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

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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
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 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
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
not onely lyars but such as love lies Rev. 22.8 And a good man is said to have this property that he will not receive an ill report against his neighbour Psal. 15. And by receiving evill reports a man becomes accessary to the slander guilty of it for as it is true that the receiver of evil-gotten goods is accessary to the theft so is it in the case of slander somewhat worse for there may be theeves though there be no receivers but there can be no slanderers without some to receive the slander Neither is there any great difference betweene the tale-bearer and the tale-hearer for the tale-bearer hath the divell in his tongue and the tale-hearer hath the divell in his eare Quest. But what should wee doe to avoid tale-bearers or if wee do heare reproaches or slanders of other men Answ. As the North wind drives away the raine so must thy angry countenance do the slaundering tongue thou must not any way shew any liking of his discourse but the contrary yea and further thou must as farre as thou art able make an apologie for the godly man that is evill spoken of And the tongue of a godly wise man should be in this sense healthfull because it should be ready to heale that wound which the tale-bearer hath made in the name of his neighbour Prov. 12.18 and 25.23 Thus of the second reason The third and fourth reasons are contained in these last words viz. That they may by your good workes which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation The reasons are because God may visit them and if he do they will glorifie God upon the remembrance of your good workes But here I purpose to handle the words as they lie in the order of reading them and so I have foure things to consider of First of good workes secondly of the beholding of good workes thirdly of the glorifying of God fourthly of the day of visitation Good workes Divers observations are implied here First that Religion sets men to worke there is labour in godlinesse Hee must worke that will be truly godly or religious God entertaines no servants but he sets them to worke they are called to labour all the daies of their life Wee must worke out our salvation without working wee cannot be saved though our workes be not the cause of salvation This point proves that the Gospel is not a doctrine of liberty religion doth call men to working not to live as they lift but as he lists that died for them and requires their service And secondly this doctrine shewes who is a true Christian. For as the Scripture is wont to describe a profane man by saying that he is a worker of iniquity so doth it avouch that hee is a godly man that worketh truth and righteousnesse Psal. 5. Prov. 14.23 Ioh. 3.21 Psal. 106.2 To be a worker of iniquity imports three things First grosse knowne sin secondly a daily custome in the practice of it and thirdly an estimation of sinne as the means of our happie life The wicked man lives by sin as the labourer doth by his trade So here that man that will labour and that constantly about the workes of a holy life making it his every daies care to do Gods will and accounts it the happinesse of his life to doe good duties that man is a godly man It is not talking of Religion will serve the turne nor the shewes of it but hee must worke and endure the labour of godlinesse Iam. 1.25 Act. 10.36 And further this should teach Christians often to remember their holy calling and examine themselves what workes they have done as such servants as desire to give a good account to their Master and the rather because no servants can have fairer worke it is all good worke and servants were so ingaged to their masters nor did owe more service and because never was there a master that gave better wages than God doth to his servants And therefore let every Christian be daily carefull to looke to his worke that when his Master cometh he may find him so doing Thus of the first point Doct. 2. Secondly that workes do specially commend us to the good opinions of men it is our workes must justifie us before men by good workes wee must winne testimony to our sincere religion from men Faith justifies us before God and proveth us to be true Christians as works do before men prove us to be so And therefore wee should strive by well doing to win as much credit as we can to our Religion among men Iam. 3.13 Doct. 3. Thirdly that the foundest way of confuting our Adversaries is by our workes we must make reall apologies wee must put them to silence by well-doing Now in that he calls the good workes done by them their good workes I might note divers things 1 The necessity of good workes they must have workes of their owne the good workes done by others availe not them nor justifie them 2 The goodnesse of God that vouchsafeth to call those workes their works when yet they were wrought by him as having had their beginning from his grace and Spirit Esa. 26.12 3 It is true that they onely can doe good workes good workes are onely theirs a wicked man cannot do good workes because his person is hatefull to God and his nature altogether impotent and though he may doe some actions which for the matter of them are good yet he pollutes them with his sins of which hee hath not repented and cannot bring them forth compleate for matter manner and end Tit. 1. ult Mat. 6. But it is the goodnes of workes which I specially intend to intreat of in this place Good workes The goodnesse of mens workes may be diversly considered either according to the differences of workes good from such as are not so or according to the formes of good workes or according to the time of doing workes or according to the uses workes are put to For the first Some mens workes are neither good nor seeme to be so as are the apparent sinnes of men Some mens workes seeme good but are not as the almes and prayer and fasting of the Pharisees Some mens workes are good but seeme n●t so at least in the eyes of some men and so the religious duties of godly Christians seemed to be vain practices of Sectaries and innovators Act. 28. and so Pauls zeale and knowledge seemed madnesse to Festus Act. 26. Some workes seeme good and are so such are the open good workes of the godly in the judgement of godly men guided by charity For the second If workes be tried by their forme then those workes are good works which are done with correspondencie to the revealed will of God in his Word they must be commended in the Word and done according to the directions of the Word so that all workes done besides or above the Law of God are sinfull and naught and the doing of
iniquity is found worthy to be hated Ps. 36.1 Ier. 44.10 Mal. 3.5 4. Such as goe on in vicious courses in the abuse of their liberty in things indifferent notwithstanding the frequent admonitions of godly and grave Divines and seeme rather willing to forsake their owne mercies than leave their foolish vanities Exod. 14.31 Iob 28.28 Pro. 13.13 14. 16. 1 29 30. 5. Such as take no notice of Gods great judgements which are in the world and will not declare his workes Psal. 64.9 6. Such as are carelesse of prayer and see not need to seeke unto God but restraine prayer Iob 15.4 And so it is of the constant and wilfull omission of all the service of God 7. By not pitying the a●flicted Iob 6.14 I omit to reckon up more particulars because by the contrary conversation to that which is required in the former rules men may see that they are farre out of the way Yet it is the more lamentable that this conversation with feare is not so usually found even amongst the godly themselves neither in their awefull reverence of behaviour and continuance in Gods service nor by their humble and carefull and mortified behaviour towards men Againe by the serious consideration of the former explication we may gather that there are divers feares ought not to be found in our conversations as the feare of crosses in our callings or of the reproaches and oppositions of men for well-doing or a superstitious feare of transgressing where there is no Law but meerely the wills of men and such as that feare which through unbeliefe is conceived in the hearts of many weake Christians and doth much oppresse them and that is the feare of Gods acceptation of their best workes so judging themselves as they withall judge of God unrighteously while they remember not his promises made to his servants concerning his acceptation of their desires and endeavours Lastly such as have attained to this conversation with feare should much rejoice and labour to preserve it with all care because it is a thing which is not only lovely in the sight of God but is very amiable and of a winning quality amongst men as this Text imports And thus of this conversation with feare as it concernes those women as they were Christians Now there is another kinde of feare which is required of them as they are wives for so it is expressely charged upon all wives that they should feare their husbands Eph. 5. ult And this feare they must shew 1. By giving reverent terms and titles as Sarah did to Abraham 2. By avoiding all things by wisedome she can ghesse or by experience she can find to be crosse to the nature or desire of her husband even striving to avoid what might provoke his very infirmities giving soft answers when he is angry and forbearing passion and unquietnesse even with others if he be present 3. By a care to shew all faithfulnesse diligence care and tender respect of him and his good in all things in their power and charge And so it appeareth in the negative what wives doe not feare their husbands viz. such as care not to be daily guilty of such faults as crosse or grieve or vexe their husbands such as give them unseemely titles out of the rudenesse of their familiarity or the distemper of their passions such whose feet will not keep their owne house to attend their callings such as blaze abroad their husbands infirmities whereas they should have beene the glory of the man such as are apt to make the worst constructions of the doubtfull actions of their husbands and such as are inquisitive and still desirous to have accounts given them of all their husbands doe Verse 3. Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the haire and of wearing of gold or of putting on of apparell Verse 4. But let it be the hidden man of the heart that which is not corruptible even the ornament of a meeke and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price THese words containe the third thing charged upon wives by the Apostle in his exposition and that is their comely dressing of themselves which he sets downe negatively shewing how they must not be dressed ver 3. and affirmatively shewing what doth most adorne them ver 4. In the negative observe what is expressely prohibited and then what is impliedly allowed That which he expressely forbids he referres to three heads The first concernes the naturall abuse of the ornaments that by nature are upon the body and instanceth in the haire which God hath given to women for a covering And the abuse lieth in the plaiting of the haire by which he meanes not the tying up of the haire after a decent maner but the artificiall laying of it out in plaits or curles or lockes or the like Their devices about their haire are so many as we cannot reckon them by the names they give them The second concernes the excesse of cost about their dressing synecdochically exprest by the putting about of gold and pearles and such like rich jewels The third concernes the vanity of fashions in attire in the last words of putting on of apparell Now for the meaning of the Apostle in this negative prohibition I finde three opinions The one is of such as thinke the Apostle did absolutely forbid the things named but yet that it was a temporary prohibition intended to binde them of that time not to binde us that live now The other is of such as thinke that hee doth not simply forbid these things but onely comparatively meaning that in comparison of the inward d●essing wee should not have so much care of these outward ornaments or about dressing our care should not bee so much for the outward dressing as for the inward The third is of such as conceive that the Apostle doth simply and for ever forbid these things named and all of like sort and that for ever The opinion of the first sort of men is rejec●●● by all sorts of Divines as very foolish and erroneous The second opinion hath Cajetan a Papist for the author of it but is rejected by Divines of his owne sect for this reason because if that were the Apostles meaning his prohibition would teach the most sober and modest women in their apparell as well as the most licentious for ever the most modest are tied to respect the inward dressing above the outward which cannot bee the Apostles meaning The third opinion is the opinion almost of all the Ancient and modern Writers But because I will not take power to binde your consciences onely by the opinions of men therefore afterwards I will shew you by expresse Scripture when apparell or dressing becomes vicious but first I would consider of the doctrine in generall Doct. It seemes to be a cleare truth that Christian women should in the dressing of themselves take heed of ostentation costlinesse and vaine fashions and that
