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

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and pleasant to vs till we finde this precious treasure hid therein II. Dutie Hauing found this treasure we must highly prize and value it euen aboue all that we haue or can get nay more worth then all the world besides So did the man in the parable Matth. 13. 44. esteeme the treasure hid in the field aboue all his goods And Paul so esteemed of Christ crucified that he counted all things losse for the excellent knowledge sake of Christ and iudged them as dung that he might winne Christ. This high esteeme of Christ is needfull if euer we meane to lay him vp for our treasure and then haue we made good progresse in this heauenly purchase when we truely value Christ in our hearts at so high a rate and therefore we must endeauour our selues hereunto and labour so to frame our whole conuersation in speaches and in action that they may testifie at how high a rate we value Christ. And because the word of God reueales Christ Iesus vnto vs in which regard it is called a treasure therefore it also must be highly valued euen aboue all carthly things Thus Dauid did Psal. 119. 72. The Law of thy mouth is better vnto me then thousands of gold and siluer verse 127. I loue thy Commandements aboue gold yea aboue much fiue gold hereof wisdome saith my fruite is better then gold euen then much fine gold and my reuenues better then ●ine siluer It were happie for vs if wee did thus value the word of God Many hold there is but one truth and so that be knowne it is no matter whence it is learned whether out of Gods word or the writings of men but they are sarre deceiued for the Scriptures of God onely are that truth which is according to godlinesse and they alone discouer vnto vs this heauenly treasure and therefore they must haue the preheminence in our hearts and be esteemed farre aboue all the writings of men which if we would doe we should feele that power and comfort of the word in our hearts which naturally we lacke III. Dutie Hauing found out and rightly valued this true treasure we must seeke to get it for our selues and make it our owne so did the man in the parable Matth. 13. 44. when he had found the treasure hid in the field and so Christ here commandeth lay vp treasures for your selues Now that we may get this treasure to our selues we must conscionably vse such meanes as God hath appointed for this purpose to wit I. heare the word of God preached with all reuerence care and diligence labouring to mixe it with faith in our hearts II. receiue the Sacraments with all reuerence and due preparation III. pray to God in faith earnestly and constantly for the pardon of our sinnes and the fiuition of this treasure The reason hereof is plaine for the word and Sacraments are as it were the Lords two hands wherewith he reacheth out this heauenly treasure and all spirituall blessings vnto vs and our faith is the hand of our soule wherewith we receiue them now by our praiers we testifie this faith and sanctifie vnto our selues the two former meanes IV. Dutie Hauing gotten this treasure we must labour to make it sure vnto our selues And to this purpose we must follow Pauls counsell and charge to rich men 1. Tim. 6. 17 18 19. Charge the rich men in this world that they be not high minded neither trust in vncerten riches but in the liuing God that they doe good and be rich in good workes laying vp in store for themselues a good foundation against the time to come that they may obtaine eternall life where marke how by trusting in God and by liberalitie and bountie we are exhorted to lay a good foundation What will some say must we be saued by our Almes-deedes and good works Ans. Not so for the ground of our saluation is Gods election and loue in Christ which he himselfe hath laid vp in heauen for vs. But the foundation which wee must lay vp for our selues is in our owne consciences for our assurance in Gods foundation and this we lay by our good works of loue mercie and iustice all which be fruits of faith and beeing done in faith and with singlenes of heart to Gods glorie they are sure testimonies of our portion in the true treasure Iesus Christ for hereby we know we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren 1. Ioh. 3. 14. V. Dutie Hauing got this treasure sure to our selues we must vse it as a treasure Hereunto three duties are required I. we must haue our conuersation in heauen for there Christ our treasure is and where our ●reasure is there will our hearts be and if our hearts be on Christ in desire in ioy and delight it cannot be but our liues will be holy and heauenly though our bodies be here on earth but let vs beware that our affections be not set on things below for then is not Christ our treasure at all II. We must turne our earthly goods into heauenly treasures This we doe by imploying them in works of mercie for he that giues vnto the poore lends vnto the Lord Prou. 19. 17. so that the mercifull man hath the Lord for his debter for the Lord sends the poore mā as his messenger vnto the rich to borrow of him such things as the poore man lacketh and the Lords returne of paiment is in heauenly blessings and therefore Christ himselfe as it were explaning this point bids sell that ye haue and giue almes make you bagges which waxe not old a treasure that cannot faile in heauen where no theefe commeth neither moth corrupteth This then is the Lords owne direction for this happie exchange of earthly goods for heauenly treasures then which who can wish a better increase III. We must rather part with all that we haue then with Christ Iesus friends goods countrey libertie nay our owne life and deerest hearts blood must all goe for this treasures sake so doth the good purchasser part with all he hath for to ●●ie the field in which this treasure is Matth. 13. 44. but if we will rather part with Christ then with some or with all of these then wee vse not Christ as the true treasure Thus we see how Christ becomes our treasure let vs therefore make conscience to practise these fiue duties so long as we liue for when Christ becomes our treasure marke what will follow we shall finde in our hearts such sweet content therein that neither prosperitie shall lift vs vp too high nor aduersitie cast vs downe too low nothing shall daunt vs while we haue this treasure sure no kind of death no not the day of iudgement Thus much of the commandement now followeth the particular reason thereof where neither moth nor canker corrupteth c. This reason is drawen from the vnchangeable certentie and safetie of this
doctrine and style the doctrine of Scripture is the Law and the Gospel now the Law is set forth in most excellent puritie nothing therein is against right reason or common equitie In the lawes of men are many things found against reason and equitie they commaund such things as common reason would condemne and omitte many things which reason and equitie would commaund And for the Gospel in it is set downe doctrine altogether aboue mans reason touching Christs incarnation and mans redemption by his death and although these things bee aboue nature yet wee finde them true wholesome and good in experience of conscience which also prooues that they are the word of God Men may deuise things aboue nature but they can neuer be wholesome to the conscience Further for the style of Scripture the phrase is plaine familiar and yet in any one speech there is more maiestie then in all the writings of men Lastly the ende of Scripture prooues the same to bee Gods word for the Scripture sets vp Gods worshippe and mans saluation and yet giues nothing to men or Angels but all to the glorie of God but for the writings of men they doe either directly or by insinuation ascribe some thing to the writers thereof II. Argument From the effects one worke of Scripture is this It is against our corrupt nature crossing and condemning the same and yet it winneth men to the loue therof and to obedience thereto which could not be vnlesse it were the truth of God for wee abhorre and detest the words of men that be against our nature A second effect is this Gods word serues notably to comfort a man in all distresses whatsoeuer euen in the pangs of death when no word of any man can doe him the least good but onely his word that is the Lord of our soule and the God of our life III. Argument From the properti●s of Scripture the first whereof is Antiquitie The Scriptures of all writings are most auntient and euermore truth is most auntient among humane writings wee haue none of certaintie in the things they record before the times of Nehemias and Ezra but Scripture sets downe things done from the beginning A second propertie is mutuall consent for though the bookes of Scripture were written by diuers men in sundry ages and times yet all agree within themselues no contradiction is in Scripture but the writings of men haue not this consent no not in the same Author IV. Argum. From the signes and miracles thereof The doctrine of Scripture teacheth and recordeth true miracles as the parting of the Sea the staying of the sunne and moone the taking away of barrennesse and the incarnation of the son of God a miracle of all miracles all which beeing wrought by the power of God shew that the Scripture which recordeth them is the infallible truth of God V. Argum. From the contraries Contrarie to the word of God is the will of the deuill mans corrupt nature the deuil hates Scripture and mans sinfull nature repines thereat when it is checked and controlled thereby now that which is contrary to these to must needs be holy and true and that is the word of God VI. Argument From testimonie There bee two kindes of testimonies touching Scripture one of holy Martyrs who in all ages haue sealed the truth thereof with their blood preferring the word of God before their owne liues It will be said that Heretikes haue died for falshood Answer There is great difference in their endes the Martyrs haue vnspeakable ioy in the spirit in their torments but Heretikes haue no such ioy but a naturall senslesse blockishnesse whereby they vndergoe these tortures A second testimonie is most principall and that is the testimony of Gods spirit for when men beginne to learne and obey the word of God then the spirit of God setles their consciences in the perswasion of the truth of Scripture whereupon it is called the sealing of the spirit of truth because it assures a man in conscience of his reconciliation with God which assurance none can haue till he be first resolued of the certaintie of Scripture which is the groūd thereof Question How may a man finde this seale in himselfe Answer When hee findes the Scripture imprinted in his heart as the signe of the seale is in the waxe and his heart is transformed into Scripture as the waxe is into the similitude of the seale then doth the spirit out of the holy Scripture seale vp assurance of the truth thereof vnto his soule None other writing of any man hath the like worke in the heart of man and from these grounds especially from this last may wee resolue our selues that the Bible is of infallible certaintie And yet for further resolution let vs see what obiections are made against it I. Obiect It is said that Scripture is against all reason Ans. This is not true for the Law is perfect reason and the Gospel is aboue reason not contrarie to reason nay holding this principle of nature that God is almightie euen the Gospel it selfe may stand with reason as that the sonne of God should be incarnate and that by his death we should receiue life which is the summe of the Gospel II. Obiect There bee falshoods in Scripture for the passage thorough the redde Sea was no miracle but might bee done in the ebbing of the Sea as in other countries there is oft-times passage through the Washes Answer The Scripture saith the water stood as walls on each side the passage which could not bee by an ebbe againe reason shewes that it could not bee by naturall course for their passage ouer was at the full of the Moone when all Seas are most full and doe not ebbe and flowe as they vse to doe at other times III. Obiect The greatest part of the world reiect the Bible as Turks and Pagans and the Iewes care not for the new Testament Ans. We must reuerence Gods worke in this withholding his mercie in Christ from some to whome he denies the meanes which is his holy word for hence it comes that some reiect the Bible because God in his secret yet most iust iudgement withholds this blessing from them And therefore though Atheists barke yet the truth is Scripture is th● word of God Vses 1. Seeing the word written is the certen truth of God we must take heede of beeing seduced by Popish teachers who say there be two kinds of Scripture Inward and Outward Inward Scripture is a consent of doctrine written by the holy Ghost in the hearts of all Catholikes and this say they is right Scripture The outward Scripture i● written in paper and parchment which hath no certen sense but as the present Church determines thereof But this is a deuillish doctrine abolishing written Scripture the true word of God and setting vp the opinions of their owne hearts making Scripture what themselues will we must therefore hold
Thirdly in Christs addressing of himselfe to speake all persons must learne to make conscience both of silence and of speech this wee shall doe if by silence we close vp our lippes till wee haue iust matter to speake of tending to the glory of God or the good of our brethren and beeing so prepared vpon fit occasion and in due time we may vtter our minde we must remember that Christ left himself an example that we should follow his steppes and also consider that of euery idle word that we shall speake we must render account vnto God If this were knowne and beleeued there would not be so many sinnes in words by cursing swearing vaine and idle speaking as there be Thus much of the Preface Now we come to the matter of this Sermon beginning at the third verse of this Chapter and so continuing to the 28. verse of the 7. Chapter And it may be diuided into 12. heads or places of doctrine The first whereof concerneth true happinesse or blessednesse from the 2. verse of this Chapter to the 13. wherin are propounded sundry rules directing men to attaine thereunto The scope of them all must bee considered which in generall is this Our Sauiour Christ had now preached two yeares among the people and thereby had wonne many to become his Disciples and among the rest his 12. Apostles to all whom hee promised happinesse and life euerlasting if they would continue in the faith and obedience of his word Now though they beleeued in him yet they still remained in the same state for outward things and became more subiect to outward miseries then before so as if they iudged of happinesse by their present outward estate they might easily suspect the truth of Christs doctrine and thinke he had deceiued them because he promised them happinesse and yet for outward things their case was farre worse then before they knewe him This our Sauiour Christ considering doth here goe about to remooue this false conceit out of their minds and for this purpose deliuereth this doctrine vnto them in the first generall head of his sermon that true happinesse before God is euer ioyned yea couered many times with the crosse in this world Whereby hee strikes at the roote of their carnall conceit who placed true happinesse in outward things and looked for outward peace and prosperitie vpon the receiuing of the Gospel As this is the scope of the doctrine following so it stands vs in hand to learne the same and to finde experience hereof in our owne hearts that true comfort and felicitie is accompanied with manifold miseries in this life Indeede carnall wisdome deemeth them happie that enioy outward peace wealth and pleasure but this conceit must be remooued and Christs doctrine embraced who ioyneth true happinesse with the crosse Secondly this serueth to teach vs patience in affliction for it is Gods will to temper happines and the crosse together now this puts life into an afflicted soule to thinke that Christ will haue his felicitie inioyed and felt in outward miserie Thus much of this head of doctrine in generall now we come to the branches thereof Vers. 3. Blessed are the poore in spirit for theirs is the kingdome of heauen Here is Christs first Rule concerning happinesse wherein obserue two points first the parties blessed the poore in spirit secondly wherein this blessednesse consists for theirs is the kingdome of heauen Before we come to these parts seuerally note in a word the forme of speech here vsed they that are ledde by humane reason will rather say blessed are the rich for theirs are the kingdoms of the world But Christ here speaks the flat contrary saying blessed are the poore for theirs is the kingdom of heauen which is infinitely better then all the kingdoms of the world whereby we may see that the wisdome of this world is foolishues with God and the ordinarie conceit of man flat opposite to the sauing doctrine taught by Christ. Blessed are the poore in spirit The word translated poore doth properly signifie a begger one that hath no outward necessaries but by gift from others but here it is more largely taken not onely betokening those that want outward riches for S. Luke opposeth these poore to the rich in this world but also those that are any way miserable wanting inward or outward comfort and such an one was Lazarus that lay begging at Dives gates What is meant by poore in spirit is plainely expounded Isa. 66. 2. where the Lord saith I will looke to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit and that trembleth at my words Christs meaning then is this that those poore are blessed who by meanes of their distresse through want of outward comforts are brought to see their sinnes and their miserie thereby so as finding no goodnesse in their hearts they despaire in themselues and flie wholly to the mercie of God in Christ for grace and comfort as Lazarus did to Diues gates for outward reliefe Seeing Christ doth thus set out the person that is truly blessed let vs see whether we be in the number of these poore ones Indeed we haue many poore among vs some that by excesse and ryot haue spent their substance and others that through idlenesse increase their want as the wandring beggars a sinnefull and disordered people who ioyne themselues to no Church but none of these can by their pouertie make iust claime to true felicitie The blessed poore are poore in spirit and this pouertie we must finde in our hearts if we would knowe our selues to be truely happie but after triall this will be found much wanting for first if men liue outwardly ciuill and keepe themselues from grosse sinnes this thought of pride takes place in their hearts that they are righteous and they perswade themselues with the young man in the Gospel that they can keepe Gods commandements Secondly let worldly wants befall men in body goods or name and they are grieued yea their soules are full of sorrow but for spiritual wants as blindnesse of minde hardnesse of heart vnbeliefe and disobedience their hearts are neuer touched Now whence comes this but from that pride of heart whereby they blesse themselues in their estate and thinke all is well with them in respect of their soules so that true it is pouertie of spirit is hard to be found We therefore must search our selues and labour to feele our spirituall wants and looke how Lazarus lay for his bodie at Diues gates so must wee lie at Gods mercie gate in Christ for our soules abandoning this pride of heart and acknowledging that there is no goodnesse in vs of our selues for the straite gate of heauen cannot receiue a swelling heart that is puffed vp with pride And to induce vs vnto this good dutie let vs consider the gratious promises made to them that be poore in spirit they are called Gods poore hee
thinketh on them though heauen be Gods throne and the earth his footstoole yet will hee looke to him that is poore and of a contrite spirit yea the Lord will dwell with him that is of a contrite and broken heart Christ came to preach the glad tidings of the Gospel to the poore yea the Lord filleth the hungrie that is the poore and hungrie soule with good things but the rich he sends emptie away Let these and many such fauours with God which they enioy prouoke vs to become poore in spirit Secondly are they blessed that be poore in spirit then here all poore and wretched persons in the world may learne to make good vse of their wants and distresses they must consider them as the hand of God vpon them and thereby be ledde to the viewe of their sinnes and by the consideration of their sinnes be brought to see their miserie in thēselues the true ground of this spirituall pouertie Now when they are once poore in spirit they are in a blessed state in the iudgement of Christ. If a man bleed dangerously at the nose the best way to saue his life is to let him blood else-where and so turne the course of the blood another way euen so when a man is oppressed with worldly calamities hee cannot finde any comfort in them for in themselues they are Gods curses yet if thereby he can bee brought to see his spirituall pouertie then of curses they become blessings vnto him and therefore when we are in any distresse wee must not onely fixe our eies vpon the outward crosse but by meanes of that labour to see the pouertie of our soules and so will the crosse lead vs to happinesse Thirdly they that abound with worldly wealth must hereby learne to become poore if they would be saued Poore I say not in goods but in soule and spirit this indeed is hard to flesh and blood for naturally euery rich man blesseth himselfe in his outward estate and perswades himselfe that God loues him because he giues him wealth but such conceits must he striue against and learne of God to reioyce in this that he is made lowe Iam 〈…〉 Fourthly on this saying of Christ that the poore are blessed the Popish teachers obseruing the word translated poore to be●oken outward pouertie goe about to builde their vowe of voluntarie pouertie whereby men renouncing their wealth and possessions of this world doe be take themselues to some Monasterie there to liue a poore and solitarie life But their voluntarie pouertie will not agree with this text son Christs poor● here pronounced blessed are such as by reason of their pouerty are miserable and wretched wanting outward comforts as we shewed o●t of Luke where Christ opposeth them to the rich who abound with all worldly delights but to vndergoe the Popish vow of voluntarie pouertie is no estate of miserie or distresse for who doe liue in greater ●ase or enioy more freedome from the crosses and vexations of this life then their begging Friers Againe if their vowed pouertie had any ground in this text then Christ should pronounce such poore blessed as made themselues poore but that he doth not for then in the next verse he should pronounce such mourners blessed as voluntarily cause themselues to mourne for that verse dependeth on this as a more full explanation of this first rule But no man will say that they that mourne without a cause are there called blessed and therefore Popish vowed pouertie hath no ground on this place And thus much of the persons II. Point Wherein the blessednes of these poore consists namely in hauing a right to the kingdome of heauen For theirs is the kingdome of heauen By kingdome of heauen for the better conceiuing of this blessednes we must vnderstand a state or condition of man whereby he is in Gods fauour and hath fellowship with God The truth of this description is euident by the tenour of the new Testament Now this estate of man is called a Kingdome because herein God rules as king and man obeies as Gods subiect for no man can be in Gods fauour nor enioy his fellowship vnlesse God be his King ruling in his heart by his word and spirit and he Gods subiect resigning himselfe to be ruled by him for this happie estate consists in Gods gracious ruling of man and mans holy subiection vnto God Indeede fewe doe see any great happines in this estate but the truth is mans whole felicity stands herein Rom. 14. 17. The kingdome of God is not meate and drinke but righteousnes peace and ioy in the holy Ghost Here the Apostle teacheth vs three things namely that when Gods spirit rules in a mans heart then first he is iustified there is righteousnes secondly he hath peace with God euen that peace of conscience which passeth all vnderstanding thirdly the ioy of the holy Ghost which is all vnspeakable comfort passing all worldly ioy whatsoeuer And these three doe notably set out the state of an happie man which will yet more plainly appeare by their contraries in Iudas who beeing a wretched sinner vnrighteously betraied his master and thereupon fell into the miserie of a guiltie accusing conscience which was the cause of his desperate death and also that his bodie burst asunder and his bowells gushed out now if an euill conscience be so fearefull then ●ow blessed an estate is the peace and ioy of a good conscience which a man then hath when God by his word and spirit ruleth in his heart Againe this estate is called the kingdome of heauen because that man in whom Christ 〈…〉 by his word and spirit is alreadie himselfe in heauen though i● bodie he be yet on earth for heauen is like a citie with two gates thorough both of which a man must passe before he obtaine the full ●oyes thereof now so soone as God by his word and spirit rules in any mans heart he is alreadie entred the 〈…〉 te of grace which is the first gate the other remaines to be passed thorough at the time of death which is the gate of glorie and then he is in full possession Doth true happines consist in this estate where Christ ruleth and man obeies then here behold the errour of all Philosophers and wise men of this world touching happines for some haue placed it in pleasure some in wealth and others in ciuill vertue and some in all these But the truth is it stands in none of these A naturall man may haue all these and yet be condemned for the ciuill vertues of the heathen were in them but glorious sinnes Our Sauiour Christ hath here reuealed more vnto vs then all the wise men of the world did euer know and hereby we haue iust occasion to magnifie the bookes of Scripture farre aboue all humane writings because they doe fully set out vnto vs the nature and estate of true felicitie which no humane
