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A87554 An exposition of the Epistle of Jude, together with many large and useful deductions. Lately delivered in XL lectures in Christ-Church London, by William Jenkyn, Minister of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The first part. Jenkyn, William, 1613-1685. 1652 (1652) Wing J639; Thomason E695_1; ESTC R37933 518,527 654

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the barren wildernesse and they are by God compared to drossie silver Jer. 6.28 which all the art and pains of the Silver-smith cannot refine and therefore called reprobate silver These seducers in Gods Ort-yard were trees without fruit twice dead pluck'd up by the roots Jude 12. 4. A fourth woe in this condemnation is Gods giving them up to strong delusion a delighting in errour and false doctrine with a believing it and thus seducers are said not only to deceive but to be deceived 2 Tim. 3.13 2 Thes 2.10 11. and those who received not the love of the truth had strong delusion sent them from God and upon them the deceivablenesse of unrighteousnesse takes hold and thus God suffered a lying spirit to deceive Ahab and his prophets 5. A fifth woe in this condemnation is a stumbling at and a quarrelling with the word of life 1 Pet. 2.8 and Christ the rock of salvation Thus Paul speaks of some who were contentious and obeyed not the truth Rom. 2.8 and of seducers who resist the truth 2 Tim. 3.8 Like these in Jude who contended so muth against the faith that all which Christians could do was little enough to contend for it against those who made the Gospel a plea for licenciousnesse 6. A sixth woe in this condemnation is progressiveness in sin 2 Tim. 3.13 and as the Apostle speaks of seducers a waxing worse and worse a walking so far into the sea of sin as at length to be over head and eares a descending to the bottom of the hill a daily treasuring up wrath a proficiency in Satans school a growing artificially wicked and even doctors of impiety 7. Which lastly will prove the great and heavy woe not to be contented to be wicked and to go to hell alone but to be leaders to sin 2 Tim. 3.13 and to leaven others with impiety and thus Paul saith that seducers were deceiving as well as deceived 2 Pet. 2.2 And Peter that many shall follow their pernicious wayes And certainly impiety propagated shall be condemnation heightned 2. Why is this punishment of seducers called Condemnation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the cause for the effect I grant Condemnation is properly the sentence or censure condemning one to some punishment and though in this place it be taken for the very punishment it selfe yet fitly doth the Spirit of God set out this punishment of wicked men by a word that notes a sentencing them thereunto And that 1. Because a sentence of condemnation is even already denounced against them 2. Because it is such a punishment as by judiciary sentence is wont to be inflicted upon guilty offenders 1. It is really and truly denounced c. For besides Gods fore-appointing the wicked to this condemnation as it is the punishment of sin the execution of his justice wicked men are in this life sentenced to punishment 1. By the word of God which tels them that God will render to every man according to his deeds to them who do not obey the truth but obey unrighteousnesse indignation and wrath Rom. 2.8 c. And that he who believeth not is condemned already John 3.18 2. By their own conscience which accuseth and condemneth as Gods Deputy and here tels them what they deserve both here and hereafter If our hearts condemne us c. 1 John 3.20 c. 3. By the judgements of God manifested against those who have lived in the same sins the wrath of God being revealed against all unrighteousnesse Rom. 1.18 4. By the contrary courses of the godly The practices of Saints really proclaiming that because the wayes of the wicked are sinfull and destructive therefore they avoid them Mat. 12.41 42. and thus Noah sentenced the old world by being a practicall Preacher of righteousnesse 2 Pet. 2.5 And all these sentencings of wicked men do but make way for that last and great sentence to be pronounced at the day of judgment Mat. 7.23 Mat. 25.41 to the punishment both of eternall losse and pain 2. It is such a punishment as by judiciary sentence is wont to be executed upon guilty offenders and so it is in two respects 1. Because it is Righteous 2. Severe 1. Righteous These Seducers were not spiritually punished without precedent provocations Rom. 1.28 as they did not like to retaine God in their knowledge God gave them over to a reprobate mind 2 Thes 2.10 and God sends them justly strong delusions that they should beleeve and teach a lie because they received not the love of the truth and because they would not be Scholers of truth they justly become Masters of error 2. The punishment of wicked men is such as is wont to be inflicted upon offenders by a sentence because of its weight and severity It is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not a paternall chastisement or a rebuke barely to convince of a fault but it 's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Judges sentence condemning to a punishment the guilty Malefactor It is not medicinall but penall not the cutting of a Chirurgian but of a Destroyer the happinesse of correction stands in teaching us but this punishment is the giving of sinners up to unteachablenesse and what is it indeed but a hell on this side hell for God to withdraw his grace and to suffer men to be as wicked as they will to be daily damning themselves without controle to bee carried down to the gulf of perdition both by the wind of Satans tentation and which is worse the tide of sinfull inclination For God to say Be and do as bad as you will be filthy still Rev. 22.11 sleep on now and take your rest I le never jog nor disturb you in your sins How sore a judgment is it to be past feeling so as that nothing cooler than hel fire and lighter then the loyns of an infinite God can make us sensible though too late OBSERVATIONS 1. Observ 1. The condemnation of the wicked is begun in this life As heaven so hell is in the seed before it is in the fruit The wicked on this side hell are tunning and treasuring up that wrath Rom. 2.5 which hereafter shall be broached and revealed The wicked have even here hell in its causes The old bruises which their souls by sin have received in this life will be painfull when the change of weather comes when God alters their condition by death When thy lust asks How canst thou want the pleasure let thy faith answer by asking another question How can I bear the pain of such a sin Observ 2. Tristitia nostra quasi habet quia in somnis tranfit Qui somnium indicat addit quasi quasi sedebam quasi loquebar quasi equitabā quia cum evigelaverit non invenit quod videbat Quasi thesaurum inveneram dicit mendicus si quasi non esset mendicus non
heaven people must not hear them delivering another Gospel 4. Observ 4. Infinite is the power of God to preserve the faith perpetually and unalterably The doctrine of faith is a torch burning in the midst of the sea It 's a Moses's bush burning not consumed All oppositions are by God turned into victories on its side The smutchings which Hereticks cast upon it are but to make it shine the brighter Naked truth will vanquish armed errour 5. This delivering of the faith once Observ 5. regulates the notion of new lights If we understand by new light a new and further degree of knowledge to understand what is unchangeably delivered in the Scripture new light is a most desirable gift but if by it we understand pretended truths which are new to Scripture varnish'd over with the name of new light they are to be shun'd for false lights which lead to perdition After Christ hath spoken in the word we must not be curious 't is bastard doctrine which springs up after the Scripture This one thing believe that nothing but Scripture Doctrine is to be believed 6. Observ 6. Gods unchangeable perpetuall delivery of the faith is a singular encouragement to expect his blessing in the delivery of it It may encourage Ministers and people He who hath promised a Gospel to the end of the world hath also promised to be with the deliverers of it to that time He who will continue a Gospel to us if sought will also continue his grace to it He who bestows the doctrine of faith will not deny the grace of faith if we duely ask it When the Lord bestowes the seed of his word be encouraged to expect the showers of his blessing If he sticks up his candles comfortably hope that he will put light by his Spirit to them 7. Observ 7. It 's a great comfort to the Saints that in all their changes and losses their best blessings shall never be altered or utterly removed In an impure world there shall ever be kept up a pure word This light shall never be put out till the Sun of righteousnesse ariseth at the last day God will keep his stars in his right hand They who will go about to remove the stars in his right hand shall feel the strength of his right hand Of the Ministry it may be said as Isaac said of Jacob God hath blessed them and they shall be blessed The Saints shall have a golden Gospel though they live in an iron age 8. Observ ult It must be our care to be stedfast in the faith and to shun hereticall superadditions and superstructures We must beware lest being led away by the errour of the wicked we fall from our stedfastnesse 2 Pet. 3.17 To this end 1. We must be grounded in the knowledge of the truth Ignorant and doubting people will easily be seduced Silly women 2 Tim. 3.6 ever learning and never coming to the knowledge of the truth will easily be led away Children in knowledge will soon be tossed with every wind of doctrine Eph. 4.14 They will like water be of the same figure with the vessell into which it 's put They will be of their last doctors opinion 2. We must get a love to the truth Many receive the truth for fear of loss disgrace c. or hope of gaine preferment c. or because others do so and as hounds who follow the game not because they have the sent of it but because their fellows