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A09432 A godly and learned exposition of Christs Sermon in the Mount: preached in Cambridge by that reuerend and iudicious diuine M. William Perkins. Published at the request of his exequutors by Th. Pierson preacher of Gods word. Whereunto is adioyned a twofold table: one, of speciall points here handled; the other, of choise places of Scripture here quoted Perkins, William, 1558-1602. 1608 (1608) STC 19722; ESTC S113661 587,505 584

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thinketh on them though heauen be Gods throne and the earth his footstoole yet will hee looke to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit yea the Lord will dwell with him that is of a contrite and broken heart Christ came to preach the glad tidings of the Gospel to the poore yea the Lord filleth the hungrie that is the poore and hungrie soule with good things but the rich he sends emptie away Let these and many such fauours with God which they enioy prouoke vs to become poore in spirit Secondly are they blessed that be poore in spirit then here all poore and wretched persons in the world may learne to make good vse of their wants and distresses they must consider them as the hand of God vpon them and thereby be ledde to the viewe of their sinnes and by the consideration of their sinnes be brought to see their miserie in thēselues the true ground of this spirituall pouertie Now when they are once poore in spirit they are in a blessed state in the iudgement of Christ. If a man bleed dangerously at the nose the best way to saue his life is to let him blood else-where and so turne the course of the blood another way euen so when a man is oppressed with worldly calamities hee cannot finde any comfort in them for in themselues they are Gods curses yet if thereby he can bee brought to see his spirituall pouertie then of curses they become blessings vnto him and therefore when we are in any distresse wee must not onely fixe our eies vpon the outward crosse but by meanes of that labour to see the pouertie of our soules and so will the crosse lead vs to happinesse Thirdly they that abound with worldly wealth must hereby learne to become poore if they would be saued Poore I say not in goods but in soule and spirit this indeed is hard to flesh and blood for naturally euery rich man blesseth himselfe in his outward estate and perswades himselfe that God loues him because he giues him wealth but such conceits must he striue against and learne of God to reioyce in this that he is made lowe Iam 〈…〉 Fourthly on this saying of Christ that the poore are blessed the Popish teachers obseruing the word translated poore to be●oken outward pouertie goe about to builde their vowe of voluntarie pouertie whereby men renouncing their wealth and possessions of this world doe be take themselues to some Monasterie there to liue a poore and solitarie life But their voluntarie pouertie will not agree with this text son Christs poor● here pronounced blessed are such as by reason of their pouerty are miserable and wretched wanting outward comforts as we shewed o●t of Luke where Christ opposeth them to the rich who abound with all worldly delights but to vndergoe the Popish vow of voluntarie pouertie is no estate of miserie or distresse for who doe liue in greater ●ase or enioy more freedome from the crosses and vexations of this life then their begging Friers Againe if their vowed pouertie had any ground in this text then Christ should pronounce such poore blessed as made themselues poore but that he doth not for then in the next verse he should pronounce such mourners blessed as voluntarily cause themselues to mourne for that verse dependeth on this as a more full explanation of this first rule But no man will say that they that mourne without a cause are there called blessed and therefore Popish vowed pouertie hath no ground on this place And thus much of the persons II. Point Wherein the blessednes of these poore consists namely in hauing a right to the kingdome of heauen For theirs is the kingdome of heauen By kingdome of heauen for the better conceiuing of this blessednes we must vnderstand a state or condition of man whereby he is in Gods fauour and hath fellowship with God The truth of this description is euident by the tenour of the new Testament Now this estate of man is called a Kingdome because herein God rules as king and man obeies as Gods subiect for no man can be in Gods fauour nor enioy his fellowship vnlesse God be his King ruling in his heart by his word and spirit and he Gods subiect resigning himselfe to be ruled by him for this happie estate consists in Gods gracious ruling of man and mans holy subiection vnto God Indeede fewe doe see any great happines in this estate but the truth is mans whole felicity stands herein Rom. 14. 17. The kingdome of God is not meate and drinke but righteousnes peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Here the Apostle teacheth vs three things namely that when Gods spirit rules in a mans heart then first he is iustified there is righteousnes secondly he hath peace with God euen that peace of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding thirdly the ioy of the holy Ghost which is all vnspeakable comfort passing all worldly ioy whatsoeuer And these three doe notably set out the state of an happie man which will yet more plainly appeare by their contraries in Iudas who beeing a wretched sinner vnrighteously betraied his master and thereupon fell into the miserie of a guiltie accusing conscience which was the cause of his desperate death and also that his bodie burst asunder and his bowells gushed out now if an euill conscience be so fearefull then ●ow blessed an estate is the peace and ioy of a good conscience which a man then hath when God by his word and spirit ruleth in his heart Againe this estate is called the kingdome of heauen because that man in whom Christ 〈…〉 by his word and spirit is alreadie himselfe in heauen though i● bodie he be yet on earth for heauen is like a citie with two gates thorough both of which a man must passe before he obtaine the full ●oyes thereof now so soone as God by his word and spirit rules in any mans heart he is alreadie entred the 〈…〉 te of grace which is the first gate the other remaines to be passed thorough at the time of death which is the gate of glorie and then he is in full possession Doth true happines consist in this estate where Christ ruleth and man obeies then here behold the errour of all Philosophers and wise men of this world touching happines for some haue placed it in pleasure some in wealth and others in ciuill vertue and some in all these But the truth is it stands in none of these A naturall man may haue all these and yet be condemned for the ciuill vertues of the heathen were in them but glorious sinnes Our Sauiour Christ hath here reuealed more vnto vs then all the wise men of the world did euer know and hereby we haue iust occasion to magnifie the bookes of Scripture farre aboue all humane writings because they doe fully set out vnto vs the nature and estate of true felicitie which no humane
sinnefull conception al which our Sauiour Christ was free from for at the very time when hee bare our sinnes hee was in himselfe more holy then all men and all Angels Fourthly it is said that if Christs righteousnesse bee made ours then wee are made Sauiours Answer It followeth not for Christs merits and righteousnesse are conuaied and applied vnto men not as they are in Christs person in whom they are sufficient to saue ten thousand worlds but as they serue to saue and iustifie that particular person onely to whom they are imputed so that this remaines an vndoubted truth that that righteousnesse which brings saluation is Christs righteousnesse onely Here some may say How is Christs righteousnesse made ours and wee assured of it Answ. It is made ours by sauing faith which the holy Ghost creates in the heart and soule as an hand whereby wee may laie hold on Christ and applie his righteousnesse vnto our selues as hee is offered vnto vs in the promises of the Gospel Some obiect that if Christs righteousnesse be made ours by our beleeuing it to bee ours then if a man beleeue his neighbours house to be his it is his also and so for any other thing Answer There is not the like reason in these things for it is a meere fancie and imagination for a man to beleeue his neighbours house to be his hauing no ground for it besides his owne conceit but when a man beleeueth Christs righteousnesse to be his he hath Gods commandement and promise for his warrant and assurance that it shall be imputed vnto him and withall that faith so grounded maketh Christs righteousnesse as truely his as any thing a man hath is his owne beeing giuen him of another Now this sauing faith laying hold on Christs righteousnesse for mans iustification is neuer seuered from sanctification by the spirit with the fruits thereof whereby the old man beeing mortified and the new man in Christ renued according to his image in knowledge righteousnesse and true holinesse the whole person is turned vnto God and made carefull to please him both in thought word and deede and hereby doe wee receiue assurance of our iustification for true sanctification is the earnest of the spirit of adoption in our hearts whereby we are sealed vnto the day of our redemption Doth that righteousnesse whereby we must be iustified and saued in the day of our Lord come from Christ onely and not from our selues then we see what iust cause we haue to humble our selues and to acknowledge our great vnrighteousnesse and want of all goodnesse in our selues and when wee can doe this vnfainedly wee haue gone one steppe in the way to true happinesse Secondly we also must hereby learne to esteeme all things as drosse and dongue with the Apostle in respect of Christ Iesus and his righteousnesse for he it is that brings vs to heauen and therefore wee must honour him aboue all and value his righteousnesse as that most pretious iewel which when a man hath found hee will sell all that he hath to get and keepe it Matth. 13. 