and rebellion into our Land if this were not our peace would continue for euer for the worke of iustice shall be peace quietnesse and assurance for euer And againe in righteousnesse shalt thou be established and be farre from oppression This therefore should mooue all vngodly persons to repent and to breake off the course of their sinnes vnlesse they will continue professed enemies to the peace of the state vnder which they liue The second Point wherein this blessednesse of Peace-makers consists namely in that they shall be called the children of God that is they shall be esteemed and reputed for Gods children in this world of God himselfe and all good men and in the world to come fully manifested so to be That this is true happinesse will soone appeare by the view of the state of euery childe of God for they are vnited vnto Christ by the spirit of grace by which they are regenerate and in Christ they are adopted for sonnes and daughters and so enioy Gods speciall grace and fauour Now hereupon they are Kings children hauing God for their Father who loues them more tenderly then any earthly Parents can loue their owne children secondly they haue Christ for their brother and so are heires annexed with him hauing heauen and earth for their possession In him they are made Kings and Priests vnto God and shall be iudges of the world at the last day yea they haue the holy Angels for ministring spirits to attend vpon their persons for their defence from the power of the enemie which farre surpasseth the dignity of any guard of men on earth whatsoeuer all things worke together for the best vnto them their crosses and afflictions are no curses but fatherly trialls and chastisements yea their sinnes are turned to their good to them death is no death but a sweet sleepe vnto their bodies and a straite passage for their soules into eternall glorie yea in the acte of death they haue the comfort of life in the ioy of the spirit and the Angels readie when breath departeth to carrie their soules to heauen If this be true happinesse to be called Gods children then they that liue after their owne wicked lusts voyd of all care to keepe a good cōscience are miserable and accursed for they are the children of the diuell seruing him in the workes of sinne and expressing his image in vngodlinesse and worldly lustes It stands them therefore in hand if they haue any care of true happinesse to labour after regeneration whereby forsaking the lusts and courses of their former ignorance and embracing and obeying sincerely the word of life they may become Gods children and so happie Secondly hast thou receiued this grace of Gods spirit whereby thou art inclined to haue peace with all men and to seeke for peace between God and thine owne conscience yea betweene the Lord and others then comfort thy selfe thou art the childe of God these motions come from grace flesh and blood brings forth no such fruits labour therefore to maintaine these good motions with all other pledges of thine adoption and so shalt thou growe fully assured of thine own happines In this age men make much adoe to get good assurance of earthly purchases but what madnesse is this so greatly to regard momentanie things and to haue no care in comparison of our eternall inheritance which we shall haue assured vnto vs when wee become the children of God Verse 10. Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousnes sake for theirs is the kingdome of heauen 11. Blessed are ye when men reuile you and persecute you and say all manner of euill against you for my sake falsly 12. Reioyce and be glad for great is your reward in heauen for so persecuted they the Prophets which were before you Here Christ propounds his eight Rule touching happinesse which he handles more largely then the former for hauing laid downe the Rule vers 10. he expounds the same in a speciall application of it to his Disciples in the 11. and 12. verses In the Rule it selfe note two points first the parties blessed secondly wherein their blessednesse consists The parties blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousnesse sake Persecution properly signifieth pursuite such as one enemie maketh after another but here the word must be taken generally for all kind of persecution whatsoeuer Now because it is a paradoxe and absurd in humane reason to thinke him blessed that for any cause is persecuted therefore Christ to verefie the truth hereof repeats the same Rule in the nextwerse where also he expounds euery parcell thereof wherewith I will content my selfe because Christ is the best interpreter of his owne words In the 11. verse therefore Christ sets downe three things all pertaining to the true exposition of this Rule First he explaines more particularly the parties that be blessed saying to his Disciples Blessed are yee In the beginning of the Chapter wee heard that hee cast his eies vpon them and spake vnto them and now here he doth the like again therefore this Rule must not be vnderstood of all men in the world that suffer but of all Christs true Disciples and generally it is not true for the heathen and infidels doe often suffer for good causes and yet remaine infidels without the true God and so are not blessed Againe a Chrstian professor may giue vp his life in a good cause yet not of loue to God or his truth but vpon ambition and so not be blessed for though I giue my bodie to be burned yet wanting loue it profiteth mee nothing Secondly Christ expoundeth particularly what hee meaneth by persecution naming three parts thereof first slaundering and reuiling which is the persecution of the tongue Thus the Iewes persecuted the Apostles saying they were drunke or full of sweete wine Thus Festus persecuted Paul making him madde or beside himselfe Secondly persecution meaning hereby as the word doth properly signifie first pursuite such as one enemie maketh after another when he seekes to spoile him of his goods or of his life secondly the bringing a man vnto the Barre and there of malice to accuse and arraigne him thirdly euill speaking with lying when as men of purpose be without cause malitiously carried thereunto as when the Iewes called Christ a Samaritan that had a diuell and said that he cast out diuels by Belzebub the prince of diuels and thus were the Christians in the Primitiue Church persecuted beeing malitiously accused for killing their owne children for worshipping the head of an asse for incest and such like To these three kindes of persecutions S. Luke Chap. 6. 22. addes a fourth namely hatred and a fift called separation wherby men were excommunicated and cast out of the Temple Synagogues for Christs sake and his Gospels These are the seuerall kinds of that persecution for the enduring whereof Christ pronounceth men blessed vers 10.
herewith Secondly the people of God that heare his word may learne good instruction from this Title first hereby euery one may see what he is by nature namely like vnto flesh subiect to corruption nay as vnsauory flesh and stinking cation in the nostrels of God for els what needed this salt This therefore must mooue vs to lay aside all pride of heart whereby we thinke highly of our selues yea we must become base and lowly in our owne eies in regard of the vnsauourie tast of our naturall corruption else we shall neuer feele the seasoning vertue of Gods holy Ministerie Secondly euery one must hereby learne to suffer the word of reproofe whereby his heart and conscience may be ripped vp and his sores of sinne discouered when we haue a cut or a wound in our flesh we can be content to put salt vpon it to drie vp the noysome humours that otherwise would corrupt now can we endure the smart of salt for the health of our bodies and shall we not much more suffer the word of God to rip vp our sinnes and to mortifie the same for the saluation of our soules Thirdly euery one must giue all diligence to bee seasoned throughout with this heauenly salt that the thoughts of his heart the words of his mouth and the actions of his life may be all sauourie and acceptable vnto God in Christ yea in his conuersation with men hee must labour to shewe the power of this seasoning Coloss. 4. 6. Let your speech be gratious alwaies and powdred with salt that is seasoned by the word that it may sauour of grace to those that heare vs. If we liue vnder the Ministerie of the word and be not seasoned therewith our case is dangerous for therein it is of the nature of salt which causeth barrennesse where it seasoneth not as we may see in the practise of Abimelech who sowed salt in Shechem to make the groūd barren and the place despised But if the salt haue lost his sauour wherewith shall it be salted it is thenceforth good for nothing but to bee cast out and troden vnder the foote of men Here Christ amplifieth the former reason whereby hee mooued his Apostles to sidelitie and diligence in their Ministerie by the danger of the contrarie infidelitie which is as vnsauourie salt incurable and vnprofitable and so subiect to a fearefull curse and therefore saith Christ you had neede to bee faithfull in seasoning the world by your Ministerie In this amplification we may obserue foure points First the ordinarie sinne that doth accompanie the calling of the Ministerie Secondly the danger of this sin Thirdly the vnprofitablenes of such a Ministerie Fourthly the iudgement of God due vnto it I. Point As other callings haue their seuerall faults so hath the calling of a Minister noted in these words If the salt haue lost his sauour c. Salt is said to become vnsauourie when it looseth that vertue and acrimonie which it hath in seasoning that flesh on which it is cast Now Ministers are as vnsauourie salt when they become vnprofitable in their Ministerie and either doe not or cannot dispense Gods word for the seasoning of mens soules that they may be acceptable to God and reconciled vnto him in Christ. In this calling there bee especially foure kinds of vnsauourie salt First the blind watch-men that haue no knowledge and dumb dogges that cannot barke that is such as either cannot or if they can will not dispense Gods word for the saluation of mens soules Secondly Hereticall Teachers who preach false and damnable doctrine such as doth not season but poison and destroie the soule such were the false Prophets among the Iewes who enticed to Idolatrie Deut. 30. 1 2. and the false Apostles and Heretiks in the Primitiue Church whose words did fret as a canker and destroyed the faith of many And such are the Romish teachers at this day and the Iesuits and Seminaries among vs who though they be qualified with many good gifts of learning yet by mingling the word of God with their owne inuentions and humane traditions they rase the foundation they become vnsauourie salt and hereticall Teachers And here by the way who cannot but wonder that students in Diuinitie should so much affect the Postils and Comments of Friers and Popish writers as they doe doubtlesse it argueth that the word of God hath not seasoned their hearts for where such vnsauourie salt hath relish the wholesome doctrine of Gods word hath neuer seasoned Thirdly they are vnsauourie salt who teach true doctrine but yet misapplie the same Many such were in the Church of the Iewes in the daies of Ieremie and Ezekiel who much complaine of sowing pillowes vnder the elbowes of the wicked by preaching peace vnto them when they should haue called to repentance by the discouerie of their sinnes and the denunciation of Gods iudgements as also for making sad the hearts of those whom God hath not made sadde And such are those at this day who haue sinooth tongues in respect of sinne and yet are full of bitter inuectiues against the better sort By this meanes the word of God looseth his acrimonie and sharpnesse whereby the wicked should be awaked out of their slumber of securitie and the godly further seasoned and made more acceptable vnto God Fourthly they are vnsauourie salt who though they teach the truth and generally applie it well doe yet lead vngodly and scandalous liues for an offensiue and vnsauourie conuersation in the Teacher doth hinder the seasoning vertue of the word of his Ministerie in the hearts of the people and his doctrine cannot so much edifie as his course of life destroyeth because naturall men regard not so much what is said as what is done This beeing so all Gods Ministers and those also that destinate themselues to this calling must haue speciall care so to bee qualified for this worke and so to preach the word of God that it may be sauourie in the hearts and consciences of them that heare it This is a matter of great importance as well in respect of the Minister as of the people and thus shall it appeare that they are not onely no vnsauourie salt but euen such as doe season others II. Point The danger of this sinne in beeing vnsauourie salt that is vnfaithfull in the Ministerie is very great noted in these words wherewith shall it be salted Some referre this salting to the earth as if Christ had said wherewith shall the earth be salted but it doth more truely belong to the salt it selfe as Mark. 9. 5. Salt is good but if the salt be vnsauourie wherewith shall it that is the salt it selfe be seasoned Againe the interrogation wherewith imports a vehement deniall as if Christ should say If salt once loose his naturall propertie of saltnesse it can neuer be recouered now vnfaithfull and vnprofitable Ministers are vnsauourie salt and therefore their danger is exceeding great
obedience to God now vnlesse God appoint them the doing of them cannot be any obedience to his will Thirdly will-worship whereby men thrust vpon God their owne inuentions for his seruice is euery where condemned and of like nature be all those actions wherein men of themselues doe fasten goodnesse without the will and appointment of God This point must bee remembred because the Church of Rome doth teach the contratie That a man may doe good workes not required or appointed by God but the former Reasons shew this to be false and the arguments which they bring for their opinion are nothing but abuse of Scripture as in these fewe may plamely appeare First they say the Iewes had free-will offerings which were not commanded in the word and yet were acceptable vnto God and so do many now adaies many good workes acceptable to God though not commanded Answ. Their free-wil offerings were ordained of God and therefore were acceptable they were onely free in regard in the time of offering them but for the manner how and the places where they must be offered both these were appointed of God Againe they say Phinees slewe Zimr● and Cosbie with Gods approbation though hee was no Magistrate and therefore workes not commanded of God may be acceptable vnto him Ans. Though Phinees had not any outward commandement yet he had that which was answerable thereto to wit an extraordinary instinct by the spirit wherby he was carried to doe that fact which was as much as if God had giuen him an expresse commandement And so we may say of the Ministerie of sundry auncient Prophets who by extraordinarie instinct were mooued thereunto and vpon this ground did Elijah slaie Baals Prophets Thirdly Maries fact say they in powring a boxe of costly ointment on the head of our Sauiour Christ was a good worke and yet there was no commandment for it in Gods word Answer Maries fact was a worke of confession whereby she testified her saith in Christ and so was generally commanded though not in particular Againe she was carried thereto by a speciall instinct of the spirit for she did it to burie him as Christ himselfe testisieth because his buriall was so speedy after his death in regard of the approaching of the sabboth that they could not embalme him as the manner of the Iewes was now euery instinct of Gods spirit in the conscience of the doer hath the force of a particular commandement Fourthly the spirit of God say they mooues euery man to any good worke that is to be done and therefore men need not a particular commandement for euery worke for those that are carried by the spirit cannot but doe well Answer True it is the spirit mooueth men to good works freely but yet this motion of the spirit is in and by the word of God and at this day those instincts which are besides the word are mens owne fancies or illusions of the diuell Many other reasons they alleadge to this purpose for the Iustifying their vowes of Chastitie of regular obedience pilgrimages trentals and such like but they are like to these and notwithstanding them all the truth is this that for substance a good worke is such a one as is ordayned appointed commanded by God And here by the way we may obserue that they are farre deceiued who so much commend the times of Poperie for good workes for the truth is that all their oblations to Images to Monasteries and to Churches for Masses Pardons and such like were no good workes but onely in their owne opinion for God commanded them not Now it is the Lords reuealed will that must giue the goodnes to mans worke Mich. 6. 8. he hath shewed thee O man what is good and what the Lord requireth of thee Next I adde Done of a regenerate person The Author of a good worke is not euery one in the world but that man or woman that is a member of Christ borne a new by the holy Ghost so Christ here saith Let your light c. restraining his speech to the persons of his disciples True it is that among Turkes and Infidels many a ciuill man will doe workes of mercie of ciuill iustice and liberalitie and will abstaine from outward sinnes and liue orderly now these and such like though in themselues they be good workes so farre forth as they are required by the law of nature or commaunded by Gods word yet in an infidel or an vnregenerate person they are sins for first they proceed from an heart which is corrupt with originall sinne and with vnbeleefe for the heart is the fountaine of all actions and also they are practised by the members of the bodie which are weapons of vnrighteousnesse and therefore must needs be like vnto water springing from a corrupt fountaine and running through a filthy channell Secondly these workes are not done for Gods glorie and the good of men Thirdly they are not done in obedience to God according to the Rule of goodnesse the will and word of God and therefore cannot be good workes And this must teach euery one that would doe good to labour for regeneration by the holy Ghost that so his person may be good then shall his workes of obedience be good in Gods sight for such as the tree is such will be the fruit An euill tree cannot bring forth good fruite nor a good tree euill fruite Matth. 7. 18. Wee must therefore labour to be engraffed into Christ for without him we can doe no good thing but beeing pa●takers of his grace we shall abound with the fruits of rightcousnesse which are by Iesus Christ vnto the praise and glorie of God Phil. 1. 11. Thirdly I adde that good workes must be done in faith for saith is the cause of euery good worke and without faith it is impossible to do any good worke Now in the doing of a good worke there is a twofold faith required First a generall faith whereby a man is perswaded that God requires of him the doing of that worke which he takes in hand as when a man giueth almes hee must be perswaded it is Gods will he should giue almes and so for other good workes for what soeuer is not of faith is sinne that is whatsoeuer proceedeth not from this perswasion in the conscience that it is Gods will that such a thing should be done or should not be done is sinne for he that doubteth of the thing he doth sinneth therein though the thing done be good in it selfe Secondly herein is required Iustifying faith whereby a man is perswaded in his conscience of his owne reconciliation with God in Christ of this it is said Heb. 11. 6. Without faith it is impossible to please God This Iustifying faith hath a double vse in the causing of a good worke First it giues the beginning to a good worke for by iustifying faith Christ with his merits is apprehended and applied