pursue it These who embrace the truth they know not why will leave it they know not how and by the same motives for which they now embrace the truth they may be induced to forsake truth and embrace errour God often sends to those strong delusions that they should beleeve a lie who received not the love of the truth 2 Thes 1.11 3. Nourish no known sin The Jewel of faith can never be kept in a crack'd cabbinet a crazy conscience He who puts away a good conscience concerning faith will soon make shipwrack 1. Tim. 1.19 Those silly women laden with sins may easily be led captives 2 Tim. 3.6 Solomon by following strange women soon embraced strange and idolatrous practices Demas having loved the present world soon forsook Paul 2 Tim. 4.10 Seducers through covetousness wil make merchandise of souls 2 Pet. 2.3 Tit. 1.11 Pride will also hinder from finding and keeping wisdome Prov. 14.6 God giveth grace to the humble and resisteth the proud The garment of humility is the souls guard against every spirituall mischief 'T is prudent counsell to be clothed with humility 1 Pet. 5.5 An humble soul will neither hatch nor easily be hurt by heresies 4. Labour to grow in grace Beware saith the Apostle lest being led away with the errour of the wicked ye fall from your own stedfastness the remedy is immediately subjoyn'd but grow in grace They who stand at a stay will soon go backwards This for the first part of the duty to which the Apostle exhorted these Christians viz. What the thing was which he commended to them to maintain The faith once delivered to the Saints The second followeth namely the means whereby he exhorts them to defend the faith by an earnest contending for it That you should earnestly contend Two things offer themselves in the Explanation 1. 1. Explicat To shew what the force and importance of that word is which is translated earnestly contend 2. More fully what the Apostle here intends by earnest contending for the faith and wherein this earnest contention doth consist as it is imployed for the faith 1. The compound-word in the original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unto which our English words Earnestly contend do answer Decerto Bez. Supercerto Vulg. John 18.36 Luk. 13.24 1 Cor. 9.25 Col. 1.29 1 Tim. 6.12 2 Tim. 4.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propriè dicitur de aestuatione animi in eo qui in certamen descensurus est Accipitur pro luctâ in morte Gerh. Harm is onely used in this place throughout the whole new Testament All the severall translations thereof by interpreters speak this contention to which Jude exhorts these Christians to be eminent extraordinary The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 out of composition though then it importeth not so notable a contention as here in composition it doth is rightly translated to strive to fight and that as for the mastery to labour fervently and signifieth that vehement fighting and striving which was wont to be among wrastlers in their solemn games with sweat pains and trouble but it being so compounded as in this place it importeth a more renowned and famous contention than ordinary It is not agreed by all wherein the force of the composition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 consisteth Some conceive that thereby the Apostle intends they should add one kind of contention to another as possibly an open professed to an inward and secret contention Others that the Apostle would have them
that his commands are profitable to both 3. Sins of unchastity are peculiarly defiling Besides that spirituall uncleannesse wherewith every sin defiles carnall chastity defiles with that which is bodily All sin in generall is called uncleannesse but fornication is the sin which is singled out particularly to be branded with that name Some think that Adulterers are especially compared to Dogs unclean creatures The hire of a whore and the price of a dog are put together and both forbidden to be brought into the house of the Lord Deuter. 23.18 And when Abner was by Ishbosheth reproved for defiling Rizpah he answers Am I a dog Weems on the seventh Commandment The childe begotten in adultery is Deut. 23.2 called Mamzer which some learned men derive from two words signifying another mans spot or defilement how foolish are they who desire to have their dead bodies imbalmed and their living bodies defiled There 's a peculiar opposition between fornication and sanctification 1 Thes 4.3 This is the will of God even your sanctification that ye should abstain from fornication The Saints of God should have a peculiar abhorrence of this sin fornication and uncleanness c. let it not be once named among you as becometh Saints Eph. 5.3 they should cleanse themselves from all filthiness of flesh and Spirit 2 Cor. 7.1 A man who is of a cleanly disposition loves to wear clean garments The body is the garment of the soule and a clean heart will preserve a pure body Remember Christians by what hand your bodies were made by what guest they are inhabited to what head they are united by what price they are purchased in what laver they have been washed and to whose eye they shall hereafter be presented Consider lastly whether Delilah's lap be a fit place for those who expect a room in Abrahams bosome 3. Observ 3. The love of lust makes men erroneous and seducers They who make no conscience of ordering their conversation will soon be hereticall These Seducers who oppos'd the Faith were unclean and Flesh-defilers The fool said in his heart that there was no God Psal 14.1 and the true ground thereof immediately follows they are corrupt and have done abominable works They who put away a good conscience concerning faith will soon make shipwrack 1 Tim. 1.19 The lust of ambition and desire to be teachers of the Law makes men turn aside to vain jangling 1 Tim. 1.7 Diotrephes his love of preheminence puts him upon opposing the truth 3 Joh. ver 10. The lust of covetousness did the like They who supposed that gain was godliness quickly grew destitute of the truth 1 Tim. 6.5 while some covered money they erred from the faith Mich. 3 5. 1 Tim. 6.10 They who subverted whole houses and taught things which they ought not did it for filthy lucres sake Tit. 1.11 The blinde Watchmen and the Shepherds which understood not were such as could never have enough and lookt every one for his gain and they were dumb because greedy dogs Esa 56.10 11. The lust of voluptuousness produced the same effect they who caused divisions contrary to the Doctrine which the Romans had learned were such as served their own belly Rom. 16.17 They who lead captive silly women laden with divers lusts resisted the truth were men of corrupt minds and reprobate concerning the faith 2 Tim. 3. Wine and strong drink made the Prophets erre and go out of the way The Hereticks of old the Gnosticks Basilidians Epiph. adv haer c. 24 25 26. Aug. de haer c. 5 6. Perit judicium cum res transit in affectum Nicolaitans c. were so infamous for carnall uncleanness as Epiphanius Augustine and others report that a modest ear would even suffer by the relation thereof Nor have the Papists and Anabaptists of late come far short of them The lusts make the affections to be judges and where affection swayes judgement decayes Hence Alphonsus advised that affections should be left at the threshold when any went to Councell We are prone to believe that to be right and lawful which we would have to be so Lusts oppose all entrance of light which opposeth them Repentance alone makes men acknowledge the truth 2 Tim. 2.25 How can yee believe saith Christ who receive honour one from another Sensuall men taught that the Resurrection was past 2 Tim. 2.18 because it troubled them to think of it The consideration of a Resurrection an Hell an Heaven disturbs them and therefore they deny these If the light be too much in mens eyes they will either shut their eyes or draw the curtains Lusts will pervert the light which is brought in making men instead of bringing their crooked lives to the strait rule to bring the strait rule to their crooked lives and in stead of bringing their hearts to the Scripture to bring the Scripture to their hearts Hence it is that wicked men study the Scripture for distinctions to maintain their lusts and truly a carnall will is often helpt by the Devill to a carnall wit Lastly God in judgement gives up such who will not see to an inability and utter impotency to discern what they ought and to a reprobate minde they who will not be Scholars of Truth are by God justly delivered up to be Masters of Error And because men will not indure sound Doctrine God suffers them to heap unto themselves teachers after their own lusts to turn away their ears from the truth and to be turned unto fables because that when the very Heathen extinstuish'd the light of Nature and knowing God did not glorifie him as God professing themselves wise they became fools and God gave them up to uncleanness and vile affections much more may God send those who live under the Gospell and receive not the love of the truth strong delusions that they should believe lies 2 Thes 2.10 11. Wonder not therefore at that apostacy from the truth which abounds in these dayes and the opposing of those old precious Doctrines which heretofore men have imbraced in appearance some unmortified lust or other there was in them some worm or other there was of pride licenciousness c. in these beautifull Apples which made them fall from the tree of truth to the dirt of error in stead therefore of being scandalized at them let us bee carefull of our selves if wee would hold the mystery of faith let us put it into a pure conscience Let us keep no lust in delitiis love we no sin if we would leave no truth Let us love what we know and then we shall know what to love let us sincerely do the will of Christ and then we shall surely know the Doctrine of Christ I understand more than the Antients saith David Psal 119.100 because I keep thy precepts The Lord will teach such his way and guide them in judgment Evill men saith Solomon understand not judgement but they that seek the Lord understand all things Prov.
