Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n word_n work_n youth_n 46 3 7.7329 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A45335 A practical and polemical commentary, or, exposition upon the third and fourth chapters of the latter epistle of Saint Paul to Timothy wherein the text is explained, some controversies discussed, sundry cases of conscience are cleared, many common places are succinctly handled, and divers usefull and seasonable observations raised / by Thomas Hall ... Hall, Thomas, 1610-1665. 1658 (1658) Wing H436; ESTC R14473 672,720 512

There are 31 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

betray the son too 4. Here is the Reason of this Caution why he should shun the society of Alexander viz. because of his desperate condition he being one that openly and maliciously opposed the Truth of God and greatly withstood Pauls words Alexander the Copper-smith c. There is a great Controversie amongst Interpreters who this Alexander should be and it is conceived by the most judicious that it was that Alexander mentioned Acts 19.33 Who was a Jew and dwelt at Ephesus who was on Pauls side at the first and sought to appease the tumult stirred up at Ephesus against him where he had like to have lost his life for appearing on his side yet now he maketh shipwrack of the Faith and opposeth the People of God revileing and traducing them which the Apostle calleth blasphemeing 1 Timothy 2.20 The Copper-smith A man of a mean Condition one that got his living by his hammer and hard labour in an inferiour Calling He was sometime Pauls Disciple and profest the Truth but now the scales are turned and of a Professour he is become a persecutor Hath done me much evil The word which we render hath done in the Original signifieth to shew It is an Hebraism they put shewing for doing Psal. 4.6 Who will shew us any good .i. who will effect our desires in that kind so Psal. 60.3 thou hast shewed thy people hard things .i. thou hast caused them to see and endure hard things probably he might by his agents and friends stir up Nero against him as a seditious person a broacher of strange doctrine and and enemy to the Jewish religion which was then tolerated at Rome What this evil was he shewes in the next Verse He resisted our words and opposed the truth which Paul delivered The Lord reward him according to his works which he hath done and still endeavours to do against me and the truth of God which I profess He now delivers him up to the Justice of God who is a righteous Judge and will reward every man according to his works The Vulgar to mollify this Imprecation have put the word in the future Tense and so would make it a Prediction and not an Imprecation The Lord shall reward him but the word is Optative in the Original and implyes a heavy Imprecation The Apostle by a prophetical Spirit saw manifest signes of reprobation in this man and thereupon denounceth this curse against him Quest. But how doth this Imprecation agree with that Apostolical sweetness and mildness which was in the Apostle Answ. The Apostle spake not these words out of any private spleen but o●t of Prophetical zeal he desires the Lord to execute his justice on this incurable Apostate So that it was an Imprecation darted by a particular motion of the Holy Ghost and so not to be imitated by us who have not that extraordinary measure of the Spirit as Paul had Of whom be thou ware also Observe him and take heed of him for he goeth up and down stirring up the Jews against the Gospel q. d. The reason why I mention him at this time is that thou maist shun him as an excommunicate person and one delivered up to Satan Since then he is an incurable Apostate avoid him as the Pest and Poysener of humane Society For he hath greatly withstood our words much more will he withstand thine q. d. He hath not onely resisted us but which is worse he hath Violently and Vehemently resisted the truth which I have preached to the world The one is but a personal persecution against charity the other is a doctrinal offence against piety and so far more hainous Observations 1. Great Professors may become grievous Persecutors This Alexander was a noted Professor and within the pale of the Church else the Apostle could not have excommunicated him and cast him out of the Church if he had never been in and if he had not profest the faith he could not have made ship-wrack of it 1 Tim. 1.19 20. Yea this man was neer to Martyrdom as Calvin conceives yet now he turns a desperate opposer of the truth The best things when corrupted become the worst The most generous wine makes the sharpest vinegar and the finest flesh when putrified becomes most fulsom These Apostates know the state of the Church better then others and so are able to do it more mischief besides God in judgment gives them up to a reprobate sense and the Devil comes with seven worse spirits and re-enters which makes the latter end of these men worse then their beginning Nicholas a great professor and one of the seven Deacons yet at last fell into foul errours pleading for community of wives and the lawfulness of adultery hence came the Sect of the Nicolaitans Rev. 2.6 Iudas went far yet at last sells his Master Be not then offended when you see Professors turn Blaspemers and Preachers Persecutors it should grieve us but not discourage us It was so in the Apostles time it is so now and it will be so to the end of the world There will be some such Tares mixt with Gods wheat and a Iudas amongst the very Apostles We must look to be hooted at as signes and wonders as mad-men and Monsters and that in Israel Isay 8.18 Quest. But doth not this prove the Apostasy of the Saints since Alexander is said to make ship-wrack of the faith Answ. Not at all There is no arguing from the shadow to the substance from the Meteor to the fixed Star because Hypocrites temporary beleevers and carnal professors fall away therefore real Saints and such as are effectually called may fall away is a manifest Non Sequitur 2. Observation 2. It is lawful sometimes and in some cases to name men Alexander a malicious incorrigible enemy is named that every one may shun him But of this before in Verse 10. 3. Observation 3. The enemies of Gods people many times are sordid men Alexander a Smith a man of no learning of mean education by professing not a Gold-Smith nor a Silver-Smith but a Copper-Smith and by disposition an open enemy to the truth This contemptible man opposeth the Preaching and Practice of chosen vessels an eminently learned Paul Thus it pleaseth God to exercise and humble his choicest servants by vile and worthless men Iob complains of such Iob 19.10 and 30.1 David complains that the abjects and dregs of the people made head against him Psal. 35.15 16. So Acts 17.5 And this was prophesied longe since by Isay 3.5 that such disordered times should come that every boy should behave himself proudly against the Ancient and the base against the Honourable and men of worth It is a trouble to ingenious natures to be molested by such disingenuous ones who want common humanity To fall by the hand of an Achilles or some eminent person for Learning and Valour is some honour But to be vext by such How 's and
any indirect meanes When we make not money our end but the glory of God for many pretend a Call from God when it 's 100 l. or 200 l. per annum that calls them This is Mammons call and not Gods and such prosper accordingly they have no comfort nor success in what they do But when a man shall see upon the improvement of his gift a cleare hand of providence leading him from a lower to a higher place wherein he may bring more glory to God and he can make it appear to others that this is his primary end then goe and prosper and the Lord be with thee 3. Carnal security with hopes of long life and thoughts that they shall live here for ever Luke 12.17 18. this made that rich churle so eager after the World Such may do well to remember that we are but strangers and pilgrims here That our life is short and uncertain like a Tale that is soon told Psal. 90.9 a span that is soon measured Psal. 39.5 like a shadow that soon passeth away Iob 8.9 like a vapour that soon vanisheth Iames 4.14 Like a flower that soon fades Isai 40.7 Iames 1.10 11. Like the grasse that soon withers 1 Pet. 1.24 Like a Post that hasts away Iob 9.25 Like a Weavers shuttle that flyes swiftly Iob 7.6 Like a race that is soon run Like a thought which quickly comes and quickly goes Psal. 9.9 Like a dream which quickly vanisheth Psal. 90.5 Like a blast of wind which returns no more Iob 7.7 Psal. 78.39 though a man should live a thousand yeares yet in Gods sight and compared with eternity it is but as a watch of the night which lasteth but three houres Besides Physicians observe that within us we are obnoxious to three hundred diseases besides many new ones which have not been heard of till of late yea how many have been killed by immoderate passions as excessive Joy Sorrow Fear Envie c. 2. Without us there is the Sword Plague Famine Fire Water Beasts and wicked Men who are worse then Beasts Death is in our Cap in our Pot in our Meat Drink Gloves Apparell a Haire a Flye a Raisin stone a Tile from an House may soon end us So vain a thing is man Psalm 39.11 This seriously considered is a notable means to mortify our affections to the World Remember that all these creature-comforts have aut finem suum aut finem tuum either thou must from them or they from thee how soon thou knowest not 1 Tim. 6.7 't will be our wisdom therefore to wean our hearts betimes from these low enjoyments that so when our last weaning by death shall come it may not be better to us 4. False Notions and delusive conceits about riches This indeed is the prime Cause of Covetousnesse Most men are blinded they judge Riches to be that which makes a man and his Posterity happy Hence it is that they place their Comfort Joy Contentment in these Perishing low things They call them Goods as if they were the only good Wealth as if it were well for all such Profit Gain Treasure Substance as if there were an All-sufficiency in them They look upon a man as undone without them but he that hath them they look upon him as made such a man hath a house and land given him he 's made when the man oft-times is marr'd and by them is made more Idle Proud Luxurious Covetous and cruell c. As a remedy against this Soul-destroying Malady Be sure to get your judgements rightly informed that you may conceive aright of these Temporal things Regard not what the World calls them for those things which are highly esteemed in the sight of men oft times are an abomination in the sight of God they call Darknesse Light and Evill Good But observe what the word of God which is truth it self Dan. 10.21 calls them and accordingly judge of them Now the Scripture calls these earthly things which the World idolizeth and so dotes upon 1. Vanity not only Vain but Vanity it self in the Abstract Not only Vanity but Vanity of Vanites i. e. Vanissima Vanitas exceeding Vain And not only so but they are Vexation of Spirit too there 's Vexation in getting them Vexation and Care in keeping them and Vexation in parting with them But who tells you all this Why Solomon the wisest of men who had experience of all creature-comforts after much triall of them all concludes Vanity of Vanities all is Vanity Eccles. 1.2 See Mr. Cottons Commentary on Ecclesiastes Downams Warfar lib. 2. cap. 8 9 10. p. 466 467 c. Doctor Reynolds Vanity of the Creature Mr. Henry Smiths Sermon on Ecclesiast 1 2. Sibbs Cordialls Serm. 18. on 1 Sam. 19.3 4. Edit 1. Papillon on the Passions cap. 3. 2. Riches are called Snares 1 Tim. 6.9 though in themselves they are good and the blessings of God yet accidentally by reason of mans corruption they become dangerous Snares to many and the occasion of thei● ruine as we see in Pharaoh Ieroboam Rehoboam Nebuchanezzar Darius Nabal Iesurum Deut. 32.15 Herod Dives how Proud Luxurious Unmercifull Luke 16. The poor men were bad in Ieremies time but the rich were far worse Ier. 5.4 5. and usually when we have most of the Creature God hath least of us Iob 21.7 to 17. Ier. 2.31 Hos. 4.7 13.6 Psal. 73.6 7 8. as they were increased viz. in number riches and all manner of blessings so they sinned against God and according to their Pastures they were filled and their heart was exalted not in duty and thankfulnesse but in Pride and forgetfulnesse How many whilest poor and low were active and zealous men but the higher they have been promoted like a Pope which I have read of the worse they have been when the Church was most persecuted it flourisht most Plures efficimur quoties metimur said Tertullian And when Constantine bestowed great preferments on the Church a Voyce was heard in the Ayer saying Hodie venenum fun ditur in Ecclesiam Now is the Church poysoned Riot and Pride usually attend Riches Hence that Caveat 2 Tim. 6.17 Charge them that are rich that they be not high-minded implying that rich men are apt to be so Riches to a wicked man are like a sword in a mad mans hand with which he doth much mischiefe He 's the more able to oppresse and Tyrannize over his brethren Psal. 52.2.7 Bulls and Beares when they are fat and full grow fierce and man-kin Since therefore riches are such dangerous snares we should rather fear them then desire them considering how many great men yea and good men have fallen by them 3. Riches are called Thornes 1. As those choak the seed that 's sowen they overtop it and drop upon it So the inordinate cares of the World choak the good seed of the Word that it cannot prosper in our soules Mat. 13.22 Luke 8.14 2. Thornes are noysome unprofitable things so
28.4 4. These Impostors do not onely deceive these silly women but they bring them under the Devils yoke they make slaves and prisoners of them they bind them with the cords of error and then they lead them whither they please They deal with their Proselites as the Devil doth with witches he promiseth them liberty but brings them to prisons promiseth them pleasures yet gives them pain promiseth them Riches yet keeps them poor promiseth them life but gives them Death They ensnare them with their Pythanalogy and hold them as fast with their lyes and flatteries as a Jaylor doth his Prisoner which he keeps in bondage 2 Tim. 2. ult or the fisher his fish which hath swallowed his bait 2 Pet. 2.14.18 These Satanicall fishers of men put on the Visors of Piety and preach liberty pleasure ease as other fishers cozen sometimes the eye and sometimes the taste of the silly fish so these have variety of baits but none so catching as that of carnal liberty Hence they are said to bewitch men Gal. 3.1 to enchaunt and delude men Rev. 18.23 and make them drunk Revel 17.2 It will be our wisdom then to submit our selves to the word of God and from the heart to obey its commands so shall we know the truth and the truth will keep us free from the power of sin and error Iohn 8.32 the keeping of a good conscience is the way to keep faith and sound doctrine 1 Tim. 1.19 get the heart once establisht with Grace and then you will not be carried about with every wind of doctrine Heb. 13.9 get Gods fear once planted in your hearts and then you will never depart from him Ier. 32.40 VERSE 7. VVhich Women are ever learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth THe Apostle goeth on to shew what women they are which are brought into bondage by seducers viz. such as are unconstant unsetled and given to seek after novelties and curiosities they are not content with plain truth revealed in the Scripture they must have novum aut nihil some new light some new-found doctrine or else 't will not down with them this unsettles them and makes them run hither and thither after this and that man but all in vain They make a great adoe but to little purpose they are alwayes learning yet learn nothing which they should learn Now the Reason's of their Non-proficiency are 1. Either because they have no better Teachers they follow false Prophets and blinde Guides and when the blinde shall lead the blind no wonder if both fall into the ditch These may seem wise in their own eyes when in truth they know nothing because they know not the truth which is the foundation of all knowledge 2. They thrive not for want of a right disposition within They love their lusts better then the truth and this barres the heart against holy Learning Intus existens prohibet alienum When their judgements are blinded with lusts and their hearts hardened through sin how should such thrive 2 Tim. 4.3 3. Or else they seek not after sound and saving truth but all their enquiry is after some curious novelty they love to heare and learne nothing else in this point being true Athenians Acts 17.21 Well they may toyle and take a great deal of pains for some aery notions and empty speculations that they may come ad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to some kind of knowledge but never ad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word in the Text to such a knowledge as brings forth an acknowledgement of the truth in the power of it 4. Oft times they are meer Scepticks in Religion they are ready to question every thing but they believe nothing they have no foundation no resting place they lay out their mony but not for bread and therefore 't is no wonder if they spend their labour without being satisfied Error cannot satisfy the soul we must enquire for the good old way of truth and Holinesse if ever we would find rest for our souls Ier. 6.16 God who is the great Lord of all will have his commands obeyed not questioned He loves Currists and not Quaerists He prefers obedience before disputes We have disputed so long till we have almost disputed all Religion out of doores We should study rather to live well then dispute well therein lyes our happinesse Mat. 7.24.25 Iohn 13.17 The Spirit of God writes not Notions but Assertions in our hearts it establisheth them so with grace that the gates of hell cannot prevaile against it though such may by the violence of a tentation be moved yet are they like Mount Sion which can never be removed out of its place Heb. 10.23 and 13.9 Against Scepticks and Seekers See that excelent Tract of Mr. Gelaspy his Miscelanies cap. 10 11. yet how many delight in giddinesse and count it a bondage to fixe a belief affecting free-will in thinking as well as in acting And though the Sect of the Phylosophers of that kind be gone yet there remain certain discoursing wits which are of the same veines though there be not so much blood in them as was in those of the Ancients The Scepticisme and Affectation of Novelties is the great sin of England at this day As many are much taken with new Fashions so many are much taken with new Opinions new Doctrines new Teachers and new Expressions Yet the Apostle doth not blame these women simply for seeking after knowledge for the wiser sort of Heathens have commended that but he blames them for hunting after Novelties and vain speculations and in the meane time neglecting the sound and saving truths of the Gospel This is celeris cursus extra viam a swift running to destruction 'T is true all the godly are learners the knowledge of the truth is not Innata but acquisita not born with us but attained by means yet they are not ever learning they know the truth in which they firmly rest and from which they suffer not themselves to be moved and never till then have we profited in our learning when we are made so able to discern the truth as that we are satisfied with it and our consciences are at rest by it even in the saddest dangers Ephes. 4.13 14. 1 Thes. 1.5 6. 2 Pet. 1.12 2. I wish this were not the sin of silly men as well as of silly women to be alwayes learning yet never come to the knowledge of the truth how many are men in yeares yet children in understanding 1 Cor. 14.20 and when for the time they might have been Teachers they had need to be taught the elements of Religion Heb. 5.12 though the knowledge of the best in this life be imperfect and we are alwayes learners here yet we must strive forward toward perfection and not alwayes stick in the place of bringing forth Hos. 13.13 nor be like a horse in a mill still going round in
Reprobates for 't is one thing to be Reprobate concerning the faith pro tempore at present and another thing to be a Reprobate Manasses Paul and those 1 Corinthians 6.11 were lewd enough for the time yet at last were called These that are now 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reproveable and unapproved as the word signifies 2 Cor. 13.7 Heb. 6.8 1 Corinthians 9.27 yet in Gods due time they may be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 accepted and approved This must teach us to keep our judgements pure and our understandings clear for 't is our guide and if that mislead us we must needs fall into the ditch Corruption in judgement in some respects is worse then corruption in manners especially when the mind hath been enlightned with the knowledge of the truth for this is the root of those corrupt manners that are amongst us In the time of the Law the Leprosie in the head was of all other Leprosies the most dangerous and destructive the man that had it in his hand or feet was unclean but if it were in his head then he was to be pronounced utterly unclean Lev. 13.44 Hence the scripture gives so many caveats against errors and erroneous ones Deut 13.3 Philip. 3.2 Colos. 2.8 2 Pet. 3.17 Matthew 7.13 Beware of false Prophets the word implies a diligent study and singular care lest we be caught by such subtle adversaries Keep your judgements pure then the pure Word of God will delight you Micah 2.7 you will delight to come to the truth that your deeds may be discovered Iohn 3.21 Part not with a good conscience and a good conversation lest you make ship-wrack of the faith and a gap be opened in your breasts to all sinne and errour that the Lord knowes where you will rest it may be not till you come to the highth of sin and depth of misery Count therefore a corrupt judgement a sore plague and if God have given thee a sound judgement able to discern the truth and a mind ready to receive it and approve of it when 't is propounded this is not a common mercy but calls for speciall Thankfulness Psal. 16.7 Proverbs 28.5 1. Observe There have been false Teachers in all Ages to oppose the Truth and the Professors of it As Iannes and Iambres here oppose Moses a meek a learned a faithfull servant in all Gods House So there were four hundred and fifty fals Prophets against one zealous Elijah four hundred against good Michaiah 1 Kings 18.18 and 22.6.14 Hananiah against Ieremy Amaziah against Amos 7.10 false brethren against Paul Hymeneus Philetus and Alexander oppose him 1 Tim. 1.20 The Church shall never want enemies to war withall whilest the seed of the Serpent abides in the world As Pharaoh had his Magitians who hardned him in his sin and deluded him to his destruction so the World will ever have its false Prophets to blinde and harden them in sin to their ruine Thus in the Primitive times there was a Simon Magus Scribes Pharisees Sadduces Essens Herodians Nicolaitans Elymas Ebion Cerinthus the Gnosticks and many others 2 Peter 2.1 Thus when Luther began to reform thirty severall Sects arose to hinder the worke We should not therefore be despondent or discouraged as if some strange thing had happened to us but comforted rather in that we are made conformable to Christ the Prophets and Apostles Matthew 5.11 Luke 6.22.23 This was is and will be the condition of the Church Militant from her youth up she must looke to be plowed and persecuted by malicious men Psalm 129.2 3. Besides 't is the condition of Truth in this World to meet with opposition we can no sooner publish it but it's enemies appear Galathians 4.16 Truth brings hatred men cannot endure to have Vngues in Vlcerre they are unsound and would not be touched Truth is a Light which discovers the intents of mens hearts Hebrewes 4.12 and layes open the evill of mens wayes and this makes the wicked not simply to oppose but to rise in open rebellion against the Truth Iob 24.13 which reproves their deeds and exposeth them to the view of themselves and others Hence they have alwayes been esteemed the Pests and troublers of a Land that publish Truth as we may see throughout the Acts of the Apostles where we finde some disputing against the Truth Acts 6.9 others blaspheming Acts 13.45 some secretly undermining it and seeking to draw men from embracing it Acts 13.8 others openly rayling against it Acts 17.18 19. and 24.5 Some have opposed it out of ignorance and blind devotion as Paul before his conversion 1 Timothy 1.13 and some of the Jewes Acts 3.17 and 13.50 Others deliberately against conviction and out of malice have resisted the Truth as Alexander 2 Timothy 4.15 these are given up to a reprobate sense the Devil having blinded their eyes 2 Corinthians 4.4 Some oppose it for their gain and for their bellies Rom. 16.17 18. 1 Tim. 6.5 2 Pet. 2.3.15 16. Others from fleshly lusts 2 Peter 2.18 and 3.3 Others out of pride loving the preheminence 3. Iohn 9.10 1 Timothy 6.3 4. yet should not we distaste the Truth because of those oppositions which are made against it for however some prophanely scorn at the name of Truth and say with Pilate what is Truth Iohn 18.38 Yet wisedome is justified of her children and they that are of the Truth hear his voyce who came into the world to beare witnesse of the Truth They come with love and teachable hearts to it and so are made to know the Truth Iohn 8.52 Let not the great host of Truths enemies make us despair but know there are more with us then are with them 2 Chronicles 32.7 8. and the more they are that oppose the Truth the more illustrious will our conquest be If I must have an adversary let it be a wicked one and then be he never so potent he cannot stand long because God is against him Iob 27.7 Truth may be opprest but never conquered Praemi potest opprimi non potest yea oppositions advance and clear it Veritas impugnata magis elucet Bern. 2. Observe That as the Devill hath his Iannes and Iambres to oppose the Truth so God hath his Moses and Aaron to uphold it As the Devill hath his Domestick Chaplains so God hath his armed Champions and as the Devill raiseth up oppressors so God sends Saviours Obadiah 21. If he raise hornes to gore the Church God will raise Carpenters to saw off those hornes Zachary 1.19 20 21. The same day that Pelagius was born in Brittain the same day was Saint Augustine born in Africa that did confute him God hath an Athanasius to oppose Arrius Chrysostome against the Manichees Basil against Macedomus Prosper against the Massilians Salvian against the Libertines Fulgentius against Faustus Christ against the Pharisees Simon Peter against Simon Magus Paul against false Apostles Luther Calvin Beza c. against the
