heard of God as the Israelites were in their distresses many times a man may be of an unrebukeable conversation amongst men as Paul was before his conversion and such as have sinned may reforme their lives in many things as Herod did finally a man may have faith to beleeve Gods Word as the Divels doe and to beleeve Gods promises as they that have a temporary faith doe after a sort and may joy much in the comfort of them as they concerne the godly and yet in all these gifts there was no life Another point in that sense is this That there are gifts of Gods grace bestowed on the Elect which are ever accompanied with life so as their grace is the grace of life And both these points should wonderfully awaken all sorts of Christians to looke about and trie their estates and weake Christians should diligently studie their booke of signes of true grace and marke how the Scripture proveth all those saving graces to be such as can be found in no reprobate But because I think Grace in this place cannot be taken for the gifts of grace in men I passe from these points By grace then here is meant the glorious attribute of goodnesse that is in God by which he freely sheweth his love and mercy to his creatures And that it must be taken in this sense I gather from the third of Titus v. 7. where the sentence being like grace is called there His grace we are justified by his grace and made heires of eternall life Now this grace of God as it is in God I consider of two wayes first as it is in relation to this spirituall and eternall life of Gods heires and then secondly as it is in it selfe generally considered In relation to spirituall life I consider of it both in what it excludes and what it includes Grace excludes both nature and the workes of the Law It excludes nature from this life in three respects first in respect of propagation This life cannot be propagated by naturall generation we are not borne heires of life and so the sons of God we are borne only the sons of Adam not of God They that are borne after the flesh are not the seed Rom. 9.8 Secondly in respect of priviledge By nature we are the children of wrath and therefore cannot be the children of promise Eph. 2.3 Thirdly in respect of the works of nature for by nature we doe such workes as proclaime us to be children of disobedience and children of the Divell and therefore cannot be heires of life by any workes done by nature since the fall And as it excludes nature so it excludes the workes of the Law not in respect of the obedience to the Law but in respect of the merit of life so as the inheritance cannot be had but by the workes of
in their consciences or in their estates It may be observed that all the while a man is in contention about his divers or strange opinions in which he dissents he is not quiet in himselfe nor enjoyes firme rest and peace in his owne heart and conscience And experience shewes that many both Ministers and private Christians have brought a great deale of trouble upon their estates by dissenting Now out of other Scriptures we may observe divers other ill effects of diversities in opinions as first it breeds confusion in the Church as the Apostle shewes 1 Cor. 14.32 33. Secondly it breeds division and schisme 1 Cor. 1.10 When men begin to broach new opinions schismes begin in the root of it though it may be a long time before it come to the full growth Thirdly it much disquieteth the hearts and heads of many weak Christians in which respect S. Paul wished they were cut off that troubled the Galathians chap. 5. Fourthly it not onely troubles Christians but many times workes still in them as it proves the subverting of their soules as the Apostles shew in the case of difference about the Ceremoniall Law Act. 15.24 Eph. 4.14 2 Tim. 2.14 16 17. Fifthly it drives men many times into divers acts of hypocrisie or passion or pride or such vices as are contrarie to singlenesse of heart Act. 2. 46. Sixtly it breeds many times strange censuring the authors of new opinions censuring of others as if because they received not their doctrine they were not spirituall enough but too carnally minded and that they were f●rre behinde them in knowledge as we may gather 1 Cor. 14.36 37. Thus the false Teachers vilified Saint Paul and the Apostles Thus of the motives to unitie in judgement Before I come to the Use I must put you in minde of a limitation that concernes this doctrine We must be of one minde but then it must be according to Christ Jesus Rom. 15.5 that is this consent in ju●gement must bee in the truth and in such truth especially as may further the edification of the mysticall bodie of Christ else agreement in judgement is a conspiracie rather than unitie The Use may be both for instruction and reproofe for instruction and so we should all be affected with a great estimation of unitie in judgement and strive by all meanes to attaine to it and keepe our selves so all of us that we doe live in unity with the Church of God Now that we may doe thus 1. Wee should beseech the God of patience and consolation to give us to be like minded even to