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
verse 7 this effect is both propounded and amplified propounded in those words The tryall of your faith amplified 1. by comparison with go●d tri●d in the f●rnace 2. by the event it will be found to praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Iesus Christ. The second objection might be made thus Wee know not whether the former comforts belong to us to which the Apostle answers by giving three signes by which men may try themselves 1. The love of Christ whom they have not seene 2. Beleeving 3. The unspeakable and glorious joyes of the Holy Ghost verse 8. The end of all which is the salvation of their soules verse 9. Thus of the Prolepsis the testimonie of holy men fo●●owes where consider five things 1. Wh●●e s●●i fie In generall Prophets In speciall those Prophets which were app●●●●ed to testifie of the grace that should come unto us Christians 2. 〈…〉 prec●●●nes to furnish themselves for the knowledg of the things they testified They searched inquired diligently 3. The question they studied or unto which they testifie In generall 〈…〉 of salvation verse 10. In speciall it was of the manner and time of the grace foretold 4. The 〈…〉 them to this earnest desire after this knowledge and that was the inspiration of the Holy Ghost driving them to foretell of the passion of Christ and glories that should follow 5. The successe and that is that they were answered of God where observe two things 1. The manner of the giving the answer it was by revelation Unto whom it was revealed 2. The matter of the answer which concernes both Persons and Things The persons are considered negatively and so they were resolved that they themselves were not the men to whom those glories did belong and affirmatively that they did minister those things unto us Christians Now the things promised are not onely propounded but commended and that two wayes 1. By the glory of their efficient causes which were lesse principall the Apostles and more principall the Holy Ghost sent downe from heaven 2. By the adjunct respect of the Angels which things the Angels desire to looke into Hitherto of the consolation The exhortation followes from ver 13. to the end where observe 1. The things unto which they are exhorted verse 13. 2. The reasons by which the exhortation is inforced The things to which he doth exhort are three 1. The first concernes the renovation of the mind Girde up the loynes of your minde 2. The second concernes the moderation of life be sober 3. The third concernes the confirmation of their hope Trust perfectly upon the grace to be brought c. ver 13. The reasons follow and they are 6. in number taken from the consideration 1. Of the Image of God verses 14 15 16. 2. Of the judgement of God verse 17. 3. Of the redemption in Christ verses 18 19 20 21. 4. Of the relation to the godly verse 22. 5. Of the immortality of the soule verse 23. 6. And sixtly of the mortality of the body verses 24 25. The first reason taken from the Image of God is both propounded and expounded propounded in these words as obedient children expounded two waies 1. by description 2. by testimonie By description 1. negatively shewing what they should sh●nne Not fashioning your selves to the lusts of your former ignorance ver 14. 2. He sets it out affirmatively both by shewing the patterne to be imitated viz the holinesse of him that called them and also the manner of imitation viz to be holy in all manner of conversation ver 15. In the testimonie two things are to bee noted 1. Whence the proofe was fetched in these words As it is written and 2. what was alledged viz Be yee holy as I am holy ver 16. The second reason is taken from the judgement of God where note 1. The proposition of the reason viz Hee that yee call upon as Father c. 2. The inference or use of the same viz Passe the time of your sojourning in feare In the proposition consider 1. Who shall be judge viz he that was called upon as a Father 2. How he shall judge viz without respect of persons 3. Whom he shall judge viz every man 4. For what they shall be judged viz according to their workes verse 17. The third reason is taken from the consideration of our redemption and this reason should move the more 1. Because all the precious things in the world could not redeeme man verse 18. 2. Because the deliverance from our vaine conversation was one of the maine ends of our redemption verse 18. 3. Because our redemption was effected by a matchlesse price viz the passion of Christ which is increased 1. In that it was a suffering even to the effusion of blood 2. that it was a suffering of one that was so infinitely pure without spot or blemish verse 19. 4. Because our redemption was ordained in Gods counsell ver 20. 5. Because the honor of manifesting Christ in the cleare preaching of the Gospell is done now to us Christians and not to the Fathers of old verse 20. 6. Because our redemption was ratified by God the Father and that two waies 1. By raising Christ from the dead 2. By giving him glory verse 21. 7. Because all this was done that our faith and hope might be in God verse 21. The fourth reason is taken from our relation to the godly ver 22. In which reason observe 1. A proposition of doctrine 2. An exhortation by way of use The proposition in it selfe properly concernes sanctification which is described 1. By the nature of it imported in the m●ta●horicall terme purified 2. The subject of it your soules 3. the forme of it in obeying the truth 4. The cause of it the spirit 5. The end of it which was brotherly love amplified by the property of it unfained The exhortation is therefore to love one another with a pure heart fervently The first reason is taken from the immortalitie of the soule which is considered two wayes 1. In respect of the fountaine of it which is the new birth 2. In respect of the meanes of it which is set downe 1. negatively not of corruptible seede 2. affirmatively where consider what the meanes is and by what it is What it is viz incorruptible seede By what it is the word which is praised for three things 1. It is of God 2 ●t liveth 3. It abideth for ever ver 23. The sixt reason is taken from the mortality of the body compared with the eternity of the word of God ver 24 25. Of the vanity of man ver 24 which is ●●th propounded and repeated propounded as it concernes either the person of man All flesh is grasse or the condition of man All the glory thereof is as the flower of grasse The rep●tition ●s it concerns both is in these words the grasse withereth and the flower falleth away The eternity of the word of God is propounded in
for no threatnings nor makes any great reckoning of any truth of God But all this is but within 10. The tenth degree is outward Apostacy and this is when a man at length growing audacious in sinning gives over even outwardly all care of honesty or religion openly shewing himselfe to be fallen away from all care of the profession of the truth or respect of godlinesse further than the lawes of men or other carnall respects may lead him 11. The eleventh degree is tradition to Sathan which is done either secretly the Lord giving the sinner up to Sathan or openly where the sinner is delivered to Sathan by the censure of the Church It is true that sometimes Sathan hath possession at consent before practice For then he entred into the heart of Iudas It is true also that the censures of the Church fall upon many after practice before Apostacy But if men doe tarry out all these degrees in this place they will be given up if they prevent not death or death prevent not them c. 12. The twelfth degree is a reprobate sense when a man having been under the power of the devill and not escaping out of his snare by repentance i● most fearfully forsaken of God and with unspeakable spirituall wic●ed●esse besotted by Sathan so as all sense and remorse is wholy extinguished i● him so as neither the light o● Nature nor the light of Scripture can worke upon him 13. The last degree is death even death eternall Thus we see the staires that descend downe to hell and the severall step● 〈…〉 staires Saint Iames makes but 6. degrees For the first motions hee suppresseth Then the first degree is drawing away now that containes the 2 3 and 4. degree as it is here in our reckoning viz. liking delight and security The 〈…〉 ●irth that is practice the fift the finishing of sin which hath in i●●●stome in●●r● 〈◊〉 outward Apo●●acie tradition and a rebrobate minde the 〈◊〉 i● death Thus of the second point 〈…〉 the third wee must understand that the tentations of concupiscence 〈◊〉 the ●entations of Sathan differ thus 1. First the tentatations of Sathan are usually to things against nature or against the God of nature and so the temptations of Blasphemy as they are te●med are from Satan or they are against the constitution of nature a● the 〈…〉 which a man is moved to kill himselfe or destroy or betray his C●untry or Prince or to commit ●●●●mitry Bu●●●r● or 〈◊〉 2. Secondly the tentations of Sathan are usually sudden and fierce and violent like lightning that leaves not a man time for deliberation Thus he 〈◊〉 CHRIST with the glory of the world but it is in a moment lest ou● Saviour by deliberation should finde our reasons of exceptions against earthly glory and so when the devill would perswade to sinne that is grosse and m●nstrous hee labours to confound a man with the suddaine fiercenesse and flame of the tentations whereas concupiscence is more lingring and flower 3. Thirdly those evils that are instantly disliked and in no measure consented to or approved are from Sathan and not from concupiscence For concupiscence works by the naturall pronenesse to the evill which cannot be without all desire or liking and these tentations may be none of our sins The first motions are not alwaies to be counted our sinnes For Christ was tempted not onely for the matter but for the manner in all things like unto us yet without sin he had monstrous things cast into his mind by the devill yet he sinned not so likewise it is not our sinne simply that tentations are there For a man doth not sinne in the tentation till hee be in some degree drawne away by it Now for the fourth thing there are many comforts against tentations diversly to be raised out of the Scripture First from example and that both of Christ and Christians Of Christ for he was tempted so the Apostle useth this argument as a comfort Heb. 2.16 and 4. ●5 now there is a threefold comfort from Christs example 1 First that he was tempted as well as wee 2. Secondly that wee see by his example one may be tempted yet without sinne 3. That he was tempted that he might succour us when we are tempted And as we have the example of Christ so we have the example of Christians For as the Apostle Peter saith The same afflictions are accomplished on your brethren that are in the world 1 Pet. 5.12 Secondly from the meditation of the helps in tentations 1. First Gods Spirit is within us to lust against the flesh even to assist with grace and strength against the workings of Sathan 2. Secondly the good Angels invisibly and insensibly are as ready to help and succour as the evill Angels are to tempt and devoure 3. Thirdly Christ is a present cure for the stings of this serpent as the brasen Serpent was to cure the stings of the bodily serpents Now Christ cures us when we looke upon him by faith partly by his intercession and partly by a vertue flowing out of him to us For it is certaine he prayes for us as well as he did for Peter Luk. 21.31 Ioh. 3.14 4. Fourthly Gods care is for us so as no temptation shall befall us but by his sufferance and besides he will have respect to our strength and thirdly hee will give issue with the temptation as is excellently shewed 1 Cor 10.13 Thirdly ●rom the consideration of the effect of tentation For though Sathan would faine carry us away with the whirlewinds of his suggestions yet indeed it is but to winnow us And although it seemes to be against all reason that tentations should purge us yet it is certain Gods children are made more cleare and pure by the very experience in the conflict with inward evils It doth winnow them and drive away a great deale of chaffe even of lightnesse and vanity out of their mindes Againe temptations are but to hide their pride and to keepe them that they be not exalted over-much Lastly we may greatly comfort our selves if we consider the promises the Lord hath made to us in tentations Hee hath promised that hee will tread downe Sathan and that speedily under our feet Hee hath in the Apostle Paul answered and assured us that his grace shall be sufficient for us and his power shall be made knowne in our weaknesse yea and Christ hath promised when we enter into the combat that he will pitch his Tabernacle by us Besides it is an old and ancient promise made long since that if the Devill for terror shew himselfe like the great Leviathan or for fraud like a crooked and piercing serpent or for violence and fury like the dragon in the sea yet the Lord will smite him with his great and sore and mighty sword Thus much of the comforts against temptations The fift and last thing I propounded to be observed was the rules to be