to those that are Novices they discover no such things but suffer them to gape or mutter as stupified with admiration of their words and so they lye hid under those winding forms as thieves hide themselves in their dens These are those swelling words which Peter and Iude compare to Bubbles and froth which end in nothing But whilest they study by their lofty stile to lead others into errours they so mislead themselves that they understand not their owne bablings I remember when once Quintin saw me in a great Assembly sharply reproving his chattering he desirous to shunne the stroke said I reproved his speech because I did not understand it To which I answered that I understood somewhat in it more then he did for he did not at all perceive those things which he uttered but I perceived that he meant to bewitch the minds of men with his absurd and pernicious dotages which will appear to be so in that he doth so plunge them in and involve them with such foolish speculations that neither heaven nor earth can appeare unto them By this Note they are discerned from others when they speak they make a noyse like a Chough so that nothing they utter can be understood The tongue was created by God that we might expresse our Thoughts and communicate them to each other but they pervert the order instituted by him and with a confused sound beat the ayre or by long circumstances they minister matter of such varying and altering to the auditours that at last they are left wholly in suspence when the mysteries of God are to be handled we ought to make the Scripture our Rule let us then follow the Rule which God hath delivered to us and not wander out of the compasse of it for God knowing that if he should use onely such words as become his Majesty our apprehensions could not reach them useth therefore such expressions as suit best with our shallow capacities And as a nurse speaks broken and imperfect words to her Infant so doth God to his people that he may be understood Whosoever therefore inverts this order aimes at nothing but to bury the Truth of God which cannot be perceived any other way then by that which he hath revealed unto us See then how we must labour in the explication of their circumlocutions so as by force to draw their meaning into light that so their abominations which they study to cover may be made manifest to all men And all Christians ought to be admonished that when they hear their gagling in this manner they break off their speech and say Either speak as the Lord hath taught us and according to Scripture phrase or get you gone and make your speech to stones and trees So farre pious and judicious Calvin 8. They preach one thing in publike and another thing in private In publike I have heard some call for Duties Ordinances c. and acknowledge the Deity of Christ but talk with the same men in private and they are other men They are like Fortune Constans in levitate sua constant in unconstancy They are more mutable then the Moon and change themselves into several shapes like Proteus As the Jesuite is omnis homo so these can say and unsay they can play fast and loose with ease 9. 'T is their property to conceal many of their Opinions especially at first till they have fitted their Disciples to receive them They deal with their Proselites as Absalon did with his followers he at first covers his Treason with a shew of courteous behaviour zeal for justice and the pretence of performing a Vow 2 Samuel 15.2.8 he never shews himself in open Rebellion till he was sure of the peoples hearts Error in it self is ugly and if it should appear especially at first in its proper colours men would detest both it and those that bring it 10. They boast much of the Spirit when upon triall 't is a mere Satanicall deluding spirit that leads them For such sensual Separatists as these have not the Spirit of God saith Saint Iude 19. They think they know more by the Spirit then their betters can know by twenty yeers study who yet are led by a better spirit then they V. Tactica S. l. 2. c. 2. S. 8. 11. They boast much of New-light and love to vent such things as savour of Novelty They know that itching eares cannot away with common Truths they must have novum aut nihil By this the old Prophet brought the young Prophet into the Lions mouth by telling him that an Angell spake to him and had brought him some New-light 1 Kings 13.18.24 and 't is an old Policy of the Devill to cry up sin and errour under the Notion of New-light Thus he beguiled Eve Gen. 3.5 this is rather strange Light then New 'T is Light in Name but Darknesse indeed Let us examine them and we shall find that these New-lights are nothing but Old-Errours and so are Neither Lights nor New 1. They are not Light because they are contrary to the Light of Gods word from whence all true Light springs Isay 8.20 neither are they New but rather renewed for most of them were broached in or before Austins time which is above 12. hundred yeares agoe The Ghosts of those old Hereticks are now come out of their graves to scarre men and mislead them 12. They pretend to Miracles and extraordinary Revelations When they cannot make good their Tenets by Scripture then as the Papists fly to unwritten Traditions so these fly to Miracles and Revelations This is no more then what Christ long since foretold that in the last days false Christs and false Prophets should arise showing signs and wonders and should deceive many Matthew 24.23 So doth Antichrist with his lying wonders 2 Thes. 2.9 They cry up an extraordinary light within them and cry down the Scriptures and Preaching as low things because they discover their works of darkness Thieves put out the light because darknesse best becomes their deeds of darknesse 13. They seem modest at first they desire you onely to hear them speak then to separate and after to be rebaptized and then farewell all They drop a little at once into their followers and never administer their Physicke till they have first given good Preparatives to make it work and then stronger potions as they finde the pulse of the Patient They do not alwayes deny in plain terms fundamental Truths but often when they pretend to own the Scripture expressions they deny the Truth They desire you at first but to taste of the Devils broth Isay 63.4 not doubting but at last to make you eat of his beef He that saith yea to the Devil in a little shall not say nay when he pleaseth Sinne is gradual as well as Grace As no man attains to a height of Vertue suddenly so neither of Vice A spark neglected may burn down a Town Arrius at first a spark
is one end why we came into the world viz. that we might bear witness to the truth Iohn 13.37 We are Gods salt and therefore must by our Prayer Preaching and Practice help to season men and keep them from rotting in sin and error One part of our work is to convince gain-sayers Titus 1.9 This others of abilities may do ex charitate but we ex officio We are the keepers of the Vineyard and must take care that the Foxes spoil not the tender Grapes We are Fathers and must see that the children have not a stone given them insteed of bread nor a Serpent instead of a fish Let the zeal of others quicken us How zealous was Elijah and Paul against the false Prophets of their times How zealous was Athanasius against the Arrians Austin against the Pelagians and the Donatists Luther Calvin Beza c. against Papists and Sectaries of all men it becomes not us to be silent and meal-mouthed when our Lord 's dishonoured 3. Let every one stand upon his guard Christ warned his own Disciples to beware of such Matthew 7.15 the best know but in part and Satan is so subtle that we may soon be deceived How quickly did the Galathians fall from the faith to justification by works in so much that the Apostle wonders they were so soon fallen to another Gospel Galathians 1.6 'T was Luthers complaint that an ignorant rayling sot could in a moment overthrow what we have been building many years Such is the cursed depravation of mans heart I shall therefore give you some preventing Physick against the pestilent attempt of seducers 1. Get your judgements rightly informed especially in the Principles and Fundamentals of Religion as Faith Repentance Justification Sanctification and new-Obedience Our greatest care should be about the greatest things of the Law Lay a good foundation else the building will totter When men are children in understanding then they are tossed to and fro with every winde of Doctrine Ephes. 4.14 Heresie is most strong where knowledge is most weak 'T is the weak flies which hang in the spiders web when the strong break thorough The simple are apt to believe every thing Proverbs 14.15 and like children swallow all that 's put into their mouths There are 7. things as a Reverend Divine hath well observed which are apt to be carried away by the Flood of He●esies 1. Light things 2. Loose things 3. Weak things 4. Low things 5. Rotten things 6. Tottering things 7. Ventrous things How many erre for want of knowledge Psal. 95.10 Matth. 22.19 upon this account the Apostle would not have a Minister to be a novice 1 Tim. 3.6 The Devil deals with men as the Cow doth by the Lamb which first picks out the eyes and then devours it Or as the Philistims dealt by Sampson they first put out his eyes and then they make him grind like a slave Thus he dealt with Eve Gen. 3.4 5. First he deludes her judgement with ye shall not die and then he easily perswades her to eat of the forbidden fruit We should therefore be wise as Serpents that we be not deceived and innocent as Doves that we prove not deceivers Vt nulli nocuisse velis imitare columbam Serpentem ut possit nemo nocere tibi 2. Walke alwayes as in Gods eye have respect to all his commands be ready to obey in revelatis in revelandis whatsoever God shall discover to you to be his Will be not Nominall but Reall Christians rest not content with the form but get the Power of Godlinesse Hereticks are a mere scourge for Formalists and Hypocrites When men reject Gods call he gives them up to delusions Isay 66.4 and the lusts of their own hearts Psalm 81.11 12. Hosea 4.12 13. When men will not be schollars to truth they shall be masters of errors and teachers of lies well verst in the blackest and basest Art 'T is just with God that they who will not have Truth for their King should have falshood for their Tyrant being given up to the Efficacy of errour or to errour in the strength and power of it 2 Thes. 2.10 11. If Pharaoh will not believe the real Miracles of Moses he shall be deluded with the false ones of the Magitians If Ahab will not hearken to Micaiah a true Prophet he shall be deluded by lying spirits in the mouths of false ones and this is one end why the Lord suffers not onely Schismes but Heresies to abound viz. to discover mens hearts to themselves and others Deuterenomy 13.3 So long as the glasse is still no dregs appear but stir it and then they shew themselves Fire discovers the mettle and storms shew us which were rotten trees No man fully knows his own heart till a temptation comes If a man should have told our Apostles 1500. years agoe that they should have denied the Trinity Scripture Sacraments Ordinances c. they would have been ready to say as Hazael am I a Dog that I should do such things as these 3. Grow in Grace This is a special preservative against Apostacy 2 Peter 3.17 18. To this end sit down under a sound soul-searching Ministery God hath ordained this as a special means to establish us in the truth Ephes. 4.10 Better have a biting Gospel said Bradford then a toothlesse Masse better it is to sit under the saddest shade of the true Vine even weeping then to frolick it under the greenest trees and most pleasant Oakes of Idolatry and Heresie We have been barren stocks in the Vineyard of the Lord we have been dead under lively Oracles like the Smiths Anvill we are the harder for beating on such is our corruption that we are the worse for preaching Isaiah 6.9.10 Now God in his just judgement punisheth sinne with sinne he punisheth such contempt of the Gospel with Heresie Witchcraft Apostacy c. 4. Try before you trust Tho your Minister be a Holy man yet ' try what he teacheth you will tell money and weigh gold after your father and shall we onely take Doctrines on trust Since there are not a few but many false Prophets gone forth into the world as Anabaptists Arrians Quakers c. it will be our wisedom to try all things weigh them in the ballance of the Sanctuary bring them to the touch-stone of Gods Word and what upon trial you finde to be sound and right hold it fast retain it against all adverse power whatsoever 1 Thessalonians 5.21 Prov. 23.23 buy the truth at any rate part with it at no rate Prov. 4.21 Luke 8.15 Rom. 12.9 2 Tim. 13.14 Heb. 2.1 and 10.3.3 Rev. 3.3.11 The world was never so full of Spirits as now There is the spirit of Errour the spirit of Fornication the spirit of Pride the spirit of Slumber the spirit of Giddinesse the spirit of Delusion c. Had not we then need to try the spirits 1 Iohn 4.1 Hath not God given us the
ano●nting of his Spirit to the end we may be able to discern light from darkness and truth from errour when we hear of many cheaters abroad we had need to looke to our purses The best may erre every man 's a lyar both actively and passively subject to be deceived and to deceive others Rom. 3.4 we should therefore with the Bereans try what is taught I shall sum up all in the words of a judicious Divine A judgement solidly principled an heart sincerely renewed a faith truly bottomed Truth and love of it cordially matched profession and practice well joyned a fear of our selves and dependance on God still maintained Gods Ordinances and the society of humble and growing Christians still frequented watchfulnesse and prayer still continued are the best directions to keep us in the truth and the best preservatives to keep us from errors Lastly forsake not the way of Gods Churches especially in these fundamentals wherein they are unanimous E. g. Suppose the Question be Whether Infants Baptisme be lawfull Answer All the Churches of God who should know the sense of Scripture better then any private man do practise it or Whether the Old Testament be authentick all the Churches of God believe it c. It 's a dangerous thing to follow the Opinion of any particular man be he never so holy against the current and practice of all the true Churches of Christ. 2. Forsake not the government and discipline of the Church which is Unanimously owned by all the Reformed Churches of Christ 'T is the want of this which is one great cause of so many errors amongst us If this were fully and generally establisht we should not have an Heresie or blasphemy peeping up in the land but there would be a timely preventing of it Government Rule and Order is the glory of Families Cities Churches and all Societies 'T is a lovely thing and if the Apostle rejoyced to see the Order and Ecclesiastical government of the Collossians 2.3 how would he mourn to see the disorder of our times when the Church of God lies as a Vine without an hedge a City without walls and a Garden without a fence God takes it ill when we prefer our own private interest before his publick service and dwell our selves in seeled houses when the House of the Lord lies waste Hag. 1. The greatest sin of this age is the violent opposition against the Kingly Government of Christ in his Church by his own Officers and Ordinances All the wicked hate it because it crosseth their lusts and the Devil hates it because it destroyes his Kingdome But let us according to our Covenant endeavour in our places the setting up the Government of Christ amongst us Since our Church hath been as a field without a fence how many wild beasts have broken in upon it It s ill having the reins on our own necks when there was no King in Israel every man did what pleased himself Since the reins of Government have been loosed men have fancied and found out a thousand by-paths It s good for every man to be bound the best are but in part regenerate and being left to themselves may fall into dangerous sins and errors God is the God of Order and he will have not only some things but all things done in order 1 Cor. 14.33.40 he commands Order commends Order delights in Order and would have all his people walk in an orderly way 'T is the Devil who is the Author of disorder and confusion he knowes if Order goe up his Kingdome must go down and therefore he doth his utmost to hinder Government But God will have Order both in Substantialls and Circumstantials in Reals and in Rituals This Order is not any superstitious humane invention but an Order grounded on the Word of God and agreeable to that Canon The Titles given to Gods Church imply some order there It 's called 1. a House 2. a Common-wealth 3. a Garden 4. a Vine-yard 1. The Church is Gods house and family 1 Pet. 4.17 Gal. 6.10 Now what 's a house without government but a little hell above ground yea worse then hell for in hell there 's some order there is Beelzebub the Prince of Devills Yea there 's some Unity in hell Satans Kingdom is not divided against it self if it were it could not stand Luke 11.17.18 now if we have Order in our own houses is it fit that Gods house should lye in confusion This brings judgement on a people Hag. 1.9 At the Reformation of the Lacedemonian state some perswaded Lycurgus to set up a Democrasy i. e. a popular government where all might have equall power He answered Begin first and set up such a government in your own houses 2. The Church is a spirituall Common-wealth Ephes 2.12 Strangers from the Common-wealth of Israel from the Church of God Now what 's a Common-wealth without Order aud Unity we see how carefull men are to keep their Common-wealth in Peace and Unity O that there were a like care to set up Order and Unity in the Church of God! 3. The Church is Gods Garden Cant. 4.12 and must therefore be hedged and defended with Discipline and Government else every wild beast and boare would suddenly spoyle the flowers in it 4. The Church is Gods Vine-yard Isay 5.1 c. least any should hurt it he himself doth keep it night and day Isay 5.5 and 27.3 as he doth fence it so should we in our places and stations do what in us lieth to preserve it from violence and wrong 3. Order and Government is the Beauty of a Church Zach. 11.7 this makes the Church admirable Psal. 48. per totum we should be oft surveying Ierusalem and observing the glorious power and providence of God in her Order and Protection What David saith of Unity one branch of Order is true of Order it self Psal. 133.1 2. behold how comely it is for Brethren to dwell together in Amity and Order Order is the glory of all societies a well-ordered Family Army City Society are comely sights Hence God hath set an Order in Heaven an Order in Hell an Order amongst Angells an Order amongst the Starres an Order amongst rationall Creatures an Order amongst the sensitive Creatures the very Bees have a King and Ruler over them Take away this and we shall be all in confusion if there were not an Order in the Sea it would overflow the land and drown all The ayer would poyson us the Creatures destroy us and every man would destroy another Object The Presbyterian Government is Tyrannicall and curbs men that they dare not vent their errours so freely as now they do Answ. This Government is Christs yoke and so is sweet and easie to a spiritualized soule As the yoke of his Doctrine so the yoke of his Discipline is delightfull and pleasant to them They say as that good man said of the word of God Veniat Veniat disciplina Christi
error and a way that sets up Christ and his glory encouraging all the Saints of Christ in all the wayes of Christ why should any go about to preferre Prelacy or Independency before it when this excells them bot● as will plainly appear by comparing them with each other 1. Presbyterytery is Iure Divino Episcopacy is Iure Humano a Plant which God never planted King Iames called them his Creatures and so they were in more Senses then one Or Iure Pontificio for D. Heylin tells us that Pope Gregory erected them they are then by Originall the Popes Creatures Independency is Iure Politico A Politick device lately found out to gather the choycest flowers out of other mens Churches and under pretence of Gathering breaking and scattering Churches 2. Presbytery is Aristocraticall Episcopacy Tyrannicall Independencie Democraticall or Anarchicall 3. Presbytery is the way of the Reformed Churches Episcopacy goes too wide and High Independency goes too narrow and strait 4. Presbytery discountenanceth and punisheth Hereticks and Schismaticks truly so called Episcopacy indulged such witnesse the great increase of Arminians Socinians and Innovators and punisht the truly godly under those Notions Independency is too favourable to most Sects 't is the doore by which they creep into the Church as sad experience testifies since the Church hath been Independent what a flood of errours over-spread the land It 's the Asylum the Catholick shield and buckler of erroneous persons Lest any should think me singular you shall have the Attestation of an Association of Reverend Divines Though we acknowledge divers of our Brethren of the Independent way to be Learned godly and kind to their Presbyterian Brethren and some of them to be adverse in a great measure to such a Toleration as you may truly term intolerable Yet as we take the Tenet of Independencie to be an errour in it selfe so do we find it by sound reason and sad experience to be if not the naturall Mother yet such a tender Nurse and Patronesse to Hereticall opinions of all kinds that to it we may for a great part ascribe the luxuriant growth and spreading of errors Heresies c. so farre over this Kingdom As on the contrary the freedome of the Kingdome of Scotland from the like evills which is recorded as their happinesse and Honour to the firm establishment of a subordinate Presbyteriall Government amongst them So they See more in Mr. Pagets Learned Defence of Church-Government p. 240 241. c. 5. Presbytery hath Appeales to Synods aad that not only ad consilium for bare advice and counsell but ad jurisdictionem also they determine juridically and with authority they make Decrees according to the word which bind the Churches Acts 15.17.19 and the people cheerfully and willingly submit to this authority being thereby confirmed in the faith Act. 15.28.31 and 16.4 6. In their Sessions they inquire after sinne not coyne Episcopall Visitations were Visitationes nummorum They lookt more after the Fees then after the Flock 7. Presbytery allowes of no dumb dogs no rayling Sectaries nor Selfe-called Seducers Episcopacy ordained many ignorant Sots and Time-seerving Levites Independency gives too much approbation to Ieroboams Priests and Self-called Speakers 8. Presbytery incourageth painfull powerfull orthodox Preachers Episcopacy silenced such they might not once be Lecturers in the Land One Bishop I remember gave thanks that he had not a Lecture left in his Diocesse Independency looks somewhat asquint and soure on plain powerfull Orthodox Preachers that faithfully witnesse against Schisme and Heresie 9. Presbytery encourageth people to worship God in their families as well as in the Publick Episcopacy punisht such as met together to Pray or Repeat Sermons under the name of Conventicles They were too streight Independency erres as much on the t'other hand and gives a toleration to forsake the publick Assemblies and lye speaking error and Heresie in corners without controule 10. In Presbytery there is no Lording it over the flock of God there is an order of Priority but none of Superiority The President or Moderator pro tempore if he have the first voyce yet he hath but one voyce his Office is to avoyd confusion not to seek Prelation But Bishops Lord it over the flock Independency they say looks somewhat high they will be accountable to none in spirituall things but onely to Christ and what could the Pope say more this is to pull down one Pope and set up many and to make the Power of one Minister equall to the authority of many combined together in Synods Every Naturall man hath in his heart somewhat of Popery somewhat of Arminianisme and somewhat of Independency so farre as it pleads for more Liberty then Christ hath allowed and 't is Naturall I thinke to every man to desire to be judged by no man 11. Presbytery is candid and cleare it feares not the light Episcopacy lyes in the clouds Independency hath its Reserves they will not reveale themselves but conceale their way more then the people of God are wont to do especially when desired by authority They never would shew wherein this New-found way excells the way of all the Reformed Churches 12. Presbytery is the way of all the Reformed Churches Episcopacy is disowned by them Independency is Via devia the Reformed Churches look upon it as a New-found by-path which opens the doore to Schisme and Heresie I shall therefore conclude with the words of those Reverend Divines that long since have borne witnesse to this Truth Wee are abundantly convinced say they that a well-ordered Church-Government is most necessary and effectuall for the preventing of Errour and Scandall and we are well assured that Iesus Christ whom God hath given to be head over all things to the Church hath the government upon his shoulders having all judgement and all authority in Heaven and Earth committed to him And that he hath sufficiently revealed in his word how he will have his Church governed under the New Testament And that the Presbyteriall government truly so called by Presbyteries and Synods in a due Line of Subordination of the lesser to the greater with prosperous successe exercised in the best Reformed Churches is that government which is most agreeable to the mind of Iesus Christ revealed in Scripture c. To this agrees that Encomium of this Government given by the Church of Scotland 'T is well known say they both at home and abroad what a Wall for defence and a band for Peace and progresse of the Gospell was that heavenly Discipline whereby Brotherly amity and sacred Harmony of Prince and Professours was continued and increased c. It was the hedge of the Lords Vineyard and the Hammar whereby the Hornes of the wicked were beaten and broken c. The Government of the Kirk of Tcotland in the Preface Vbi plura How the Presbyterian Government excells the Independent way in nine particulars See Ius Divinum Regim Ecclesiast in Praefat p. 6