worke in us the unity he requires of us Rom 15.5 2. We must take heed of private interpretations Men should with much feare and jealousie here or reade of such opinions or interpretations of Scripture as have no authors but some one or few men Of such authors of doctrines we should say with the Apostle What came the Word of God out from you or came it unto you only 1 Cor. 14.36 Especially men must take heed of receiving opinions from meere private persons that are not Ministers of the Gospel for I suppose it cannot be shewed from any place of Scripture that ever any truth was revealed to or by a private man that was unknowne to all the Teachers of the Church yea if the Authors of divers and strange doctrines be Ministers yet that rule of the Apostle should hold that the spirits of the Prophets should be subject to the Prophets Such doctrines as may not be approved by the grave and godly learned that are eminent in the Church must not be broached 1 Cor. 14.32 And this rule hath one thing more in it viz. that men should not expresse difference of opinion without open and manifest Scripture Avoid doubtfull disputations Rom. 14.1 Esay 8. 3. A great respect must be had to the Churches peace so as such doctrines as are likely to breed either scandall or division in the Church are either not to be received or not uttered except in some speciall case Yea moderate Christians that make conscience of unity should hold themselves in conscience bound to be affraid to depart from the judgement of the Church in which they live unlesse it be when doctrine is brought in with great demonstration to the conscience To preserve the unity of the spirit we must have great respect to the bond of peace Rom. 14.19 1 Cor. 14.33 Eph. 4.3 We must greatly reverence the forme of doctrine in the Church where wee live Rom. 6.17 4. That we may be of one mind every Christian must be sure to know the truth which is given to the Churches and to make himselfe fully perswaded in his mind about such truths as are fundamentally necessarie to salvation ● Tim. 1.1 3. 5. Private Christians in receiving opinions should have great respect unto such Teachers as have beene their fathers in Christ God hath bound them to a speciall reverence towards them which they should shew by reverencing their judgements more than any other men in meet comparison 1 Cor. 4. 15 16. 11.1 2 4 5. Phil. 3.15 17. 6. To preserve a further unity it should be the care of such as have gifts of knowledge and utterance to helpe forwards such as are weake in judge●●nt and to comfort the feeble minded lest they being neglected become a p●●y to deceivers of mindes 1 Thes. 5.14 and to warne such as are not of the same minde Phil. 4. Lastly we should marke such as cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which we have l●●rned and avoid them Rom. 16.17 18. The second 〈◊〉 may be for the reproofe of multitudes of Christians in all places that 〈◊〉 greatly against this doctrine by their dissenting in opinions without due respect of the former rules There is almost no Congregation in the kingdome but is disquieted with this sin yea many times the glory of such as professe religion is greatly obscured by this sin and the sincerity of religion much exposed to contempt and the profane reproach of the wicked And this sin is the greater 1. When men not only bring in new opinions but also bring them in with an opinion that they are more holy and more spirituall than such as receive them not or resist them 1 Cor. 14.37 2. When the opinions are meerely new and unheard of before in the Christian world 3. When they are brought in by private persons that goe from house to house to inferre upon others the singularity of their conceits 4. When themselves are doubtfull inwardly of the truth of what they affirme and are not fully perswaded but doubt both waies and yet take to that side that differs from the generall judgement of the Churches Rom. 14.5 1 Tim. 1.6 7. 5. When men urge their dissenting so violently that a Schisme is made in the Church or Christians are divided from the exercise of brotherly love and mutuall fellowship 1 Cor. 1.10 11. 6. When men are
vaine talkers and will have all the words and by their good wills will talke of nothing else and so hinder edification in profitable doctrine and such as is out of question Tit. 1.10 11. and when men lust to be contentious and are like Salamanders that live alwaies in the fire and know no zeale without contention 1 Cor. 1● 16 7. When men differ in judgement in the very points of foundation and erre against such truths as must be beleeved to salvation 8. If men be so ●●gh● headed and variable that they are tossed to and fro and carried about with every winde of doctrine sometimes of one opinion and shortly after of another especially when men are so new fangled as in every place to receive almost any doctrine that is new divers Ephes. 