diligence There are three sorts of men Sathan doth in the Church bewitch 1. The first are they that will take no paines at all nor trouble themselves to study about their religion and what belongs to their soules 2. The second are they that though they will take some paines and study diligently yet it is in by-studies as matters of controversie or the generall knowledge of religion or matter that may fit them for discourse or the like 3. Now a third sort there are that will not be drawn aside from the needfullest studies as are repentance assurance order of life c. but their fault is that they study not these diligently For they soone give over and finish not their works either of mortification or sanctification or illumination or preparation for salvation And thus much of the 10. Verse Verse 11. Searching when or what manner of time the Spirit which testified of Christ which was in them c. THe particular subiect of their inquiry was to have found the time of those glories the holy Ghost foretold should follow the sufferings of CHRIST Foure sorts of men have inquired about times and the manner of times For there is the observation 1. of the curious 2. of the weak 3. of the superstitious 4. of the wise 1 Curious men search into times prohibited and restrained from them They inquire what God did before he made the world and in what yeare and day Christ shall come to Iudgement with such like 2 The weake Christian many times is too busie about time as in his distresse his thoughts runne about the time of his deliverance and with impatience he asks How long when hee ought not to limit God but live by faith and leave the time unto God 3 The superstitious are imployed in observing time such were the Galathians of whom Paul was afraid This was their humour they did observe dayes and times not commanded of God but prescribed and kept afoot by the inventions of men 4 Now in the last place the wise observe time and thus they observe time necessarily or arbitrarily Necessarily they observe the seasons and opportunities of Gods grace and so not to observe time is a great offence Ier. 8.7 Luke 9. Mat. 16.3 Arbitrary they enquire after time as the circumstance of some great things wherein there appeareth some glory of God and good to the soule Thus the Prophets here enquire about the time of Gods manifestation of the great grace he promised to the Church Three things may be noted out of these words 1 That the times and seasons of all things are known unto God else the Prophets would not have searched but that it was a received principle that all the times of all things are set and knowne to God 2 That the Lord is many times loth to discover the precise time of his mercy as for a long time he would not let it be known when Christ should come so it was ab●ut the calling of the Gentiles and so it is about the time of our going to heaven For if it should be farre off men would grow the more impatient with their present condition and by this meanes God tries the faith and patience and obedience of his people and thus are blessings more admired and welcome when they doe come and by works of preparation the happinesse of the Elect is greatly furthered But is it not uncomfortable to be ignorant of the time when God will shew his mercy It is not for 1 The time is infallibly set by God 2 The Lord hath chosen and appointed the fittest time 3 The Lord is precise in keeping his time 3 The third Observation is that when the circumstance of time is not of absolute necessitie for our good to be knowne we must be sober and temperate and enquire with all humilitie we may learne this of the Prophets about salvation it selfe they are said to enquire diligently but about the time it is barely said they searched Thus of the third thing 4 The fourth thing is the Occasion which was an inspiration of the holy Ghost which testified of Christs sufferings and strange glories should follow after So that the efficient cause of the inspiration was the holy Ghost which was in them The finall cause was to testifie or beare witnesse The subject matter of this inspiration was twofold 1 Of the sufferings of Christ. 2 Of the glories should follow The Spirit that was in them Note that he saith not the Spirit of God but the Spirit of Christ so the holy Ghost is called the Spirit of the Sonne Gal. 4.6 He may be called the Spirit of Christ because he is given by Christ and because he is given to the members of Christ and because he should be especially manifested in the times under Christ and because it did especially reveale Christ and chiefly because it was essentially ioyned unto Christ and did proceed of Him and the Father from all eternitie Now for the use hereof Here is both Information and Consolation We may be informed here that the doctrine of the Trinitie was not unknowne in the Church of the Jewes in that we see that the Spirit of God was called the Spirit of Christ. As for that place in Act. 19. where some say they had not heard whether there were a holy Ghost or no It is to be understood of the extraordinary gifts of the holy Ghost which at the time of the conversion of many did fall upon them and not of the nature of the holy Ghost This doctrine also may comfort us greatly for whereas it it the office of the holy Ghost to mortifie the deeds of the flesh to lead us into all truth to be a comforter to beare witnesse unto our spirits to help us when we know not how to pray as we ought c. This doctrine I say may greatly incourageus to beg the holy Ghost and to beleeve our help therein seeing hee is sent of Christ and is at his disposing that dyed for us and gave himselfe for us how shall he not then give us his holy Spirit also if we aske it of him Further hence we may note that the Spirit of God is the onely immediate fountaine and originall of all Prophesies concerning times and things to come The Oracles of the Gentiles were but eyther delusions under ambiguous sentences or but coniectures or else when they did foretell aright they were permitted of God for the further hardning of the people eyther from Scripture or other revelation to foretell As for the Sibyls that prophesied of Christ c. it is no absurditie to grant that they were stirred up by the holy Ghost to prophesie of Christ among the Gentiles c. Verse 12. Vnto whom it was revealed that not unto themselves but unto us they should minister the things which are now shewed unto you by them which have preached unto you the Gospell by the holy Ghost sent down from heaven the which things the Angels desire
had informed themselves in some good sufficiency of knowledge herein and therefore they might not neglect his exhortation that might be proved by such a known reason For as much This word notes a dependance with the doctrine of the former reason and shewes that these reasons are linked in a chaine you cannot pull the one but you draw the other also And from hence wee may note 1. The sacred combination of holy truth in the mysteries of religion they hang all as in one chain● and 〈…〉 as in one body there is a wonderfull agreement amongst them they point one to another whereas in the writings of men by reason of their imperfection they are oftentimes discording not from other men but from themselves also their assertions sound as if they were afraid one of another or ready to fight one against another 2. That the right knowledge of Christs first comming to redeeme us serves generally to inflame our hearts to a desire after and care of his second comming to judge us For by his first comming 1. We know he hath satisfied for our sins and therefore need not feare the sentence of condemnation or Gods anger 2. We know how dearly he paid for our sins and therefore we should for ever hate sinne 3. We know that he cannot but doe us honor then since for our sakes he himselfe was judged on earth and did shed his owne bloud for us 4. We know that at that day we shall be fully redeemed and receive all the inheritance prepared for us What shall I say if this his first comming were so full of love pitty care grace and profit for us how then should we long for his second comming when he shall give himselfe not for us but to us for our eternall delight and happinesse The Use may be for tryall of the truth of our faith in his first comming if we can stirre us up with care and cheerfulnesse to provide for his second comming then we doe effectually beleeve it else it is very doubtfull whether we doe indeed know Christ crucified Thus of the coherence the insinuation followes Yee know From hence foure things may be noted 1. That we may be profitably put in mind of the things wee know yea we need to be put in mind of them for thereby wee may know things the better and more fully but especially wee need it for the use of knowledge This is true in rebu●es for sinne in consolations in affliction in directions for our lives and as here in the doctrine of the mysteries of our religion they and we know the doctrine of redemption perhaps but the powerfull use of that doctrine we are altogether wanting in besides what we know we know but in part The Use is for great reproofe of those vaine persons that neglect hearing reading admonition c. upon pretence they know it already if that were true yet this doctrine shewes we need to be put in mind even in the things we know yea wise men will receive commandments yea and rebukes too Prov. 9. It is a discreet commendable charity sometimes the better to perswade and winne affection to insinuate the praises of others as here the Apostle so did Paul to Agrippa Act. 26.3 It is certaine that by nature we are pleased highly with others opinions of our knowledge and contrariwise the a●pe●sion or ignorance is wonderfull hatefull there be some sins that vexe us more then others to have them imputed as lying and divers others so ignorance the devill knew this well in Eves case the intimation of ignorance made her ruine her selfe and her prosterity and so doth the devill still What makes many goe to hell for want of direction how to be saved even this they will not have their ignorance seene What makes many leap from the cradle of religion to the throne of censure so as to think themselves fit to judge whole Nations when troops of learned men are extreamly toyled with advising Is it not this opinion of knowledge Now as the devill useth it for hurt so may the godly make advantage of the weaknesse of our natures herein the better to direct us to good 3. Of all doctrines we must be sure to know the doctrine of our redemption for this is the most fundamentall doctrine of all others It is impossible to be saved without the knowledge of this 2. Of all doctrines this is most clearly taught in Scripture 3. Of all doctrines wee have most need of this against the discomforts of temptations infirmities afflictions and death it selfe 4. This most exalts the glory of Gods grace and mercy and all others are in a manner built upon this 5. Lastly this hath exceeding great force to perswade us to holinesse of life for it both shews us to whom wee belong and what reason we have to obey him and withall implyes how vile we are in our selves First so labour for knowledge herein that thou mistrust thy own nature and the policie of the devill even the slower thou findest thy disposition to it the more strive after it let not the devill rob thee of this knowledge above all other We are not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold In these words is contained the first principall point namely the invalidity of all earthly things to redeeme us they containe the disabling of the riches of this world and as the words lye two things are said against the treasures of this world First that we are not redeemed by them Secondly that they are corruptible things That they cannot redeeme the soule of man is evident 1. By proofe Psal. 49.6 7. 2. By experience we see wicked men abound in these things and yet goe to hell Psal. 17. ult 73.12 Eccles. 9.11 3. This may appeare by a distribution of the parts of redemption for they cannot appease Gods anger Prov. 11.4 they cannot restraine the devils power they cannot buy us a righteousnesse answerable to that the law requires they cannot be a ransome to keepe the soule from hell Iob 29.9 19 20. they cannot cover our imperfect work● they cannot buy us a better nature but rather choke the word of God Mat. 13. and make men carelesse of repentance and conceited of the●●elves and wilfull to entertaine sinne Prov. 28.11 Hosea 12.8 and drowne men in noysome lusts 1 Tim. 6.9 yea how hard is it for a rich man to enter into the Kingdome of heaven Mat. 19. Lastly they cannot make us immortall Iam. 1.10 11. Thus it is cleare they cannot redeeme us For the second they are corruptible This is manifest Solomon saith they have wings Prov. ●7 they vanish subject to violence or vanity Mat. 6.13 yea many times they goe away with an ill loose it may be the ruine of the owners Iob 20.18 Eccles. 5. Ier. 17.11 nor can they goe with their owners when death comes Psal. 49.17 The Use may be 1. For information It should raise the price of true grace and
