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A52355 A brief exposition of the First and Second Epistles general of Peter by Alexander Nisbet ... Nisbet, Alexander, 1623-1669. 1658 (1658) Wing N1165; ESTC R37734 248,842 354

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oftentimes a burden to their corrupt nature Jer. 23.33 Yet must not the Lord's Ministers weary to repeat and inculcate one and the same Truth to them not knowing when life and power from God may accompany that Truth to their heart which hath been often told them before and as often slighted by them See Philip. 3.1 for this Apostle presses the same Truth upon the Hebrews which he knew Paul had prest before upon them and upon all others in all his Epistles which were all intended for the common good of the whole Church in all ages As also in all his Epistles speaking in them of these things 2. It hath pleased the Lord so to expresse some parts of His Mind in His Word that the sharpest-sighted will not at the first nor easily take up the meaning thereof that all that study the Scriptures may be made humble in the sense of their own blindness earnest in imploying Christ for His Spirit and may be quickned to pains in meditation comparing one Scripture with another and the use of other commanded means that after the use of all any insight they get in places formerly dark to them may be the more esteemed of for there is in Paul's Epistles some things hard to be understood 3. Although no man without special illumination from God can savingly take up any Truth revealed in Scripture 1 Cor. 2.14 Yet i● there much of the Lord's mind revealed therein in it self plain and easie to be understood by them who humbly depend upon Christ's teaching in the use of His own means So that the simplest who desire to know as much as may save and comfort their souls ought not to be hindred or discouraged in the study of the Scriptures In which the Apostle saith only there are some things hard to be understood importing that there are therein many things plain and such as may be easily understood 4. Those Truths which are most darkly propounded in Scripture are not impossible to be understood if men would seriously exercise their wit about them and humbly imploy Christ for understanding as the Saints have done Psal 119.33 34 97. for the Apostle saith only there are some things hard importing not only that there are many things plain but also that there is nothing impossible to be understood 5 Although humane learning being sanctified in the use thereof may prove a blessed mean of fitting men for the service of God Dan. 1.17 Act. 7.22 and 22.3 Yet it is not so much the want thereof nor yet any obscurity that is in the Scriptures which causeth men dangerously to mistake and wrest the Word of God as that men will not become humble Disciples of Christ renouncing their own wit and giving themselves up to Christ's teaching for the word here in the Original Unlearned is not that which is made use of in Scripture Act. 4.13 to signifie the want of humane litterature but it is a word that signifies to be undiscipled or not taught by Jesus Christ in which sense they that are unlearned do wrest the Scriptures 6. Another special cause of wresting and mistaking these things in Scripture which are hard to be understood is That men labour not to fix themselves in the knowledge love and practice of Truths that are plain but have their hearts distracted with the cares and pleasures of this present world for it is they that are unstable in this sense that wrest the Scriptures 7. To wrest the Scriptures is to endeavour to force them to speak contrary to the intent of the Spirit that endited them in defence of vile errors or profane practices for there is a metaphor in the word which is translated wrest taken from those who by tortures labour to compel the innocent to speak against their mind 8. They that wrest one plate of Scripture will readily wrest many moe there being a connexion between one error and another as there is between one Truth and another for they that wrest Paul's Epistles they wrest also other Scriptures 9. The hazard of mens forcing a sense of their own upon the Scriptures contrary to the mind of the Spirit that endited them is no lesse than the everlasting destruction of them that do it for they that wrest the Scriptures do it to their own destruction Vers 17. Ye therefore Beloved seeing ye know these things before beware lest ye also being led away with the error of the wicked fall from your own stedfastnesse The fifth use of the Apostle's former doctrine is an exhortation to constancy The sum whereof is That since they had been clearly forewarned of their spiritual dangers and informed concerning the remedies thereof they should be the more wary lest they be drawn away from that way of Truth and Holinesse wherein they had been through the Lord's grace in some good measure established Hence Learn 1. Clear forewarnings of spiritual dangers and informations concerning the remedies thereof do lay upon the Lord's People strong obligations to watchfulnesse it being a great aggravation of their guiltinesse if after these they be insnared for the Apostle maketh the fore-knowledge they had of these things by his former doctrine a special motive to watchfulnesse Wherefore Beloved seing ye know these things before beware 2. There is no error nor temptation so grosse that hath overtaken others whereof those that are dearly beloved of God and His Saints ought not to entertain so much fear as to make them very strict in watching lest they be ensnared with the same considering that there is a friend to these in their unmortified part Beloved beware lest ye also be led away with the error of the wicked 3. Although the Lord's People can neither totally nor finally fall away from Truth or Holinesse Joh. 17.11 12. Yet those who have been in some good measure established in the knowledge of the Truth and practice of holy duties may for a time and in a great measure fall from both as is imported in this warning Beware lest ye also being led away with the error of the wicked fall 4. The possibility of Believers falling for a time should provoke them to much circumspection and as the word here signifieth to keep very strict watch over themselves which exercise the Lord hath appointed to be a special mean of His Peoples preservation Beware lest ye also being let away with the error of the wicked fall 5. The Lord's People have a stedfastnesse proper to themselves which no hypocrite can attain unto whereby they do adhere to the Truth and Way of Christ not for the applause or example of others or any worldly advantage whatsoever but because their minds are enlightened to know and their hearts renewed to believe and love the Truth for its own worth and for his authority that revealeth it for the words in the Original are Beware lest ye fall from your own proper stedfastnesse Vers 18. But grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ to Him be glory both now and for ever Amen The sixth and last use of the former doctrine is an exhortation to the study of a continual growth and progress in grace and knowledge and this the Apostle presseth as a special mean to attain to that which he prest in the former use to wit stedfastnesse and closeth with a song of praise to Jesus Christ Hence Learn 1. It is not enough for the Lord's People to maintain that measure of grace which they have already attained but they must labour to find the lively exercise and daily growth of every grace for the Apostle having exhorted to stedfastnesse in what they had already attained doth adde this But grow in grace 2. Growth in grace is a special preservative from apostasie there being no possibility to keep what we have attained except it be improven and be upon the growing hand Mat. 25.29 for this exhortation is added to the former as a special mean of attaining to stedfastness Grow in grace c. 3. They that would have grace to thrive in their hearts must labour for a daily increase of knowledge in their minds concerning Christs soveraignity His offices and the benefits we have by Him for as growth in grace is here prest as a special mean to stedfastness so growth in knowledge is prest as a special mean of attaining to growth in grace But grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 4. It is the duty of all who have any right thoughts of Christ to break forth some way in His praise and to ascribe glory to Him who being the Soveraign Lord of Heaven and Earth is become the Saviour of sinners and hath cloathed Himself with Offices answerable to all their necessities as is imported in the names of Christ that are here for the Apostle that knew Him well to be such a one taketh up the song which all that know Him should follow and keep up in their hearts To Him be glory 5. Praise is a duty wherewith all our other duties should be closed both for the help we find in them and for the pardon we believe to obtain for our failings upon both which grounds the Apostle closeth his Epistle with praise To Him be glory 6. Praise is an exercise for the discharge whereof not only all our time but the long age or day of eternity as the word here signifieth is little enough To Him be glory both now and for ever Amen FINIS
and serious searchers in the nature of this salvation held forth in the Gospel the Prophets were who did foretell of a more clear manifestation of the Doctrine concerning is and of a more plentifull out-letting of the graces of the Spirit upon those who live after Christ's incarnation than had been upon those who lived before and this may be taken for an argument by it self to move those upon whom that grace is bestowed chearfully to adhere to the Gospel notwithstanding of sufferings for it Hence Learn 1. The way of salvation by Jesus Christ which is held forth in the New Testament is no new light broken up since Christs dayes in the flesh but is the very same in substance which was known to the Prophets under the Old Testament and by them made known to the Church then although the doctrine of salvation be now clearer and the gifts and graces of the Spirit more plentifully dispensed since the price of redemption is actually paid for which God gave out upon trust grace and glory to the Elect before yet the way of salvation then and now is one and the same for substance for of that salvation which Believers in Christ do by Faith now under the Gospel receive the Apostle here speaks Of which salvation the Prophets have enquired c. 2. So sweet and ravishing a study is that way of salvation through Christ incarnate that the more knowledg therof any attain unto they will still be the more and more inquisitive and diligent after a further measure of it so that those can know nothing of Christ savingly who satisfie themselves with any measure of the knowledge of Him that they have already attained unto for even the Prophets after some insight in that way partly by immediate revelation and partly by their former diligence were not taken off from the painfull use of ordinary means such as Reading Meditation Prayer and carefull prying into the meaning of those manifold Types which held forth that way of salvation through the Messiah to come and the benefits which the Redeemed have by Him but did renew and double their diligence as is imported by the several words here to one purpose Of which salvation the Prophets have enquired and searched diligently 3. All that deliver the mind of God to His People ought to be affectionate and serious students of it themselves that so they may make the Truths they are to deliver their own and have their hearts affected therewith Psal 45.1 So may they expect it shall be more blest to take impression and have effects upon the hearers for the words here expressing the Prophets pains in the study of that way of salvation through Christ do import that never did Hunters with greater eagerness and delight pursue their game nor those that dig in the earth where they know some rich treasure is to be had more seriously apply themselves to that exercise than the Prophets did insist upon this study Of which salvation the Prophets have enquired and searched diligently who prophesied before 4. The prime subject both of the Old and New Testament whereupon all the Ministers of Christ should insist with His People is the free grace of God manifested in giving Christ for sinners in his powerfull drawing of their hearts to close with him for pardoning grace and for renewing of their natures by inherent grace and so obliging and enabling them to walk worthy of that grace of God for the sum of the Prophets work in which the Apostles concur as the following words do make clear was to prophesie of the grace that should come unto us 5. Although this grace was made known and communicated to them who lived before Christs incarnation Act. 10.43 Yet it is in a special manner come unto those who live after in regard of a clearer manifestation of the Doctrine of Gods Grace 2 Cor. 3.18 a more plentifull communication of the gifts and graces of his Spirit Act. 2.16 and that both of these are extended to some of all Nations Col. 3.11 In which respects it is here called The grace come unto us Vers 11. Searching what or what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was in them did signifie when it testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow The Apostle clears yet further the Prophets pains in the study of that way of salvation through Christ incarnate shewing that they were exceeding desirous and diligent to have known the particular time of his coming in the flesh and to have known more clearly than they did how happy those times behoved to be whereof the Spirit of Christ who was even then in an extraordinary way present with them did mean when he moved them to describe so long beforehand the humiliation or sufferings of the Messiah and his exaltation or the glorious effects that were to follow upon his sufferings to himself and his redeemed ones therefore they who lived after his incarnation ought chearfully and constantly to adhere to the Gospel notwithstanding of all their sufferings Hence Learn 1. It is the way which the Lord usually keeps with the dearest of his Servants to let out his mind to them by little and little to make plain some things to them and keep up other things from them that he may humble them quicken them to diligence and keep up correspondence betwixt himself and them for though it was made clear to the Prophets that Christ was to be incarnate that much grace should be in his dayes and more blessed times than any they had seen and however all of them had some intimation of the time of his incarnation by Jacob's prophesie Gen. 49.10 and those of them who lived after the Captivity by Daniel's prophesie Dan. 9.24 Yet they were kept dark concerning the particular time when he should come and the distinct quality of His times what form of Worship and way of administration of Gospel-Ordinances there should be then Therefore are they here set forth Searching what or what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was in them did signifie c. 2. The holy Spirit is a person subsisting distinct from the Father and the Son proceeding from both Joh. 15.26 and true God equal to both to whom future events are known as if they were actually existing for here he is called the Spirit of Christ and is said to testifie beforehand the sufferings of Christ 3. Jesus Christ the second person of the Trinity hath been before his incarnation actually exercising the Office of Mediatorship revealing to the Church in all ages the way of salvation through his sufferings for it was the Spirit of the Son of God that dwelt in the Prophets and made known to them those things concerning the Mediator whereof they did prophesie The Spirit of Christ in them testified beforehand 4. The chief things which the Spirit of Christ did manifest to the Prophets and wherewith their prime study was taken up was the
to sinners and keeping familiar correspondence with them in the man Christ than if they had such desires as is imported in this word in the Original which hath in it an allusion to the type of the two Cherubims that were upon the Ark looking down into the Mercy-seat Which things the Angels desire to look into 7. The moe attesters of the truths of the Gospel we have the more worthy those have been and the more taken up with the study thereof The more are we obliged to delight and adhere to the same notwithstanding of all sufferings if we slight so great a salvation or faint in our adherance to the Gospel revealing it for any possible sufferings from men great must our judgment be many witnesses may be brought forth against us in the day of the Lord even this cloud of witnesses all the Prophets and Apostles and the Angels of Heaven who have with such harmony and earnestness delighted in this study for this is the force of the Apostles principal argument in this and the two preceding Verses which might be branched out in many pertinent arguments to presse chearful suffering for the truth of the Gospel That the Prophets were such serious and painful students thereof the Apostles also have agreed with them and these same things also the Angels desire to look into Vers 13. Wherefore gird up the loyns of your mind be sober and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ In this second part of the Chapter the Apostle draws from his former doctrine concerning the excellent state and rich priviledges of Believers several exhortations to the study of holinesse and presseth the same by severall motives The first exhortation is That they would draw up their affections which are here called the loyns of the mind because they follow the motions of the understanding from things below and unite them together upon Jesus Christ and their spiritual and eternal priviledges spoken of before The second is That they would study sobriety which is not only to keep themselves free of unlawfull pleasures but mainly to meddle sparingly with lawfull delights The third is That they would live constantly in the believing expectation of that full manifestation of Gods favour and that perfection in holinesse which Christ will bring with him to his own at his last appearance And all these the Apostle doth press by the consideration of those priviledges of believers formerly mentioned as the first motive comprehensive of many others Hence Learn 1. The consideration of our spiritual priviledges by Jesus Christ should stir us up to the study of holinesse our diligence in that study being the means of our perseverance and that which clears our right to take the comfort of those priviledges 2 Pet. 1.10 11. So that what ever matter of joy and praise Believers have it should be turned by them in motives to the duties of holiness and therefore they can have no true comfort in their spiritual priviledges who are by the apprehension of them cast over in security and not quickned to their duty for the Apostle having in the former part of the Chapter held forth many grounds of joy and praise to Believers under all their sufferings from their election regeneration their right to the heavenly inheritance the certainty of their perseverance and other priviledges doth teach them here to turn all these in motives to holiness while he infers from them these and the following exhortations Wherefore gird up the loyns of your mind be sober c. 2. Till the Heirs of Glory be possessed in their inheritance they should still think with themselves that much of their way and work and many difficulties are yet betwixt them and the possession thereof that so they may be kept from security and defection and may be still fitting themselves for their journey and their warfare for this ancient custom of trussing up long garments whence the word here is borrowed was especially used when they were to journey or run a race 2 Kings 4.29.18.46 or when they were to fight Isa 8.9 Gird up the loyns of your mind 3. The affections of the Children of the Lord are oftentimes low and scattered partly while they are sinking under sinfull discouragement Psal 42.5 and partly while they are divided and spent upon base and sinfull objects Psal 119.36 37. both which as main hinderances of Christians in their course toward their heavenly inheritance are supponed in this exhortation to be their too ordinary temper Gird up the loyns of your mind 4. It should be the great study of those who mind their spiritual journey and warfare to get their affections elevated above things earthly united together upon Jesus Christ See Col. 3.1 Psal 86.11 and taken up with their priviledges by Him and the duties their priviledges calls them to otherwise they can no more make progress in their christian course than a man whose garments are about his feet can run or fight Wherefore gird up the loyns of your mind 5. They that would keep up their affections from discouragement or setling upon things earthly would labour to have their minds upward the notions and discourses thereof as the word here translated the mind signifies taken up with things spiritual and heavenly because the affections do follow and depend upon the motions of the mind or understanding for which cause they are here called the loyns of the mind Therefore the Apostle having in the former part laboured to draw up their minds to the contemplation of their spiritual and eternal priviledges he here exhorts to draw up and unite upon these their affections Gird up the loyns of your mind 6. They that would make progress in their journey toward their heavenly inheritance must study sobriety which consists in the composing of the rage and excess of carnal passions and perturbations Luk. 8.35 in the entertaining and expressing a mean esteem of our selves and a high esteem of the least good in others Rom. 12.3 in a prudent wariness to meddle with or vent our opinion of things above our reach or calling Act. 26.25 in a spare medling with all sensible delights though lawful in themselves the excess whereof no lesse indisposeth Christians for spirituall performances than excesse of meat or drink doth a man for his work or journey Luk. 21.34 and in a holy and strict watchfulness as the word in the Original also signifies lest we offend any of these wayes for as all the rest of the exhortations here are given to fit Believers for their journey toward their fair inheritance formerly described so is this Be sober 7. Even those for whom the heavenly inheritance is made sure and who have attained to some comfortable measure of assurance that they shall possess it have need to be stirred up to the study of perseverance in grace and holiness especially to keep their hearts still up in the confident expectation of that