4.14 9. When men quarrell so earnestly about things of lesse moment contrary to the custome of the Churches as about praying or prophecying bare or covered or about eating the Sacrament full or fasting 1 Cor. 11. or about such indifferent things as may bee used or not used with Christian liberty Rom. 14. or about Genealogies 1 Tim. 1.4 and such like And that this reproofe may enter the more deeply upon the hearts of some Christians it will be profitable to consider of the ill causes of disse●●ing which are these and such like 1. Ignorance of the Scripture if they had more true knowledge they would not disagree and this ignorance yea sometimes palpable ignorance may bee found in some that thinke themselves to have more knowledge and to be more spirituall than a multitude of those from whom they disagree Mat. 22.1 Tim. 1.6 7. 1 Cor. 14.37 38. 2. Want of love to those found truths that mor● concerne sanctification causeth God in his justice sometimes to give men up to delusion● and to beleeve lies 2 Th●s 2. 3. Vaine-glory the very desire to be some body and to excell others makes some Christians gladly to receive or bring in different opinions 1 C●r 4.8 Phil. 2. ● Gal. 5.26 4. Over much trust upon the judgments of some ●h●n they esteeme when they respect some Ministers so much as to be of their opinion though their consciences be not enformed of any ●ound reason from the word of God for it This estimation of men above that is written hath deceived ●●●y ● Cor. 3.21 4.6 5. Respect of earthly things Some men teach and professe to hold opinions of dissenting sometimes meerely for advantage to their estates either to get maintenance or preferment in the world by it Tit. 1.10 11. Rom. 16.19 20. 6. Prejudice is the root of dissenting many times as the Gentiles would not abide yeelding to ceremonies out of very dislike of the Jewes and the Jewes would not understand the needlesnesse of their ceremonies out of very contempt of the Gentiles and so the strength of faction on both sides kept them from agreeing 7. Heaping up of Teachers disorderly when Christians are so diseased with humour and so hard to be pleased with sound doctrine that they hunt up and downe to heare all sorts of men it many times proves hurtfull in this respect that they get infection from the different humours of the many Teachers they heare Disordered hearing in this respect breeds as a surfe● of the inward regard of sound doctrine so a great aptnesse to receive divers and strange doctrines 2 Tim. 4.3 4. 8. The contempt of their godly Teachers and want of sound affection to them to them I say that have a charge over their soules whom they ought to obey And this is the more vile as some Christians order the matter because of their hypocrisie in magnifying the judgement or gifts of Teachers that are absent and have not the charge of their soules and abusing the due respect of their owne Teachers which is yet more vile if this injury be done to such as were their Fathers in Christ. Thus of the Use for reproofe By the limitation given before from other expresse Scriptures we learne so to understand this doctrine of unity as it excludes all unity of opinion or practice with such Churches or particular persons as hold doctrines against the foundation of Christian religion so as we must never agree with them As for instance We may not without the damnation of our soules be of one mind with the Church of Rome for there are many things which they beleeve and practise which we must in no case joyne with them in and it is impossible to reconcile us to them unlesse they change their minds I will instance in divers things wherein we cannot without losing Christ be of one minde as 1. In opinion of merit of workes for thereby we make the Gospel or Doctrine of Gods grace of none effect and the promise of God void which is to deny the grounds of Christian religion Gal. 5.3 Rom. 4.14 11.16 2. In the opinion of worshipping Saints and Angels for the Apostle saith expressely that they that doe so hold not the head and so cannot be true members of Christ Col. 2.18 19. 3. In their Idolatry in making and worshipping of Images and almost infinite superstitions contrary to the second Commandement expressely and so as we are commanded to get out of this spirituall Babel in respect of her spirituall fornications 4. In their doctrine of Traditions for they teach that Traditions that are not agreeable to Scripture yet are to be received if they be delive●●d by the Church in equall authority with the Scriptures If we be of one m●●de with them herein we cannot escape Gods eternall curse as these Scriptures shew Gal. 1.8 Rev. 22.18 5. In their doctrine of perfection for they teach a man may perfectly keepe the Law of God Now this is so dangerous an errour that the Apostle saith there is no truth in the man that holds it 1 Iohn 1.8.10 I omit the rehearsall of other differences Thus of the first vertue The second vertue charged upon Christians is compassion one towards another Have compassion one of another The word signifies such a fellow-feeling or sympathie that makes us like affected as if we were in their case The doctrine then is cleere That we ought to have a sympathy one towards another this is a singular vertue In handling of which point I will observe these things 1. The proofes of it from other Scripture 2. The Explication of the sense shewing in what things we should be like affected 3. The reasons of it 4. The Uses 1. The proofes are very pregnant and full in these other Scriptures Rom. 12.4 15. Heb. 13.3 2. For the explication This sympathie is to be exprest both in the case of the evills of others and in the case of the good of others In the case of the evills of others we ought to be tenderly affected towards them both in respect of their sufferings troubles griefes and crosses Heb. 13.3 10.34 Iob 30.25 whether they be inward or outward as