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
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
are immortall Sometimes it signifieth an everlasting happy being from which a man cannot fall and so the godly are immortall and so their immortality differs from that of Adam also for he was immortall that is such as might have continued happy for ever and might also not continue The first kind of immortality begins at birth the second at new birth of which he intreats here These words must be considered in their coherence and in themselves In the coherence both with the 13. verse and with the former As they depend upon the 13. verse they are a fift reason why wee should regard those three things viz. because our soules are immortall For if wee soundly consider of it it evidently followes 1. That therefore we should gird up the loines of our minds and get established our celestiall cogitations and resolutions as such as still mind an eternall being and therefore will strive against all impediments which might hold us downe 2. That therefore we should be wonderfull temperate in the use of earthly things seeing these serve not unto immortality 3. That therefore we should with all industry make sure all those evidences of hope concerning the grace to be brought unto us in the revelation of Jesus Christ. Now as these words depend upon the former verse they confirme us in the love of the brethren we should therefore love them fervently and purely because we are borne together as heires of the same hope and must live together for ever in another world Looke not upon the godly according to their birth but according to their new birth nor according to their present condition but according to the happinesse they are born to and the fellowship thou shalt have with them in another world The words of themselves intreat of immortality two waies First in respect of the fountaine Secondly in respect of the meanes of it The fountain of immortality is the new birth The meanes is set downe negatively and affirmatively Negatively it is not corruptible seed Affirmatively it is the incorruptible seed which is expounded to be by the word of God which liveth and abideth for ever Borne againe Being turned unto God by true faith and repentance A metaphoricall tear●e We are borne againe foure waies 1. Sacramentally by Baptisme 2. Spiritually by the Word 3. Corporally in the Resurrection 4. Eternally in our Glorification Quest. But why is our repentance likened to a new birth Answ. To distinguish true repentance from that which is false and fained for it imports five differences 1. That in true repentance there is an utter disclaiming of all happinesse in a naturall life or what doth or can belong unto it 2. That in true repentance there is a totall change in the whole nature of man He hath grace in every part a new mind and a new heart a new memory and a new conscience a new language and a new carriage both to God and man for birth is the producing of all essentiall parts of man 3. That in true repentance there is the paine of contrition a broken spirit the throwes and paines of travaile there is true godly sorrow and griefe in the birth of grace 4. That there is in true repentance a daily hunger and thirst after the sincere mild of the Word 1 Pet. 2.2 5. That in the things of Gods Kingdome there is new life and sense and feeling and motion Secondly to shew the priviledge of the penitent For it signifies he gets more by his new birth then any child in nature can doe by pleading his birth-right For if in repentance we be borne unto God then it shewes 1. That we have received power to be the sons of God Ioh. 1.2 2. That with our adoption we enjoy the priviledges of sons 1. The favour of God as a father 2. The care of God to main●a●eus Mat. 6.33 3. The pardon of God in saving us from condemnation Rom. 8.1 4. The portion of God even the inheritance which God gives as a Father which is spoken of Rom. 8.17 Gal. 4.7 The Use should be twofold 1. That wee try ourselves carefully in the businesse of our repentance by the former signes and secondly that we comfort our selves in the priviledges of our new birth rejoycing in our portion and the favour of our heavenly Father And thus of the reason of the phrase Concerning the new birth here we have occasion to consider of 2. things 1. That it is needfull often to be remembred of the doctrine of regeneration the Apostle having spoken of it before falls upon it here againe There is great need that men should be put in mind of it often for divers respects 1. Because of the extreame necessity of it and the unspeakable danger if it be neglected Ioh. 3.5 Gal. 6.15 2 Cor. 5.17 Luke 13.5 2. Because of the dignity of it It is a second creation of as great fame and wonder as the making of the world therefore Christ is called the beginning of the creation of God Rev. 3.14 3. Because of the marveilous impediments with which men are hindred from the effectuall indevour after it such as are 1. Extremity of blindnesse A Ruler in Israel knowes not what it is unlesse it be to goe into his mothers wombe againe This is still the case of the most 2. Evill opinions about it as 1. That it needs it not God made them and therefore will save them yet as Ioh. 3.5 2. That Baptisme did it yet but a seale Rom. 4.11 3. That a civill life is it yet as Mat. 5.20 4. That the purpose of it hereafter will serve 3. Forgetfulnesse the doctrine runs out Heb. 2.1 the heart is so weak and impotent in keeping alive the sparks of resolution and remorse and desire 4. Prejudice that lieth in the minds of many in respects of the reproches lie upon such as teach it or practice it It could not be but we should be more respected in this doctrine were it not that many of you have strange opinions of us the truth of which you seeke not to be resolved in 5. A dumbe devill many have throws and give over will not propound their doubts nor seeke directions 6. The marveilous pleading of the world sinne and Sathan that they might not be cast out or forsaken especially the unspeakable methods of Sathan 7. The lethargie of the soule which appeares in such as cannot leave sinne that is hatefull hurtfull to themselves even grosse sinnes as wee see 4. Because it may be a meanes of conversion to such as are not yet converted The opening of the doctrine may open a way unto Christ into their hearts Who knowes what and when God will worke And it is certain the work is done more easily and successefully when we goe about it while the doctrine is fresh in our memories 5. Because of the excellent use of it both 1. For consolation for this doctrine comforts 1. Against the fiery darts of the devill Eph. 6. that
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
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
thoughts and be yeelded to and delighted in and that constantly they seeke the pleasure of contemplative wickednesse and doe not resist it by praying against it even vaine thoughts may dead the affections and poison them Psal. 119.113 Fourthly sometimes it is neglect of mortification the s●ule will gather aboundance of humors as well as the body and therefore Christians should not goe too long especially if they ●eele a kind of fulnes to grow upon them but take a purge that is seriously and secretly set time apart to humble themselves before God purging out their most secretest corruptions with all hearty confession before God Fiftly sometimes it is want of practice or want of an orderly disposing of their waies in godlinesse If they rest onely in hearing their affections cannot last long sincere and besides the most Christians burden their own harts for very want of order and that they goe not distinctly about the works of godlinesse but rake together a great heape of doctrine which they know not what to doe withall Psal. 50. ult Sixtly sometimes againe it is occasioned by inordinate feeding when Christians begin to affect novelties and seeke to themselves a heape of teachers they scape not long without fulnesse and the fits of l●athing 2. Tim. 4.3 Seaventhly sometimes very idlenesse is the hindrance The want of a particular calling to imploy themselves in the sixe dayes breeds a generall kinde of wearinesse and satiety which extends the heart of it not only to the times of private dutyes in the working dayes but to the very Sabbath also They cannot worke at Gods worke with any great delight that had no more minde to their owne worke Eighthly sometimes it is neglect of preparation and praier before we come to the word Ninthly sometimes it is a violent kinde of ignorance and unbeliefe when a Christian knowes not this right to the word and will not be perswaded of the fatherly love and presence of God in his ordinance If Preachers must say I have beleeved therefore I will speake so must Hearers say I have beleeved therefore I will heare They should know that they are welcome to Christ and may eate and drinke Cant. 5.1 And that their heritage lieth in the word Psal. 119. Tenthly sometimes it is a very disease in the body as melancholy or some other which doth so oppresse the heart that it doth not take delight in any thing But of this more in the next Use. Lastly any of the sinnes mentioned in the former verse will hinder affection Malice Hypocrisie or Envy or any of the rest Vse 3. The third use may be for instruction to teach us to strive for affection to the word and to provide to order our selves so as we be not wanting in the direction of the Apostle and so two sorts are to be taught that is such as want appetite and such as have it that they may keepe it aright Quest. What must such doe as finde either want of appetite or decay of it Ans. Such as would get sound affections to the word must doe sixe things First they must refrain their feete from every evill way It is impossible to get sound affections without sound reformation of life Psalm 119. Secondly they must pray for it they must beseech the Lord to quicken them Psal. 119.37 and to inlarge their hearts verse 32. especially to give them understanding verse 34. and to open their eyes to see the wonderfull things of his law verse 18. Thirdly they must chuse an effectuall Ministery to live under it such as is executed with power and demonstration to the conscience 2. Cor. 4.2 Fourthly they must remember the Lords day and that they doe when they empty their heads and hearts of all cares of life which might choak the word diligently doing their owne works on the sixe daies and finishing them that they may be free for the Lords work on the Lords day The cares of life choake the word Matthew 13. Fiftly they must converse much if it be possible with affectionate Christians For as yron sharpneth yron so doth the exemplary affection of the tender-hearted whet on the dull spirits of others Sixtly they must purge often they must be frequent in the duties of humiliation by solemne fasting and prayer and sound confession striving when they feele fulnesse to grow upon them to disturden their hearts and to quicken their spirits more forcibly to the love of Gods name and word Quest. But what must such doe as have gotten some affections to the word that they neither lose them not be unprofitable in them Ans. They must looke to diverse things First they must hate vaine thoughts take heed of those secret vanities of imagination and that delightfull contemplation of evill in the minde Psalm 119. 113. Secondly they must trie all things and keepe that which is good they must heare with judgement and make speciall account of such parcels of doctrine as doe most fit their particular needes labouring by all meanes that such truths run not out 1. Thess. 5.21 Thirdly they must take heed of itching eares For where mens desires are still carried after new men they are in great danger of fulnesse or of declining and which is worse of being carried about with diverse doctrines and at length to be a prey to deceitfull mockers Fourthly they must preserve by all meanes the feare and trembling at Gods presence and humiliation of minde For so long as we can dread the presence of God in his ordinances we are in no danger of losing our love to the word Psalm 119.120 Lastly in Esay 55.1 2 3. wee may note diverse things that God requires in such as have the same thirst 1. They must come to meanes 2. They must buy and bargaine with God by prayer and vowes 3. They must eat that is they must apply it to themselves 4. They must be instructed against merit in themselves and bring faith to beleeve success though they deserve it not they must buy without mony 5. They must hearken diligently 6. They must eate that which is good that is they must apply effectually that doctrine they feele to have life in it 7. Their soules must delight in fatnesse that is they must be specially thankfull and cheerefull when God doth enlive his promises and sweeten his words to their tastes 8. They must after all this incline their ear and come to God they must make conscience to strive against dulnesse and distractions and seeke God in his word still or else their affections may decay and then if they doe this they shall live and enjoy the sure mercie● of David by a perpetuall covenant Quest. But what shall such godly persons as are afflicted with melancholy doe in this case of affections Ans. They must attend these things First they must be perswaded to see the disease in the body which extends the oppression of it to the very affections Secondly they must remember times that are past