further motives The one is That since the Lord had vouchsafed to call them from an estate of sin and wrath to a state of holinesse and happiness they ought therefore to walk answerably to their holy calling The other is That there should be a conformity between the Holy Lord and all His Children and therefore holiness which is His property ought to be studied by them and manifested in all the particular passages of their christian course And this last argument the Apostle confirms from the Scripture whereof though there be no particular place here cited yet the substance of the words are to be found in several places Lev. 11.44.19.2 and 20.7 Mat. 5.17 Hence Learn 1. They that would prove themselves to be truly holy and so to be the Children of the Lord must not satisfie themselves with the negative part of holiness which consists in abstenance from what is unsuitable to the relation of Children but they must also labour for the positive part of it which consists in some measure of conformity to their heavenly Father in His holinesse for after the Apostle hath prest that study negatively that they should not conform themselves to their former lusts in their ignorance he urgeth here the positive part thereof But as he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy 2. They who have found the Lord powerfully calling them from that estate of sin and wrath wherein they are naturally to a blessed condition of grace and happiness should think themselves thereby strongly obliged to the study of holiness whereby Christians in heart and practise are alienated and drawn from things earthly and are set apart for the use of their Lord and so do evidence to themselves their effectual calling 2 Pet. 1.10 for as a motive to the study of holiness the Apostle here suggests to Believers their calling But as he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy 3. Although it be altogether impossible for any Man or Angel to be conform in holinesse unto God who is essentially immutable and infinitly holy 1 Sam. 2.2 Yet there is no absolute unerring patern lower than the holy One to be set before the eyes of the Children of the Lord who ought not to make the holiest on earth a sufficient copie to them but being still ashamed of their defects in holiness and unsatisfied with their present measure thereof must still be aiming at a nearer conformity with Christ the Lord and daily making use of Him who is their sanctification 1 Cor. 1.30 to cover their defects and to sanctifie them more fully for this is the example and patern of that holinesse to which all the called Children of God should aspire As he who hath called you is holy so be ye holy 4. Although internal holinesse be mainly lovely to the Lord Psal 51.6 and the external without it be loathsom to Him Mat. 23.27 Yet none should satisfie themselves with that holinesse which they imagine to have within but should labour to manifest holiness in their external conversation by shewing themselves in their visible actings mindful and respective of all the Commands of God Lev. 20.7 8. Psal 119.6 whereby they glorifie Him before others and evidence themselves to have true holinesse Joh. 15.8 for this conformity to our Father in holinesse must be manifested in the conversation 5. There is no part of a Christian's conversation which ought not to favour of holiness and true piety not only his religious but even his common and civil actions ought to be done in the Lord and for his glory 1 Cor. 10.31 And under all the various dispensations of God with him he ought still to prove himself a hater of sin and a lover of what the Lord approves which is the thing here pressed to be holy in all manner of conversation 6. The strictest of moral precepts in the Old Testament are binding to Believers under the New the substance of all of them which is That reasonable creatures should love their Maker and their fellow-creatures being of perpetual equity obliging both Angels and Men and nothing being required of us in any of them to be done by vertue of our own strength or that we may be justified thereby but only what the Regenerate are enabled to aim at and to attain to such a measure of as through Christ shall be accepted as if they had attained to what is required Col. 2.10 for here one of the strictest of moral precepts that are in the Old Testament is pressed upon Believers As he who hath called you is holy so be ye holy for it is written Be ye holy for I am holy 7. The Ministers of Jesus Christ ought to have His Word so richly dwelling in them that they may be able to confirm what they deliver to the Lords People from clear and expresse testimonies thereof especially when they presse such Truths as natural hearts are most averse from for even this extraordinary Minister the Apostle whom people had lesse reason to suspect than any ordinary Minister while he presseth this high pitch of holinesse to wit the study of conformity to the Holy One he thus confirms his doctrine by Scripture Because it is written Be ye holy for I am holy 8. Although it be the duty of Ministers sometimes to point out to people the particular place of Scripture whereby they do confirm their doctrine Act. 13.33 yet ought the Lords People to be so well acquainted with the written Word that upon the hearing of any sentence of it they may acknowledge it to be the Lords mind that so there may be no necessity for Ministers to spend time and burthen peoples memories with multiplied citations for every Truth they deliver especially where the words of Scripture are remarkable and frequently to be found for so the Apostle citing this remarkable Scripture which is frequently to be found in the Old Testament doth not name any particular place but only saith It is written Be ye holy for I am holy Vers 17. And if ye call on the Father who without respect of persons judgeth according to every mans work passe the time of your sojourning here in fear Follows the fifth and sixth motives to the study of holiness The one is That even those who take the Lord for their Father and themselves for his Children will find Him an exact and impartial Judge of them and all their actions The other is That His Children are but strangers and sojourners and so living in the midst of many hazards and temptations both which should move them to study holiness whereof this is a special part to carry along in their hearts through their pilgrimage some fear of offending their heavenly Father who is to be their Judge Hence Learn 1. The more acquaintance with the Lord and confidence of His fatherly affection Christians attain unto the more are they obliged to the study of holiness and particularly to walk in fear of offending Him who will
and ought not to content themselves with a high esteem of the written Word or of the preaching thereof in the general in the mean time having a slender esteem of these portions of Truth which God carves out to them by the Messengers whom He sends to them for the Apostle leads those to whom he writes to look upon that commendation of the Word which Isaiah had given out before him as agreeing to the Word written and preached to them by himself and others of the Lord's Servants in that time And this is the Word which by the Gospel is preached unto you 9. Although the precepts and threatnings of the Word have their own efficiency as instruments in Gods hand to prepare the soul for the new life by breaking and humbling of it Act. 2.37 Yet it is mainly the Gospel or the glad tydings as the word signifies of free salvation through Jesus Christ to all lost sinners who get grace to receive the offer thereof whereby a new life is conveyed to and increased in the soul and whereby it is brought into that excellent state of Regeneration for the Apostle applies the commendation of the Word which is the seed of Regeneration mainly to the Gospel And this is the Word which by the Gospel is preached unto you CHAP. II. IN this Chapter the Apostle goes on to presse such duties of holiness as are most suitable for that excellent state of the Regenerate described in the former In the first part of it he exhorts to growth and progress in such duties of holiness as concern all Christians in whatsoever relation they stand in the world as namely the study of mortification ver 1. a hearty indrinking of the Doctrine of the Gospel because their so doing is the means of their spiritual growth ver 2. It is the way to prove that they had experimentally tasted of the sweetness of Christ's grace ver 3. and because by their daily use-making of Christ offered in the Gospel they should find an increase of spiritual life and fitness for every duty ver 4 5. and that because the Scripture witnesseth Him to be given with the Father's good will for a solid foundation of salvation and comfort to every soul that flyes to Him ver 6. Whence the Apostle infers that Christ cannot but be very dear to Believers and that He shall not be the lesse glorious that many slight Him who by their so doing shall only ruine themselves and prove themselves Reprobates ver 7 8. But as for those whom he hath so highly honoured that they might be forth-coming for his praise who had made so remarkable a change upon them ver 9 10. Their great study ought to be to keep up the battel against their inward lusts ver 11. and to walk so as the most wicked among whom they converse may be allured to fall in love with Christianity ver 12. In the second part of the Chapter the Apostle presseth such duties as are suitable for Christians considered under some of their special relations And first he exhorts them as subjects under heathen Rulers to respect every form of lawfull Government whether in the person of the supream or inferiour Magistrate and this he presseth by many arguments First Because they should thereby evidence their respect to Gods Command Secondly Because Magistrates are appointed of God for so good ends as he expresseth ver 13 14. Thirdly They should thereby silence their slanderers ver 15. Fourthly Because otherwise they should abuse their Christian Liberty unto licentiousness ver 16. And fifthly Because other unquestionable duties did necessarily infer this ver 17. Secondly He exhorts them as servants under heathen persecuting Masters in which case many Christians then were to carry themselves dutifully toward such Masters and patiently under wrongs from them whether they were of the worst or better sort ver 18. and this the Apostle presseth to the end of the Chapter by severall reasons First Because they might expect a gracious reward from God if they were put to unjust sufferings from men for respect to his Commands ver 19. Secondly Because it would be a disgrace for Christianity if Christians did deserve hard usage from Heathens for their miscarriage ver 20. Thirdly Because they were obliged to patience under the Crosse by their Calling Fourthly Because Christ had suffered harder things for them Fifthly Because He had cast them a sweet Copy of the right way of suffering ver 21. Sixthly Because Christ was a most innocent sufferer ver 22. Seventhly Because He was the most patient And eighthly the most confident under greatest wrongs that ever was ver 23. Ninthly Because by His death He hath purchased Reconciliation with God And tenthly healing to all his Peoples wounds especially for his cause ver 24. Eleventhly Since they who were once in the way to perdition were now brought to a state of safety by Him ver last Therefore they ought patiently to suffer wrongs in following their duty to Him the pressing whereof is the Apostle's scope Vers 1. Wherefore laying aside all malice and all guile and hypocrisies and envies and all evil speakings THe Apostle's scope in the first part of this Chapter being to presse upon all Christians the study of progresse and growth in holiness as appears by the second and fifth Verses he doth in order to this stir them up to the battel against their unmortified corruptions giving instances of such as are most contrary unto that love of the Regenerate one toward another which he had prest before as an evidence of their Regeneration Chap. 1. ver 22. and to that hearty receiving of the Word which he presseth in the following Verse as the principal means of their growth in grace not excluding other evils not here mentioned but leading them by these to the knowledge of all the rest that are unbeseeming a regenerate state Doct. 1. There doth remain in the Children of the Lord not only after their Regeneration but even after some progresse in mortification many strong corruptions and filthy frames or spirit which are left to humble them Rom. 7.24 and to stir them up to earnest imployment of Jesus Christ both for mercy and power to subdue them 2 Cor. 12.8 for upon those whom the Apostle supponed to be not only born again Chap. 1.23 but to have attained to a good degree of mortification Chap. 1. ver 22. he doth here presse that they should lay aside malice and guile and hypocrisie c. 2. Our corruptions ought to be renounced with detestation as things very noisom to be longer kept Isa 30.22 and with a purpose never to meddle with them again Hos 14.8 for there is a metaphor in the words taken from a man putting off an old suit of cloaths full of filth and vermine which would be both hurtful and disgraceful to be longer worn Wherefore laying aside all malice c. 3. Even the Children of the Lord are ready to cleave very close to
their unmortified corruptions to forget the necessity of a further degree of mortification than what they have already attained unto and to entertain their corruptions as if they were necessary for them yea and to accompt them their very ornaments for the metaphor in the words is taken from a man that is unwilling to shed with his garments which though they be old and full of filth and vermine yet he keeps them close to him as his necessary ornaments lay aside all malice c. 4. Our Regeneration and former progress in mortification should be so far from making us indulgent to our lusts remaining yet unmortified that the more clear we be concerning the one and the further advanced in the other the more are we obliged to set against the remaining power of those unmortified corruptions we having now stronger obligations to sight against them greater strength for that effect and being more ready to dishonour God by their prevailing than formerly for upon those whom the Apostle supponed to be born again to know themselves Redeemed Ones and to have purified their souls in the former Chapter he presses here the study of mortification with a Wherefore laying aside c. 5. Our new birth is mainly evidenced to us by our opposition of and victory over those corruptions which stir in us contrary to that love and duty which we owe to our Brethren the rest of the Regenerate Ones our victory over these being the kindly effect of our victory in some measure over our ignorance of God Atheism and unbelief and such other sins as are more directly against the first Table 1 Joh. 3.2 3. for all the particular evils here named are such as relate mainly to our neighbour as contrary to that love and duty which we owe to him and the mortification of them is here prest as that which should evidence our Regeneration as appears by comparing the 23. Verse of the former Chapter with this and the Verse following Being born again c. Wherefore laying aside all malice c. as new born babes c. 6. Not only is the actual hurting of our neighbour an evil unbeseeming the Regenerate Ones but the very intention of the heart to harm him is such an evil also and therefore to be mortified for intention to hurt out neighbour is the first evil which the Apostle here disswades from laying aside malice c. 7. The Lord takes notice of folks cunning conveyances of their plots and practices which tend to the prejudice of others those being more dangerous to the party and more grievous when discovered or felt in their effects than more open injuries Psal 55.11 12 13. for that artificial way of hurting others which hides the hurt intended from the party is the next evil the Apostle exhorts to be laid aside as is clear from the signification of the original word guile 8. As hypocrisie in the matters of God whereby Christians draw near Him with their lips while their hearts are far from Him Mat. 15.7 8. and give out themselves to be much for Him when they are nothing so 2 Tim. 3.5 is an evil very detestable to Him Mat. 23.25 So hypocrisie in dealing with others whereby men in their words and carriage behave themselves with seeming respect and love in the mean time aiming at the disgrace and hurt of others Psal 55.21 is a guilt unbeseeming the Regenerate which they should study to mortifie as they desire to prove themselves such for of both these sorts of hypocrisies may this third evil be understood which the Apostle exhorts to be laid aside and hypocrisies 9. To be grieved and vexed at the good of others their excellencies or preference before our selves as it is a frame of spirit natural to all Gal. 5.21 and incident to the Regenerate Jam. 4.5 So it is an evil very detestable to God Tit. 3.3 and hurtful to the person in whom it is Prov. 14.30 and therefore to be opposed and mortified as most unbeseeming the Regenerate who should rejoyce in the welfare one of another as if it were their own 1 Cor. 12.26 for this is the fourth particular which the Apostle here exhorts to mortifie and envies which word signifies an evil wasting them that have it with grief at others welfare 10. Evil speaking of others is th● fruit that grows upon malice envy and other inward evils of that kind which are clearly bewrayed to be prevalent in the heart when there is in the tongue much reviling backbiting contradicting and other sorts of evil speakings whereby the reputation of our neighbour is hurt for as this is here the last in order so it may be safely looked upon as the effect or ordinary consequent of the former laying aside all malice and guile and envies and evil speakings 11. However there may be some one sin to which the heart of the Regenerate is more inclined than to others against which one they should mainly bend their strength Psal 18.23 Yet as they desire to prove themselves Regenerate they ought to oppose and mortifie all sin considering that they are weak before every temptation Gal. 6.1 3. and that the root and branch of every sin is hatefull to God and contrary to His holy Law as is clear by Christ's exposition of it Mat. 5 and 6. chap. for the Apostle puts the note of universality to some of these evils and puts the rest in the plural number laying aside all malice and guile and hypocrisies c 12. There are degrees of the strength of unmortified corruption and several wayes how it vents it self so that when one branch of it is cut off and one way how it doth prevail is stopped there are yet many other branches of that same sin to be searched out and foughten against for the first two evils here named have an all with them importing that when one branch or degree of malice and guile is laid aside there may be yet much of them behind unmortified And the rest of the evils here named are in the plural number importing that there are many sorts and kinds of envies and hypocrisies and evil speakings to be mortified in every Christian VVherefore lay aside all malice and all guile and hypocrisies and envies and evil speakings 13. The right order which Believers should keep in the mortifying of sin is to begin with the inward root● there of that are in their hearts so shall they the more easily curb the sins of the outward man for in this order the Apostle presseth this study upon the Regenerate that they should first lay aside malice and guile c. and then evil speakings 14. There is no right receiving of the Word so as souls may grow by it till first they set about the mortifying and putting off of such filthy frames of spirit as are here named the Truth must be received in love both to Christ and all His People to which the evils here named are contrary for the laying aside of