say that is he may be insallibly assured of it And this is true in two respects first he may know that he is truely called and converted and elected of God secondly he may know his calling in respect of the warrant of all his particular actions as here he may know what is required of him in his carriage towards his enemies Now that every true Christian may be sure of his calling and election and may know his conversion is most apparent by these Scriptures 2 Cor. 13.5.1 Cor. 3.16 2 Tim. 1.12 Heb. 8.11 1 Iohn 2.3 3.14 4.16 5.13 19. And that every Christian is bound to seeke this assurance and knowledge is apparent by many reasons As first from Gods Commandement he requires it of us that we should with all diligence seeke to make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Secondly many reasons may be gathered from the effects and benefits such knowledge and assurance will bring to us Assurance is profitable for many things In generall it is our best riches on earth Col. 2.2 and in particular 1. It estates us in all the promises of God when we know we are truely called then we know our right to all the promises of Gods Word 2. It purifieth the heart and life of man Acts 15.9 for when we know we are the children of God we are thereby stirred up to the greater care to please God and walke in his waies 3. It greatly staies and supports the heart of man in the evill day when temptation or afflictions befall us yet the comfort of our assurance sustaines us and refresheth us greatly For helpe in the evill day the Apostle saith we should above all things put on the shield of faith which if it remove not the crosse yet it qu●ncheth the fiery temptations of Sathan with which we may be assaulted Eph. 6.16 and it greatly helps us against the feare and terrour of death Heb. 10.19 20 22. In a word it overcomes the world 1 Iohn 5.4 5. 4. The faith of a Christian is all his living he lives by faith in all the occasions of life as his faith helps him when all other meanes faile him and makes all other meanes more successfull when he useth them The just man lives by faith The people in captivity that were Gods children raised a living for themselves in a strange land by their faith Hab. 2.5 5. It puts life into all the duties of religion or righteousnesse it worketh by love it ●ets all our affections on worke towards God and his people and creatures Gal. 5.6 6. It opens a spring of grace in the heart of a Christian every good gift from above is excited and made to flow from within him by the benefit of his certaine knowledge and assurance of faith Iohn 7.38 Now if any aske how a Christian comes to know his calling I answer 1. By his sensible feeling of his sins to be a heavie burthen to him of which he is truely wearie so as he desireth more to be rid of them than of any burthensome crosse whatsoever Mat. 11.29 9.13 2. By his manner of receiving the voice of Christ and the preaching of the Gospel not in word but in power The voice of Christ hath a marvellous power over him above all things in the world which appeares by the effects of it for he seeles in hearing the word first such an estimation of it as he acknowledgeth nothing like it for power and wisedome 1 Cor. 1.23 24 Secondly he finds at some times especially such an assurance of the truth of his religion and the doctrine he heareth that he is fully established and freed from his naturall uncertainties about the true religion Thirdly the Word worketh in him spirituall senses and very life from the dead which he feeles in all parts of his conversation making conscience of his waies in all things bewailing his frailties and striving to be such as God would have him to be Fourthly it makes him to separate himselfe from the world avoiding all needlesse societie with the wicked and exciting in him constant desires to use the world as if he used it not Fiftly much spirituall joy before the Lord even then when in respect of outward things he is in much affliction The most of these effects are noted 1 Thes. 1.4 5. 