wise men evident to all men Now as God confounded those Egyptian sorcerers of old before all the world so he will confound those that oppose his truth and Ministers that they shall prevaile no further 1. Observe That Hereticks and false Prophets are bounded and limited by God They cannot hurt when where and whom they please but whom God pleaseth though the will of hurting and seducing be of man yet God orders it to his praise Revel 7.3 As God set bounds to the Sea saying hitherto shall ye come but no further and here shall thy proud waves be stayed Iob 38.11 So he limits the malice and madnesse of men how far they shall prevaile he onely can stop these seas of errour and bound these floods of false doctrine which are ready to overflow the face of the world The flood of the Arrian Heresie had almost overflowed the whole world but the Almighty bounded it and though in this age it seem to return and is ready to overflow the earth again yet our comfort is God hath set it bounds which it cannot passe All Heresies have their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their Non ultra their limits which they cannot passe Our comfort is that both the deceivers and the deceived are ordered by the providence of God Iob 12.16 he sets down the time when they shall begin and limits them how long they shall continue he orders how far men shall deceive and to what height they shall come and prevaile and when to stop them that they may proceed no further for as the maliciousnesse so the deceivablenesse of men would know no bounds if God did not bound it but because he doth therefore though they would yet they shall proceed no further No man can do good till God assist him and no man shall do hurt when God will stop him Rev. 20.3 These seducers in the Text had a mind to proceed further their will was to oppose truth and propagate errour in infinitum without end but they have now gone to the utmost of their line they are come to their border and bound they shall proceed no further but it shall appear to all men that the doctrine which they stood for was nothing else but a bundle of folly and that the Doctrine which they withstood was the truth and wisdom of God 2. Observe here the difference that is between Truth and Falshood The one hath its Non ultra it suddenly riseth comes to its height and then vanisheth 'T is a plant which God hath not planted and therefore is rooted up Matth. 15.13 't is no sooner discovered but 't is explod●d by the people of God especially Heresies are seldome Long-lived such Meteors last not long such Mushroms soon vanish witnesse Becold Knipperdolling Phifer c. Though for a time they may deceive many yet in a short time God discovers their Hypocrisie to their reproach The Church is like a Lilly amongst Thornes Cant. 2.2 Tyranny and Popery on one hand and intestine Hereticks on the other Yet God in his wisdom so orders them that not onely their wrath but their rage shall turn to his praise and the remainder of their rage he will restrain Psal. 76.10 Every Heresie is like a cloud which for a little time darkens the Church and then vanisheth We may say of them as Athanasius said of Iulian Nubecula est transibit citò But truth though it meet with opposition at first and hath few followers yet increaseth and prevailes against all opposition It hath its Plus ultra 't is perpetuall and endures for ever The devices of men shall fall but that which is of God shall stand Acts 5.38 39. Heaven and earth may fail but not a jod or title of Gods word shall fail This stands more firme then the Pillars of the earth or the Poles of Heaven There is nothing so perfect on earth but it hath an end Wisdome Beauty Riches Strength David saw an end of such perfections Psal. 119.96 onely Gods word abides for ever Isay 40.8 Matth. 24.35 Truth may be prest and opprest but never totally supprest becanse it 's built upon the word of God which is an invincible rock Eph. 2.20 Let not then the flood of Heresies which hath overflown the land make us despondent or despaire for as we have seen their rise and reigne so we shall suddenly see their ruine What 's become of the Arrians Donatis●s Novatians Pelagians c. though like a mighty flood they drowned all for a time yet like a flood they were quickly dried up again God is the same to the same sinners he that brought down the Sects and Schismes of former ages can and will in his due time bring down ours Quest. But when will it once be we rather see an increase then a decrease ●f Sects and Heresies Answ. Yet in due time God will arise and will visit their sin upon them and cast them out as an unprofitable branch Quest. But when is that fit time Answ. When the Church is lowest and all seems to make against it so that all its power is gone then God appeares Deut. 32.16 Gen. 22.14 Exod. 3.9 cum duplicantur lateres venit Moses God lets things come to extremity for his own greater glory When Ashur cannot save us but we are fatherless and helpless then God loves to shew mercy Hos. 14.3 Psal. 12.5 and 78.58 when we lye like dry bones in a helpless forlorn condition then God comes and breaths upon us and makes us live Ezek. 37.11 to 15. when the earth languisheth Isay 33.9 10. Now now now will God arise Exod. 14.13 14. when Iob had lost all and was poor even to a Proverb then God appears and gives him double makeing his latter end better then his beginning Iob 42.12 when the Priest and the Levite passe by then comes the good Samaritan with the Oyl of gladness When father and mother forsake us then God takes us up There is a wheel in the midst of all these wheels and when we think they go backward God can make them go forward Ezek. 1.16 and when 't is night with us he can make it light Zach. 14.7 at even when we expect nothing but darknesse then it shall be light T is at mid-night when he 's least expected that the bridegroom comes when the Ship is sinking and Lazarus stinks in his grave and all men forsake Paul then Christ appears When we are in the greatest danger then God is nearest to deliver He 's auxilium in angustiis praesentissimum Psal. 46.1 when there is no visible means by which Iacob should arise but he 's low in Temporals and low in Spirituals then God appears Amos 2.5 God is never nearer to his people then when they are in the greatest extremity Though the world see it not and sometimes his own people cannot discern his presence and therefore they cry How long Lord wilt thou hide thy self God was never nearer to
her witch-crafts are so many 2 Kings 9.22 We desire to see Reformation in the Land but till we be ashamed of such abominations especially as these God will never shew us the form of his House Ezekiel 43.11 When the Lord will reform a Nation He first takes away witch-craft from amongst them Micah 5.12 Shall wax worse and worse Wicked men proceed but it is in wickednesse they goe forward but they had better sit still for it is in sinne and errour Such progresse is no better then a regresse and such proficiency is meer Apostacy This is true 1. In Thesi in general if we consider wicked men as they are in themselves they are all strongly bent to Apostasie every day they grow worse and worse As godly men are Graduats in Gods School growing from strength to strength and from one Degree of grace unto another till they become perfect men in Christ. Every Sermon makes them better and every Ordinance improves them So wicked men are Graduats also and take Degrees in the Devils School they stand not at a stay but they grow from evil to worse As he that is Righteous will go on and be more Righteous so he that is filthy will go on in his filthiness Revel 22.11 'T is the proper Character of wicked men that they fall away more and more Isay 1.5 Prov. 1.22 Wisedome reproves three sorts of sinners in three Degrees like steps of a Ladder where men step from one step to another and each step argues a higher Degree of wickednesse then the former It is bad to love sinful and sottish simplicity worse to scoffe at Piety and worst of all to hate knowledge they proceed till they become Doctors of the Chair in Psalm 1.1 We have all their Degrees 1. There is the ungodly man Malus 2. The sinner Pej●r 3. The scorner Pessimus 2. There is Walking Standing Sitting 'T is dangerous walking 't is more dangerous standing resolvedly in the way of wicked men but most dangerous when men become Doctors of the Devils chair of scorners making a scoff at all Religion and Religious ones such are come to the very height of sin Such as give the reins to sin seldom stop till they come to the top E. g. Caine served God in Hypocrisie his rotten heart harboured malice his malice brought forth murder and his murder despair So Saul at first an Hypocrite then envies Davids praise after seeks his life then goeth to Witches and at last killeth himself So Iudas first an Hypocrite then a Thief after a Traytor at last despairs and then hangs himself So the Gentiles fell first to Adultry from that to Sodomy from Sodomy to a reprobate mind and from thence to all manner of vileness Rom. 1.24.26 28. As there is a concatenation of Vertues so there is of Vices one drawes on another wicked men adde iniquity to iniquity Psalm 69.27 as the godly adde grace to grace 2 Peter 1.5 6 c. So do these adde Vice to Vice till they be ripe for ruine Genesis 15.16 Matthew 23.32.36 1 Thessalonians 2.16 that they may fulfil their sins alway alway notes the Progress of their wickedness unto its full measure So Psalm 36.1 to 5. 1. the heart is naught 2. They flatter themselves in their sinne 3. They defend it 4. They refuse to hear any thing that is spoken against it they cease to understand or to do good 5. They devise wickednesse Lastly They set themselves obstinately on wayes that are not good and then they feare no sinne though never so vile so Hebrewes 3.12 13. 1. He hath an heart of Unbeleefe 2. He is deceived with some sinne 3. He is overcome and brought in bondage to it 4. He is hardened in it 5. He departs and falls away utterly from the living God Thus the wicked adde drunkennesse to thirst Deuteronomy 29.19 and sell themselves to work wickednesse 1 Kings 21.25 and that with greediness Ephes. 4.19 they draw on iniquity with cords of Vanitie Isay 5.18.19 20. Iniquity draws not them so much as they draw iniquity This drawing implies some resistance and repugnancie in the Conscience against sin at the first The cords of Vanitie note the reasonings by which they induce themselves to fals conceits and notions of sin The Cart-ropes not the violent oppressing of the conscience to satisfie their lusts These heap sin upon sin and add to evil motions evil words and to evil words evil works till by oft winding and wreathing the threeds of sin they grow to be cords and those cords at last become as strong as Cart ropes So that the wicked are fast bound with the cords of their own sin Prov. 5.22 consenting to sin is one cord acting of sin is another cord and continuing to multiply sin is a third and such a threefold cord is not easily broken Thus if we take the words collectively for evil men in general 't is true they shall grow worse and worse But secondly let us consider them Specifically and Divisively for such evil men as are deceivers and impostors and these we see experimentally grow worse and worse They have no foundation to rest on they know no stay when once they have past the bounds of the word no more then a viole●● stream doth when it hath broke over those bounds and bonds which bef●●e kept it in errour knows no end when once men forsake the way of Truth they wander in infinitum As 't is in Logick grant one absurdity and I will infer a thousand and as sin begets sin bloud toucheth bloud and one murther begets another Hos. 4.2 So errour is very fertile and prolifical it speedily brings forth a great increase One errour is a bridge to another Arminianisme makes way for Socinianisme and Popery Separation breeds Anabaptisme and Anabaptisme Familisme Antinomianisme and what not Thus one errour engenders with another and begets a Mule or mixt off-spring Affricke it self is not more full of Monsters These encrease but 't is to more ungodlynesse 2 Timothy 2.16 17. Ill weeds spring apace and spread farr when good herbs grow thinn and low A little of this Leaven will quickly sowre the whole lump Matthew 16.6 when once men begin to tumble down the hill of errour they seldome rest till they come to the bottome They usually fall to separations and sub-separations divisions and sub-divisions till they have broken themselves all to pieces and may at last say as that great-Grandmother did Rise up daughter and go to thy daughter for thy daughters daughter hath a daughter Or as King Iames said to one that came to be Knighted with a great Ruffe Rise up Ruffe and go to thy Ruffe for thy Ruffes Ruffe hath a Ruffe So may these big-bellied Separatists say Rise up Separation and goe to thy Separation for thy Separations Separation hath a Separation The Naturalists observe that except a Serpent do eat a Serpent it cannot become a Dragon a man must swallow many
poysenous Tenents before he can be a compleat Anabaptist Even the Devil observes a method in seducing 1. He makes men Scepticks in Religion so that they Question every thing yet believe nothing 2. They become Schismatickes and make a rent in the Church 3. They become Hereticks overturning the very foundations of Religion First the Devil makes men unconscionable hearers of the Word Secondly Contemners of it Thirdly Haters of the Preachers of it Fourthly and at last they hate God himself that sends them Oh then stop sin and errour in the beginning it is much easier to keep them out then to cast them out Every act of sin is a wound to the soul it weakens it and leaves it more unable to withstand a temptation Besides God in justice oft punisheth one sin with another when men will not go forward nor profit by the means of grace they shall go backward growing worse and worse till they come to a reprobate sence and are past feeling that they may fill up the measure of their sin and Gods wrath may come upon them to the uttermost for their ingratitude and rebellion 1 Thess. 2.16 'T is a sad case when men are given up to be ruled by unruly lusts when like Tapsters and Drawers they must answer all comers If Pride call ready Sir If Pleasures call here Sir If Lust call anon anon Sir If Covetousnesse call I come Sir This is the miserable slavery of those who serve divers lusts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Seducentes Seducti Deceiving and being deceived In the words there seems to be an Hysterosis and Inversion of the Order for in the Order of Nature men first erre themselves before they lead others into error Or we may take the words thus whilest those notorious Impostors go about deceiving others by their Sophisms and shewes of Holiness the Devil by the just judgement of God deceives them They cozen others and the Devil cozens them leading them into far greater errors and so they shall be punisht on a double account 1. Because they erre themselves and resist the Truth 2. Because they have drawn others into error The Participle of the Present Tense notes their assiduity and constancy they make it their Trade to deceive others they are still Deceiving one or other with their smooth and flattering Language The Devil is an old Serpent he is a Serpent for subtlety and an old Serpent for his experience in seducing He finds by experience that those things which are taught by men take sooner then if he should personally appear himself In times of ignorance and Popery the Devil appeared more commonly and visibly but now in these dayes of light he acts more secretly and subtilly working on man by man As God loves to imploy good men for the conversion of others not that he needs the help of man but for the exercising of the graces of his servants and for the greater manifestation of his own Glory So the Devil who is Gods ape loves to deceive men by men He hath his Agents and Emissaries every where He hath Magitians for Pharaoh a Balaam for Balack a Witch at Endor for Saul false Prophets to delude Ahab c. The world abounds with Devils incarnate so that if ever that Caveat were seasonable 't is now Beware of men Matth. 10.17 and 24.4 the Devil oft deceives by a Father a Brother a Wife a Friend Watch against them and whosoever he be that would draw thee into sin or error looke upon them as the Devils instruments and say to them as Christ did to Peter Get thee behind me Satan As good men delight in converting others so wicked men delight in perverting others as those would not goe to Heaven alone so these would not goe to Hell alone and therefore they labour to make others twofold more the children of the Devil then themselves Of this sort are Jesuites on the one hand and Sectaries on the other either of which with their Flesh-pleasing doctrine will doe more mischief in pulling down then twenty faithful Ministers can build up again in many years Though the Heresies which these deceivers bring are damnable yet the Apostle tells us that Many will follow them 2 Peter 22. This Christ foretold that many false Prophets should arise and deceive many Matthew 24.11 so doth Antichrist 2 Thessalonians 2.10 2 Iohn 7. Revelations 13.14 and such there were in the Apostles time Titus 1.10 11. Now the Reason why deceivers deceive so many are these 1. In respect of the blindness of our minds in Spiritual things 1 Cor. 2.14 2. In respect of our Natural pronenesse to error by Reason of the Vanity of our minds which make us far more apt to believe lies then truth Isay 30.10 2 Timothy 4.3 4. 3. In respect of our instability in the wayes of God Seducers beguile unstable souls Ephesians 4.14 2 Peter 2.14 We are unstable as water which turns with every wind that which pleaseth us to day displeseth us to morrow 4. In respect of our sinful simplicity we are apt to give blinde Obedience suspecting no evill Romans 16.18 We are apt to follow our own carnal Reason against the Word of God 5. In respect of error it self It s easie and pleasant to flesh and bloud which makes such multitudes to follow it The way of Truth is strait and narrow with much adoe is it found but with the more difficulty practised He who treads this Track like Ionathan and his Armour bearer must climb the Hill when others swim down the stream This is the Reason why so many follow falshood rather then truth not because falshood is in its own Nature stronger then truth or Satans stratagems too strong for the Spirit of God but because these false flesh-pleasing doctrines agree with our corrupt Nature therefore 't is that men doe so readily embrace them 6. God in his just judgement gives up such as will not believe his Truth to the power of error and to the will of seducers Since they will be deceived they shall be deceived since they will not obey the true Prophets they shall be seduced by false ones 1 Kings 22.21 22. Ezekiel 13.23 2 Thessalonians 2.10.11.12 Let not then Ministers be discouraged when they see many fall off to these Impostors 't is no more then what hath been long since fore-told God sets them their bounds he limits the time how long the persons deceiving and whom they shall dececeive are ordered by his wisdom both the deceiver and the deceived are his Iob 12.16 Ezek. 14.9 2. The Magistrate should restrain such workers of Iniquity if those that had but a Leprosie upon their bodies must be shut up for fear of infecting others Leviticus 13.46 Surely these deceivers that have a worse Leprosie upon them should not be connived at as they be Such evil men will not long be evil alone they endanger the good as weeds do Corn or bad humours the
sight to see Old M●ason's old Cedars in the house of God old disciples whom no storms nor tempests can drive from the truth Acts 21.16 like the Church of Thyatira to have our works more at last then at the first Revel 2.19 like spiritual Sampson we must break the cords of difficulties forgetting what is past and pressing towards the work Like Heroick Luther whom men nor devils could draw or drive from the truth And like another Caesar not cease from doing till all be done Nil actum credens cum quid superesset agendum Instat atrux Lucan Pharsal l. 2. To this end we must first labour to know the truth for how can a man walk in a way which he doth not know 2. When we have found the way we must walk in it with full purpose and resolution Ier. 6.16 Acts 11.23 let the understanding be never so clearly convinct yet if the will resolve not to obey there is no good to be done 3. Lay a good foundation dig deep he that will build high must lay low Deny your own strength and wisdom for in his own strength shall no man be strong 1 Sam. 2.2 9. but we must be strong in the Lord and the Power of his might if ever we look to overcome Ephes. 6.10 if ever we would be able to do or suffer we must get vertue and strength from Christ. Philip. 4.13 We are never stronger then when we are most apprehensive of our own weaknesse 1 Cor. 12.10 nor ever weaker then when we trust most to our selves as we see in Peter and in the book of Martyrs the timerous trembling souls who suspected their own strength were faithful to the death when the proud and Self-confident basely turned with the times 4. Put on the whole armour of God and gird it close to you An ignorant unbelieving unarmed man hath no heart to fight 't is the man that hath the shield of Faith the helmet of Hope the breast-plate of Righteousnesse the girdle of Truth c. that like the valiant horse rejoyceth to meet the armed man Iob 39.19 20. the Apostles were armed with these graces and see how boldly they go on in despight of all opposition 2 Cor. 6.4 to 8. He that would see more of Constancy and perseverance let him peruse Dike on Conscience cap. 9. p. 130. c. Barkers Serm. before the Parliament 1648. on 1 Cor. 15. ult Gatakers Serm. on Revel 2.10 fol. p. 317. Downams Guide to Godlinesse l. 3. c. 1. and l. 4. c. 8 9 10 Hildersham on Psal. 51.7 Lect. 144. to 150. all those six last Lectures are very useful for our times M. Vennings Serm. on Rev. 2.5 In the things which thou hast learned Observe That even the best are learners here Whilest wee live in this world though we should live Methuselahs dayes yet we may learn something still We know but in part and the most perfect are imperfect here Object We have the Spirit to teach us Answ. So had David who yet desires to be taught still Psal. 119. So had Paul who yet prest forward toward the mark still Philip. 3.12 13 14. he disclaimes perfection and desires to know Christ more clearly Our learning doth not hinder but further the work of the Spirit in our souls Timothy that had a plentiful measure of the spirit for he was an Evangelist yet must give himself to reading and meditation still 1 Tim. 4.13 Such is the profoundnesse of the Scripture that he who knoweth most may still learn more and the more we know the more we shall acknowledge our ignorance And hast been assured of or as others read it which hath been committed to thee The truth was not barely delivered to Timothy but it was committed to him to be kept as a sacred Treasury with the greatest care Observe That the Truth of God revealed in the Scripture is a sacred depositum a choyce Treasure a precious Jewel which must be carefully kept by all Christians and especially by the Ministers of Christ. The Oracles of God and the doctrine of the Gospel is more specially committed to our care and fidelity that we may publish it to others 'T is true every private Christian in his Sphere and Calling ought to preserve the truth and contend for the faith Iude 3. we cannot keep the truth without strong contention the word signifies to strive with all our might or say some it's to strive one after another in our places and successive generations Insuper certare or certamen repetere it 's not enough to strive once and to assert the truth but we must doe it again and again after one another as oft as the Truth is opposed But the Gospel is committed primarily to the care of Christs Ministers they are his Heralds to proclaim and publish it to the world as appeares 1 Tim. 1.11 and 6.20 and 2.1 14. 1 Thes. 2.4 Titus 1.3 1 Cor. 9.17 Gal. 2.7 of all men Ministers must hold fast the faithful word Titus 1.9 we must hold it against all opposition and hold it with both hands hold it with all our strength hold it in our Judgements in our Affections in our Practice part with it at no rate to Schismaticks Hereticks false Prophets c. As Moses was faithfull and would not part with a hoof to Pharaoh so we must not part with a tittle of Gods truth to his enemies for all Truths even the least are precious truth is like gold which is glorious in the Ray and Spangle as well as in the wedge As 't is in Practicals he that makes no conscience of little sins will quickly be drawn to greater so 't is true and holds in Doctrinalls he that admits of a little error will soon be drawne to a greater Though every truth be not fundamental yet every truth is a guard to the foundation the outer skin of an Apple lyes remote from the heart yet if you pluck that off the heart will soon be rotten The finger is not a vital part but a Gangrene in the finger will in a short time reach to the very vitals and corrupt the blood with the spirits Not onely the garment of Truth but the fringes thereof are useful and must be preserved Numb 15.38 39 40. We experimentally see that those who forsake Truth in Discipline quickly fall to errors in Doctrine We shall hardly find a man that erres in the one to be sound in the other As therefore we must count no sin small so we must esteem no error small for the least truth of Gods Kingdome doth in its place uphold the whole Kingdome of his truth Take away the least Vericulum out of the world and it unworlds all Potentially and may unravell the whole Texture Actually if it be not conserved by an extraordinary power 2. Consider that truth is the choycest gift which God ever gave to the sonnes of men it is better then any created Ens or Bonum which