Apostle expounds or applies the former testimony of Scripture which he urgeth both for the beleever and against the unbele●ver The beleevers he cals upon to take notice of their felicity assuring them that that Scripture doth avouch that Christ is an incomparable treasure to them Concerning the unbeleevers he speaks terrible things whom he describes both by their sin and by their judgement The sinne is disobedience their judgement is to be considered as it is denounced first against their Leaders whom he cals Builders and then against the whole body of unbeleevers The plague upon the Builders is that the Kingdome of Christ shall be advanced in spight of their hearts they shall perish and be confounded but Christ shall raigne and flourish The plague upon the body of unbeleevers is that Christ shall be to them a stone of stumbling a rock of offence which is amplified by the consideration of the causes partly in themselves which is their stumbling at the Word and disobedience and partly in God who in his justice hath appointed them thereunto Thus of the order of the words Now before I come to the ful opening of each particular in these two verses I may observe divers things from the coherence and generall consideration of all these words First in that the Apostle doth not rest satisfied to alledge the Text but doth withall apply it it shewes the necessity of application We cannot profit by the Word if it be not laid particularly to our hearts as food doth not nourish if it be not eaten nor a medicine cure the disease if it be not taken nor a plaister heale the sore if it be not laid to it nor are our wants supplyed by comming to the market if we do not buy and carry home Which should work in us a sound care of application of the Word we heare or reade and withall it should waken us to a care of observing all the rules that may further us in applying which are these and such like First we must be carefull to understand rightly the Scriptures wee would apply this is the very foundation of all application that is profitable 2 Pet. 3. else we may grow perverse and wrong both the Word and our own selves Ob. But some private man might say This is hard how can we learne to know the cleer meaning of the Scripture and the sense of the Text Sol. For answer hereunto thou must know that there be divers rules that may help thee to understand or at least keep thee from wrong and dangerous mis-application First thou must be wise to sobriety not presume to know above what is meet nor to meddle with such secrets as should lead thee into knowledges that belong not to thy calling or are not evidently revealed in Scripture Secondly thou must have respect unto other Scriptures to take no sense that is contrary to other apparant Scriptures Thirdly thou must haue respect to the Analogie of faith to avoid all senses which oppose any article of faith or thy faith Rom. 12.3 Fourthly thou must avoid all doubtful disputations and unprofitable questions and vain ●anglings that tend not to edification and the salvation of thy soule and account it as a happinesse to be able to keep thy selfe free from intanglements therein And therefore stand at the doore of every opinion and before thou let it in ask this question What shall my soule be advantaged by this opinion at the day of Jesus Christ and if it cannot answer to it directly reject it Psal 119.66 David praies God to teach him good judgement and knowledge Fiftly let the publike Ministery of Gods servants be the ordinary rule of thy interpretation so long as no sense is taught there contrary to the former rules 1 Cor. 14.36 and where thou doubtest thou must seek the law at the Priests mouth and be very fearfull in any thing to be wiser than thy Teacher I meane to nourish private opinions which are not justified by publick doctrine Sixtly pray to God to teach thee and to give thee his Spirit to leade thee into all truth understanding is Gods gift 2 Tim. 2.7 and he will teach thee humbly his way Psal. 25. Thus of the first rule wee must first soundly understand the sense of the Scripture we would apply Secondly thou must bring a mind apt to be taught willing to be formed and to be all that which God would have thee to be thou canst never profit by application without a penitent mind a mind that will part with any sin God shall discover in thee and a mind carefull to observe the conditions required as well as the promise tendred Iames 1.21 This is indeed to glorifie the Word Thirdly it is an excellent help in application to follow the guiding of the holy Ghost in thy heart thou shalt finde in all doctrines a difference Some things read or heard have a speciall taste put upon them by Gods Spirit or a speciall assurance of them wrought at the time of reading or hearing Now thou must be carefull to take to thee these truths which the Spirit of God doth cause to shine before thee Eate that which is good Esay 55.2 Try all things and keep that which is good 1 Thes. 5.20 Fourthly know that serious and secret meditation upon the matter thou hearest is the principall nurse of fruitfull application it is but a flash can be had without an after and deliberate meditation and about meditation remember these rules 1. Let it be secret 2. Hee must let it be full Give not over till thou hast laid the truth up in thy heart take heed of that common deceit Psal. 119.45 of resting in the praise or liking of the doctrine be not a Judge against thine owne soule For if the doctrine be worthy of such praise why darest thou let it slip and run out Let not the devill steal it out of thy heart Mat. 13.20 or the cares of life choke it Luke 11.28 3. Let it be constant Be at the same point still from day to day till it be soundly formed and seated in thy heart How rich might many Christians have been if they had observed this rule Psal. 1.2 Psal. 119.3 5. Esay●6 ●6 9 Fiftly be wise for thy self take heed of that error of transposing thy applications say not This is a good point for such and such till thou have tried thine owne heart whether it belong not to thee Psal. 119.59 Pro. 9.7 Sixtly by any means be carefull of the seasons of doctrine be wise to understand the season There be many truths which if thou let passe the opportunity of informing of thy selfe thou maist perhaps never have it so againe and therefore take heed of losing precious things when thou hast the time and meanes to attaine them c. Thus of the first point The second thing is the speciall duty of Ministers to apply the Scriptures to the hearers that belong to their charge we see the Apostles
was the lot of David in his time Secondly that all this was foretold in the old Testament and therefore might not seeme strange Thi●dly that all those oppositions should be in vaine for God would reject and confound those opposites and would prosper and advance the right of Jesus Christ without the help of those men In the particular consideration of these words three things must be noted First the persons threatned viz. the Builders that is the Scribes and Pharises and those that under pretence of religion did oppose Christ. Secondly the cause of their punishment viz the refusing of Christ the foundation stone Thirdly the judgement inflicted upon them which is twofold the one implyed the other expressed There is a judgement implyed viz. That though they were by calling and in the account of the multitude Builders y●t God would reject them and goe on with his work in converting both Jewes and Gentiles without them The judgement expressed is that Christ whom they so much hated and opposed should be in spight of their hearts and to their extreame vexation made King of the Church and exalted to supreme power over all things and the onely stay of the whole Church both of Jews and Gentiles And herein it is to be noted both the manner how this shall be done in the word is become or is made and also the time in that he saith It is made Builders Quest. A question may be moved here for the sense viz. how the Scribes and Pharises and such like men can be said to be builders Answ. For answer hereunto wee must understand that the Scribes and Pharises and so wicked men that possesse eminent places in the Church may be said to be builders First in the account of the multitude whatsoever they were indeed yet they were so accounted as builders and prime men in managing the affaires of the Church Secondly the Scribes and Pharises may be acknowledged in some respect as builders indeed They did God some worke For howsoever they did not soundly teach Christ yet they drew the people by their doctrine to avoid on the right hand the Stoicall strictnesse of the Essenes and on the left hand the profane irreligiousnesse of the Sadduces Thirdly they were builders by calling they have the name not so much from what they were as from what men in their places had been or ought to have been And these are the persons that oppose Christ and are thus severely judged of God Divers things may be hence noted First that men may be great in their owne opinion and in the account of the world who yet are nothing set by of God such were these Pharises Luke 16.14 15. And therefore we should labour for a spirit without guile and not be wise in our selves or rest in outward shews but seek the praise of God we are safe if God allow of us though all the world disallow us Secondly that God will acknowledge freely any good he finds in his very enemies as here the Pharises are not denied the title of Builders for that general work they did in encountring the Sadduces and Essenes And as they are called Builders so are the devils called Principalities and Powers to import what is any way of praise in them notwithstanding their horrible fall Which should teach us to learne of God to doe likewise towards all our enemies and withall it may much comfort us If God will doe thus with his enemies what will he doe with his owne children and servants how will he honour and reward them and if the notorious oppositions of the Pharises cannot hinder Gods acknowledgement of that little goodnesse was in them how much lesse shall the meere frailties of the godly that will doe nothing against the truth though they cannot doe for the truth what they would hinder the glorious recompence of reward and acceptation with God! Thirdly we may hence note that Christ and Religion and the sincerity of the Gospell may be disallowed and opposed by great learned men by such as are of great mark in the Church even by such as were Governors of the Church in name and title Quest. 1. Two questions doe easily rise in mens minds upon the hearing of this doctrine The first is Whence it should be that learned men who have more means to understand the truth than other men and by their calling more especially tyed to the study of all truth yet should be drawn to oppose or reject Christ and the truth Answ. I answer that this may come to passe diversly First sometimes it is because of their ignorance neither may this seeme strange that they should be ignorant for though they may be very learned in some parts of study yet they may be very blockish in some other Besides the naturall heart of man doth not take any great delight in the study of the Scriptures and therefore the answer of Christ was proper Yee erre not knowing the Scriptures or the power of God Secondly in some it is because of their secret Atheisme Many learned men be very Atheists in heart and such were some of the Pharises for they neither knew the Father nor Christ as he chargeth them Thirdly some have a spirit of slumber they have eyes and yet cannot see as in the case of some of those Pharises they could not apply the very things themse●ves spoke For being asked about the King of the Jews Mat. 2. they could answer directly out of the Scriptures and give such sig●●s of the Messias as did evidently agree to Jesus Christ and yet these men were so infatuated that when God shews them the man to whom their own signs agree they cannot allow of him Fourthly in some it is envy They are so fretted at the credit and fame of Christ or such as sincerely preach Christ that for very envy they strive to destroy the work of God and to disparage the progresse of the Kingdome of Christ they cannot endure to see all the world as they account it to follow Christ. Fiftly in others it is ambition and desire of preeminence and the quiet usurpation of the dignities of the Church that they alone might raign and be had in request this no doubt moved the Pharises and was the cause why Diotrephes made such a stir in the Church Sixtly in others it is covetousnesse and desire of gain These are they that account gain to be godlinesse as the Apostle speaks and such were some of the Pharises Luke 16.14 Seventhly in others it is a wilfull and a malicious hatred of the truth and such was it in those Pharises that were guilty of the sinne against the holy Ghost Quest. 2. But how shall a simple ignorant man stay his heart and be setled in the truth when the wise and learned men of the world oppose it how can he tell it is the truth which they reject who have more learning and wit than he Answ. I answer A simple and single-hearted