3. By the image of the vertues of Christ in his heart by new gifts in some measure for when God calls a man he reveales his Son in him Gal. 1.15 16. There is begotten in him a likenesse of Christ his very disposition is changed into the similitude of the vertues of Christ God gives him a new heart with the image of Christ stamped upon it and he is like Christ in respect of lowlinesse of minde and meekenesse and contempt of the world and love of God and the godly mercy wisedome patience love of his very enemies and desire to live without offence and praying to God as to his Father Quest. But if Christians may know their calling what should be the reason that so many Christians are so unsettled and are not assured of their calling Answ. Distinguish of Christians some are Christians in name and outward profession but not in deed being not at all converted though they have the meanes of conversion and this is the estate of the most men and women in all places Now some are indeed converted but are weake Christians as it were infants that lie but in the cradle of religion Now for the first sort the answer is easie They know not their calling because they are not called yea they are so far from knowing it that they generally are offended at it that we should teach that any body can know his owne calling certainely Carnall Christians then know it not because they have it not and in particular the causes why these Christians attaine not assurance is because they rest upon common hope of mercy in God which house is but like the house of a Spider and will give up the ghost when the evill day commeth upon them And besides they live in knowne sins which they love and preferre before all things can be offered to them by the Gospel Now it is impossible to have true assurance and to lie at the same time in knowne grosse sins without repentance And further many Christians by their wilfull unteachablenesse and incurablenesse in sinning doe so provoke God that all meanes notwithstanding yet those things that concerne their peace are hidden from their eyes Luke 19.42 Now for the weake Christian the causes of his want of assurance are such as these sometimes ill opinions about assurance either that it may not be had contrary to the charge given 2 Pet. 1.10 or if it be had it will not be profitable contrary to the reasons given before Sometimes it is their ignorance they are so unexpert in the Scriptures that not discerning the frame of godlinesse in generall they can never tell when
called 272 Wherein it exceeds all other writings ibid. Servants Service How we are to serve God 473 Who are rejected from the number of Gods Servants 474 It is an excellent freedome to be a Servant of God 475 Their prerogatives ibid. Servants are of divers sorts 486 For what cause Servitude came in ibid. How a godly Servant may comfort himselfe in his estate 488 They must be subject three wayes 490 Helps in their subjection ibid. They are to shew their feare of God in their callings 492 Their feare towards their Masters shewed divers wayes 493 Sheep Signes of a lost Sheep 557 Hopes of returning 558 Motives to returne 559 The time when the number and meanes 560 The maner and signes of returning 561 The lets 562 Shepherd What attributes are given to Christ as a Shepherd 563 564 He is the one true great and good Shepherd 564 The happinesse of such as live under this Shepherd appeares in ten things 565 Shew Seven wayes whereby we may offend by outward Shewes 333 Motives to the Shew of vertue 334 Sicknesse Vide Healing How it comes into the soule 548 The Sicknesse of the soule grievous many wayes 549 Why many feele not the Sicknesse of the soule ibid. Silence To put to Silence is diversly accepted 455 Sin Sixe wayes by which one mans Sin is derived on another 141 How many wayes Sin hinders the growth of the word 200 A man may be said to make Sin many wayes 522 523 How Christ had no Sin 524 Inwhat respect Christ bare our Sins 531 His sufferings fitted to our Sins 532 Men are said to be alive in Sin many wayes 535 Their miserie great that so doe ibid. Sinner To be a worker of Iniquitie what and three wayes manifested 397 Sion The Church is like Mount Sion in many respects 276 How the Citizens of this City may be knowne 277 Their speciall priviledges 279 Sober Sobrietie A fixefold Sobrietie 104 Sojourners Vide Saints and Strangers 4 5 132 Soule What it is 76 Soule taken many wayes 367 Its description ibid. Seven things considerable in it ibid. c. It is a substance but not bodily 368 It is immortall 369 Its originall 371 Anima non est ex traduce 372 God creates the Soule 373 374 Objections against it answered 374 375 Of the union of the Soule with the body 376 Shewed by many similies 377 By what band the Soule is bound to the body ibid. The faculties of the Soule 378 Its five senses 379 The inward senses three 380 The Soule gives to the body a threefold motion 311 The facultie of reason in the Soule and wherein it excells 382 The end of its creation 383 Foure kinds of warre against the Soule 384 The Flesh wars against the Soule five wayes ibid. How the Soule comes to be diseased 548 The sicknesse of the Soule grievous many wayes 149 Many feele it not ibid. The Soule synechdochically signifieth the whole man 17● Speaking Vide Evill-speaking and Report Spirit What need our Spirit● have to be sanctified ●5 In what its sanctification consisteth ibid. Eight things belong thereto 16 Why the Spirit is called the Holy Ghost 93 Why the Holy Spirit ibid. Sprinkling The meaning of that ceremonie of Sprinkling Christs bloud 22 A