godly with a love of complacency True Christians shall have a Benjamins portion of love Mark 10.21 it doth good especially to the houshold of faith Brotherly-love is set upon brethren Christ loved the young man a Pharisee by shewing loving respect toward him but he loved Lazarus a godly man with a dear intimate love John 11.3 5.11 the best men shall have the best love There 's a prudence also in the measure of expressing love so to love to day as we may love to morrow We sow not by the bushel but the handfull 8. It 's a mutual reciprocal love Hence 't is Joh. 13.34 Gal. 5.13 Col. 3.13 Gal. 6.2 Jam. 5.16 1 Thes 5.11 that there is so frequent mention of Loving one another giving and receiving benefits is by some compared to the Game at Tennis wherein the Ball is tossed from one to the other and if it falls it 's his forfeit who mist his stroke His disposition is very bad who if he will not provoke will not repay love where Affection there Gain is reciprocal The Pole sustains the Hop and the Hop adorns the Pole the Wall bears up the Roof and the Roof preserves the Wall from wet the wise directeth the strong and the strong protecteth the wise the zealous inflameth the moderate and the moderate tempers the zealous the rich supplyeth the poor and the poor worketh for the rich Love must have an eccho to resound and return 9. It 's a fervent burning love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Puritie and fervencie of love are joyned together 1 Pet. 1.22 and 1 Pet. 4.8 Have fervent charitie among your selves It must be a love to the utmost not remiss and faint not a love of courtesie and civil correspondencie but of intireness and holy vehemencie such a love as was between Jonathan and David surpassing the love of women The fervencie of it must be so great as that it may burn and consume all intervening occasions of hatred and dislike by bearing with infirmities covering of sins construing mens meanings in the better part condescending to those of lower parts and places 1 King 18. like the fire that fell from Heaven upon Elijahs Sacrifice which lick'd up a trench full of water A love that overcomes the greatest difficulties for the good of others and triumphs over all opposition 10. It 's a constant and unwearied love 1 Phil. 9. Joh. 13.1 15.12 A love that must abound more and more A love that must be like that of Christs who loved his to the end Love is a debt alway to be owed and alway to be paid 't is a debt which the more we pay the more we have And which herein differs from all civil debts that it cannot be pardoned When we have well chosen our Love we should Love our choice and be true Scripture-friends to love at all times not fawning upon our friends when high and frowning upon them when low not looking upon them as Dyals onely when the Sun of success shines upon them we should love them most when they want us not when we want them most This for the explication of the third and last blessing which the Apostle requesteth for these Christians Love 2. The Observations follow 1. Love to God flows not from Nature Observ 1. 1 John 4.7 God is not onely the Object but the Author of it From him for these Christians the Apostle desires it The Affection of Love is natural the Grace of Love is divine As Love is the motion of the will toward good ti 's in us by Nature but as it is the motion of the will toward such an object or as terminated upon God it is by Grace Love is one of the Graces to be put on Col. 3.14 Rom. 1.30 and we are no more born with it in us than with our clothes on us Wicked men are haters of God and that as the word signifieth with the greatest abhorrency 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abhorreo unde Styx they so hate him as to desire he were not that so they might live without the limits of his Law the reach of his Justice God is onely by them look'd upon with fear Ps 139.21 2 Chro. 19.2 1 Joh. 3.13 Joh. 15.18.20 Rom. 8.7 as a Judge and whom men fear as hurtfull they hate and wish they were taken out of the way Mens hearts and Gods holiness are very opposite The carnal mind is enmity against God The very reason of it the best thing that is in Corrupt Nature even Lady-Reason her self is not an enemy onely but enmity and irreconcileable There is in it an Enmity against every truth preferring before it humane mixtures and Traditions and undervaluing Gods mercy and the way of obtaining it in his Sonne misjudging all his wayes as grievous and unprofitable accounting all his Servants base and contemptible An enmitie there is in Affection against his Word wishing every truth which crosseth its lust razed out of the Scripture quenching the motions of the Spirit refusing to hear his voice rejecting the councel of God against his people his Messengers hating them most that speak most of God either with the language of lip or life Enmity in conversation holding the truth in unrighteousness by wilful disobedience forsaking the waies of God to walk in those of Nature casting off his Yoke and refusing to be reformed And all this hatred is against God though man by it hurts not God but himself man being Gods enemy not by hurting his will but resisting it Non nocendo sed resistendo The consideration whereof should humble us for our folly and danger in hating so good and great a God It should also teach from whom to beg renewed inclinations Lord Whither should we go but to thee and how but by thee 2. Love is the best thing which we can bestow upon God Observ 2. 'T is our All And the All which the Apostle desires these Christians may return to God who had bestowed upon them mercy and peace Love from God is the top of our happiness and love to God the summe of our duty It 's that onely grace whereby we most neerly answer God in his own kind he commands corrects comforts directs pitties sustains c. in these we cannot resemble him but he loves us and in this respect we may and must answer returning love for love Love is the best thing that the best man did ever give his God Love is a gift in bestowing whereof hypocrites cannot joyn with the faithful there 's nothing else but they may give as abundantly as the most upright in heart they may give their tongue hand estate children nay life but Love with these or these in love they cannot give And the truth is not giving this they give to God in his esteem just nothing The best thing that an Hypocrite can bestow is his Life and yet Paul tels us That though
those twenty can cure that one infected person Rusty armour soon makes bright armour rusty by lying neer it when as the bright armour imparts to the other none of its brightnesse 1. The written word is needfull as the rule of faith and manners Observ 1. Jude upon the entrance of the Seducers with their errours tels the Christians it was needful to write this Epistle to regulate and direct them They who deny that the written Word is necessarily required to be the rule of faith must necessarily give way to the overthrowing of faith There 's no Truth in the Scripture can be proved or beleeved with a divine faith unless the ratio credendi or ground of such beleeving be the revelation of God in writing John 20 31. John 1.5.13 These things are written saith John that you may beleeve that Jesus is the Christ. And These things have I written saith he unto you that ye might beleeve in the name of the Son of God 2 Pet. 1.9 Wee have a more sure word of prophesie saith Peter to which yee do well to take heed as unto a light that shineth in a dark place Without this light the way of truth cannot be found The Bercans searched the Scriptures Acts 17.11 Luk. 24.25 27. Act. 13.33 Rom. 14.11 whether those things they heard were so The doctrines of faith have been ever by Christ and his Apostles proved and errors which oppose them have been ever by them confuted by the written word They who build not their faith upon the written word must needs go to Enthusiasms the Pope or Reason for a Foundation 2. The helping forward the good of souls 2 Observ 1 Cor. 9.16 is the most needfull imployment Paul as Jude here tels us that necessity was laid upon him to do this work A saving Ministry is that which we cannot be without We can better spare the Sun in the Firmament as it was once said of Chrysostome than the preaching of a faithfull Minister The Word in its ministry is compared in Scripture to the most needfull things bread salt water physick armour c. Bread and salt are alway set upon the table whatsoever the other dishes are Let our condition be what it will the Word is alway needfull The life of the the soul is the dearest and the famine of the Word is the sorest Places though never so rich and glorious are but magna latrocinia without the Word dens of theeves not dwellings for men The removall of the Gospel is a soul-judgment and the soul of judgments It 's foolish to account the falling of the salt upon the table ominous but it 's our duty to lament the falling of them whom Christ calls the salt of the earth Mat. 5.13 They who are weary of the word are weary of heaven weary of God Ministers for performing so necessary a work as is that of saving souls should hazard themselves What father would not burn his fingers to pull his child out of the fire It is not necessary a Minister should be safe but that he should be serviceable and that a soul should be saved 3. Observ 3. The opposing of Seducers is a needfull part of our Ministry 'T was this that made Jude account it needfull to write to these Christians It 's the Ministers work to defend as well as to feed people to drive away the wolfe from as well as to provide pasture for the flock The mouths of deceivers are to be stopt and gain-sayers must be convinced Tit. 1.9 11. They subvert saith the Apostle whole houses Cursed be that patience which can see it and lay nothing I know not how it comes to passe but among many the opposing of seducers is either accounted bitter or