them is here pressed as a mean toward the duty held forth in the following Verse Wherefore laying aside all malice c. desire the sincere milk of the Word Vers 2. As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word that ye may grow thereby The Apostle having disswaded from those evils which are great hinderances to the right receiving of the Gospel doth here in the next place exhort the Regenerate to labor for such a sharp edge upon their appetite after the Truths of the Gospel by which they were begotten and must be nourished as lively infants have after the milk of the mothers breasts And this exhortation the Apostle bears in by three motives in this Verse taken from the nature and effects of the Truths of the Gospel 1. That those Truths are the sincere milk that is most pure Truths without any mixture of falshood or error 2. That they are full of spiritual reason and so suited to the sanctified understandings of men and women for the Original may be rendred that rational milk 3. That the greedy in drinking of them will prove a principal mean of spiritual growth and progress in grace and comfort Hence Learn 1. The Truths of the Gospel are to the truly Regenerate what the milk of the breasts is to the young infant those being no lesse necessary and fitted for the cherishing and entertaining of their spiritual life no lesse refreshing and strengthening through Gods blessing to them than this is to the new born babe for however the first principles or grounds of Religion which use to be held forth in a Catechise are for their plainness and fitness for the weak called Milk as contradistinguished from more profound Truths which have the name of strong meat Heb. 5.13 14. Yet for the causes formerly mentioned the whole word is here called Milk to be much thirsted-after by all the Regenerate As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word 2. The desire of a truly regenerate person after the Word will in some measure resemble that desire after the breasts which is in new born babes for as the best thing on earth beside the breasts cannot be satisfactory to a lively infant as it is most grieved for the want thereof most unwilling to shed with it and most delighted to have it of any other thing So is it with the Regenerate in reference to the Word as is imported in this exhortation As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word 3. This desire of the Regenerate after the Word ought to extend it self to all the parts thereof every one of these having influence upon their spiritual growth The discovering and threatning part of it serving them as a glass wherein to see their defects and spots Rom. 3.20 that so they may be chased to Christ Rom. 10.4 The promises thereof being the channel through which life strength and transforming vertue to make them resemble their Lord is conveyed to them 2 Pet. 1.4 and the precepts and directions thereof serving as a Lamp to direct them in their christian course Psal 119.105 for here the Word indefinitly without restriction to one part of it more than another is by the Apostle held forth as the object of this desire of the Regenerate desire the sincere milk of the VVord 4. This desire of the Word formerly described is a clear evidence of Regeneration and a new nature no sooner is a sinner born again by the vertue of the Spirit working with the Word but as soon is there a kindly appetite after the Word wrought in the sinners heart even as the infant presently after the birth doth evidence some inclination and desire after the breasts for the Apostle having asserted their new birth Chap. 1. ver 23. doth here put them to evidence it As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word 5. There is nothing in the Word of the Lord to deceive any that get grace to receive it by Faith and walk by it there being no mixture of Error with the Truths therein delivered or of falshood either in the promises threatnings or predictions thereof and therefore Ministers in handling of it should keep it free of the mixture of their own inventions and passions and People should love it and rest upon it because it is the sincere milk of the Word or as the Original is the Word without guile or mixture of any thing that deceives 6. Although natural reason of it self except it be elevated above it self and enlightened by the Lord cannot comprehend the Truths revealed in the Gospel nor look upon them as reasonable 1 Cor. 1.18 23. and 2.14 Yet all of them are most reasonable in themselves and cannot but be acknowledged to be such by all that have the use of sanctified reason when they consider what subjection and credit we owe to Him of whom we have our being when they compare His Precepts and Commands with His Promises of furniture for obedience and of a gracious reward thereof and when they consider how Justice and Mercy are agreed Righteousness and Peace do kisse each other in that way of Salvation which is devised through Christ incarnate and that neither these Truths nor any other in Scripture are contrary to pure natural reason though some of them be far above the reach of it for this Text may be translated as the like word is Rom. 12. 1. desire that rational and sincere milk 7. There are none of the Children of the Lord so far advanced in knowledge grace or holiness as that they ought to be satisfied with their measure but ought still to aspire toward a further degree of growth both downward in humility 2 Sam. 6.22 and stability Col. 2.7 and abroad in publick-mindedness kything it self in real endeavours after the salvation and comfort of others Hos 14.5 6 7. and upward in joy and praise Psal 71.14 for upon those who were already far advanced in grace Chap. 1. ver 22 23. is growth here pressed desire the sincere milk of the VVord that ye may grow 8. According to the strength of our desires after and greedy in-drinking of the Word by application and use making thereof so will be our growth in grace and holiness They cannot but be under a great decay in both who have lost their appetite after the Gospel for this desire after the Word is here prest by the Apostle as a mean of growth desire the sincere milk that ye may grow thereby Vers 3. If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracious The fourth motive to sharpen their appetite after the Word is That if they did greedily drink it in that they might grow by it their so doing should prove to them the reality of any experience they seemed unto themselves to have of the graciousness or sweetness of the Lord to them of which whosoever gets a tast they cannot but thirst earnestly after more of it through the Word and they who do
ought to have the written Word so richly dwelling in them that they may be able to confirm every Truth they deliver from that Word and the Lord's People ought to be so well acquainted with the same that though Ministers do not spend time to cite particularly every Chapter and Verse where every passage they bring forth is to be found they may notwithstanding upon the hearing of it faithfully and for the substance repeated to them acknowledge and receive the same for the Lord's mind for even the Apostle here as frequently elswhere doth confirm his Doctrine by Scripture and yet supponing those to whom he writes well acquainted at least with the letter thereof he doth not condescend upon the particular place judging it sufficient to say Wherefore it is contained in the Scripture Behold I lay c. 2. True Faith can have solid footing no where but upon the written Word of God nor should any of the Lord's People be satisfied with the most pleasant notions about Christ Jesus till they see them grounded upon and drawn from that Word therfore the Apostle having in the former words commended Christ as the object of saving Faith doth here repeat again the same commendation of Him from the Old Testament that so Faith might rest safely upon Him as such a one Wherefore it is contained in the Scripture Behold I lay in Sion a chief corner-stone c. 3. Jesus Christ and He alone is that to the Church and to every soul that flees to Him which the chief corner stone whether the lowest or the highest is to the building He is the stone first laid in regard He was and behoved to be actually exercising His Mediatory Office before any sinner could attain to union or communion with God Col. 1.18 He is the stone laid lower than any of the rest in His humiliation Psal 22.6 He bears the weight of the whole Church and of every believing soul Heb. 1.3 He is more curiously wrought than any of the rest of the stones of the building as the chief corner-stone useth to be and engraven by the art of His Father adorning Him with all perfections suitable for the necessities of poor sinners Zech. 3.9 He is the bond whereby most differing Nations such as Jews and Gentiles are united in one building Eph. 2.16 as the foundation corner-stone knits the two side-walls of the building together He is the perfection of the whole in whom the building and every lively stone thereof is compleat Col. 2.10 as the highest corner-stone and as that also He is the glory and ornament of all the building Isa 22.24 In all which He is resembled by that whereby the Spirit of the Lord here sets Him forth to our capacity The chief corner-stone 4. We have this great blessing Christ for the chief corner-stone of this spiritual building with the Father's great good will who hath laid Him first In His eternal Counsel or Decree as the word used by Isaiah chap. 28.16 and here translated to lay doth signifie Psal 2.2 Secondly In His actual exhibition of Him to the Church as Mediatour first in the promise of Him Gen. 3.5 and next visibly in our flesh for so this word is also used to signifie the publishing or execution of things formerly decreed 2 Chron. 9.23 Prov. 3.19 And thirdly in His exalting of Him when He had perfected the work of Redemption so much of it as concerned Him to do in the state of his humiliation for so this same word used Psal 8.2 is translated Mat. 21.16 to perfect a work In all which respects the Father layes Christ the foundation or chief corner-stone in the Church and calls all to behold what pleasure He hath in so doing Behold I lay in Sion a chief corner-stone 5. The Father's condescendency to give His own blessed Son for the above-mentioned uses to His Church and Believers in Him which this similitude here made use of holds forth is worthy of our most serious consideration and Christ this chief corner-stone is much to be admired as differing from all other corner-stones He being one stone who is both the lowest and highest of the building Philip. 2.6 7. who hath immediate connexion with the least stone or meanest Believer as well as with the greatest or most eminent whether Prophets Apostles or even the virgin Mary Joh. 17.20 21. who communicates an influence of life and growth to every stone laid upon Him Eph. 2.21 and who never suffers any that are built upon Him to fall totally and finally off Him Joh. 10.28 In all which respects we are here called to admire Jesus Christ and to give our most serious attention and consideration to the Father in giving Him by this word which serves both to draw attention and admiration Behold I lay in Sion a chief corner-stone c. 6. Though Christ be God's gift to the whole Church made up of Jews and Gentiles Eph. 2.14 which often hath the name of Sion in Scripture Obad. 17. Yet with a special reference to the Church of the Jews who first had that name He is said to be laid in Sion being first preached publickly and held forth in Promises Sacrifices and Types to them Psal 147.19 20. being come of them according to the flesh Rom. 9.5 and first offered to them after His incarnation Matth. 10.5 6. from whom the news of Him is come to the rest of the world Mica 4.2 and by whom Christ shall yet have a great part of His publick glory in the world Hos 3.5 Rom. 11.12 15. All which should make us pity their present case and pray for their conversion for with a special eye to them is this spoken Behold I lay in Sion a chief corner-stone c. 7. Christ's fitness for this great work of our Redemption evidenced by the Father's choosing of Him for it from among all others as the word elect signifies and by His high esteem of Him as our Mediator should strongly draw the hearts of sinners in to Him and move them to dwell much upon the thoughts of His worth and of the Father's esteem of Him as He is the receiver of all that come to God through Him for the Apostle having commended Christ before from these two Epithits that He is chosen of God and precious as motives to draw sinners in to Him repeateth them here again as delighting to write and think of so sweet a subject as Christ Elect precious 8. That which builds sinners upon Christ this chief corner-stone is that grace of believing which according to the signification of the word in the Hebrew whence the Apostle translateth this Text is the fixedness or stayedness as this same word is translated Exod. 17.12 of the soul in the expectation of salvation through Christ offered in the Gospel and whereby the soul is fed and nourished upon Him as its necessary food which is also in the signification of the word in that Language for the Apostle instead of insisting further upon the
a motive to holinesse he doth here hold it forth again as a motive to constancy in holinesse notwithstanding of sufferings For ye were as sheep going astray but are now returned to the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls CHAP. III. THis Chapter hath three parts In the first containing the duties of married persons the Apostle presseth upon Christian Women first That they should make conscience of duty to their Husbands though they were Pagans that so they might be gained to fall in love with Christianity ver 1. by the sight of their chast and religious carriage ver 2. Secondly That they should not be much taken up with trimming of their bodies ver 3. But thirdly That their prime care should be to have their souls adorned with grace especially meeknesse because 1. that's an ornament durable and 2. it 's in high esteem with God ver 4. So should they resemble holy Women recorded in Scripture ver 5. and prove themselves heirs of Sarah's blessednesse ver 6. Next he exhorteth Husbands to a wise and tender walking toward them by some arguments ver 7. In the second part he exhorteth all Christians whatever their relations be to the exercise of such graces and duties of holinesse as serve for keeping up a comfortable communion among themselves and with the Lord ver 8. and disswadeth them from some evils that might mar the same Because first they were all called to inherite the same blessednesse ver 9. And secondly because a holy walking with God and a peaceable carriage toward others is the only way to sweeten the lives of Christians under all their troubles ver 10 11. Thirdly that that was the way to have God's favourable providence watching over them for good Fourthly to get acceptance to their prayers And fifthly to eschew his wrath ver 12. The third part containeth several motives to constancy in holinesse and encouragements against suffering in that way As first that well-doing was the way toward off the evil of all their troubles ver 13. Secondly that no trouble for well-doing should hinder but rather promove their blessednesse to which encouragements the Apostle subjoyneth six directions for attaining a right carriage under suffering First that they should labour to banish the fear of flesh ver 14. Secondly that they should adore the holinesse of God in carving out a suffering lot for them Thirdly that they should timously enrich themselves with the knowledge of the Truth so as they might be able to give a reason of what they suffered for Fourthly that they should manifest meeknesse toward their persecutors And fifthly entertain fear of their own miscarriage ver 15. Sixthly that they should labour still to keep a good conscience under their suffering so should their carriage convince and make ashamed their very persecutors which is their third encouragement ver 16. Fourthly that their sufferings after this manner should prove much more comfortable to them than if they were procured by their own miscarriage Fifthly that the good will of God had the carving out of these sufferings ver 17. Sixthly that innocent Jesus Christ had suffered to the death for reconciling them to God and for the applying of his purchase was raised by the power of his Spirit or God-head ver 18. Seventhly that there are many souls now imprisoned in Hell for slighting such Truths as Christ's Spirit speaking through Noah and others of his Servants had prest upon them ver 19 20. Eighthly that the spiritual safety of Believers from the deluge of Gods wrath was made no lesse sure to them by their Baptism and the work of Christ's Spirit with it than the temporal safety of Noah and those few persons with him from the floud was made sure to them by the Ark ver 21. And ninthly that their Surety is now in highest power and glory that he may bear them through all their troubles and possesse them in that salvation which he hath purchased for them ver 22. All which prove that Believers ought to follow their duty to him notwithstanding of all sufferings for him Vers 1. Likewise ye wives be in subjection to your own husbands that if any obey not the Word they also may without the Word be won by the conversation of the wives 2. While they behold your chast conversation coupled with fear THe Apostle being to point out the duties of married persons he beginneth with and insisteth most upon the duties of the Women partly because they had maniest discouragements and partly because their making conscience of their duty was the best means to provoke their Husbands to their duty Upon them he presseth subjection or dutifulnesse to their Husbands by two arguments The first is Because their obligation to their duty was no less strait than the obligation of others who stood in any of those relations mentioned in the former Chapter The second is Because their unbelieving Husbands might through Gods blessing be moved to receive the Gospel which formerly they had rejected ver 1. providing they did mark nothing but chastity and holinesse joyned with the fear of God and reverence toward themselves shining in the conversation of their Wives ver 2. And therefore Christian Women had reason to make conscience of duties even toward their Pagan-Husbands Hence Learn 1. They that would rightly divide the Word of Truth among the Lord's People must not content themselves to presse the duties of holinesse in general as they concern all Christians but must learn in their Doctrine to come down to the lowest relations that are among the Lord's People and to point out the particular duties of these it being in the discharge of such duties mainly that Religion is adorned Tit. 2.10 Therefore the Apostle after he hath spoken at large of the duties of holinesse belonging to all in general he comes among other relations to point out the duties of wives to their husbands Likewise ye wives be subject c. 2. The sum of a Womans duty to her Husband is subjection which doth consist in a reverend esteem of him as of one placed by the Lord in a degree of superiority above her which will produce reverent speaking of him and to him ver 5. and in giving obedience to his commands in things lawfull both which are in the signification of this word whereby the Apostle expresseth the whole duty of Wives to their Husbands Likewise ye wives be subject to your own husbands 3. However there be difference among those relations that are betwixt the Lord's People some of them having more of dominion and subjection in them as those last mentioned in the former Chapter betwixt Magistrates and Subjects Masters and Servants others of them having more of equality and love in them as this which is here betwixt Husband and Wife Yet the obligation to the duties of the latter sort is no lesse strict than to the duties of the former both being enjoyned by the same authoritie and so to be made conscience of upon