46. Thirdly we must hunger and thirst after Christ and his righteousnesse for it is the fountaine of all blessednes and without it we are most miserable yea though wee had all the world beside yet without it wee loose our saluation Now what will it profit a man to winne all the world if he loose his soule Fourthly seeing Christs righteousnesse is made ours by faith we made assured of it by sanctification of heart and life wee must labour for true faith whereby our hearts may bee inwardly renued we must not content our selues with an outward holinesse for that will neuer bring a man to heauen but our endeauour must be for inward holinesse whereby we shal be preferred with God aboue all the Pharises in the world and get assurance of eternall happinesse And this faith wee must shewe forth in all holy exercises as when we heare the word wee must lend the inward eare of the heart with the bodily eare and when we fall downe to praier we must bowe the knees of our hearts and in fasting from meate wee must abstaine from sinne yea in all things wee must be carefull to serue God in spirit and truth for which cause wee must pray with Dauid Lord renue a right spirit within me that so feeling Christ to liue in vs by grace wee may bee assured that Christs righteousnesse shall bring vs vnto glorie Verse 21. Ye haue heard that it was said of olde Thou shalt not kill for whosoeuer killeth shall be culpable of iudgement Our Sauiour Christ hauing laid downe his Preface doth here begin his interpretation of the Law beeing indeed the onely true doctour of his Church and herein especially hee doth meddle with the second Table beginning first of all with the sixt Commandement touching Murther In the handling whereof hee obserueth this order First hee setteth downe the false interpretation of this law by the Scribes and Pharises in this verse Secondly hee sheweth the true meaning of it v. 22. And lastly hee propoundeth rules of concord and agreement betweene those that be at variance verses 23 24 25 26. For the first The Exposition Ye haue heard that is you Iewes which now heare mee whether Scribes Pharises or others you haue heard that it hath beene said of old that is by your auncient Teachers the old Scribes and Pharises who haue expounded this law vnto you and that this phrase must be vnderstood of the ancient Iewish Teachers may plainely appeare because in the next verse hee opposeth his owne teaching thereunto and would haue these his hearers that before had learned a false interpretation of this law from their old Teachers now to learne of him the true exposition thereof The Law is this Thou shalt not kill The exposition of the ancient Iewish Teachers was this for whosoeuer killeth shall be culpable of iudgement that is whosoeuer laieth violent handes on another to take away his life for they knew no other murther neither did they extend this commandement to forbid any sin but actual murther shall be culpable of iudgement that is shall be held guiltie of murther both in the courts of men and also before the iudgement seate of God where hee shall receiue the deserued punishment thereof This was the interpretation of the Iewes Here first obserue that Antiquitie is no infallible marke of true doctrine for this exposition of this commandement was ancient received from ancient Teachers and yet Christ the doctour of truth reiecteth it as false and corrupt and therefore the argument which the Papists vse for the stablishing of their religion drawn from Antiquitie is of no effect Secondly by these words of Christ ye haue heard it hath beene said of olde wee may easily gather after what manner the Scribes and Pharises expounded the law namely they left the Scriptures and followed
doctrine and style the doctrine of Scripture is the Law and the Gospel now the Law is set forth in most excellent puritie nothing therein is against right reason or common equitie In the lawes of men are many things found against reason and equitie they commaund such things as common reason would condemne and omitte many things which reason and equitie would commaund And for the Gospel in it is set downe doctrine altogether aboue mans reason touching Christs incarnation and mans redemption by his death and although these things bee aboue nature yet wee finde them true wholesome and good in experience of conscience which also prooues that they are the word of God Men may deuise things aboue nature but they can neuer be wholesome to the conscience Further for the style of Scripture the phrase is plaine familiar and yet in any one speech there is more maiestie then in all the writings of men Lastly the ende of Scripture prooues the same to bee Gods word for the Scripture sets vp Gods worshippe and mans saluation and yet giues nothing to men or Angels but all to the glorie of God but for the writings of men they doe either directly or by insinuation ascribe some thing to the writers thereof II. Argument From the effects one worke of Scripture is this It is against our corrupt nature crossing and condemning the same and yet it winneth men to the loue therof and to obedience thereto which could not be vnlesse it were the truth of God for wee abhorre and detest the words of men that be against our nature A second effect is this Gods word serues notably to comfort a man in all distresses whatsoeuer euen in the pangs of death when no word of any man can doe him the least good but onely his word that is the Lord of our soule and the God of our life III. Argument From the properti●s of Scripture the first whereof is Antiquitie The Scriptures of all writings are most auntient and euermore truth is most auntient among humane writings wee haue none of certaintie in the things they record before the times of Nehemias and Ezra but Scripture sets downe things done from the beginning A second propertie is mutuall consent for though the bookes of Scripture were written by diuers men in sundry ages and times yet all agree within themselues no contradiction is in Scripture but the writings of men haue not this consent no not in the same Author IV. Argum. From the signes and miracles thereof The doctrine of Scripture teacheth and recordeth true miracles as the parting of the Sea the staying of the sunne and moone the taking away of barrennesse and the incarnation of the son of God a miracle of all miracles all which beeing wrought by the power of God shew that the Scripture which recordeth them is the infallible truth of God V. Argum. From the contraries Contrarie to the word of God is the will of the deuill mans corrupt nature the deuil hates Scripture and mans sinfull nature repines thereat when it is checked and controlled thereby now that which is contrary to these to must needs be holy and true and that is the word of God VI. Argument From testimonie There bee two kindes of testimonies touching Scripture one of holy Martyrs who in all ages haue sealed the truth thereof with their blood preferring the word of God before their owne liues It will be said that Heretikes haue died for falshood Answer There is great difference in their endes the Martyrs haue vnspeakable ioy in the spirit in their torments but Heretikes haue no such ioy but a naturall senslesse blockishnesse whereby they vndergoe these tortures A second testimonie is most principall and that is the testimony of Gods spirit for when men beginne to learne and obey the word of God then the spirit of God setles their consciences in the perswasion of the truth of Scripture whereupon it is called the sealing of the spirit of truth because it assures a man in conscience of his reconciliation with God which assurance none can haue till he be first resolued of the certaintie of Scripture which is the groūd thereof Question How may a man finde this seale in himselfe Answer When hee findes the Scripture imprinted in his heart as the signe of the seale is in the waxe and his heart is transformed into Scripture as the waxe is into the similitude of the seale then doth the spirit out of the holy Scripture seale vp assurance of the truth thereof vnto his soule None other writing of any man hath the like worke in the heart of man and from these grounds especially from this last may wee resolue our selues that the Bible is of infallible certaintie And yet for further resolution let vs see what obiections are made against it I. Obiect It is said that Scripture is against all reason Ans. This is not true for the Law is perfect reason and the Gospel is aboue reason not contrarie to reason nay holding this principle of nature that God is almightie euen the Gospel it selfe may stand with reason as that the sonne of God should be incarnate and that by his death we should receiue life which is the summe of the Gospel II. Obiect There bee falshoods in Scripture for the passage thorough the redde Sea was no miracle but might bee done in the ebbing of the Sea as in other countries there is oft-times passage through the Washes Answer The Scripture saith the water stood as walls on each side the passage which could not bee by an ebbe againe reason shewes that it could not bee by naturall course for their passage ouer was at the full of the Moone when all Seas are most full and doe not ebbe and flowe as they vse to doe at other times III. Obiect The greatest part of the world reiect the Bible as Turks and Pagans and the Iewes care not for the new Testament Ans. We must reuerence Gods worke in this withholding his mercie in Christ from some to whome he denies the meanes which is his holy word for hence it comes that some reiect the Bible because God in his secret yet most iust iudgement withholds this blessing from them And therefore though Atheists barke yet the truth is Scripture is th● word of God Vses 1. Seeing the word written is the certen truth of God we must take heede of beeing seduced by Popish teachers who say there be two kinds of Scripture Inward and Outward Inward Scripture is a consent of doctrine written by the holy Ghost in the hearts of all Catholikes and this say they is right Scripture The outward Scripture i● written in paper and parchment which hath no certen sense but as the present Church determines thereof But this is a deuillish doctrine abolishing written Scripture the true word of God and setting vp the opinions of their owne hearts making Scripture what themselues will we must therefore hold