needlesse and it 's still the policy of Satan not to suffer a sword in Israel But if there be damnable heresies I see not but there may be a damnable silence in those who should oppose them 2 Pet. 2.1 Every one must give account for his idle words and a Minister for his idle silence 4. Observ 4. Ministers should preach such doctrine as is most needfull for the places and people with whom they have 〈◊〉 do The Physician administers not one kind of physick to all distempers Some Patients require one some another Some places abound most with prophanenesse others more with errours Some places are infamous for drunkennesse others for pride others for covetousnesse others for wearinesse of the Gospel The Minister must sute his preaching to their exigences It 's not enough in war for a souldier to discharge his Musket though it be well charged with powder and bullet unlesse also he aim well to hit the enemy He who delivers good doctrine and reproofs but not sutable to the people whom he teacheth dischargeth up into the ayre God commands the Prophet to shew the people their sins Isai 58.1 not to shew one people the sins of another but their own Some observe that Christ in his doctrine ever set himselfe most against the raging impiety of the times wherein he lived We find his vehemency exprest more against the secret subtill hypocrisies of the Pharisees than against other sins which in some times and places would have deserved most severe reprehension And the truth is the preaching of seasonable and needfull truths is that which creates so much hatred to the faithfull Ministers People can be content to hear us preach of the sins of our fore-fathers but not of the sins of the present times People will not take honey out of the Lion unlesse he be dead nor taste sweetnesse in that preaching which is lively and roars upon them in their way of sin A good heart considers not how bitter but how true not how smart but how seasonable a doctrine is It desires that the word may be directed to it in particular It sets its corruptions in the fore-front of the battell when Gods arrows are flying and patiently suffers the word of Exhortation This for the third and last reason which did put the holy Apostle upon sending the following Exhortation to these Christians namely the needfulnesse of sending such an Exhortation to them It was needfull for me to write And so I passe from the first part considerable about the Apostles Exhortation viz. the reasons why he did send an Exhortation The second follows viz. the Exhortation it selfe in these words And exhort you that ye should earnestly contend for the faith once delivered to the Saints In the words the Apostle sets down 1. The way or manner of his writing which was hortatory or by way of Exhortation 2. The matter or subject of the Exhortation or to what it was that he did exhort them viz. earnestly to contend for the faith once delivered to the Saints The first shews us what the Apostle did The second what these Christians ought to do First Of the way or manner of the Apostles writing which was by way of
enough It 's very good manners in Christianity to stay and to knock again though we have knock'd more than three times at a sinners conscience 3. Observ 3. The best Christians often stand in need of quickning by holy incitements The strongest arms like Moses's want holding up the ablest Christian may now and then have a spirituall qualm He who is now as it were in the third heaven 2 Cor. 12. may anon be buffeted with the messenger of Satan Grace in the best is but a creature and defectible onely the power of God preserves it from a totall failing Corruption within is strong tentations without are frequent and all these make exhortation necessary A Christian more wants company as he is a Christian than as he is a man though much as both The hottest water will grow cold if the fire under it be withdrawn 4. Observ 4. Isa 23.16 Hos 6.1 Mal. 3.16 1 Sam. 23.16 Holy exhortation is an excellent help to Christian resolution It 's as the sharpening of iron with iron It 's a whetstone for the relief of dulnesse Jonathan in the wood strengthened David's hand in God They who fear the Lord must often speak one to another The want of communion is the bane of Christian resolution When an Army is scattered 't is easie to destroy it The Apostle Heb. 10.23 24. joyns these two together the holding fast the profession of our faith without wavering the provoking one another to love and good works as also the exhorting one another 5. Observ 5. Heb. 13.22 Christians must suffer the word of Exhortation They must be intreated If importunity overcame an unrighteous Judge to do good to another how much more should it prevaile with us for our own good Let not Ministers complain with Esay I have spread out my hands all the day to a rebellious people Isai 65.2 Heavenly Wisdome is easie to be intreated Men want no intreaty at all to do good to their bodies Whence is it that when we want no precept and therfore have none to love our selves all Precepts and Exhortations are too little to perswade us to the true self-love This for the way or manner of the Apostles writing it was by Exhortation The second followeth The Apostles expressing to what he exhorted these Christians viz. earnestly to contend for the faith once delivered to the Saints In which words I consider two things 1. What it is which the Apostle here commends to them carefully to maintain and defend The faith once delivered to the Saints 2. The means whereby or the manner how he exhorts these Christians to maintain and preserve that thing which was by earnest contention Earnestly contend 1. What thing it is which the Apostle here commends to these Christians to maintain and preserve viz. The faith once delivered to the Saints This thing the Apostle here first specifieth calling it the faith secondly amplifieth three wayes 1. It was faith given or delivered 2. To the Saints delivered 3. Once delivered 1. He specifieth the thing which these Christians were to maintain and defend Explicat faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word faith in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doceo and persuadeo to teach concerning the truth of a thing which we perswade men to believe it is in Scripture taken either properly or improperly 1. Properly and that either 1. In its generall notion for that assent which is given to the speech of another Or 2. In its different sorts and kinds and so it 's either humane or divine humane the assent which we give to the speech of a man or divine the assent which we give to divine Revelation This divine faith is comonly known to comprehend these four sorts 1. Historicall faith called also by some dogmaticall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is nudus assensus that bare assent which is given to divine truth revealed in the Scripture without any inward affection either to the revealer or to the thing revealed Thus the divels believe James 2.19 and ver 17. This is called dead faith 2. Temporary faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not so properly call'd a different kind of faith from the former as a further degree of the same which is an assent given to divine truths with some taste of and delight though not applicative and prevalent in the knowledge of those truths for a time Mat. 13.21 he endureth for a while Luke 8.13 for a while they believe Miraculosa 3. Miraculous faith is that speciall assent which is given to some speciall promise of working miracles and this is either active when we believe that miracles shall be wrought by us as 1 Cor. 13.2 Mat. 7.22 or passive when we believe they shal be wrought for and upon us Acts 14.9 4. † Justificans Justifying faith which is assent with trust and affiance to the promise of remission of sin and salvation by Christ's righteousnesse Rom. 3.26 Gal. 2.16 Luke 22.32 Acts 15.9 Rom. 4.5 c. 2. Faith is considered improperly and so it 's taken in Scripture four wayes especially 1. For * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 De hac fide nunc loquimur quam adhibemus cum alicui credimus non ca quam damus cum alicui pollicemur nam ipsa dicitur fides sed aliter dicimus non mibi habuit fidem aliter non mihi servavit fidem Illud est non credidit quod dixi hoc non fecit quod dixit secundùm hanc fidem quâ credimus fideles sumus Deo secundùm illam verò quâ fit quod promititur etiam Deus est fidelis nobis Aug. lib. 6. de sp lit cap. 31. fidelity and faithfulnesse And so faith is attributed to God Rom. 3.3 Shall their unbeliefe make the faith of God without effect And to man Mat. 23.23 Yea have omitted the weightier matters of the Law judgment mercy and faith This is as Cicero saith Dictorum conventorúmque constantia the truth and constancy of our words and agreements So we say he breaks his faith Punica fides 2. For the profession of the faith Act. 13.8 Acts 14.22 Rom. 1.8 Your faith is spoken of throughout the world 3. For the things believed or the fulfilling of what God hath promised Gal. 3.23 Before faith came we were kept under the Law shut up unto the faith which should afterward be revealed and ver 25 But after that faith is come Here faith is taken for Christ the Object of faith 4. For the doctrine of faith or the truth to be believed to salvation and more peculiarly for the doctrine of faith in Christ Acts 6.7 A great company of the priests were obedient to the faith Rom. 3.31 Do we make void the law through faith Nomine fidei censetur illud quod creditur illud quo creditur Lomb. Rom. 12.6 Acts 24.24 He heard him concerning the faith in