the same hazard Therefore the Apostle presseth the duty of Women to their Husbands by such an expression as imports a like strictnesse of tye upon them to their duty as was upon those mentioned in the last part of the former Chapter Likewise ye wives be subject c. 4. The wickednesse and disobedience to the Gospel of any married person however it may draw themselves under the curse of God Yet it doth neither loose the relation nor exempt the other party from their duty excepting in the case of Adultery and lawful divorce thereupon Mat. 5.32 or wilful desertion 1 Cor. 7.15 but doth rather tye the better party the more strictly to a conscionable discharge of that duty for the conviction or gaining of the other party for though the Apostle here doth suppone Husbands some of them at least to be disobedient to the Word Yet he presseth upon their Wives dutifulness to them as to their own Hubands Be in subjection to your own husbands that if any obey not the Word c. 5. Although the publick Ministery of the Word be the ordinary and principal mean of sinners conversion to the Lord Rom. 10.15 17. Yet the Lord may and sometimes doth make use of the pains of private Christians for that effect for it is supponed that they who obey not the Word may be won to obey it by the conversation of their wives 6. Although the Children of the Lord be bound to deal with the unconverted or profane among whom they live by discourse and conference commending Christ to them and pointing out the way of attaining acquaintance and communion with him Joh. 4.29 30. Philip. 2.15 16. Yet it is mainly a conversation suitable to the Word that God useth to blesse for gaining of such to fall in love with Religion without which the best discourses will rather harden folk in sin than reclaim them from their sinful wayes Therefore the Apostle here presseth practical duties upon Christian Women as the best way to gain their unbelieving Husbands That if any obey not the Word they may be won by the conversation of the wives while they behold your chast conversation c. 7. The Lord's People ought not to quit their hopes of the conversion of those who have not hitherto been perswaded by the Word to follow the directions thereof neither yet do believe the Truths revealed in it But they ought to continue their pains toward those with whom the publick Ministery doth not prevail for even to these Husbands whom the Apostle supponeth to be unbelievers disobedient to the Word and such as will not be perswaded thereby as the word here signifieth he pleads for duty from their Wives in hopes of gaining them thereby That if any obey not the Word they may without the Word be won by the conversation of the wives 8. The winning of a sinner to Jesus Christ is an imployment full of gain and advantage as the word here translated to be won signifieth both to the sinner it self who is thereby made partaker of the true riches Jam. 2.5 and to those who are instrumental in that work in regard of the comfort they may have from them Philip. 4.1 and the reward they shall have from God Dan. 12.3 and therefore it ought to be mannaged with a great deal of spiritual policy and skill as the same word also signifieth That if any obey not the Word c. they may be won 9. There is no part of a Christians conversation so prevalent to gain on-lookers to fall in love with Religion as that wherein the duties which we owe to others in the relation we have to them doth shine for these two chastity which in the peculiar signification of it is one main duty of the Wife in reference to her Husband and fear signifying reverence to a superiour Rom. 13.7 are the qualities of a christian conversation which the Spirit of God here condescends upon as most prevalent for gaining unbelievers to fall in love with Religion They may be won while they behold your chast conversation coupled with fear 10. Carnal men do very accurately pry into all the secrets of the practice of those that are religious which though it be done by them that they may find occasion against the Godly Psal 56.6 who should therefore be the more circumspect Psal 39.1 and the more earnest for God's teaching Psal 27.11 Yet the Lord may make use of it contrary to their intention to be a mean of much good to their souls for the word which the Apostle uses here while they behold signifieth very accurately to pry into and seriously to consider a thing upon which the Apostle may be safely conceived to lay some weight for moving Christian Women to the more holy circumspection in their carriage which the Lord might blesse for gaining of their Husbands While they behold your chast conversation 11. There is no true purity or holinesse of conversation which doth not flow from fear of offending God in the heart by which Christians depart from evil in their practice Prov. 16.6 Nor is there any true fear of God in the heart where the conversation is not in some measure holy Jer. 32.40 for though this chastity and fear of Christian Women here spoken of may be taken with a special respect to their Husbands Yet the words are of a larger signification and must necessarily include holinesse of life and fear of offending God in the heart what ever they might suffer from their Husbands the one whereof cannot be separated from the other A chast conversation coupled with fear Vers 3. Whose adorning let it not be that outward adorning of plaiting the hair and of wearing of gold or of putting on of apparel 4. But let it be the hidden man of the heart in that which is not corruptible even the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit which is in the sight of God of great price The Apostle giveth here two further directions to believing Women for attaining to such a conversation as through the Lord's blessing might prove a mean of gaining their unbelieving Husbands The one is negative that they should not be too curious and superfluous in trimming their outward man The other is positive that their great pains should be to have their inward man adorned with the grace of God especially meeknesse and peaceablenesse of spirit in reference to their Husbands and the Lord's dispensation in tying them to such men and to a crosse with them which last he presseth by two arguments The first is that this was an ornament that would not wax old as others do The second is that it is in very high esteem with the Lord and therefore as they desired to gain their husbands by their outward carriage their great care should be to attain to a right frame of spirit within Hence Learn 1. Even the Children of the Lord are in hazard to offend Him and others in the matter of their apparrel while they labour not
another Fifthly that they should shew themselves courteous in their carriage and easie to be conversed with ver 8. Sixthly that they should not study to requite mutual injuries But seventhly rather seek the happinesse of them that wrong them All which especially the last two the Apostle presseth by this reason that they were all called to inherit one common blessednesse From ver 8. Learn 1. Although compleat onenesse of judgment cannot be expected among the Lord's People whilest knowledge is imperfect in all 1 Cor. 13.9 and dispensed in different measures Rom. 12.6 Yet it ought to be the sincere endeavour of every one so to drink-in the knowledge of all saving and necessary Truths themselves and to imploy their power according to their calling to make all others do the same that they may be so far as is possible as if one and the same mind were in them all as the word here signifieth which is in some good measure attained when Christians do agree in all saving and fundamental Truths and when their prime projects and designs as the word also signifieth do meet in one to wit the advancement of the glory of Jesus Christ without which unity of judgment there doth ordinarily follow among the Lord's People alienation of affection Gal. 4.15 16. and a losse of the consolations of Christ's Spirit which uses to be given through their communion among themselves Philip. 2.1 2. for this is it which the Apostle here expresly presseth Finally be all of one mind 2. Every one of the Children of the Lord ought to be so affected with the condition of another as if it were their own mourning with and for one another in affliction as if they were afflicted with them Heb. 13.3 rejoycing in and praising for their welfare as if they were in their case Rom. 12.15 considering that they are all members of one body 1 Cor. 12.26 and that this sympathizing frame of spirit is a special part of our conformity to Jesus Christ Heb. 4.15 for this is the second duty here pressed having compassion one of another 3. Whatever differences for worldly respects or measures of spiritual gifts there may be among the Children of the Lord there should be notwithstanding such affection and love in the most eminent and strongest toward the meanest and weakest as is among Brethren they being all Children of one Father Joh. 1.12 and the weakest owned by Christ as his Brethren Heb. 2.11 and co-heirs not only with the strongest but with Jesus Christ himself of everlasting blessednesse Rom. 8.17 and therefore that measure of affection which may be found among men without the Church who have not put off humanity is not sufficient for one of the Lord's People toward another for this is the third duty here pressed Love as Brethren 4. There can neither be unity sympathy nor brotherly love among the Lord's People unlesse they have hearts to pity the infirmities one of another and some prouenesse of spirit to do good to others even when they deserve the contrary at their hands for this word whereby the Apostle presseth the fourth duty is often used to signifie Christ's compassion to his own which is manifested in bestowing favours notwithstanding of provocations and signifieth such a tender-heartednesse as is evidenced by forgiving of wrongs Eph. 4.32 be pitiful 5. They that would keep up a sweet and profitable society with others of the Lord's People must shew themselves affable and pleasant in their carriage towards them studying to speak and do so far as they may with a good conscience what may be acceptable and engaging of their affections to them for this duty which is the last in the eight Verse as also all the former may be taken in reference to the keeping up of society with others be courteous From ver 9. Learn 1. Even those who have attained to such a carriage as ought in all reason to be lovely and honoured by all with whom they converse may notwithstanding resolve to meet with much hard usage and many slanders for the Apostle presseth here patience in the sixth place importing that they who had attained to all the former sive would notwithstanding have ado with their patience Not rendring evil for evil or railing for railing 2. The Children of the Lord may resolve not only to meet with hard usage and bitter language from the profane or those that are without but even from their fellow-Professors whether Hypocrites who will still be maligning the sincere Gal. 4.29 or even truly gracious whose corruptions oppose grace in others Job 16.20 for this last grace of patience prest in the beginning of the eight Verse cannot well be taken in reference to other persons than these in reference to whom the exercise of the former graces or duties were pressed which do clearly relate to other Professors and therefore this imports that they might be tried both with evil deeds and words from such while the Apostle thus dehorteth Not rendring evil for evil or railing for railing 3. However the best of the Children of the Lord are prone to study revenge and requital of private injuries as is supponed in this disswasive Yet must they not allow themselves in so doing as they love their own and others peace and desire to eschew the displeasure of God for usurping his place Rom. 12.19 Prov. 23.2 Not rendring evil for evil or railing for railing 4. So far should the Lord's People be from the study of private revenge and retaliation of wrongs done by one of them against another that by the contrary the greatest personal wrong by word or deed should not hinder one of them to procure the bestowing of blessings if they be able upon another to commend in them what they can discern to be praise-worthy or to pray for their true blessednesse which is a special draught of the Image of the Lord Mat. 5.44 45. All which is in the signification of this word whereby the Apostle expresseth the duty opposite to rendring evil for evil or railing for railing but contrariwise blessing 5. The consideration of that everlasting blessednesse which consisteth in the clear vision and full fruition of God in Christ through the Spirit and which sinners who are naturally under the curse are called to possesse as their free-gifted inheritance as the word here translated to inherit signifies should comfort the hearts of Believers against the worst usage and vilest reproaches of men which will be sufficiently made up when they come to possess that blessedness the thoughts wherof should take them off from all study of revenge toward those who may be heirs with them of the same inheritance and who could never wrong them so far as they have wronged the Lord who hath graciously called them to possess that free-gifted inheritance for this is here proposed by the Apostle as an argument to patience under wrongs and a disswasive from revenge among the Lord's people for even hereunto were ye called that ye should
good Joh. 7.7 and their carriage a shame and ●●proof to others 1 Joh. 3.12 for lest from the former ●●couragement any might expect exemption from trou●●● by following that which is good he doth in this ●uppone that they might expect to be put to suffer for righteousness sake 2. The sufferings of the Godly for ●ighteousnesse sake are so far from making them miserable as themselves are apt to apprehend Psal 73.13 and the wicked world do ordinarily judge 2 Cor. 4.13 that by the contrary they serve both to promote their spiritual happinesse the times of suffering being the times wherein every grace thrives most Rom. 5.3 and divine consolation aboundeth most in their hearts 2 Cor. 1.5 and likewise to evidence and prove to them their right to everlasting blessednesse Philip. 1.28 a special measure whereof is reserved for the greatest sufferers Rev. 7.13 c for this second encouragement doth contradict the Lord's Peoples ordinary apprehension of themselves and the profane worlds opinion of them under suffering If ye suffer for righteousness sake happy are ye 3. The best of the Children of the Lord are in hazard to have their spirits troubled and perplexed with the fear of hazard from flesh which is then exceeding sinfull when it makes them deny the Truth Mat. 26.70 or take any sinful course for their temporal safety 1 Sam. 21.10 13. or when their spirits are thereby defiled and mudded as the word in the Original here signifieth with passion against the instruments of their trouble Mat. 26.51 which hazard is imported in this disswasive given to those that suffer for righteousness Fear not their fear neither be troubled 4. They who are sled to the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ and desire to adhere to that which is right in his sight notwithstanding of suffering have no cause to fear what flesh can do unto them or to have their spirits perturbed under the hardest of their su●●●●ings considering that what ever they suffer is according to the Lord's fore-appointment 1 Thess 3.3 and carved out by His al-ruling providence Mat. 10.30 that they have the promise of his presence with them under th● sufferings Heb. 13.5 6. and are sure of a glorious iss●● out of them 1 Cor. 4.17 Upon which grounds 〈◊〉 ought to banish fleshly fear and perturbation out of 〈◊〉 hearts as the Apostle here exhorteth Fear not their ●ea● neither be troubled Vers 15. But sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts and be ready alwayes to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you with meekness and fear This Verse contains some further directions to persecuted Christians for attaining to a right frame of spirit and carriage under their sufferings The second in order is That they should reverence and adore in their hearts the soveraignty and holinesse of God especially in that dispensation of his toward them in putting them to suffer while their wicked persecutors prospered which direction as also the former is taken out of Isa 8.12 13. The third is That they should timously furnish themselves with such clear knowledge of the Truth that they may be able to hold forth from the Word of God reasons of what they believe and suffer for The fourth is That their testimony for the Truth should be seasoned with meeknesse even toward their persecutors And the fifth is That they should entertain in their hearts some holy fear of miscarrying in the way of giving that testimony Hence Learn 1. It is a principal part of a right disposition for sufferers to entertain in their hearts the sense and acknowledgment of the holinesse of God who though he be matchlesse in holinesse 1 Sam. 2.2 and can have nothing added to that or any other of his infinit perfections by any creature Rom. 11.35 36. Yet doth esteem himself sanctified in the hearts of his own while they are by the consideration of his holinesse made submissive to the hardest of his dispensations toward them Psal 22.3 afraid to offend so holy a Majesty Isa 29.23 and thereby also are confirmed in the faith of his performing all his Promises Psal 111.9 and e●ecuting of his threatnings upon his enemies and theirs ●●b 1.12 for this is the Apostle's second direction for attaining to a right frame of spirit under sufferings sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts 2. The Children of the Lord while they are under hard usage from wicked men are in great hazard not only to forget the soveraignity of God over them to use them as he pleases for his own glory which occasioneth much perturbation of spirit in them Isa 51.12 13. but likewise to entertain in their hearts thoughts unsuitable to the holinesse and purity of his Nature as if their sufferings and the wickeds prosperity were not consistent therewith both which are imported in this exhortation to acknowledge the holinesse of God whom the Apostle representeth under such names as hold forth also his soveraignity Sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts 3. Although the Godly ought not to be anxious concerning their furniture in a time of trial Mat. 10.19 Yet ought they not to neglect ordinary means of preparation for trials such as the drinking-in of the solid and clear knowledge of the Truth 1 Tim. 6.19 entertaining the presence of that Spirit who revealeth Truths not yet known and brings known Truths to remembrance when it is necessary Joh. 19.26 that so they may be able to defend the Truth by holy reason drawn from the Scripture or make apology for it as the word here signifies and answer objections that may be made against the same Prov. 15.28 as is imported in this third direction Be ready alwayes to answer every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you 4. Although in some cases the Children of the Lord may safely answer their adversaries with silence to wit when they have sufficiently and frequently born testimony to such Truths before Mat. 27.12 14. or when questions are propounded to them by wicked men out of scorn Prov. 26.5 or curiosity Luke 23.8 9 11. or to be a snare to the Godly Isa 36.21 Yet ought they still to keep themselves in a readinesse of mind and fitnesse of disposition for defending the Truth and giving a reason of what they hold when the glo y of God and edification of others call for it the seaso● and manner whereof every humble waiter on God shall know from Him Luke 12.11 12. and 21.14 15. Hab. 2.1 for the Apostle doth not direct them here to answer alwayes every man that asketh them but to be ready alwayes to answer every one that asketh a reason 5. The Children of the Lord ought not to satisfie themselves with any confidence or perswasion concerning the truths of the Gospel whereof they have not such clear and rational grounds from the Word as may not only convince themselves but such as they are able to hold forth to others when they are
