Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n work_n work_v writer_n 25 3 7.7865 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A15525 A commentarie vpon the most diuine Epistle of S. Paul to the Romanes Containing for matter, the degeneration of our nature by Adams Fall; and the restauration thereof, by the grace of Christ. Together with the perfection of faith, and the imbecillity of workes, in the cause of iustification of elect sinners before God. For forme and maner of handling, it hath the coherence and method, the summe and scope, the interpretations & doctrines the reasons and vses, of most texts. All which, are set downe very familiarly and compendiously, in forme of a dialogue, betweene Tlmotheus [sic] and Silas, by Thomas Wilson, one of the six preachers in the cathedrall church of Canterbury. Wilson, Thomas, 1563-1622. 1614 (1614) STC 25791; ESTC S120148 882,533 1,268

There are 24 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

So the decree of his loue from euerlasting is tearmed fore-knowledge Tim. What is the instruction that we gather from hence Silas That God doth not begin then to loue his elect when they bee in this worlde and are regenerated but hee hath loued them in his decree and purpose from euerlasting For vnto God those things towardes men were long since purposed and appointed saith Chrysostome Tim. But if this be true that we are from euerlasting loued of God how can we at any time be enemies to him Silas Though we be loued as creatures and more loued as Gods elect yet in respect of inherent and remaining corruption we are enemies of God beeing neuer actually beloued till we be regenerate by the Spirite of God and haue his image imprinted in vs. Tim. What vse is to be made of this point Silas First that God hath certainly loued vs in this it appeareth that our election is most firme so as the chosen must needs come to glory because whome God loueth once hee loueth to the end Secondly seeing God loued vs in his purpose when we were sinners wee ought therefore to loue him againe and also one another euen our very enemies Thirdly if God loued vs euen when wee were enemies hee will nowe much more loue and saue vs seeing wee are reconciled by his Sonne through faith in his bloud Tim. What is the second instruction Silas That the eternall good will and pleasure of God is the spring and fountaine of all spirituall graces now and heauenly glory hereafter The reason is for that the Apostle setting downe the causes of our saluation nameth the foreknowledge of God as the head and chiefe of the rest for wee are therefore predestinated called iustified and sanctified glorified because God knew vs for his own before the foundation of the world Tim. What vse is to be made of this poynt Silas It teacheth that faith loue and good workes cannot bee the cause of our election because Gods foreknowledge and election is the cause of them Secondly it confuteth such as woulde haue our beleeuing and working well to come in part frō our naturall free will wheras in trueth they are all the fruites and gifts of Gods eternall election and loue by which they are giuen to vs and wrought in vs insomuch that we haue neither good counsell thought nor good deede but that which God hath decreed to put into vs from euerlasting Ephe. 1. 4. wee are chosen in Christ not because wee were but to bee holy Tim. What is it to predestinate Silas To predestinate is to decree any thing before hand and bring it vnto a certaine end through certain and appointed meanes If this predestination saith Augustine can be deceiued then may God be ouercome of mans sin which cannot be Tim. What learne we from hence Silas That predestination is ioyned vnto foreknowledge as subordinate to it Gods foreknowledge is no bare and idle thing but is euer coupled with his decree and ordinance whatsoeuer God knoweth or seeth before hee ordaineth to some speciall end and vnto that end hee shall at last bring it this is it which is here called predestination Tim. If this be so that all things are foreordained of God howe is hee not the authour of sinnes for they bee in the number of things Silas Sinnes are foreordained of God not as they are sinnes but as they are the meanes to effect his counsell thus Adams fall and Iudas treason were foreordained of God as meanes whereby God did effect and serue his own counsell in sauing the elect to the praise of his mercy and condemning the wicked to the praise of his iustice Secondly predestinating in scripture may be taken generally and largely for Gods generall and whole decree touching all things and persons or strictly for the decree of election whereby he hath foreordained some to saluation as the end and confourming to Christ as the meanes to leade to that end and so it is here vsed Tim. Wherein stands this conformity with Christ Silas In two thinges first in being like vnto him in respect of the end that as Christ is nowe glorified in heauen so all that are predestinate shal be glorified with him Secondly in being like vnto him in respect of the meanes standeth thus that as Christ entred into his glory through holinesse and suffering afflictions and death so they that liue godly and are ready to suffer with Christ for Christ are sure to be saued with Christ. Tim. What is our instruction from hence Silas This euery one that looketh to inherite eternall life in heauen with Christ must endeuor to bee like him in this life they must be holy and righteous as he was and be ready to suffer afflictions as hee did The reason here of is Gods eternall decree and ordinance whereby hee hath appointed it to bee so that they shall bee partners with Christ in his heauenly glory whosoeuer shall bee followers of him here in his patience and holinesse which are the way we are to walke in vnto our country which is aboue Tim. What is the vse to be made of this Silas First here is an exhortation to moue vs to liue holily according to the will of God and to suffer afflictions with patience according to the example of Christ as wee desire to haue communion with Christ in his blessednesse Secondly heere is comfort for such as suffer any manner of shame or iniury for Christ and his word for this likenesse with Christ in his infirmities is a witnes that we shall be like vnto him in glory Thirdly here is sharp reproofe for such as liue prophanely and shunne the crosse saying it mattereth not how we liue or what we doe for wee must be saued if we be predestinate and if not then we cannot be saued though we do liue well Tim. How is Christ the first begotten amongst his brethren Silas This phrase hath reference to the custome of the Iewes whose first-borne did excell his brethren both in power and portion in dignity and possession so doeth Christ far excell all his brethren who are all like to Christ but not equall with him neither in nature office glory nor dominion for by nature hee is God truely and God-man in vnity of person for office the onely redeemer and mediatour of his Church therefore onely king and high-priest for glory and dominion he sitteth vpon his Fathers throne hauing a name aboue all names Phil. 2. 9. DIAL XXVII Verse 30. Whome he hath predestinate them he hath called whome he hath called them hee hath iustified and whome he iustifieth them he glorifieth Tim. VVHat doth this text contayne Silas The seuerall actions and effects whereby God doth witnes his eternall loue to his elect ones and by which as meanes hee bringeth them to their purposed and promised blessednes Here is the golden chain wherby men chosen are drawne vp and ascend to heauen here be the steps and degrees