This I note because they beginne to be in disgrace with many and corrupt Popish writers are farre better accounted of Thirdly if any among vs doubt of any point in religion let him doe these two things for his resolution which are the ordinarie meanes to know the truth First let him search the holy Scriptures diligently not by priuate studie onely but by conference with the godly Secondly let him in true humilitie of heart pray vnto God for the illumination of his spirit whereby he may in minde rightly conceiue of the truth embrace it by faith in his heart and honour it by obedience in his life thus doing constantly and in sinceritie he shall be sure to be preserued from errour both finall and fundamentall and in due time shall know the truth for the promise is Aske and ye shall haue seeke and ye shall finde verse 12. and Saint Iames saith If any man lacke wisedome necessarie for his saluation let him aske of God vsing withall other lawfull meanes to come thereby and it shall bee giuen vnto him Hereto may be added this good help for satisfaction in this case of doubting namely to haue recourse to the generall confessions of reformed Churches which may be had in that notable booke The Harmonie of Confessions for although priuate men may erre as also particular Churches not onely seuerally but ioyntly in some things in this world yet the generall consent of reformed Churches may be a good direction to the knowledge of the truth and a good perswasion to constancie therein Fourthly we must keepe a good conscience if we would preserue the truth and puritie of religion for faith and good conscience goe alwaies together whereupon Saint Paul perswading Timothie to this dutie bids him haue faith and a good conscience which some haue put away as concerning faith haue made shipwracke 1. Tim. 1. 19. where a good conscience is resembled to a shippe which saileth ouer the sea of this world beeing laden with faith that is with true religion and other spirituall graces needefull to saluation Now if the shippe of our conscience be crazie and vnsound then is our faith and saluation in great danger and therefore wee must endeauour in all things to haue a cleare conscience both towards God and towards men IU Instruct. This commandement of our Sauiour Christ to beware of false Prophets doth barre the Church of God and euery member thereof from conuersing with false Prophets after they bee conuicted to be such It was Eues fault to admit conference with the deuill in the serpent and all of vs feele the smart thereof at this day It was Pauls counsell to the Romans to marke them diligently which caused diuision and offences among them contrarie to the doctrine which they had learned and to auoyde them and Saint Iohn plainely forbids this societie with them 2. Epist. verse 10. Receiue not him to thine house neither bidde him God speed that comes to teach you and brings not this doctrine yea though we saith Paul or an Angel from heauen teach you otherwise then that which we haue preached vnto you hold him accursed Galat. 1. 8. In the histories of the Church it is recorded that S. Iohn would not wash himselfe in the same bath wherein Cerinthus an heretike was washing himselfe nor abide vnder the same roofe but leaped out and perswaded others so to doe And indeede by Eues example we may see the danger of conference with false Prophets for the same euill spirit speakes in them Now this shewes first that the practise of many students is dangerous and against this commandement who take delight in popish Cōmentaries and postils ascribing to them more learning and Iudgement then can be sound in those writers that were the restorers of true religion vnto vs hence it is that they labour more in them then in the Scripture it selfe or in other sound writers thereupon But if there bee any false Prophet at this day it is the Papist and their writings are dangerous to be read of those that are not well grounded in the truth for by reading we haue a kind of familiaritie with them and indeede many sucke out of them at vnawares much venim in waighty points of doctrine and religion We ought rather to doe with them as the beleeuers of Ephesus did with their bookes of curious Arts namely bring them out and burne them then take such delight in them albeit this must be graunted it is both lawfull and necessarie for the defence of the truth that men of sound iudgement and piety doe labour in them Secondly hence also it may appeare that it cannot bee but a great hindrance to true religion that hereticall bookes may be publikely sold to any one that will buie them without due consideration whether the partie haue gifts to discerne of truth from falshood in the Popish Church they are more carefull they permit not a man to read an heretikes booke as they call vs Protestants without leaue and that vnder a great penaltie which is seuerely inflicted vpon offenders that way V. Instruct. This commandement also shewes that it is not lawfull to graunt to any man or to any people the libertie of their owne conscience in the matters of religion permitting them to professe what religion they will for how should false Prophets be auoided when euery man may freely professe what he will in religion All gouernours therfore must follow the practise of good king Iosias who assembled all Iuda and caused all his people to heare the word of the Lord and to stand to that religion which the booke of God made knowne vnto them 2. Chro. 34. 32. V. Doctr. Wee haue from this commaundement an answer to the false charge of the Church of Rome who accuse vs of schisme and apostacie because we separate from their Church But we must know that the schisme apostacie is there where the cause of departing is which indeede is not in vs who doe no more herein but obey this commaundement of Christ the cause is in them who are become false prophets whom we must auoyd Here yet two questions may bee demaunded I. Whether a false Prophet may be put to death seeing Christ bids onely to beware of them Answ. Christ here speakes to his Apostles and to other of his auditors that were priuate men whose dutie raught no further but yet the truth is that a false Prophet beeing iudicially conuicted is to bee put to death the word of God elsewhere is plaine Leuit. 24. 14. there is both a commandement and a practise Euery blasphemer must die This wicked Iesabel knew wel who vnder pretence of blasphemie caused Naboth to be put to death and hereupon the Iewes sought to put Christ to death Yea Nabuchadnezzar an heathen king hauing but a taste of this that the God of Israel was the true God made this lawe that whosoeuer blasphemed
and duties of religion were abomination vnto the Lord because their hands were full of blood and because they had no mercie therefore they were led into captiuitie as we may see at large Ier. 5. 28. Euck. 9. 9 10. and Zach. 9. 12. Now we beeing in the same case with them for vnmercifulnes and crueltie haue no doubt deserued long since the same punishment euen that the Enemie should depriue vs both of Gospel and peace and of all our prosperitie and wealth what then shall we doe surely we must humble our selues by praier and fasting vnto the Lord if not publikely yet priuately euery man and euery familie apart euen for this one sinne of vnmercifulnesse and withall in this humiliation begin to practise mercie by bestowing that vpon the poore which we spare frō our bodies in the daie of our fast Verse 8. Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God These words containe the sixt Rule of Christ touching true happinesse wherein as in the former obserue two points the persons blessed and wherein their blessednesse consists The persons blessed are thus qualified they are pure in heart This is diuersly expounded By pure in heart some vnderstand those that are chasse others those that are simple hearted voide of guile and deceit But the words will beare a more generall sense betoken such as are holy in heart hauing their hearts purged from the defilement of their sinnes and be in part renued and sanctified by the holy Ghost and that they are so to bee taken may appeare Psal. 24. 4. whence these words are borrowed where also the Prophet expoundeth the pure in heart to be such as haue not lift vp their minde to vaine things to which purpose the Author to the Hebrewes saith Follow peace with all men and holinesse without which no man can see God Againe the intent of our Sauiour Christ in this place was no doubt to crosse the Pharisaicall conceipt of those times whereby men did content themselues with outward holinesse as sufficient to true happinesse and therefore he saith Blessed are the pure not outwardly but inwardly in heart Further by heart we are to vnderstand the soule with the parts and faculties thereof that is the mind the conscience the will and affections And that wee may yet conceiue more clearely of this point we are to search out two things first in what maner then in what measure the heart is made pure For the first the purifying of the heart is by a two-fold Action of the holy Ghost first by creating in the minde a sauing faith which vnites a man vnto Christ as an hand applieth Christs puritie that is his obedience to the heart so Peter speaketh of the Gentiles in the Councell at Ierusalem that by faith the Lord purified their hearts Secondly when a man is in Christ the holy Ghost purgeth and sanctifieth the heart inwardly by mortifying all the corruptions in the minde will and affections and by putting into it inward holinesse whereby the image of Christ is renued therein And this our Sauiour Christ expresseth Iohn 15. 2. when hee saith that the father purgeth every one that bringeth forth fruit in him Now vnto these the holy Ghost addeth an excellent grace of Christian Resolution whereby a man hath a constant purpose not to sinne against God any way either in thought word or deede but in all things to please God continually so as if at any time he-sinne it is against his holy resolution Now for the measure of this purification it is onely in part in this life for the grace of sanctification is not perfect till death as the Apostle saith we receiue but the first fruits of the spirit that is not the Tenths but as an handfull of corne to a whole field the soule is freed from the punishment and guilt of sinne and in some sort purged from corruption but not wholly This wee must obserue the more diligently because the Papists teach otherwise to wit that after Baptisme and regeneration sinne is so taken away that there is in man nothing that God can hate but experience in euery childe of God shewes this to be false The chiefe ground of their opinion is this that if sinne properly called should remaine in the regenerate then God should repute a man to be iust which is a sinner But we answer that God neuer reputeth an impenitent sinner iust but onely the repentant and regenerate which are by faith in Christ and so in effect are no sinners because though corruption remaine in them in part yet it is not imputed to their persons Besides in the acte of their conuersion corruption hath receiued that deadly wound whereof it shall neuer recouer but daiely die till it be quite abolished and therefore doth it not raigne in them And thus we see in what manner and measure the heart is purified whereby the pure in heart may be thus described They are such as beleeue the pardon of their sinnes in Christ and be in part renewed in their soules by the holy Ghost hauing their naturall corruptions mortified and abolished in some measure and the graces of Gods image repaired in thē and a godly resolution wrought in their hearts not to sinne against God in any thing Considering that the pure in heart bee blessed wee must search our selues and see whether our hearts bee qualified with this grace As in former times so at this day inward puritie is much neglected The ancient Iewes stood vpon their legall puritie and righteousnesse and the Pharises after them relied vpon their outward holinesse and the holy Ghost foretold that in the latter daies should come perilous times by reason of sundrie sinnes wherof this is one that men should content thēselues with a shadow and shew of godlinesse and in truth denie the power thereof And doth not experince shewe this to be true among vs for the pure heart is so little regarded that the seeking after it is turned to a by-word and a matter of reproach Who are so much branded with vile tearmes of Puritans and Presitians as those that most indeauour to get and keepe the puritie of heart in a good conscience Againe the generall ignorance that euery where abounds doth plainely argue the want of this grace for what can bee in the heart but impuritie and iniquitie where there is no knowledge of the will of God in the minde And for such as haue more knowledge then the rest generally they are not answerable vnto it in practise for take a view of all the markets in the land and you shall hardly find a man that is to sell his graine that will be brought to abate one iot of the highest price no not vnto the poore that stand in extreame neede which as it argueth a bloodie and cruell heart so it sheweth our times to be euill da●es wherein men professe much and doe nought which sinne