are but Truths twinnes Civil Truth is good but the least Evangelical Truth is of more worth then all the Civil Truths in the world that are meerly so 3. Naturally wee desire Liberty now Truth is the Parent of all true Liberty whether it bee Political or Personal so much Untruth so much Thraldome so much Truth so much Liberty Iohn 8.32 4. If you preserve the Truth it will preserve you in the hour of Temptation as Solomon sayes of wisdom Prov. 4.8 exalt her and she shall exalt you So keep the truth and it will keep you from falling as it did the Church of Philadelphia Rev. 3.10 so thou shalt stand as an impregnable rock when others fly as the Chaffe before the wind The Truth of God in judgement is one of the Eyes of the soul he that wants it is blind and cannot see afar off Now as a clear eye is a very great help for the discerning of a danger before it comes so a clear distinct knowledg of the truth is a very great help to us to discern a Temptation before it be upon us and to discover the Methods and Depths of Satan that he may not surprize us unawares 5. 'T is a great honour to a person or Nation to be the Conservators and Preservers of the Truths of God 'T is not only our Duty but our Glory This honour formerly belonged to the Jewes to them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 and 9.4 God hath now entrusted us with this choyce Treasure the Lord help us to keep it pure both in Judgement and Practice lest it be taken from us Let us all in our places preserve it from violence with all our might There are many spiritual Cheaters abroad the greater will our honour be in maintaining Gods Truth against them all 'T was Shammahs honour one of Davids Worthies that he kept his ground and got a great victory when others ●led 2 Sam. 23.12 Say not I am but one and a weak one too but remember what great things the Lord did by Athanasius and Luther when they had all the world against them One man holding forth truth shall be too strong for all the world for truth unites us to God and God to us it ingageth God in our quarrel and so makes us invincible for if God be with us who can be against us so as to hurt us and destroy us Rom. 8.31 Bradford writing to his friends tells them never shall the enemy be able to burn the truth or prison and keep it in bonds us they may prison bind and burn but our Cause Religion and Doctrine they shall never be able to burn The story of the man in the Councill of Nice is well known where a Christian of no great Learning converted a Learned man whom all the Bishops with their skill and eloquence could not perswade so long as the matter went by words he opposed words with words but when instead of words power came out of the mouth of the speaker words could not withstand truth nor man stand out against God Many wonder why Ministers are so earnest and zealous in defending the truth why 't is a dep●situm which God hath entrusted us withall and 't is well observed that it 's a greater sin to imbezill or alter that then any thing we have borrowed because this is committed to our justice but a depositum to our faithfullnesse the deposition doth rest upon us as trusty men Let Gods truth then be dearer to us then our dearest lives our lives will not be worth the enjoying if God take his truth from us let us beseech him rather to take our lives away rather then take the light of the Gospel away And hast been assured of If you read the words so The Observation will be this That Ministers should be assured of those things which they teach to others They should not only have a Head knowledge or an aery empty notionall speculative knowledge but an experimentall practical knowledge They must believe before they speak Psalme 116.10 that so they may speak from the heart to the heart and may bring their meat in their breasts and not as birds do in their Beaks Knowing of whom thou hast learned them 1. Observe That gracious men are modest men The Apostle doth not boast of himself to Timothy nor proclaim his Learning gifts c. He onely tells him in brief Thou knowest of whom thou hast learnt them 2. Observe The excellency of the Teacher makes the Doctrine the more taking This we see even in Humane and Moral Learning the Platonick Doctrine grew famous because it was profest by Socrates and the Peripatetick by Aristotle The Schollars of Pythagoras did so confide in the Dictates of their Master that when any one askt them a Reason of what they held they would give no other answer but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ipse dixit our Master said so yet these were Heathens but when we have an aged holy Paul for our Master who was an Apostle of Christ the Pen-man of the Holy Ghost and guided more immediately by the Spirit of God then we must with constancy adhere to what they teach us and attend to their doctrine as if Christ himself taught us Gal. 4.14 for his Ambassadours they are and he that heareth them heareth him Young Timothies especially should hearken to the instructions of aged Pauls who have born the heat of the day and by experience can teach us the ways of God Years should be heard speak Iob 32.7 Young Ministers should suspect their own judgements when they vary from an Holy aged Calvin Beza and all the Churches of God As young Lawyers and Physitians observe the Principles and Practices of the serious and grave Professours of their way especially when grounded on Maxims and Rules of Art So should young Divines It ill becomes a young raw Physitian to contradict a whole Colledge of Physitians or a Puny Lawyer a Bench of Judges or a young Divine a whole Assembly of Divines 'T is the looseness of the times that makes young men so bold When Government is settled they will either change their note or be made ashamed of it VERSE 15. And that from a Childe thou hast known the Holy Scriptures which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through Faith which is in Christ Iesus THese words contain a third Argument by which the Apostle presseth Timothy to perseverance viz. because he knew the Scriptures not onely from his Childe-hood but even from his Infancy and from a suckling i. so soon as ever he was able to learn the Scriptures he was presently taught them 1. Observe Parents ought to instruct their Children betimes in the Word of God It s good seasoning the Vessel betimes with goodness Lois Timothies Grandmother and Eunice his Mother taught him as soon as he was capable the way of the Lord 2 Timothy 2.5 Timothies Father was a Greek and Gentile but his
Mother being a believing Iewess seeth to the instructing of her son Acts 16.1 for the Iewes were very careful to teach their children the Old Testament betimes so that their skill therein saith the Learned Buxtorfe was more at 17. then our men at 70. and they were able to answer any Question in the Law as readily as to their own names saith Iosephus Hannah devoted her Samuel whilest he was very young to God 1 Sam. 1.22 and 2.11.24 He began his service in the Tabernacle in his Childhood that he might the better be instructed in Gods Law and be acquainted with all the Parts Passages and wayes of Divine Worship from his tender youth that so in his age he might keep the closer to it 'T is a singular mercy to have good Parents and specially a good Mother for she being much about her children hath many opportunities of dropping good things into her little Lemuels as Bathsheba did into Solomon Proverbs 31.1 The Mothers of the Kings of Israel are constantly mentioned and as they were good or evil so were their Children Partus sequitur ventrem the Birth followes the belly and such as the Mother such usually are the children Ezekiel 16.44 Question But at what age would you have Parents begin to teach their children Answer So soon as ever they begin to learn wickedness we should teach them goodness so soon as ever they begin to curse and swear we should teach them to bless and pray When Children can mock Elisha and call him Bald-pate it is time to change their Language and teach them to cry Hosanna to Christ so that we should endeavour to sow the Seeds of Piety and Religion in their hearts so soon as they are able to speak and are come to the Use of Reason and Understanding endeavouring that as they grow in years so they may increase in Grace and Knowledge Objection This is in vain say prophane lazie Sectaries to teach children the Words and Termes of Piety since they doe not understand them Answer Though Children whilest very young cannot come to much understanding yet the having of Scripture Phrase and Texts by heart is very usefull and will much steed them when they come to years of discretion and are able to dive deeper into the meaning of those things which they retain perfect in their memories from their Childehood We should therefore nurse and nourish them up betimes in the knowledge of Gods Word as Timothy was 1 Tim. 4.6 There are many Reasons why Youth should be seasoned betimes with good Principles 1. In respect of that Natural rudeness and ignorance which cleaves so close unto them Eccles. 3.18 Iob 11.12 Ieremiah 4.22 and 10.14 We are all by Nature like wild Asse-Colts Unteachable Untractable An Asse is the dullest and foolishest of all creatures and a wilde Asse is the dullest and most unteachable of Asses yet such a wild ●●sse-Colt is man by Nature lewdness and folly is bound up in his heart it is rooted and settled there till instruction and correction fetch it away Proverbs 22.15 2. The Lord oft blesses this seasoning in youth with good success as we see in Solomon whom his Father and Mother taught betimes Prov. 4.3.4 and 32.1 and here in Timothy who after became an Evangelist and a choyce pillar in Gods House for the good of many So Samuel who was given up to God betimes what an excellent instrument was he in the Church of God Abraham that taught his children and servants the way of the Lord Genesis 14.14 and 18 19. what obedient Children and servants had he 2. It is usually blest with continuance and perseverance such as are good young are oft good long what the 〈◊〉 is first seasoned withall it will have a taste of it a long time after What we learn whilest young it will last with us so that we seldome or never loose it Prov. 22.6 and therefore to incourage Parents God promiseth if they will faithfully discharge their duty that he will preserve their Children from Apostacy Psal. 71.5.6 9.14.17.18 3. This is an excellent means to propagate goodness to Posterity as we see here Timothies Grandmother teacheth his Mother and his Mother teacheth him and he teacheth the Church of God c. So if you teach your children they will teach their children and thou mayest be a means to propagate Gods Truth and Honour from one Generation to another So that you may comfort yourselves when you come to die that yet your Piety shall not die but shall survive in your posterity who shall stand up in your steed to profess Gods name and truth before a sinful world 4. Such well-bred and timely-taught Children are usually great comforts and ornaments to their Parents Proverbs 23.15.16 24 25. as we see in Abel Ioseph Samuel Iosiah 2 Chron. 34.3 Obadiah 1 Kings 18.12 David Daniel Ieremy All of them began betimes to serve God and were men of renown in their generations which may help to take off that Satanical slander which is so rife in the world viz. that young Saints will be old Devils they cannot hold out Whereas the contrary is commonly most true viz. that young Devils will be old Beelzebubs when those that are good betimes usually persevere in goodness Proverbs 22.6 But such as are fondly bred and left to themselves are the Parents shame and sorrow and oft come to untimely Ends Proverbs 29.15 as Absalom Esa● Adonijah 5. Children are the Seminary and Nursery of the Church and common-wealth now as our Seminaries and Seed-plots are such is the Nation as the Parents House and School are such are Towns and Cities Our seasoning in youth hath a great influence upon our lives and therefore the Devil and the world strive for youth for look what people are between 18. years of Age and 30. such usually they are all their dayes Drunkards then and Drunkards for ever lewd then and lewd for ever 6. Youth is most Teachable and Tractable like soft wax or clay fit to be formed and framed to any thing ready to take any Impression Like a tender twigg ●ou may bend it which way you please but let it grow to be a tree and you may sooner break it then bend it We should therefore take this fit season of seasoning youth betimes with sa●ing Truths and killing the weeds of sin which begin to appear in their lives It s good bearing Gods Yoke whether of Correction Doctrine or Discipline in our Youth Lamentations 3.27 No creature so wild but it may be tamed if taken whilest young We see those that would teach or tame Horses Lions Hawkes Dogs Bears they begin with them betimes the Horse is broken whilest a Colt and the Lion tamed whilest its a Whelp c. Vse This must stir up Parents to season the tender years of their Children with Principles of Grace This is a duty of Great consequence and therefore the Lord 〈◊〉
man to marry before five and twenty nor a young woman till twenty My Reasons are 1. Because the married Condition requires people that have some experience in worldly Affaires and specially in Religion 1 Peter 3.7 the Apostle would have the Husband to be a man of Knowledge Now this Knowledge how to govern a Family wisely and religiously cannot be attained without a considerable time Adam was a Man of full Age and Eve a Woman not a Childe when God brought her to Adam Of all people that we read of in the Scripture Kings did use to marry soonest that so they might have Heires betimes yet we reade of few of the Kings of Israel that married before twenty 'T is not for Children and green-heads rashly to run upon such weighty undertakings they that marry in such haste shall repent by leisure 3. Mutability and unconstancy they be not settled nor stayed in their judgements 'T is the younger sort that usually are led away with errour Old Birds stayed Professours are not so soon caught with this Chaffe Hence the Apostle Exhorts young Timothy to continue in the Truth 1 Tim. 4 16. 4 Rashness Headiness and Revenge such were Rehoboams young Counsellours 1 Kings 12.6.10 Youth is voyd of judgement Prov. 7.7 and apt to fly in the face of a Reprover 5. A disesteeming and sleighting of old Age. They were young ones that mockt the Prophet 2 Kings 2.24 and despised Iob 30.1.12 'T will be our wisedome to fly these lusts betimes It s a comely sight to see mortified and self-denying young people They are subject to stronger Temptations and more violent Affections there is a greater propensity to sinne in youth and therefore the Obedience is the more excellent and acceptable when out of love to God we can break through all these Young persons have many suiters the World the Flesh the Devil all cry be mine be mine They all ly in wait for the flower of our dayes The Flesh casts baits the World digs pits and the Devil sees snares So that unless we be magnanimous and resolute we shall be foiled and overcome 6. A sixth sinne of Youth is Neglecting the seasons of Grace not knowing the day of their Visitation a sleighting the tenders and offers of Gods Grace unto them There is a time when the Lord cometh a wooing to the Soul and by the motions of his Spirit knocks at the doores of our Hearts for entertainment Revelations 3.20 The Devil doth his utmost to hinder the match and therefore he perswadeth young persons that they are too young to be godly and too young to deny themselves in point of pleasures and carnall delights he tells them they may believe and repent time enough hereafter when they are Old He dealeth with them as the Philosopher did with the young man that came to him desiring him to tell him when he should marry Oh said the Philosopher thou art too young not yet not yet at last he grew old and then he came to know when he should marry Not at all now said he The Application is easie 1. Let such consider that there are thousands and ten thousands now in Hell that thought to have repented Hereafter Many have an Intentionall but no solid Repentance they resolve to repent but they resolve not when and so delay till the day of Grace bee past 2. Consider it is not in our power to repent when we please God must give us the Grace 2 Timothy 2.25 they way of Man is not in himself It is God must turn us or we shall never be turned Iremiah 31.18 He must draw us or we shall never runne after him Canticles 1.4 Iohn 6.44 We must observe Gods time or we loose all 3. How dost thou know that thou shalt live till thou art old younger and better then thou are gone Shorter graves then thine may be seen 4. Suppose thou shouldest live till thou wert old yet thy heart may then be so hardened that thou canst not repent and because when God called thou wouldst not answer therefore thou shalt cry and shalt not be heard Prov. 1.24 Ier. 22.21 22. 5. If it were in our power yet we may in no wise deal so dis-ingeniously with our God as to give the Devil the Marrow of our Youth and reserve the dry bones of our old Age for God It is no wisedome to lay the greatest load on the weakest Horse Old Age though in it selfe it be a Blessing yet is accompanied with many troubles sicknesses and diseases they are the Dreggs the Lees the Winter of our dayes As all Rivers meet in the Sea so all diseases meet in Old Age Hence it is called the evil day Eccles. 12.3 4 5 c. then the Eyes grow dimme the Eares deafe the Hands tremble and the Leggs are feeble and the Memory failes 'T is a time of spending not of getting and such compulsive Repentance is seldome true They are cursed that offer the blinde and the lame in Sacrifice Malachi 1.8 ult and if the blinde and the lame were abhorred of Davids soul much more of Gods 2 Samuel 5.8 'T is the greatest Wisedome in the World for young persons to know the day of their Visitation and to improve the Seasons of Grace seeking the Lord while he may be found Isaiah 55.6 and opening when he knocketh 'T is good sayling whilest the Ship is sound the Pilot well the Marriners strong the Gale favourable and the Sea calme The onely way to finde the Lord when we seeke him is to seeke him in due time even Now 2 Corinthians 6.2 Behold Now is the acceptable Time Now he calleth all men every where to Repent See how the Holy Ghost prevents Objections I 'le repent hereafter No it must be now Acts 17.30 31. Object I am rich or I am poor I am a Iew or a Gentile and cannot repent Answ. He calls All men Object I dwell amongst ill neighbours Answ. He calls all men every where The time present is the only time the Time past is gone the time to come we have no assurance of the time present is our time Hence we are called upon so oft to obey whilest 't is to day Psal. 95.7 8. Heb. 3.15 and to return i. e. presently Isai 21.12 In all obligations say the Lawyers where no time is specified there the condition is presently to be performed So Ier. 13.15 16. Zech. 1.4 Zeph. 2.1 2. Now because we are naturally averse and backward to this special duty I shall give you 20. Considerations to Quicken you 1. Consider that this speedy repenting and turning to God in our youth is Comfortable because 't is a good evidence of the Truth of our Repentance as late Repentance is seldome true so speedy repentance is seldome false It 's a good sign we have made God our God indeed when with David we can seek him early Psal. 63.1 and with Zaccheus we make hast to receive him joyfully Luke 19.6 This