this consent serue vnto Silas It serueth to confirme vs in this perswasion that the Scriptures are diuine and no humaine thing or inuention of man as also it confuteth the Manichees and Marcionites which vtterly reiect the Old Testament Tim. What do ye call Scriptures Silas Euery thing that is written is Scripture in a large and generall sense but this word Scripture by an excellency is giuen peculiarly to those Books which containe the word of God and were written by Inspiration of the Holy Ghost for the perpetuall instruction of the Church 2 Tim. 3 16. This doth put vs in minde of Gods great goodnesse that would haue his Word put in writing and so wonderously to preserue those Bookes in all Ages for his Church sake without losse of one iot or tittle notwithstanding great meanes to suppresse and extinguish them Tim. By what reasons can ye prooue vnto vs that these Bookes which are called Scriptures be the very word of God rather then any other writings Silas There be heercof sundrie Arguments which may perswade all men and some which will and doe perswade Gods Children First that which was touched before the great Hermony and constant consent of one part of this Booke with another in such a huge variety of infinite matter yet no repugnancy howsoeuer some diuersity may be found Secondly the Maiesty of the matter in great simplicity of words Thirdlie the efficacy power and vertue thereof working in the hearts of sinners for their conuersion which no other Writing in the world doth or can effect for mans natures in their reasons and wils being corrupt are as contrary to the Doctrine taught in these Bookes as darknesse to light Heauen to Hell yet are they by the mighty efficacy hid in them reconciled to them so as they willingly yeeld approoue and honor them also the power of them maketh euen the wicked to feare and tremble as in Foelix Fourthlie the euents of Prophesies so many hundred yea so many thousand yeares fore-shewed As the Seede of the Woman promised to Adam the bondage of Iacob in AEgypt the Captiuity of Babylon the Birth of Iosiah and of Cirus reuealing of Antichrist and innumerable such like and made before yet accordingly fulfilled in their due time doth bewray them to be from that all seeing veritie Fiftly the Penmen of the Scripture as Moyses Dauid Iob Mathew Paul discouering their owne corruptions and infirmities euen to their owne great preiudice and crack of their own estimation in the world and so vnpartially reporting the foul blemishes of their owne people and Country-men doth testifie that they were gouerned by the holy Spirit of truth in the penning of them Sixtlie there be sundry examples and stories in the Bible to which euen the Heathen and Pagan yea and Iewish Writers being enemies to Christ doe giue testimony to the truth of them as in Iosephus and others and the witnesse of an enemy it is of no smal credit and force Seuenthlie the strange preseruations of these Bookes notwithstanding the strange malice of the Deuill and the mischieuous pollicies and practises of his most wicked Instruments to suppresse and extingnish them yet that they should be so kept as to remaine intire without losse of any Booke nay of any Iot or Tittle as very Iudiciously learned men do think this diuine protection doth argue that their Authoritie is diuine Adde vnto all this the constant Testimony which so many worthy Martirs by their death blood haue giuen to this truth Lastly euery one of Gods Children haue the witnesse of his owne Spirit the Authour of the Scriptures to testifie in the consciences of them that they are inspired of God and doe containe a diuine infallible truth Tim. Whereunto must this help and profit vs Silas To arme our mindes against that dangerous temptation of doubting the truth of Scriptures whether they be of God Secondly to draw more reuerence towards those Bookes and Writings with more studie in them then towards al other writings whatsoeuer being the Booke of Bookes therefore by an excellencie called the Bible Tim. Why are the Scriptures called Holy Silas First because they proceede from the Spirit which is Holy Luke 1. 6 7. Secondly they teach a truth which also is Holy euen the truth which is according to godlinesse Titus 1 1. Thirdly they be Instruments whereby the Elect are sanctified and made Holy Ioh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them with thy truth thy word is truth Lastly they were written to diuers most holy Ends as to teach to conuince to correct to instruct in righteousnesse 2. Tim. 3. 16. Also to giue comfort Rom. 15. 4. Tim. What learne ye by this Silas First that they haue a sacred authority in themselues containing a diuine Doctrine and doe not depend on Church or Pope Secondly that the Scriptures are to be preached read and heard with holy affection Moyses is commaunded to put off his shooes because the ground is holie Exod. 3. 5. Thirdly they are neuer to be mentioned but with great reuerence and honourable Titles Lastly seeing they are Holy therefore to apply them to vaine and light or to prophane and wicked vses as in Charmes Inchantments in lefts and meriments in playes and interludes is a grieuous sinne euen an horrible prophanation of Gods name Tim. What doth the third verse containe Silas A description of our Redeemer and Sauiour who is the matter and substance the end and scope of holy Scriptures which teach vs nothing else saue Christ as their maine subiect and lead to nothing but vnto Christ Iesus as their furthest marke This discerneth the Gospell not onely from other prophane Writings but euen from Moyses Law which hath the same Authour not the same Subiect Tim. How is he described Silas First by his Person which is but one concerning his Sonne Secondly by his Titles which are three First Iesus Secondly Christ. Thirdly our Lord. Thirdly by his two Natures which are distinctlie set downe with their proofes the humaine first which was of the Seede of Dauid then the Diuine Verse 4. declared mightilie to be the Sonne of God Tim. What is the Summe then of this Scripture Silas That Iesus Christ the Sauiour of the World is both true God and true Man in the vnity of person there is in Christ one thing and another thing that is diuers Natures but yet not one person another person for the person is but one the Son of God made Man by assuming the Manhood into the fellowship of his person Tim. The Manhood of Christ then hath no subsistance out of the person of the Sonne of God Silas No none beeing considered apart but wholy subsisteth in the person of the Sonne to which it is inseparably and wonderfully vnited Tim. What is to be obserued touching this vnion of Natures in one person Silas That our Sauiour hath his denomination some times according to one Nature as here he is called the Sonne of God
was the end of Pauls purpose to Trauaile vnto Rome Silas To confirme them in the faith Tim. In what Respects did they lack confirmatiō or strength Silas In fiue Respects First because their Fayth was weake for we all know in part and beleeue in part 1. Cor. 13 9. Secondly their enemie Satan was craftie and strong Thirdly the assaultes against their faith both many and manifold Fourthly dangerous it was to bee ouercome Fiftly verie many seeming strong haue bin ouerthrowne by Satan From whence we may Learne that they which haue beene comfirmed by the comforts and exhortations of the word haue still need to receiue spiritual strength to arme them against new encounters Tim. Whence had they this strength Or by what meanes is it attained Sil. From the ordinance of Christ in the Ministery of the word and from publicke Prayer to Christ to blesse his owne appointment as also from earnest priuat praier and conference with the godly From diligent Reading and Meditation Tim. By what similitude may this be expressed Silas Of Raine which refresheth the thirstie land of Meat which cheareth the faint bodies through Gods blessing vpon them so the raine and food of Heauenlie Doctrine by the blessing of God refresheth the Christian soule being made faint and wearie with sinnes temptations Tim. What Vse is to be made of this point Silas First that as we desire to be inwardly strengthned we should giue eare vnto exhortation Secondlie that exhortations must be giuen with a sanctified mind that only our Neighbors profit bee sought with Gods glorie all corrupt respects whatsoeuer beeing abandoned Lastly that we do constantly and humbly vse all the former good meanes ordained to be meanes of our confirmation Tim. But wherefore doth the Apostle say That he would take comfort from the Romanes as well as giue Consolation vnto them Silas To shew that the strongest may bee edified and holpen euen by the weakest and not onely to declare the great modesty of the Apostle who Wrote as hee thought feeling a want and