Christ Gal. 1.23 He now preacheth the faith which before he persecuted So 1 Tim. 4.16 Gal. 3.2 So here in this place of Jude Faith once delivered is to be understood of the faith of heavenly doctrine the word of faith which the Apostle saith God had delivered to them and they were to maintain against the opposite errours of seducers This holy doctrine being called faith 1. Because it is the instrument used by God to work faith The Spirit by the word perswading us to assent to the whole doctrine of the Gospel and to rest upon Christ in the promise for life In which respect faith is said to come by hearing Rom. 10.15 And the Gospel the power of God Rom. 1.16 c. to every one that believes The faith to be believed begets a faith believing 2. Because it is a most sure infallible faithfull word and deserves to be the object of our faith and belief The Author of it was the holy and true Rev. 3.7.14 Tit. 1.2 2 Pet. 1.2 the faithful and true Witnesse God who cannot lie The Instruments were infallibly guided by the immediate derection and assistance of the holy Ghost The Matter of it an everlasting truth the Law being a constant rule of righteousnesse the Gospel conteining promises which shall have their stability when heaven and earth shall passe away and of such certainty that if an angel from heaven should teach another doctrine he must be accursed It abounds also with prophesies predictions most exactly accomplished though after hundreds yea thousands of years The form of it which is its conformity with God himself sheweth that if God be faithfull Heb. 4.12 Psal 19.7 9. needs must his word be so its powerfull it searcheth the heart its pure and perfect true and faithfull and all this in conformity with the power omniscience purity perfection truth of God himself The end of it is to supply us with assured comfort Rom. 15.4 Observ 1. 1. The word of life is most worthy of assent and approbation No word so much challengeth belief as Gods it 's so true and worthy of belief that it 's called faith it self When in Scripture the object is called by the name of the habit or affection it notes that the object is very proper for that habit or affection to be exercised about Heaven is in Scripture called joy to shew it 's much to be rejoyced in and the Doctrine of salvation is called faith to shew that its most worthy of our faith Infidelity is a most inexcusable and incongruous sin in us Tit. 1.2 Heb. 6.18 Isa 53.1 when the faithfull and true God speaks unto us It 's impossible for God to lie and yet Who hath beleeved our report may be a complaint as ordinary as it is old How just is God to give those over to beleeve a lie who will not beleeve the truh How miserable is their folly who beleeve a lie and distrust faith it self 2. Observ 2. Deplorable is their estate who want the doctrine of salvation They have no footing for faith they have they hear nothing that they can beleeve Uncertainty of happiness is ever the portion of a people who are destitute of the Word He who wants this light knows not whither he goeth The Fancy of the Enthusiast the Reason of the Socinian the Traditions of the Papist the Oracles of the Heathens are all Foundations of sand death shakes and overturns them all 3. Observ 3. The true reason of the firmnesse and stedfastnesse of the Saints in their profession they lean upon a sure word Spiritus sanctus non est Scepticus ne● opiniones in cordibus sed assertiones producit ipsâ vit â omni experientiâ certiores a more sure word than any revelation a word called even faith it self Greater is the certainty of Faith then that of Sense and Reason It 's not Opinion and Scepticism but Faith The holy Ghost is no Sceptick it works in us not opinions but assertions more sure than life it self and all experience The more weight and dependency we set upon the word so firm a foundation is it the stronger is the building None will distrust God but they who never tryed him 4. Our great end in attending upon the word should be the furthering of our faith The jewel of the Word should not hang in our ears but be lock'd up in a beleeving heart 'T is not meat on the table but in the stomack that nourisheth and not the Word preached but beleeved that saves us The Apostle having specified the thing which they were to maintain Faith he amplifieth it and that three wayes 1. Explicat 2. He saith it was delivered The word in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here translated delivered signifieth to be given or delivered from one to another severall wayes in Scripture according to the circumstances of the place where and the matter about which 't is used Sometime it importeth a delivering craftily deceitfully or traiterously in which respect the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is often rendred to betray as Matth. 2.4.10 and Chap. 26 15 16 21 23 24 25. and Chap. 16.45 46 48. In some places it signifieth a delivering in a way of punishment and suffering As Mat. 4.12 Jesus heard that John was delivered up So Mat. 5.25 and 10.17.19.21 and 17.22 and Acts 7.42 c. In other places it signifieth a delivering in a way of committing something to ones trust to be carefully regarded and preserved as Mat. 11.27 and 25.14 20. and John 19.20 and 1 Pet. 2.23 And thus it frequently signifieth a delivering by way of information or relation of doctrines and duties from one to another to be kept and observed And that both from God first by the speech and afterward by the writing of holy men for the use of his Church as 1 Cor. 11.2 2 Thes 2.15 and 3.6 2 Pet. 2.21 and also from men who often deliver doctrines to others not written in the word Mat. 15.2 Mark 7.9.13 but invented by men In this sense the delivering here mentioned is to be taken namely for such an information or relation of Gods will as they to whom it is delivered are bound to preserve and keep as their treasure In which respect the delivering of this faith or doctrine of salvation comprehends first Gods bestowing it secondly Mans holding and keeping it 1. Gods bestowing it and in that is considerable 1. In what wayes and after what manner God delivered it 2. What need there was of this delivery of the faith by God 1. In what wayes God delivered the faith the Scripture tels us he hath delivered it either extraordinarily Num. 12.6.8 Heb. 1.1 as immediately by himselfe by Angels by a voice by a sensible apparition to men sometime when they were awake at other times when they were sleeping by dreams sometime only by inward inspiration Or ordinarily and so he delivers the doctrine of faith 1. To his
suffering them to enter among them he saith They were before ordained to this condemnation he thereby teaching that God was neither regardless and unmindfull of the Church nor indulgent to the false teachers or their false teachings 2. In setting down the impiety of these Seducers 1. He expresseth it more generally saying They were ungodly 2. More particularly he shews wherein that ungodlinesse appeared 1. In their abusing the grace of God Turning the grace c. 2. In their opposing the God of grace Denying the onely Lord c. 1 The Apostle describes the entrance of the seducers among the Christians Explicat And 1. He describes it from the nature of the parties entring They are men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Apostle seems for two reasons to note the nature of these seducers calling them men Riv. in loc Me. lius sentiunt qui per hominis funes intelligunt omnem humanam amabilem tractationem qualis solet esse hominum erga homines Homines hominum causâ generati sunt ut ipsi inter se alii aliis prodesse possint Cic. l. 5. Offic. 1. To aggravate the sin of the seducers One man should be helpfull not hurtfull to another Man is a word used to denote goodness I drew them with the cords of a man saith God Hos 11.4 to express his gentleness toward the people And in our ordinary expression humanity is used for kind and helpfull carriage Cruelty to the body is more beseeming beasts but cruelty to the soul is fitter to be used by Divels than by men The nearer any one is to us the more heinous is the hurt which he offers us or we him Natura nos cognatos edidit Senec. Nature hath made us near of kin To be cruel and hurtfull to others is to put off the man as well as the Christian 2. To amplifie the danger of these Christians Men like our selves may most probably prevail over us by their seducements Non lupi silvestres sed urbani specie humanâ lupinam vitiositatem tegunt Were they Divels or beasts they might affright but being men they allure As it 's the wisdome of God to send us holy men to instruct us and win us to himself so it s the subtilty of Satan to send wicked men to seduce and draw us from God None hurt so unexpectedly and unavoydably as those who are near and sutable to our nature Seducers are Satans dequoyes to fetch men in to him by multiiudes 1. Observ 1. Sin hath made even man a hurtfull creature Not onely man hurtfull to beasts and beasts to man but man to man Even man who should be in stead of God a keeper a defender is by sin made a wolf a destroyer of man Man till sinfull was never harmfull Before he sin'd he naked neither fear'd nor offer'd wrong His sinless state will ever be known by the name of a state of innocency or hurtlesness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sine cornibus non feriens cornibus Phil. 2.15 and when the lost image of God is again restored he is made a Lamb a Dove a harmless or as the word in the Originall signifies a hornless creature But how much more than brutishly cruel hath sin made man become witness not only the vast multitude of men destroyed in all ages by men and the incredibly exquisite tortures as wrackings sawings burnings c. against man invented by man as if sin had set up an hellish inquisition in mans nature but even the murders committed by Seducers and Hereticks upon the souls of men it being now as much against corrupt nature to go towards hell alone as to walk in the wayes of heaven at all Oh that we could contemplate the odiousnesse of sin in this glass of it's harmfulness 2. Observ 2. We should not content our selves in being meer men He who is and continues no more but a man had better never to