For the condemning of Vsury and oppression how full is the Old Testament yet Usury is scarce mentioned in the New Testament 3. How then should Magistrates put Blasphemers Adulterers and witches to death since the scriptural warrants which make these crimes Capital are contained in the Old Testament and not in the New 4. Then it would not be unlawful to marry within the Degrees forbidden in the Old Testament and not in the New hence some Sectaries have maintained that 't is lawful to marry within the Degrees forbidden in the Old Testament c. 2. Since the Old Test. is the very word of God and there are contained in it so many excellent promises to support our faith and so many precious Truths and Commands for the direction of our lives oh let us read it study it meditate in it night and day Psalm 1.1 2. As Ministers must preach the whole counsell of God to their people Acts 20.27 so people should desire to hear and know all Gods counsell revealed to us in the Old and New Testament things revealed concerne us Deut. 29.29 ●ince we have Moses and the Prophets we must not expect Revelations Luke 16.29 This is that foundation upon which all the faithfull must build Ephesians 2.20 being built on the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets i. e. on the Doctrine of the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament a house without a foundation will soon fall He that knowes not Gods will revealed in Scripture must needs miscarry Hence 't is that Christ would not have us barely read but search the Scriptures Iohn 5.39 of the Old Testament where we shall find many excellent Lessons 1. There we may see the glorious work of Creation how God made man holy and happy how we lost this happinesse and how by Christ we are restored again Gen. 3. and 2. To fear us from sin here we may see Gods judgements on the Old world Sodom Pharaoh Egypt Ierusalem and Lots wife whom Christ commands us to remember Luke 17.33 and if we must remember her why not all the rest of these examples which are recorded in the Old Testam 3. Here are many sweet promises to quicken us to obedience Deut. 28.1 to 15. 4. Here are Precepts for practice to direct us in our duty 5. Here we may see the examples of Gods servants walking up to those Precepts and how wonderfully God preserved them in their integrity Here you may see Abrahams Faith Lots Hospitality Iobs Patience Davids Zeale Iosephs Chastity Noahs Righteousnesse Moses his Meeknesse Ioshua's Valour These must be as so many goads to quicken us to the like Graces and as so many Looking-glasses for us to dress our selves by 6. The Old Testament gives great light to the New there is a mutual Harmony and agreement between them so that like stones in an Arch they strengthen and hold up one another We cannot so well understand many places of the New Testamentt unlesse we compare them with the Old Hence Christ oft speaks and the Law Iohn 1.17 and and 5.46 Luke 24.27 44. who could understand that dark Epistle to the Hebrews which is even composed out of the Old Test. it's Types and Allegories if he have not some insight i● the Old Test. So Iohn 3.14 cannot be understood without some knowledge of the brazen Serpent mentioned in the Old Test. The Old Test. in many things is larger then the New and so is very needful to be known There 's Physicks in Genesis Iob Psalms 2. There 's Ethicks in Proverbs and Ecclesiastes for the right ordering of our lives 3. Politicks in the Judicial Laws of Moses very useful for the well-ordering of a common-wealth 4. There is in the Old Testament the best pleasantest and truest of Histories from the beginning of the world to our Saviours time here we have the Rise and Ruine of many famous Kings and Kingdomes for the space of nigh 4000. yeares exactly and faithfully which is the life and glory of History set forth unto us Other Histories may be excellent but Scripture-History excels them all Let us then embrace the Scriptures of the Old Testament as the good word of God written for our Learning and a word that still speaks unto us as unto Children Heb. 12.5 and 13.5 1 Cor. 10 11. in Doctrines Exhortations and Comforts And since Old and New Testament are both the infallible word of God let us receive it with all Humility and Thankfulnesse as an Epistle sent to us from the great God Here is the Fountain the Life and all the Treasures of wisdome included Here is all things needful for our salvation in it is nothing superfluous or vaine but a sweet harmony and agreement of all parts and therefore is to be wholly received by us for as the Phylosopher delights in all Aristotle the Physician in Galen the Orator in Tully and the Lawyer in Iustinian so and much more should a Christian embrace the whole Bible and welcome it with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prizing it as one of the choycest gifts which ever God gave to the sonnes of men How zealously did our Fore-fathers considering their light affect the Scriptures when one of them in the beginning of the Reformation gave a load of Hay for a piece of the Epistle of Saint Iames in English How will their forwardnesse condemn our backwardnesse and their zeale our Lukewarmnesse The Holy Scriptures c. So here what a large Encomium and high commendation the Holy Ghost gives of the Scriptures even such as is given to no other book in the world besides 1. He commends them in respect of one speciall property and adjunct viz. their Holinesse The Holy Scriptures 2. From their Effects they are able to make us wise unto salvation 3. From their Authority Verse 16 17. Utility Verse 16 17. Perfection Verse 16 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Holy Scriptures 'T is not simply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Those eminently holy letters those sacred Scriptures the article is emphatical and therefore the Holy Ghost to distinguish these sacred writings from all profane writings gives them such Adjuncts and Epithets as are incompatible to all other writings whatsoevr Now the Reason why God would have his word written is this viz. that it might be kept the better and be propagated to posterity and be more easily kept and vindicated from corruption then Revelations could have been 2 Peter 1.19 Observe The word of God is holy Scriptures this is it's proper Adjunct and excellency 't is holy Rom. 1.2 They are perfectly holy in themseves all other writings are prophane further then they draw some holinesse from them which yet is never such but that their holinesse is imperfect Now the Scriptures are called holy in five respects 1. In respect of their Authour and principal cause viz. the most holy God 2. In respect of the Pen-men aud instrumental cause they were holy men
give him for all those successes and deliverances which he hath given us will not this provoke him to repent of all the mercies he hath shewed us and to consume us after he hath done us good These are worse then Papists denying the Trinity Sacraments Old Testament and New Testament affirming that there is no word but only the word Christ so did the Swenck●feildians in Germany herein betraying their grosse ignorance that cannot distinguish between the word Christ and the word of Christ Colos. 3.16 so called because it hath Christ for its Authour Christ for its Object and Christ for its end between Christ the coessential and coeternall word of the Father Iohn 1.1 2. Heb. 1.3 the substantial word of God 1 Iohn 5.7 Rev. 19.13 and the expresse Image of his Father and the written word of God which is contained in the Old and New Testament and is called the written word of God Luke 8.11 12. and 11.28 Acts 4.31 and 6.2 7. and the Bible or Book as being the book of books i. e. the most excellent book in the world 2. As the Papists when they are Non-plust fly to Traditions so do these fly from Scripture to Revelations As the Jews have their Talmuds and the Turks their Alcorans so the Anabaptists have their vain Visions and etraordinary Revelations whereas the Scripture is a surer Guide then a Voyce from heaven 2 Pet. 1.19 for that may be more easily counterfeited Satan can with ease transform himself into an Angell of light See this more fully cleared by the Authours in the Margin 2. We have those that cry up a Light within them and extoll it above the word of God like false Tradesmen that preferre false Lights before the clearest Sun-shine He that takes the light of nature for his Guide hath but a blind deceitful Guide which will lead him into a thousand bogs and ditches of filth and errour The natural man cannot endure the light of Gods word Iob 21.14 Isay 6.10 and 30.10 2 Tim. 4.3 he raiseth cavils against it and hates the light that discovers him He 's dead in sin and cannot once discern the supernatural things of God 1 Cor. 2.14 hence he 's called not onely dark but darknesse it self in the Abstract Ephes. 5.8 and therefore great is the sin of those that tell men they have need of no other teacher but onely the light within them 1. This overthrowes all Scripture in vain did God bid us search the Sciptures if this natural light within us were sufficient to lead us to salvation 2. This is the way to make men Heathens and to set up a natural light instead of a supernaturall 3. This would overthrow the Ministery and all their gifts which Christ gives them for the edification of his Church Ephes. 4.11 4. This would overthrow the Magistracy for to what end are his Laws and sword if every man had a light within him sufficient to direct him thus if Aaron go down Moses cannot long endure Ministery and Magistracie usually fall together Numb 16.10 13. 5. Religion hath mysteries and depths in it which no natural man can fathome 1 Cor. 2.9 14. 6. The Scripture speaks onely to Saints when he saith Christ is in you the hope of glory Colos. 1.27 but to the world he 's a stumbing-block and rock of offence 7. Christ calls them slow of heart who believe not all that the Prophets have spoken it seems they were to look to the Scriptures without them and not onely to a light within them 8. The Beraeans are commended for searching the Scriptures Acts 17.11 and not for harkening to a light within them and we are commanded to try the Spirits by the Touchstone of Gods word and not by a light within us 3. Great is the sinne of the Socinians who make not the Scripture but Reason the Judge in matters of Religion and will believe no more in Religion then they can comprehend by Reason whereas we make not our Reason a Rule of faith added to the word but we use it as that light which God hath given us wherewith to search into the meaning of his word and by studious inquisition and observation to discover it and by good Reason out of the Text to convince others of its truth Reason raised and rectified is the candle of the Lord and good Prov. 20.27 so long as 't is subordinate to faith but when it goeth about to judge it then it quickly overthrowes all as we see in the Socinians who abound with such grosse Heresies that Divines Question whether we may call them Christians 4. Others boast of the Spirit in opposition to the Scripture these are certainly led by the spirit of the Devill Gods word and Spirit go together as you may see Prov. 1.23 Isay 59.21 Galatians 3.2 Gods Spirit teacheth us to try the spirit and doctrines of men by Scripture Isay 8.20 and if they speak not according to this word 't is not because they have New-light but no light in them Christ who was full of the Spirit of the Lord yet doth not go about to prove things by the Spirit within him but he sends men to the Scriptures as their Rule Iohn 5.39 and when he disputed with men and Devills he doth not appeal to the spirit or light within him but he cites Scripture without them against them for though Gods Spirit do enlighten the Saints on earth yet it is but in part this illumination is imperfect and mixt with much darknesse within them so that they have need also of a light without them which is the Scripture And if Timothy who was inlightned by the spirit in a more then ordinary measure he being an Evangelist yet must give himself to reading the Scriptures how much more have we need to read and study them who have not that measure of the spirit as he had And if the spirit were our Rule how many would be deluded with Satanical spirits but God hath given us a surer word of prophecy so that we must not trust onely to the Testimony of the spirit concerning it self but we must bring every spirit to the Trial and Touchstone of Gods word 1 Iohn 4.1 2 3. yea though they pretend to have the Spirit of God yet must it be tried by the word of God Object The Scriptures are for Novices and young beginners but after men are regenerate and grown up they must leave these external rudiments and be guided onely by the Spirit Answ. This is a most pernicious and dangerous opinion for take away the Scriptures and you take away the Rule both of good life and sound doctrine and so open a gap to all Heresie and profanenesse 2. Neither is the Scripture onely necessary for young beginners but also for the regenerate and most holy men as appeares by the Inscriptions of almost all the Epistles which are written even to the Saints themselves Rom. 1.7 8. 1 Cor. 1.2 and
10.15 Phil. 3.15 2 Pet. 1.1 1 Iohn 2.12 Iude 1. Now the more these wicked ones cry down Gods Law the more we should cry it up the more they loath it the more we should love it As fountain water is warmest in the coldest weather by an Antiperistasis so should we by an holy Antiperistasis grow more hot and zealous in the defence of Gods word by how much the Atheistical and profane oppose it So did David Psal. 119.126 127. 't is time for thee Lord to work for the wicked have made voyd thy Law q. d. 't is time for thee Lord to shew some remarkable judgement upon these wicked men who go about to destroy not one or two but all thy Lawes Though men may connive and tolerate such yet the Lord who is a jealous God will not bear long with the tolerators of such blasphemies nor with the persons tolerated See how this opposition increased Davids love to the word verse 127 128. therefore do I love thy commandements above gold q. d. The more the wicked contemn thy Law the more do I prize it even above all the Riches and Treasures of the world See more against Antiscripturists in Mr. Ioseph Symonds's sight and faith cap 15. Mr. Lyford's Plain mans senses exercised p. 17. c. Brinsley's Virtig p. 165. c. Mr. Bourne against the Quakers p. 3 4. c. Mr. Fowler against the Quakers p. 47.52 Mr. Clapham against the Quakers p. 1 2 c. 2. If the Scriptures be the very word of God then it must needs follow that they are pure perfect infallible of highest Authority Majesty Antiquity Excellency the best Judge of controversies and the onely Rule of our lives both in Doctrinals and Practicals This we shall see clearly proved to us in Psal. 19.7 to 12. where we have sixteen Excellencies and Royalties of the word of God The Law of the Lord is 1. Perfect 2. Powerfull 3. Sure 4. Makes us truly wise 5. 'T is Right 6. Comfortable 7. Pure 8. 'T is a Light 9. 'T is cleane 10. 'T is eternall 11. 'T is true 12. Righteous 13. Profitable 14. Pleasant 15. A preservative against sin 16. It brings great Reward 1. 'T is Perfect V. 7. The Law of the Lord is perfect i. e. the whole word of God As God is perfect and hath a self-sufficiency in himself so is his word 'T is so perfect that nothing may be added to it or taken from it 'T is perfect formaliter in it self and perfect effectivè making us perfect and if the Five Books of Moses which was the first holy Scripture that was delivered to the Church was sufficient for the instruction of the people of that time so that they might not depart from it either to the right hand or the left Deut. 4.2 how much more compleat is the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles which doth more clearly set forth what Moses delivered both in Precepts and Promises in Practice and Examples Here is nothing superfluous nothing defective 't is a perfect Law of Liberty Iames 1.25 which admits of no addition or diminution Proverbs 30.6 Revelations 22.18 19. Caut. Not that Preaching is to be counted an adding as the Quakers vainly and ignorantly imagine and therefore cry out when they hear us expound the word oh take heed of adding to the word whereas adding of mens Traditions and inventions is one thing and Preaching and expouding the word in its proper sense and meaning for the edification of Gods people is another thing This the Levites practised Nehem. 8.7 8. they gave the sense of the Law So did Paul Acts 9.22 he confounded the Jewes how 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 collatis testimoniis by comparing one Scripture with another So Christ expounded the Scripture Luke 24.27 and so did Philip. Acts 8.30 Explication is one thing and adding is another we coyne no new Scriptures but only expound the old what we deliver is for substance agreeable to Gods word and must therefore be believed and obeyed by us David had seen an end of all created perfection but Gods Law is exceeding large Psal. 119.96 he had seen Riches in Saul Beauty in Absolom Strength in Goliah Policy in Achitophel and he saw an end of them all they were but finite transitory things too low to give any true content to the mind of man but he found Gods word perfect and All-sufficient nothing pertaining to Holinesse or Happinesse comfort or co●tentment is wanting to Gods Law nor shall be to him that believes and obeyes it for the dimensions of it are large as God himself in truth and goodnesse infinite permanent and soul-satisfying Hence David expresseth his Transcendent Love to Gods transcendent Law by a Patheticall exclamation Psalm 119.97 O how I love thy Law it is my meditation all the day 2. 'T is exceeding powerful there 's latens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a hidden efficacy in it to convert the soul Psal. 19.7 and save the soul. Iames 1.21 Luke 16.29.31 Ioh 20.31 which no Philosophy nor humane eloquence can do Nature cannot cure us of our Hereditary connatural sins but the Scripture offers more grace Iames 4.6 i. e. it gives grace and strength to conquer and subdue the strongest lusts Hence it 's called a Hammer which can break the hardest hearts Ier. 23.29 a fire that consumes our strongest lusts Salt that keeps us from rotting in our sin 'T is as a Naile and an Arrow in the hearts of Gods enemies to subdue them Psal. 45.6 and fasten them Eccles. 12.11 The Majesty and Power of the Scripture is wonderfull almost in every line so that it breeds admiration in a considerate Reader By this the spirit changeth Lions into Lambs by it he raiseth us from death to life from bondage to liberty from darknesse to light and from the power of Satan unto God Insomuch as a wicked Minister by preaching it may convert soules Ier. 23.22 It must needs be powerfull because the spirit is in it which is mighty in operation and the promise is with it that if we hear and obey we shall live Isay 55.3 This can can change a Saul into a Paul it can make a Felix tremble and an Herod feare It never returnes in vain like the bow of Ionathan and the sword of Saul it never returnes empty from the battle 2 Sam. 1.23 This is that two-edged sword by which we offend our adversaries and defend our selves I may say of it as David said of Goliah's sword There is none like that 3. 'T is sure Psalm 19.7 the Testimony of the Lord is sure the word is called a Testimony because it testifies our duty de facto de jure de praemio it tells us what hath been done by others what we ought to do our selves and what our Reward shall be for so doing This word is more sure then the Pillars of the earth or the Poles of heaven they may fall and faile but not one Jod
or Tittle of Gods word shall perish Mat. 5.18 Hence it 's called a more sure i. e. a most sure word 2 Pet. 1.19 'T is a certain infallible word it hath been often tried yet never failed nor deceived those that trusted in it Psal. 12.6 we love faithfull friends and such as will stick to us in our misery oh then love the faithful and sure word of God which will never leave you nor forsake you but in the very pangs of death will minister strong consolation to you 'T is in the word that we find the everlasting Covenant even the sure mercies of David i. e. of Christ who in respect of the flesh descended from David Isay 55.3 there we find by whom our sins are pardoned our Natures healed our Soules are saved these are called sure mercies 1. In respect of performance they are as sure as if already done 2 Sam. 23.6 2. Sure in respect of continuance they shall never be taken away his mercy endures for ever Once adopted justified fanctisied and for ever so 2 Sam. 7.13 Iohn 13.1 Let us not then sit down content with those low perishing uncertain things but get interest in those sure desireable and soule-satisfying mercies Pray with Saint Au●l●● Da mihi nummum nunquam periturum Lord give me those riches which will never perish 4. It maketh the simple wise and that to salvation Many that are sensible of their ignorance and simplicity are discouraged from reading the word when the promise runs to such as being sensible of their own silly bruitish condition and come with humble tractable teachable hearts that they shall be taught wisdom Prov. 1.4 and 19.4 Psal. 119.130 and become wiser then the ancient who by their long experience oft times get much wisdom 2. Wiser then their Teachers who usually excell their Schollers 3. Wiser then their enemies who yet by their continual diving and searching into the wayes of their opposites grow very subtle and cunning Psal. 119.98 99 100. 5. The word of the Lord is right and strait having no crookednesse nor perversenesse in it Wicked men go about and fetch a compasse in wayes of sin but the godly run the way of the plain and out-run them as Ahimaaz did Cushi 2 Sam. 18.23 6. It breeds joy in every soul that orders his life according to it V. 8. the godly find 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 somewhat of kin to them in the word which makes them delight in it Though the wicked can find no joy there yet an upright-hearted David finds it sweeter then hony and more pretious then gold they are even the joy and rejoycing of their hearts Psalm 119.111 this breeds solid serious substantial spiritual joy in the deepest afflictions and tentation Psal. 119.92 I had perished in my affliction unlesse thy Law had been my delight It was not onely delightfull but even delight in the Abstract yea delights in the Plurall number he found delight upon delight i. e. great and sure delight in Gods word It upholds the heart from sinking under affliction 'T will make a Paul and Silas sing Psalmes in prison when Creature-comforts faile yet faith can feed upon the Promises Habbak 3.17 Hebrews 13.5 The word affords us presidents of greater trialls then ever yet we have undergone and so comforts us in our distresses Do thy children rise against thee so did Davids Do Princes speak against thee and thy famliar friends betray thee so did his Psal. 55. Hast lost all so did Iob. Art cast into some loathsome prison so was Ieremy c. besides the word comforts us by shewing how all things work together for good unto us Rom. 8.28 and that God afflicts us for good ends 7. 'T is pure not onely formaliter in se being free from all the dross and dregs of sin a corruption but effectivè because 't is a special meanes to purify and cleanse us Iohn 17.17 Purity is or at leastwise ought to be the Object of our love God is pure his word is pure his works are pure and therefore do the Saints love them so did David Psalm 119.140 thy word is very pure What followes therefore doth thy servant love it 8. It enlighteneth the eyes V. 8. 't is a light and a lamp to us Psalm 119.105 to have our bodily sight restored is a mercy but to have our dark understandings enlightened to see the deeps of our misery and the riches of Gods mercy this is the mercy of mercies Now the word is the meanes by which the spirit conveighs both sight and light to us by it he calls us out of our dark and doleful condition into marvellous light 1 Pet. 2.9 The light of the Sun is a pleasant thing but oh how sweet and pleasant is this spiritual light which leads us to eternal happinesse naturally there is a Vaile over all our hearts and therefore before we read we should beseech the Lord to remove the Vaile else we shalll never see the divine and supernatural mysteries of Gods Law Psalm 119.18 9. The fear of the Lord is clean V. 9. The world is called the feare of God effectivè from the effect of it because it both teacheth and worketh in us the true fear of God 'T is clean 1. in se it hath no sin nor approbation of sin in it 2. Quoad nos 't is a meanes to make us clean helping to purge out that froth and filth of sin which makes us loathsome to God and his Saints 10. 'T is eternal and perpetual the Lawes of men are changed and abrogated but the Law of God is like God himself it endures for ever maugre the malice of all opposers The grasse may wither and the flower fade but the word of the Lord abides for ever Psal. 119.89 Isay 40.8 1 Pet. 1.24 25. We use to prize durable things lasting cloaths and long enduring Leases men desire oh set your hearts on Gods word which endures and will make you endure for ever if you obey it 1 Ioh. 2.17 11. 'T is not only true but Truth it self V. 9. Iohn 17.17 the judgements of the Lord are Truth He calls Gods word by the name of judgements either because in it God denounceth judgements against wicked men or else because we must judge of our actions according to this Rule There 's no fraud nor falshood in them therefore they are called by way of Eminency The Scriptures of Truth Dan. 10. ult Colossians 1.1.5 As God is Truth so is his Word He is not like man that he should lye Not a Threatening in the Scripture but shall fall on the wicked and not a blessing promised but shall be fulfilled to the righteous 12. 'T is Righteous altogether as God is just and righteous so is his word Rom. 7.14 the Law is holy just and good three Epithets which can be applied to no Law but Gods only There 's no unrighteousness nor injustice in them Mens Lawes oft times are harsh hard