the same one to another as good stewards of the manifold grace of God The sixth direction which the Apostle inferreth upon the former arguments is That they would mutually communicate all their receipts for the glory of Christ and the good of others and this he presseth by two arguments The one is That what-ever they had was a free-gift flowing from the grace of God The other is That they were not absolute owners but dispensers or stewards of those various gifts and graces of God Hence Learn 1. There are none of the Lord's People but they have received some gifts from Him which being rightly employed may be made forth-coming for His glory and the good of others of His People this is supposed while the Apostle thus exhorts As every man hath received the gift so let him minister the same c. that God in all things may be glorified 2. It hath pleased the Lord to dispense His gifts variously among His People giving to some moe talents and to some fewer Mat. 25.15 and different measures of the same gifts to several persons Rom. 12.3 that all may know all fulnesse is only in Himself Col. 1.19 and that every one may make use of that gift or degree of gift in another which themselves want 1 Cor. 12.21 for this variety of the Lord's dispensing of His gifts is imported in this direction of the Apostle's while he thus exhorts in the beginning of the Verse As every man hath received the gift c. and while he calleth those gifts in the latter part of the Verse the manifold grace of God 3. What-ever gift or talent any of the Lord's People have that may be any way usefull for His glory and the good of others that is a free-gift to them flowing from the undeserved grace of God there being nothing foreseen or found in any that can merit the least good at Gods hand Rom. 11.35 as is clearly held forth in the signification of this word As every man hath received the Gift 4. None of the Lord's People have received any gift from Him for themselves alone but that they may lay forth the same for His glory and the good of others as is imported in this direction As every man hath received the gift so let him minister the same 5. The Children of the Lord have much need of His Spirit that they may discern the gifts they have received and so may know what is freely bestowed upon them 1 Cor. 2.12 that they may neither undervalue their receipts as uselesse and so hide their talents in a napkin nor yet take upon them what they are not able for but may put forth their gifts in their stations for the glory of God and others good suitably to the measure they have received As every man hath received the gift so let him minister the same 6. All our receipts ought to be communicated with much diligence and activity as also with humble condescendency to profit those that are inferiour to us as being in that servants to others for both diligence and condescendency are imported in the signification of this word Let him minister the same 7. The consideration of the freedom of God's grace in bestowing any of His gifts should strongly move all His People heartily to lay out the same for His glory and the good of others for that we may never think upon any of our receipts but as free-gifts and thereby may be moved to communicate the same the Spirit of the Lord hath put such a name upon them here as in the Original signifieth a gift of grace and a gift whereby others may be gratified As every man hath received the gift 8. The Lord's People are not to look upon themselves as owners of any gifts they have so as they may use the same at their pleasure but as dispensators and stewards as the word here signifies who ought to dispose of their receipts according to the mind and direction of the giver of them communicating the same seasonably and with discretion considering the several tempers of the rest of the family to whom they are to give out these gifts and faithfully as those that must give account how they have imployed all that they have received as good stewards use to do All which is imported in the manner of Christians dispensing of their gifts here held forth in a metaphor As good stewards of the manifold grace of God Vers 11. If any man speak let him speak as the oracles of God If any man minister let him do it as of the ability which God giveth that God in all things may be glorified through Jesus Christ to whom be praise and dominion for ever and ever Amen The last direction is concerning the right manner of communicating their receipts for which the Apostle giveth two instances The first is anent the communication of things spiritual which are to be communicated by word and for that he exhorteth that it be done whether by publick Ministers or private Christians in their stations with that reverence and confidence which is sutable to the majesty and certainty of divine Truths The second is concerning the right way of communicating things temporal and for this he exhorteth that those be given forth whether by all Christians whom charity obligeth to supply one anothers necessities or by those who have an Office in the House of God to gather and distribute the charity of the rest in a way suitable to every ones ability and with such a willing and chearful frame of spirit as the Lord vouchsafes upon them and withall he proposeth the right end that Christians should have before them in all their duties and especially in this the communication of their receipts to wit the glorifying of God through Jesus Christ upon the mentioning whereof the Apostles heart rises to ascribe eternal praise to him wherewith the first part of the Chapter is closed Hence Learn 1. All that speak any thing to others of the matters of God as private Christians in a private way may do for their mutual edification Judg. 5.10 11. Mal. 3.16 especially to these under their charge 1 Tim. 5.4 more especially those who have an Office in the House of God for that end ought to study the right manner of delivering the mind of God that they speak nothing but what they understand are clearly perswaded to be His Truth as the word here signifies that they speak the same with plainness that there may be no ground for people to doubt of the meaning as ordinarily there is of Satan's oracles which use to be doubtsom and ambiguous that they speak seasonably with reverence humility as becomes the mind of God All which is imported in this direction prescribing the right manner of communicating spiritual receipts which is to be done by speech If any man speak let him speak as the Oracles of God 2. As every Christian ought willingly to give out of his worldly substance for the supply
the Church-guides as arguments to bear-in his following exhortations upon them thereby importing some difficulty of prevailing with them and is very humbly earnest with them thereby casting a copie to one Minister how to deal with another as is imported in the signification of these words The Elders which are among you I exhort who am also an Elder 9. It pleased our Redeemer to suffer before witnesses both in his agony in the Garden Mat. 26.37 and upon the Crosse Mat. 27.39 and likewise to imploy some of these Witnesses to preach Him crucified to the Church thereby condescending to beget the greater certainty in the hearts of Believers that God's justice is satisfied for them Act. 5.30 31. to give us the more lively description of his sufferings Act. 3.15 and to let us know that he hath born shame for us as a part of the punishment due to our sins Heb. 12.2 for which and the like causes the Apostle calleth himself here A Witnesse of the sufferings of Christ 10. However these whom the Lord makes most instrumental to gain others to himself may expect a special reward from him Dan. 12.3 Yet everlasting blessednesse or glory is not a thing proper to them alone but is the common portion of all faithful Ministers and Believers in Jesus Christ for the Apostle only calleth himself a partaker or as the word signifieth a sharer together with others to wit the flock of Christ to whom his speech is directed and their Officers whose duty he presseth of the glory that shall be revealed 11. Although the Saints in this mortal state could not well endure the least glimpse of glory much lesse partake of it as they shall do afterward Mark 9.6 Yet even while they are in the midst of much outward misery and in the expectation of more they have a right and may attain unto some real participation of glory while they are by faith united with Christ the Lord of glory Col. 1.27 and do sometimes tast of the first fruits of that whereupon glorified spirits do live Rev. 2.17 for the Apostle a persecuted man and looking for martyrdom 2 Pet. 1.14 calleth himself a partaker or sharer with other Believers of the glory that shall be revealed 12. Although Christ's Ministers should detest the seeking of their own glory before the world as they desire to resemble their Master Joh. 8.50 and the best of his Servants 1 Thess 2.6 Yet may they humbly assert any special honour that Christ hath put upon them when it is manifest that their so doing may tend to his glory and the advantage of the message they carry for that the Apostle may make way for the receiving of the message which he hath to the Church-guides he doth commend himself from the honour Christ had put upon him to be a personal witnesse of his sufferings and a partaker of the glory to be revealed 13. The greater certainty of the Truth and comfort by it appear to be in them that deliver it and the more charity they may expresse concerning the good estate of those to whom they do deliver it the better acceptance and successe of their message may they expect for the Apostle that his message might be the better taken representeth himself as one to whom the truth of the Gospel was most certain he being a witnesse of the sufferings of Christ as one that had much courage and comfort in adhering to it and much charity toward those with whom he dealeth as being a co-partner with them of the glory to be revealed Vers 2. Feed the Flock of God which is among you taking the oversight thereof not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready mind 3. Neither as being lords over Gods heritage but being ensamples to the flock The Apostle having insinuated himself in the former Verse upon the Officers of the Church that so his counsel here might have the better acceptance with them he doth in the next place branch out particularly their duty exhorting them to feed the Lord's People with his Truth and rule them by his Discipline both which are in the signification of the first word and that these might be the better done he presseth them to take diligent inspection of the manners and several conditions of the people which duties he beareth-in by an argument taken from the relation that the People of their charge had to the Lord as being his Flock and withall pointeth out the right manner of going about these duties in six several directions one whereof is still negative disswading from some evil incident to men of that calling and another positive perswading to the study of some necessary qualification requisit in such to wit first That they should not go about their duty as if they were forced unto it But secondly from an inward inclination to serve their Master and profit his People Thirdly not from so base an end as their outward gain But fourthly from a heart fitted by Jesu-Christ for their duty Fifthly that they should not affect any dominion over the Lord's People But sixthly in their whole carriage cast them a copie of holy and humble walking Hence Learn 1. Every Minister of Christ ought both to be able to feed his People with his saving Truth Jer. 3.15 rightly divided and applied 2 Tim. 2.15 to every one of them according to their several conditions Mat. 24.45 which is no lesse necessary for cherishing and encreasing their spiritual life than their ordinary food in season is for their bodi s Job 23.12 And likewise they ought to have wisdom authority and equity for ruling of the Lord's People by the right exercise of discipline and application of censures for both feeding and ruling is exprest by one word in both the original languages to signifie that they are joyntly requisite in every Minister whose duty here is mainly held forth Feed the Flock c. 2. It is not enough for the Ministers of Christ to hold forth sound and saving Truths to his People in their doctrine and to rule them by the application of censures and discipline unlesse they also take diligent inspection of their manners and of their several conditions and necessities by frequent conversing with and visiting of them as this other word holding forth their duty signifieth without which they can neither apply the Truth nor censures to the People as they ought for this is the second principal part of Church-officers duty especially Ministers toward the Flock of God taking the oversight thereof 3. It should provoke Ministers to fidelity and diligence in their Calling to consider that the People of their Charge are the Flock of God who therefore will provide for them Isa 40.11 and will be very terrible to them that have the charge of them in case they slight or wrong them Ezek. 34.2 10. c. for to move the Church-officers to faithfulnesse and painfulnesse in their duty the Apostle thus designeth the People of their
to unworthy sinners the consideration whereof should hearten both Ministers and People to pray for and expect a more plentiful measure thereof than what they have already received for this first ground of confidence which the Apostle makes use of to strengthen his own and the peoples faith for obtaining of what he seeks here includeth both the abundance of grace that is in God and his gracious inclination to communicate the same freely in both which respects he is here called The God of all grace 6. Whether the Lord's People consider that woful case out of which they are called by the Gospel Col. 1.13 or that blessed state to which they are called 1 Cor. 1.9 they may take his calling of them for a sure ground to their faith if so be they have consented to his call concerning his willingnesse to give them every thing necessary for their perseverance till they come to the possession of what he hath called them to for this is a second ground of confidence which the Apostle makes use of to obtain what he seeks hereby teaching the people to make use of the same That God had called them unto his eternal glory 7. The blessednesse which the Gospel calleth sinners to possesse is such as they that obey the Call can never be put from the possession of it Yea it is of the same kind with that which the Lord himself liveth in glorious for ever So that they share with Him of his own blessednesse so far as they are capable Joh. 17.22 for that blessednesse whereunto sinners are called by the Gospel is here called His eternal glory 8. It is by Jesus Christ the Mediatour that sinners are called to the possession of this eternal glory He by his bloud hath purchased it for them Eph. 1.14 by His Word and Spirit doth clear to them the way to it 2 Tim. 1.10 Yea He himself is the way and quickeneth His Redeemed Ones to walk in it Job 14.6 for we are called to his eternal glory by Jesus Christ 9. The way to eternal glory lieth through sufferings so that none have ground to expect it any other way for this clause after ye have suffered may be knit to the words going before who hath called us into his eternal glory by Jesus Christ after ye have suffered 10. Those who get grace to adventure upon sufferings for Christ and His Truth with the small measure of ●●rength and grace which they have already attained may expect a further degree of perfection and a greater measure of strength and stability after they have suffered a while the Lord makes trials discover to his People the weaknesse of his grace in them and that discovery to chase them to himself who loveth to let out liberally upon sufferers chap. 4.14 for this clause may be also knit with the following petitions After ye have suffered a while make you perfect c. 11. Even the hardest of the Lord's Peoples sufferings are of small weight being compared with the reward 2 Cor. 4.17 and of short continuance being compared with eternity 2 Pet. 3.8 the consideration whereof may hearten the Lord's People under them all for in both these respects may this encouragement be understood that they are but for a while or a very little Vers 11. To Him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen The next article of the Conclusion of the Epistle coutaineth a song of praise to God wherein the Apostle acknowledgeth Him worthy to be glorified and obeyed by all as their Soveraign Lord unto all eternity and by his so doing expresseth his faith of being heard in his former petitions that so the people for whom he prayed might with the like confidence joyn with him in the song Hence Learn 1. Christ's Ministers should carry a praising disposition in their hearts all-along their work and be ready frequently to break forth in some expressions thereof before the Lord's People especially in a suffering time for the Apostle raised one long of praise at the beginning of this Epistle chap. 1. ver 3. another chap. 4.11 and here in the Conclusion takes it up again To Him be glory and dominion for ever and ever 2. While the Lords People are praying for a further measure of his grace they should joyn praise therewith acknowledging Him to be glorious in Himself and worthy of all glory from others to have dominion over all and wishing that His glory may be seen and acknowledged and His dominion submitted unto in testimony of their thankfulnesse for that measure of His grace which they have already received and of their confidence grounded upon their knowledge of His gracious Nature and their former experience of His Grace already bestowed upon them for upon these grounds the Apostle having prayed for the Peoples perseverance stability and perfection doth here praise and lead them so to do To Him be glory and dominion for ever and ever 3. When ever the Lords People see aright how gracious the Lord is and hath manifested Himself to be in the offers of his Grace to them in the Gospel they cannot but have their hearts raised to glorifie Him and to wish that many might be subject to Him for the Apostle having set forth the Lord as the God of all Grace who had graciously called sinners to partake of his own eternal glory doth now break forth in praise as that wherein all that were sensible of what he had said could not but joyn with him To Him be glory and dominion for ever and ever 4. Where there is a real and kindly desire of ascribing glory and dominion to the Lord it will extend it self beyond all time and ages even toward the length of eternity considering that His love and the proofs thereof will follow His own that length and that His excellency and the worth of His favours bestowed upon His People are such as unto all eternity they will not be able sufficiently to acknowledge and therefore will desire that Glory and Dominion may be given to Him for ever and ever 5. While we ascribe glory and dominion to the Lord there should be in our hearts strong desires that His glory may be known and acknowledged His dominion enlarged and submitted unto and much confidence that it shall be so He having engaged his faithfulnesse for that effect Isa 45.23 for this word wherewith both prayer and praise useth to be closed signifies both desire and confidence Amen Vers 12. By Silvanus a faithful Brother unto you as I suppose I have written briefly exhorting and testifying that this is the true Grace of God wherein ye stand The third article of the Conclusion of this Epistle containeth two branches In the first the Apostle commendeth the Bearer of the Epistle who was to explain and apply the purpose of it to them he being a publick Minister 2 Cor. 1.19 from his fidelity and near relation to himself and them as he had good ground in charity to judge of him