So with God there is neither circumcision nor uncircumcision Jew nor Gentile bond nor free but all are one in Christ Col. ● 11 Which should be a marvellous comfort to Christians that are meaner than others in the world to think on it that God requireth as hard worke of the richest as he doth of them and makes as great account of a poore Christian as of the mightiest Monarch And it should teach Christians humility and not to strive so much for precedency but rather if men will excell others it should be in service and sufferings Fourthly all men are not called he saith here Yee are called as importing that it was a speciall honour done to them Many have not the meanes of Calling and many refuse their Calling when they have the meanes Which shewes the wofull estates of worlds of men unto whom the voice of God by his Word in the Spirit comes not Fiftly the Calling of God doth propound conditions upon which his election in time doth depend for many are called but few chosen upon their Calling and the reason is because they yeelded not to the conditions of their Calling God calls men to a new Covenant and requires first the beleefe of all things promised on his part secondly sanctity and holinesse of life thus they are said to be Saints by Calling 1 Cor. 1.1 thirdly to suffer for well-doing if there be occasion so here Now upon the Conscience and consent of the heart unto these conditions doth God make his choice or acknowledge men and therefore hereby mens hearts must bee tried or men must try their hearts and estates whether they be effectually called or no. Sixtly men are bound to take notice of and to learne and obey the will of God revealed in his Word though it be hard to finde out as here the Apostle faith They were called to suffer which is a thing that is not easie to prove by expresse Scripture but must be found out as it lies enwrapped in consequences in divers places of Scripture For if the lawes of men binde and oblige us to punishment though we know them not because we ought to take notice of them much more must we study the Lawes of God though they be many in number and hard to finde out without much labour and many helps Seventhly our generall Calling doth binde us to a carefull observation of our particular Calling as here their Calling in Religion to be Gods servants did binde them to looke to their duty as mens servants yea and to be subject to their corrections though unjust And therefore those Christians are farre out of the way that neglect their particular Calling and the charge God hath delivered them upon sentence of Religion and their generall Calling Eightly the maine doctrine in them or in the scope of them is that God calls his servants all of them to suffer for the truth Hee shewes them heaven and the salvation of their soules and bestowes rich treasure upon their hearts but withall tells them he lookes they should arme themselves with a resolution to suffer what may befall them for well-doing Our Saviour Christ told his Disciples plainely that they must thinke of taking up the Crosse daily before they come to wearing of the Crowne And therefore they do foolishly that undertake the profession of Religion before they have set downe to know what it will cost them Thus of the second reason The third reason is taken from the example of Christ who suffered greater wrongs than can be befall servants or any other sort of men and this doctrine of Christs suffering he handles at large from verse 21. to the end of the chapter Which doctrine of Christs suffering is fitted partly to the case of servants and partly to the use of all Christians Concerning the Passion five things are in all these verses noted First who suffered Christ suffered ver 21. Secondly the end of his suffering viz. to leave us an example c. verse 21. Thirdly the manner how he suffered set out 1. Negatively and so he suffered first without sin verse 22. secondly without reviling ver 23. 2. Affirmatively and so hee commits himselfe to him that judgeth righteously Fourthly the matter what he suffered viz. our sins in his owne body on the tree ver 24. Fiftly the effect of his sufferings 1. In respect of us and so his sufferings serve To kill our sins Verse 24. To make us alive to righteousnesse Verse 24. To heale our natures Verse 24. 2. In respect of himselfe and so they procured his exaltation to be Shepheard and Bishop of our soules ver 25. Thus of the order Even Christ suffered The first thing to be considered in the Apostles description of the Passion of the person who suffered is that it is named here with speciall Emphasis Even Christ or Christ also Christ is the sir-name of our Saviour as Jesus was his proper name Jesus is a name onely given him in the New Testament but Christ was his name in both Testaments and signifies Anointed being a Greek word as Messiah doth in the Hebrew And so it is a name importing his office of Mediator as being thereby proclaimed to bee the substance of the ceremoniall types even the supreme Doctor or Prophet Priest and King of the Church for these three sorts of men were anoynted in the Old Testament and were types of Christs anointing It is true that we doe not reade that our Saviour was himselfe anointed with oyle because his anointing consisted in the substance of that shadow For the shadow signifieth two things first ordination to the office secondly the pouring out of gifts by the holy Ghost for the exornation of the office Now whereas Christ is Mediatour in both natures his anointing must be distinguished according to his natures The whole person was anointed but yet differently in respect of his natures for gifts could not be poured out upon his divine nature yet as the Sonne of God the second person in Trinity he was anointed in respect of ordination to the office of Mediatour and as the Sonne of man he was anointed in respect of the pouring out of the gifts of the holy Ghost upon that nature in measure as the Psalmist saith above his fellowes Psal. 45. The first doctrine about the Passion is here briefly contained in these three words of the Apostle Even Christ suffered which is a doctrine full of excellent Uses for thence First we may see how vile the errour was of those Hereticks they called Patri-passianus who taught that God the Father suffered whereas in this and other Scriptures we are taught that it was onely Christ the second Person in Trinity that suffered The ground of their errour was that there was but one Person in the Deity which in heaven was called the Father in earth the Sonne in the powers of the creatures the holy Ghost and thence they affirme the same things of the Father they did of the Sonne that he was
that he was never guilty of any offence against God or man Thus of the sense of the words Divers Doctrines may be gathered out of these words but because one is principall I will but touch the rest Doct. 1. Mens sinnes are of mens making man made sinne God made none Doct. 2. It is a hatefull thing to be a maker of sinne As it was most glorious for God to make a world of creatures so it is most ignominious for man to make a world of sinnes Doct. 3. Christ made no sinne This is the chiefe Doctrine and plaine in the Text He was not only free from the first and worst kinds of making of sinne mentioned before but he was free from all sinne in all estates of his life he knew no sinne he did none iniquity he was that just One by an excellency Quest. But how came it to passe that the man Jesus had no sinne seeing all other men bring sinne with them into the world and daily sinne Answ. He was sanctified from the wombe being conceived by the holy Ghost which no other are so as both originall sinne was stopped from flowing in upon him in his conception and besides hee was qualified with perfect holinesse from the wombe and therefore is called that holy thing borne of the Virgin Luke 1.35 And it was necessary his humane nature should bee so holy and that hee should doe no sin because his humane nature was to be a tabernacle for the Deity to dwel in Col. 2.9 and besides from his very humane nature as well as from his Deity must flow unto us life and all good things and therefore he must needs be undefiled The man-hood of Christ is as the conduit and the God-head as the spring of grace unto us Besides his sufferings could not be availeable if he were not innocent himselfe The Uses follow and so Uses First we see the difference between the two Adams the first made sinne and infected all the world with it the other made no sinne but redeemed all the world from it The first Adam as he had power not to sinne so he had power to sinne but the second Adam had not only a power not to sinne but also no power to sinne not only as they say in Schooles Posse non peccare but also Non posse peccare Secondly we may hence see in what a wofull damnity against goodnesse the world stands when this most innocent Man that never did any sinne that never offended God or man in all his life when he I say comes into the world how is he despised and rejected of men Who looked after him unlesse it were for his miracles few honoured him for his holinesse How is the world set on wickednesse that it should account him without forme or handsomenesse that shone before God and Angels in such a spotlesse innocency Oh what wit had the rulers of this world that condemned him as a malefactor that had no spot in him from the crowne of the head to the soale of the foot that never did man wrong or sinned against God Isa. 49.7 and 53.2 3 4. Thirdly we may hence see cause to wonder at the love of Christ to us Oh how is it 〈…〉 of such a world of sinnes that yet himselfe never knew sinne What heart of man can sufficiently admire his love unto us that can abase himselfe to be made sinne for us that never did sinne himselfe Fourthly is it not hence also most manifest that impenitent sinners shall not be spared or pitied of God Did not God spare his owne Son that never offended in all his life and shall he spare them that never left offending of him Oh what madnesse hath besotted men so as with stubborne wilfulnesse still to trust upon an unknowne mercy in God yea such a mercy as God could never conceive in the case of his Sonne that was not to him as they are in any respect Were these men but throughly beaten from this sinfull plea of mercy in God they would repent of their sins in time and seeke true mercy from God which never is with-held from penitent sinners Lastly Did our Saviour Christ suffer so patiently such extreme things that never deserved any evill in himselfe What a shame is it for us to be so unquiet and dejected or so froward or so unsettled when any crosses or afflictions fall upon us who yet have deserved at Gods hands to suffer a thousand times more and worse things than those that doe befall us In his mouth was found no guile We reade in the Scripture of guile in the spirit when we have false hearts and guile in the hands by false weights and ballances and guile in the mouth in deceitfull words Guile in words is committed many wayes First by lying when men speake what they thinke not Secondly by flattering when men praise others after a corrupt maner or for corrupt ends Thirdly by backbiting when men censure others behind their backs of malice or whisper evill against others Psal. 41.7 Fourthly by wresting the words of others to their hurt Psal. 56.11 and 52.1 2. Fiftly by with-holding the just praises of others or Apologie Sixtly by fearefulnesse in evill times when men will not stand for the truth or speake against their Consciences Seventhly by disgracefull jests Ephes. 5.4 Eighthly by telling the truth of malice 1 Sam. 22.9 10. Ninthly by boasting of a false gift Pro. 27.1 Tenthly by hypocrisie and dissimulation and that divers wayes as 1. When men speake faire to mens faces but reproach them behinde their backs or flatter them meerely to catch them and intangle them in their talke as the Pharisees often tempted Christ. 2. That reproveth sinne in others and yet commits it himselfe Rom. 2.19 3. That colours sin under pretence of Religion Marke 12.40 4. That professeth Religion in words and yet denieth it in his heart 5. That hideth his sin by deniall or excuses to avoyd shame and punishment 6. That gives good words to men in affliction but relieves them not 1 Iohn 3.17 18. None of these nor any other wayes of guile were found in Christ though they called him a deceiver and sought all occasions against him Thus of the sense the doctrines follow Doct. 1. Guile in words is a vice that wonderfully dishonours a man it was a fault would give great advantage to the enemies of the truth As it is a sinne which is in a speciall manner hatefull to God Psal. 5.7 so it is shamefull amongst men and therefore as any man would enjoy good dayes let him refraine his tongue from evill and his lips that they speake no guile Psal. 34.13 Doct. 2. When he saith that they found no guile in his mouth it imports that they sought it And so we learne that the godly are so hated of the wicked that they seeke occasion against them when they see not or heare not of any faults in them they search and inquire and lie in waite