have been so much as a man A man altogether without grace though otherwise never so exquisitely accomplished is but a tame divell and often most hurtfull How restlesse should we be till the divine nature be bestowed upon us 2 Per. 14. The naturall man or the man who hath no more than a rationall soul naturall abilities and perfections as he cannot receive so he can and will oppose the things of the Spirit of God Satan can as easily enter as assault a man meerly naturall And many who have had religious education and made hopefull beginnings yet having never been by a saving change of heart more then men have soon shewn themselves as bad almost as divels Nature elevated to the highest pitch by its most exquisite improvements is still but nature it may thereby be coloured over but grace can only change it 3. Observ 3. We should beware of those who are but meer naturall men and have nothing more or more excellent then humane nature It 's the Command of Christ to beware of men Mat. 10.17 Beware of them 1. lest they betray your liberties lives or externall welfare Naturae bonitas nisi pietate confirmetur facilè illabescit Cartw. Harm Christ committed not himselfe to man because he knew what was in man and let not us commit our selves to them because we know not what is in them Nature is a slippery thing and unlesse back'd by grace will prove but unsteady How oft have I seen found I had almost said that the love of acquaintance meerly naturall ends upon change of times either in persecution or at the best in cruell compassion in perswading to self-preservation by wracking conscience and offending God! 2. Especially let us beware lest they betray our souls by seducing them from God and truth Follow no man further than he follows God Look upon every man as a rule ruled not as a rule ruling Captivate thy understanding to none but God Take equall heed of receiving the word of God as the word of man and of receiving the word of man as the word of God The errour of the Master is the tentation of the scholer Love no man so much as to follow that of his which is not lovely in that sense call no man Master We must never beleeve errour when he speaks it nor truth because he speaks it 4. Satan is wont to make use of such instruments as Observ 4. may most probably do his work He loves to put upon himself the most taking and insinuating shape when he comes to tempt us He imployed the most subtill creature to convey his tentations to our first parents Ordinarily he makes use of men and most commonly of the fittest either for parts or seeming piety to work upon men He also hath his Apostles and Ministers to pervert the world 2 Cor. 11.13.15 transforming themselves into the Apostles of Christ and the Ministers of righteousnesse But how unworthy is it for men to suffer Satan to use their parts and wits against their Maker
urinator Herodot Luke 4.40 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 8.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. First the meaning of the word The word comprehends two things 1. It implies a fact brought about accomplished which is an obtaining of a through entrance and getting into some place or company noted in the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in or into 2. It mainly intends the manner of accomplishing it or the course taken and used to effect and bring that entrance about which is by slynesse and subtilty close and cunning carriage and entrance unawares the single and simple verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth subeo mergo ingredior to dive sink to go in to go under and it 's used concerning the setting of the Sun as Mark 1.32 and Luke 4.40 c. because it seems then to sink or dive into the sea And the Apostle speaks of some 2 Tim. 3.6 who crept into houses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vulg. qui penetrant i. e. qui penitus intrant Scire volunt secreta domus atque inde timeri Subrepserunt Bez. subintroierunt Vulg. Furtive se insinuare Latenter furtive ingredi Obiter subrepere Obliquè se ingerere tanquam aliud agentes ingredi adding only the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in to this verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Beza translates qui irrepunt others qui immergunt who subtilly silently slip in and dive as it were to the bottom to search and understand the affaires of houses as Jesuites use to do in States and Kingdoms But the principall Emphasis lieth in the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which added to the former verb signifieth a more secret and subtle close and deceitfull manner of Seducers entrance than the simple word will bear and it imports their entrance in a by-way at a back-door theevishly by little and little clancularly unawares creepingly a winding in by stealth obliquely beside the way of any reall worth and fit qualifications of integrity and piety to further the spirituall welfare of the Church and beside the intentions of the faithfull who not knowing what manner of men these Seducers were but conceiving them by reason of their painted and specious appearances of godlinesse to be worthy of admission gave them entrance before they were aware And this is the force of the preposition 2 Pet. 2.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they shall privily bring in heresies that is subtilly deceitfully and so as the Church should not be aware of them they bringing in their errours under the notion and appearance of truth The same force hath the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 2.4 in two words in that one verse where the Apostle speaks of false brethren 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unawares brought in who 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 came in privily Irreptitios subintroductos obiter ingressos subintroductitios c. They crept into the company of the faithfull by fraud and such cunning artifices specious and plausible pretences that the faithfull never went about to keep them out for though in both these places of Jude and Galatians their coming in might not be unawares so as that the faithfull knew not at all of their coming in yet it was unawares so as that they knew not what manner of persons how unworthy and hereticall c. they were when they did come in among them 2. The second thing to be explained is the agreement of the word thus opened to the Seducers in their entrance among these Christians 1. It agrees to them in regard they had already gotten in they were fully entred by their artifices they had obtained footing in the Church And the Apostle urgeth these Christians by this motive of the nearnesse of these seducers to them and their presence among them that they should be the more strenuous in contending against them God had suffered them to obtain entrance that those Christians who were approved might be made manifest The sincerity of the faithfull was discovered by the apostacy of hypocrites When a City is altogether in peace all the Inhabitants are accounted faithfull and loyall but when seditions and commotions arise they who are faithfull to the Prince are then discovered from the rest And when heresies and persecutions for the truth arise the sincerity of the faithfull is manifested by the defection of those who in times of peace seem'd haply as good as the best Thou shalt not saith God to his people hearken to the words of that prophet or dreamer of dreams for the Lord your God proveth you to know whether you love the Lord your God c. And by the entrance of these seducers the faithfull were more excited to search after and to defend the truth Both the sincerity of believers and the truths to be believed were made more evident Nothing is so certain as that which out of doubtfulnesse is made certain The Sun of truth breaks most clearly out of a cloud of errours * Pet. Molin in Epist dedic ad Enodation Languesceret fides no irritata ex judiciorum conflictu quasi ex collisione silicum emicant veritatis scintillae quae tandem victrix perrumpit obstantia Debemus Pelagio coelestio Aureolos tractatus Augustini de praedestinatione de natura gratia perseverantia Pravum haereticorum acumen viri sancti acuebat industriam Aug. de ver rel c. 8. Haeretici plurimum prosunt non verum docendo quod nesciunt sed ad verum quaerendum carnales ad verum aperiendum spirituales catholicos excitando The clashing of the faithfull and erroneous like the striking of flint and steel sends forth the brightly shining sparks of truth Yea further God by the entrance of these hereticks made both them and their hypocriticall followers manifest to the world that so they might at once both patefacere and pudefacere as Pareus speaks on 1 Cor. 11.19 discover and disgrace themselves before all men who hereby might know and shun them By the entrance also of these seducers the faithfull saw that this world was not a place of locall separation from all wicked ones and were incited to long for that place where good and bad shall be perfectly parted 2. The word here used of creeping in unawares agrees to these seducers in regard of the manner of their entrance which was close subtle hypocriticall and unawares without any fitness in themselves to enter or any intention in the faithful to admit them they only using many slie and sinfull artifices to bring both their persons and pinions into reputation among the faithfull by reason of which both were suffered unawares to enter although indeed both deserved to be kept out before and thrown out after their entrance This practise in the generall of insinuating creeping and winding unawares into the society and estimations of the faithfull hath been used both by these and all other seducers and therefore 2 Cor. 11.13 Paul cals