weaknesse in himselfe both in knowledge 1. Cor. 13. and in the guifts of regeneration Rom. 7 15. Tim. What Reasons of this Silas First God doth not giue his guifts all to one but so as one Christian shall neede anothers helpe Secondly he wil trie and exercise the humility of the most perfect Thirdly he will thereby norish loue among his Children whiles one stands another in such sted Fourthly he will get himselfe glory by doing his owne work by the feeblest meanes Lastly he will allow that absolute perfection is not to be found out of heauen Tim. What vse is to be made of this truth Silas First it comforteth them of the least gifts seeing God can and doth vse them to strengthen men of the best gifts and strongest Christians Secondly it serueth to admonish the stronger to suffer exhortations councell from their Inferiours as Moyses did from Iethro Apollos from Aquila Dauid from Abigaile Lastly it reproueth such as scorne the councell and help of such as be their inferiours in place and guifts Tim. What other thing may bee taught from this Twelfe Verse Silas The Nature of Faith which is to communicate and impart it selfe to others by the work of loue Faith workes by loue Gala. 5 6. Tim. By what Similitude was this set forth Silas Of Leauen of Fire of the Sunne and of God the Author of it all which doe communicate their properties to others and so doth Faith delight to expresse its inward force and vertue Tim. What doth follow heereof Sil. That such as doe not indeuour to strengthen others according to their guifts and calling it is a token that there is no Faith in them but that which is dead and like a withered Tree and dryed wombe which be vnable to bring forth fruite Tim. How may the Faith of Paul profit the Romanes Silas Two waies first by his faith he obtained increase of such spirituall guifts as he bestowed on them euen as their owne faith made them fit to receiue those guifts Secondly his faith stirred him vp to referre and vse those guifts he had to the good of others and to Gods glory Tim. What good came to him heereby Sil. In comforting and enstructing others he comforted and enstructed himselfe euen as Iron 〈◊〉 Iron and one hand washeth another otherwise then it is with the stone which wher 's the knife but it selfe remaines blunt and dull whereas Christians by teaching others doe teach themselues Tim. How was this further declared Silas By a dissimilitude betweene earthly and heauenly goods as thus Our earthly goods being giuen out we haue the lesse but heauenly blessings encrease and multiply towards our selues by the vse of them towards others For the faithfull by mutuall exhortations doe profite in the faith and it is knowne that Ministers comforting the sicke are comforted againe by them Tim. How might the Faith of the Romanes profit Paul Silas In prouoking them to pray for him and for the successe of his Ministry and also in moouing them to Minister to him consolations both inward and outward according as his occasions required all which bee the fruits of 〈◊〉 faith Tim. What was taught from these words I would haue ye know c. Silas That it is fit and requisite the people should know how well and heartily their Pastor loues them for it will breed loue in them towards him or else make them excuselesse Also it breedeth a boldnesse in them to resort to him vpon iust occasions as his wisedome and Grauity will cause them to come reuerently Tim. Wherein did Pauls loue further appeare Sil. In a purpose to come to them for their spirituall good of which purpose he was letted eyther by Sathan or by Gods speciall direction or by incident occasions of the Church When Paul would haue come to Thessalenica he saith That Sathan was the lette that he could not come 1. Thes. 2 18. Sathans impediments which he casteth in the way of Teachers to hinder them in their course be partly by raising vp Schismes and Heresies as in the Church of Corinth and Galatia partly by stirring vp persecutions and aduersities as he got Iames and Peter cast in prison at Ierusalem Acts. 12. and Antipas to be slaine at Smirna 〈◊〉 2 13. And Paul himselfe complaineth of a grieuous persecution which he suffered in Asia beeing tempted beyond his strength and brought into despaire of his life 2. Cor. 1 8. Sometime Paul was letted by God himselfe who by manifest Oracles called him backe from his intended enterprises Acts. 16 6. Where Paul purposing to preach the word in Asia was commanded in a vision to goe into Matedonia verse 9 10. Thirdly the necessities of the Churches encreasing euery day more and more occasioned the alteration of his purpose Paul seemeth to giue this reason of his not comming to the Romanes when he had decreed it That the estate of the Churches where he remained required his longer
Nebuchadnezar when their captiuity was sharpe and their deliuerance long deferred yet because temporal deliuerance were Tipes of eternall and depended vpon Christ it is not to be doubted but Paul hath rightly applied it to the spirituall deliuerance by the Messiah to come through Faith Wherby the elect both vnder Law and Gospel were safe and made pertakers as well of Iustification and remission of sinnes presently as of life eternall in the Heauens Which concord in this great trueth of righteousnesse by Faith betweene the Prophets and Apostles it is implied not obscurely by this Particle As and whereas Paul ascribeth vnto holy Scripture the authority to proue the question in hand whether Faith or workes do iustifie before God we may note further in what estimation wee ought to haue the written word namely to account it the perfect rule of al diuine truth acording to which we ought to examine and iudge of al controuersies in matter of Faith and Religion for it is the wont of this blessed Apostle when he will confirme any Christian Doctrine or determine any doubt or question which may arise about it still to runne vnto Scriptures for probation which shewes the Scriptures alone to be a sufficient directory and a competent Iudge of all controuersies in Religion Tim. What did we obserue in the authority it selfe Sil. The reading and the Interpretation The reading standeth thus The iust by Faith shall liue this is the better reading or thus The iust shall liue by Faith this is the worse as though we were first iust and afterward should liue by Faith Also the word His is in the Prophet The iust shall liue by his owne Faith but it is left out by Paul because it is sufficient without the pronowne to proue his purpose that The iust by Faith shall liue Tim. What is the Interpretation of these words as they were first vsed of the Prophet Habakkuk Sil. To shew the duty of iust men in dangerous times namely by Faith to waite and rest vpon God if they would liue and be preserued when other which had confidence in themselues were destroyed Tim. What is the meaning as Paul sciteth it Sil. To teach thus much that such as imbrace righteousnesse by Faith shall be saued from Sinne Hell and Sathan and liue eternally in Heauen as well as be deliuered heere in earth from temporall dangers Tim. What Doctrines were gathered heere Sil. These three chiefely First that none shall liue but the iust Secondly none iust but by Faith Thirdly euery one is iustified by his owne Faith Tim. Why shall none liue saue the iust Sil. Because God hath not promised life but to such as are iust as it is written Doe this and liue Secondly he threatneth death to sinne and to all vnrighteousnesse therefore all vniust persons are certain to perish which sheweth the necessity of seeking and getting perfect iustice by beleeuing the gospell Tim. Why is none Iust saue by Faith Silas Because all men euen the best do lacke righteousnesse of their owne therefore they must seek it elswhere in Christ by Faith Rom. 10 3 4 5. Phil. 3 7 8 9. Tim. How is it declared that none is Iustified but by his owne Faith Silas As none seeth but with his owne eye or taketh hold of a thing but with his owne hand or eateth but with his owne mouth or walketh but with his owne feete so none seeth Christ to be his Sauiour or taketh hold of his merites or feedeth on him or walketh and commeth to him any otherwise then by his own Faith which is the eye hand and mouth of the soule Tim. What other things learned we from this Text Silas That we haue many notable benefites by Faith to wit Saluation Righteousnesse and Life who of all other be most principall Secondly that to liue by faith it is to exercise Patience Hope Wisedome Loue Obedience out of a liuely Faith by which a Christian is made able to mooue himselfe to all good duties vnto which by power of Nature wee can by no meanes attaine Tim. Is there any further thing to be obserued in this Text for our instruction Silas Yea it commendeth vnto vs the difference betweene the Law and the Gospell how the righteousnesse of the one is distinguished from the other For the righteousnesse of the Law requireth workes and the fulfilling of the Commandements Leuit. 