the Lawe is immutable and eternall and therefore I came not to destroy it First here obserue that the Law of God is made perpetuall and vnchangeable If any man aske how this can be seeing the Apostle faith The Lawe is changed Answer The Law is threefold Ceremoniall Iudiciall and Morall as hath beene said now that place is principally to be vnderstood of the Ceremoniall law which indeede is abrogated in regard of the obseruation of it in Gods worship but in the scope and substance of it which is Christ crucified with his benefits whom it shadowed out it remaineth still and is now more plaine then euer it was As for the Iudiciall law though it be abrogated vnto vs so farre forth as it was peculiar to the Iewes yet as it agrees with common equitie and serues directly to establish the precepts of the Morall lawe it is perpetuall If it be said that Christ changed the Morall law in changing the Sabbath day from the seauenth day to the eight I answer Christ did so indeed by his Apostles but that is no change of the substance but of the ceremonie of the Sabbath for the substance of that law is the inioyning of a seauenth daies rest vnto the Lord. Now though the seauenth day from the creation be not kept yet a seauenth day is kept still If it be further said that the Law it selfe is abrogated for that euery one that breaketh the Lawe is not accursed according to the sentence thereof Deut. 27. 26. Answer Wee must knowe that the Law is but one part of Gods word and the Gospel another reuealing another part of Gods will besides that which the Lawe made knowne for it addes a qualification to the Law moderating the rigour thereof after this manner Hee is accursed saith the Law that faileth in any commandement except saith the Gospel he bee reconciled againe in Christ and in him haue the pardon of his transgressions And yet the Morall law remaines for euer a rule of obedience to euery childe of God though he be not bound to bring the same obedience for his iustification before God Againe this propertie of the Law in beeing vnchangeable and for euer to be kept sheweth that no creature may dispense with the Law of God Mens lawes may be abrogated and changed but Gods Law euen in the least parts thereof must stand for euer till it be accomplished to the full but if it might be dispensed with then not onely iots and titles thereof but whole lawes might bee abrogated This shewes the blasphemous impietie of the Popes of Rome who in their Canons be authorized to dispense with the lawes of God yea in the last Councell of Trent hee is priuiledged to dispense with some of the lawes of Consanguinitie against nature flatly forbidden in the word of God which is most horrible rebellion and a great disgrace vnto God Thirdly from this propertie of the Law we may obserue that it is not likely that any whole booke of Canonicall Scripture is lost for not one sentence of the Law shall passe till all be fulfilled much lesse then can whole bookes perish Sundrie men do thinke that whole bookes be loste but that opinion cals into question the fidelitie of the Church and Gods own prouidence in preseruing his word neither can it stand wel with this text that saith no title thereof shal faile Those that seeme to be lost were either humane writings as bookes of lawes and Chronicles such as our books of statutes or Chronicles be or books of philosophie such as Salomon writ or else some of them are in the Canonicall Scripture for the bookes of Samuel and the Kings were written by diuers Prophets and therfore we may more safely hold that no part of holy Scripture is lost neither shall euer faile For howsoeuer after the last iudgement the vse of the word written shall cease yet the substance thereof shall remaine in mens hearts and be kept for euer Fourthly this immutabilitie of the Law containes a matter of great terrour woe vnto al impenitent sinners for howsoeuer they may flatter themselues with a presumption of Gods mercie yet the curse of Law which is against them shall stand for euer and therefore while they goe on in sinne they haue iust cause to houle and crie for Gods iustice in that his Law is inuiolable neither will gold or siluer pacifie Gods wrath for though a man by his power and wealth were able to ouerturne heauen and earth yet that would not helpe him though heauen and earth be brought to nothing yet euery part of Gods Law must stand for euer and be fulfilled And therefore whosoeuer doe lie in any finne must in time repent humble themselues forsake their sins and betake themselues vnto Christ that he may fulfill the Law for them or else the cuise thereof shall certainly be fulfilled in them and they shall there lie howling vnder it eternally where is nothing but weeping and gnashing of teeth Fiftly this immutabilitie of the Law and so proportionably of euery part of Gods word as it prooueth the Scriptures to be the word of God so it is a most excellent ground of comfort for all Gods seruants to stablish their hearts in the assurance of all his promises A Christian heart is subiect to receiue many doubtinges of the truth of Gods promises especially in the time of triall and temptation but this must be remembred for euer that the whole word of God is immutable though mans promises may faile and their lawes be abrogated yet no iot or part of Gods word shall passe vnfulfilled and therefore they must constantly waite for the accomplishment thereof for in due time it shall be fulfilled Sixtly we are hereby taught to put on patience in afflictiōs for they come by the speciall appointment of our God who saith in his word That through many afflictions we must enter into the kingdome of heauen now euery part of Gods word must be accomplished and therefore Christ bade Peter to put vp his sword when he would haue rescued his apprehension for saith he I could pray to my Father and hee would send more then twelue legions of Angels to helpe me but how then should the Scriptures be fulfilled which say It must be so Matth. 26. 52 53 54. Seauenthly our Sauiour Christ in this propertie of immutabilitie giueth vnto the whole Law and vnto euery sillable and letter thereof his proper force vertue and sense so as there is nothing in it not so much as one letter vaine or idle for euery commandement reueales the perfect iustice of God and euery letter serues to expresse the same comaundement And herein the Law of God differeth from mens lawes for in them bee many vaine and idle words yea oftentimes whole sentences but in the law of God it is not so Prou. 8. 8. All the words of my mouth are righteous there is no
lewdnesse nor frowardnesse in them yea the Law of the Lord is perfect his statutes are right and his iudgements true and righteous altogether Now the consideration of this integritie and perfection of the law and word of God must mooue vs to studie the Scriptures with great diligence so saith our Sauiour Christ Search the Scriptures that is shake and sift them as the word signifieth search narrowely till the true force and meaning of euery sentence yea of euery word and sillable nay of euery letter and iotte therein bee knowne and vnderstood conferre place with place the scope of one place with another things going before with things that come after yea compare word with word letter with letter and search it throughly This manner of studying the Scripture is most necessarie as beeing the thing indeede which preserueth and vpholdeth the Church of God and the puritie of religion for about foure or fiue hundred years agone men left off to studie the Bible after this sort and betooke themselues to the writings of men occupying their wits wholly in vaine quid●ities in Philosophie and in hid mysteries of Diuinitie by which meanes it came to passe that Poperie and Apostacie from the truth spread it selfe ouer the world for many hundred yeares together Afterward God of his meere mercie put into the hearts of some men to bee carefull searchers in the word of God by which meanes the truth appeared as light out of darkenesse Thus God stirred up Luther about the yeare of our Lord 1517. who by diligent search in the Scripture and especially by serious meditation with praier vpon these words of the Apostle Roman 3. 21. That now by the Gospel without the Law the Iustice of God is made manifest did finde that by the perfect obedience of Christ our iustification was wrought and thereupon began to maintaine and professe Iustification before God to be free through and by faith in Christ onely without helpe from the works of the law against the doctrine of the Church of Rome and so by further diligence and industrie in the Scripture the truth of God shone forth more and more Let all men but especially Students in diuinitie consider this effect of searching out the Scriptures as a spurre to diligence in this behalfe By this means also errors and heresies are auoyded and suppressed the will of God is plainly reuealed And here by the way we may see how profitable and necessarie the gift of Interpretation is It is a most excellent gift of the spirit pertaining to the Ministerie and therefore most commendable necessarie is the vse thereof in Schooles of Learning Eightly this immutabilitie ascribed to Gods law that euery part thereof shall be accomplished to the full teacheth all Princes and Magistrates not onely to be keepers of Moses law in their owne persons but also within their rule and dominions to doe their best indeauour that the same bee fulfilled and kept by others For this cause did the Lord command that the Prince of his people should haue the Law written before him in a booke to read vpon continually that hee may learne to feare God and to keepe all the words of the Law to doe them and that which is there enioyned vnto Princes belongeth also vnto all Magistrates Masters and Parents within their places and charges they must be carefull to see the whole law of God practised and obeyed both in their owne persons and of those that are vnder them Lastly by this immutabilitie ascribed to the Law wee may learne what it is to fulfill the law namely to keepe and obserue to the full euery particular thing which the law commaunds vs and vpon this wee may ground two conclusions against the Papists First that no man can come to life euerlasting by his owne righteousnesse and obedience for hee that would come to heauen by his owne righteousnesse must be able to fulfill the whole law perfectly in euery respect but since Adams fall no man could keepe the lawe in all things sauing our Sauiour Christ both God and man Secondly that our fulfilling of the law must be in the obedience of Christ for he onely was answerable to the whole law in all things and therefore if we would come to heauen we must not come in our owne righteousnesse but in his as Paul wisheth to be found of God Phil. 3. 8 9. Verse 19. Whosoeuer therefore shall breake one of these least commandements and teach men so he shall bee called least in the kingdome of heauen but whosoeuer shall obserue and teach them the same shall bee called great in the kingdome of heauen Our Sauiour Christ hauing plainely propounded in his Apologie for himselfe the stabilitie and eternitie of the whole law doth here laie downe two notable conclusions for the vpholding thereof 1. Because the Law is immutable and eternall therefore he that breaketh one of the least of the commandements and teacheth men so shall be called least in the kingdome of heauen 2. Because the Law is eternall therefore he that keepes the commandements and teacheth men so shall bee called great in the kingdome of heauen For the first by least commandement he meaneth the precepts of the Morall lawe though in the former verse by Law he vnderstood the whole law in three parts Iudiciall Morall and Ceremoniall And he calleth them litle not simply in regard of themselues as though they were so indeede for in it selfe euery commaundement of God is great and waightie but hee speaketh according to the opinion of the Iewes for the Scribes and Pharises had ordained certaine rites and ceremonies according to the tradition of their Fathers the obseruation whereof they made a greater matter of conscience then the keeping of some of Gods commandements and so esteemed them little Againe saying these least commaundements hee pointeth out what particular commaundements of the Morall law the Iewes esteemed lesse then the traditions of men namely those which afterward he expoundeth in this Chapter touching Murther Adulterie Swearing and the rest for they esteemed not all the commaundements of the law lesser then their traditions Shal be called least in the kingdome of heauen Here Christ sets downe the punishment of a false Prophet which breakes Gods commaundements teacheth men so to wit his base esteeme in the Church of God for the kingdome of God is two-fold the kindome of grace and the kingdome of glorie The kingdome of grace is the societie and companie of Gods faithfull seruantes here on earth The kingdome of glorie is the blessed estate of all the Saints in heauen Now here by kingdome of heauen he meaneth the kingdome of grace which is the militant Church on earth and so Iohn Baptist calleth it Math. 3. 2. Repent and amend for the kingdome of heauen is at hand that is the Church of the old Testament is now abolished and the Church of the new Testament is ready to take place
by Christs comming and therfore repent and amend and Math. 11. 12. from the time of Iohn hitherto the kingdome of heauen suffereth violence So then the meaning of this first conclusion is this Whosoeuer breaketh one of these least commandements of the Moral law which afterward I shall expound and teacheth men so to doe he shall be contemned and not counted worthie to bee a member of the Church of God in the new Testament In this conclusion in the practise of the Iewes Christ setteth forth two notable corruptions of an hollow heart towards God The first to set little by the commandements of God esteeming no more of them nay lesse then of mens lawes and traditions but Saint Iames saith he that breaketh one commandement bee it neuer so little is guiltie of all though hee make shewe of keeping all so likewise hee that maketh light and base account of one commandement contemneth all though he seeme to honour the rest neuer so much Though Herod heard Iohn gladly and obeied his doctrine in many things and so seemed to make some account of some commandements yet because he would needs liue in incest against the seauēth commandement he did in effect contemne and breake them all so at this day there are many who professe religion and giue testimonie thereof by hearing the word and receiuing the sacraments and herevpon they would be counted louers of Gods lawe yet in the course of their liues and in their particular callings they will not sticke to oppresse the poore and to deale vniustly for their aduantage to prophane the Sabbath for a little profit or pleasure and to sweare and curse when they are a little prouoked Now howsoeuer such persons may make a glorious shew of profession outwardly yet by these and such like particular actions they shew plainly that they haue but Pharisaicall hearts which indeed make little or no account of Gods commandements Let vs therfore euery one looke into our waies and search in our owne hearts whether this corruption be in vs or no and if it be let vs repent and forsake it and labour to become like Dauid who had respect vnto all Gods commandements and so shall we not be despised in the Church of God The second corruption of an hollow heart noted likewise of Christ in these Iewes is to place the ceremonies rites and traditions of men aboue the commandements of the Morall law Herewith he doth expresly charge the Iewish teachers Matth. 15. 3. Why doe ye transgresse the commandements of God by your traditions And this is also the practise of the Church of Rome at this day they account eating flesh in Lent and on their fasting daies a deadly sinne yet they will dispense with threasons murthers of Christian Princes they allow of Stues they permit and pardon Sodomie and yet vtterly forbid mariage in some estate which the holy Ghost calleth honourable among all men In these and many moe they preferre their owne traditions before the most holy commandements of God yea many ignorant persons among vs are tainted with this corruption for be not some feast daies appointed by the Church as Christs natiuitie all Saints and such like obserued by them with greater conscience and reuerence then the Lords owne Sabbath Though the memorie of Christs natiuitie may be celebrated yet the Lords day should haue the speciall honour Now for the reforming of this corruption we must labour to haue the same minde that was in Dauid who grew into admiration with Gods commandements and thereupon invred himselfe to the obseruation of them We must therefore labour to haue an high estimation of the lawes of God and this will be a notable meanes to drawe vs to a reuerend feare and obedience towards to the same one cause why men do not so highly aduance the law of God as they ought is because they doe not sufficiently waigh the dignitie thereof In euery commandement therefore we must first deepely consider the waight thereof then labour to vnderstand it aright thirdly learne to admire the wisdome and iustice of God therein and lastly endeauour to yeeld loyaltie and obedience thereunto Secondly in this Rule our Sauiour Christ puts a difference between a false Prophet and a true The false Prophet breakes the commandements of God in his owne person and also by his doctrine teacheth others to doe the like But the true Prophet and seruant of God in the Ministerie endeauoureth the aduancement of Gods glorie as well by integritie of life as by soundnesse of doctrine Thirdly in the punishment of a false Prophet here set downe wee haue good direction for our iudgement touching the present Church of Rome namely that shee is not worthie to be esteemed a part of Christs Church on earth by the sentence of our Sauiour Christ because shee breakes Gods commaundements and teacheth men so for whereas the second commandement forbiddeth the worshipping of Images yea and the making of Images to resemble God the Church of Rome doth not onely allow the contrarie against this commandement but teacheth others so to doe saying that it is lawful to resemble the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost in Images either painted or carued and to worshippe them therein yea and to worshippe the very Images of Christ and of Saints as also the Saints themselues with religious worship Againe they plainely breake the tenth commandement which forbiddeth the first motions vnto sinne with delight though without cōsent of wil by teaching that concupiscence after baptisme is no sinne And as they deale with the commandements so deale they with the Prophets who giue testimonie vnto Christ for first they destroy his manhood by their forged transubstantiation secondly they ouerturne his kingly office by making the Pope the head of the Church and giuing him power to make lawes to binde the conscience Thirdly they ouerturne the Priesthood by their massing Priesthood wherein they daily offer vp an vnbloodie sacrifice for the sinnes of the quicke and the dead Fourthly they rob him of his propheticall office in giuing liberty to the Pope to make new Laws to expound the Scriptures as supreame iudge these things they teach therefore that Church is not worthy to be counted a member of Christs Church But seeing God in great mercie hath vouchsafed vs this fauour in this land that we should receiue and embrace his holy word to publish and teach the same and so esteemeth vs worthie to be accounted a member of his Church wee are therefore to reioyce in this mercie and to praise God vnfainedly for this vnspeakable blessing and to shewe forth our thankefulnesse not onely by teaching and receiuing the truth of his word but also by yeelding obedience in all things thereunto yea our earnest and daily prayer must be because it is so great a blessing to be counted worthie of his kingdome that