unrighteous so are not Gods they are perfectly just and righteous altogether 13. 'T is precious 1. In respect of profit 't is better then Gold ● In respect of pleasure 't is sweeter then hony By gold David notes all riches and the things of greatest worth in the world and by much fine Gold he meaneth all gold how pure or precious soever even the finest refined gold that hath been oftnest tried in the fire No riches like the word Hence David calls it his Heritage and Portion Psal. 119.11 as if he had nothing else in the world to trust to and therefore he prefers it before all worldly excellencies Psal. 119.72.127 the Law of thy mouth is better to me then thousands of gold and silver It excells Gold in five respects 1. Gold is but an Earthly good but the riches which the Scripture brings is Spirituall 2. 'T is but a common good wicked men as Esay Ahab Nabal the Turk the Pope have it in abundance a man may be outwardly great and yet inwardly miserable 't was great Caesar that said I have been all things and yet am never the better But the Grace which the Scripture brings is a speciall blessing peculiar but to a few 3. Gold cannot comfort a man in the day of distresse whether it be personal or national 'T is rather a snare then an Helper then Proverbs 11.4 Ezek. 7.19 Zeph. 1. ult But the word of God hath breasts full of consolation for the people of God in all their distresses Psalm 119.92 4. Gold cannot breed contentment yea the more men have oft-times the more they covet But the word teacheth men godlinesse and this in the power of it breeds contentment which is better then gold 1 Tim. 6.6 5. Gold may be lost Thieves may rob us of it rust may consume it and especially when death comes we must part with it But true Grace which is wrought in us by the word and spirit of God can never be lost Where ever we go it will go with us 'T is fidus Achates a faithfull friend which will never leave us till it have brought us to glory Rev. 14.13 Oh that I could convince men of the truth of this viz. that the saving knowledge of God in his word is better then Gold Tell men where they may have gold and we see how they ride run dig delve and all for a little perishing gold which cannot satisfy them Isay 55.2 But this true Treasure which is hidden in the word of God very few labour for and the Reason is mens hearts are earthly carnal sensual and savour not the things of God Oh that such would hearken to the counsell of Solomon Prov. 8.10 11. receive instruction and not silver and knowledge rather then choice gold Prov. 3.14 15. and to a greater then Solomon Revel 3.18 Buy of me gold i. e. the Graces of the Spirit as Knowledge Faith Obedience c. Build not on the Hay Wood Stubble of mens fancies and inventions but build on the pure sure sound doctrine arising from Gods word this is called Gold 1 Cor. 3.12 and one day will be better to us then all the gold in the world 14. For delight and pleasantnesse Gods word is sweeter then Honey yea then the purest finest honey which flows from the comb Prov. 24.13 14. and 16.24 the lips of the spouse are said to drop as the honey comb i. e. her words are very pleasant sweet and grateful Cant. 5 3. and when the Scripture would express the sweetnesse of any thing it borroweth this allusion sweeter then honey Ezek. 3.3 Revel 10.9 10. Old men are all for profit and young men for pleasure here is gold for the one and honey for the other Gods word brings more true pleasure to the soules of those that obey it then the sweetest honey doth to the taste Quest. If the word be thus precious and sweet how comes it to passe that most men in the world see not the preciousnesse nor taste the sweetnesse of it Answ. The God of this world hath so blinded their eyes that they cannot see the Excellencies of the word The Sun is full of light and lustre but the blind man for want of sight cannot discern it The word is full of sweetnesse but mens hearts are so taken up with the enjoyment of present things that they cannot taste nor relish the things of God 'T is but lost labour to put a cordial in a dead mans mouth The fault then is not in the word which is as precious pure delightfull and sweet as ever but the fault is in our corrupt minds which are so blinded and hardned with sin that we cannot perceive nor receive the word Let 's beseech the Lord to spiritualize our hearts and then we shall be able experimentally to say How sweet are thy words unto my taste yea sweeter then Honey to my mouth Psal. 119.103 As none know the sweetnesse of honey but such as have tasted it so none know the sweetnesse of Gods word but the people of God who experimentally know the worth of it To them and to them onely 't is more precious then gold and sweeter then honey To them the most excellent and delightfull things in the world are base and bitter drosse and dung loathsome and noysome in comparison of Gods word 15. 'T is a speciall preservative against sin V. 11. and Psal. 119.11 't is one speciall piece and part of our spiritual armour whereby we defend our selves against sin and Satan Ephes. 6.17 by this Christ Steven Paul and the Martyrs defended themselves and offended their enemies Matth. 4.47 This will Antidote and arm us with invincible arguments against sin and Satan Doth the Devill tempt thee to covetousnesse cruelty Usury the word will tell thee that no such person shall come into Gods Kingdome Psal. 15.5 Gal. 5.22 Art given to fornication adultery uncleannesse the word will tell thee that God will judge such Heb. 13.4 Art tempted to Apostasy remember Heb. 10.38 Mark 8. ult Rev. 21.8 Art tempted to pride remember God resists the proud Iames 4.6 1 Pet. 5.5 Art tempted to hypocrisy remember Hypocrites have the lowest place in hell Matth. 24.51 Art tempted to defraud and over-reach thy neighbour remember the Lord is an avenger of all these things 1 Thes. 4.6 though men may carry many things so subtilly as to escape the justice of men yet they shall never escape the hand of God Art tempted to break thy Covenant the Scriptures still tell thee what befell Zedekiah for this sin Ezek. 17 18. The very root of all that Atheisme and Profanenesse that is amongst us is this that either men do not know the Scriptures or else they do not believe them 16. It brings a great Reward not to those that onely hear it know it praise it but to those that practise it V. 11. yea the very obeying of Gods commandements is a reward it self
so Tobit 6.7 with the smoak of the Liver of a Fish he drives away the Devil but the Scripture saith Fide non Fumo by Faith and not by smoke we must resist him So Tobit 12.9.12.13 he makes the Angel not Christ to offer up the Prayers of the Saints to God Ecclesiasticus 22.22 and 2 Maccab 12.43.47 there is offering sacrifice for the dead See strong Reasons against them Doctor Reynolds Lect. de Lib. Apochry Bishop Vshers Body of Divinity page 14.15 Master Leighs Body of Divinity l. 1. c. 5. D. Whitaker de script Controv. 1 Q. 1. cap. 3. Rivels Isagoge ad Script c. 7. Sharpii Cursus Theolog. Contr. to page 6. 5. Is the Scripture the Word of God Oh love it then for the Authours sake we usually esteem of writings according to the Eminency and Dignity of the Authour now all Scripture is given by inspiration from God and is to be prized as the Epistle and Love-Letter of the Great God to the sonnes of men 'T is one of the chiefest gifts which ever God gave it is a greater mercy then the Sun or the Light of Heaven 'T is this we must be judged by at the last day Iohn 12.48 Not a Chapter we read nor a Text that is expounded to us but will be a witness for us or against us for our comfort or conviction at that great day Be ruled then by it since you must be judged by it and chuse rather to die then to sin against it Set your affections on it see that you love it 1. Cordially not Superficially Write it not onely in your Heads or Note-Books but get it written upon your hearts and engraven on your souls then you will delight to do Gods Will Psalm 40.8 doe not onely read it but eat it and by Meditation digest it that it may be to you the Rejoycing of your hearts Ier. 15.16 We should as readily and willingly receive Gods Word as an hungry man doth meat 2. Love it Superlatively do not love it as you do your beast or other creatures with a low carnal sensual Love but love the Scriptures next to God Appretiativè intensivè Affectu Effectu with the highest intention of Affection even above riches Pleasures yea and our appointed food Iob 23.12 I have esteemed the words of his mouth more then my necessary food He loved it more then any food absolutely and preferred it before his necessary food without which his life could not subsist he had rather loose his meals then his meditations on Gods Word He esteemed it more not onely then dainties or superfluities but then substantial food without which he could not live and subsist As a Reverend Divine of ours hath well observed 3. Love it ●ractically Love it so as to obey it this is the end of all our Reading and Hearing viz. that we may doe it Deuteronomy 4.6.14 and 51. and 6.3 and 11.32 It is not knowing nor praysing but practising that bringeth blessednesse Iohn 13.17 Psalm 15. ult Iam. 1.25 Revelations 22.14 Though Obedience be not the Meritorious cause of our salvation yet it is a good Evidence of it It is Via ad Regnum non causa Regnandi Luke 11.28 Romans 2.13 At the last day Christ will demand not what have we read or said but what have we done Matthew 7.22 and 25.35 Many are bare hearers but not doers of the Word and so play the Sophisters in deceiving themselves and others with showes insteed of substance Iames 1.22 To obey the Word of God in our Life is our Wisedome Deuteronomy 4.6 Hence Christ calleth him a wise man that heareth the Word and doth it Matthew 7.24 These are Verba vivenda non legenda not barely to be read but practised Hereby we honour God and so shall be honoured of him again Iohn 15.8 One Practical Christian bringeth more glory to God then a thousand Notional formall Professours This made Paul commend the Romans 6.17 not for bare professing but for obeying from the heart that form of Doctrine which was delivered to them and Christ preferreth such as Doe his Will before his natural Kindred Matthew 12.47 Hereby we shall experimentally know the Truth of Gods Word Iohn 17.17 When men believe the Word submit to it and are content to be ruled by it in all things they shall Experimentally know the truth of it Knowledge helps much to Practice and Practice helps much to Knowledge It is not talkeing of Wine but drinking of it that comforts and chears the heart The Theory of Musick is delightfull but the Practice is farre more Excellent and Pleasant A reall good Man is Decalogus Explicatus a living Decalogue his Life is a Comment on the Commandements The Word is written in his Heart and held forth in his Life Philippians 2.16 Holding forth the Word of Life He doth not onely lay up the Word in Hearing but he doth hold it forth in ordering all his Actions according to it And this is an Evidence that we are truely Godly Iohn 14.15 1 Iohn 3.24 And serveth to distinguish us from all the Hypocrites in the World who onely talke of Religion and cry Lord Lord Matthew 7.22 23. they come and hear But they will not doe it Ezekiel 33.31 32. that But is a blot and spoils all As it was said of Naaman the Syrian He was a Valiant man But he was a Leper that but was a blemish So we may say of many formal Professours they can talk excellently and have good Parts But they are covetous cruel proud malicious censorious c. Fie on these Buts they are the Coloquintida that spoils all These are the Botches and blemishes of Religion and cause it to be evil spoken of as the Indians said of the Spaniards when they saw their cruelty Surely that God cannot be good that hath such wicked servants So Ezek. 36.20 the profane Iewes caused Gods Name to be profaned and evil spoken of by reason of their lewdness when the Enemy cried These are the people of the Lord and are gone forth of his Land q. d. These are the holy people see what kind of Inhabitants God had in his Holy Land On the contrary when Gods people walke up to their Principles and Priviledges answering their Gospel Light with Gospel lives being burning and shining lights and leading convincing lives 1. Either they shall convince the wicked and stoppe their mouths that they shall have nothing justly against them 2. Or else convert them as Iustin Martyr confesseth that the Holy lives of the Christians taught him the Christian Religion by seeing their Constancy Patience Humility and cheerfulness in suffering it won him to the Gospel Oh then let us be doers of Gods Will this is more pleasing to him then all Duties without it Obedience is better then Sacrifice 1 Samuel 15. A heart without words is better then words without an heart a grain of Grace is better then many pounds
Isay 12.3 We see how worldlings delight to view their Bills and Bonds their Leases and Indentures by which they hold their lands and livings and shall not we delight to study the Scripture which assureth us of never-fadeing Riches May be Perfect Objection The Quakers finding here the word Perfect presently dream of an Absolute Perfection as their Kinse-men the Papists doe of a Legal perfection when they say a man may live in this World without sinn● and may perfectly fulfil the Law in his own person Answer These are meere Fancies for the Apostle speaketh here of a Ministeriall Perfection and not of any Legall or Absolute Perfection Now a man may have Ministeriall Perfection and yet be farre from salvation he may be fitted for his Office and yet unfit for Heaven Witnesse Iudas and those Preachers whom Christ knew not Matthew 7.22 2. In Scripture phrase Sincerity is called Perfection the ignorance of the Quakers in this particular is the very ground of this their errour See Genesis 17.1 1 Kings 15.14 Iob 1.1 Matthew 5.48 Colossians 2.28 and 4.12 Then God accounts us perfect when we sincerely strive after perfection though in this Life we cannot attain our full desires yet in respect of inchoation intention and purpose though not in respect of pervention and full obtaining that purpose we are called perfect Grace in this Life is but Opus in fieri not in facto esse a work in doing not fully done Perfecti sumus spe erimus Re. Our greatest perfection in this life is to bewail our imperfections and our greatest righteousnesse is to lament our unrighteousnesse A gracious Soul setteth up no Hercules Pillars beyond which he will not passe but he hath his Plus ultra still he striveth forward after perfection Phillippians 3.12 13. 3. There is a Perfection of Degrees which is twofold 1. Relative or Comparative being compared with that which is weak and very small and in this sense Believers that have attained to a great measure of Gifts and Grace are called perfect Philippians 3.15 Hebrews 5.14 the word is the same in both places in the Original and strong men in Christ not Simply and Absolutely but Comparatively and in respect of those that are weaklings and babes in the Faith and beginners in the School of Christ 1 Cor. 3.1 Heb. 5.13 2. There is an Absolute perfection of Degrees when the whole Man is wholly perfect being wholly freed from sinne and all its concomitants and this is not to be lookt for in Via in this Life but in Patria in the Life to come Here we are Viatores travelling towards it but in Heaven we shall be comprehens●res fully enjoying it Earth is the place of desiring but Heaven of enjoying the height of perfection Here the best are imperfect both in Knowledge and obedience Philip. 3.12 Iames 3.2 1 Cor. 13.12 but in Heaven we shall be absolutely perfect we shall be free from sinne and from the very possibility of sinning 1 Corinthians 13.10 Eph. 4.13 The Quakers boast much of this absolute perfection but alas their Rayling Pride Lying Blasphemy Heresie Ignorance and Obstinacy shews that they are perfect sinners rather than perfect Saints See their folly in this point discovered fully in Perfect Pharisee Posit 10. Reyners Government of the Tongue p. 327. to 362. Eaton against the Quakers p. 17.60 61. Fenners Remains p. 105. Doctor Owen against Biddle cap. 33. Throughly furnished unto all good Works Here is the last but not the least commendation of the Scripture viz. That by it the people of God and specially the Ministers of Gods Word may be furnished throughly furnished not to one or two but unto every good work especially those of his Ministery before recited The word in the Original is Emphatical and signifieth such a compleat furnishing as will fit a Minister for all the Duties of his Calling It will teach him how to give to every one their Portion To the Ignorant Instruction to the Erronious Confutation to the obstinate Terrour to the distressed Consolation and to the backward Exhortation Some Ministers will open a T●●t well and inform the judgement but make no Application which is the life of teaching no wonder if such see no Fruit of their Ministery since they fail in their duty He that will win souls must deliver to his people the whole Counsel of God Acts 20.26 27. He must not keep back any thing necessary to salvation neither for fear nor favour 2. As we must discharge our whole duty so you must submit to all the Parts and Duties of our calling you must not onely suffer the word of Doctrin to inform your heads but you must also suffer the word of exhortation to work upon your hearts Heb. 13.22 So long as we preach in Thesi and onely inform your judgements you prayse and admire ●●s but when we come ad Hypothesin to apply the word to your souls and lay the axe to the root of the Tree you fret and fume accounting us for your enemies because we tell you the Truth Many can away with Expounding of Scripture for Information but the Application of it to their sinnes and soares they cannot endure They cry out Cannot the Minister ●et us alo●e Cannot we be Proud and Prodigall but he must still be telling us of it Who biddeth him meddle with us Answer God It is he that commands us not onely to teach but to reprove and he doth his worke to halves that onely informeth the Judgement and doth not looke upon the Affections It were more for our ease to let you rot and perish in your sinne but how then should we be Faithfull to our God and your Souls Had yo● grace you would finde so much sinne and scumme within you that you would finde as much neede of Reproofe and Exhortation to fight against Corruption as Information to convince you of it 3. As the Pastor so the People must reade and meditate on the Word that they also may be fitted for all good works in their places and callings Here every man may learn what to believe and doe Here are Lessons for Magistrates Masters and Servants Parents and Children Here you may be furnished with Directions how to walke Religiously towards God and Righteously towards Man The Scripture is no Doctrine of loosenesse it fitteth and furnisheth us for well doing and not for ill doing In every line thereof we may reade Holynesse to the Lord. More is required of a Minister who is the Eye and Mouth of a People and if he may be perfectly instructed by them how to perform the duties of his Calling how much more are they able to give every ordinary Man sufficient instruction how to walke with his God in the place where he hath set him The end of the Third Chapter An Exposition upon the Second Epistle of TIMOTHY CHAP. 4. VERSE 1. I charge thee therefore before God and before the Lord Iesus Christ who shall
suffering frame of Spirit Long-suffering yea all Long-suffering and Patience that he may be able to bear with the weak not despair of the wicked nor rashly cast off any but patiently wait till the Lord shall give them repentance to salvation As the Apostle prayed for his Colossians 1.11 that they might be strengthened with Patience yea all patienee so we had need to pray for our selves that God would strengthen us with Long-suffering yea with All long-suffering that we may patiently endure the reproaches and indignities which attend our callings and are annexed to our Orders that so we may condescend and stoop to the slowness and dulness weakness and waywardness of our people This will make us like to God who beareth long and is slow to wrath Exodus 34 6. Romans 9.22 Objection The Apostle commandeth Titus to be sharp and severe Titus 1.13 Answer Distinguish the persons and the doubt is resolved The Cretians to whom Titus preached were rugged and refractory now a hard knot must have a hard wedge But the Ephesians to whom Timothy was sent were of a better temper and disposition as appeareth Acts 20.32 and therefore to be more meekly and mildly dealt withall 2. Others draw the difference from the persons to whom the Apostle writ the one was Timothy who they say was severe and austere and is therefore exhorted to lenity and patience The other Titus who they say was gentle of nature and mild and is therefore stirred up to sharpnesse and severity And with All Doctrine The Apostle very seasonably addeth this Caution and Qualification viz. That all our reproofs and exhortations should have a good foundation and be grounded on sound Doctrine being clearly agreeable to Gods Word and Will Let a man preach never so fervently and affectionately yet unlesse by Scripture Arguments he convince me of my sin and errour he doth but beat the Aire and all that he saith doth but vanish into smoak Doctrine must be laid as the ground of all and a reason of the reproof must be given Man is a rational creature and it is not words but solid Arguments that must convince him stir him comfort him Many young men make a great noise they flutter and make a great clutter in a Pulpit they have many high-flowen words and that is all The emptiest carts maketh the greatest rattle and the emptiest barrels the loudest sound but for want of substantial Arguments they leave their Auditors unsatisfied and unwrought upon would you not then have their advice contemned convince their Auditors of the Truth of what you say and then they will yea they must submit or doe worse Now these two Qualifications are very necessary for a Minister 1. He had need of a great deal of patience to undergo the oppositions and reproaches of an ungrateful world 2. He had need to be accomplished with all manner of Learning that he may be able to stop the mouths of all gain-sayers Observations 1. Note Gods Timothies onely who are called and set apart by Imposition of hands for the work of the Ministery must Preach the Word Preaching is not every mans work in common it belongs not to the flock but to the Pastors and Leaders of the flock The Apostle layes not the Injunction upon all but onely on Timothies who are fitted and ordained to the work Every Minister is an Herald an Ambassador an Officer and must not go without his Commission nor deliver any thing but what his Lord who sends him shall give him in charge Acts 20.27 Faith comes not by hearing every speaker but by attending on such Preachers as are sent Romans 10.15 If any run before they are sent they may speak as long as they please but they shall never benefit the people Ier. 23.32 But of this see more at large in my Pulpit-Guard 2. Observation Ministers must be Preachers As they must be Ministers i. Men called to the Work So when they are called not onely they may but they must Preach There is a necessity lieth upon them yea a necessity backt with a Woe 1 Corinthians 9.16 So that they must either Preach or perish this must be done or they are undone Verbi Minister es Hoc age was Master Perkins his Motto Reading is not sufficient we must Preach and Expound the Word When God had given the Law to his People he presently appoints Priests and Levites to expound it to them Nehem. 8.7 8. Mal. 2.7 This is that great Ministerial Duty which the Apostle doth so seriously here press upon us This was the first thing which our Saviour gave in charge to his Apostles when he sent them forth into the World Matthew 10.7 Goe Preach and this was his last charge to them when he was leaving the World Goe Preach and Baptize Matthew 28 19. This he commanded Peter once and again that as he loved him he would feed his sheep Iohn 21. So that if we either love Christ or the soules of our Brethren or our own soules we must feed the flockes and be prompt and ready to Preach on all Occasions 1 Timothy 3.2 and 2.2 24. He must not conceal his gifts to himself but on all occasions he must be ready to communicate them to others 'T is true a Ministers Conversation must be unspotted and blamelesse but let him live never so well yet unlesse he Preach and faithfully discharge the Dueties of his calling he shall never convert souls As for dumbe Dogs and blinde watch-men they are worthless useless things not fit to be swineherds Let such lazy droans read Ierem. 23. and Ezekiel 34. and if they have not lost all sense and savour it will awaken them 3. Observation Ministers must not preach the fancies and inventions of men nor the Canons and Decrees of Prelates but they must Preach the pure Word of God They are Heralds and must keepe to the instructions of him that sent them without adding or dectracting If any man speake in the Church he must speak the Oracles of God 1 Peter 4.11 and what Christ commands Matth. 28.20 'T is the whole Word of God which we must preach both Law and Gospell the One will keepe us from Presumption and the Other from Despaire the One will Humble us and the Other will Raise us The Law makes way for the Gospel it breaketh the stubborne heart of man and maketh him prize a Saviour and cry out with Paul Acts 9.6 Lord what wilt thou that I shall doe q. d. I doe now Resigne and Devote my self wholly to thee I am ready to doe and suffer what ever thou shalt command me Thus the Preaching of the Law prepareth the heart for Christ and must first be preached the Spirits Method is first by the Law to convince us of the exceeding sinfulnesse of sin and then by the Gospel to convince us of Christs Righteousnesse Iohn 16.9 10. But our great Worke is to Preach the Gospell and the Law