18 5. Galath 3 12. But the Gospell saith The Iust by Faith shall liue The righteousnesse of the Law is a perfect obedience the righteousnesse of the Gospell is an imputation thereof to the Elect Sinner at what time he beleeueth Rom. 4 24. The Righteousnesse of the gospell God giueth to vs but the righteousnes of the Law men do giue it to God There is good vse of this difference and is to be held constantly because it freeth the trobled Conscience from snares and perplexities when hee shall perceiue that though he lacke good Workes and be full of wicked manners yet vnto the forgiuenesse of sinnes and absolution before God it is enough only to beleeue in Christ according to the gospel Secondly it takes from man al cause of reioycing and glorying in himselfe that he may glory only in this That he knowes God to be mercifull to pardon his sinne and accept him for righteous when by his sinfull Workes and transgressions of the Lawe hee deserued death Ier. 9 23. DIAL X. Verse 18. For the Wrath of God is reuealed from heauen against all vngodlinesse and vnrighteousnes of Men which with-hold the truth in vnrighteousnes Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text how doth it depend vpon and sort with the former Verse Silas The drift and purpose is to confirm the maine and grand proposition that sinners are Iustified and saued by the Faith of the gospell The argument is from the contrary Sinners are not Iustified by their Works therefore by Faith For in the cause of Iustification faith and workes haue the condition of contraries Rom 11 6. Now touching things which be immediately contrarie the maxime and rule is that when the one is denied the other is affirmed and what is taken from the one is giuen to the other it doth then necessarily followe that righteousnesse must be had by Faith seeing it cannot be had by workes Aud why not by workes Was it not the common and generally receiued opinion both amongst Philosophers and the Iewes themselues that Workes were the cause of righteousnesse To this secret Obiection the Apostle answereth by a reason taken from the contrary effects as thus Men cannot bee righteous by their Workes because their workes were wicked and vniust therefore punished of God which he proueth by a distribution of Gentiles vnto Chap. 2. Verse 17. and thenceforward of the Iewes till Chap. 3. verse 22. Tim. How many things are noted in this Text Silas Three First that the Gentiles had knowledge of God and good things naturally ingrafted in them signified by the word Truth
by wicked affections Tim. Who doe with-hold the truth in vnrighteousnesse Sil. Such as by force suppresse or keepe it backe as if they would imprison it least it come abroad when it is not onely not followed and obeyed but resisted and the quite contrary to the direction of truth is done then it is as it were fettered in the Giues and Manacles of our lusts which keepe it backe Tim. Taketh the truth any hurt thereby Sil. None at all but the hurt is to our selues euen great vexation and vnquietnesse of mind Secondly a greater inclination and pronesse to all manner of euill this may be declared and illustrated by the similitude of prisoners kept in prison against their will also by the example of such Gentiles Iewes and Christians as knowing what they ought to doe yet did against their knowledge Rom. 1 32. Rom. 2 17 21. Phil. 3 18. Tim. What counsell was giuen heere Silas That all men endeuour to take part with the knowne truth against their affections and endeuour to doe according to that truth which they know For first if men will not haue truth to guide them they shall haue their corrupt filthy lusts to be their guides Secondly if men keepe truth in Prison by their disobedience themselues at last shall bee cast into the prison of darkenesse whence they shall neuer come out where the fire neuer goeth out and the worme neuer dyeth DIALOGVE XI Verse 19 20. For asmuch as that which may be knowne of God is manifest in them for God hath shewed it vnto them For the inuisible things of him that is his eternall power and God-head are seene by the Creation of the world being considered in his workes to the intent that they should be without 〈◊〉 Tim. WHat coherence and agreement hath this Text with the former and how doth Paul proceeds Sil. This verse with the rest that follow to the end of the first Chapter doe by a very plaine and distinct order more fully explicate and declare the matters briefly and concisely set downe in the 18 verse as first what that truth is which the Heathens did vniustly detaine viz the principles of Nature imprinted within them both of God and of morall dutyes and how they came by this naturall light in this verse and next Secondly how by vniust detaining that truth they proued impious to God by vnthankfulnesse and Idolatry and iniurious towards themselues and their Neighbours from verse 20 till 32. in which verse lastly is taught what that wrath and punnishment is which is from God in Heauen reuealed and sent vpon such wickednesse of men Now the first word or Particle of this present Text Because or For bewraieth this verse to depend vpon the former as a reason thereof taken from the effect He had said the Gentiles violently oppressed truth and as a Iaylor his Prisoner so they kept in the same which yet desired to burst out into actions as the Sun out of the Clouds this he proueth thus because such as had a certaine light and knowledge to leade them to God in some sort to know him and to discerne betweene good and euill in common life could not commit such impieties toward God such vncleannesses against themselues and such Iniustice to their Neighbours but that they must bee iudged guilty of vnrighteous detention and suppression of the truth If happily any would alleadge for the Heathens in their defence that they wholly wanted the knowledge of the truth and so are vntruely charged for with-holding it for answere to this secret obiection he affirmeth that the Gentiles had the knowledge of God both by light of Nature verse 19. and by the view of Gods works v. 20. Tim. What is the drift of this Text Sil. To shew what truth that is which the Gentiles detained in vnrighteousnesse it was a certaine knowledge of God which they learned by naturall instinct and by the workes of Creation and that they are iustly charged for with holding the same knowledge Tim. How many things may be considered in this Text Sil. Fiue thinges First that the Heathen had the knowledge of God that c. Secondly that they had it from God for God shewed it them Thirdly what things they knew touching God his eternall diuine power Fourthly out of what bookes they learned it not Scriptures but Creatures from his workes not from his word Lastly what was the euent of their knowledge Tim. Did the Gentiles know all that was to be knowne of God Sil. No but knew somuch as they were capable to knowe according to such meanes as they had yet the Philosophers and wise men knew much of God which they did not reueale to the common people There are some things to be knowne of God which are incomprehensible simply and cannot be known of Gods regenerated Children much lesse of Philosophers as his perfit diuine essence most glorious maiesty which dwels in a light that none hath accesse or aproach vnto 1 Tim. 6 16. Also the reasons of his will and counsell touching the gouernement of the worlde and especially of mankind for they ought not to be searched nor can be traced and found Rom. 11. 