and strict exposition of the Law according to the traditions of the Fathers and they were most holy outwardly and of chiefe account among the Iewes and therefore the Apostle Paul saith that after the most strict sect of their religion he liued a Pharis●● that he was a Pharise the sonne of a Pharise Yet besides these there were another sect called Herodiās who as some think were courtiers which held taught that Herod was the Messias And thus we see what the Scribes and Pharises were whome Christ here ioyneth together for amplification sake vnderstanding thereby such teachers among the Iewes Priests and Levites as liued after the most strait custome of the Pharisies for the Pharisies were by office Scribes as we may plainely see by comparing together Ioh. 1. 19. with v. 24. where the Priests and Leuites who were Scribes as we haue shewed are called Pharisies II. Point What was that righteousnes of the Scribes and Pharisies which is here so debased as beeing vnable to bring a man to heauen By the tenour of Scripture it will appeare that it was an externall righteousnes onely standing in the outward obseruation of the law for they were carefull to abstaine from actuall grosse sinnes as whoredome theft murther idolatrie and such like and they were very forward in fasting praying and giuing of almes openly and in keeping the traditions and ceremonies of the Elders and in all things to carrie themselues in shew conformable to the law but the inward righteousnes of the heart they nothing regarded thinking that perfect righteousnes consisted in outward obedience by that they looked to be saued as it is said Rom. 10. 2. neglecting vtterly the righteousnes of God In these Scribes and Pharisies we may obserue what is the naturall perswasion of man touching righteousnes to wit that an outward righteousnes will serue the turne and therefore euery man naturally contents himselfe therewith and hence it is that men will bring their bodies vsually to the place of Gods worship to pray to heare the word and receiue the Sacraments but few haue care to bring their hearts with them that they may inwardly worship God in spirit and truth so likewise many are content to rest from their ordinarie labours on the Sabbath day but few are carefull to consecrate their rest vnto God men be carefull to abstaine from actuall murther but few make conscience of malice hatred reuiling and quarelling many hate theft that yet will not sticke to robbe their neighbours of their good name by vile reports many are ashamed to robbe openly that make no bones to deceiue by false weights and measures by glosses and such like and yet all these will blesse themselues with their outward righteousnes and think all is well not doubting but they shall be saued by it though they haue no more but this is Pharisaicall pride and folly for all such outward righteousnes is here condemned as vnable to saue the soule Againe here wee may see the palpable and grosse opinion of all worldly men euen of those who cōmonly are called honest men if they be told of their sinnes of the danger of dānation except they repent their answer is they are no theeues no murtherers no grosse sinners and therefore they hope God will saue them for they liue orderly and doe no man wrong but let all such take heede lest they deceiue their owne soules for this ciuill honestis was the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises which could neither bring them nor any other into the kingdome of heauen as Christ the God of truth saith expresly in this place To giue almes to fast to praie and to deale vprightly with men be very good things but yet wee must labour for more then these if euer wee meane to come to heauen wee must get another righteousnesse of the heart renouncing vtterly our owne righteousnesse in the matter of Iustification and condemne our selues for our best actions that so we may be fit to receiue that true righteousnesse which will commend vs vnto God III. Point What is that true righteousnesse which will bring a man to heauen Answ. It is the righteousnesse of Christ 1. Cor. 1. 30. for Christ is made vnto vs of God wisedome righteousnesse yea hee was made sinne for vs that wee might be made the righteousnesse of God in him This is that righteousnesse which exceedes the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises and whereby a sinner doth stand iust before God for when as by Adams fall wee all became guiltie of sinne and thereby subiect to the curse of God and to eternall condemnation from which we could neuer haue deliuered our selues then it pleased Christ to come from the bosome of his father and to become our suretie and Sauiour who in his life became obedient to the law for vs and in and by death vpon the crosse suffered whatsoeuer was due vnto our sinnes which obedience and satisfaction beeing made by him that was both God and man was alone all-sufficient both to free vs from the curse of the law and also to iustifie vs before God and this righteousnesse of Christ is that which exceeds the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises and is able to bring a man to heauen Yet further for our Iustification Christs righteousnesse hath three parts the puritie of his humane nature the integritie and obedience of his life and the merit of his sufferings vpon the crosse and all this must be ours to answer for our corrupt nature and sinnefull life deseruing a cursed death Here some make question how Christs righteousnesse can be ours and how one mans righteousnes can saue so many thousands Answ. Christs righteousnes is not the righteousnes of a meere man for then it could saue but one at the most but it is the righteousnesse of that person who is both God and man and therfore is an infinit righteousnes of merit sufficient to saue a thousand worlds But some here say If Christs righteousnesse bee ours then we are as righteouse as Christ Answ. The same righteousnesse that is in Christ is ours but not in the same manner or measure for Christ hath it by merit and action of himselfe we haue it onely by mercie and imputation it is in Christ as a roote and fountaine in vs by reception and application like the light in the Moone and in the Starres which is not in them originally but receiued from the Sunne the fountaine thereof Thirdly it is said If we by Christs righteousnesse be iustified and made the sonnes of God then is Christ by our sinnes made vniust and so the childe of the diuell Answer We may safely say that Christ was made a sinner by our sinnes not actually but by imputation now hence it will not follow that hee should bee the childe of the diuell for that commeth by the acte and habite of sinning after
the interpretation of their ancient Teachers But here Christ checketh and reprooueth this manner of teaching and therefore the like cannot be warrantable among vs at this day whereby we see that kind of teaching reprooued wherein euery point is stuffed out with the testimonies of Fathers Schoolemen and humane writers And here also is discouered a wicked and daungerous practise of the Papists who referre all deciding of controuersies and interpretation of hard places of Scripture to the Church and to the Fathers If we say that Fathers oft dissent and the Church may erre then they send vs to the Popes breast But if this course were safe then the Iewish teachers might haue had a good defence against this charge of Christ for they had both Church and Fathers on their side and the high Priest that was then in place Indeede the Fathers must be reuerenced as lights of the Church in their time and their testimonies duly regarded wherein they agree with the written word but for the confirmation of the truth in mans conscience and for the edifying of the soule in the graces of the spirit the word of God hath the onely stroake by it alone Gods children are begotten and borne anew to a liuely hope and by it alone they are fed and nourished in the faith yea by it alone they are confirmed and stablished in the truth Thirdly in these Iewish Teachers forbidding nothing as a breach of this law but the outward sinne of murther and on the contrarie approouing of those as keepers of this law that kept their hands from this Actuall crime of blood and by consequent worthie of life euerlasting behold a plaine picture of euery naturall man for is not this the common opinion that vnlesse a man kill an other he breakes not this commandement and so for the rest if he abstaine from the outward actuall grosse sinnes of stealing adulterie and false witnes bearing then he keepes those commandements though his heart be neuer so full fraught with enuie malice lust couetousnes falshood c. But let vs obserue Christs reproofe of such erronious interpretations of Gods law as a meanes to schoole our hearts from such vaine conceits vers 22. But I say vnto you whosoeuer shall be angrie with his brother vnaduisedly shall be culpable of iudgement and whosoeuer saith vnto his brother Raca shall be worthie to be punished by the Councell and whosoeuer shall say foole shall be worthie to be punished by hell fire Here our Sauiour Christ propounds the true interpretation of this Commandement But I say vnto you that is whatsoeuer you haue heard the Scribes or Pharisies teach you from themselues or from their fathers it is nothing let them not deceiue you for I that am the Law-giuer and Doctor of my Church and therefore best know the meaning of mine owne law I say otherwise vnto you whosoeuer is angrie with his brother c. Here Christ laies downe three kinds of murther and three degrees of punishments for the same The first degree of murther is Anger not anger simply but rash and indiser●et anger towards a brother and by Brother he meaneth first one Iew with an other to whome Christ spake secondly one neighbour with an other whether Iew or Gentile for by creation we are all brethren hauing one father which is God as Adam is called the sonne of God Luk. 3. 38. The second degree of murther is calling his brother Raca Some expound this word Raca an idle or emptie braine others an euill man others take it to signifie a loathsome man one to be spit at as we by spitting vse to shew our contempt but these interpretations cannot so fitly stand for then the third degree of murther and this second should be one and the same for to call a man emptie braine euill or loathsome and to call him foole are equall in degree Now Christs intent is to set downe distinct degrees of murther as is euident by the distinct degrees of punishment adioined thereunto A more fit exposition is this that Raca hath no perfect signification but is onely an interiection of indignation whereby a man doth not slaunder or reuile his brother but onely in gesture shew the contempt and anger of his heart against him as when in English we say fie tush or such like which words are not open raylings but onely outward signes of the inward anger and contempt concealed in the heart so that the meaning is this He that is angrie with his brother and expresseth this his anger either in gesture or countenance by frowning lookes gnashing of teeth or by imperfect speech as tush fie pish or such like he is guiltie of murther The third degree of murther is whē a man doth shew his anger against his brother by open raylings and reproachfull names expressed in these words whosoeuer shall call his brother foole And all these three degrees are beyond the interpretation of the Iewish Teachers who onely condemned actuall killing by this commandement Now to these seuerall kinds of murther Christ addeth distinct degrees of punishment The first is to be culpable of iudgement for vnaduised anger The second to be worthie to be punished of a Councell for outward signes of this anger The third is to be worthie of hell fire for reproachfull names or raylings And here we must vnderstand that Christ speaketh not properly in setting downe these degrees of punishment but figuratiuely alluding to the custome of punishing offenders vsed among the Iewes for they had three courts The first was held by three men for meane matters and other cases of small importance The second was held by three and twentie men wherein were determined matters of great importance that could not be decided in the first court as matters of life and death and it was kept in the cheife cities of the land The third court was held at Ierusalem onely called the court of the Seauentie-two from which none might appeale to any other In it were all weightie and great causes determined and this court is here called a Councell Now Christ alluding hereto saith to this effect Look● as among you Iewes there are different courts and some matters are adiudged in your courts of iudgement and others in the Councell at Ierusalem so God also he hath his Iudgement and his councell those that are rashly angrie shall vndergoe Gods iudgement and he that makes knowne his anger by speech or countenance shall be punished more grieuously and vndergoe a deeper iudgement as it were by the Lords councell but he that shall by open reuilings and raylings shew forth his malice against his brother as by calling him foole or such like he shall be worthie the most grie●●us iudgement and torment of hell fire alluding to the highest degree of torment among the Iewes which was burning for before their Gouernment was taken from them by Herod the Iewes vsed these foure kinds of punishments hanging beheading
want thereof ought not to keepe the godly from this Sacrament for another mans euill conscience cannot defile thy good conscience another mans sinne cannot hurt thee vnlesse thou doe some way communicate with him therein Christ was more carefull in his dutie then euer man was and yet hee communicated with the wicked Iewes Scribes and Pharises in the seruice of God vnder the Law The fourth head from whence offence is taken is the state of the wicked principally in regard of their prosperitie Hence some holy ones suspect their owne estate and religion as either not good or not regarded of God This befell Dauid Psal. 37. when hee sawe the prosperitie of the wicked and their increase in riches with peace and ease hee said Certainly I haue clensed mine heart in vaine ●nd washed my hands in innocencie Hence also Ieremie reasons with God why the way of the wicked should prosper and they bee in wealth that transgresse rebelliously Hence vndoubtedly at this day many call into question the good prouidence of God Now the way to cut off this offence is to enter into the sanctuarie of God as Dauid did that is to come to the assemblies of Gods people where the word is preached for there a man shall see the manifold reasons why God will haue his owne people afflicted also the fearefull end of the pleasures of the wicked namely a fitting of them to further destruction Againe from this same ground doe many rich men take offence for hauing the world at will they blesse themselues with this perswasion that God loues them and thereupon take occasion to condemne all religion and to goe on in the pursuite of worldly profits and delights And this is one maine cause why among the rich we haue so few good and sound Professors because that from a false ground of outward things they perswade themselues of Gods loue fauour But to cut off this offence we must remember that mans case is the more fearefull when he wants all crosses for God chasteneth euery child whom he receiueth Heb. 12. 6. it is a marke of Gods child to be in affliction if he profit thereby the stalled oxe commeth sooner to the slaughter then the oxe that is vnder the yoke and the sheepe that goeth in fat pasture commeth sooner to the shambles then that which goeth on the bare commons so oftentimes God fatteth the wicked with the blessings of this life as hee did the rich glutton that he may more iustly condemne them in the world to come Lastly we must remember what Salomon saith No man knoweth loue or hatred of all that is before him that is of all outward things all things fall alike vnto all both good and bad therfore no man must so blesse himselfe with his outward estate that he be drawne to esteeme of religion as a thing needlesse or superfluous Verse 31. It hath beene said also whosoeuer shal put away his wife let him giue her a Bill of diuorcement 32. But I say vnto you whosoeuer shall put away his wife except it be for fornication causeth her to commit adulterie and whosoeuer shall marie her that is diuorced committeth adulterie Our Sauiour Christ proceeding further to restore the seauenth commaundement to his perfection doth here confute a false interpretation of a Politicke law of Moses giuen by the Scribes and Pharises For this ende first he laies downe the wordes of Moses politicke law but yet so as containing in them the false interpretation of the Iewish teachers ver 31. then hee opposeth the truth of God against their false interpretation and maintaineth the first institution of mariage v. 32. For the first Moses politicke law was That hee which put away his wife should giue her a Bill of diuorce This law the Iewish Teachers did falsly interpret for the better perceiuing wherof these three points are to be handled touching Moses politicke law 1. what kinde of law it was 2. the straitnesse of that law 3. what effect and force it had For the first the law is set downe Deut. 24. 1. when a man marieth a wife and she finde no fauour in his eies because he hath espied some filthinesse in her then let him write her a bill of diuorce and put it in her hand and send her out of his house This law was not morall but ciuill or politicke for the good ordering of the common wealth Now among their particular lawes some were laws of toleration and permission which were such as did not approoue of the euill which they concerned but did onely tolerate and permit that euill which could not be auoided for the preuenting of a greater euil which otherwise would fall out As when the sea hath made ● breach into the land if it cannot possibly be stopped the best course is to make it as narrow as may bee Such was the law concerning vsurie Deut. 23. 20. permitting the Iewes to exercise it vpon a stranger but not towards a brother and the like was the law touching polygamie Deut. 21. 15. If a man had two wiues the one hated the other loued and they both haue borne him children if the first borne be the sonne of the hated though shee were maried to him the latter yet her seed was legitimate and her sonne had the right of the first borne In both which lawes were tolerated that which God condemned onely for the preuenting of a greater euill Vnder this sort comes our law of vsurie for taking tenne in the hundred not approuing but permitting so much for the auoyding of greater vsurie Vnto this kind the Papists would reduce their law of permitting Stewes for the preuenting of greater sinnes but that law can haue no title to such permission for a law of permission is to diminish that euill which by man cannot possibly be cut off altogether now that sinne which they would preuent by their Stewes might be cut off among them if they would giue allowance to Gods owne ordinance of lawfull mariage vnto all sorts and sexes So likewise this law of Moses for diuorce was a law of permission not approouing of the giuing a bill of diuorce for euery light cause but tolerating of it for the preuenting of greater mischeife euen of murther for the nature of the Iewes was this if a man once tooke dislike to his wife he would neuer be at rest till he had shed her blood if they might not bee parted asunder Now this law of diuorce was giuen to restraine this great euill for hereby a man was tolerated to put away his wife when shee found no fauour in his eies lest hee should kill her yet so as he gaue her a bill of diuorce wherein hee must set downe the cause why hee put her away whereby also many were restrained from putting away their wiues because it was a great shame for a light occasion so highly to transgresse Gods holy institution who made them by mariage
the same place with vs for so is the Samaritane saide to be neighbour to the man that fell among theeues because he found him lying in the way where he traueiled and had compassion on him Now the Iewish teachers leaue the generall signification of the word which expressed the true meaning of the holy Ghost and take the speciall signification and so restraine this law of loue to friends onely Whereby we see how necessarie it is that the tongues wherein the Scriptures were penned should be well knowne and vnderstood for the mistaking of the signification of a word by the Iewish teachers caused a manifest errour to be taught among them for truth And this maketh greatly for the honour of the Schooles of learning where the studies of the Tongues is professed And herein also an other thing may be noted in the Iewish teachers that in the time of Christ they were ignorant in their owne tongue and therefore no maruell though at this day they knowe not the proprieties thereof seeing their Common-wealth is decaied and they dispersed among all people Their second fault is a false collection and consequent that because a man must loue his friend therefore he must hate his enemie this is against the rules of Arte for vnlesse the contraries be equall a consequent will not thence follow in this sort Here then obserue the necessitie of the studie of humane Artes and among the rest especially of the Arte of Logicke whereby we may discerne betweene true and false collections Againe here obserue an infallible note of a false teacher to wit to temper the word of God to mens naturall affections and so to expound it as they may both stand together The Iewes were a people that loued their friends entirely and hated their enemies bitterly now answearably doe their Teachers expound this law whereby they ouerturne both the law of God and the saluation of the people Thirdly marke here the fruit of corrupt doctrine namely to corrupt good manners The Iewes were a people that did much bragge of their Ancestours and priuiledges and in regard of themselues contemned all forraine Nations yea they hated them and therefore they were ●o●e in contention with Peter for going to Cornelius a Gentile Act. 11. 2. now this their malice proceeded partly from nature and partly from the false doctrine of their Teachers which was that they might hate their enemies The like may appeare in many practises of Poperie to this day for when that Superstition was aloft the people were taught a distinction of times and places in regard of holinesse the fruit of which doctrine stickes fast in the hearts of many vnto this day for they thinke Churches and Chappell 's to be more holy then other places and therefore some will neuer pray but when they come into some-such place And doe they not make great difference of daies and times all which are fruits of Poperie In regard whereof we see it is necessarie that the puritie of Religion in faith and manners should be strongly maintained by the syncere ministerie of the word for many disorders in mens liues come from the vnsound handling of the Scriptures Whereby we may see Gods vnspeakeable mercie and goodnesse towards vs in vouchsafing vs an holy Ministerie wherein the puritie of doctrine is and hath beene long and may be still through Gods mercie maintained and published This ought to mooue vs to all thankefulnesse vnto God and to endeauour to shew the fruit of this true Religion in all holinesse and pietie both of heart and life towards God and man vers 44. But I say vnto you Loue your enemies blesse them that curse you doe good to them that hate you and pray for them which hurt you and persecute you Here our Sauiour Christ propounds his Answer vnto the former false doctrine of the Iewish Teachers for the hating of an enemie Wherein first he laies downe a generall Rule containing the summe of his whole answer saying Loue your enemies then he expounds that Rule in the same v. and after prooueth it v. 45 46. Of these in order For the first Loue your enemies In this Rule two things must be knowne I. what is an enemie II. what it is to loue our enemie both these are euident in the words following wherein Christ expounds this rule Blesse them that curse you c. An enemie then is any one that of hatred doth wrong vnto his neighbour either in word by cursing or euill speaking or deede by striking and persecuting him But what is it to loue our enemie Loue properly is an affection of the heart whereby one is well pleased with an other But here more generally loue comprehendeth these two things first to be louingly affected in heart towards an enemie secondly to vse an enemie louingly in speech and action so it is taken 1 Ioh. 3. 18. Loue not in word and tongue onely but in deed and truth And Rom. 10. 1● Loue is the fulfilling of the Law For the first loue in the heart comprehendeth all good affections that one man beareth to another a● mercie compassion meekenesse and desire to doe vnto them what good we can as it is more plainely expressed Luk. 6. 36. Bee ye therefore mercifull as your heauenly father is mercifull And for the second that kinde vsage which loue expresseth in word and deede is here set out vnto vs in three branches First blesse them that curse you where is commaunded all good speech both vnto our enemie and of our enemie The second Do good to them that hate you where is prescribed all louing vsage in action by affoarding them helpe reliefe and comfort any way we can The third Praie for them that persecute you that is for their good estate in this life so farre forth as it serueth for Gods glorie and for their conuersion and saluation in the world to come See the euidence of these things in examples for the affection of the heart take Christs example who so loued his enemies that he was contented to shed his owne hearts blood for them and to suffer the pangs of hell vpon the crosse for their saluation For loue in courteous speech see Dauid's practise towards Saul his professed enemie for though Dauid had him in his hands and might haue killed him sundrie times nay though he was prouoked thereunto by his seruants yet hee spared him and with all tearmes of reuerence towards Saul appeased his seruants calling Saul his master and the Lords annointed Thus louingly also in speech did Paul behaue himselfe to Fest●s Agrippa though they were heathen men and his enemies For doing good in action to an enemie read Exod. 2● 4 5. If thou meete thine enemies Oxe or his Asse going astraie thou shalt bring him to him againe and if thou seest thine enemies Asse lying vnder his burden wilt thou cease to helpe him thou shalt helpe him vp againe with it and Prou.