it we may as the Traveller doth his Staffe but love it inordinately we may not unlesse we will renounce the Love of God 1 Iohn 2.15 Our love cannot stand in intense degrees to two such contrary Masters 3. Evil company is a great extinguisher of this Holy Fire scarce any thing more Hence zealous David commands evil company to depart Psalm 119.115 We must therefore be very choyce of our company for it hath great operation upon us either to good or evil As iron sharpens iron and one edged tool helps to sharpen another so God hath ordained the society of men to quicken men Conference and communication of experiences hath incredible profit in all Sciences Hence the Saints that lived in dead times did by conference excite and quicken each other in the wayes of God Mal. 3.16 17 4. Formality in Religion is a great enemy to zeal When men rest in a bare performance of duties without any power of godlyness this is the bane of Religion when ever we come to duties we should stir up the graces of Gods Spirit in us 2 Timothy 1.7 If fire be not blown and stirred up it will decay and goe out We must also dayly be adding fuel to it for where there is no fuel the fire goeth out Proverbs 26.20 Pray much men of much Prayer have been men of much zeal as we see in David Daniel Paul Bradford Frequent the Preaching of the Word Accede ad hunc ignem there is a hidden Vertue in this Ordinance to kindle this fire in our breasts which maketh the Devil so busie in drawing men to separation for he well knowes by long experience that if he can but get men out of Gods way they will soon decay in grace the body may assoon live without food as the soul can live without this bread of Life If any would see more let him peruse D. Corn. Burgess Treatise of Zeal Master Henry Hall's Sermon on Matthew 11.12 and Master Loves 4. Sermon on Matthew 11.12 Master Fenner on the Affections Sermon the ninth tenth eleventh Hildersham on Iohn 4.32 Lect. 56. Doctor Sibbs Beams of Light Sermon on Matthew 11.12 Master Ash his Sermon of Zeal 5. Observe Ministers must take all occasions to preach the Word They must preach on the Lords Day and on the week day in publick and private at home and abroad In prosperity and adversity In War and Peace In Prisons and Palaces We must not be Strawberry-Preachers as Bishop Latimer calleth them which come but once a year and are quickly gone again Not long since the Church was troubled with Canon-Preachers who preached according to the Canon once a moneth or once a day insteed of these we have State-Preachers who preach such stuffe for quality as may please the State and so much for quantity as will bring in their Angmentations no Catechizing of the flock no preaching on the week day unless Angels or Nobles call them No baptizing of Infants no fitting of the flocke for the Lords Supper but all lies at random and in confusion surely such Halving-Preachers should have half-pay Doth not he that commands us to Preach command us to Baptize also and to dispense the Lords Supper often Surely this is either not Scripture or els some of us do not doe our duty Let us therefore either do our duty or else cast off our Ministery and give place to such as will As the woman said to the King either do me justice and act as a King or else put off the Title so either let us do the whole work of our Ministery or put off the Name For nomen inane crimen immane Let us preach in season and out of season so did our Saviour he took all occasions to preach sometimes he preached in the Synagogues anon in a Mountain Matth. 5.1 sometimes in a ship Luke 5.3 and anon in a desert Luke 4.42 when the heart is willing it will find out opportunites of doing good So Paul preacheth in Synagogues in Houses by a Rivers side Act. 16.13 in prison Philem. 9. and on other occasions We are Gods Husbandmen and in the morning we must sowe our seed and in the Evening not be idle for some may prosper when we consider the great price that was paid for souls Acts 20.28 it must quicken us to redeeme all opportunities to gain them to Christ. Love is active but lazy persons have a thousand excuses either their bodies are unable the place unfit the company inconvenient c. Many Lions ly in the way of the sluggard but willing minds know no difficulties 6. Observe We are exceeding backward to the best things and have need of many admonitions and exhortations in season and out of season to quicken us in Gods work It 's much adoe to make us begin and when we have begun we are ready to look back on every discouragement Were there in us that Tractableness and teachableness which ought to be how easily might Ministers lead us in good paths 'T is prophesied of Gospel times that so meek and teachable men shall be that even a child with Scripture reason shall lead them Isay 11.6 A wicked man though you bring an hundred plain Scriptures yet he will not be convinced but a gracious soul if he have but a little hint from Scripture that what he holds or doth is displeasing to God he presently casts it off We should therefore lament the sad depravation of our Natures that have need of so much quickning to the best things Many wonder why we are so fervent and frequent in reproofs why our necessitie requires it and God in this Text injoynes it Many love us whilest we comfort them but when we come to cutting reproving and launcing their soares then they look upon us as enemies See more before on 2 Timothy 3.16 7. Observe Application must be joyned to Doctrine The Foundation and the building must go together for a foundation without a building argues the folly of him that laid it and a building without a Foundation will soon fall 'T is not sufficient that by sound Doctrine we inform the judgement but by Application we must work it on the Affections This is the very life of Preaching Doctrine is the whole loaf as 't were but Application is the dividing the word aright and distributing thereof to every one according to their several conditions For these very ends and uses God hath given us his word 2 Tim. 3.16 VERS 3 4. For the time will come that they will not endure sound Doctrine but after their owne Lusts shall they heap to themselves Teachers haveing itching eares 4. And they shall turne away their Eares from the Truth and shall be turned to Fables IN these words we have an Apostolical Prophesie of the petulancy and peril of the last times when men will grow weary of sound Doctrine and fall to the embracing of fabulous and vain opinions insteed of truth The words are to be considered Relatively as depending on
the precedent Verses and so they contain in them a Reason of the Apostles solmemne Adjuration by which he stireth up Timothy to a careful discharge of his Duety in Preaching the word viz. in respect of the Apostacy of the last times when many would fall from the truth grow weary of sound Doctrine and follow fables where we have 1. The grounds of their Apostacy viz. their hatred of the Truth they will not endure sound Doctrine id est they will reject it and cast it behind their backs they hate and abhor it 'T is a Meiosis where less is spoken then is meant They look upon it as a grievous burden as Israel did upon the Doctrine and Visions of the Prophets Ieremiah 13.34.36 'T is not so much they cannot but they will not endure sound Doctrine they love their lusts above the Law and therefore they hate him that reproves in the gates They are so far from obeying it that they will not once hear it and so farre from loving it that they will not so much as Tolerate it Errours they can tolerate and superstition they can tolerate but the Truth they cannot bear By sound Doctrine is meant the pure Word of God which hath no Errour nor evil mixed with it but is sound in se and sound Effectivè It sheweth unto men their sinne which is the Souls sicknesse brings them to a Saviour and so makes the conscience sound and whole This is called Saving Doctrine and sound Wisedome Proverbs 2.7 and 3.21 and is opposed to Fables and Humane inventions by which the simplicity of the Gospel is corrupted 2. A second ground of their Apostasy is their delight in false Teachers they so doat on them that one or two will not content them they must have heaps of them They love their lusts and therefore they seek out for such Teachers as may not disquiet them Such as erre cannot rest but they must run from one Teacher to another they get heaps of such claw-backs to themselves i. They wittingly and willingly suffer themselves to be deluded by them The word sinifies 1. An earnest desire of getting such Teachers 2. It notes an indiscreet and confused gathering together of such a multitude of Teachers without wit or reason without any respect either to their life or learning as in an heap all is confused there is neither first nor last head nor tail but all 's mixt together so amongst these confused persons all 's confused there 's no Master and Schollars superior and inferior but all are levelled and equal like themselves hence they are said to heap to themselves Teachers The Disciples create their Doctors talis creatio fit ex nihilo they be not chosen and ordained in an orderly way but which is the height of baseness the lusts of their followers are their call One loves Antinomianism and he gets an heap of Antinomians to speak to him Another loves Quakerism and he gets an heap of Quakers to scratch his itch Thus according to mens corrupt humors they have their Teachers As the Lord complained of his people Ier. 2.28 According to the number of Cities thy are thy Gods O Iudah So according to the variety of mens lusts they get them Leaders They cannot endure to be bound to one faithful Pastor who watcheth over his Flock and preacheth solid Truths but they love such as will claw their itch and sing Placebo 3. A third cause of their Apostasy is that inmate malice and inbred concupiscence which is in the hearts of men They are lead by their peculiar lusts every one hath his dilectum delictum his darling sin one's for luxury and another for heresy c. Now according to these lusts they earnestly seek out for Teachers which may in no wise disquiet their lusts which are their Lords and which they love as their lives Rom. 1.4 Iude 16. The Vulgar renders the word Desires after their own desires they shall get Teachers But the word in the Original is Lusts which implies not a simple desire or sudden motion but a vehement ardent earnest desire pursuit of a thing 4. They have itching ears this is another reason why they seek out for false Teachers they love not such as deal plainly and faithfully with them they must have such as will claw their itch please their humors tickle their fancies with novelties and curiosities but they must in no wise touch their vices 2. Here is the issue and consequence of their contempt of the truth and the fruit of this mad Itch. viz. the loss of truth and following Fables They shall turn away their ears from the truth viz. of the Gospel which flatters no man they 'l reject sound doctrine which is sharp and curbs their lusts and turn to Fables which will gratifie them since they can find nothing in the word which may please their itching humor they will see what Fables and lying Legends will do but all in vain for as a man that hath his itch scratcht for present is pleased but after hath more pain then before so these after they have wearied themselves in pursuit of lying vanities at last lye down in greater sorrow These are marble to God and wax to the Devil the truth they cannot obey but they willingly obey unrighteousness This is the Devils method First he stops the ear against sound Doctrine and then he opens it to error Like a cruel Thief he draws the soul out of the right road into some wood by-lane or corner and there binds robs and rifles it Quest. What Fables doth the Apostle here mean Answ. 1. Some say Judaical Fables as Titus 1.14 1 Tim. 1.4 Where Fables and Genealogies are joyned together 2. Others conceive the Apostle Means the Fabulous Divinity of the Gnosticks made up of Judaism and Gentilism These are too narrow the words are to be taken more largely and generally for any Fables and erroneous Doctrine be it never so absurd or impious proceeding whether from Jews or Gentiles from Hereticks or Schismaticks they 'l prefer falshood before truth darkness before light and death before life The summe and substance of all is this q. d. O my son Timothy this exhortation and adjuration of mine in pressing thee to an ear●●● and diligent preaching of the Word is not need less and vain for although thou hast now an opportunity of preaching yet the time will come yea is already begun when men will not away with sound doctrine but by reason of their lusts they will multiply to themselves variety of pleasing Teachers having itching ears which altogether affect Novelty of Doctrines and curious speculations insomuch that they will forsake the truth to follow Fables which will lead them to destruction Observations Observation 1. God not onely knoweth what Men do at present and what they have done but what they will do in time to come He tells Timothy here what will be done
those that are cloathed in scarlet are tainted with this du●ghil disease the Oaks of Bashan and the Cedars of Lebanon are become as so many Reeds shaken with every blast of strange Doctrine and every N●vel opinion is ready to transport them from the Truth to Fables 'T was Iohn Baptists glory and 't will be ours to be no such Reeds Matth. 11.7 An Itch of Popularity and applause they long to be in Print when they have been in travel with their New-notions they are even sick till they be publisht to the world They love to have it said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this is he that is in Print against Infant-Baptism against Magistracy against Ministery against the Trinity c. It 's pitty but some were better physickt for this Itch. Others have an Itch to be in the Pulpit and must in all hast be Teachers of others before they have learned themselves These would have some salt throwen on their Itch. 5. An itch after smooth pleasing preaching These itching ears love flattering Pr●●chers Isai. 30.20 They love to be clawed They have Musical-ears the Prophet's eloquence may delight them as some pleasing song but his wholesom direction they will not follow Ezek. 33.31 32. Plain-preaching is too harsh for their dainty ears they cannot endure to have those courses contradicted which they have pitcht upon and to which they have addicted themselves Neither can they endure to hear any one man long they must have an heap of Teachers They love to hear high-flowen-notions that they may discourse above the rate of their neighbours their curious Palats disrelish common food Priviledges when preacht please them but positive duties distast them These are high in their Notions but low in their practicals like children that have the Rickets grow in the head wither in the feet 6. An Itch of disputing We have many that love to question everything but they beleeve nothing They desire rather to dispute well then to live well This is the scab blemish of our age This Itch of Disputing hath almost destroyed all the Power of Godliness When men fall to wrangling they deal but truth as I have read many Suitors did by a Virgin one would have her another would have her tell at last they had pulled her all to pieces Luthers prayer therefore shall be mine From frivolous fruitless controversies good Lord deliver us Whilst men spend their strength and time about mint and cummin the weighty matters of the Law lye unregarded Better want a disputative-knowledge then that savory sanctifying affective-knowledge which will enable to die for the Truth though we cannot dispute for it 'T is holiness and obedience not disputing and wrangling which is the way to happiness 'T is well observed by one that disputations in Religion are sometimes necessary but alwayes dangerous drawing the best spirits into the head from the heart and leaving it either empty of all or too full of fleshly zeal and passion if extraordinary care be not taken still to supply and fill it anew with pious affections towards God and loving towards men 7. A quarreling contradicting itch which like a tetter the more it is rubbed the more it spreads it self They have critical ears they come to arraign the Minister at the Bar of their own judgment to judge that word by which they must be judged These come not to practice the Sermon but to quarrel with the Preacher Salamander like they love to live in the fire of contention God loves not saith Luther such Curists and Quaerists i. Such as are alwayes to their Cur why is it thus and thus and their Vtrums whether it be so and so We must believe and obey but not reason with God about his Commands there must be a quiet resignation of our wills to Gods Will. Thologia nostra est Pythagorica God hath said it and that 's sufficient to quiet a gracious soul. Fides est quietativa non disputativa Faith quietly and readily obeyes it doth not dispute Gods Command A beleever is not quarreling when he should be doing his duty It 's a good sign we are sincere when we do all things without murmuring and quarreling Philip. 2.14 15. We should therefore cast off all wranglings about toyes and trifles about niceties and novelties about things whereof we can neither have proof nor profit The cure of this Itch is 1. To acquiesce in the pure Word of God without any hunting after Novelties and Curiosities Love the Law and then ye will neither forget nor forsake it to follow Fables The root of Apostasy is want of affection to the Word when men serve not God with gladness of heart in the aboundance of spiritual mercies but grow weary of truth loath this Heavenly Mannah then 't is just with God to give them up to strong delusions to believe lyes Iob 12.16 Ezek. 24.4 9. 2 Thes. 2.11 When men will not be servants to Truth 't is just with God that they should be slaves to sin and error and when they will not serve God in the enjoyment of Ordinances they should serve their lusts in the want of them Amos 8.11 2. Take heed 1. Whom ye hear 2. How ye hear 1. Take heed whom and what you hear Faith comes not by hearing every Self-called-speaker but by hearing sent Teachers Rom. 10.14 15. Such as have Itching-ears love to hear all men many times grow out of love with all so that they can endure to hear none long If the Devil but can set the Itch upon thee of hearing New-teachers he 'l soon draw thee to believe lyes and fables His great design is to undermine the Ministery and steal peoples hearts from them if the Wolves but can get the Sheep from the Shepheards they will soon devour them If then you love your souls love your faithful Pastors and stick to them 2. Take heed how you hear as all the senses must be guarded so must this set a Watch-man on it and take heed how see to the manner as well as to the matter of your hearing Luke 8.18 The ear is an honourable part 't is sensus disciplinae the sense which conveighs instruction into the soul. For delight 't is an excellent sense therefore the ears are called the daughters of Musick Eccles. 12.4 By it Faith which is the Grace of graces is conveyed into the soul. Rom. 10.17 Faith comes by hearing and not by seeing Labour then for an intelligent obedient circumcised mortified ears which is a choice mercy Matth. 13.16 23. Rom. 2.29 To this end we must hear the Word 1. Preparedly 2. Attentively 3. Intentively 4. Retentively 5. Understandingly 6. Discreetly 7. Beleevingly 8. Reverentially 9. Affectionally with Love Desire Joy 10. Obedientially 1. There must be preparation before we hear and that not onely habitual but an actual washing of our hearts and hands before we come to Gods Altar Psal. 26.9 Ezra 7.10 Iob 11.13 14. Eccles. 5.7
Sancta sanctis these holy things call for holy Ones We must first take an holy Vomit and by a sincere confession of sin rid our stomacks and purge out of our souls those malignant peccant humors of malice guil hypocrisy filthiness and superfluity and naughtiness before we can receive the Word with meekness so as to grow thereby 1 Pet. 2.1 2. Iames 1.22 Iacob purgeth his family before he goes to Bethel Gen. 35.1 2. The husband-man first rids his ground of those bushes briars and brambles which stand in his way and then falls to plowing before he goes to sowing and so must we first rid our hearts of all inordinate cares which like thornes choak the good seed of the Word and then receive it into honest and good hearts Matthew 13. Ier. 4.3 when the people were prepared for the hearing of the Law Exodus 19. Then and not till Then doth God speak unto them Exodus 20.1 Our Translation reads it And but former Translations render it Then and so saith the Arabick Version Deinde then or after that viz. they were prepared Many come but like Rachel they bring their Idolls with them Genesis 31.19 like the Samaritans they will serve the Lord and their Idolls too 2 Kings 17.33 Such God disownes Ver. 34. They serve not me saith God he will have all or none at all and therefore he threatens to set himself against such Ezekiel 14 7 8. there is no standing with comfort or confidence before God in our sins Ezra 9. ●lt The prime cause of so little profiting after so long hearing is our unpreparednesse for the duety This hardens the heart Accidentally maketh it more blind Isay 6.9 10. The Sun softens waxe but hardens clay and if the word be not the savour of Life then contrary to its own Nature meeting with the rebellious hearts of men it hardeneth them and becommeth the savour of death unto them 2 Corinthians 2.16 2. Hear Atte●tively give heed to what is delivered Acts 5.16 There is no getting or keeping knowledge without attention Proverbs 5.1 2. Let a Minister preach never so powerfully if the people sleep talk gaze or come when ha●● is done they cannot profit We should rouse up our selves to attend as for our lives remembring it is for Eternity The people that heard our Saviour attended or as the word signifieth they hanged upon him Luke 19. ult as the young birds doe upon the Bill of the Damme every one openeth his mouth to see which can catch it and that bird which is not sed waits till his turn cometh They hung upon him as Bees on Flowers to suck out the Virtue that is in them so Luke 4.20 3. Intentively with the highest intention of Affection We must hearken diligently and encline our ears to hear Isay 55.2 3. We must set our hearts on the things we hear for it is our life Deut 32.46 Ezek. 40.4 The word must not swim in our Heads but sink down into our eares and Hearts Luke 9.44 we must mark it diligently and entertain it readily The Kingdome of Heaven must suffer violence and we must take it by force Matthew 11.12 4. R●tentively We must retain the Word and lock it up in our hearts as a Jewel of the greatest price So did Mary Luke 2.51 and so must we Deuteronomy 11.18 Iob 22.22 Proverbs 2.1 Iohn 15.20 an holy remembrance of Gods Word is an excellent preservative against sin Psalm 119.11 and a singular support to us in our trouble● Psalm 73.17 Hereby we shall be the better enabled to practice what we hear we cannot practice what we forget The sciens must be grafted into the stock before it can grow the Word must be graffed in our heads and hearts before we can bring forth fruit to Christ Iames 1.21 The Devil useth all means to steal the word out of our hearts and to make us forget it Matthew 13.19 For he knoweth it is the way to blessednesse when men hear the Word and keep it Luke 11.27 28. We should therefore pray for the Spirit of Grace which may lead us into all Truth and bring all good things to our remembrance Iohn 14.26 and 16.13 and pray with David that God would keep his Truth in the imaginations of the thoughts of our hearts 1 Chronicles 29.18 2. Love the Word we doe not easily forget the things which we love Ieremiah 2.32 If Rachel love her Fathers Idolls she will lay them up Genesis 31.34 Want of Affection breedeth want of memory If David delight in Gods Law hee will never forget his Word Psalm 119.6 3. Use the Meanes Reade Heare Meditate Conferre Apply the Word and write it as Baruc did Ieremies Sermons Ier. 36. 4. The Israelites must make them Fringes that they may not forget the Law Numbers 15.38.39 and above all be sure to receive the Word with all readinesse of minde Acts 17.11 It is a mercy that we heare the Word a greater mercy when we can approve of it but the greatest mercie is to receive it into our hearts in the Love of it 1 Thessalonians 2.13 When we can eate the Word Ieremiah 15.16 and receive its sharpest reproofes with submission and Thankefulnesse 1 Samuel 25.33 Psalm 141.5 5. Vnderstandingly We must not barely reade but we must search the Scriptures and labour to understand what we heare Matthew 15.10 Iohn 5.39 Praying for the Spirit of Illumination Ephesians 1. 17.18 6. Discreetly we must Try the Doctrine before we trust it Though it be Paul that Preach yet the Beraeans will trie his Doctrine by the Scriptures Acts 17.11 and Paul calleth on his hearers to Judge and consider what he said 1 Corinthians 10.15 and 2 Timothy 2.7 1 Thessalonians 5.21 and biddeth them Try the Spirits 1 Iohn 4.1 God hath given his People an Anointing to this end that they may be able to judge and discern of things that differ Colossians 1.9 10. We will not take gold but We will try it first and we will count Money after our own Fathers and shall we take Doctrines onely upon trust 7. Beleevingly we must by faith apply it to our selves whether it be for Humiliation or Consolation Iob 5.27 It must be engraffed in our hearts by Faith Iames 1.21 This is the way to make it effectual Romans 1.2.16 1 Cor. 1.21 Unbelief bars the heart against the Word and maketh it unprofitable to the hearers Heb. 4.2 8. Reverentially no service pleaseth God that is not mixt with Reverence and feare Psalm 2.1 Hebrewes 12.28 We must set our selves as in Gods presence and so heare as if God himselfe spake to us so did Cornelius though a Souldier and a great man Acts 10.33 So did the Thessalonians 1 Thess. 2.13 They received not the Word as the word of Paul but as the Word of God It is God that speaketh to us by the mouth of his Prophets Luke 1.70 and 10 16. Daniel 9.10 Micah 6.9 Iohn 1.23 2 Corinthians 5.20 We are Christs Embassadours and the words of an