fourefold legall Sprinkling 22 23 c. The manifold passages of Sprinkling the Passeover opened 25 26 Statutes God hath foure Statute books 149 Foure praises of those Statutes ibid. Stone How Christ is said to be first a Stone secondly a living Stone 249 250 This Stone disallowed how and by whom 251 252 Wicked men compared to Stones in many respects 258 So the godly also ibid. Reasons why we ought to be lively Stones 259 That Christ is laid as a foundation Stone imports many things 276 A corner Stone 282 Elect and precious ibid. Strangers Who and why man is a Stranger even in five respects 3 4 The Elect are Strangers 4 And in foureteene things they should be like Strangers 4 5 The word Stranger literally and mystically taken 132 Prettie allusions from Israels being in Egypt 132 c. We should carry our selves as Strangers 364 Submission The Submission which belongs to Princes and Magistrates hath sixe things in it 425 Objections against this Submission answered 427 Suffer The markes of such as truely suffer with Christ 315 Divers wayes of Suffering 514 Christ Suffered for us in divers respects 517 518 His Sufferings were for our examples 519 Ten things to be followed by the examples of Christs Sufferings 521 Christs Sufferings 〈…〉 532 He suffered in his body and soule 533 Why he suffered on a tree 534 T TAbernacle Christ hath a fivefold Tabernacle 261 A godly man like a Tabernacle in many respects 262 Excellent uses hereof 263 Taste What will bring us unto a good Taste of Gods goodnesse 239 240 Our true Taste is seene both by the causes and effects 241 Wherein the Taste of the godly and wicked differ 242 How far the Taste of the wicked may goe 243 The uses of it 243 244 We can have but a Taste of Gods sweetnesse in this life 244 The uses of it ibid. The true causes of the want of Taste to the Word 245 When we have tasted of it we must not lose our Appetite 246 Temptation Foure sorts of it 57 Sathan tempts five wayes 58 Thirteene degrees of it ibid. c. How Sathans Temptations differ from our owne concupiscence 59 60 Comforts against Temptation 60 Twelve rules in Temptation 61 God tempts man sixe wayes 62 Seven wayes in affliction 62 63 Testimonie The Scripture is our sure Testimonie and thence how our Testaments are to be fetcht 124 125 Time Times Foure sorts of men have enquired about Times 1. The curious 2. The weake 3. The superstitious 4. The wise 83 Tradition The word is taken five waies 89 90 How many wayes children are infected by the Tradition of their fathers 142 Why those Traditions should be so infectious ibid. c. Trust. Five things pertaining to a perfect Trust 105 Nine wayes to shew our Trust 108 Truth What it is 175 What it is to obey the Truth how 176 V VAine-glory Wherein it is seene 512 Verily The word oft used in Scripture and that for three speciall causes 150 151 How many wayes we shew forth the Verilies of Christ 332 333 Why the Verilies that are in us are called Christs Verilies 334 Vertue How the word is taken in the Originall 327 Nine Vertues in Christ which we should shew forth 329 Vertue and Grace are a Christians best riches 618 Vessell The word Vessell diversly taken 642 Visit Visitation Men are said to visit diversly 412 So God also ibid. c. First in judgement 413 Secondly in mercy 414 Signes of such as he visits in mercy 415 What glorious things the day of Visitation brings forth 419 Uncleannesse Two waies contracted 25 Unitie Of Unitie in mind or judgement 674 675 Helpes thereto 676 Aggravations against discord in opinion 677 Many ill causes of
this formality and outward shew and serving God for fashion how deeply is it seated in mens manners It is likely the most of you that heare this doctrine will say it is good and perhaps some one or two of you will be a little toucht with a kinde of consultation in your selves which way you might doe well but alas alas out and alas Oh that I could get words to gore your very Soules with smarting paine that this Doctrine might bee written in your very flesh for a thousand to one you will goe the most of you away and not redresse your wayes Religion shall not bee honoured by you more than before cursed be that worldly drosse or spirituall security that will thus rob and spoyle your soules and keepe Religion without her true glosse and bea●ty and shining glory I might here also note that submission to the ordinances of men is one part of a Christian mans well doing and a speciall ornament of the sincere profession of religion because it is the discharge of the duty enjoyned us by God and so is a part of the obedience due to God himselfe to keep their ordinances is to obey Gods commandement Secondly because such a conscionable submission to mans Lawes makes the religious works of Christians to be the more unrebukable in the eyes of wicked men and therefore they are to be warned of their rashnesse that say that conformity to mens lawes is evill doing when God sayes it is well doing they say it is a sinne God sayes it is a good worke It is neerer to the truth and safer to say that not conforming is a sin because it is a breach of Gods expresse