these false Apostles deceitfull workers Satan using them for his instruments to beguile as sometime he did the Serpent which beguiled Eve Likewise Rom. 16.18 Paul saith that they deceive the hearts of the simple And Acts 20.30 that they draw many disciples after them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By these Gal. 3.1 the Galatians were bewitched These would have beguiled the Colossians Col. 2.18 They have their slight and cunning craftinesse whereby they lie in wait to deceive Ephes 4.14 They creep into houses and lead captive silly women 2 Tim. 3.6 They are seducers and deceiving ver 13. False teachers privily bringing in damnable heresies 2 Pet. 2.1 And they make merchandise of people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ver 3. And they allure ver 18. those who were clean c. But more particularly the by-wayes in which they go the subtle artifices and insinuations by whith they creep into the company and good opinions of the Church and deceitfully enter unawares are such as these 1. They conceal their opinions Vid. Aug. contr Pelag. l. 1. Pelagius dixit liberum sic confitemur arbitrium ut dicamus nos semper indigere Dei auxilio ita homi nis laudamus naturam ut Dei semper gratiam addamus auxilium Anathema qui docet gratiam Dei per singulos actus nostros non esse necessariam Diligenter est interrogandus Pelagius quam dicat gratiam quâ fateatur homines adjuvari c. Mihi paenè persuaserat hanc illam gratiam de qua quaestio est confiteri Aug. de gra Christ c. 37. In fraudem nomen Christi circumferunt Hos 7.8 especially at their first entrance Either they totally forbear the delivering of errours or else they deliver them so darkly cloudily and ambiguously as that they may finde subterfuges and places for retreating whensoever they are charged with them They love to know but are wary in being known like Moles they labour to spoil the ground by keeping under ground It 's often harder to finde them than to overcome them Their words and phrases have divers senses the same sentence shall speak both truth and falshood so that their disciples shall understand them one way and the ingenuous hearer shall hope that they meant another by reason of which deceit they resemble some light-fingerd-dealers who can steal even from those who look upon them Augustine was sometime almost well perswaded concerning Pelagius so seemingly orthodoxe were his expressions about grace 2. They utter some reall and wholsome truths Their custome is to mix something true with much that is false that thereby they may put off one with another The false Apostles taught Christ joyning some other thing with him in the cause of salvation and so the Papists at this day Their doctrines like that cake which Hosea saith was not turned are neither raw nor baked i. e. neither altogether true nor altogether false or like a picture which seems beautifull on the one side and deformed on the other or like the commodities of some deceitfull chapmen the top the uppermost of the bag is good and vendible but the wares which are under are corrupt and unsound or as that image the head is of gold but the feet of iron and clay Errour would never be honour'd before the people unlesse it were seen in the company of truth As a man who is often taken in a lie is not believed when he speaks the truth so he who is often observ'd to speak truth is not mistrusted though he somtimes utters what is false 3. They preach doctrines pleasing to corrupt nature 2 Pet. 2.18 such as are most delightfull to flesh and bloud They know that naturally people cannot endure sound doctrine Isai 30.10 2 Tim. 4.3 2 Cor. 2.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 desire not to have right things prophesied to them but smooth things and deceits and therefore they corrupt and deal deceitfully with the word like deceitfull Vintners who for gain mix water with their wine meer truth they know would be bitter truth veritas mera veritas amara and therefore they are more desirous to be sweet and unsound than harsh and wholsome suting their doctrines as some fable of the taste of the Manna in the wildernesse to the pleasure of every pallate Hence it was that the false Apostles preach'd up circumcision and other abrogated observations because they knew such doctrines only would be savoury to Jewish pallates And hence it was that these seducers preached doctrines of liberty and licentiousnesse 2 Pet. 2.19 Jude 4. and such as turned the grace of God into lasciviousnesse making the narrow way to heaven seem broader then God ever intended it holding before peoples eyes the spectacles of carnall liberty wherby in their passage over the narrow bridge of Christianity they adventuring upon a supposed bredth tumble down into the waters of perdition 4. They deliver such doctrines as savour of novelty The subjects of which they treat must be represented as rare and unusuall to accomplish which either they put upon them a new dresse a new shape and fashion of words and expressions or they deliver either that which is false and against Scripture they chusing rather to be erroneous than not to be rare and often venting for new truths old errours new drest or that which is nice and very uncertainly grounded upon Scripture they preferring a doubtfull before a common way well knowing that usuall truths will not sute with itching eares If the doctrines which they deliver be old and ordinary truths they often as men use to do by old stuffes water them over with new expressions strange and new-minted phrases not savouring of Scripture-simplicity or agreeable to the pattern of wholsome words 5. They labour to work the godly and orthodox Ministers out of the affections of their hearers They erect a building of honour for themselves upon the ruins of the reputation of such who deserve to stand when they are ruin'd Well they know 2 Cor. 10.10 as long as the messenger is loved the message is not like to be loathed They had much rather stand in the peoples light than that a godly Minister should stand in theirs Omnis apostata est osor sui Ordinis The greatest enemies to true have ever been false teachers Thus it was of old Michaiah and Jeremiah had the one a Zedekiah the other a Pashur to smite them And as the practice of smiting with the tongue at least still continues Amos 7.10 so doth the pretence of that practice Hence 't is that faithfull Ministers must be represented as the disturbers and troublers of Church and State though the true reason why turbulent practices against the peace of both are by false prophets condemned a good work is that they may get all the practice to themselves while the peaceable servants of Christ are only suspected Non accuso verba tanquam vasa pretiosa fed vinum quod in illis
Corinthians 2 Tim. 3.15 the Apostle blesseth God The knowledg of the scripture from a child was the praise of Timothy True wisdom gives to the head an Ornament of grace and a crown of glory it makes the face to shine Pro. 4.9 Eccles 8.1 When the Apostle saith that some had not the knowledg of God 1 Cor. 15.34 he spake it to their shame How little to the honour of others was that complaint of the Apostle that when for the time Heb. 5.12 they ought to be teachers of others they had need that one should teach them again which be the first principles c. And as Paul speaks of some Ever learning and never able to come to the knowledg of the truth 2 Tim. 3.7 The whole life of an ignorant person is an aberration from the rule Gal. 6.16 he sayls by no Card. All his actions are wild and roving wandrings His sacrifice is the sacrifice of a fool Psal 119.5 and devout idolatry He cannot pray unlesse it be to the unknown God He cannot beleeve Rom. 10.14 for only they can trust God who know his name Psal 9.10 John 4.10 Nor can he fear and love God or desire Christ Wait therefore on the ordinances O ye ignorant ones with humble hungry souls Be wisdomes Clyents Prov. 8.34 Psal 25.9 1 Pet. 2.3 Purge your hearts of conceits of a Laodicean fulnesse God teacheth only the humble Tast the sweetnesse of divine truths Lay up what ye hear Not he who gets but hee who saves much is the rich man Yeild conscionable obedience to that of Gods will which you know Hold not the truth in unrighteousnesse The more you practice what you know the more shall you know what to practice Knowledg is the mother of obedience and obedience is the nurse of knowledg The former breeds the later the later feeds the former And yet put not off your selves with every kind of knowledge labour for a soul humbling knowledge Job ult 5.6 1 Cor. 8.2 Job 5. ult Prov. 9.12 The more the light shines into you the more you must see your own imperfections Every man is so much a fool as he thinks himself wise Let your knowledg be applicative If ye be wise bee wife for your selves Let not knowledg swim in the brain but sink into the heart Endeavour to possesse for thine own Psal 119.104 Joh. 13.17 1 Joh 2.3 the good of every threatning command promise Let your knowledg be influentiall into heart and life not informing only but reforming not as the light of torches which scatter no influences where they shine but as the light of the sun which makes the earth and plants green and growing He who is rich in knowledg must be plentiful in holiness and not like the rich Indians who have much gold in their possessions and go naked and beggarly In a word let your knowledg be useful and helpfull to others Know not to know that 's curiosity nor to be known that 's vain glory but to do good by your knowledg that 's Christian charity Knowledg increaseth in pouring out And as some have experimentally found it the Teacher learnes more by the Scholer than the Scholer by the Teacher 2 Ministers ought to commend their peoples proficiencies in holinesse Observ 2. Jude here mentions the knowledge of the Christians to their praise When people do what is commendable Ministers should commend what they doe If the former finde matter Rom. 15.15 1 Cor. 11.2 the later should find words I am perswaded of you saith Paul to the Romans that ye are full of goodnesse And I praise you brethren saith he to the Corinthians that you remember me c. A Ministers prudent commendation wins that love to his person without which the best doctrine is often but unprofitable Rare is it to find that Christian who embraceth a message which is brought him from a messenger not beloved A wise commendation will make a Reproof go down the better Constant chiding is like Physick which being too frequently taken grows naturall and therefore proves not operative Ministers should be wise in chusing a fit object for commendation the commendable actions of every one must not be presently commended some can lesse bear the sweetnesse of praise then they can the bitternesse of reproof A little wine will turn a weak brain Nor should we commend any to flatter but benefit them to encourage the humble not to content the proud But truly Christians 't were happy for Ministers if the time you make them spend in weeping and reproving they might fill with encouraging and cheering you The work and delight of a Minister is with the Bee to give honey he puts not forth the sting unlesse you by sin provoke him Of this more pag. 183. 