by Christs comming and therfore repent and amend and Math. 11. 12. from the time of Iohn hitherto the kingdome of heauen suffereth violence So then the meaning of this first conclusion is this Whosoeuer breaketh one of these least commandements of the Moral law which afterward I shall expound and teacheth men so to doe he shall be contemned and not counted worthie to bee a member of the Church of God in the new Testament In this conclusion in the practise of the Iewes Christ setteth forth two notable corruptions of an hollow heart towards God The first to set little by the commandements of God esteeming no more of them nay lesse then of mens lawes and traditions but Saint Iames saith he that breaketh one commandement bee it neuer so little is guiltie of all though hee make shewe of keeping all so likewise hee that maketh light and base account of one commandement contemneth all though he seeme to honour the rest neuer so much Though Herod heard Iohn gladly and obeied his doctrine in many things and so seemed to make some account of some commandements yet because he would needs liue in incest against the seauēth commandement he did in effect contemne and breake them all so at this day there are many who professe religion and giue testimonie thereof by hearing the word and receiuing the sacraments and herevpon they would be counted louers of Gods lawe yet in the course of their liues and in their particular callings they will not sticke to oppresse the poore and to deale vniustly for their aduantage to prophane the Sabbath for a little profit or pleasure and to sweare and curse when they are a little prouoked Now howsoeuer such persons may make a glorious shew of profession outwardly yet by these and such like particular actions they shew plainly that they haue but Pharisaicall hearts which indeed make little or no account of Gods commandements Let vs therfore euery one looke into our waies and search in our owne hearts whether this corruption be in vs or no and if it be let vs repent and forsake it and labour to become like Dauid who had respect vnto all Gods commandements and so shall we not be despised in the Church of God The second corruption of an hollow heart noted likewise of Christ in these Iewes is to place the ceremonies rites and traditions of men aboue the commandements of the Morall law Herewith he doth expresly charge the Iewish teachers Matth. 15. 3. Why doe ye transgresse the commandements of God by your traditions And this is also the practise of the Church of Rome at this day they account eating flesh in Lent and on their fasting daies a deadly sinne yet they will dispense with threasons murthers of Christian Princes they allow of Stues they permit and pardon Sodomie and yet vtterly forbid mariage in some estate which the holy Ghost calleth honourable among all men In these and many moe they preferre their owne traditions before the most holy commandements of God yea many ignorant persons among vs are tainted with this corruption for be not some feast daies appointed by the Church as Christs natiuitie all Saints and such like obserued by them with greater conscience and reuerence then the Lords owne Sabbath Though the memorie of Christs natiuitie may be celebrated yet the Lords day should haue the speciall honour Now for the reforming of this corruption we must labour to haue the same minde that was in Dauid who grew into admiration with Gods commandements and thereupon invred himselfe to the obseruation of them We must therefore labour to haue an high estimation of the lawes of God and this will be a notable meanes to drawe vs to a reuerend feare and obedience towards to the same one cause why men do not so highly aduance the law of God as they ought is because they doe not sufficiently waigh the dignitie thereof In euery commandement therefore we must first deepely consider the waight thereof then labour to vnderstand it aright thirdly learne to admire the wisdome and iustice of God therein and lastly endeauour to yeeld loyaltie and obedience thereunto Secondly in this Rule our Sauiour Christ puts a difference between a false Prophet and a true The false Prophet breakes the commandements of God in his owne person and also by his doctrine teacheth others to doe the like But the true Prophet and seruant of God in the Ministerie endeauoureth the aduancement of Gods glorie as well by integritie of life as by soundnesse of doctrine Thirdly in the punishment of a false Prophet here set downe wee haue good direction for our iudgement touching the present Church of Rome namely that shee is not worthie to be esteemed a part of Christs Church on earth by the sentence of our Sauiour Christ because shee breakes Gods commaundements and teacheth men so for whereas the second commandement forbiddeth the worshipping of Images yea and the making of Images to resemble God the Church of Rome doth not onely allow the contrarie against this commandement but teacheth others so to doe saying that it is lawful to resemble the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost in Images either painted or carued and to worshippe them therein yea and to worshippe the very Images of Christ and of Saints as also the Saints themselues with religious worship Againe they plainely breake the tenth commandement which forbiddeth the first motions vnto sinne with delight though without cōsent of wil by teaching that concupiscence after baptisme is no sinne And as they deale with the commandements so deale they with the Prophets who giue testimonie vnto Christ for first they destroy his manhood by their forged transubstantiation secondly they ouerturne his kingly office by making the Pope the head of the Church and giuing him power to make lawes to binde the conscience Thirdly they ouerturne the Priesthood by their massing Priesthood wherein they daily offer vp an vnbloodie sacrifice for the sinnes of the quicke and the dead Fourthly they rob him of his propheticall office in giuing liberty to the Pope to make new Laws to expound the Scriptures as supreame iudge these things they teach therefore that Church is not worthy to be counted a member of Christs Church But seeing God in great mercie hath vouchsafed vs this fauour in this land that we should receiue and embrace his holy word to publish and teach the same and so esteemeth vs worthie to be accounted a member of his Church wee are therefore to reioyce in this mercie and to praise God vnfainedly for this vnspeakable blessing and to shewe forth our thankefulnesse not onely by teaching and receiuing the truth of his word but also by yeelding obedience in all things thereunto yea our earnest and daily prayer must be because it is so great a blessing to be counted worthie of his kingdome that
man by oath and not otherwise may either free himselfe from temporall losses or procure to himselfe temporall benefits which be of great weight and moment for an oath for confirmation is among men the ende of all strife now we know that much strife and controuersie doth arise about worldly affaires And in this regard a man by oath may lawfully purge himselfe of infamie and slander In these foure cases a man may lawfully sweare not onely publikely before the Magistrate but also priuately so it be with due reuerence and good conscience But in common talke or on light occasion a man cannot lawfully sweare either by small or great oath for that is to take the name of God in vaine II. Quest. How must a man take an oath when by iust occasion he is called to sweare Ans. To this question the Prophet Ieremie answereth chap. 4. 2. Thou shalt sweare the Lord liueth in truth in iudgement and in righteousnes where three vertues are required in an holy manner of swearing First truth and that respecteth two things as well the matter whereto we sweare for God may not be brought for a witnesse to a lie as also the minde of him that sweareth for his oath must be according to his minde without fraud or deceit and with intent to performe that truly which he promises thereupon Secondly Iustice or righteousnes which also respecteth two things first the thing sworne to that must be iust and lawfull and according to Gods word secondly the conscience of the swearer for a man must not sweare for a trifle though the thing be true but either by the authoritie of the Magistrate or vpon some necessarie cause of his lawfull calling and against this vertue doe those sinne that sweare vsually in their common talke though the thing be true for trifles and light matters are not a iust cause of an oath Thirdly iudgement as well of the oath as of his owne person for the oath he that sweareth rightly ought to know the nature of an oath and be able to iudge of the matter whereabout he sweareth and also discerne rightly of the persons before whome of time place and other circumstances And for his owne person a man that sweareth ought to see in his conscience that he is fit to take an oath and thereby to worship and glorifie God for he that sweareth ought to haue his heart smitten with feare and awe towards God as in all other parts of his worship Deut. 10. 