Lord. And to cleare this point yet further consider this that the roote of hypocrisie and of Atheisme is in our nature whereby naturally wee doe these three things wee Loue feare and trust in men more then in God and therefore doe make men the Iudges of our actions 1. for Loue are wee not greeued when we our selues or our freinds are dishonoured and on the contrarie when wee our selues or our freinds are praised are we not glad and reioyce but when God is dishonoured who is greeued or whose heart doth leape for ioye when God is glorified which argues plainely that our affection of loue is more inclined towards our selues and to our freinds then vnto God 2. for feare are not most men more afraide when they offend a mortall man like themselues then when they offend the euerliuing God 3. for trust and confidence in the time of affliction most men are more comforted if some friend promise them helpe then they are by all the promises of God himselfe in his word But men will say that they loue and feare and trust in God aboue all This indeede is the ordinarie profession of ignorant people but the truth is that by nature we refuse God to be our iudge and our approouer and appeale vnto men and therefore we must labour to see and feele and to bewaile this hypocrisie and to be indued with the contrarie grace whereby we may simply and sincerely seeke to be approoued of God in all our actions Secondly in this example note one euident cause of the disorder which was among the Iewes in respect of their poore for they begged in the high waies in the streetes of the cities and gates of the Temple flat against Gods commandement who would not haue such a begger in Israel other occasions there were of this abuse but one principall cause is here noted namely that priuate persons were permitted to giue their priuate almes vnto the poore with their owne hands in publike places This was a great disorder and the cause of many beggers for priuate men could not discerne the particular wants of all that begged so and therefore God had otherwise prouided for them in the old Testament as he shewed before And in the new Testament there were chosen faithfull men called Dea●ons in euery congregation who were to looke-vnto their poore to collect for them and to distribute to euery one according to their necessitie It is not vnlawfull for a priuate man to giue Almes in publike place if neede require but where the poore are no otherwise prouided for then by such priuate releefe it is a great disorder like as it is in a family where the children and seruants know not where and when to haue their dinners for the poore are Gods children in his family and ought to be prouided for in better sort then by such priuate releefe and therefore where good order is wanting for prouision for the poore it ought in conscience to be begunne and where it is begunne men must carefully maintaine and continue the same Thirdly in this example of a corrupt manner of Almes-giuing see the concurrence of sundrie sinnes First here is noted hypocrisie which were enough to condemne a man but yet with this there goes ambition and with both an open contempt and breach of good order in prouiding for the poore which shewes euidently that no sinne goes alone but ordinarily hath his companions for sinnes are so infolded one in an other that he which commits one is not free from any other this may plainly be shewed by many examples In Adams sinne there was the breach of the whole law in euery commandement either directly or by consequence for he shewed euident want of loue to God in beleeuing Satan more then God therein he chose Satan for his God he worshipped Satan and tooke Gods name in vaine he shewed also euident want of brotherly loue for hereby he became a murtherer not onely of himselfe but of all his posteritie and thus doe sinnes concurie in euery wicked action in which regard it may be said with Iames that he which faileth in one commandement is guiltie of all which must admonish vs to make conscience of euery sinne for we cannot liue in any one but we must needes runne into many other Uerely I say vnto you they haue their reward These words containe the reason of the former prohibition wherein we may see the vanitie of this giuing of Almes for the praise of men is all their reward they haue none with God as we shewed in the former verse vers 3. But when thou doest thine Almes let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doth 4. That thine Almes may be in secret and thy father that seeth in secret he will reward thee openly These words containe Christs second commandement touching the manner of Almes-giuing with the reason thereof The commandement is in the third verse and it beareth this sense that if the left hand could vnderstand yet it should not know what our right hand gaue and therefore much more must we conceale the same from men Yet here Christ forbids not all giuing of Almes in open place or in the sight of men but his meaning is to restraine the ambition of the heart after the praise of men the giuer must not intend or desire that men should see him giue Almes that they might praise him but his heart must simply and sincerely seeke to approoue it selfe vnto God This will appeare to be the right meaning of our Sauiour Christ by comparing this verse with the first for here Christ renueth the commandement there giuen and forbiddeth the corrupt desire of the heart after vaine glorie in the giuing of almes Now for our better vnderstanding of this commandement first we will shew what is here forbidden and secondly what is commanded Here are two things forbidden first all desire or intention of mens beholding of vs when we giue our Almes secondly all respect and intent to please our selues in Almes-giuing for the left hand must not know what the right hand giueth The thing here commaunded is this that he which giues Almes must doe it simply intending and desiring onely to please God and to approoue his worke vnto God without all by-respects of mens praise or approbation Here then first is condemned the doctrine of the Church of Rome which teacheth men to doe good workes with opinion of meriting life euerlasting thereby at the handes of God for that is farre more then to doe them for this ende to get praise of men which yet is here forbidden and therefore the other must needes be abominable Secondly seeing in our weldoing we must simply intend to approoue our selues vnto God it shall not be amisse here to shew how we may so doe our good workes that God may approoue thereof Hereunto foure things are required faith loue humilitie and sinceritie or simplicitie For the first in euery good
worke there must be a two-fold faith Iustifying faith and a generall faith Iustifying faith whereby the person doing the worke must be reconciled to God and stand before God a true member of Christ for of this it is said without faith it it is impossible to please God And Christ saith every brāch that beareth not friute in me the father taketh a way and without me yee can doe nothing where it is plaine that whosoeuer would doe a worke acceptable to God must first be in Christ and the reason is euident for first the person working must be acceptable to God before his worke can be approoued but no mans person is approoued of God before he be in Christ and therefore iustifying faith whereby we are vnited vnto Christ is cheifely necessarie By generall faith I meane that whereby a man beleeues that the worke he doth is pleasing vnto God Hereof Paul saith Whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne A worke may be good in it selfe and yet sinnefull in the doer if he want this generall faith Now vnto this are two things required first a word of God commanding the worke and prescribing the manner of doing it secondly a promise of blessing vpon the doing of it for euery good work hath his promise both of the things of this life and of a better these things must be knowne and beleeued vpon these grounds we must pray giue Almes and doe euery good worke and so shall they be approoued of God Now by this double faith required in euery good worke we see how those that are bound to practise good works as euery one is more or lesse ought to labour to be acquainted with the word of God that they may doe their works in faith for els though the worke be good it may be sinne in them because it is not of faith which is the miserable state of ignorant persons who through want of faith cannot doe good workes in a good manner The second thing required in the doing of a good worke is loue loue I say ioyned with faith for faith worketh by loue Gal. 5. 9. indeed faith doth some things of it selfe as apprehend receiue and applie Christ and his righteousnes to the beleeuer which is the proper worke of faith But other things it doth by the helpe of an other and so faith bringeth forth the workes of mercie and performeth the duties of the first and second table not properly by it selfe but by the helpe of loue and therefore here I say that in euery good worke is required that loue whereby faith worketh Now the kinds of loue required in wel-doing are two first the loue of God in Christ for as we know God in Christ so must we loue him secondly the loue of our bretheren yea of our enimies for howsoeuer in our vnderstanding these two may be distinguished yet in practise they must neuer be seuered but must alwaies goe hand in hand to mooue vs to doe the workes of mercie and all the duties of our calling as Paul saith of himselfe and the rest of the Apostles The loue of God constraineth vs to preach the Gospel 2. Cor. 5. 14. The third thing required in doing a good worke well is humilitie whereby a man esteemeth himselfe to be but a voluntarie and reasoable instrument of God therein This vertue will make a man giue the honour of the worke to the principall Agent that is to God himselfe who worketh in vs both to will and to doe of his good pleasure The fourth thing required in wel-doing is simplicitie or singlenes of heart whereby a man in doing a good worke intendeth simply and directly to honour and please God without all by-respects to his owne praise or the pleasing of men This is a speciall vertue directing a man to the right ende in euery good worke which is the obedience and honour of God in mans good This vertue was in Paul who in simplicitie and godly purenesse had his conuersation in the world thus he preached the Gospel and so ought we to doe euery good worke Now that this sinceritie may shew it selfe we must take heede of a speciall vice which is contrarie vnto it namely the guile of the spirit mentioned Psal. 32. 2. which maketh a man intend and propound false ends and by-regards in doing good workes as his owne praise and delight or to please men thereby And that we may auoid this spirituall guile we are to know that it may and doth vsually preuaile with men in foure cases I. when those doe practise vertue in whome God onely restraines the contrarie vice thus ciuill honest men that haue no religion may practise iustice temperance mercie and other morall vertues because they are not inclined to iniustice intemperance and the contrarie vices but these actions in them are no good works before God because they proceede not from sanctified hearts sincerely intending to obey glorifie God hereby II. When men doe good works for feare of diuine iustice and the penalties of mens laws and such for the most part is the repentance of the sicke I graunt indeede that some doe truly repent in this estate but commonly such repentance is vnsound and proceedeth not from a single heart but from feare whereby being vnder Gods hand they seek to auoid his iudgement Such also are the outward duties of religion performed by our common Protestants who come to Church and receiue the Sacraments chiefly for custome sake and to auoide the daunger of mens lawes III. When men doe good works for the honour praise of men This is a dangerous thing vpon this ground a man may preach the word vse prayer and professe the Gospel yea and be zealous for Gods glorie as I●h● was and hence it comes that many fall away to loosenes of life from a strict profession of religion because they receiued not the truth in simplicitie of heart with purpose onely to obey please God but rather to get the praise of men IV. When men doe good works from some corruption of heart preuailing in them as whē a man is both proud and couetous yet more proud then couetous couetousnes bids him not to giue to the poore but yet pride desiring the praise of men preuailing in him causeth him to giue to the poore And so when couetousnes preuailes in a proud man it will cause him to abstaine from riot proud apparell which yet his pride would perswade him vnto In all these cases spirituall guile corrupts the worke that otherwise is good in it selfe and therefore we must haue a watchfull eye vnto singlenes of heart in our well-doing and to the rest of the vertues before named that so we may be able to say with good conscience that our works are such as God approoueth vers 4. That thine Almes may be secret and thy father that seeth in secret he will reward thee openly Here is the reason
treasure is Secondly how a man must lay it vp for himselfe both these we must marke with reuerence because they are points of great waight and moment in the practise whereof standeth our saluation For the first In searching it out we will first consider what is erroniously thought to be this treasure which Christ would haue vs to lay vp The Church of Rome hath for many hundred yeares abused the world hereabout making the ouerplus of Christs merits and of the merits of Saints and Martyrs to be the treasure of the Church which beeing gathered together and put into a store-chest is say they in the Popes custodie and he alone hath the plenarie opening and shutting of this chest and the ordering and disposing of these merits by vertue whereof he giues out indulgences and pardons when and to whome he will And hereby indeede he maintaines and vpholds his kingdome for hereby comes infinit wealth and reuenewes But this cannot be the true treasure ●ay it is corrupt and deceitfull for two causes for first hereby they abase the true treasure which is Christs merits by adding supplie thereto from the merits of Saints for if Christs merits receiue increase from the merits of men then it is not al-sufficient of it selfe and so but a poore treasure Secondly hereby they make the merits of Saints departed to be the merits of others which liue long after them by the Popes application which is a thing impossible and absurd for no man can merit for himselfe but say he could yet should his merits be for himselfe alone and for none other for euery man in regard of saluation is a priuate man and the reward of his workes he doth that way can onely redound vnto himselfe onely Christ Iesus our Mediatour God and man who was by God himselfe made a publike person for this ende can merit for others The true treasure then to let the other passe is in a word the true God that one only eternall essence in three persons who made all things and gouernes all things in him alone is all goodnesse and happines to be found Gen. 15. 1. I am thy buckler and thine exceeding great reward saith God to Abraham and Psal. 16. 5 6. The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance saith Dauid I haue a goodly heritage which is as much as if he had saide The Lord is my treasure I will not stand on this for men by the light of nature haue seene and saide thus much This rather is to be considered how God becomes our treasure And for this ende we must conceiue of God as he hath reuealed himselfe vnto vs in Christ for out of Christ he is not our God and so not our treasure but God incarnate is our true treasure Coloss. 2. 3. In whome that is in Christ are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Coloss. 3. 3. Our life euen eternall life is hid with Christ in God as in a treasurie 1. Cor. 1. 31. Christ is made vnto vs of God wisdome righteousnes sanctification and redemption and Ioh. 1. 16. Of his fulnesse as out of a full treasurie we all receiue grace for grace Now we must not rest in his incarnation but conceiue further of him as he was crucified for vs in our nature and is set forth vnto vs in his word and Sacraments for his obedience death and passion is our treasure which is reuealed and applied in the word of promise and in the Sacraments and this is that thing prepared of God for them that loue him which eye hath not ●eene eare hath not heard neither euer entred into the heart of ●aturall man to conceiue 1. Cor. 2. 9. But why will some say should Christ crucified be called our treasure Ans. Because he is the fountaine and storehouse of all true blessings conuaied from God to man Wouldest thou haue remission of sinne righteousnes with god why Christ was made sinne for vs that we might be made the righteousnes of God in him 2. Cor. 5. 21. Wouldest thou haue life euerlasting This same Iesus Christ is very God and life eternall 1. Ioh. 5. And he that hath him hath life 1. Ioh. 5. 12. Wouldest thou haue comfort in distresse and true delight in temporall blessings then get Christ Iesus for he is life in death and without him the good things of this life be no blessings vnto vs. II. Point Hauing found what this treasure is let vs now see how euery one must lay it vp for himselfe for so Christ here cōmandeth lay vp for your selues c. That we may lay vp Christ crucified for our treasure we must be carefull to doe fiue things intimated in the parable of him that bought the field wherein the hidden treasure was 1. we must finde this treasure 2. we must value it 3. obtaine and get it 4. assure it to our selues 5. vse it as a treasure I. Dutie We must needes find this treasure first of all els we cannot value it nor obtaine it we cannot assure it to our selues nor vse it And thus much is implyed in that parable where it is called an hidden treasure for we cannot haue a thing that is hid before we find it Now the finding of this treasure stands in Gods reuealing of it vnto vs letting vs see that naturally we want it and making vs feele that we are poore without it and therefore stand in great neede of it whereupon we beginne to seeke it Euery reuealing of this treasure is not the finding of it for God inlightens the mind of man two waies first generally whereby a man in reading the word is able to conceiue the true sense and meaning of it Secondly more specially when beside the generall sense God makes a man feele the truth and power of the word in his owne conscience and in this speciall illumination stands the true finding This indeede is a great blessing of God but not common to all for our naturall eies cannot discerne it and the more we are dazled with the sight of worldly treasures pomps and vanities the blinder wee are about this spirituall treasure yea this treasure is hid from many that are able to propound the word of God truly as Christ saith these things are hidde ofitimes from the wise and prudent and reuealed vnto babes for till the Lord giue this speciall illumination whereby a man sees his owne miserie in himselfe and his great need of Christs righteousnes Christ is a hidden treasure vnto him In regard whereof we must descend into our owne hearts and there trie whether by the sense of our owne miserie in our selues and our owne desire and hungring after Christ God haue reuealed this treasure vnto vs we may say we see with the Iewes and yet be blinde vnlesse we truly feele the want of Christ in our owne soules oh therefore labour for this speciall illumination for the Doctrine of the Gospel will neuer be sweete