hearts break that is they let the doctrine runne out and never thinke of it when they are gotten out of the Church Heb. 2.1 Or else they have resisted the light of the truth so long that God hath now delivered them over to a spirit of slumber lest they should convert and he should heal them Mat. 13.15 16. Isa. 6.10 Secondly in some the world is the cause of it For either they are entangled with the examples of the multitude especially of the wise Ones and great Ones of the world 1 Cor. 1.26 27 28. Or else they are affrighted with the evill reports with which the good way of God is disgraced in the world Act. 28.22 Or else they are insnared with respect of their carnall friends they are loth to displease father or mother or sisters or brothers or any they have great hopes from or dependance upon Mat. 10.35 37. 1 Pet. 4.2 Or else they have so much businesse to doe and so many cares about their worldly affaires they cannot be at leisure ●o long as to thi●ke they cannot bring their lives into order Mat. 13.22 Luke 17. Or else they live at hearts-ease and prosper in their estate and so desire not to alter their course of life and so their prosperity destroyes them Pr● 1.32 Thirdly in some men the cause is the lust after some particular wickednesse of life in which they live either secretly or openly which sinne is the very Idol of their hearts and hinders a good resolution Fourthly in some the cause is conceitednesse they are pure in their owne cic● and yet are not cleansed they rest in the outward profession of religion and the feare of godlinesse and regard not the sound power of it in their lives Lastly in all unregenerate men there are three causes why they are not perswaded to a religious life First the one is the forgetfulnes of their death therefore their filthinesse is still in their skirts because they remember not their latter end Lam. 1.9 Secondly the other is that they are dead in sin What should hinder the conversion of multitudes at once but that we preach to congregations of dead men Thirdly the divell workes effectually in all the children of disobedience striving to hide the Gospel from them and the glory of a righteous life that so they might perish 1 Cor. 4.4 And thus of the second Use. Use 3. Thirdly such as consent to obey and feele themselves raised from death to life and are now desirous to spend their daies in a religious and righteous course of life must observe all such rules as may further them and establish them in an orderly and fruitfull conversation Hee that would live in righteousnesse must thinke on these directions following as the very gates of righteousnesse First he must give over all needlesse conversation with vaine persons and profane men hee must shunne their company as he would such as have the plague running upon them hee must not come neere them as is urged Pro. 14.15 For what fellowship can bee between righteousnesse and unrighteousnesse 2 Cor. 6.14 Depart from me ye evill doers saith David for I will keep the commandements of my God Psal. 119.115 Secondly he must redeeme time he must buy time from his worldly occasions and settle such an order in his worldly estate or outward estate that he may provide to serve the Lord without distraction abstayning from all things that may intangle him or interrupt him Eph. 5.16 1 Cor. 7.29 35. and 9.28 2 Tim. 2.4 He must provide to him time for Gods service and for commerce and fellowship with the godly and for works of mercy Thirdly he must be wise for himselfe that is he must in all the meanes hee useth for or in religion especially apply what hee can for his owne use and study himselfe and to understand his owne way and provide whatsoever he doe for his justification and sanctification and finall salvation Pr● 9. 12. and 14.8 And to this end he must meddle with his owne businesse and take heed of being a busie-body in other mens matters so much as in his thoughts 1 Thes. 4.11 12. And he must also avoid vaine janglings and doubtfull disputations in religion and quarrels that tend not to his edification but to shew wit or science Tit. 3.9.1 Tim. 6.20.2 Tim. 2.23 And he must keep his eye straight upon the mark to proceed directly and distinctly in building himselfe up in knowledge and grace not losing his time or going about but keeping a straight path to supply what he wants and grow in what he hath Pro 4.25 Ier. 31.32 Hee must take heed of uncertaine running but bee sure to take accounts of himselfe for all his courses to see that hee goe very straight towards the mark and finally hee must not respect company to goe the pase of other men but run as if hee alone were to obtaine striving to excell 1 Cor. 9.24 and 14 12. Fourthly he must esteeme the Word above all treasures Psal. 119.72 Mat. 1● and take hold of the instruction thereof as that must bee the very life of his life Pro. 4 1● For by the Word doth God sanctifie us and make us righteous Ioh. 17. And he must order his whole course of life so as that he may see the meanes of all his actions from the Word he must live by the rules of Scripture that will live righteously Gal. 6.16 Now that he may doe thus he must looke to divers things First that he place no confidence in the flesh neither trusting upon his owne wit nor carnall reason nor gifts nor yet yeelding himselfe to be a servant to any mans humour or opinions or example or commandement Secondly he must provide to live so as he suffer not a famine of the powerfull preaching of the Word hee must labour for the meat that perisheth not Ioh. 6.27 and so exercise himselfe in the Word morning and evening that the Word may dwell plenteously in him Psal. 1.2 Col. 3.16 Thirdly he must take heed of adding any more sinnes or duties than are discovered in the Word and of detracting from any thing that is forbidden or required there Psal. 30.6 detesting conceitednesse and singularity having his conversation in all meeknesse of wisedome Iam. 3.13 Fiftly he must daily lift up his heart to God to seeke a way of him whose glory it is to teach to profit and who giveth his Spirit to lead men in the paths of righteousnesse Psal. 23. Esay 48.17 Sixtly he must remember the Sabbath day to sanctifie it For this will be both the meanes and the signes of his sanctification and true righteousnesse It is the market day for the soule Esay 58.13 14. Exod. 31.13 c. Seventhly he must haste to the comming of Christ hee must dispatch his worke as fast as he can and to this end he must cast about to finde out waies of well-doing and when he hath any projects or opportunities of well-doing he must not
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
cloake of malice five wayes 470 How Christian Libertie is a cloake of malice in things indifferent 472 Cases in things indifferent wherein Christian Libertie is vilely abused 473 Life Live How we may live like Gods children 13 A religious Life is the best Life 541 Naturall Life but a meane thing in divers respects 649 The degrees of a spirituall Life 650 Whence it hath its originall even from God and that in three respects 651 Divers things nourish this spirituall Life 654 It differs from eternall Life in many wayes 657 Mans Life is grasse 193 Excellent uses of it 193 194 What we must doe to attain eternall Life 661 A Christians helps hereto 662 Sixe signes of it 663 Five properties of it 664 What duties this Life should imprint in us ibid. For what reasons men should take off their affections from the love of this Life 698 699 In what cases some men may be in love with this Life 702 Mans Life short in what respects and why 705 The uses of it 706 Light The acceptation of the word Light 342 Gods servants are brought into great Light ibid. Excellent instruction and consolation drawne from it 342 343 In how many respects the Light of the godly is called A marvellous Light 343 344 Excellent uses thereof 344 Love Seven signes of the Love of Christ in the sparkle and seven more in the flame 71 What we must doe to get that Love 72 Seven things to be observed to keepe our hearts in this Love ibid. Christs Love to the godly 332 How many wayes the people of God are Gods only beloved ones 361 How to preserve this Love ibid. How we should shew our Love to the Brotherhood 477 Nine signes of unfained Love 180 The impediments of brotherly Love 181 Seven signes of fervent Love 182 Nine causes of the want of it 183 What to doe that we may have and hold it ibid. Reasons to perswade to the Love of the Brethren 680 With what kind of Love we ought to love them 681 Rules for it 682 Three caveats to be looked unto in loving our Brother 683 Lusts. The sorts of Lusts which must be hatefull unto us after our Calling 114 Eight reasons why we should avoyd Lusts after our Calling ibid. Foure preservations against Lusts 115 Lusts how to be avoyded 362 Three differences of Lusts in the godly and wicked 363 Helpes to avoid them ibid. Lusts are fleshly in divers respects 365 How Lusts hurt the soules of godly and wicked men both 366 How we may get victory over our Lusts 387 How we may know that we have gotten this victorie ibid. M MAdnesse Signes of spirituall Madnesse 460 Magistrates They are to be submitted to 424 This submission hath in it sixe things 425 Objections against it answered 427 428 We must be subject to all sorts of Magistrates 428 429 In what things Magistrates are not to be obeyed 431 In what matters Ecclesiasticall Magistrates have no power ibid. In what he hath power 432 Whether we must obey Magistrates in things unlawfull 437 Divers motives in God to move man to the obedience of Magistrates 438 Excellent uses of the point 439. c. In what cases not fit to complaine to the Magistrates 529 Malice It s acceptation 203 Signes of it and reasons against it ibid. Remedies 204 Aggravations of it ibid. Men may use the libertie as a cloake of Malice five wayes 470 Man He is but grasse 193 194 c. His glory vaine in sixe respects 196 What his true glory is 197 Manifest Manifestation Christ manifested five wayes 153 We must shew our affection to this his Manifestation foure wayes 153 154 Marriage Sixteene motives for man and wife to live together quietly and comfortably in Marriage 576 Masters The originall of Masters 492 Signes of good Masters 493 Reasons against frowardnesse in Masters 494 Signes of good Masters 495 Meditation Rules for Meditation 289 Meeknesse It is shewed in foure things 330 What things are requisite to Meeknesse 613 Motives to it ibid. c. Helps to attaine to Meeknesse 616 Mercy Gods Mercy abundant 32 33 It ought not to be any cause of libertie either to the godly or wicked 33 Whether the Lord shewes any Mercy to the wicked 33 34 Shewed foure wayes● 331 What sorts of people God will not be mercifull unto 352 What wicked men in particular are not under Mercy 354 Why many obtaine not Mercy 355 Foure properties of Gods Mercy 356 It is tender many wayes ibid. It is free many wayes ibid. c. Eternall 357 Nine effects of it 358 Excellent uses of it 358 359 Helps to obtaine mercy 359 What Bowells of Mercy doth import 683 Milke The word called Milke in many respects ●30 Excellent uses thereof 231 ●32 Mind Vide Unitie Our Minds must be rightly ordered 6●4 For what reasons we ought to be all of one Mind ibid. Minister This word Minister sounds Servic● 89 Miserie All Miserie referred to 〈◊〉 heads ● of 〈◊〉 ● Of 〈◊〉 3. Of adversities 4. Of death 77 The remembrance of our past Miserie is profitable in sixe respects 338 Mortification None but mortified Christians are true Christians 536 Repentance for sin doth in divers respects kill a man 538 Signes of Mortification 539 Men truely mortified shall live happily 540 N NAme Of a good and evill Name Vide Report Nature The naturall condition very miserable many wayes 608 New Newnesle The necessitie and honour of our New birth 32 The meanes of the New birth 34 The lets ibid. Foure signes of it 35 Uses of it 35 36 Speciall duties of such as are new borne 229 Priviledges of such ibid. Speciall-signes of a New heart 415 A New behaviour discovered divers wayes 416 Why repentance is called a New birth 184 Why we had need to be put in mind of our New birth 185 Lets of it ibid. O OBedience What the causes of it with sixe rules for it 19 Motives to it 20 Of obedience in word● ibid. Our Obedience must be the Obedience of children in sixe respects 113 Our Obedience to God a speciall sign● of his feare 482 Sixe things required to 〈◊〉 sound Obedience 588 The extent of our Obedience in respect of times truths places and persons 176 177 How 〈◊〉 may know their Obedience to be right 177 In 〈◊〉 things the Spirit worketh 〈◊〉 Obedience ibid. P PArents How many wayes children are infected by the traditions of their Parents 142 Why they are so infectious ibid. Seven rules for Parents ordering their children ibid. c. Passeover The manifold passages concerning the sprinkling of the Passeover expounded 25 26. c. Patience It is to be shewed foure wayes 331 People Many sorts of People in Scripture 346 Why wicked men are said not to be a People ibid. Who are not Gods People 347 Men are Gods people three wayes 348 The miserie of those that refuse their calling to be Gods People 337 How Gods people excell all others 349 The uses thereof 350 Rules for Gods People
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