20. the feare of God and swearing by his name are ioyned together and a prophane man that hath no feare of God in his heart ought not to sweare And thus much of Christs general Answer to their false interpretation Neither by heauen for it is the throne of God v. 35. Nor yet by the earth for it his footestoole neither by Ierusalem for it is the citie of the great King c. Here our Sauiour Christ commeth particularly to forbid swearing in foure seuerall kinds of oaths vsed among the Iewes vnder which he includeth all indirect oathes by the creatures and withall obserue that he addeth seuerall reasons in prohibiting these seuerall kinds of indirect oathes as that a man must not sweare by heauen because it is the throne of God c. Now as I take it Christ doth not directly forbid swearing by the creatures in this place for his intent is to forbid ordinarie swearing in common speach whether it be by God or by the creatures which here he nameth because the Iewes counted them but light oathes Yet here this point must needes be skanned Whether it be lawfull at any time to sweare by the creatures Sundrie Papists and those of the best account both for learning and deuotion make two kinde of oathes in swearing by the creatures First when a man sweares by the creature and puts it in the place of God making it a Iudge and witnesse to his conscience of the truth of the thing whereof he sweareth and this doe all condemne as wicked and vnlawfull both Protestants and Papists Secondly when the creature is named but yet the oath is directed to God in the minde of the swearer vnder the name of the creature as the creature is in relation to God a signe of his presence and this kind of swearing is taken for lawfull not onely of all Papists but of many Protestant Diuines which be of good account in our age Yet with reuerence to them all I see no reason in the word of God to warrant this kind of swearing by the creature with direction to God in the minde of him that sweareth Indeede a man may name the creature in his oath as Paul did I call God to record to my conscience and yet sweare by God for it is one thing to name the creature in swearing and an other thing to sweare by the creature Reasons against this forme of swearing by the creatures are these First an oath is part of Gods worship as hath before beene shewed now euery part of Gods worship must be referred to God directly so we pray and giue thankes vnto God directly and not in the creature and so we ought to sweare but in indirect swearing by the creatures the oath is directly referred to the creature and indirectly vnto God namely in the creature which is not lawfull Secondly a man must sweare by him that is greater then himselfe and therefore God sware by himselfe because there was no greater to sweare by where it seemeth the holy Ghost takes it for graunted that there is no lawfull swearing by the creatures because they are not greater then man and so there must be but one onely direct kind of swearing by God himselfe Thirdly Deut. 6. 13. Thou shalt sweare by my name there it seemeth he prescribeth such a forme of swearing wherein the name of God in some plaine manner is expressed but in indirect oathes an other besides him that sweareth cannot tell whether he sweare by God or not because the oath is by the creature and directed to God onely in the minde of him that sweareth Fourthly Math. 13. 16. He that sweareth by the Temple sweareth by God whence I gather that an indirect oath is superfluous because it is sufficient that a man sweare by God onely and not by the creature also By these reasons I haue beene mooued to dislike of indirect oathes now let vs see what is said in the behalfe of them First it is saide that Ioseph a man commended for his faith sware by the life of Pharaoh therefore men may sweare by the creatures Ans. It may be well expounded not to be an oath but an asseueration to this effect as surely as Pharaoh liueth but say it is an oath yet this fact prooueth not the lawfulnes of this kind of swearing for no man is so good but he may be tainted with the impieties of the place wherein he liueth especially beeing so wicked a
say there is a God and this God is to be worshipped to be loued and feared and that we must loue our neighbour as our selues and liue wel they seeke no further and yet if a man were brought vp in the wildernesse he might see all this by the light of nature the wicked eie seeth thus much but we must not content our selues herewith for if there be no more the life is full of darkenesse still and the soule may goe to vtter darkenesse with all this We therefore must remember to get the single eie else we are no schollers in the schoole of Christ. Indeed some plead that Preachers can say no more in effect but this Loue God aboue all and thy neighbour as thy selfe but these men know not what they say blessing themselues in their ignorance they must know that grace must be put to nature and sanctifie it and spirituall knowledge ioyned with naturall or else we remaine with the wicked eie If wee haue no more but a generall confused knowledge in moral points that serues not to saue vs but to make vs without excuse at the last day Againe another common fault worthy reproofe is this that men content themselues with naturall reformation they will graunt that God is to bee worshipped and loued that we must liue wel deale iustly and loue our neighbours but the blinde eie seeth thus much The meere ciuill man will goe thus farre and yet his life is nothing but darkenesse all this reformation is but naturall We therefore must labour for renued hearts by the spirit of God and reformed liue● according to the Gospel for howsoeuer a ciuill conuersation may commend vs vnto men yet it will not saue vs in the day of the Lord. Thirdly is this euill eie in euery one by nature then beware we bee not wise in our selues and from our selues in matters of saluation herein the word of God must be our wisedome Deut. 12. 8. 11. Ye shall not doe euery man that which seemeth good in his owne ●ies but that which I command you Farre be it therefore from vs to appoint to our selues how we will worship God or how we will be saued and yet such is our blinde presumption that wee will bee our owne masters in these things The Turke hath his religion the Iewe his and the Papist his all swaruing from the truth of God and yet euery one of these look to be saued in their religion each one of these haue a different manner of worshipping God and all swaruing from the true worship and yet they all perswade themselues that God is well pleased with their seruice And thus it goes with naturall men among v● though otherwise sufficiently wise for worldly things they resolue vpon their own course for the saluation of their soules let the preacher say what he will some thinke if they repent at their ende and then commend their soules to God it is sufficient others looke to be saued by their wel-doing and others by their faith as they call it but in truth by their owne good meaning and intent to liue well for what faith haue they that knowe not Gods word and promises Thus by their owne wisedome wil men be saued and hereby the deuil destroyes many a soule but let God bee wise and euery man a foole and let vs submit our selues in the things of God wholly to be ruled and guided by his written word lest Iewishly and Popishly we going about to stablish our own conceits in the matters of saluation doe plunge our soules into the pit of destruction Fourthly is the eie of the minde naturally corrupt then must wee labour for a better eie that is the eie of faith by which we relie on Gods mercie for our saluation and on his prouidence for all needfull things in life and death This eie makes supply to that which is wanting to naturall knowledge hereby we discerne rightly of God and of our selues this enables vs to see afarre off yea hereby we see things inuisible for it is the euidence of things which are not seene Heb. 11. 1. hereby Abraham saw the day of Christ and was glad Ioh. 8. 58. and all the Patriarkes saw the promise of God afarre off Heb. 11. 13. This will inable vs to walke in their steps towards the heauenly ci●ie and therefore let vs get this faith that so becomming children of the promise we may be counted for the seed And thus much for the wicked eie The third kind of eie is the blinde eie which is set out with the fruits thereof in these words Wherefore if the light that is in thee bee darkenesse how great is that darkenesse For the better discerning of the state of man with this blinde eie we must see what is meant by light and also by darkenesse By light is meant that knowledge of God of iustice of good and euill which is in the minde by nature now though this cannot be quite put out for the most wicked wretch and the veriest Atheist that liues hath some conscience remaining which is a worke of this light yet it may be so buried and couered that no light shall appeare nor any vse be made of it and then is it said to be darkenes which is the state of those that are giuen vp to a reprobate sense as when a man denies there is a God or that the Scriptures be the word of God or such like in these men naturall light is become darkenesse And the cause of this change in them is their corrupt will and rebellious affections which ouer-ruling naturall knowledge and conscience cause men to giue themselues to actuall sinnes whereby at length they come to commit sinne greedily and without remorse yea euen against conscience and the light of nature and so burie them both in such sort that they haue no more vse of them then if they were quite put out Now where the light of nature is thus put out the fruite of it is most palpable darknesse How great is that darkenesse that is there is nothing in that mans life but brutish confusion in hellish actions of pride couetousnesse enuie blasphemie and vnnaturall vncleannesse as Rom. 1. 27 29 c. The Use. Considering the light of nature may be thus put out wee must hereby be admonished First to enter into a serious consideration of our owne vilenesse for naturally wee haue in vs euen the best of vs all such rebellious lust and damnable desires as vnlesse they be restrained or renewed by grace will darken and as good as put out the light of nature This should make vs vile in our owne eies that nourish such corruptions and esteeme so of sinne which wil put out that light which yet Adams fall left in vs. Secondly hereby we are admonished to haue speciall care to mortifie our corrupt desires and our vnruly affections that else wil exstinguish in vs the light of nature Before the fall the