In the next he commendeth the Epistle it self 1. from the shortnesse of it and 2. from the sweet scope thereof which was to stir them up to their duty and to bear witnesse to the Doctrine of God's Free-grace whereunto they did adhere Hence Learn 1. Though saving Truth should be heartily embraced who ever they be that carry it Philip. 1.15 18. Yet it contributes for the better acceptance thereof that those who deliver it deserve and have a good esteem amongst those to whom it is delivered and be looked upon by them as having a special respect to their good for to make thi● Epistle the more acceptable to those to whom it was firs● directed the Apostle commendeth him that carried it and was to open it up unto them as one faithfull in his Office and loving toward them By Silvanus a faithf●ll Brother unto you 2. It becomes those who are of longer standing and more eminent gifts in the Ministery to be so far from undervaluing or slighting those who are of shorter standing and meaner gifts that they ought to gain to them all the respect and esteem they can among the Lord's people for the Message-sake which they carry for this Apostle being among the first of those that Christ called immediately to the service of the Gospel and eminently honoured by him to be a Pen-man of Scripture doth here commend Silvanus of whom there was no mention in Christ's dayes and who was only an ordinary Minister called to expound the written Word as if he had been in all respects his equal By Silvanus a faithful Brother 3. It is the great commendation of a Minister of Christ that he be faithful in his Master's service by improving his talents whether moe or fewer for His glory Mat. 25.21 23. and that he have a brotherly affection toward his fellow-labourers expressing the same by working to their hands in the work of the Gospel Col. 4.11 and to the people by a humble and affectionate care of their good as if they were his brethren Philip. 4.1 for this is the commendation of Silvanus A faithful Brother to you 4. It is neither safe to withhold our testimony concerning the fidelity of others when we have grounds for charity that they do deserve it nor to be positive and superlative in commending of any as if we were infallibly perswaded of their faithfulnesse for the Apostle giveth this commendation to Silvanus of his faithfulnesse with such an adjection as signifies a judgment of charity concerning him which the Apostle had gathered by several probable grounds and reasons and yet the expression doth import an inferiour degree of certainty to that which he had concerning his own estate and fidelity in his Calling Rom. 8.38 1 Tim. 1.12 By Silvanus a faithful Brother as I suppose 5. It is a necessary favour to the Church and People of God to have the mind of God given unto them in writing to be a standing Rule for trial of every thing that is pretended to be His mind Isa 8.20 to help their frail memories the better to remember His Truth Isa 30.8 to prevent mistakes among His People concerning His mind which would far more readily arise if it had been only delivered in so transient a way as Satan's oracles are and that His People when they have not occasion to hear His Mind preached or spoken by others may have it with them to read and meditate upon Act. 8.28 for though this Apostle and others had preached the substance of 〈◊〉 Doctrine contained in this Epistle to these same persons to whom it is directed Act. 2. 1 Pet. 1. 25. and though they had Silvanus a man able to preach the Gospel coming to them Yet the Spirit of the Lord finds it necessary to write his mind to them By Silvanus c. I have written unto you 6. It is a commendable thing in Christ's Servants and a special gift of God's to them to be able to deliver much of the Lords Mind to His People in a few words providing it be with plainness of speech So will people be the more able to comprehend in their judgment and retain in their memory what is delivered to them for the Apostle commends this Epistle which hath in it the heads of all saving Truths delivered in much plainnesse of speech from the shortnesse of it I have written unto you briefly 7. It is necessary for Christs Ministers to make use of several strains of Doctrine in dealing with people sometimes to exhort them and that with much earnestnesse and vehemency to their duty sometimes to comfort them against discouragements in the way of their duty both which are in the signification of the first word Exhorting at other times again to bear witnesse to the Truths they deliver as a thing themselves know experimentally and believe to be the Truth of God Joh. 3.11 confirming the same from other places of Scripture Act. 26.22 and 28.23 and testifying against them that reject or disobey the same Deut. 8. 19. according to the signification of the next word testifying by both which the Apostle holdeth forth his several strains of dealing with the people especially in this Epistle and these as a patern to Ministers Exhorting and testifying 8. The sum of the Gospel and of all right preaching thereof is To make offer unto sinners of the rich and free grace of God for pardoning sanctifying and saving of them to stir them up to imbrace that offer and having embraced it to study the exercise of grace and walking like gracious persons in the obedience of that Doctrine for here the Apostle giveth the sum and scope of this Epistle which is the same with that of the whole Word To exhort and testifie that this is the true grace of God 9. The Doctrine of the Gospel wi●● deceive none that receive it they will find the Lord as gracious and his wayes as sweet as the Gospel affirms for it is the true grace of God 10. Even those who have made good progresse in grace and are for the present fixed in their adherance to the Truth are in hazard to be shaken by temptations and made to question the truth of the Gospel and the reality of the gracious offers made therein as is imported in this that the Spirit of the Lord findeth it necessary to put the Apostle upon writing an Epistle to such for exhorting and testifying that is was the true grace of God wherein they did stand Vers 13. The Church that is at Babylon elected together with you saluteth you and so doth Marcus my son Here is the fourth article of the Conclusion of this Epistle wherein the Apostle delivers salutations to the scattered Jews 1. From those Christians at Babylon whom the Lord had chosen out of the world to be a Church to himself and to share with others of His People in spiritual and eternal mercies This Church at Babylon seems to have been made up of the posterity of those Jews who
for so the Apostle exhorteth Greet ye one another with a kisse of charity 4. The occasion of frequent converse and correspondence among the Lords People ought not to diminish their love or hinder the expressions thereof but rather to encrease the same they who live together being more ready to offend or mistake one another and so to be mutually jealous of the alienation of one anothers affection than those who are at a greater distance whose love should provoke those that are nearer for the Apostle having signified the love of those that were at Babylon to their dispersed Brethren doth here exhort them that had more frequent occasion of meeting and correspondence to greet one another with a kiss of charity 5. As it is the duty of Christ's Ministers heartily to wish all sort of true peace upon all the Members of the visible Church who in regard of their external profession and participation of common gifts and benefits from Christ may be said to be in Him Joh. 15.2 So true spiritual peace which is the calmnesse and contentment of the soul arising from the faith of acceptation with God through Christ when fears of His wrath and jealousies of His love are in some measure banished Rom. 5.1 together with as much outward peace and prosperity as shall be for their true good is the Lords allowance only to real Believers and to all of them whether weaker or stronger and may be in a good measure attained unto in the midst of many troubles by those who are chased out of themselves and by faith planted in the living Vine Christ Jesus for as this Apostolick-benediction may be understood of the Apostle's wish to all the Members of the visible Church So it doth especially respect true Believers therein Peace be to all them that are in Christ Jesus 6. As it is the duty of Christ's Ministers to presse duties upon all Professors So it is their part to guard promises and priviledges by qualifying the persons to whom they do belong for the Apostle having prest the duties of love and expressions thereof upon all indefinitly to whom he writeth in the first part of this Verse he doth in the latter part restrict his wish of Peace qualifying the persons to whom it doth especially belong Peace be to all them that are in Christ Jesus 7. As the Ministers of Jesus Christ ought to enter upon every part of their Imployment with the faith of their Calling and Commission from Him as was observed upon the first words of this Epistle So they ought to close the same with some confidence in their hearts of the blessing of God upon their labours and of His granting their desires for that end for here the Apostle closeth his exhortations and prayers in this Epistle with this word of confidence Amen A BRIEF EXPOSITION Of the second Epistle General of PETER The ARGUMENT THis Epistle may be called the latter Will of a dying Apostle and Martyr of Jesus Christ for when Peter wrote it he knew that he was shortly to seal the Truth in it with his bloud as will be clear by comparing the 14. Verse of this Chap. with Christ's prediction concerning his death Joh. 21.18 It is not directed to any particular Church but to all Believers especially believing Jews scattered at that time through many Nations as appeareth by comparing 1 Pet. 1.1 with the first Verse of this and of the third Chapter The principal heads of Doctrine contained in it make clear the scope and parts of it And they are three The first is concerning a Christians growth in grace and diligence in holy duties which is cleared and pressed chap. 1. The second is concerning error the way of working and hazard whereof is handled chap. 2. The third is concerning the last coming of Christ some errors about it being confuted and the right preparation for it held forth chap. 3. What can be more necessary than to study growth and diligence in so declining and secure a time as this is to guard against error when it so prevaileth and to prepare for the last coming of our Lord when now it is so near and so much forgotten CHAP. 1. THe parts of this Chapter are three In the first which is the preface to the whole Epistle is contained a description of the Apostle and those to whom he writeth in the Inscription ver 1. An Apostolick wish for the best blessings of God to them to wit the growing sense of His love and the fruits thereof in the Salutation ver 2. Grounds of encouragement that it should be according to his wish to wit that there was a saving work of grace already begun in them which he describeth from the cause nature parts and way of working of it ver 3 4. In the second which is the first principal part of the Epistle he exhorteth to diligence and the study of growth in grace reckoning out several steps of their progresse ver 5 6 7. with many moving arguments thereto ver 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15. And because there is no growth but by the knowledge and use-making of Christ and Christ is only revealed in the Word preached and written Therefore In the third part of the Chapter there is a commendation of the preaching of the Gospel ver 16. of Christ himself the chief subject thereof ver 17 18. and of the whole written Word from the certainty and usefulnesse thereof ver 19. and from the divine authority thereof ver 20 21. Vers 1. Simon Peter a Servant and an Apostle of Jesus Christ to them that have obtained like precious faith with us through the righteousness of God and our Saviour Jesus Christ THe Apostle describeth himself 1. from two names which design his person Simon his old name when he was a fisher Peter his new surname given him when Christ called him Mark 1.16 and 3.16 The one minding him of his former ignorant and mean condition the other of the honour Christ put upon him when He made him a lively stone in the Church and a Believer and Preacher of that Truth upon which as a Rock He buildeth His Church which is Christ's own exposition of the name Peter Mat. 16.18 Hence Learn It is very necessary to carry to the end of our time with us the sensible remembrance of what we were before Christ did manifest himself to us and of what His grace hath made us that we may go to Heaven both humble and thankful Therefore the Apostle setteth down these two names here in the beginning of his Testament Simon Peter Next he describeth himself from two stiles which design his office the one common to all the Officers of the Church the other proper to those who had immediate Commission and extraordinary Assistance from Christ to publish the Gospel and work Miracles Hence Learn 1. It is honour enough for the highest Office-bearer in the Church to be a Servant of Christ so doth this Apostle esteem it who never
related the greatest things present And because a transient Voice is more easily mistaken or forgotten than a standing authentick Record therefore the written Word is a more sure ground for sinners faith to rest upon than a Voice from Heaven could be Next he commendeth the written Word from the usefulnesse thereof that it should prove to sinners who make it the rule of their faith and manners a comfortable Directory through this dark state of ignorance and misery until they get such a measure of the promised Spirit and nearness to the Son of righteousness that they shall not need a prospect of Glasse of the Word and Ordinances which will not be till death and the dawning of the day of eternity Hence Learn 1. The written Word believed to be the Lord's mind is the surest ground for faith to rest upon of any that ever hath been or can be given to sinners subject to forgetfulnesse jealousies and mistakes the general offers of Christ and free promises of His grace excluding none who will not exclude themselves give more solid encouragement to self-judging sinners than they could have by a Voice from Heaven calling them by their names for that would readily be suspected to be another than the Lord's or spoken to another of that name Therefore the Apostle comparing the written Word with the Voice from Heaven calleth it to sinners A more sure Word 2. As this world is so dark a place that our own reason the counsel or example of others will often leave us comfortlesse to wander and fall in snares except we look to the light of the Word which shineth in this dark place So they have the Lord's approbation and commendation who do apply their hearts to and satisfie themselves with this Word as the only and sufficient ground of their faith and rule of their manners to keep them from erring in judgment or practice for so saith the Apostle VVhereunto ye do well to take heed as to a light that shineth in a dark place 3. Although the light be now clear in comparison of what was before Christ came Yet being compared with that light we shall have in Heaven it is but dark Like the light that shineth out of a room where a candle is in a room where the candle is not seen So much doth this similitude of a light shining in a dark place import 4. Though it be so Yet shall the Word give comfortable direction to all that follow the light of it under all their crosses confusions and difficulties and these who make it a lamp to their feet and a light to their path may be sure to get at last such a clear and satisfactory sight of Christ as shall banish all darknesse and doubts and such a near union and fellowship with Him the bright Morning-Star gloriously present by His Spirit in their hearts and personally also in humane nature conversing with them for ever that they shall have no more need of Word or Ordinances which is the condition here described by the Apostle only to be expected in Heaven till which time we will never be above the direction of the Word and use of the Ordinances Eph. 4.13 Cant. 4.12 Vers 20. Knowing this first that no Prophesie of the Scripture is of any private interpretation 21. For the Prophesie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost Last of all the Apostle commendeth the written Word from the Divine Authority of it the interpretation or true meaning whereof cannot be found out by the wit or proper invention of any whereof the Apostle giveth a reason Because these truly gracious men who were consecrated and set a part by the Lord for receiving and registring His mind in Scriptures could neither speak nor write when nor what things they pleased but as they were immediatly moved and infallibly furnished by the Lord's Spirit whose mind it is Therefore the Scriptures are of Divine Authority and this the Apostle saith must be known first to wit as a principle of saving knowledge without which Christians cannot profit by the Scriptures Hence Learn 1. As the Scriptures do not hold forth to us the device of their heads who wrote it but the publick mind of God So none can attain to the right meaning nor be able to hold forth the true interpretation thereof by their own proper skill or invention there being in it such knots as the word interpretation importeth as cannot be loosed but by humble imploring the help of the Spirit whose mind it is as the Pen-men of it themselves did that they might know what was revealed to themselves Psa 119.18 Dan. 2.22 Zech. 4.4 5. and by comparing one place with another Act. 17.11 and making use of other helps that God hath given Dan. 9.2 1 Tim. 4.13 14 15. by which means through the Lords blessing we may come to some saving measure of the knowledge of God's mind in His Word and may have the common or publick consent of both Prophets and Apostles to every saving Truth made known 〈◊〉 us therein for no Prophesie or part of Scripture is of any private interpretation 2. As it is the duty of all the Lord's People to fix in their minds as an unquestionable Truth this principle That the Scriptures being the Lord's mind none can of themselves attain to the true meaning of them So till this principle be known at least so far as that it be not questioned there can be no light or comfort expected from the Word for the Apostle having exhorted in the former Verse to look to the Word for direction and comfort doth adde here that as they would find these they must know this first that it is not of any private interpretation And though only the Spirit of the Lord the Author of the Scriptures can fully perswade hearts that they are His mind Yet if men would consider that a great many of these truths that are revealed in Scripture are not only agreeable to Natures-light but may be in some measure known by it The one to wit the light of Nature teaching That there is one God the first cause of all omnipotent wise righteous and good that it is reasonable He should be served and that according to His own will which therefore He being both wise and good must have some way revealed that reasonable creatures have immortal souls and so die not as the beasts that there is no true happinesse in these things wherein men do ordinarily seek it that since vice and vertue receive not suitable rewards here there must be punishment and reward after this life all which and many other things of this sort Natures-light teacheth though darkly as the Scriptures themselves Rom. 1.19 20. and the Writings of those that never knew the Scriptures do witnesse The other again to wit the Scriptures clearly revealing these same things pointing out the nature will and way of worshipping of