33. And other things there be which though they bee comprehensible yet are not known without reuelation of the word and spirit which Heathens lacked as the Doctrine of the Trinity of Christ his Incarnation free Iustification by Faith Remission of Sinnes by a crucified Christ Resurrection c. By that therefore which may be knowne is meant that which by ir-bred principles of truth remayning in man after the fall as some sparkles and fire-brands after a great fire and by strength of naturall reason as also by sight of the creature the Gentiles coulde attaine vnto viz. that there was a God he insensible and spirituall and for properties most mighty most iust most wise and good which things they saw God the first cause could not bee without seeing men which were his effect and work had such qualities in them Whereas this knowledge is said here to be manifest in them it is expounded by Chap. 2 vers 15. written in their hearts neither in the Creatures nor in the Philosophers nor among them nor to them but in themselues euen within their hearts by which it is plaine that he now speakes not of the Iewes which had their knowledge of God from the word but of the Gentiles and of those inward notions and principles which be natural whereof some be contemplatiue shewing them of God that hee is and what one he is and some practicke teaching them the difference betweene that is godly and wicked iust wrong honest and vnhonest morally good and euill Hence outwardly did arise the seeds of Arts Sciences and Disciplines and within a conscience iudgeing of a mans owne deedes whether good or ill and admonishing of the diuine iudgement approouing and rewarding what is well done abhorring and reuenging euill actions as Chap. 2. 15. This iustifieth that saying
thought well of them not regarding what GOD iudged of them which was chiefly and asore all to be thought on Tim. How fitly doth this Text agree with the former Also in what sence is Gods iudgement affirmed to bee according to truth And how do we know thus much Silas This verse was a proof of that which was written in the first verse for there he saide that men which condemned themselues are without excuse but are so guilty as they cannot escape the reason heereof is now rendred because the iudgement of God is according to truth and therefore though men would blinde themselues putting out their owne eyes yet that cannot be done and were it done it cannot help for God will finde them out By iudgement is meant both Gods gouernment of things and persons in this world namely his iudiciary power in inflicting paine and also the action of the last and great day when God will giue recompence to euerie man as his workes be This Iudgement is saide to be according to truth not so much for that he iudgeth not after outward shews and appearances but searcheth the hearts 1. Sam. 16 7. as because it is a righteous vnpartial iudgement looking not to persons as corrupt men do in their iudgement but to the quality of the offence This we are saide to know both because it is certaine and the certainty heereof euidently appeareth to al men generally and obscurely by light of nature imprinted in all mens minds whereof before Chap. 1. verse 19 20. and this is meant heere and more specially and clearly by the witnesse of the word often auouching God to be righteous in his iudgement and holy in his waies Psal. 99. and 76. and 145. Paul abhorring with detestation the least thought of any iniustice in God Rom. 3 5. and chap. 9 14. Tim. What dooth the Apostle teach heere touching the Iudgement of God Sil. Two things First that his iudgement is true equall and iust Secondly that it is certain and vnauoidable Tim. What learned we from the former Sil. That God doth iudge otherwise then men doe iudge now heerein is the difference that men do iudge according to outward appearance for men do iudge according to that they do heare see because they know not the heart and cannot tell with what minde euerie thing is done for this is the cause that men are so soone and much deceiued as it may appeare first in that men take some to be good which bee otherwise as in Isaac who thought well of Esauꝭ and Paul who thought well of Demas the eleuen Apostles who had a good conceite of Iuda Also men are deceiued in iudging some men euill which be good example heereof we haue in Dauid towards Mephibosheth Sedekiah towards Ieremie Therefore in these cases men are to iudge well of all men so long as they haue no cause to the contrary especially so long as they see good in them which may giue hope Secondly so to seeke the good opinion of men as we do not rest in it Thirdly if any of vs be deceyued in others to remember we are no gods Tim. Now tell vs how God doth iudge Sil. God iudgeth all persons and things truly as they are because hee most perfectly seeth and knoweth all things euen the verie secrets of mans heart Tim. What should this worke in vs Silas These things First that with great care we approue our liues vnto God in all vprightnesse And secondly that gouernors labour to be like vnto God endeuouring what lyeth in them to iudge truly of persons and things Thirdly that we reuerence all Gods iudgements though they seeme straunge to vs. For the godlesse men yea thorow weaknes of iudgment or strength of temptation the godly too do thinke and are readie to speake hardly of Gods gouernment either as if there were no diuine prouidence or as if it were not equall paines and afflictions being the portion of good men most commonly euill men well rewarded with good things as if they were good men This stumbled euen Iob Ieremy Dauid but all our carnall thoughtes must heere strike saile and giue place to this Oracle of God that his iudgements now and heereafter will be found iust and iustly executed Which trueth as it ought to stop our mouths and to awake our security that we perish not by hope of impunity so it affoords vndoubted comfort against confusions and apparant oppression 2. Thes. 2 7. Tim. Why is the iudgement of God vnauoydable Sil. First because of his omnipotency whereby he can draw all men besore him Secondly because of his decree whereby it is established Lastly wee cannot auoyde the iudgement of our owne conscience much lesse GODS iudgement Tim. What vse was made of this trueth Sil. It should mooue all men to amend themselues seeing all men must come to account Secondly it should work in Rulers a great care of their actions seeing they also can not escape the iudgement of God DIALOGVE III. Verse 4 5. Or dispisest thou the riches of his bountifulnesse and patience and long sufferance not knowing that the bountifulnesse of God leadeth thee to repentance but thou after thy hardnes heart that cannot repent heapest vp and treasurest vnto thy selfe wrath against the day of wrath and of the declaration of the iust iudgement of God Tim. FIrst speake something to the method and disposition of the Text how doth it agree with the former and of what parts doth it consist Sil. The blessed Apostle doth now bend himselfe against the vaine excuses and pretexts by which those selfe condemners doe deceiue themselues The first is the hope of impunity by the lenity of God giuing good things out of his bounty or kindnesse bearing with the abuse of his benefits out of his patience and forbearing a great while to punish out of his long sufferance therefore say sinners he will neuet punish Hereuppon as wanton Children or dissolute Scholers which espy the gentlenes of their gouernors or as Birds which marke the lcar-crow not to moue or hurt waxe bold and fearelesse So these sinners imagine of God that hee will euer spare because hee presently striketh not they want only contemne him and his kindnesse The parts of the Text be two the one concerneth the generall goodnesse of God toward euill men set downe in three words The second is a reprehensicn of the abuse of his goodnes which that it might pierce deeper and moue more is set downe by an interogation and an Apostophe Doest thou Tim. What is the drift of this Text Sil. To checke such as being euill yet thought themselues righteous and in Gods fauour because they were not punished of God but prospeted vnto these men the Apostle saith that their prosperity and fredome frō punishment was a token of Gods bounty patience and long sufferance but not of their vertue and goodnes Tim. What is meant here by bountifulnesse Sil. The kindnes whereby God is inclined to do