minde ruled and directed the will and affections but now these inferiour powers rule or rather ouer-rule the minde and vtterly peruert the regiment thereof they cast a mist and a vaile ouer the eie of the minde that it can see nothing in the waies of righteousnesse and therefore as wee tender the saluation of our soules wee must renounce our owne naturall wils and corrupt desires and striue to bring them into subiection vnto the word of God Many men thinke much to be crossed of their naturall desires and delights but it is happie for the soule when God in his prouidence doth breake men of their wills for the will vnsubdued carries the whole man headlong into all disorder This must be considered of them which haue knowledge and learning for vnlesse the will and affections be ruled by the word all knowledge is made fruitlesse out of the heart saith Salomon come the issues of life if it be kept with watch and ward and ordered by Gods word otherwise hence come the issues of death when the raines of the affections are let loose after the corrupt desires of nature and therefore as we respect woe or ioy so must wee haue regard to our will and desires Thirdly if the light of nature may bee turned into darkenesse then may the illumination of the Gospel be put out turned into darkenes for the knowledge of the Gospel is not naturall and therefore not so deeply imprinted in the vnderstanding vpon the bare knowledge of it Experience sheweth this to be true in all those temporizers which begin in the spirit end in the flesh the author to the Hebrews shews 5. degrees of apostacie by which the illumination of the Gospel is turned into darkenesse Heb. 3. 12. saying Take heede lest there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeleefe c. where the first degree is consenting vnto sinne beeing deceiued with the temptation of it The second is hardnesse of heart vpon many practises of sin Thirdly the heart beeing hardened becomes vnbeleeuing and calls the truth of the Gospel into question Fourthly by vnbeleefe it becomes euill hauing a base conceit of the Gospel Fiftly this euill heart brings a man to apostacie and falling from God which is the extinguishing of the light of the Gospel We therefore to preuent this feareful estate must embrace the Gospel and practise the counsel there set down euen by looking carefully euery one to his owne heart and life and by mutuall admonition and exhortation one of another vers 13. that so the first step of this apostacie which is the deceitfulnesse of sinne take not place in vs. Fourthly seeing the light of nature may bee put out whether may not true faith and other sauing graces be quite lost Answ. There is no grace of God but considered in it selfe it may be lost for it is a creature and so is changeable for nothing is vnchangeable in it selfe but the Creatour but in regard of the promise God touching the preseruation of sauing grace vnto the ende in such as be in Christ hence it comes that faith hope and charitie cannot be lost for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance in Christ. God indeede gaue to Adam true and perfect grace whereby he might haue stoode if he would but because he decreed to permit the fall to make a way for his mercie in Christ therefore he left man in the hand of his owne counsell and so he fell from his created integritie but now in Christ God workes both the will and the deede so as he which doth truly beleeue is as mount Zion which cannot be remooued but standeth fast for euer for he is built vpon the rocke Christ Iesus and so can neuer fall the gates of hell shall not preuaile against him God giues a second grace vnto the first by vertue hereof it becomes vnchāgeable though in it selfe considered it might be lost Againe I answer thus that as the light of nature is not quite put out but onely buried in such sort as it is without vse and seemes exstinguished so the grace of faith by the practise of sinne may be hidde and couered so as it shall not appeare for a time but yet it cannot be quite put out where it is once truly wrought And thus much of the blinde eie with the fruit thereof Now to end this place wee must remember that the scope of Christ in these two verses is to shew that the euill and blind eie of man by nature whereby he is disabled to discerne rightly of things that differ is the cause why in seeking after treasure he leaueth the heauenly and seeketh earthly treasure onely And hereby we must be admonished to labour for this gift of discerning by the illumination of the spirit in the word as we shewed before that so the eie beeing single the whole body may be light that is so ordered that with peace and comfort wee may walke on in the way of life whereas otherwise we walke in darkenesse and feare no danger till we fall into it irrecouerably verse 24. No man can serue two masters for either hee shall hate the one and loue the other or else he shall leane to the one despise the other Ye cannot serue God and Mammon Here Christ meeteth with a second obiection which the carnal heart of man might frame against the former commandements verse 19 and 20. for whereas Christ had forbidden the treasuring vp of worldly riches commanded the seeking of heauenly treasure some man might flatter himselfe with this perswasion that he might well seek● both and lay vp both treasures for himselfe in earth and in heauen also To this Christ answers No that is impossible and he prooues it thus No man can serue two masters But to seeke heauenly and earthly treasures is to serue two masters to wit God and Mammon and therefore no man can seeke them both The first part of this reason is fully set down and prooued in the text by the effect of such seruice in contrarie affections and behauiour for either he shall hate the one and loue the other c. The assumption and conclusion are necessarily implied in the last words Yee cannot serue God and Mammon wherein Christ applies the former argument The Exposition No man can serue two masters This may well bee doubted of for experience shewes that by their mutuall consent one Factor may serue diuers Marchants Hereto some answer thus that it is implied the masters must be of diuers and contrarie qualities as when one saith come and doe this the other saith doe it not and then no man can serue them both and thus the words containe an holy truth But yet because no clause is expressed implying contrarietie in the masters therfore I take it the words must be taken as a common prouerb among the Iewes which Christ Iales downe for the ground of his
which we speake or thinke of others els how could this be true that rash Iudgers shal be so rewarded in their kind seeing men may cōceale their thoughts and many times their words from the eyes of men To this purpose Salomon admonisheth not to curse the king no not in thy thought nor the rich in thy bedchamber for the foule of heauen shal carie the voice and that which hath winges shall declare the matter And this must teach vs to make conscience of all our speaches and thoughts that concerne others yea then when we our selues are iudged When Dauid was rayled vpon by wicked Shemei he staied himself with the consideration of this that God knew it and had appointed Shemei to curse Dauid 2. Sam. 16. 10. Lastly here it may be doubted howe God can be cleared from the guilt of rash iudgement seeing in his prouidence he causeth it by his decree Answ. Though he decree it yet is he free from the fault thereof for first he decrees it not to be the cause thereof himselfe but to permit it among men leauing them to be the authors thereof secondly he decrees to dispose of it well and to order it as a iust punishment of the rash iudgement of others and so in no sort is the cause of the euill in rash iudgement howsoeuer he dispose hereof for the iust punishment of offenders in this kinde The second confirmation of the first reason is contained in this parable which tendeth to the same ende with the former sentence And with what measure you mete it shall be measured to you againe That is the Lord hath ordained that men shall be rewarded in their kind like for like Hence we may obserue this rule of Gods iustice in the punishment of sinne namely to reward men in their kind punishing them in the same things wherein they offend David sinned by committing adulterie with Bathsheba the wife of Vriah and God by way of punishment raised vp euil against him out of his owne house in the same kind for his own son Absolon deflowred his fathers cōeubines in the sight of all Israel 2. Sam. 12. 9. 11. 16. 22. And experience shewes that blood will haue blood for though the murtherer escape the hands of the ciuill Iudge yet the terror vengeāce of God doth ordinarily pursue him to destruction A notable exāple hereof we haue in the holy league as it is called but indeed the bloodie league wherein the enemies of Gods grace and truth did confederate themselues to roote out true religion and the professors thereof from off the earth but the Lord hath rewarded them in their kind and turned their owne swords against thēselues causing them to spoile one an other according to the prophesie of Isai Woe to thee that spoilest and was not spoiled and doest wickedly and they did not wickedly against thee when thou shalt cease to spoile thou shalt be spoiled Isa. 33. 1. This rewarding iustice of God well obserued doth discouer vnto vs yea and denounce a fearefull woe not onely against all those that giue out rash iudgement of others but against all vsurers and oppressors who met● out hard measure vnto others euen cruelty without mercie but so shall they be serued againe Gods heauie hand hath heretofore laine sore vpon this land for many yeares in dearth and sca●fitie which also in some sort hath bin made more grieuous vpon the poore by hard hearted rich men who are like to great fishes that deuoure the lesser for they grind the faces of the poore and plucke off their skinnes from thē and their flesh from the bones by their wicked couetousnes yea doubtlesse their cruelty costs many a mans life Some in higher place by inclosing and racking of rents others of meaner sort by ingrossing and withholding the commodities of the land frō the common good till a time of dearth come wherein as the Prophet saith they may make the Epha small and the Shekel great that is sell little for much lessening the measure and enhauncing the price And indeed such a time of dearth is the worldlings day wherein they doe inrich themselues by the spoile of the poore but they must know that a feareful woe belongs vnto thē for the like mercilesse measure shall be measured to them againe and when they cease to spoile then shall they be spoiled for when the hand of God is heauie vpon the poore then no doubt is vengeance preparing for hard hearted rich men who increase the same The Lord forbiddeth to trouble the widdow or fatherles child Exod. 22. 