184. 3. Observ 3. Col. 3.16 Joh 5.39 Rom. 15.4 Acts 17.11 Every private Christian should be acquainted with the Scripture It 's sinfull to clasp up the Scriptures in an unknown tongue The end of the writing the Scriptures was the instruction of every one None are so much commended in Scripture as those who most diligently search'd into it To private Christians Paul writes sundry Epistles The study of Scripture is usefull and needfull to people as well as Ministers Illumination Conversion Direction preservation from sin Psal 19.8.9 Psal 119.24 belong to the one as well as to the other and if for the abuse of Scripture the use thereof should be denyed to people why would Christ and his Apostles preach and write to those who perverted and wrested their doctrines yea why should not the reading of Scripture be deny'd not only to ignorant Monks and Priests but erroneous Clerks and Bishops from whom by abuse of Scripture most heresies have proceeded But whether Satan hath not by his methods wrought us into the other extreme when in stead of generall restraint from reading he puts people upon a generall liberty of preaching and expounding the Scripture our present distractions sufficiently witnesse 4. Observ 4. The knowledg of truth is a strong engagement upon Christians to embrace and love it The Apostle from their knowing the examples hopefully expects that they will lay them to heart Truth known and not loved is unprofitable Not he who knows a trade but follows it grows rich It will fare ill enough with the ignorant worse with the obstinate and many stripes are reserved for the opposing of much knowledg But of this before 5. Observ 5. Ministers ought not to content the curiosity but to consult the benefit of their hearers They should rather deliver Truths old and usefull then doctrines new and unprofitable Their work is not to please the Athenian but to profit the Christian They are not Cooks but Physicians and therefore should not study to delight the pallat but to recover the Patient they must not provide sawce but physick If to preach the same things be safe it matters not whether
power of all he had said and done Mark 6.6 We are carried unto unbelief both by the tide of our own natures and the winde of tentation Our hearts ever since we left God crave and look for relief from sensible objects and having forsaken the true embrace even any opinionative God or good which hath enough to flatter into expectations though nothing to fill or to yeeld satisfaction And so great is our natural pride that we had rather steal than beg rather rob God of glory by resting upon our own crutches then go out of our selves to depend upon another for happinesse The batteries of Satan are principally placed against faith He would not care for taking away our estates names liberties unlesse he hoped hereby to steal away our faith He fans not out the chaffe but bolts out the flour Luke 22.32 Satan saith Christ to Peter hath desired to winnow thee as wheat but I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not Satans first siege in Paradise was laid against the faith of threatnings He knows that all our strength like Samsons in his Locks is from laying hold upon another If therefore he can make us let go our hold which is our faith he desires no more Faith is the grace that properly refisteth him and therefore he principally opposeth it unbelief befriendeth Satan and therefore he most promotes it in our hearts Oh that we might most fear and oppose that sin which is most difficultly avoided and most dangerously entertained Of all keepings keep thy heart and of all means principally use this of keeping out unbeleef 4. Nothing more displeaseth God Observ 4. than the forsaking of our own mercies In the true loving of our selves we cannot provoke God He is angry with Israel because they refuse that which might make themselves happy God loves to be giving and is pleased with them who are alwayes taking in his goodnesse Unbeleef obstructs mercy and God opposeth unbeleef He delights in them who hope in his mercy He hath such full brests that he is most pained when we will not draw them by beleeving The great complaint of Christ was that people would not come to him for life He was grieved for the hardnesse of their hearts and incensed against those guests that would not come when they were invited to the feast of his Gospel-dainties He is so abundant a good that he wants nothing or if he doth he wanteth only wants If he be angry with us how should we be displeased with our selves for rejecting mercy It s the proud and unbeleving soul which God only sends empty away They who will buy his benefits must leave their mony behind them How inexcusable are they who perish they starve and dye in the midst of fulnesse But alasse wee are the poorest of beggars not onely without bread but without hunger Oh begge that hee who bestowes grace upon the desires would first give us the grace of Desire 5. Observat 5. Nullum genus insipientiae infidelitate insipientius Bern. de Consid None are such enemies to unbeleevers as themselves nor is any folly so great as Infidelity The business and very design of unbelief and all that it hath to do is to stop mercy and hinder happinesse Every step which an unbeleever takes is a departing from goodnesse it self Heb. 3.12 And no wonder if such an one carry a curse along with him Jer. 17.5 and ver 6. if he be like the heath in the desert and shall not see when good cometh Unbelief is like the unwary hand of him who being without the door puls it too hard after him locks it and locks himself out Faith is the grace of receiving and unbelief the sin of rejecting all spirituall good How vainly doth the unbeliever expect refreshment by going from the fountain or gain by leaving the true treasure Distrustfull sinner who is the looser by thy incredulity and who would gain by thy beleeving but thy self What harm is it to the cool and refreshing fountain that the weary passenger will not drink and what benefit is it to the fountain though he should What loseth the Sun if men will shut their eyes against its light what gains it though they open them What good comes by distrusting God unlesse the gratifying of Satan in the damning of thy self How foolish is that disobedience that will not wash and be cleansed from a worse leprosie then Naaman's that like a man in a swoun shuts the teeth against a life-recalling cordiall that will not open a beggars hand for the receiving of a Jewell more worth then all the world that beleeves the Father of lyes who cannot speak truth unless it be to deceive and will not trust the God of truth nay Truth it self to whose nature lying is infinitely more opposite than to our good O Unbeliever either thou shalt believe before thou dyest or not if not how scalding will be this ingredient among the rest of those hellish tortures which hereafter shal compleat thy pain to consider that offered sincerely offered mercy was despised that the promise of grace and truth daily desired thy acceptance but had nothing from thee but contempt That thou who art now crying eternally and vainly for one drop hadst lately the offers and intreaties of the fountain to satisfie thy self fully and for ever If thou shouldst beleeve before thou diest how great a trouble to thy heart holily ingenuous will it be that thou hadst so long together such unkind thoughts of Mercy it self that thou didst deem Truth it self to be a Lyer How angry wilt thou be with thy self that thou didst so slowly beleeve and so hardly wert brought to be happie 6. Observat 6. Our greatest dangers and troubles are no plea for unbelief Notwithstanding Israel's tentation their unbelief was a provocation A houling wilderness and dismall tidings excused them not from sin in distrusting of God Even he who hides his face from the house of Jacob is to be waited for When we sit in darkness and see no light we should trust in the Lord and stay our selves upon our God Faith goeth not by feeling and seeing but should go against both It must both beleeve what it sees not and contrary to what it sees Psal 119.49 114. Verbum fidei pabulum Not outward props but the stability of the word of promise should be the stay of our Faith a stud that ever stands though heaven and earth should fail In thy word saith David I do and thou hast caused me to hope The greatness of danger must not lessen Faith Dangers are the element of Faith among them faith lives best because among them it findes most promises When the world is most against us then the word is most for us Faith hath best food in famine and the fullest table in a time of scarcity The very earth which we tread on should teach us this so massy a body hangeth in the midst of the aire and