numerous party to back them in their soul-destroying courses 2. That they and their followers should prevail to bring saving Truth in disgrace among many Doct. 1. It is not strange to see the most dangerous Hereticks have many followers every error being a friend to some lust 2 Tim. 4.3 and having often more of prosperity and applause attending it than Truth 1 Cor. 4.8 10. and because of the activity and fair pretences of them that vent it Mat. 23.15 Rom. 16.18 for these and the like causes many shall follow their pernicious wayes 2. They that are loft of God to the leading of the spirit of error do not only enslave their judgments to their seducers But do also give up themselves to back them in all the courses they take to propagate their errors and increase their faction even although these courses no lesse than their errors be destructive to the honour of Christ and welfare of souls for the Apostle saith Many shall follow not only their errors which he called damnable before but their wayes which are called pernicious 3. As error is received Truth goeth out of request the lovers thereof bending all their wit to disgrace those Truths that discover the vilenesse of their errors Rom. 3.8 and to raise and keep up hot contests among the Professors of the Gospel Gal. 1.7 thereby giving occasion to a third party who resolve to side with none but to slander or as the word is blaspheme the whole profession of Christianity Rom. 2.24 for the Apostle here makes the slander of Truth the consequence of embracing error and doth point at a third party who would take occasion from Hereticks prevailing to slander the Truth By reason of whom the way of Truth shall be evil spoken of Vers 3. And through covetousnesse shall they with fained words make merchandise of you whose judgment now of a long time lingreth not and their damnation slumbreth not Followeth the way how these false teachers came to have so great successe held forth in two branches 1. Their immoderate desire of gain and glory made them very industrious And 2. their figurative or plaistered language as the word signifieth made them easily gain a number of poor souls to be compleatly at their disposal as wares are under the power of the Merchant that hath bought them for which dealing he doth forewarn that God's watchfull providence was framing His decreed judgments for them Hence Learn 1. However they that seduce fouls by error may seem to be the most mortified men in the world Col. 2.23 and most desirous of the good of souls Gal. 4.17 Yet is the rise of all their pains with people from some unmortified lust such as the immoderate desire of gain or applause for the Spirit of the Lord is in this to be believed what ever they pretend that through covetousnesse make merchandise of His People 2. False teachers are in their way of dealing with souls very like unto cheating Merchants 1. in their using of much fair and plaistred language to commend their errors 2. In their activity and stirring from place to place as the word in the Original of making merchandise doth signifie to vent them And 3. in their unsatisfiableness till their followers become their compleat slaves both in judgment and practice All which is held forth as clear resemblances betwixt them and cheating Merchants in these words With fained words shall they make merchandise of you 3. However the judgment of such men be hardly believed because of their successe and fair pretences and may be long suspended for the exercise of the Godly and punishment of those who receive not the love of the Truth with strong delusion Yet it is most certain according to the foreknowledge and decree of God it is swiftly approaching and shall light upon them by way of surprizal for their judgment now of a long time lingreth not and their damnation slumbreth not Vers 4. For if God spared not the Angels that sinned but cast them down to Hell and delivered them into chains of darknesse to be reserved unto judgment The Apostle proveth the certainty of the judgment threatned against these false teachers by a threefold instance in this and the following Verses The substance of the first which is in this Verse is That if the holy Lord did not spare the Angels His most glorious Creatures when they sinned against Him but did presently imprison them in the pit of Hell reserving them for further judgment These false teachers and their followers have no reason to dream of exemption Which conclusion flowing from this and the following instances the Apostle findeth not necessary to expresse but leaveth to their own conscience to infer Doct. 1. Although it be ordinary for sinners to harden themselves against threatnings because of their excellencies and priviledges conferred upon them by the Lord Rev. 18.7 Yet nothing of that kind can shelter them from the wrath of a provoked God but the more of these gifts there be and be abused the greater measure of wrath may be expected Therefore is the judgment of God upon these excellent and priviledged Creatures the Angels brought to prove the certainty of the like wrath to come upon false teachers who by reason of their excellent enducments and esteem in the Church were ready to make light of the Apostle's threatnings If God spared not the Angels c. 2. It ought to be esteemed marvelous mercy in God that He doth not presently thrust sinners down to Hell when they provoke Him and much more that He hath provided a remedy and offers pardon to them Every moments sparing after the comission of sin should be thought wonderfull indulgence in God who spared not the Angels but as the words in the Original will bear imprisoned them while they were sinning secluding them from all possibility or hopes of recovery for ever He spared not the Angels that sinned but cast them down to Hell and delivered them into chains c. 3. The fallen Angels who are the Devils are under such a powerfull restraint of Divine Providence that they cannot move or act any thing but in so far as the Lord 's holy Justice and Wisdom permitteth and ordereth them for the punishment of the wicked or exercise of the Godly for they are reserved in chains of darknesse which are nothing else but God's irresistible Power and terrible Justice over-ruling tormenting and restraining them 4. Although the Devils when they are permitted can appear visibly as if they were at their own liberty and can seem jovial as if they were free of torment 1 Sam. 28.13 that so they may the more effectually prevail with such poorslaves as have provoked God to give them up to their delusion Yet go where they will their Hell is alwayes with them they live in the constant feeling of the wrath of the Almighty as their being delivered in chains of darkness doth import and in the dreadful expectation of a more high measure of
changed in their nature for these of whom the Apostle speaketh here being still dogs and swine were only washen externally and did vomit up by confession and seeming renunciation their filthy practices to which they did return again as the dog returneth to his vomit and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire and so this place can make nothing for the apostasie of the Saints Lastly It is lawfull for the Ministers of Christ to make use of common similitudes or proverbs to clear the Truth and fix it in the minds of those that are led by sense providing they do make use especially of such as are scriptural propose all their similitudes in a decent and cleanly way suitable to the majesty and purity of Truth and apposit to their present purpose and bring them forth only for illustration of Truths otherwise proven for so doth the Apostle here make use of such a similitude as he found in Scripture which though it be taken from things in themselves vile is exprest in the most honest tearms that can fitly set out the vilenesse of apostasie the evil whereof he had clearly proven before It is happened unto them according to the true proverb c. CHAP. III. BEcause the believing consideration of Christ's second coming is a special mean to make Christians thrive in grace and holinesse and to guard their hearts against temptations Therefore the Apostle having pressed growth in grace and holinesse in the first part of this Epistle Chap. 1. and guarded against the infection of error in the second part Chap. 2. He doth in this last Chapter wherein is the third part of the Epistle 1. defend and clear the doctrine of the last judgment and 2. doth shew what use Believers should make thereof In the first part of this Chapter the Apostle having put them in mind of his main scope in both the Epistles which was to keep the substance of the Gospel fresh in their minds ver 1 2. giveth forewarning of the rise of profane mockers of Christ's second coming who that they might serve their lusts with the more quietnesse would plead for an eternity of this present world because they had never observed any appearance of such a change as was foretold to be at that day ver 3 4. Which blasphemous opinion together with their seeming reason for it the Apostle confuteth by several reasons drawn from the works of Creation and Providence which prove there will be such a day as will be very terrible to profane mockers of it ver 5 6 7. and holdeth forth to the Godly satisfying reasons of the delay of that day to wit that it is very small being compared with eternity ver 8. that the delay is mainly for the gathering of the Elect ver 9. which being done that day will come suddenly and with much terror ver 10. In the second part of the Chapter the Apostle maketh use of his former Doctrine concerning Christ's second coming for the up-stirring of the Lord's People to the study of holinesse ver 11. to wait and pray for that day ver 12. when they had ground to look for so excellent an estate ver 13. as might provoke them to much diligence in making ready for it ver 14. to esteem the delay thereof to be granted for the furtherance of their salvation in which strain Paul had insisted much in his Epistles ver 15 16. And upon the consideration of all to labour for stedfastnesse and progresse in grace and in the knowledge of Christ who is worthy of eternal praise ver 17 18. Vers 1. This second Epistle Beloved I now write unto you in both which I stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance 2. That ye may be mindful of the words which were spoken before by the holy Prophets and of the Commandment of us the Apostles of the Lord and Saviour THe Apostle doth here present to them his chief scope intended by him in both the Epistles which was the wakening and rousing of these sincere-hearted Christians to whom he writeth to an actual consideration and constant practice of known Truths that had been delivered to them by the Prophets himself and other Apostles of Jesus Christ Hence Learn 1. The Ministers of Christ ought not only to intend as their scope some particular advantage to the souls of the Lord's People by all the Messages they carry to them But also in their delivery of them frequently to make clear to the People what their main intent is that so themselves may be engaged to direct all they deliver toward that scope the People may have it the better fixed in their minds and all that they hear relating to that scope may be the better understood and have the greater weight otherwise the greatest variety of Truth and most taking expressions can have but a slender and soon evanishing impression upon that hearer who cannot be able to condescend upon the principal scope of the speaker for here the Apostle hath proposed their up-stirring as his scope and by his frequent mentioning of it in the first Chapter and this also did ty himself to speak to it and made his hearers able to judge how all he delivered did make for it This second Epistle Beloved I now write unto you in both which I stir up your pure minds 2. A Minister's main scope ought not to be the acquiting of himself before men in his duty so as he may be free of censure neither only the clear information of the minds of the Lord's People in the Truth neither yet the bringing forth of some new things which they that live under the Gospel have not formerly heard But more principally he must study the quickning and wakening of the affections of the Lord's People to a delight in and resolution to walk in the practice of Truths they have formerly known and remembred for it is here the Apostle's scope to stir them up a word frequently used in the New Testament of raising the dead and wakening those that are asleep by putting them in remembrance which signifieth to represent of new to the mind and memory truths formerly known and remembred 3. A Minister that would prevail with the Lord's People ought both to keep love to them that his pains may flow therefrom and in his dealing with them to expresse his love and high esteem of any measure of sincerity he hath discerned in them Therefore doth the Apostle stile these whom he intends to stir up Beloved and doth acknowledge that they had sincere and pure minds 4. Even those who for sincerity of heart and honesty of their aims and intentions may a bide the trial of Gospel-light have great need of many messages to the same purpose and of much up-stirring to the right use-making of them there being in them that have the clearest understanding much darknesse and many mistakes concerning the Truths of God and in the sincerest Believer whose heart is most lively and forward
in duties a great remnant of hypocrisie deadnesse and unwillingnesse to the practice of many known duties for the Apostle findeth it necessary to write two Epistles for the up-stirring of pure minds or as the word in the Original signifieth minds so sincere that they may be judged by the Sun 5. The Word of the Lord hath most weight with People when not only they that carry it to them are holy and so esteemed by the People but the minds of the hearers are carried above the Messengers to Jesus Christ and their hearts in hearing or reading are filled with some sense of His Soveraignity who doth imploy those Messengers and of His usefulnesse for them in all His Offices Therefore that the Word which the Apostle here exhorteth them to study may have the more weight he leadeth them not only to look upon the Messengers that carried it as holy men but to consider the soveraignity excellency and usefulnesse of Christ in His Offices to which He is anointed Be mindfull of the Words which were spoken by the holy Prophets and of the Commandments of us the Apostles of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 6. The way to keep life in the affections of the Lord's People is to have their wit and memory actually exercised about the Truths of God both the Prophesies and Promises of good to the Church and People of God and to presse the Precepts enjoyning their duty for that the Apostle may gain his principal scope to wit the rousing up of their affections he maketh this his speech subordinate thereto That they might be mindful of the Words that were spoken before by the holy Prophets and of the Commandments of the Apostles of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 7. Although the Lord hath letten forth His mind to His Church by little and little in several Ages of the World and by several Messengers Heb. 1.1 Yet is there such a compleat harmony among all the parts of His Mind that all serve for one and the same principal scope the up-stirring of the Lord's People to a hearty receiving and use-making of Christ and His Truth for unto this scope the Apostle here affirmeth that the whole Doctrine both of the Prophets and Apostles did harmoniously tend Vers 3. Knowing this first that there shall come in the last dayes scoffers walking after their own lusts 4. And saying Where is the promise of His coming For since the fathers fell asleep all things continue as they were from the beginning of the Creation That the Apostle may attain his fore-mentioned scope he doth forewarn of the rise of profane mockers toward the end of time who that they might sin the more securely should question the second coming of Christ and plead for an eternity of this present World pretending this reason for it That since the whole frame of Nature had kept one constant tenour and course since the death of Adam Seth Enos and the rest of the first fathers it was not to them credible that ever there should be such a change as was foretold to be at the day of judgment Doct. 1. Variety of very fierce and discouraging opposition in the way of Christ and that from several sorts of enemies is the lot wherewith the Church and People of Christ may resolve to be exercised for the Apostle having forewarned of and guarded against open persecutors in the former Epistle subtil and fair pretending Hereticks in the former Chapter he doth here forewarn of● and guard against a third sort to wit profane scoffers of Christ's second coming 2. The consideration of the hazard that the best are in of being drawn aside some one way or other from the Truth and Way of Christ by such variety of opposition as they ordinarily meet with ought both to stir up Ministers carefully to warn and guard People against the same and People to the use-making of their pains for after the Apostle had guarded against open persecutors and cunning deceivers he doth here bring in the forewarning of the third sort of enemies scoffers which may be taken both for a reason of his pains in writing two Epistles as also for a reason why they should be stirred up by what he had written Knowing this that besides furious persecutors and subtil deceivers they should also be exercised with profane scoffers They who have not been terrified by the first sort nor deceived by the second are in hazard to be discouraged by the third 3. The certainty and necessity of being exercised with variety of opposition in the Way of Christ is one of the principles of Christianity which ought to be held in the first place by all that resolve to adhere to any other saving Truth they who do not first know this and notwithstanding thereof resolve upon adherance to the Truth in Christ's strength will readily when they meet with such a lot be surprised therewith and either forsake the Truth or faint in their adherance to it Therefore the Apostle would have them knowing this first that after several other sorts of enemies there were also to come in the last dayes scoffers 4. There are no such pure or peaceable times to be expected by the Church and People of God within time wherein the fore-mentioned lot is not to be expected they who dream of the best times to the Church on Earth look for them toward the end of time and yet the Spirit of God here forwarneth that beside the rage of persecutors and prevailing of hereticks there shall come in the last dayes scoffers 5. It is a clear evidence that men are slaves to their lusts when they do strongly desire an eternall enjoyment of this present world and labour to banish out of their own hearts the thoughts of a day of judgment Yea their so doing is also the cause why they give up themselves to the service of their lusts the believing consideration of the terror of that day to the wicked being a special help to mortification and of the sweetnesse thereof to the Godly a special encouragement in the battel against corruption for their scoffing at the promise of Christ's second coming may be looked upon here both as the evidence and cause of their walking after their ungodly lusts 6. When men are left of God to vile opinions for not receiving the Truth in love they are then oftentimes plagued further not only with devilish wit to find out seeming reasons for the defence of them very plausible to themselves and others like themselves but also to take manifest falshoods for undeniable grounds of their errors for these mockers here lay all the weight of their blasphemous opinion upon this seeming reason That since the fathers fell asleep all things continue as they were c. which appeareth from the Apostle's contrary instance ver 6. to be a manifest falshood 7. Although it be a sweet mercy much to be acknowledged by the Lord's People that things in nature do ordinarily keep one constant