22 2● c. for if thou vexe and trouble such and so he call and cry vnto me I will surely heare his crie then shall my wrath be kindled and I will kill you with the sword and your wiues shall be widows and your children fatherles This is Gods word and it must stand The Lord himselfe foretold that towards the latter day iniquitie should abound and charitie should waxe cold are not these the times whereof Christ spake for what power hath the Gospel to withdraw mens hearts from iniquitie and when was there euer lesse charitie then is now well these are forerunners of greater iudgements and therefore in the feare of God let vs make conscience of this and all other sinnes euen in consideration of this that the Lord will pay vs home in that kinde wherein we offend v. 3. And why seest thou the mote that is in thy brothers eye and perceiuest not the beame that is in thine owne eye 4. Or how saiest thou to thy brother Suffer me to cast out the mote out of thine eye and behold a beame is in thine owne eye These two verses containe a second reason to inforce the former cōmandement against rash iudgement The meaning of the words is this Why seest thou that is vpon what ground forwhat cause and with what conscience seest thou And so in the 4. v. How saiest thou that is with what face with what honestie and conscience saiest thou So much these interrogations how and why import Seest sight here is not a light or sudden beholding of the mote but a seeing with attention a serious and considerate obseruation thereof A mote the word vsed in the originall may as well be translated a straw or a peece of a straw as a mote as it hath beene in former times for it will beare ei●her translation yet the word beame seemes rather to haue reference to a straw then to a mote but which way soeuer it be taken it signifies small and little sinnes as sinnes of ignorance and infirmitie such as the best Christians doe commit cannot be free from in this life Again it signifies supposed sinnes such as are not indeed sinnes before God but onely in his opinion that giues rash iudgement And perceiuest not this perceiuing is properly an action of the minde standing in consideration and thinking which follows after seeing Thus the word
hearts touched with sorow for them and to hate them first in our selues and then to proceede to hate them in others It is a preposterous course arising from the corruption of nature to beginne with the hatred and dislike of sinne out of our selues II. Doctr. Further here in this reason our Sauiour Christ makes a difference of sinnes some are as motes some as beames euery sinne indeede is death and condemnation and yet all are not equall but farre different in degrees as some men are drowned in the chanell and middle of the sea some by the shoare side which places differ in depth and danger though all is one in regard of death some men indure damnation in deeper measure some in lesser yet both are condemned But the Papists abuse these words and would gather hereon a distinction of sinnes which God doth not allow to wit that some sinnes are veniall which deserue not death and these are here called motes some againe are mortall deseruing death and those are called beames But the moto and beame are both mortall sinnes A mote or a straw may sometime put out the eye though indeed the beame be more forcible to dash it quite out and so doe small sinnes wound the conscience and damne the soule though greater sinnes doe more deepely wound the conscience and plunge the same into hell small and great sinnes both destroy the soule though in a differēt degree the very mote is deadly sinne though in nature the beame be more mortal This distinction they borowed frō former ages but abusing the primitiue Church from whence they had it for the ancient Fathers called some sinnes veniall not because they deserued not death but because they were pardonable in regard of the censure of the Church and did not incurre the censure of excommunication and those they called mortall or criminall sinnes which had the censure of excommunication passed against them so that the Papists abuse both Fathers and Scripture in this distinction Thirdly Christ naming the very eye and not the face or other parts of the bodie would hereby giue vs to vnderstand what is the propertie and scope of rash iudgement namely to deface the very intention of his heart of whome censure is giuen When Dauid sent his seruants to Hanun king of Ammon to comfort him after his fathers death the Princes of Ammon told their lord that Dauids seruants were but spies that came to search out his citie thus they iudged rashly of Dauids fact and their intent was to corrupt the honest mind of Dauid perswading the king that Dauid and his seruants had an other intent and end of their comming then they made knowen to the King So that the rash censurer seekes to blemish the good mind and conscience of his brother And hence we may well be warned to take notice of our naturall corruption how that without Gods speciall grace we doe plainly hate our brother els we would neuer so suspiciously prie into his waies as to depraue his good meaning We must therefore content our selues with the speaches and actions of our brother and take heede how we deale about the eye that is with his intent and meaning that we must leaue to God who onely knowes the heart and for his actions speaches if it may be we must alwaies expound them in the better part if we cannot defend a mans doing yet we must excuse his meaning if we cannot excuse his intent yet we must thinke the best of his conscience if we cannot excuse his cōscience yet we must iudge it to be but a sinne of ignorance if we cannot so doe yet we must thinke that it was done in some grieuous temptation and that if we our selues had beene in like case we should haue done farre worse we know not when God may giue grace to men or when he leaues them to themselues and therefore in regard of the minde and conscience we must comprimit our iudgements at all times And perceiuest not that is though it may be thou seest it yet thou dost not well consider of it Hence our Sauiour noteth out a second maine fault in mans nature to be thought vpon namely carnall securitie whereby though in some small measure men see their offences yet naturally they neuer thinke on them heartily seriously as they ought to doe S. Paul saith Awake thou that sleepest signifying that by nature we lie slumbering in sinne so as though we may sometime haue a little glimmering thereof yet we neuer throughly behold and consider them as we should the Lord himselfe complaines of this securitie in sinne in his owne people No man saith what haue I done Ier. 8. 6. This was the sinne of the old world they kn●w nothing till the flood came Mat. 24. 39. it may be they had now then some conceit thereof but they thought not seriously thereon now as the daies of Noe were so shal be the daies of the comming of the sonne of man in regard of securitie and these are those daies wherein we now liue for howsoeuer we sometime thinke on our sinnes yet we looke not on them with both eyes as we doe on our neighbours faults We must here be warned to take heede of this sinne for it is a fearefull case either not to see our sinnes or seeing them to passe them ouer without serious consideration The Apostle saith when men say peace peace then comes sudden destruction Now men doe then most fearefully crie peace peace vnto themselues when they either will not see their sinnes or seeing them doe not well consider thereof in their hearts We therefore must labour for this grace to haue a cleare sight into our sinnes for without that we can neuer sorow according vnto God nor repent vnto life as we ought to do Why seest thou c. and how saiest thou to thy brother In both these phrases consider how Christ would haue all those which are to giue iudgement of the offences of others to be themselues without reproofe and blame els they are no fit persons to giue censure of those that be vnder them And therefore the Magistrate in the towne and common-wealth the Minister in the Church the master in the family and euery superiour in his place must labour to be vnblameable for if they be tainted with grosse sinnes they can neuer throughly purge them that be vnder them A Minister saith Paul must be vnreprooueable 1. Tim. 3. 2. and so likewise the Magistrate who is Gods vicegerent and euery gouernour in his place Lastly in both verses obserue the cōdition of those that are giuen to rash iudgement namly that of all men they are the worst Christ makes them to carrie beames in their eyes when others haue but motes or strawes The man that is giuen to censure others would seeme to be of all men most holy but the truth is there is none so bad as he though he be a
want thereof ought not to keepe the godly from this Sacrament for another mans euill conscience cannot defile thy good conscience another mans sinne cannot hurt thee vnlesse thou doe some way communicate with him therein Christ was more carefull in his dutie then euer man was and yet hee communicated with the wicked Iewes Scribes and Pharises in the seruice of God vnder the Law The fourth head from whence offence is taken is the state of the wicked principally in regard of their prosperitie Hence some holy ones suspect their owne estate and religion as either not good or not regarded of God This befell Dauid Psal. 37. when hee sawe the prosperitie of the wicked and their increase in riches with peace and ease hee said Certainly I haue clensed mine heart in vaine ●nd washed my hands in innocencie Hence also Ieremie reasons with God why the way of the wicked should prosper and they bee in wealth that transgresse rebelliously Hence vndoubtedly at this day many call into question the good prouidence of God Now the way to cut off this offence is to enter into the sanctuarie of God as Dauid did that is to come to the assemblies of Gods people where the word is preached for there a man shall see the manifold reasons why God will haue his owne people afflicted also the fearefull end of the pleasures of the wicked namely a fitting of them to further destruction Againe from this same ground doe many rich men take offence for hauing the world at will they blesse themselues with this perswasion that God loues them and thereupon take occasion to condemne all religion and to goe on in the pursuite of worldly profits and delights And this is one maine cause why among the rich we haue so few good and sound Professors because that from a false ground of outward things they perswade themselues of Gods loue fauour But to cut off this offence we must remember that mans case is the more fearefull when he wants all crosses for God chasteneth euery child whom he receiueth Heb. 12. 