preach the Gospel purely and sincerely not shrinking from his Duty for any persecutions or troubles whatsoever Evangelists were Extraordinary Officers but Temporary they were Coadjutors and Helpers of the Apostles in spreading and publishing the Gospel They for the most part attended on them and watered what they planted Acts 8.39 40. Ephesians 4.11 such a one was Timothy as appeareth 1 Corinthians 4.17 and 16.10 and 2.1 1. Philippians 2.19.22 Now Paul maketh ●n honourable mention of Timothies office First The better to incourage him in the faithfull discharge of his Duety against all Opposition Secondly That the VVorld might see he had Authoritie for what he did 4. Sincerity Least any should accuse thee of negligence make full proof of thy Ministery fulfill and accomplish it Let it be fully known q. d. So behave thy self in this Office that men may be able to charge thee justly with nothing but rather approve of thee in all things Let the VVorld see that thou makest it thy own and onely work to winn soules by a faithfull discharge of every part of thy Ministery both in publick and private revealing the whole Counsel of God and boldly rebuking all sorts of sinners By Ministery is not here meant any Civil Office or attendance on the Poor as the Word importeth in Scripture but it noteth the Office of Preaching the Gospel which is called The Ministery Colossians 4.17 and the Preachers of it Ministers 1 Corinthians 5.3 Colossians 1.7 by way of Eminency Verse 6. The Apostle giveth a Reason for this his so serious an Exhortation drawn from the time of his death which he discerned to be now at hand and therefore he Exhorteth Timothy to be so much the more diligent that the Church might not suffer by his negligence after his departure g. d. So long as I lived I was a Father a Counsellor and a quickner of thee both by word and example thou hast hitherto had my help but now thou must shift for thy selfe and swimme without one to hold thee up for the time of my Martyrdome is now at hand Hence briefly Observe That we must not onely be go●d whilest we have good company as King Joash was when de had good Jehojada the Priest to quicken him 2 Kings 12.2 but when good men leave us yet must we not leave our goodnesse Galathians 4.18 Philippians 2.12 A man that is truely good is alwayes good in all places times and companies he is still the same In this verse we have Pauls intimation of his death Verse 7. We have a briefe Narration of his life Verse 8. VVe have his hope and expectation after this life 1. By a Spiritual instinct he saw that his departure was at hand and his Martyrdome near He was now in his last bonds and he saw the cruell actings in Nero's Court against him and therefore he concludes he had not long to live 2. The Terms and Titles by which the Apostle setteth forth his death unto us are worth the observing 1. He calleth it an offering I am now ready to be offered up as a sweet sacrifice to God in my Martyrdome for his Name 'T is usual in Scripture to put that in the Present Tense as done which yet was not done till afterward Thus Christs body is said to be broken and his blood powred out Matthew 26.28 i. This was shortly after to be done on the Crosse So Matthew 26.45 Iohn 20.15 and 14.3 The Word in the Original is very Pathetical and Emphaticall it signifieth a Drink-offering he was now ready to be offered up as a Drink-offering on Gods Altar he chuseth this word rather then that of Sacrifice 1. because the Drink-offering saith Chrysostome was offered up whole but so was not the Sacrifice for part of it was given to the Priests 2. This consisting of Wine and Oyle which was powred out when a meat-offering was made was most fit to set forth the death by which he should die viz. by shedding his blood for Christ which he cheerfully powred out as a Drink-offering to God in sealing of his Truth This is the most genuine sense of the Word it signifieth a Libation or Drink-offering of which we have frequent mention in the Law which the Septuagint render by the word in the Text when they powred out Wine Water Oyle or the like in Sacrifice to God this they called a Powred-out-offering or an effusion because it was onely of moist things Thus Genesis 14. Exodus 30.9 Leviticus 23.13 Numbers 6.15 and 15.5.12 and 28.7 Deuteronomy 32.33 2 Samuel 23.16 17. 2 Kings 16.13 Ieremiah 32.29 and 44.17.25 So that by this allusion he seemeth to Intimate the manner of his death which was not by being offered as an Holocaust or Burnt-offering by fire as the Martyrs were but by a death wherein his blood was shed and powred out viz. by beheading He doth not say I shall now be slain as some vile guilty person but I shall now be offered up in Martyrdome as a sweet-smelling sacrifice to God 3. He useth this Metaphorical word to intimate his Confirmation of the Truth he had preached As the aspersion of blood Blood or Wine was used in sacrifices for the Confirmation of Covanants or as Covenants were confirmed by effusion of VVine which the parties contracting had first tasted of so his death was not onely an oblation or Sacrifice but a Libamentum a Drinke-offering powred out for Comformation of the Gospel which he had preached The Apostle expresseth this more clearly Phil. 2.17 Yea if I be offered upon the Sacrifice and service of your faith ● joy with you all q. d. I have not onely laboured amongst you but if I may die for the confirmation of your Faith and be powred out as a drink-offering for the sealing of the Doctrine which I have taught you it shall be that whereof I shall rejoyce together with you Let Nero kill me because I converted you and others to the Faith it shall not tro●ble me but I will freely give my self in sacrifice for you that you may be ●n Oblation to God and my Blood the Drink-offering that so I may offer up an intire Sacrifice to God Briefly the Levitical Sacrifice consisted of two parts 1. There was the Victima the Sacrifice it self viz. a Bullock a R●m or the like 2. There was the Libamen the Drink-offering of Wine Oyle or the like now the Philippians faith was the sacrifice which was seasoned with Pauls blood as a Drink-offering 2. He setteth forth his death unto us by the term of A departure or dissolution T is not a destruction but a resolution or loosing of the soul from the bonds of the body Death is a taking asunder the parts of which we are composed 't is a freeing the soul from this house of Clay The same word is used Philippians 1.23 I desire to be dissolved q. d. I desire to be discharged and released out of the Prison of
my course I am come to the period of my dayes and to the end of my race I have not onely begun but grace assisting me I have finisht fulfilled and consummated my course or race He seems to allude to the course of his whole life which after his conversion was spent in the service of Christ and as it were wholly in running from place to place speedily to disperse the Gospel and now he was come to the last stage or Goal at Rome where he was to receive his Garland after the manner of those who ran for prizes 1 Cor. 9.24 25. And if the life of other men be called a course Acts 13.25 Surely the life of Paul may well be called a Race who so swiftly ran through so many places and Provinces and won them to Christ Rom. 15.19 Gal. 1.17 18. and 2. 2 Philip. 2.16 Heb. 12.1 q. d. I have accomplisht the course of my Ap●stleship of Christianity of my afflictions and combats as my Saviour when he was giving up the Ghost said 't is finished so may I say according to my measure and degree I have not onely begun but I have finisht the work of my Lord and Master I have kept the Faith 3. This third Metaphor say some is taken from Depositaries who faithfully keep the things committed to their trust without embezelment 2. Others say the Metaphor of a Souldier is still continued who promiseth fidelity to his commander and performs it to the death The sense is the same either way Fidelity is required of all servants but specially of Depositaries and Souldiers This Faith Paul had 1. He kept the grace of saving Faith which was committed to him as a signal gift of God in which he persevered to the end 2. He was faithful in keeping the doctrine of Faith what in him lay from corruption and in a faithful propagation of that choice Treasury to posterity in despite of the Legal Jew or the profane Gentile And thus the word Faith is often taken in Scripture 1 Tim. 1.19 and 3.9 and 4.1 So Acts 6.7 they obeyed the Faith .i. the Gospel which is the doctrine of Faith So Acts 24.24 Rom. 1.5 and 3.31 Rev. 2.19 So Saul is said to preach the Faith .i. the doctrine of Faith which sometimes he persecuted Gal. 1.23 so Phil. 1.27 Iude 3.3 The word Faith sometimes signifies fidelity and constancy in our promises and engagements So Paul saies of himself that he was a Teacher of the Gentiles in Faith and truth .i. he was a faithful and sincere Teacher of them 1 Tim. 2.7 I have not taught for gain or applause neither have I taught the fancies and inventions of men but I have plainly taught them the Faith of Christ. So Tit. 2.18 Though it be true that Paul kept the Faith in all these acceptations of the word yet Calvin conceives that the Apostle hath some allusion to military fidelity q. d. I have been faithful to Christ my commander to the last breath and have kept the Faith committed to my trust in despite of all the frowns and flatteries of its enemies 'T was a custome amongst the Romans that none should go to the wars till they had first taken the military Oath called the Sacrament to be faithful and true to the Emperour to observe all his commands never to flye from their colours nor to refuse any death so they might be serviceable to the Common-wealth Such an Oath we all take at Baptism we there renounce the Devil and all his works and devote our selves to God and his service for ever This is general and common to all Christians But there is a more special fidelity required in Ministers whom God hath in trusted with his Sacred Oracles and truths such stewards especially must be faithful 1 Cor. 4.2 such a one was Paul he was not onely faithful as a Christian in general but as a Pastor he faithfully distributed to all the bread of life without the leaven of superstition the poison of heresy or the chaff of mans inventions 2 Tim. 2.15 and therefore now he 's dying he cannot but glory in this and speaks of it with confidence and comfort I have kept the faith Now happy yea thrice happy are those who when they come neer their end and are within the Horizon of eternity can speak Pauls words with Pauls Spirit and can truly say I have fought the good fight c. Verse 8. Paul now looks upward to the Reward and there he sees heaven prepared for him yea he sees himself as 't were already there which makes him speak so confidently both of a safe deliverance from all miseries in this life v. 18. and of enjoying eternal blessedness after this life He still persists in the Metaphor taken from valiant wrastlers and strenuous runners which conquer in the Olympick games they had a crown either of Bayes Ivy Olive or Parsly bestowed on them by way of honour much more will the Lord bestow an everlasting crown of life on those spiritual Heroes who overcome the enemies of their Salvation Many take great pains to little purpose I have not done so saith Paul I have fought a good fight and am assured of a crown of life at last however it go with me now He had committed a depositum to God he trusted him with his Salvation 2 Tim. 1.12 and God had deposited his truth to him now Paul kept the truth which God had left with him and therefore he did believe that God would keep that which he had committed to him So that if I had three things to wish I should wish for Pauls threefold crown 1. The crown of Grace a great measure of Grace to do Christ much service 2. His crown of Joy a great measure of joy to go through with that service 3. The crown of Glory which he was here assured of In the words we have first the concluding Particle henceforth lastly as for that which remains 2. We have the Reward of the faithful no less then a crown not gold or fading flowers but a crown with an adjunct a crown of Righteousness which is a Periphrasis of Heaven and eternal happiness 3. The person Rewarding Christ who is here Periphrastically described by two Titles viz. Lord and Judge together with an adjunct a Righteous Iudge 4. Here are the persons Rewarded not onely Paul but also all the faithful who are here described by their affection to Christ they love and long for his coming to Judgment 5. Hence the certainty of this Reward 'T is laid up for them and he is righteous and faithful who hath promised 6. Here is the Time when they shall receive this Reward or the day of their Coronation and that is In that day .i. at that great and glorious day of the Lord when he shall come to Judge the quick and dead and shall give to every one according to his works The Explication Henceforth Lastly or as for that which
Haggards such Coppingars and Colliars as are famous for nothing but Ignorance and Impudence but malice and wickedness is a great burden But it may comfort us that Christ himself was thus exercised before us He endured the contradiction of sinners Heb. 12.3 If we be contradicted by wise men we can the better bear it but to be contradicted by foolish rebellious sinners goes hard yet such is the vanity of the Vulgar that one such an ignorant and brazen faced sot especially if he have liberty and a little success is cryed up by them as the onely man and one such a Demetrius though but a Smith pleading for gain shall be heard before a Paul pleading for Christ and Heaven Acts 19.24 25. Hath shewed me much evil 4. Observation 4. Wicked men that oppose Gods truth and people do but labour in vain They do but Shew what they would do they cannot bring their wicked desires into acts according to their intents Their intent is to root up the Name of Israel and to destroy the Gospel and by opposing them they increase the one and spread the other Acts 8.1 Wicked men serve Gods will though against their own wills Their designs Accidentally though not Intentionally fulfil Gods will Iosephs brethren little thought to have advanced him by selling him yet God had so decreed it their selling him furthers it Pharaohs daughter thought little to Nurse up one that should be so signal an opposite to her father Thus God catcheth the wise in their own craft he makes their Plots to become their plagues and their own doings to become their undoings he snares them in the work of their own hands Iob 5.12 13. Psal. 9.16 The Lord reward him according to his works 5. Observation 5. Imprecations against the malicious and incurable enemies of the Church are lawful David a man of Prophetical Spirit frequently used them against such men Psal. 69.22 to 29. and 10.9 6. to 22. So did Moses and others Deut. 27. Iudg. 5.23 Ier. 17.18 Lam. 3.64 65 66. So did Paul 1 Cor. 16.22 Gal. 5.12 These men had a Prophetical Spirit and saw into the final estate of those whom they cursed and so might better do it then we who want that extraordinary gift of the Spirit Object Christ commands us to bless our enemies and not to curse them Matth. 5.44 and so doth Paul Rom. 12.14 Answ. We must distinguish of enemies 1. Some are Private enemies and onely wrong us 2. Others are Publick enemies and such as oppose the truth of God of these also there are two sorts 1. Some are Curable and they are such as persecute the truth and people of God out of Ignorance and blind superstition for such we must pray so did Christ Luke 23.34 and Steven Acts 7.60 Many have been converted by such Prayers as those Iews Acts 2. and Paul by Stevens Prayers 2. There are malicious and incurable enemies who wittingly and wilfully oppose the truth of God out of malice so did Alexander here and therefore the Apostle curseth him and such we may pray against Yet least any should offend in Imitating the Saints in their Imprecations these Rules must be observed 1. Imprecations against particular persons must be rarely used We must not with the men of the world fly presently to curses 1. Because we now want that Spirit of Prophesy to discern who are incurable enemies which the Saints then had 2. It is very hard to keep a right measure in these Imprecations and not to mingle our own private affections with them 3. It is safer to pray Indefinitely against the enemies of truth in general as against Antichrist the Turk and those profest enemies of Gods truth and people 4. It is safer praying against the Plots of wicked men then against their persons So did David 2 Sam. 15.31 he prayes against the plots and counsel of Achitophel so Peter and Iohn pray against the threatnings of wicked men Acts 4.29 Now Lord behold their Threatnings 5. Pray not absolutely but conditionally 1. That if they belong to Gods Election he would be pleased to call them 2. If this will not do but they persevere in their persecuting the people of God then beseech him to correct them and to lay some temporal chastisement on them for their amendment so David Psal. 83.17 Fill their faces with shame that they may seek thy Name 3. If it appear to us that they are incorrigible and incurable enemies to God and his truth then we may desire as Paul doth here that God would glorifie his Justice in their destruction It is not for us by open force and violence to resist them Prayers and Tears are our best Weapons and therefore Paul goeth to God by Prayer for aid The Lord render to him according to his works This is the best revenge when we call on God and bring him in to our help committing our cause to him who judgeth Righteously 6. Observation 9. God observes all the wayes of wicked men and first or last he will reward them according to their works So much is implyed in this Apostolical Imprecation He eyes all the wayes of men and they shall have according to their doing Psal. 28.4 5. Ier. 32.19 2 Cor. 11.25 Rev. 18.6 Be not then offended at the prosperity of wicked men for though a sinner do evil an hundred times and his dayes be prolonged yet in the end it shall not be well with him Eccles. 8.12 13. VERS 15. Of whom be thou ware 1. Observe WE must shun the society of incurable sinners Whilest men are hopeful and curable we must try all means to win them But when we perceive that men are obstinate and incurable we must leave them least we be infected by them Rom. 16.17 Tit. 3.10 2 Iohn 10. But of this at large on 2 Tim. 3.5 For he hath greatly withstood our words 2. Observation 2. Opposing of the truth is very grievous to a gracions Soul Paul doth not complain of any personal trouble though he were now in Prison but that which afflicted him was that Alexander should thus maliciously resist the truth and hinder the Gospel God hath but two things which are dear to him in this world viz. His Truth and his People and these should be dear to us Our Zeal for them should consume us as it did Christ Iohn 2.17 Gods people are baptized with fire as well as with water and must be hot and not luke-warm or indifferent in the things of God 3. Observation 3. Wicked men do not so much oppose our persons as our Preaching They hate us not as men but as Ministers because we publish the truth that condemns their wicked practises The truth hath many opposers 1. Sometimes Learned men oppose it by their wit disputing and writing against it 2. Tyrants labour to suppress it by cruelty and great men by their authority Never was power yet in the hands of men but for the most
is clear that a sin against the Rule of faith may caeteris paribus be far more sinful and damnable then the sinne which is against the rule of life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 attendite cum attentione cavete An erroneous Hereticall head and an upright pious heart are in compatible a good conscience and true faith like Hippocrates twins live and die together M. Cranford Ser. ag Haeres p. 15. A mans Opinion makes him sinfull as well as his Practice and a man may be damned for a corrupt opinion as well as for a corrupt Conversation Sedgewicke Vide Godwins Jewish Antiqu. l. 1. c. 12.13 Helvici Chronol ab Anno 60. c. fol. p. 87.89 Optimum solati● genus est si oculos referant fideles ad vetusta Ecclesiae certamina See Mr. Caryll on that Text. Tanto plus gl●riae referemus qu●niam tò plures sup●rabimus Nisi Haereticis exercitaremur atque cogeremur ad inspiciendos exercend●s thesauros nostros ignavi sterteremus marcesseremus anim● Luther See Dr. Wilkins●n ●ast Ser. preacht 1644. Oct. 25. O●do seculi ta●quam pulcherrimum carmen constat ex quibusdam quasi Antithetis antithe●a ve●o sunt ornamenta elocutionis Aug. de Civit. Dei l. 11. c. 18. As 't is in the greater world all good and useful things have their contrary evils there are Herbs and Weeds Tares and Wheat useful and hurtful creaturs so 't is in the Church there are false Prophets and true c. N●c ferè accidere solet ut antè circa fidem naufraget aliquis quam naufragere caeperit circa mores Bellarm. See Mr. Strongs 31. Serm. on Iude 4. p. 195. c. Those which are for all kinde of Tenents are commonly for all kinde of Practises a latitude of judgement hath a latitude of conversation D. Horton See more in Mr. Gournall on Ephes. 6.12 p. 268. c. Haec vitia Haereticos comitari solent morum dissimulatio ficta retractatio pertinacia disciplinae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Danaeus V Sleidan Bullinger Spanhein Diatrib de Anabap and Hookers Pref. to his Eccles. Policy See Mr. Cranfords Ser. against Heresies p. 2. c. and Mr. Sherlock against the Quakers cap. 7. in fine libri See Mr. Iohn Clerks Sermon preach't 1646. Adams Ser. on Gal. 5.9 p. 69● folio See Mr. Obad. Sedgwich Ser. on that Text. See Mr. Vines Serm. on that Text. Palam coit cum matre sororibus canis masculi infinita cubilia Franz●us See more in my Sal. Terrae cap. 9. A pa●●iculari ad Vniversale non valet argumentum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicuntur illa quae exi●●estinis boum ovium a●t pejorum canibus projiciuntur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod canibus objiciantur à Lapide Si leo●ina pellis non s●fficit vulpina est assuenda Autor Haeresium Diabolus ita lubritus mille modis Proteus est ut non possit certo const●ingi aut capi Vna rima obstructa decem alias invenit quibus elabitur et seu ventus conclusus omnia quarit penetrat omnia ut possit ●l●bi Contra hu●s pracipuè pugnatur quando cum Haereticis res est Itaque disputando nihil prosicitur eisi disputandum est disputationibus ministri Satanae sunt convintendi propter reliquam Ecclesiam Luther Non solum faciunt mala sed defendunt Hicron Etsi vox caprissat tamen per rimulas vulpem videamu● Mente sagax vitâ sanctus calamoque celebris Arminius V. vitam Armin. Bellarmine was such a perfect Pharisee that if you believe the Jesuite who writ his life he could hardly find any sin to confesse when he was dying Non vult Diabolus deformis ater esse in suis ministris sed mundus candidus ut talis appareat ornat omnia verba opera sua praetextu veritatis nominis Dei juxta protri●um illud In nomine Domini c. Luther ●a mihi fallere da justum sanctùmque videri Horat. Nullus Haereticus venit sub titulo erroris Satanae nec Diabolus ipse v●nit ut Diabolus praeser●im candidus ille imò ater Diabolus ad manifesta scelera impellens operculum facit homini ut peccalum extenuet Luther 'T is common that the same of the Founder of a Sect makes men drink in his opinions first in one thing then in another at last in all especially if he be a man of parts and famous Capell S●● Mr. Tombs his Ser. on 1 Cor. 3.21 G●la●pies Miscelan cap. 12 13. D. Boltons Arraignment of errours 163. c. V. D. Arrowsmith Tactica S. lib 2. cap. 2. S. 3. See my Pulpit-Guard Edit 4. p. 11. Arg. 2. Skilfull Musicians are hardly induced to play but unskilfull Fidlers will scrape without entreating Ex sartoribus doctores facti ut delicatè molliter viverent Calvin contra Liberi cap. 4. Iactant se sincerissimos fidelissimos cum sunt omnium mendacissimi Luther They pretend to walk so spiritually as if they had no bodies and yet act so carnally as if they had no souls they talk as if they had cloven Tongues yet walk as if they had cloven Feet Mr. Wild in his Assize Serm. on Rom. 1.32 Cum vitium virtus putatur ibi culpa sine metu cumulatur Greg. Dum verba molliunt virus infundunt Greg. Mr. Firmin hath spoken very well to this Point in his Treatise against the Quakers p 12. to 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 à 〈…〉 ndo Torquent contorquent detorquent atque retorquent Non aliunde natae sunt Haereses nisi dum Scripturae bonae non bene intelliguntur etiam temerè audacter asseritur August Tract 18. in Job Non est haec libertas credendi sed errandi non conscientiae sed Phantasiae non libertas sed Libertinismus Cum ipsam veritatem criminari obsc●rare non possunt homines per quos praedicatur abducunt in odium de quibus fingere quicquid in mentem venerit possant Aug. epist. 137. See the Letters sent to Nayler Naylers Examination Noctem peccatis fraudibus objice nubem Horat. Solaecismus in verbis transit in solaecismos in doctrina barbarismus sepè abit in Haeresin Doctor Slatyr Peregrinâ insolenti utuntur linguâ quâ sic cornicantur ut nihilo plus perspicuitatis insit quam in aviam cantu Calvin adversus Libe●tinos cap. 7. In fruticosis gaudet auceps fur in tenebris Piscator in turbidis 'T is well observed by Master Clapham that seducers doe not alwayes deny in down right words great and fundamental Truths revealed in Scripture but often whilest they pretend to owne the Scriptures expressions they pervert and deny the Truths themselves Belingues sunt in multiplices species se transformant nunc hoc nunc illud asserentes Calv. cont Libert c. 8. ubi plura See Master Sherlocke against the Quakers cap. 4.5 6. c. Nayler talks much of the Spirit in his Examination Putant