commandement in the former verse and therefore also godly Christians whether Ministers or private persons that obey the lawes of men simply out of conscience of Gods Commandements and not for corrupt ends may comfort themselves that the good God doth like of what they doe because it is his will that so they should doe and he sayes they doe well though some good men are contrary-minded out of weaknesse censure them as evill doers Then it is implyed here that the conscionable conformity of godly Christians shall be rewarded in Heaven for all well-doing shall be rewarded in Heaven but submission to humane Ordinances is well-doing and therefore shall be rewarded in Heaven Paul is crowned in Heaven for his holding to the Jewish ceremonies to win the Jewes and further the liberty of his Ministery Thus of the matter required The end followes That you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men The word here rendred To put to silence is diversly accepted or the force of it is shewed by diverse tearmes in severall Scriptures Sometimes it is translated to still a thing that is tumultuous and raging and so the sea was silenced or made still Mark 4.39 Sometimes it is translated To make speechlesse or dumb so Mat. 22.12 Sometimes To confute so as they have not a word to answer so Mat. 22.34 Sometimes To muzzle or tye up the mouth so 1 Cor. 9.9 1 Tim. 5.18 and so it signifies properly and so well-doing is intended here as a meanes to muzzle the mouths of wicked men The word here rendred Foolish men signifies properly men without a minde or men that have not use of their understanding and so are either naturall fooles or mad men The Doctrines that may be gathered from hence are many For it may be evidently collected from hence Doct. 1. That wicked men doe usually in all places speake evill of godly men they are prone to it they doe it usually The holy Ghost here supposeth it to be done as the usuall course in all ages and conditions of the Christian Church and no marvell For it hath been in all ages past the condition of godly men to be evill spoken of and slandered God children were as signes and wonders Esay 8. And whosoever refraineth himselfe from evill maketh himselfe a prey Esay 59.15 The throats of wicked men are the ordinary burying places for the names of the Righteous Rom. 3. And this is the more to be heeded if we mark in Scriptures either persons reproaching or the persons reproached or the matter of the reproach or the manner For the persons reproaching we shall read sometimes that men are reproached by such as are of the same Religion with them Psal. 50.16 Esay 8.18 Cant. 1.6 Yea sometimes that godly men are reproached by such as are of their owne house and kindred as Isaak was by Ismael and Ioseph by his brethren the parents are against the children and the children are against the parents and a mans enemies are those of his owne house And for the persons reproached we shall finde them to be the most eminent and godly persons as Iob cap. 30.1 Moses Heb. 11.26 David Psal. 35.15 Ieremiah c. 18.18 the Apostles 1 Cor. 4.9 10 13. yea the Lord Jesus Christ himselfe Heb. 12.3 And for the matter objected wee shall finde the godly men have beene reproached with the most vile slanders that almost might be I may spare other testimonies now seeing Christ himselfe was charged with gluttony blasphemie sedition deceit diabolicall working and to have a divell in him and he supposeth it to be the case of Christians to be spoken against with all manner of evill-saying Mat. 5.12 And for the manner two things may be noted First that many times wicked men set themselves to study and invent without all colour of occasion mischievous things to reproach godly men withall thus they devised devices against Ieremiah Secondly that when they have evill reports afoot they pursue them and divulge them with all possible forwardnesse and malice thus the abjects tare Davids name and ceased not Psal. 35.15 and ill-minded men cease not till that good men may be every where evill spoken of Acts 28. The reason of this strange kinde of ill humour in wicked men is twofold First there is their naturall hatred of goodnesse it is not because of the sin of godly men but simply because they follow goodnesse There is a naturall antipathy betweene a good life and a bad man 1 Iob. 3.13.14.1 Pet. 4.5 Psal. 38.20 Secondly the other is because it is one of the rules of the divell To be an accuser of the brethren and good livers and the works of their father the divell they will doe Iob. 8.44 The use is diverse for Uses First it should informe men not to thinke it strange when they see such things come to passe for no other triall in this point of reproach befals godly men but what hath accompanied the condition of all godly men almost in all ages Secondly godly men should be the more stirred up to prepare apologies and in all places where they come to contend for the truth and strive together to preserve the reputation of one another Prov. 12.18 Thirdly godly men should arme themselves and prepare for reproaches and accordingly stirre up their