minde ruled and directed the will and affections but now these inferiour powers rule or rather ouer-rule the minde and vtterly peruert the regiment thereof they cast a mist and a vaile ouer the eie of the minde that it can see nothing in the waies of righteousnesse and therefore as wee tender the saluation of our soules wee must renounce our owne naturall wils and corrupt desires and striue to bring them into subiection vnto the word of God Many men thinke much to be crossed of their naturall desires and delights but it is happie for the soule when God in his prouidence doth breake men of their wills for the will vnsubdued carries the whole man headlong into all disorder This must be considered of them which haue knowledge and learning for vnlesse the will and affections be ruled by the word all knowledge is made fruitlesse out of the heart saith Salomon come the issues of life if it be kept with watch and ward and ordered by Gods word otherwise hence come the issues of death when the raines of the affections are let loose after the corrupt desires of nature and therefore as we respect woe or ioy so must wee haue regard to our will and desires Thirdly if the light of nature may bee turned into darkenesse then may the illumination of the Gospel be put out turned into darkenes for the knowledge of the Gospel is not naturall and therefore not so deeply imprinted in the vnderstanding vpon the bare knowledge of it Experience sheweth this to be true in all those temporizers which begin in the spirit end in the flesh the author to the Hebrews shews 5. degrees of apostacie by which the illumination of the Gospel is turned into darkenesse Heb. 3. 12. saying Take heede lest there be in any of you an euill heart of vnbeleefe c. where the first degree is consenting vnto sinne beeing deceiued with the temptation of it The second is hardnesse of heart vpon many practises of sin Thirdly the heart beeing hardened becomes vnbeleeuing and calls the truth of the Gospel into question Fourthly by vnbeleefe it becomes euill hauing a base conceit of the Gospel Fiftly this euill heart brings a man to apostacie and falling from God which is the extinguishing of the light of the Gospel We therefore to preuent this feareful estate must embrace the Gospel and practise the counsel there set down euen by looking carefully euery one to his owne heart and life and by mutuall admonition and exhortation one of another vers 13. that so the first step of this apostacie which is the deceitfulnesse of sinne take not place in vs. Fourthly seeing the light of nature may bee put out whether may not true faith and other sauing graces be quite lost Answ. There is no grace of God but considered in it selfe it may be lost for it is a creature and so is changeable for nothing is vnchangeable in it selfe but the Creatour but in regard of the promise God touching the preseruation of sauing grace vnto the ende in such as be in Christ hence it comes that faith hope and charitie cannot be lost for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance in Christ. God indeede gaue to Adam true and perfect grace whereby he might haue stoode if he would but because he decreed to permit the fall to make a way for his mercie in Christ therefore he left man in the hand of his owne counsell and so he fell from his created integritie but now in Christ God workes both the will and the deede so as he which doth truly beleeue is as mount Zion which cannot be remooued but standeth fast for euer for he is built vpon the rocke Christ Iesus and so can neuer fall the gates of hell shall not preuaile against him God giues a second grace vnto the first by vertue hereof it becomes vnchāgeable though in it selfe considered it might be lost Againe I answer thus that as the light of nature is not quite put out but onely buried in such sort as it is without vse and seemes exstinguished so the grace of faith by the practise of sinne may be hidde and couered so as it shall not appeare for a time but yet it cannot be quite put out where it is once truly wrought And thus much of the blinde eie with the fruit thereof Now to end this place wee must remember that the scope of Christ in these two verses is to shew that the euill and blind eie of man by nature whereby he is disabled to discerne rightly of things that differ is the cause why in seeking after treasure he leaueth the heauenly and seeketh earthly treasure onely And hereby we must be admonished to labour for this gift of discerning by the illumination of the spirit in the word as we shewed before that so the eie beeing single the whole body may be light that is so ordered that with peace and comfort wee may walke on in the way of life whereas otherwise we walke in darkenesse and feare no danger till we fall into it irrecouerably verse 24. No man can serue two masters for either hee shall hate the one and loue the other or else he shall leane to the one despise the other Ye cannot serue God and Mammon Here Christ meeteth with a second obiection which the carnal heart of man might frame against the former commandements verse 19 and 20. for whereas Christ had forbidden the treasuring vp of worldly riches commanded the seeking of heauenly treasure some man might flatter himselfe with this perswasion that he might well seek● both and lay vp both treasures for himselfe in earth and in heauen also To this Christ answers No that is impossible and he prooues it thus No man can serue two masters But to seeke heauenly and earthly treasures is to serue two masters to wit God and Mammon and therefore no man can seeke them both The first part of this reason is fully set down and prooued in the text by the effect of such seruice in contrarie affections and behauiour for either he shall hate the one and loue the other c. The assumption and conclusion are necessarily implied in the last words Yee cannot serue God and Mammon wherein Christ applies the former argument The Exposition No man can serue two masters This may well bee doubted of for experience shewes that by their mutuall consent one Factor may serue diuers Marchants Hereto some answer thus that it is implied the masters must be of diuers and contrarie qualities as when one saith come and doe this the other saith doe it not and then no man can serue them both and thus the words containe an holy truth But yet because no clause is expressed implying contrarietie in the masters therfore I take it the words must be taken as a common prouerb among the Iewes which Christ Iales downe for the ground of his
reason Now in a prouerb it is not requisite it should be alwaies true but for the most part and ordinarily as Luk. 4. 24. No Prophet is accepted in his owne countrie that is ordinarily For either he shall hate the one that is the one master commanding him either disliking that he should be his master or displeased with his commandements And loue the other that is the other master in whom he taketh delight and is well pleased with his commandements Or else he shall leane to the one and despise the other These words are an explication of the former shewing how it may appeare that a seruant hates one master and loues another namely his leaning to the one declares his loue vnto him that is his applying of himselfe to respect his masters pleasure and to doe his commaundement And hic despising the other declares his hatred when he hath no regard to his commandements Yee cannot serue God and Mammon By mammon he meaneth riches lucre and gaine now he saith not Ye cannot serue God and haue riches for Abraham Iacob and Iob were very rich and yet serued God sincerely but ye cannot serue God and serue riches that is giue your selues to seeke riches and set your hearts vpon them and serue God also In the words thus explaned wee may obserue sundrie instructions First here Christ sheweth what it is to serue God a point much spoken of but little knowne and lesse practised To serue God therefore is to loue God and to cleane vnto him Euery one will say he loueth God euer hath done but beware herein of spirituall guile for true loue consists not in word and tongue but in deed and in truth and God must be loued not onely as he is a bountifull father but as he is a Lord and master and doth command vs seruice The written word shewes his will and pleasure concerning vs what he requireth at our hands and if we serue him indeed we must loue him in his power of commanding though he should bestowe no reward vpon vs. This Dauid sheweth notably Psal. 119. 25. I am thy seruant graunt me therefore vnderstanding that I may know thy testimonies Againe if we serue God we must cleane vnto him and thereby testifie our loue now what is meant by cleaning vnto is notably expressed in the parable of the prodigal sonne Luk. 15. 15. where it is said of him that hauing spent his portion hee claue to a citizen of that countrie that is he resigned and gaue himselfe to his seruice So to cleane vnto God is to resigne a mans selfe vnto Gods seruice in obedience to all his commandements and embracing all his promises not suffering himselfe to be drawne from any part of Gods word by vnbeleefe or disobedience though all the world should set against vs. This Dauid also professeth of himselfe saying I haue cleaued to thy testimonies O Lord and I shall not be confounded when I haue respect vnto all thy commandements On the contrarie when a man withdrawes himselfe from God by disobedience to his commaundements and by vnbeleefe then he doth hate and despise him Indeed the vilest wretch that liues is ashamed with open mouth to professe hatred despite of God but yet the bad practise in life bewraies the bad affection of the heart Prou. 14. 2. He that is lewd or peruerse in his waies despiseth God they that liue in the breach of his commandements hate him Exod. 20. 5. let them professe in word what they will Now the consideration hereof serueth First to discouer vnto vs the grosse blindnesse and superstitious ignorance of the world who thinke that if a man rehearse the Lords praier the Creede and the ten Commandements he serues God well let his life be what it will but here Christ teacheth vs a further thing if we will be Gods seruants we must cleaue vnto him both in the affections of our heart and in actions of obedience in our life Thus did Abraham when God said vnto him thou shalt not kill he kept himselfe from murther but when he said Abraham kill thy sonne he addressed himselfe to doe it though he were the sonne of the promise and the onely sonne of his old age Secondly this sheweth how Atheisme abounds in all places at this day for to hate and despise God is flat Atheisme now they that withdraw their hearts from God and set themselues to seeke the things of this world neglecting obedience to Gods holy commandements are here accounted of Christ despisers and haters of God and the number of such is great in euery place I know such men doe scorne to be called Atheists but how they be esteemed in the world it skilleth not till they reforme this wicked practise they are no better in the sight of Christ. Secondly whereas God and Mammon are here opposed as two masters hence we learne that Mammon that is riches is a great lord and master in the world this Christ here takes for graunted and therefore doth forewarne his Disciples of it But how will some say can riches be a God Answ. Not in themselues for so they are the good creatures of God but to the corrupt heart of man which makes an ido● of them to it selfe by setting his loue and delight vpon them as on true happinesse and trusting in them more then in the true God and for this cause is co●etousnesse called idolatrie Colos. 3. 5. and the co●etous person an Idolater Ephes. 5. 5. for looke whereon man sets his heart that is his Lord and his God though it be the deuil himselfe Now that men do● thus set vp riches in their hearts as an Idol and so become seruants and slaues to that which God ordained to serue them I shew plainely thus For first they neglect the worship and seruice of God for lucre and gaine and spend more time with greater delight for earthly riches thē they doe for the true treasures of Gods heauenly graces Secondly let a man haue worldly wealth at will and he is full of ioy and delight his riches giue him great contentment but if hee loose his goods then vexation and sorrowe doth more oppresse him then all the promises of God in the Bible can comfort him Thirdly by transgressing Gods commaundements a man looseth heauen but who is so grieued for his transgressions whereby hee incurres this losse as hee is for a small dammage in some part of his riches Fourthly I appeale to mens consciences whether they bee not farre more sharpe and eager set vpon the meanes of gaine then on prayer and other parts of Gods worshippe which are the meanes of grace all which doe argue plainely that they serue Mammon and honour riches for their God So that howsoeuer by Gods blessing out●ard Idolatri● be banished out of our Church yet wee haue many Idolatours in our Land for euery couetous worldling sets vp the Idol of
by dogs and swine from whence the meaning of Christ may be plainely thus set downe Giue not that which is holy c. that is haue regard how to whom ye dispense the word and sacraments and if any person be openly conuicted of obstinate enmitie to your doctrine to such publish not my worde be they dogs in railing or swine in senslesse contemning and scorning of the same The Vses 1. Hence wee may see what course is to be vsed of Gods ministers in the preaching dispēsing of his holy word they must first preach publish the word of God to al men without exception grace must be offered to all good and badde then they must obserue what fruite and effect the word hath with them whether it worke reformation of life in them or not and though as yet they see not that fruit thereof in them yet they must not condemne them as dogs but rather waite and pray for their conuersion to see if at any time God will giue them repentance according as Saint Paul chargeth Timothie 2. Tim. 2. 25. Thirdly hauing waited for their conuersion he must labour to conuince their very conscience of the truth which they in heart and life denie so as he may say with Paul If our Gospel be hid it is hidde to them that perish 2. Cor. 4. 3. but if after all this they giue euident signes of malicious and obstinate enmitie against the word scorning and rayling on the doctrine of God and on the ministers thereof then are they to be cast out by the Church and to be accounted as dogges and to be barred from the word of life till they repent This was Christs owne practise toward the Iewes at the first he preached vnto them the Gospel of the kingdome by Iohn Baptist in his owne person and by his Disciples but when as he saw some of them maliciously obstinate then he propounded his doctrine vnto them in parables vnto them that they might be hardened in sinne and after expounded the same priuately to his Disciples The Disciples likewise after the ascension of Christ preached still vnto the Iewes euen when they were persecuted by them but at length when as they saw that of obstinate malice they oppugned the truth putting it from them and iudging themselues vnworthie eternall life then they turned to the Gentiles Act. 13. 46. Now in this that hath beene said we may note two things first the long suffering and great patience of God that will not haue a sinner liuing in the Church condemned till he haue brought him through all the meanes of his conuersion and till he be past hope Thus he dealt with the old world expecting their repentance an hundred and twentie yeares whereunto he then called them by the preaching of Noah Gen. 6. Secondly hereby we must learne to moderate our iudgements concerning wicked men a man must not be condemned for a dogge or for a swine till he giue euident signes of obstinate malice and wilfull contempt of the word and vntill he doe euen conuict himselfe to be such a one by a wilfull contempt of the meanes of his saluation This serues to shew their rashnesse and indiscretion that condemne our Church for no Church and our people for no people of God iudging them for dogges and swine when as they haue not yet conuicted them of obstinate malice in sinne or error It will be said they haue admonished them by writing I answer that their owne bookes haue more errors in them then they doe hold whome they admonish and so their writings can be no sufficient conuiction Secondly here obserue that men become dogges and swine by their wilfull repelling that holy doctrine of God which should purge them and make them cleane It is the naturall propertie of a dog to returne to his vomit and of a swine to his wallowing in the mire as the prouerbe is and hereof they can by no meanes be bereaued And all men by nature returne to the vomit and filth of their sinnes like dogs swine and they which will by no meanes suffer thēselues to be drawen from their old sinnes they haue these properties of dogges swinerand looke as those beasts were excluded the Lords tabernacle congregation vnder the law so are these men debarred from the word sacraments and all holy things vnder the Gospel they are an abhomination vnto the Lord see Psal. 56. 6. and Psal. 50. 16. In this regard we are to be admonished to suffer our selues to be clensed and reformed by the word of God Ye are cleane saith Christ by the word which I haue spoken vnto you Ioh. 15. 3. where he maketh the word of God the instrument of our purification to which effect he saith in his praier to his father Sanctifie them with thy truth thy word is truth Ioh. 17. 17. And Saint Peter saith our soules are purified in obeying the truth by the spirit 1. Pet. 1. 22. Now we are by nature dogges and swine inclined to the filth of our own sinnes returning thereto with greedines neither can we of our selues be broken of this property but when occasion is offered we doe naturally runne to our old sinnes as the swine and dogges doe to their filth and vomit In consideration whereof we ought to subiect our selues to the word of God labouring to see and feele our owne vncleannesse and to crie with Dauid Wash me throughly from my sinnes and with Peter Not my feete onely but my whole bodie that so it may be said of ●s We are cleane throughout by Christs word If we see any vncleannes in our hearts or liues we must purge it out by this word and returne no more to the filth of our former sinnes It is the propertie of Christs sheepe to heare his voice and to obey the same let vs hereby testifie our solues to be his sheepe that so we may be distinguished from dogges and swine Here it may be demanded whether we should make confession of our faith before dogges and swine Ans. Yes if we be called thereunto we are bound to doe it ●e alwaies readie saith the Apostle to giue an answer to euery man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you 1. Pet. 3. 15. And in this place our Sauiour Christ speaketh of the p●●ading and dispensing of the word not of confession Now in preaching men acknowledge the word to belong vnto their hearers but in confession they declare the word to belong vnto themselues alone Further here we are to consider diuer● points concerning Excommunication First the foundation thereof It is an ordinance of God for all dogges and swine by Christs commandement must be kept from holy things ● many that liue in the Church are open 〈◊〉 of the name of Christ● some others 〈◊〉 heret●●●es and these ●●●●wi●e are to be barred from the word and sacraments yea a man liuing in the Church may be worse in practise then an open
bookes Diuine Ecclesiasticall and Humane Diuine bookes are the bookes of God penned by the Prophets and Apostles and they are all the word of God for whether we regard the matter of them or the manner of reuealing them they are all from God the Prophets and Apostles were onely Gods hands and instruments in penning them the holy Ghost gaue the matter the order and the very words from whence it must needs follow that they are of al-sufficient authoritie of themselues Ecclesiasticall bookes are bookes of diuine matters penned by learned men in the Church and they are either generall bookes or particular Generall bookes Ecclesiasticall I call those which were either made or confirmed by the whole Church as the Creedes of the Apostles the Nicene and of Athanasius and the foure first generall Councels and these haue Catholike allowance yet not absolute authoritie but depending on Scripture Particular bookes Ecclesiasticall I call the Catechismes and Confessions of particular Churches made by them or by particular members thereof which haue not authoritie of themselues but from the Scripture or from generall consent Now both these kindes of bookes may bee called Gods word so farre forth as they agree with Scripture and yet they are also the word of men because they were penned by men and haue both order and style from men and in this regard that they were partly mens workes they are not authenticall of themselues but depend vpon the authoritie of Scripture Humane bookes are bookes penned by men either of the Church or out of the Church concerning humane things as bookes of naturall Philosophie of Policie and other Artes and these are not the bookes of God but of men alone hauing both matter and style from men many of them containe excellent truthes in their kind yet gathered onely from experience and common reason but they haue not in them that truth which is truth according to godlinesse seruing to builde vp and to binde the conscience vnlesse it bee in one case to stoppe the mouthes of Atheists and Epicures and to conuince their consciences And thus by conference of all bookes wee see that Scripture alone is authenticall in it selfe and no bookes beside Uses 1. This teacheth vs that ministers in the dispensing of Gods word should content themselues with the testimony of Scripture alone for the end of the ministerie is to worke and confirme faith and to settle and build vp the conscience in the truth of religion and matters concerning saluation which no other word can doe saue onely the word of God in Scripture that hath sufficient authoritie in it selfe from which conscience cannot appeale and for which cause our Sauiour Christ the true Prophet of the Church contents himselfe with the testimony of the Law and Prophets alone and after him his Apostles did the like See this notably confirmed by Paul who in his preaching to the Iewes professeth himselfe to haue said none other thing then that whic● the Prophets and Moses said should come Other writings haue the●● good vse in their time and place but not in the publike ministerie for authoritie and testimonie from Scripture is authenticall This the Scripture saith therefore it is so but authority from Councels and Father ●is sophistrie as Austin saith so therefore it is so this is no good reason for it implies that all that Austin said is true which indeede is false ●ee beeing as all men are subiect to errour 2. Use. This also sheweth that wee cannot beleeue vnwritten traditions thoug● they be called Apostolicall The Church of Rome intend to decei●e vs when they would beare vs in hand that halfe of those things t●●t are to be beleeued are not written in Scripture but receiued by tr●dition but these traditions we cannot beleeue by a diuine faith hovsoeuer by a common humane faith we may for they are contained in t●e bookes of Councels and Fathers which were worthie men yet subiect to errour 3. Vse Th●● also sheweth that we must submit our selues with feare and trembling to the word of God for it hath absolute authoritie to iudge vs and to con●ince our conselence in all matters of faith manners that pertaine to saluation IV. Point Wh●●eas Christ alleadgeth Moses and the Prophets to confirme his minist●●ie it may be demanded whether there be any difference for authoriti● between Christ and the Prophets for he that alleadgeth another m●●s authoritie seemes to be inferiour thereto I answer if we cōpare C●rist the Prophets we must distinguish between their doctrine th●ir persons The doctrine of Moses of the Prophets is equall to th● doctrine of Christ 2. waies First in certaintie of truth for it is as vnd●ubtedly true as if Christ himselfe had taught the same Secondly in e●ficacie authoritie for the power of binding conscience for the doct●in of the Prophets binds conscience as fully truly as if Christ himse●fe had spoken it And yet the person of Christ is aboue the person of Moses of all the Prophets for he is the Sonne of God both God ●an they were men he is the author of truth they only the instrumēts pen-mē therof frō hence it coms that Christs doctrine doth more bind vs to obedience then the doctrine of the Prophets because the person deliuering it is of more authority excellēcy and for this cause Christ alleadges Moses and the Prophets not for that his word is inferiour to theirs but that in regard of our obedience he might increase the authoritie of Moses and the Prophets because a greater measure of obedience is required to Christs word in regard of the dignitie of his person And this shewes that we now are more bound to obedience vnder the Gospel then the people vere vnder the law for we haue Christs doctrine which in regard of ●is person is of more authoritie then Moses and the Prophets see the point plainely laid downe by the Author to the Hebrewes in the irst Chapter he saith God in times past spake to hi● Church by his Propets but in these last dayes he hath spoken to vs by his sonne and in the second chapter verse 1. he laies downe the vse of this that now we haue Christ for our teacher namely that therefore we ought more aboundanly to giue heede to the things that we haue heard least at any time we le them slip c. shewing that our disobedience now shall be more seue●ly punished V. Point Ignorant people abuse this text to persvade themselue s that preaching is needlesse because no man can say moe then this doe as ye would be done to for this is the summe of the law a●d the Prophets But we wust know that this is not the summe of all tht the Prophets say but onely touching the matter of iustice and equi●e and indeede that we may attaine to saluation more is needfull for ve must not only know Gods word in generall but in particular