if they did liue till they were men for true iustifying faith can neuer bee without good works in such as for yeares and strength are apt and able to do them no more then the Sunue without light or a good tree without good fruite Touching such as bee conuerted at the eleauenth houre in the houre and moment of death as the Theese vpon the Crosse was I say of them that for the time they liue after their conuersion their faith will be working for it is operatiue and cannot be idle because it is liuely and life is actiue as was seen in that repentant Theese whose faith brast forth by confession of sinne reprehension of his neighbour petition to God glorification of Christ and Apologie for his innocency yea if such as take the life of faith when they bee to leaue the life of nature might bee suffered to continue in this world they would also continue in good works Lastly Paul speaketh here of such as were of full age and also might doe good workes being spared to liue that by well liuing they might honour God and bee at length for euermore honoured with him DIAL VI. Verse 8. 9. 10. But vnto them that are contentious and disobey the trueth and obey vnrighteousnesse shall be indignation and wrath tribulation and anguish shall bee vpon the soule of euery one that doth euill of the Iew first and also of the Groecian but vnto euery one that doth good shall be glory honour and peace to the Iew first and also to the Groecian Tim. WHat is the coherence drift summe and parts of this Text Sil For coherence either here is mentioned the other part of distributiue iustice the punishment due to wicked workers the reward also of good works repeated the more to excite and allure men with hope therof to be constant in well doing or else the persons to whom recompence shal be giuen of the iust iudge as they haue beene set forth by their qualities so now by their nation they are described either Iewes or Grecians that is all the Gentiles which were not subiect to Moses law The drift is to shew God to be righteous in his iudgement because he rendreth to euery one the due belonging to thē whither it be wel or ill The sum is that howsoeuer haply there be not retribution made to euery person here in this world according to their doing because the good are often oppressed and oppressours not onely goe scot free but prosper yet certainly there will come a day wherein this confusion and troubled face of thinges shall bee redressed and righted when euery one shall haue as they haue done For the parts first there is a description of the paynes due to euill persons in foure words whereof two indignation and wrath do containe the cause of their punishment Gods hot displeasure kindled by sinne the other two tribulation and anguish note the extreame affliction of the vngodly begun here continued and perfected in hel elsewhere signified by death destruction gnawing worme gnashing of teeth darknesse chaines 〈◊〉 c. Secondly the reward of the godly is parted into three members glory honour peace which is the most quiet and peaceable possession of all good things in heauen Tim. What doe ye note in the diuision of people into Iewes and Graecians Sil. Scripture vsually diuideth nations into Iewes and Gentiles or Iewes and Greekes because the Hebrews held all people beside themselues to be Greekes and these accounting all beside themselues to be barbarous hence the Greekes are subdiuided into Greekes and Barbarians See Rom. 1. 14. 16. Rom. 10. 12. Iewes are first named because of their prerogatiue to bee Gods people also they excelled others in the knowledge of God and therefore were more seuerely to bee punished for their disobeying the trueth Hence it is that as they were first for the order and preheminence of estate so they are first placed here in the order of punishment for abusing so great dignity and vnderstanding Also it is to bee obserued that heere the Apostle beginneth to wrap the Iewes in the selfe same reproofe with the Gentiles because hee intendeth directly and more specially to reprehend them vnto whome therfore easily by little and little hee slideth turning his speech by name to them alone hereafter at the verse 17. When he sayth Behold thou art called a Iew c. And in that he wold not spare his own kindred but named them first he shewes himselfe vnpartiall DIAL VII Verse 11. For there is no respect of persons with God Tim. HOw is this Text and the verses following ioyned with the former and what is the sum and scope of them Sil. He confirmeth by this sentence that which before hee saide of the equall conditiou of the Iew and Gentile whome he had matched in punishment whereas they seemed to be vnequall for the Iew had the law of Moses as a great light to guide them so had not the Gentiles but the small and dimme light of nature therefore it seemeth a respect of person to condemne them to equall paynes which were not equall in the meanes to keepe them from sinning The Apostle answereth that howsoeuer the cause might be vnequall yet God in distributing paine was not moued with respect of person hee did not looke vnto the countrey or kindred of the Iew or of the Gentiles when hee inflicted punishment vppon them but notwithstanding the difference of countrey God did alike punish the Gentiles which had no written lawe and the Iewe which had a lawe written by Moses because whosoeuer doeth transgresse whither it be without a law or with a law they are worthy of death Hauing then hitherto from the 3. verse answered the generall pretext of all men nowe hee bendeth himselfe to take away the more speciall excuses and shifts as bucklers against Gods iudgements first of the Gentiles vntill verse 17 and then of the Iewes to the end of the Chapter Tim. How are the persons of euill men described set forth Sil. By these two properties First they are contentious such as wilfully defend errours and strife without cause Secondly they obey not the truth but obey vnrighteousnes which is all one with that which is written in Chap. 1. ver 18. and Chap. 2 4. Tim. In what causes doe contentions appeare and breake foorth Sil. In causes ciuill and religious in matters of the world and of God Tim. What be the originall and first grounds of contention Sil. Pride busie medling couetousnes ambition Tim. What reasons to disswade from contention Sil. First it is a fruite of the flesh Gala. 5. 20. Secondly it is against the will of God Thirdly it is against nature reason and religion Fourthly it bringeth foorth fearefull euents Tim. What may be noted in the other part of this description Sil. That there be two Lords truth and vnrighteousnes now of necessity wee must obey one of these two Lords because there bee no other Lordes but Christ or
good duties if for a lesse he neglect a greater or hinder one duty by another as to be collecting for the poore when they should attend the word or to be busie in reading and priuate prayer when they should bee giuen to publike deuotion Tim. Come nowe vnto the sixth priuiledge spoken of in this Text and tell what instruction is that hee speaketh off what is meant by instructing Sil. That which is by Catechising or such as is fit for children to enter them into religion to make them vnderstand the principles thereof Tim. What is the manner of Catechising instruction Sil. By questions and answere as Math. 16. 13. 14. and Acts 8. 30. 31. Tim. What difference is there betweene Catechising and Preaching Sil. The one is short the other is a more large treatise the one belongs to weake ones and beginners the other to all both strong and weake the one is as the laying of a foundation the other is as a building vp to perfection the one is redeliuered the other not Tim. How ancient is this exercise Sil. Very ancient practised before the lawe by Adam and Abraham vnder the law by Dauid and in the time of the Gospell by Christ and Paul as Heb. 6. 1. 2. Tim. How may it appeare that there is a necessity of this duty Sil. By the commaundement Deut. 6. 