one truth will not sinke yet into our heads Wee are told that this is a point unsearchable Rom. 11.32 33. and the rather because weake Christians are not tied to eate strong meat they may safely let this doctrine alone Thirdly that no man can know his owne reprobation nor ought to beleeve so of himselfe but is called upon to use the meanes by which he may be saved Fourthly we have this oath of God for it That he desires not the death of the sinner but would have all men to repent and be saved Fifthly that whereas Divines make two parts of the decree of reprobation Preterition and Predamnation all Divines are agreed for the latter that God did never determine to damne any man for his owne pleasure but the cause of his perdition was his owne sinne And here is reason for it for God may to shew his soveraignty annihilate his creature but to appoint a reasonable creature to an estate of endlesse paine without respect of his desert cannot agree to the unspotted justice of God And for the other part of passing over and forsaking a great part of men for the glory of his justice the exactest Divines doe not attribute that to the mere will of God but hold that God did first looke upon those men as sinners at least in the generall corruption brought in by the fall For all men have sinned in Adam and are guilty of high treason against God Sixthly that sinne is no effect of reprobation but onely a consequent Gods decree doth not force any man to sinne c. Seventhly that whatsoever God hath decreed yet all grant that God is no way any authour of sinne hee doth not cause sinne in any but onely permits it and endureth it and whereas the most that can be objected is that God hardneth whom he will Rom. 9. it is agreed upon in the answer of all sound Divines that God doth not infuse any wickednesse from without in mens hearts but whereas their hearts are in themselves by custome in sinne hardned as a just Judge he gives them over to Sathan and his power who is as it were the Jayler but doth never restraine them from good and the meanes of it Eighthly now may men say that sinne came upon men by reason of the rigour of Gods Law for it was impossible to be kept For this there is a cleere answer When God gave his Law at first man was able to keepe it and it came by his owne default that hee was not able to keepe it afterwards A man that sends his servant to the market and gives him charge to doe such and such businesse for him if that servant make himselfe drunken and so bee unfit to doe his masters businesse he is worthy to be punished because hee was fit to doe it when hee was first sent about it Ninthly it is plaine in this verse that those men of whom he here speakes are indited of grievous sinne against Christ and the Gospell Tenthly that things may be just though the reasons of them do not appear unto us if it bee true of some cases of justice among men much more in this case of God's justice Lastly it should much satisfie us that in the day of Jesus Christ those mysteries of Religion shall be broken open and all then shall bee made cleer unto us as cleer as the shining of the Sun at noon-day Thus of the punishment of unbeleevers and so also of the first argument taken from testimony of Scripture Verses 9 and 10. But yee are a chosen generation a royall Priesthood an holy Nation a peculiar people that ye should shew forth the vertues of him that hath called you out of darknesse into his marvellous light Which in times past were not a people yet are now the people of God which had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy THese words containe the second argument to perswade Christians to make their constant recourse unto Christ and from him to procure vertue to enable them for holinesse of conversation and it is taken from the consideration of the excellency of that estate unto which they were brought by Christ. For the description whereof the Apostle singles out two places of Scripture with which he makes up a compleat narration of their great prerogatives above all other people and above that they themselves were in former times The places of Scripture he makes use of are Exod. 9. and Hos. 1. But before I open the words two things may be here noted First the Apostles care to prove what he saith from the Scripture whether it bee against wicked men or for godly men which shewes that wee should much more take heed to Gods Word being lesse than Apostles especially such an Apostle Secondly wee may hence note that the promises or prayses given to the godly in the old Testament are not envied to Christians in the new Testament God is no respecter of persons but wee have free liberty to search the bookes of God and to chuse out of all the examples of the suites of godly men or the preferments what we will and if we make a suite of it to God he will not deny it but shew us their mercy Now for the particular opening of these words we must observe that it is the purpose of the Apostle to shew briefly the priviledges of the godly above all others or what themselves were before their conversion And the priviledge of their estate may be considered either positively in it self or comparatively It is described positively vers 9. comparatively vers 10. In the ninth verse there he reckons up a number of prerogatives belonging to the godly and withall shewes the use they should make of them or the end why they were conferred upon them The godly excell in divers respects if we consider First their election they are chosen of God Secondly their alliance or kinred they are a chosen kinred Thirdly their dignity above other men they are royall Kings Fourthly their function or private imployment before God Priests Fifthly their behaviour or outward conversation they are holy Sixthly their number they are a Nation Seventhly their acceptation with God they are a peculiar people First for Election The Apostle looking upon the words in Exodus 19.5 6 and seeing that they described the happinesse of Christians in this life doth in the Fore-front put to this priviledge of their election as the foundation of all the rest and would have Christians much affected with the consideration of this prerogative It is one of the chiefe and prime comforts of a Christian to consider that he is elect of God Psal. 106.4 5. 2 Pet. 1.9 elect I say both before time and in time Before time in Gods decree and in time when the godly are singled and called out of the word and picked out one of a city and two of a tribe in all the ages of the world and distinguished from other men by beleeving in Jesus
the mysteries of Religion in that first moment than they did all the dayes of their life before This is that new spirit the Prophet speaks of He that sate in darknesse before now sees a great light he sees and wonders at divine things in Religion whereas before he was a ●ot and understood nothing with any power or life and by the comforts of this light he can heare as the learned understands doctrine in a moment which before was altogether harsh and dark unto him 2 Pet. 1.19 Ezek. 36.28 Psal. 119.130 Mat. 4.16 Esay 50 4. Thirdly by his vehement desire to righteousnesse or after righteousnesse Mat. 5.5 Which he shewes many wayes as by the loathing of himselfe for his want of righteousnesse and for all his wayes that were not good Ezek. 36.35 and by his estimation of righteousnesse above riches and all worldly things Psal. 3.8 9. and by his affectionate enquiry after directions for righteousnesse Men and brethren what shall we do to be saved Act. 2.37 and by his longing after the Word of truth by which he may learne righteousnes Fourthly by his estimation of righteousnesse in others he honours them that feare the Lord as the only Noble Ones all his delight is in them and he loves them and longs after them for righteousnesse sake Fiftly by the covenant he makes in his heart about righteousnesse he not only consents to obey Esay 1.19 but hires himselfe as a servant to righteousnesse resolving to live to righteousnesse and spend not an houre in a day but a life in the service of righteousnesse Rom. 6.13 18. And as the righteous man growes more strong and better acquainted with God and his Ordinances and the workes of righteousnesse other signes break-out upon him which doe infallibly prove the happinesse of his condition such as are First vexation in his soule at the wickednesse and unrighteousnesse of others 2 Pet. 2.8 Secondly rejoycing with joy unspeakable and glorious when he feeles the comforts of Gods presence and begins to see some evidence of Gods love to him in Christ 1 Pet. 1.9 Thirdly the personall and passionate love of the Lord Jesus Christ the fountaine of righteousnesse though he never saw him in the flesh esteeming him above all persons and things 1 Pet. 1.9 Phil. 3.8 9. longing after his comming with great ●rivings of affections 2 Cor. 5. 2 Tim. 4.8 c. Fourthly flourishing like a Palm-tree when he is planted in the house of the Lord and enjoyes powerfull meanes in the house of his God growing like the Willowes by the water-courses Psal. 92.12 13. and 1.3 Fiftly resolution to suffer any thing for righteousnesse sake Mat. 5.12 so as he will forsake father or mother house or lands yea life it selfe rather than forsake the truth and the good way of God Mat. 16.23 Mark 10.29 Sixtly he lives by faith The just lives by faith In all estates of life hee cas●eth his cares and himselfe upon God trusting on the merits of Jesus Christ and is in nothing carefull but patien●ly waits upon God Gal. 2.2 Heb. 10.38 Gal. 3.11 And thus he is described in himselfe Now his righteousnesse is distinguished from the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees by divers signes and markes as First in the ends of it His righteousnesse is not intended for the praises of men for his praise is of God Rom. 2.26 He doth not his work to be seen of men Mat. 6.1 c. He had rather be righteous than seem so Secondly in the parts of it The Pharisees righteousnesse is outward his is inward also The very thoughts of the righteous are right Pro. 12.5 Hee strives to get a cleane heart as well as cleane hands and is as well grieved for evill thoughts and lusts and desires within as for evill words or works whereas the Pharisee is but like a painted sepulchre all full of rottennes and filth within his soule desires evill when he dares not practise it in his life Pro. 21.10 Againe the Pharisee makes conscience of great commandements but not of the least Hee refraines whoredome murder perjurie swearing by God sacriledge c. but makes no conscience of filthy speaking anger swearing by that which is not God or by lesser oathes deceit covetousnesse or the like whereas a righteous man indeed makes conscience even of the least comm●ndements Mat 5.19.20 Again a Pharisee may be good abroad but is not usually so at home but he that is truly righteous is so at home as well as abroad hee becomes a good husband master father friend c. as well as a ●●od man Finally the righteous man hath respect to all Gods Comman●ements whereas the Pharisee in some one or other of the commandements lives in the breach of it wilfully and without out desire of r●formation some in covetousnesse and extortion some in lust and filthinesse Thirdly in the degrees or measure of righteousnesse The Pharisee is carefull of some few workes of which he seekes glory but the righteousnesse of the just man is as the waves of the sea he is industrious to increase in all well-doing and to bee filled with the fruits of righteousnesse every day Esay 48.18 Fourthly in the continuance of righteousnesse The just man doth righteousnesse at all times Psal. 106.2 Luke 1.75 his desire is for ever to bee imployed in good workes whereas the Pharis●●s righteousnesse is but by fits and as the morning deaw and if trouble come for righteousnesse he fals away and forsakes his righteousnesse c. And thus of the Use for triall Use 2. Secondly the excellent living of such as live righteously may greatly reprove such as cannot be stirred with these things to a conscionable care of forsaking their sinnes and of living righteously Quest. What should be the cause that such men as heare so much of the excellent estate of righteous men are not perswaded to convert and embrace that kinde of life Answ. The cause is divers in divers men as First in some it is long of certaine corruptions that discover themselves about the hearing of the doctrine of righteousnesse For either mens hearts are like a beaten path in the high-way that the sound of doctrine cannot enter into their understanding Mat. 13. Or else they understand not with application to themselves but thinke only how the doctrine may fit others Luke 13.1 2. Or else they meet with some hard condition that they are not willing to observe as the rich young Pharisee did or some other harsh doctrine as they account it which doth so vex and offend them that they fall cleane off from the respect of Christ and holinesse as Iob. 6.59.66 Or else they have some vile opinions that let them in the time of hearing as to thinke that one is not bound to doe as the rules of Scripture doe require or that if one be not a grosse offender God will not impute lesse faults contrary to our Saviours doctrine Mat. 5.18 19 20. Or else their