the Lord's People and which will be comfortable to them and approven of God now and hereafter must be manifested in all the parts of their conversation both in their outward carriage and secret practice in their common affairs and religious performances in duties of Gods immediate Worship and in duties relating to their neighbour as is imported in this What manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godlinesse 5. In the discharge of all the duties of holinesse Christians ought to look much to the qualification of their persons that they be reconciled with God through Christ and daily renewing the friendship by the exercise of godly sorrow for sin and a living faith in the Mediator and by keeping their hearts in frame for the particular duties of holinesse they are called to for the Apostle doth not put the question how holy ought our conversation to be but what manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godlinesse 6. If the holiest on earth would put their conscience to speak to them after serious consideration of the terror and glory of the second coming of Christ they would be much unsatisfied with their present measure of holiness and would have their desires quickned and their endeavours strengthened after a further measure thereof as is imported in this question of the Apostles put to his own and others conscience What manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godlinesse including himself ver 13. Vers 12. Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God wherein the Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat The second use of the former doctrine is That the consideration of so dreadfull and glorious a day should make all the Lord's People live in the constant expectation thereof by their prayers and pains furthering these works which must be done before it come which use together with the former the Apostle beareth-in by a new representation of the glory and terror of that day Hence Learn 1. To live in the constant expectation of Christ's glorious appearance is both the duty of all the lovers of Him and a special mean to make them grow in holinesse Therefore is this expectation prest here by a word of the present time importing that it is both a perpetual duty in it self and a special mean of attaining to what is prest before What manner of persons ought ye to be c. looking for the coming of the day of God 2. Although the time of Christ's second coming be so fixed in the decree of God as that it cannot be altered Act. 17.31 Yet ought the Lords People to be no lesse earnest in ●astning their own preparation for it and by their prayers and other means competent to them in their stations furthering these great works to be done before than if that day could be hastned by them for the word in the Original signifieth not only our hastning toward that day but also our hastning of it See Isa 16.5 Looking for and hasting the coming of the day of God 3. It is safe for the Lord's Ministers frequently to represent to His People those Truths that are much contradicted by enemies of Truth that are but little considered by His People and which have greatest influence upon their practice to restrain them from sin and provoke them to duty for such is this Truth concerning the terror and majesty of the last day which the Apostle having spoken of before repeareth here again Wherein the Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat Vers 13. Neverthelesse we according to His promise look for new Heavens and a new Earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse Here is the third use of the former doctrine and it is for the consolation of Believers against all their pains and sufferings in Christ's service and especially against the losse that they may apprehend to be in the fore-mentioned dissolution of all things They have a more excellent state to look for a new World when the old is destroyed where only righteousnesse shall have its constant abode This promise of the new Heavens and the new Earth was first given out to the Church by Isa 65.17 and 66.22 and had some accomplishment as these places make clear at the return from Babylon which was a new World to the ruined and exiled State and Church of the Jews It is also made use-of by the Apostle Paul as having spiritual mercies in it such as conversion regeneration and the like which is as a new World to sinners for he marketh it to have accomplishment this way 2 Cor. 5.17 And yet this Apostle here leadeth Believers to expect more out of that same promise not any worldly or temporal felicity as Millenaries dream because it is a state promised after the day of judgment as fully satisfactory to Believers where no sin but only righteousnesse shall have its constant mansion which cannot agree to any earthly happinesse but must be understood of everlasting blessednesse set forth under these borrowed expressions Doct. 1. One and the same promise may contain several sorts of mercies both temporal and spiritual to be le●●en-out at several times to the Lords People and yet may have its full accomplishment only in Heaven for such is this promise of new Heavens and a new Earth out of which Isaiah hath drawn temporal deliverance Paul spiritual mercies and Peter here everlasting blessednesse Many promises in Scripture are of the same nature e. g. That promise Isa 25.8 The Lord God will wipe away tears from off all faces was in part accomplished when the mourning Church came rejoycing home from their exile in Babylon as is clear Psal 126. That same promise hath also been often made good in the Lord 's comforting of particular persons humbly mourning for their sins as appeareth by Psal 116.8 And yet that promise is to have its full accomplishment in Heaven as is clear by Rev. 21.4 The consideration whereof may serve to direct us to a right use-making of many promises 2. The state of Believers in the other life will be wholly new their bodies will be new like Christs glorious Body Philip. 3.21 their spirits also new 1 Joh. 3.2 their duration new a constant presentnesse of enjoying the Lord 1 Thess 4.17 Their exercises shall be new to sing new songs to the Lamb Rev. 5.9 and to follow Him where-ever He goeth Rev. 14 4● Their cloathing shall be new glory and immortality 1 Cor. 15.53 New food and refreshment to eat of the Tree of life and drink of the Water of life Rev. 22.1 2. and a new light and sun to shine upon them the glory of God and of the Lamb being the light of that new World Rev. 21.23 All which are but borrowed expressions to set forth the glory of that Estate which cannot be fully set forth for even the Apostle not having
the consideration of their second birth be strongly moved to the study of holiness for the honour of their Father and especially to live in love with the rest of their Fathers Children for the Apostle brings this as a further argument to the study of holiness and particularly to the study of that branch of it which he had pressed in the former words concerning mutual love amongst Professours that they were born again not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible by the Word of God c. Vers 24. For all flesh is grasse and all the glory of man as the flower of grasse the grasse withereth and the flower thereof falleth away 25. But the Word of the Lord endureth for ever And this is the Word which by the Gospel is preached unto you The last motive whereby the Apostle presseth upon Believers the study of holiness and constancy under sufferings is taken from a further commendation of the excellency of their spiritual estate which the Apostle sets out by comparing the same with the best estate of men naturally considered with all their ornaments wherein they use to glory which is according to the Scripture Isa 40.6 like unto withering grasse and fading flowers In the application of which comparison the Apostle insists upon his former commendation of the Word which is the seed whereby Believers are begotten from the perpetuity of it to wit in the effects thereof upon them which might easily lead them to judge of their state accordingly and applies this commendation of the Word to that Doctrine which was preached to them by himself or others of the Lords Servants All which doth strongly presse his scope that therefore they should live holily and suffer chearfully as became those who were in so excellent an estate Hence Learn 1. Although it be much in the thoughts and desires of natural men that they might have a perpetual enjoyment of this life and the comforts of it Psal 49.11 Yet themselves and all that they can glory in is frail and fading like the grasse and flowers of the grasse whereupon they should read their frailty and mortality and so be stirred up to provide for a better life and a more enduring substance than what they have here for all flesh is as grasse and all the glory of man as the flower of grasse 2. Though every common gift of God wherein men use to glory whether riches wisdom strength beauty or the like be fading as the grasse and flowers thereof Yet because mens credit or glory before the world is that wherein they use to glory most and of the perpetuating whereof they are most strongly desirous Psal 49.11 The Lord hath put a special fadingness and vanity upon that and will have it as easily blasted as any other thing wherein men glory for though the glory of man here spoken of may be taken largely as comprehending every thing for which men lift up themselves and wherein they use to glory as the word is used Mat. 4.8 Yet it seems especially to point out that honour and credit which men affect to have before the world in which signification it is used 2 Thess 2.6 the property whereof the Lord pronounceth to be fadingness or withering And all the glory of man as the flower of grasse 3. Though this be a plain Truth taught by daily experience and commonly acknowledged that our natural estate with all the ornaments thereof is frail and fading Yet it is not easie to make this Truth take due impression upon the hearts of men who are naturally unwilling to admit thoughts of a change Amos 6.2 Therefore the Spirit of God bears it in upon mens minds under the same similitude in very many places of Scripture Job 14.2 Psal 103.15 Isa 40.6 Jam. 1.10 and here by many expressions All flesh is grasse and all the glory of man as the flower of grasse the grasse withereth and the flower thereof falleth away 4. The believing consideration of this frailty and fadingness of mens natural estate and earthly contentments should heighten in their hearts the esteem of that spiritual and better estate whereunto by receiving the Gospel they may be advanced and should be to them a powerful motive to the study of holiness which will abide when other things do fade 1 Joh. 3.9 and especially to the study of mutual love among themselves those earthly things for which usually they contend Gen. 13.8 and particularly their credit the love whereof is often the greatest occasion of strife among them Luk. 22.24 being so fading and uncertain for as a commendation of the state of the Regenerate or motive to the study of holiness and particularly of brotherly love is this here brought in All flesh is grasse and all the glory of man as the flower of grasse the grasse withereth and the flower thereof falleth away But the Word of the Lord endureth for ever 5. What ever can be spoken to the commendation of the Word serves also for the commendation of them who have by faith received it and are regenerated by it That which is the seed and principle of their spiritual being their charter and right to all their priviledges and inheritance being excellent and worthy their state must needs be such likewise for it is clear the Apostles purpose here is to commend the state of the Regenerate as far more excellent than the best natural state and this he esteems to be sufficiently done by commending the Word from the perpetuity of it in opposition to the frail state of men naturally considered All flesh is grasse c. But the Word of the Lord endureth for ever 6. They who have received a new spiritual life and so are entered in a new state by their receiving of the Word ought to fix in their hearts by frequent meditations the perpetuity of that Word in the accomplishment of the good things promised therein which shall endure to them for all eternity that so they may the better see and be the more affected with their own blessedness for the Apostle having commended the Word from this property of it before repeats it here again The Word of the Lord endureth for ever 7. As Christs own worth and excellency is best seen when He is compared with other things which may seem to have worth in them Cant. 2.3 So the worth of our spiritual estate is best seen and most esteemed of by us when we compare it with the frailty and fectlesness of the best state on Earth beside for to heighten Believers esteem of the one he compares it with the other All flesh is grasse c. but the Word of the Lord and consequently their state who are begotten again by the Word endureth for ever 8. What ever good esteem the Lord's People have of the Word of God in general they ought to have the same or the particular Messages that are brought to them from or according to that Word by the Lord's Servants who are sent unto them
called be ready to give a reason to every man that asketh you 6. Every testimony that God's People give to his Truth before the enemies of it ought to be seasoned with meeknesse of spirit evidenced in their carriage toward their persecutors by their eschewing all signs of carnal passion and revenge against them 1 Thess 5.15 by their respective and sober language to them Act. 26.25 which may be blessed of God to procure a mitigation of their trouble Prov. 15.1 at least to put convictions upon the wicked of the equity of the cause which they persecute as the following Verse cleareth for this is the fourth direction for a right carriage under sufferings that they be ready to give a testimony to the Truth with meekness 7. Although the fear of flesh which ma●reth confidence and peace in the heart be most unsuitable for sufferers as was cleared from the Apostle's first direction Yet a holy fear of miscarriage under trials by denying or concealing any necessary Truth by bringing forth the same untimously or mixing our own passions with our testimony to the Truth is a prime qualification of a right sufferer for Christ and his Truth for 〈◊〉 is the Apostle's fifth direction That they should 〈…〉 to bear testimony to the Truth with fear Vers 16. Having a good conscience that whereas they speak 〈◊〉 evil of you as of evil doers they may be ashamed that falsly 〈◊〉 accuse your good conversation in Christ. Here is a sixth direction for attaining to a right carriage under suffering That they should labour to have their conscience purged from guiltinesse and so made good in God's sight the study whereof as also of all the former the Apostle presseth by a third motive which is also an encouragement against suffering That if they made conscience of following those directions their slandering persecutors should be convinced and ashamed by their christian carriage Hence Learn 1. None can rightly undergo a suffering lot for Christ and his Truth who do not labour to get and keep a good conscience within by the application of Christ's bloud for purging of it from guilt and of the vertue of his Spirit for subduing the power of corruption Heb. 10.22 which proves a continual feast to them that have it Prov. 15.15 and so makes them chearful under their hardest sufferings 2 Cor. 1.12 for this is the Apostle's sixth direction for attaining to a right frame of spirit and carriage under suffering having a good conscience 2. Even those who have attained to a good conscience within and an honest conversation without may resolve not only to meet with hard sufferings but as a principal ingredient embittering the same to have many false and grievous crimes laid to their charge and those not only forged and spread in a private way for their disgrace but as the word here translated to speak evil signifieth given-in judicially against them that so they may be the liker to their Lord Mark 15.3 and may learn to die to their credit before men while they are honoured to suffer for Him 1 Cor. 15.31 for this the Apostle suppones to be the lot of those who have both a good conscience and a good conversation that they shall be evil spoken of as evil doers and have their good conversation falsly accused 3. It is the Lo● 〈…〉 way to bring the shame and confusion of wicke● 〈◊〉 out of the integrity and uprightnesse of his suffering pe●ple and the endeavours of their enemies to disgrace then 〈◊〉 by drawing a testimony of his Peoples innocency fro● some of their adversaries to the shame of the rest Act. 2● 29. and 26.31 by enabling his suffering Servants to maintain his Truth and their own innocency with such clearnesse and power as sometimes confounds their opposers Tit. 2.8 by making use of enemies fury and his Peoples constancy to disappoint wicked designs and directly to promove the cause which enemies intend to crush Philip. 1.12 that so they may either be reclaimed from their opposition to his Truth and People or have everlasting shame poured upon them Psal 83.16 17. for this is the result which God bringeth out of all the wickeds slander and persecution of the Godly that they may be ashamed who falsly accuse their good conversation in Christ 4. The consideration of the disappointment and shame which the Lord doth sometimes make wicked men to meet with here for their persecuting and slandering of his People should be a strong motive to the Godly to constancy in following their duty whatever they may suffer for this is given to them here for their encouragement that whereas they speak evil of the Godly as evil doers they may be ashamed who falsly accuse their good conversation in Christ 5. To the end that the conversation of a Christian may be good in God's sight and so may serve to make their slanderers and persecutors ashamed it must flow from a good conscience within and must be a conversation in Christ the person being by Faith united to Him and enabled to draw vertue from Him for walking unto wel-pleasing Joh. 15.5 and to aim at conformity in the conversation to His carriage 1 Joh. 2.6 for both these are necessary for that conversation of a Christian which may make persecutors ashamed and which deserveth to be called a good conversation Having a good conscience that whereas they speak evil c. they may be ashamed who falsly accuse your good conversation in Christ Vers 17. For it is better if the will of God be so that ye suffer for well doing than for evil doing The fourth motive to presse the former directions and to encourage against suffering is That in their suffering for Christ and their duty to Him they should find much more comfort and spiritual advantage than if they did procure sufferings to themselves by their miscarriage And this fourth motive or encouragement hath a fifth in the bosom of it That they should not be put to a necessity of suffering except it were the good will of the Lord so to dispose Hence Learn 1. Christians have a great deal of more spiritual advantage honour and sweetnesse in suffering for Christ and duty to Him than they could have in suffering for their faults though they had obtained mercy for them from the Lord and had peace in their spirits while they did stoop to the stroak of humane justice inflicted for these faults the former sort of sufferings being more conform to Christ's and having ordinarily a larger allowance of peace and chearfulnesse than useth to be letten forth to them who suffer for their faults though they were never so sure of God's mercy for in this sense must the Apostle be understood here to compare suffering for well doing and for evil doing and to prefer the one to the other because suffering from men for evil doing without obtaining mercy from God hath no goodnesse in it at all and so cannot be compared in that with suffering for