7. also 〈◊〉 6 4. Secondly because this kinde of instruction is compared to milke Heb. 5. 13. and to the laying of a foundation Heb. 6. 1. and to the teaching of principles Thirdly also by the resisting which Sathan maketh to this worke Lastly because it is an ordinance of GOD for good to his elect therefore it is necessary being a part of the holy ministry Tim. What is the vtility and profit of Catechising Sil. Manifold first it prepareth vnto ripenesse in knowledge Secondly it enableth to descern truth from errour Thirdly it fitteth for the receiuing of the communion Fourthly it causeth Christians to heare sermons more profitably as by taking in milke children are at length made able to beare strong meat DIAL XIII Verses 19. 20. And perswadest thy selfe that thou art a guide of the blind a light to them that are in darknes a teacher of the ignorant an informer of them that lacke discretion Tim. WHat was the drift of these words Sil. To shew the pride and vanity of the Iew euen of their chiefe Doctours despising all other people as babes and idiots in comparison of themselues yet they had no sparkle of sound knowledge in them but were as bladders full of winde Tim. What especiall things were learned out of this Text Sil. That ignorant and vnlearned persons are likened to the blinde and to such as be in darknesse for whether by blinde we vnderstand Gentiles or vulgar Iewes the vnskilfull be meant here Tim. Whereof did this put vs in minde Sil. Of sundry and very profitable lessons first that ignorant persons see not their way to heauen as blinde men see not their earthly way Secondly as blinde persons are soon misse-led from the way so are ignorant persons soon seduced Thirdly as we pitty the blinde so we are to pitty the ignorant Fourthly as wee are ready to leade the blinde in their way so we must doe towards the ignorant Fiftly as they in darknesse and blindnesle are in danger of taking bodily harme so are the ignorant in danger of spirituall hurt by falling into sinne and errours Sixtly as the blind haue no comfort of the Sunne so neither the ignorant haue any comfort of the word whiles they remayne such Tim. What other things were learned out of this text Sil. That teachers are called guides and lights and should bee able to enlighten others though these meant here by our Apostle were nothing lesse then such in truth whatsoeuer boasts they made delighting to be called masters Rabbi Teachers Scribes Tim. Whereof did this admonish vs Sil. Of diuers good instructions as first that there is a necessity of teachers as of guides in our iourney to heauē Secondly that teachers ought to haue more skill in Gods matters then the hearers as a guide ought more perfectly to know the way then the party guided Thirdly that hearers ought to loue and recompence their teachers as trauailers doe their guides Fourthly that great is the losse of skilfull guides and lights it is as the falling of the light and starres from heauen Lastly that great is their vnthankfulnes which do abuse their teachers as if one shold abuse his good guide Tim. What other things were noted out of this text Sil. The nature of pride in this that it is said thouperswadest thy selfe noting to vs that they were such in opinion rather than trueth being puffed vp with the vaine perswasion of great knowledge Tim. What is that that pride works in men Sil. It causeth them to be puffed vp through the knowledge of Gods word to perswade themselues to be what indeed they are not From whence proceedeth these two things first a contempt of others which haue lesse knowledge Secondly an enuying of such as are praysed aboue them for greater knowledge Tim. What remedy for this disease Sil. First to consider that our knowledge is the guift of God Secondly to thinke that the more knowledge wee haue the more we are indebted to GOD and haue the greater account to make Thirdly that others excell vs as farre both in knowledge and other guifts as we can excell our inferiours in knowledge Fourthly that our knowledge is ioyned with great ignorance and with many other wants and deformities Fistly that the abuse of our knowledge by pride is oftentimes grieuously punished of God with heresie and prophane life Sixtly that when our knowledge is through loue applyed to profite others it is much encreased through Gods blessing Tim. What is meant by the forme of knowledge Silas An appearance and shew of knowledge with an opinion that they could infuse that knowledge into others DIAL XIIII Verse 21 22. Thou therefore that teachest another doest thou not teach thy selfe Thou that sayest steale not doest thou steale Thou that sayest a man should not commit adulterie breakest thou wedlocke Thou abhorrest Idols and yet committest Sacriledge Tim. VVHat is the drift and matter of this Text Silas To shew how the Iewes abused and reproached the name of God by their euill life were very hypocrites their maners not being sutable to their teaching and profession not dooing what they taught others Tim. What be the parts of this Text Sil. Two First a reprehension Secondly a confirmation of it by Scripture Tim. What is the sum of the reprehension Sil. That the Iewes by their sinnes which they did contrary to their knowledge did dishonour God and therefore were far off from true righteousnesse this reprehension is set downe by Interrogation or Question the better to affect them with shame and pierce their dull and hard hearts which would hardly bee mooued with soft and gentle words
of those singular thinges without fruite for the whole Scripture is profitable howsoeuer wee may not become followers of them therein yet there is of euery Scripture a profitable vse perpetuall to all times Tim. What other things may bee noted from this ground of the Apostles application Sil. Sundry things first the sauing vse of the Scriptures is proper to the faithfull for whose good alone they were written a speciallmercy Scondly that diuine trueth must bee prooued by diuine Scripture and not by humaine writers which are of no authority in matters of saluation Thirdly examples serue very well to declare doctrines and commaundements because to thinges hard and doubtfull they bring great light and cleerenesse for that in them the minde and sences both are ioyned together Fourthly we learne that it is a great comfort to the faithfull to bee made equall to Abraham in iustification To Iusticiaries mercenarie hypocrites infidels and prophane vnbeleeuing worldlings it hath no comfort Tim. What is the fourth thing contayned in this text Sil. To lay forth the two principall thinges whereunto faith leaneth to witte the death and resurrection of our Lord. For Christ dead and raysed againe is the thing which a true faith chiefly looketh vnto because there it is that faith findeth matter of support stay to itselfe Therfore the Apostle doth ioyne his death and resurrection togither because neither his death without his life nor his life without his death could any whit auaile vs to Saluation Hence are they in Scripture so often ioyned togither Pagans can beleeue that Christ being a man died but that he is risen they do not Tim. Who deliuered Iesus to death Sil. Iudas for his gayne the Iewes for enuy Christ deliuered himselfe for his Fathers will to obey it God the Father deliuered his Sonne for the redemption of sinners out of his loue as it is written So God loued the world Iohn 3. 18. This last deliuering is meant here Iudas Christ God did one and the same thing but not for one and the same end therefore Iudas a sinner and God iust Tim. What was learned hence Sil. That the whole efficacie of Christs death doth depend vppon Gods free will and decree that is that his death had beene of no force to satisfie Gods wrath had he not dyed according to the determination of his father and this is that which is written Iohn 6. 