required to make a false Prophet the Scripture is plaine There shall bee false Teachers among you saith Saint Peter which priuily shall bring in damnable heresies 2. Pet. 2. 1. There is the first propertie and for the second that they must be seducers Christ himselfe teacheth vs Matth. 24. 24. There shall come false Christs and false Prophets and shall sh●we great signes and wonders so as if it were possible they should deceiue the very elect And of both these properties ioyntly S. Paul speaketh Rom. 16. 17. I beseech you brethren marke them diligently which cause diuision and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye haue receiued and auoyde them for they that are such serue not the Lord but their owne bellies with faire speech and sl●ttering deceiue the hearts of the simple So then Christs meaning in this commandement is this You shall bee troubled with many false Prophets which shall bring in damnable doctrines among you and withall labour to seduce you from the truth and therefore take heed of them And these two notes wee must marke in a false Teacher to distinguish him from a schismatike and from an hypocrite for euery false Teacher is a schismatike but euery schismatike is not a false Teacher If wee would haue examples of false Teachers behold the Iesuites and Romish Priests for they come among vs and bring false doctrine with intent to deceiue and seduce our people Such likewise are the Familie of loue and such were the Arrians in time past that denied the godhead of Christ as for others that hold priuate errours not rasing the foundation neither seeking to seduce others they may be hypocrites schismatikes and bad Christians but they are not false Prophets Thus much for the meaning of the commandement The Uses 1. By this caueat Christ would teach vs that the deuill shewes his exceeding great malice against Gods Church and people in these last times of the world he subornes false Teachers to bring in dānable doctrine and mooues them to seduce men from true religion This thing Christ did plainely foretell Matth. 24. 24. and Saint Paul chargeth the Elders of Ephesus to take heed vnto themselues to their flockes for I know saith he that after my departing shall grieuous wolues enter in among you not sparing the flocke Moreouer of your owne selues shall men arise speaking peruerse things to drawe Disciples after them And Saint Peter foretels of the like as we heard before 2. Pet. 2. 1. The truth hereof is verefied by experience for in the first foure hundred yeares after Christ which were the prime and chiefest times of the Church there arose fourescore and eight seuerall kinds of false Prophets which seduced men from the faith and true religion and preuailed greatly And no doubt in the end of the world Satan wil now shew his malice as great against the Church as hee did then and therefore Christ bids take heed of them And for this cause when we see men that professe religion fall away to heresie and be corrupted seeking also to seduce others we must not much maruell at it or be thereby discouraged but rather watch more carefully for the deuill will stirre vp false Prophets daiely to deceiue the Church of God II. Instruction From this commandement wee may also see that we are feeble full of weakenesse in the faith so as a little thing will easily make vs forsake our faith and true religion if this were not so what should we neede this exhortation who was more couragious and forward in profession then Peter and yet the voice of a sillie damsell made him denie his master and to forsweare his faith and religion The Galatians receiued the Gospel so gladly from Paul at the first that hee professesseth they would haue pluckt out their own eies to haue done him good and yet when he writ vnto them hee wonders they were so soone fallen to another Gospel receiuing the doctrine of iustification by works Yea this sheweth that we haue itching eares whereby we will readily and willingly receiue wholesome doctrine for a time but soone after desire new doctrine againe like vnto the Iewes who for a while delighted in the light of Iohns ministerie Ioh. 5. 35. and to the old Israelites who liked Manna at the first but after a while were wearie of it and complained that their soule dried away whereupon they lusted after the flesh-pots of Egypt againe So wee at the first did willingly receiue the Gospel of Christ but now many waxe wearie with it and beginne to like of Popish doctrine preferring their corrupt writers before those that haue beene the restorers of true religion vnto vs. III. Instruct. We must labour to maintaine faith and good conscience and not suffer our selues to be drawne there-from by Gods mercie we haue had the Gospel of truth among vs a long time and doe still enioy it for which we haue great cause to praise the name of God and in this regard we must labour to bee constant in holding it yea to liue and die with it This is the principal point which Christ here aimes at and therefore we must carefully learne it and for this purpose let vs remember these particular directions which follow First that God hauing restored vnto vs true religion doth require we should loue it as the chiefest treasure that euer this kingdome enioyed Wicked Ahab could not abide Elias and Michaiah Gods true Prophets but hated them for which cause God left him to himselfe and suffered him to be seduced by foure hundred false Prophets of Baal and thereby brought him to destruction And the Apostle speaking of the kingdom of Antichrist saith that God therein giues men vp to strong illusions that they should beleeue lies because they haue not loued the truth 1. Thes. 2. 10. 11. Now this loue we must shewe by our obedience in duties of pietie to God and in the exercise of iustice and mercy towards our brethren else God will translate his Gospel from vs and giue it to a nation that wil bring forth the fruits thereof A second rule to be obserued for the maintaining of true religion is this that ministers especially and those that intend that calling should highly esteeme and reuerently account of those men and their writings which by Gods mercie haue beene the meanes to restore vnto vs pure religion for though they were men subiect to error and in some things might slippe yet they were the worthy instruments of Gods mercy for the planting of his Gospel among vs which since their time hath beene sealed with the blood of many Martyrs in England Germanie and else-where in which regard though we must onely depend on the pure word of God for certaintie of truth yet we are to giue much vnto them and be followers of them for the substance of religion wherein they doe most soundly consent in one truth
though wee cannot see the shaddow of the sunne mooue yet wee may perceiue that it doth moo●e Now by their fruits it is cleare they bee corrupt for they reuerse the doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles both in the Commandements of the Law and in the Articles of faith First they disanull the first commaundement by making to themselues other Gods beside the true God for they pray vnto Saints and therein acknowledge a diuine propriety in them and also giue vnto them the honour due to God alone and so set vp vnto themselues the creature in the roome of the creator The second they reuerse by worshipping God himselfe and dead men in images Christ himselfe in the crucifixe yea in a peece of bread wherein they match the grossest idolatry a●ong the heathen and the best learned among them teach that the Rood the Crosse and Cruci●ixe are to bee worshipped with the same worship wherwith Christ himselfe is worshipped In the 6. Command touching murther they cōdemne the killing one of another but yet if a priest come from the Pope kill a Protestant Prince the Lords annointed King or Queene that is not onely no sinne but a ●●●t notable rare and memorable works Against the 7. commandement they maintaine the vow of single life necessarie in their religious orders whereby as also by their stues they cause all filthinesse 〈◊〉 natiō to abound among them And for the tenth commandement they say that concupiscence after baptisme is no sinne properly In the Articles of faith they ouerturne those that concerne Christ making him no Sauiour but a diuine instrument whereby we saue our selues for they ●ake mens good workes 〈◊〉 by Gods grace after th● first instification truly and properly m●ritorious and fully worthy of euerlasting life And his offices they haue parted from him his kingly and propheticall offices betweene him and the Pope and his Priesthood between him and euery popish priest as wee haue shewed before so that by these fruits we plainly see their apostacie which is enough though we know not when and by whom it came 2. Vse Here also we haue to answer such among our selues as renounce our Church as beeing no true Church of Christ because say they we want true ministers and so haue not a right ministerie among vs. But hence we answer that we haue the true Church of God and our ministers be the true ministers of God for proofe hereof our ministers haue the outward calling of the Church of England they say indeede our calling is nought because they haue power from God to call in whose hands it is But to omit that question for this time sufficient approbation of our ministery may be had from the fruits of our ministers as they are ministers for to leaue the fruits of their liues as sufficient meanes to iudge them by our ministers teach through Gods blessing the true and wholesome doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles and are alloued and called hereto by the gouernours of the Church and accepted of their people whose obedience to the faith is the seale of their ministery and this is sufficient to confirme the calling of our ministers if it had not Christ would not haue said Ye shal know them by their fruits 3. Use. Whereas Christ saith Ye shall know them speaking to all his hearers he takes it for graunted that euery beleeuer may bee able to iudge of false Prophets and therefore euery one in the Church of God ought to labour for so much knowledge whereby hee may bee able to knowe a Teacher by his fruits and doctrine This then sheweth that euery one ought to know the summe of true religion comprised in the Articles of faith and in the commandements of the Law both for their true meaning and right and profitable vse vnto themselues which thing I note because I know many deceiue themselues herein thinking that God will excuse them for their want of knowledge because they are not booke-learned But let vs consider wee haue euery one this care to be able to iudge of meates which concerne our bodies which be wholesome and which not should wee not then haue much more care of our soules to be able to discerne of doctrines in religion which be either the poison or saluation of our soules 4. Vse Whereas wholesome doctrine out of Scripture is a note of a true Prophet it teacheth vs that we may lawfully vse the ministery of those men whose liues and conuersations be euill and offensiue if so be their doctrine bee sound and good The Disciples of our Sauiour Christ must not doe according to the waies of the Scribes and Pharisies but yet they must hear● them when they sit in Moses chaire that is when they teach Moses doctrine And Paul is glad when Christ is truly preached though it be not in sinceritie of affection but of enuie When the Disciples saw a man that was not called by any speciall calling to follow Christ as themselues were and cast out deuills in the name of Christ they thought it intolerable and therefore forbad him but Christ said Forbid him not for he that is not against vs is with vs And the like may be saide of them that preach wholesome doctrine though their liues be still offensiue for in doctrine they be with Christ and so farre-forth must be approoued Againe consider that the vertue and efficacie of the word and Sacraments administred by men is not from the minister but from God a letter is not the worse because it is brought by an vnhonest or vnfaithfull carier Neither doth the euill conscience of the minister defile the good conscience of the honest hearer and worthie receiuer This must be remembred because many take offence at the life of the minister so as they will not heare his doctrine if his conuersation be scandalous V. In that a Prophet is to be knowne by his fruits and the maine fruit of a true Prophet stands in the good handling of Gods word for the edification and saluation of his hearers hence the children of the Prophets and those that are set a part for the ministerie of the word are taught that they must make this the maine and principall ende of all their studies to be able to bring forth the fruits of a true Prophet that is to interpret ●●ight the word of God and thence to gather out wholesome doctrines and vses for the edification of Gods people And for the inforcing of this dutie let vs consider first that it is Gods commandement so to doe 1. Cor. 14. 1. Seeke for spirituall gifts but specially to prophesie Againe the greatest skill of a Prophet stands in the true expounding and right diuiding of Scripture so as it may become food for mens soules 2. Tim. 2. 15. Show thy selfe a workeman that needeth not to be ashamed in diuiding the word of truth aright And lastly this true fruit
receiues the seede with ioy and brings forth some fruit but it lasteth not of such it is said Hebr. 10. 29. They tread vnder foote the sonne of God and count the blood of the Testament an vnholy thing wherewith they were sanctified that is according to their profession and perswasion And thus we see what kinde of gifts an hypocrite may haue and yet neuer be saued Vses 1. The consideration whereof must mooue vs to looke vnto our selues that we haue better things in vs then these are for here we see we may goe on to perdition carying the profession of Christ in our mouthes And the rather is this to be considered of vs because many looke to be saued who come short of Simon Magus in knowledge and of Saul Ahab and Iudas in humilitie yea and for faith farre short of the deuill himselfe who is saide to beleeue and tremble but how canst thou looke to be saued that in regard of grace commest short of those which are now condemned Secondly hence we must learne to suspect our selues and call our selues to a reckoning about our faith and obedience and we must not flatter our selues herein for these things before named will not saue vs many haue had faith in some truth for some degrees thereof and also good affections and other gifts as we haue seene who are yet for all this condemned Thirdly seeing there be two sorts of men in the Church that shal be condemned the one whereof haue many worthie gifts this must moue vs not to rest in these things but to labour and striue to haue our hearts rooted and grounded in the loue of God in Christ and to become new creatures in righteousnes and true holinesse and then shall we be as the wise virgins hauing the oyle of grace in the vessells of our hearts which will neuer be quenched till we come into the marriage chamber with our Bridegroome Christ Iesus The second part of the conclusion laid downe by our Sauiour Christ is this That some men professing the name of Christ in the Church of God shall be saued And these persons are here described vnto vs by their effect or action to wit The doing of the will of the Father And because this is an infallible note of them that shall be saued I will briefly shew what it is to doe the Fathers will The Scriptures best expound themselues Iohn 6. 40. This is the will of him that sent me that euery one that hath seene the Sonne and beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life 1. Thess. 4. 3 4 c. This is the will of God euen your sanctification and that you should abstaine from fornication and that euery one should know how to possesse his vessell in holines and honour that no man oppresse or defraud his brother c. These two places of Scripture laide together shew that the doing of the Fathers will stands in three things in faith in repentance and new obedience faith is directly expressed in the place of Iohn and repentance which is a fruite of faith as also new obedience the fruit of them both in the wordes of the Apostle Paul for by Sanctification is meant repentance and new obedience by the duties following For the first in true sauing faith there are three things required Knowledge assent and application By knowledge I meane the right conceiuing of the necessarie Doctrines of true religion especially of those which concerne Christ our Redeemer Assent is when a man knowing this doctrine doth further approoue of the same as holsome doctrine and the truth of God directing vs aright vnto saluation Application is when we conceiue in our hearts a true perswasion of Gods mercie towards vs particularly in the free pardon of all our sinnes and for the saluation of our soules example of this particular applying we haue in the Apostle Paul Gal. 2. 20. who professeth thus Now liue not I but Christ liueth in me and the life that I now liue is by faith in the sonne of God which what that is he sheweth after saying who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me and without this particular application neither knowledge nor assent can saue vs in the 6. of Iohn Christ propounds himselfe vnto vs as the bread of life and water of life now we know that foode vnlesse it be receiued will not nourish the bodie euen so vnlesse we doe by the hand of faith particularly receiue and applie Christ vnto our selues all our knowledge and assent will be as foode vneaten and vndigested It may be said that hypocrits haue knowledge assent and a perswasion of Gods fauour and therefore this is not a sure note of doing the fathers will I answer an hypocrite as Simon Magus may haue true knowledge of Gods word and giue assent thereunto in regard of both these haue true faith in some degree yea he may conceiue a perswasion of Gods mercie in the pardon of his sins though falsely in presumption vpon false grounds and insufficient Now that a man may discerne the truth of his faith and perswasion of Gods mercie from that which is in hypocrisie he is to obserue therein three things the beginning of his faith the fruites and the constancie thereof The beginning of true faith is hearing the word of God preached especially the Gospel the law going before as an occasion or preparing meanes whereby a man comes to see his sinnes and his miserie thereby and thereupon to desire reconciliation with God in the pardon of them and hearing the promises of mercie to desire faith whereby he may imbrace the same labouring against vnbeliefe This though it be not a liuely ●aith yet it is the beginning of true faith and no hypocrite hath the same soundly wrought in him The fruite of true faith is a chaunge of the whole man both in heart and life making the heart contrarie to it selfe in moderating the naturall affections and passions thereof and keeping them in compasse of true obedience and causing a man in euery estate to rest contented with the will of God as I say saith he that beleeueth shal not make hast Thirdly constancy in true faith is knowen by this when a man relyes wholly on God euen then when he feeles no tast of his mercie but hath all tokens of his displeasure Euery man will beleeue when he hath present signes and pledges of Gods louing fauour but true faith beeing the euidence of things hoped for will make a man beleeue aboue hope as Abraham did and beeing the subsisting of things not seene will cause a man to beleeue when he sees no tokens of Gods mercie and indeede he that le ts go the hold of Gods mercie when he is in distresse may assure himselfe he neuer had true faith for the iust shall liue by faith in all estate and will with Iob trust in God though he kill them The second worke wherein consisteth the doing of the Fathers will