6. it is a marke of Gods child to be in affliction if he profit thereby the stalled oxe commeth sooner to the slaughter then the oxe that is vnder the yoke and the sheepe that goeth in fat pasture commeth sooner to the shambles then that which goeth on the bare commons so oftentimes God fatteth the wicked with the blessings of this life as hee did the rich glutton that he may more iustly condemne them in the world to come Lastly we must remember what Salomon saith No man knoweth loue or hatred of all that is before him that is of all outward things all things fall alike vnto all both good and bad therfore no man must so blesse himselfe with his outward estate that he be drawne to esteeme of religion as a thing needlesse or superfluous Verse 31. It hath beene said also whosoeuer shal put away his wife let him giue her a Bill of diuorcement 32. But I say vnto you whosoeuer shall put away his wife except it be for fornication causeth her to commit adulterie and whosoeuer shall marie her that is diuorced committeth adulterie Our Sauiour Christ proceeding further to restore the seauenth commaundement to his perfection doth here confute a false interpretation of a Politicke law of Moses giuen by the Scribes and Pharises For this ende first he laies downe the wordes of Moses politicke law but yet so as containing in them the false interpretation of the Iewish teachers ver 31. then hee opposeth the truth of God against their false interpretation and maintaineth the first institution of mariage v. 32. For the first Moses politicke law was That hee which put away his wife should giue her a Bill of diuorce This law the Iewish Teachers did falsly interpret for the better perceiuing wherof these three points are to be handled touching Moses politicke law 1. what kinde of law it was 2. the straitnesse of that law 3. what effect and force it had For the first the law is set downe Deut. 24. 1. when a man marieth a wife and she finde no fauour in his eies because he hath espied some filthinesse in her then let him write her a bill of diuorce and put it in her hand and send her out of his house This law was not morall but ciuill or politicke for the good ordering of the common wealth Now among their particular lawes some were laws of toleration and permission which were such as did not approoue of the euill which they concerned but did onely tolerate and permit that euill which could not be auoided for the preuenting of a greater euil which otherwise would fall out As when the sea hath made ● breach into the land if it cannot possibly be stopped the best course is to make it as narrow as may bee Such was the law concerning vsurie Deut. 23. 20. permitting the Iewes to exercise it vpon a stranger but not towards a brother and the like was the law touching polygamie Deut. 21. 15. If a man had two wiues the one hated the other loued and they both haue borne him children if the first borne be the sonne of the hated though shee were maried to him the latter yet her seed was legitimate and her sonne had the right of the first borne In both which lawes were tolerated that which God condemned onely for the preuenting of a greater euill Vnder this sort comes our law of vsurie for taking tenne in the hundred not approuing but permitting so much for the auoyding of greater vsurie Vnto this kind the Papists would reduce their law of permitting Stewes for the preuenting of greater sinnes but that law can haue no title to such permission for a law of permission is to diminish that euill which by man cannot possibly be cut off altogether now that sinne which they would preuent by their Stewes might be cut off among them if they would giue allowance to Gods owne ordinance of lawfull mariage vnto all sorts and sexes So likewise this law of Moses for diuorce was a law of permission not approouing of the giuing a bill of diuorce for euery light cause but tolerating of it for the preuenting of greater mischeife euen of murther for the nature of the Iewes was this if a man once tooke dislike to his wife he would neuer be at rest till he had shed her blood if they might not bee parted asunder Now this law of diuorce was giuen to restraine this great euill for hereby a man was tolerated to put away his wife when shee found no fauour in his eies lest hee should kill her yet so as he gaue her a bill of diuorce wherein hee must set downe the cause why hee put her away whereby also many were restrained from putting away their wiues because it was a great shame for a light occasion so highly to transgresse Gods holy institution who made them by mariage
one flesh The truth of this may appeare by the Lords owne complaint against his people to whom he speaketh as to a wife that had forsaken her husband without a cause on his behalfe Isay 50. 1. Where saith he is that bill of your mothers diuorcement wherby I sent her away As if he should say I gaue her no bill but her departure and separation from mee is by her owne sinnes which phrase sheweth what was the custome of the Iewes in this case II. Point The straitnesse of this law appeares in this that the man onely was permitted to giue this bill vnto his wife but the wife might not giue it to her husband for Moses saith Whosoeuer shall put away his wife neither is there any place in Scripture to prooue that the wife had this libertie so to deale with her husband If it bee asked whether the wife in a iust cause as for adulterie had not the like libertie I answer If we respect Gods institution touching mariage the right of diuorce is equall to them both for in regard of the bond of mariage they are equally bound one to another Here indeed this libertie is permitted onely to the man by this politicke law not that he had more right but to preuent the euill of the hardnesse of his heart who taking displeasure at his wife would rather spill her blood then continue with her If it be alleadged that a man is the womans head I answer that is for regiment and direction in her place but not in regard of breaking the bond of mariage whereby he is bound to his wife as well as she to him as the Apostle teacheth 1. Cor. 7. 4. III. Point The force and effect of this law was this It made the Bill of diuorcement for any cause giuen to be tolerable before men mariage after such a diuorce lawfull and warrantable in the Courts of men Deut. 24. 4. But yet in the court of conscience before God the diuorcement it selfe and second mariages made thereupon were both vnlawfull for God hateth this separation Mal. 2. 15. And whether partie soeuer marieth another vpon this diuorce commits adulterie Matth. 19. 9. This must be remembred for the true vnderstanding of this law of Moses the first words whereof are a permission to this effect If a man do conceiue such a dislike against his wife as that he wil not abide with her but will needes put her away then he may but yet so as hee giue her a bill of diuorce which doth not acquit him before God but before men onely Hauing thus shewed the true meaning of this law it remaineth now to see what the Pharises taught touching diuorce Their doctrine was this that hee which gaue a bill of diuorcement vnto his wife for any light occasion was thereby acquitted from her before God and thereupon might marie another without the guilt of adulterie and also that another man might lawfully marrie her that was thus diuorced That this was their meaning may appeare by the contrarie answer of our Sauiour Christ wherein he crosseth and confuteth this their interpretation in the words following Verse 32. But I say vnto you whosoeuer shall put away his wife except it be for fornication causeth her to commit adulterie and whosoeuer shall marrie her that is diuorced committeth adulterie Here Christ answereth not to Moses law but to the corrupt interpretation of the Scribes and Pharises whereby they depraued that law By fornication Christ meaneth not euery sinne of that kinde but onely the sinne of adulterie or that which is greater in that kind namely incest Adulterie is a sinne that is committed by two parties one whereof is either maried or espowsed as hath beene shewed before Causeth her to commit adulterie That is giueth her occasion to marie againe and so to commit adulterie because their first bond remaineth stil and he that marieth her that is diuorced that is for any small cause not for adulterie he also commits adulterie Here then two points are set downe First that he who puts away his wife for any light cause causeth her to commit adulterie Secondly hee that marieth her that is diuorced committeth adulterie Yet vnto both these Christ putteth an exception in the case of adulterie The Papists and some others would restraine the exception to the first part of the sentence and make it a negation to this effect He that puts away his wife beeing no fornicator c. But the truth is that the exception belongs to the whole answer of our Sauiour Christ denying diuorce saue onely for adulterie and permitting no mariage after diuorcement saue onely where the diuorce is for adulterie First whereas our Sauiour Christ opposeth vnto this politicke law of Moses concerning diuorce the law of nature touching mariage Ge. 2. 24. He giueth vs an excellent distinction between all politicke laws and the law of nature which is the morall law for that is a law of eternall equitie commaunding good and forbidding euill simply without respect of man but politicke lawes are tempered according to the cōditions of men and though they doe not approoue yet sometimes they permit euill for the auoyding of greater mischiefe yea they tolerate that which before God and in conscience is condemned This point must teach vs not to content our selues with performing obedience to the politicke lawes of men for the lawes of men may tolerate that which Gods law doth condemne so the law of this Land in practise tolerates vsurie but vsurers must not hereupon thinke that all is safe well with them and that they sinne not in taking ten in the hundred because the law of the land permits it for our law tolerates that for the preuenting of greater vsurie when as the law of God doth vtterly condemne the same Againe our laws are open for men to goe to law at the first vpon euery light occasion without seeking former means of agreement but yet such men as doe so are guiltie of sinne before God notwithstanding their libertie by our politike lawes Some politike lawes also tolerate contracts of mariage made without consent of parents yet such children sin against the law of God for herein God requires childrens subiection to their parents and gouernours And the like might be shewed in many other points so that it is no sufficient iustification of our actions to say the lawes of men allow vs so to doe Secondly hence we may learne that a man cannot lawfully and with good conscience put away his wife except it be for adulterie the text is cleare both heare and also Math. 19. 7. which confuteth the ciuill laws of some countries the popish constitutions that allow other causes of diuorce besides adulterie Here they obiect sundrie things in their defence against this doctrine As 1. the saying of Christ Whosoeuer forsaketh Father or Mother wife c. shall receiue much reward Math● 19. 29. Here say they is diuorce for