the vertue of his resurrection to raise and build vs vp againe in newnes of life learning to know Christ vnto our selues by experience in our selues for knowledge in the braine will not saue the soule but he that is truly founded on Christ feeles the benefits of his death and resurrection in some measure in himselfe IV. Point The effect and fruit of bad hearing that is fearefull ruine and destruction resembled by the issue of building on the sands v. 27. The raine fell the floods came c. Where two things are to be noted I. the cause of this fearefull ruine the falling of the raine and beating of the floods and windes II. the qualitie of this ruine it is great and fearefull The house fell and the fall thereof was great For the first Floods and winde and raine doe here betoken trialls and temptations which are here said to befal the professors of the name of Christ. Whence we learne that euery one that doth heare the word of God and professe true religion must looke for a day of temptation and triall It is Gods will that whosoeuer taketh vpō him the profession of his name should be tried what he is Thus he permitted Adam presently after his creation to be tempted and tried the smart whereof we all feele vnto this day and God gaue Abraham a commandement of triall to kill his onely sonne Gen. 22. 1 2. Soe he left Hezekias to himselfe to trie him and to know all that was in his heart 2. Chr. 32. 31. And Iohn Baptist saith of Christ that he hath his fanne in his hand to sift and trie the good corne from chaffe Matth. 3. 12. and Luk. 22. 31. the deuill sought to winnow the disciples as wheate And S. Peter makes it a thing requisite that the faith of Gods seruants should be tried by afflictions as gold is tried in the fire 1. Pet. 1. 7. Vse We now haue by Gods mercie true religion among vs and are freed from the bondage of the Turke Iewe and Papist we must therefore stand fast in our profession and not suffer our selues to be depriued of true religion for times will come when we must be tried and therefore in this happie time of peace and truth which is to vs the day of grace and mercie we must labour seriously to haue our hearts indued with some good measure of lasting grace as of faith hope and loue which as good gold may abide the triall of afflictions otherwise we shall not stand for all painted shewes of grace in time of triall will vanish away like drosse and stubble before the fire The second point in this effect is the qualitie of this ruine and fall it is great and fearefull It fell and the fall thereof was great The thing resembled hereby is most fearefull to wit that such professors of religion as in the daies of peace did not ioyne practise with their profession shall fall away in the time of triall and come to most fearefull perdition this is the principall point that Christ here aimes at whereby he intends to terrifie men from dissembled profession And the consideration of it must worke effectually in our hearts for we by Gods mercie and blessing haue had the light of the Gospel for many yeares together in such measure as neuer was in this land before and yet though all of vs be hearers where is our obedience alas some among vs grow to be flat and peremptorie Atheists denying God and Christ Iesus others and the most vnder the name of religion root their hearts in the world some in profits and some in pleasures and none of these almost regard religion others professe religion and yet liue in grosse sinnes as swearing drunkennesse vncleannesse c. making no conscience of grosse impietie in their liues so that if we looke into the generall state of our people we shall see that religion is professed but not obeied nay obedience is counted precisenesse and so reproached but we must know that in the ende this prophaning of religion will soone turne all Gods blessings temporall and spirituall into fearefull curses both of bodie and soule If euer any thing bring ruine vpon vs it will be the contempt of Gods word professed and therefore let vs in the feare of God endeauour our selues not onely to know and heare the word of God but to turne vnto God from all sinne and especially in regard of this sinne of disobedience to the word of God Lastly Christ notes the qualitie of this fall to be exceeding great to shew vnto vs the great daunger of hypocrisie for there is great difference betweene these three sorts of men a sinner that makes no profession of religion an hypocrite that makes a great shew of pietie in profession and a true beleeuer whose life and conuersation is answerable to his profession For a true professor may fall into sinne very fearefully as Peter and Dauid did and yet recouer againe Also he that is a most notorious sinner as Manasses was may be conuerted and repent But when a professor that is an hypocrite in religion is tried he falls quite from Christ and makes apostacie from his profession and in this regard his fall is called great And therefore seeing professors may thus fearefully fall away let vs in the feare of God labour in some truth of heart to yeild obedience to that we heare vers 28. And it came to passe when Iesus had ended these words the people were astonied at his doctrine 29. For he taught as one hauing authoritie and not as the Scribes These two verses containe the issue and euent of this Sermon of our Sauiour Christ in his hearers And in them we may obserue two points first the good fruit that came of this sermon v. 28. secondly the cause reason thereof v. 29. The fruit was the astonishing of the people which S. Matthew sets out by three circumstances I. of the time when it appeared to wit after the Sermon was ended II. of the persons in whom it was wrought the people that is the multitude III. of the matter whereat they were astonished namely at the doctrine of Christ. Touching this Astonishing of the people in it many things are to be obserued I. That though the person of our Sauiour Christ were lowly and base yet his doctrine in preaching was of that force in the minds of his hearers for it did amase and astonish them This caused the officers that were sent to take him to returne without him alleadging the maiestie of his doctrine for the reason of their fact Neuer man spake as this man did Ioh. 7. 46. and when the gouernours came with a band of men to apprehend him so soone as he did but tell them he was the Christ they went backward and fell to the ground Ioh. 18. 6. This sheweth vnto vs that the voice and sentence of Christ giuen at the last day of iudgement will be most fearefull and
becomes a work● of mercie 187. m Life eternall described 476. b. a Christian life lead by faith 477. 478. a patterne of a godly life 279. m. 324. b. rules for it 359. b. 405. b. temporall life hath his certaine period 381. c. miserie of mans life 406. m. how Christ esteemes a godly life 534. b Light twofold 54. b. all Christians should be lights 57. m Logycke approoued 200. c Long-suffering 36. c Looking to lust or idle looking 112 c. how to looke to Gods glorie 119. c Losses a ground of patience in losses 402. c Loue described 201. c. examples of loue in practise 202. m. a rule of louing our neighbour 211. m. brotherly loue wanting 421. m. how to get loue 462. m. Lust in heart is sinne 114. c. it is two-fold 115. m. motiues to subdue it 116. m Luthers conuersion 77. m M MAgistracie approoued 109. c. 176. c. Magistrates dutie in keeping the Law 78. b Man-slaughter is murther 98. m Mariage after diuorce for adulterie 146. c Masters of families dutie 273. c. 465. c Meditation on Gods creatures 161. c Meekenesse described 15. b. and handled by the fruits ground thereof ib. 16. b. motiues to meekenesse 16. c Mercie described 24. b. duties of mercie ib. c. a mercifull man described 25. b. motiues to mercie 25. ● 380. b. rules for the exercise of mercie 26. m Merit of workes confuted 28. m. 45. m. 225. b. 286. m. 382. m Minde how corrupted by Adams fall 360. m Ministers office two-fold 58. b. 82. m. the end thereof 67. c. his dutie in preaching 47. m. 441. c. he must preserue the puritie of the word 438. c. and the credit of his ministerie 550. m. the ministers peculiar sinne 49. c. foure kindes of vnsauourie ministers 50. b. their dangerous estate 51. b. whether ministers making apostacie from the truth may bee receiued into the Ministerie 52. c. how ministers are lights their dutie thereupon 54. b. their conuersation should bee blamelesse 56. c. 82. c. a ministers comfort against his peoples vntowardnes 83. b. what commends a minister 507. m. of ministèrs calling 501. m Ministerie of the wicked may be vsed 505. c. Christs ministerie full of maiestie and yet planie 546. m. causes thereof 549. m A Miracle described 522. b. God onely works them ibid. how man workes a miracle ibid. Miracles are now ceased ibid. c. miraculous works no sufficient ground of n●w doctr●●e 499. b. 524. m Moses writ the first scripture 464. c Morall law described in 3. points 69. m. how it differs from the Gospel 69. c. Popish errour in confounding them 70. b. wherein they consent 73. b Murther in three degrees 91. b N NAme how to get a good name 416. c Naturall corruption makes vs vnsauourie 48. c Neighbour taken two waies 200. b Noah his Arke of the quantitie of it 129. b O OAth two things in an oath 154. c. the straite bond of an oath 153. b. a constrained oath binds ib. m. an oath gotten by errour binds ibid. m. and indamaging our estate ib. c. the popes dispensation frō a binding oath ibid. c. the Pharisies doctrine of oathes 154. b. indirect oathes or sivearing by the creatures forbidden 159. b. 169. m. minsed oathes forbidden 156. b Obedience two-fold 276. c. branches of new obediēce 517. fruits of it 539. b. motiues to it ib m. hinderances to obedience 277. m. furtherances ibid. c. 278. m. resemblance of our obedience to the angels 280. c Occasions of sinnes o● offences described 1●0 c. kinds of offences ib. Offences giuen sixe w●●●s 121. b. the way to auoide them 12● c. of offences taken 127 foure heades of offences taken ib. c. the remedies ib. Offences should be auoided 120. m Oppressors a terrour vnto them 418. m Original sinne the greatnesse of it 509. b Owne wee may not doe with our owne what we will 187. b P PArdon of sinne how God grants it 293. b. a true signe thereof 300. c. it must be beleeued particularly 321. b Parents dutie to their children 456. b. their prerogatiue for apprehending Gods mercie 455. c Pastor how euery Christian is a pastor 431. c Patience in affliction taught 76. c 280. b. 487. c Peace in generall described 34. c. kinds of peace ib. how to get and keepe true peace 36. c. 302. b. how to esteeme it 183. c Peace-makers who 34. c. to God-ward 37. m Peace-breakers who and their estate 38. m People ought to be able to iudge of teachers 505. m. their dutie to their ministers 58. m. when a people cease to bee Gods people 167. m Perfection legall and Euangelicall 213. c. 214. Perfection in parts and in degrees 214. c. how Gods childe is perfect 215. b Periurie described 149. c. 150. the grieuousnesse of this sinne 152. m. three kinds of periurie ib. m. whether sworne members of societies bee periured in breaking their statutes 151. m. whether he may be put to sweare that is thought will periure himselfe 152. m Persecution and the kinds of it 40 41. of flight in persecution 446. b Pharisies described 84. c Pilgrimage going confuted 258. m Place difference of place for religious vse abolished 239. c Pompe worldly pompe is vanitie 386. m Poore what poore are blessed 8. consolation to the poore 11. c. duties of the poore in regard of their pouertie 199. b. how the poore may haue sufficient 400. b the degrees of pouertie 190. b. popish voluntarie pouertie confuted 9. c. 195. c Poperie a false religion 481. b. corrupted 504. m. no reconciliation with poperie 35. m. delight in popish writers dangerous 495. c. popes Bulls bee Satans instruments 44. m Praier the necessitie of it 231. obiections against it answered 23● parts of prayer 230. b. the right manner of praying 236. m. 254. b. of reuerence in praier 258. c. 234. m. foure conditions in acceptable praier 446. c. of a set forme of prayer 249. c. of publike praier 253. m. why we pray notwithstanding God knows our wants 247. m. why God delaies to graunt our praiers ibid. why God neuer graunts some men their requests ibid. c. of applying Gods promise in prayer 256. m. 451. m. a double proppe to our hearts in prayer 259. c. of praying standing 230. c. how Papists faile in prayer 238. c. prayer to Saints vnlawfull 240. c. prayer cannot merit 241. m. sundrie abuses in prayer 242. m. we must pray for others 256. c. in loue 257. m. in zeale 448. b. constantly 449. c. Lords praier how farre forth prescribed 249. m. the excellencie of it 251. c. how it is made a patterne to our praiers 32● b Praise how to praise God 319. m. the author and ground of true praise 228. c Preaching in a right manner 48. c 54. ● 436. c. 472. c. 550. c. carnall preaching 27. m. Preachers may be condemned 52● c Pride of minde and heart 218. c. 426. m. the practise of pride 219. m. why pride must be auoided and how 219. m. pride in
God would continue the truth of his will to vs and to our posteritie for euer The second Conclusion Whosoeuer shall keepe them and teach men so the same shall be called great in the kingdome of heauen that is hee shall bee honoured in the Church of God and esteemed a worthie member thereof because by this meanes he endeauoureth to keepe the law vnchangeable for euer In this conclusion two points are to be considered the office of a faithfull Teacher and his reward his office is two-fold First in his owne person hee must be a doer of Gods commandements Secondly in his publike Ministerie hee must teach men so to doe Here first obserue the order of these duties Doing must goe before Teaching This order Christ propounds and that doubtlesle on speciall grounds First because a man cannot with ioy and comfort fitly teach others before himselfe bee a doer of the thing hee teacheth for if a man teach others from the instruction of the spirit hee shall finde his owne heart inclined by the same spirit to the obedience of the word he teacheth Againe the experience of the fruite and efficacie of the word in his owne person is the best Commentarie a man can haue for the opening of it vnto others The writings of men with the knowledge of artes and tongues are excellent helpes yet if a man want the spirit of God framing his heart to beleeue and obey the word hee teacheth whereby he should become a doer of it doubtlesse the word wil seeme but a dreame or riddle vnto him neither can he fitly apply the same vnto others hauing neuer had experience of it in his owne soule This then should mooue all Ministers and such as set themselues to this calling first and chiefly to labour to become doers of the word themselues other helpes of learning are to bee fought for with all diligence to make them fit and able Ministers of so great mysteries but especially they must labour for the spirit of grace to frame their hearts to embrace and their liues to obey the word which they teach that so they may be fitted according to our Sauiour Christs direction Now this spirit is attained by knocking ut hea●●n gates by praier Luke 11. 13. and by opening the doore of our hearts when our Sauiour Christ knocketh thereat by his wo●d Reuel 3. 20. Secondly in ●aying downe this dutie our Sauiour Christ propoundeth a singular comfort to such faithfull Ministers as be grieued with the vntowardnesse of their people hee propoundeth not the conuersion of the people as a propertie of a faithfull Teacher but the doing and teaching of the will and word of God And doubtlesse a man may bee a faithful Teacher and yet not conuert many vnto God hence the Prophet complaines that hee had laboured in vaine and spent his strength in vaine nay the same Prophet is sent to blinde the eies of his people to make them dull of hearing and to harden their hearts by his Ministerie which was a heauie case but yet that saying of the Apostle Paul must be remembred that howsoeuer vnto some his Ministerie was the sauour of death yet vnto God it was alwaies the sweet sauour of Christ So that a Minister mourning truely for his people to see their hardnes of heart may comfort himselfe with this that in a good conscience hee endeauoureth to obey the word of God and to teach men so II. Point The reward of a faithfull Teacher is this hee shall bee counted great in the kingdome of heauen that is he shall be honoured and counted worthie to bee a member of Christs Church both in this life and in the life to come This must be remembred to incite all Ministers to become faithfull Teachers both in life and doctrine To get respect in Princes courts is much sought after on earth O then how should this high respect with God preuaile in our hearts to incite vs to be faithfull in this calling Verse 20. For I say vnto you except your righteousnesse exceed the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises you cannot enter into the kingdome of heauen These words are commonly taken to bee a Reason of the former verse by way of answer to a secret obiection which the Iewes might frame there-from to this effect Thou saiest whosoeuer breaketh one of these least commandements and teach men so shall be called least in the kingdome of heauen But our Teachers the Scribes and Pharises looke to haue chiefe place in the kingdome of heauen and yet if thy doctrine be true they breake Gods commandements and teach others so to doe Now here-to Christ should answer thus I say vnto you except your righteousnesse exceedes theirs ye cannot enter into the kingdom of heauen But if we marke well the words may more fitly be referred to the 17. verse as a third reason to prooue that Christ came not to destroy the Law or the Prophets but to fulfill them because he exacts at euery mans hands a more perfect and exact righteousnesse then that which the Scribes and Pharises either haue in themselues or require in others without which no man can enter into the kingdome of heauen In this verse are three points to be handled First what these Scribes and Pharises were Secondly what was their Righteousnesse and thirdly what is that true Righteousnesse whereby a man may enter into the kingdome of heauen and stand iust before God For the first a Scribe is a name of office whereof there were two sorts among the Iewes Ciuill who as Publike Notaries did register the affaires of Princes and such a one was Shimshai Ezra 4. 8. And Ecclesiasticall who were imployed in the expounding of the Scripture such a one was Ezra Ezra 7. 1 5 6. And those of whom our Sauiour Christ saith Matth. 13. 52. Euery Scribe taught vnto the kingdome of heauen is like a good housholder and Matthew 32. 2. the Scribes and Phraises sit in Moses chaire that is they are expounders of the law of Moses And such Scribes are meant in this place to wit men in Ecclesiasticall office descending from the tribe of Leuie who expounded the Law vnto the people and these were all one with the Priests and Leuites vnder the Law and therefore Ezra is called both a Scribe and Priest Nehem. 8. 1 2. The name Pharise betokeneth a sect not an office for there were three speciall sects among the Iewes The Essenes the Sadduces and Pharises The Essenes were like Popish Monkes and Friers which did separate themselues from the people vowing and dedicating themselues to liue in perpetuall sanctitie The Sadduces were a sect that did expound the law according to the letter and syllable and with-all denied the resurrection and the immortalitie of the soule as is plaine Acts 23 8. The Pharises were such as did forsake the common exposition of the Scribes and taught and framed a more exact