27. Him hath God the Father sealed Tim. To what death was Christ deliuered Sil. To the most shamefull and cruell death of the Crosse his bare death is not onely here meant but all the miseries of his life yet his death onely is named because it was the perfection of all and that wherein his obedience most appeared the top of his obedience Epilogue of his passion Tim. What necessity was there of his death seeing hee was free from sin in himselfe Sil. Although himselfe had no sinne yet our sinnes were all imputed to him as to our surety and pledge who was to answere for vs. But further this was the end for which hee dyed that ouercomming death in his resurrection he might fully satisfie for our sinnes For death by GODS iust decree was pronounced the wages of sinne Genesis 2. we had surely suffered it eternally if our Mediatour had not both borne and conquered it Tim. What sins doth he speake of Sil. Not our light and common infirmities but our most grieuous and haynous sinnes by the which wee deserue euen to fall from the grace of God if he should deale with vs in rigour not his but our sinnes were the cause of his death which suffied for all hath acquitted vs from them all one and other Tim. What learne we from hence Sil. Very many things first that we are bound to loue Christ who so loued vs. Secondly we must loue our enemes as Christ Iesus dyed for his enemies Thirdly sinne is a most loathsome thing being the cause of Christes accursed d at h Fourthly that there is iust cause of beeing humbled by this consideration that wee were the meanes of Iesus death wee killed the Lord of life Fiftly there is matter of great comfort to heare that our greatest sinnes are done away by his dying for vs for his bloud was of infinite value being the bloud of God Acts 20. Sixtly that all men must be fearefull to offend God who shewed himselfe so mercifull and so iust in the death of his sonne iust to his Son standing in our roome but mercifull to beleeuing sinners whome he absolueth by his Sonnes death let this mercy leade men to reuerence God continually Tim. Did Iesus remayne in death Sil. No surely for then he should be thought to dy for his owne sinnes also to be but a meere man and therefore he rose againe euen to declare that hee was God and absolued from our sinnes and wee in him for in that death could not hold 〈◊〉 in his denne and house that made it manifest that our sinnes which hee tooke vppon him were all discharged that we might be iust through him This is the meaning of that which is here written Hee rose againe for our iustification Christ is sayd to be raised of God who deliuered him and of himselfe for God doth all things by his Son Tim. Is there any other fruit of his resurrection Silas Yea for thereby Christs members are raised vp to newnesse of life Rom. 6 4. Also it is a pledge of our resurrection to life eternall at the last day 1 Corm 15. Lastly in his resurrection he began his exaltation vnto glory and hath giuen sufficient testimony and declaration of our absolution from sinnes out of which sithens he was deliuered as his raising againe did proue for he had stayed in death if but one sinne had beene vnsatisfied for heereby we haue assurance of our iustification in him CHAP. V. DIALOGVE I. Verse 1. Therefore being iustified by faith wee are at peace with God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Timotheus WHat is the connexion or dependance betweene this Chapter and the former Also tell me the argument of this Chapter and of what parts it consisteth Silas Paul hauing taught in the last verse of the former Chapter that mans iustification before God was founded vpon the death and resurrection of our Lord Iesus being by faith apprehended now he continueth the same argument and sheweth what a riuer of benefits do flow out of this Fountaine of free Iustification both to present comfort and life eternall in the heauens Vpon the rehearsall and demonstration of which benefits as the two principall parts this Chapter standeth For first he reckoneth vp the seuerall and singular fruites of the passion and resurrection of our Lord beginning with iustification the foundation of reconciliation peace whence the rest do yssue to ver 5. after followeth the demonstratiue confirmatiō of the same to verse 19. Vnto which is anexed an answer touching a question wherefore the
fortitude and courage And lastly it wil leade them by the hand to another experience of themselues that they are the sonnes of God truly and indeede not in name and profession onelye this last experience is especially meant heere as appeareth by the 5. verse of this chapter Tim. What is the fruite of this Christian experience Sil. Hope which is a sure expectation whereby beleeuing Christians do certainly look to enioy the good things promised especially the blessednesse of eternall life Tim. How is it meant that experience bringeth foorth Hope seeing there is no patience nor experience except first there be an hope of glory How is it that hope doth beget experience and yet experience doth bring forth hope how can hope be both the mother daughter of experience Silas The case standeth thus hope of glorie causeth that afflictions are suffered patiently in this patience Gods Children haue triall and experience not onely of the great might of God strengthning them but also of his great loue in conforming them vnto his own sonne this triall breedeth a better and a larger measure of Hope Tim. By what meanes doe the faithfull attaine this greater Hope Sil. By this Christian consideration that seeing God was present with them to aide them vnder their crosses therefore they will hope he will likewise do it still and in the end make them happy For as an honest poore man who vppon confidence he hath in some rich man borroweth of him money in his neede and being pleasured often and chearefully he gathereth new hope of like fauour in the like necessity so Gods Children being kept and blessed with patience in some great affliction vppon this triall conceiue good hope that God will strengthen and deliuer them Like vnto this is the saying of the Prophet Psal. 9 10. Let him that knoweth the Lord trust in him and teacheth the same instruction with this Text namely that such as by triall in their afflictions know the goodnesse and power of God haue cause by this experience to gather much trust and hope in God for the time to come Tim. What are we learne of this Silas First the maruailous goodnesse of God in raising vp the hearts of his Children vnto a more strong hope by afflictions whereby Sathan seeketh by all means to driue them to dispair Secondly Christians are bound to make this good vse of their experience thereby to gaine much heart and more confidence in Gods goodnesse for heereafter Example we haue in Paul God hath deliuered me saith he and he will 〈◊〉 me 2 Tim. 4 17 18. Also of Christ who by the long experience of his Fathers helpe gathered good hope euen in the very agony of death saying My God my God Math. 27 46. Thirdly the Kingly prophet Dauid as appeareth in Ps. 23 6. and 1 Sam 17 35 36. for we our selues make bolde to trust them whom we haue alwayes found friendly faithfull vnto vs. Tim. But is it not presumption to beare our selues thus bold towards God Sil. No such thing it is presumption to leane vpon our owne strength and wisedome merits and works but to rest stedfastly vpon God his mercy and truth it is the duty of Christian hope and also it is an honour which is due to God for euen by our stedfast hoping in him he is acknowledged to be a God constant in his truth mercies Therefore it is a grieuous sinne in such as by their long experience of Gods kindnesse in blessing and protecting them do not grow in hope of his goodnesse and power for heereafter but waxe rather more faint distrustfull This is a token of a very weake if not of a wicked heart DIAL V. Verse 5. And hope maketh not ashamed because the loue of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is giuen vs. Tim. What doth this text contayne Sil. Two things first a property or effect of hope that it doth not confound or it doeth not make ashamed Secondly a reason or cause why Christian hope of heauenly glory is so certaine as it doth not make the faithfull ashamed because the Holy Ghost perswadeth them that God loueth them in that hee gaue his Sonne to death for them being his enemies here it is that they do most surely hope in God for how may they not firmely looke for all things from him who spared not his Son for them Rom. 8. 32. Tim. What hope is here spoken off Sil. That Hope mentioned before in the second verse which is there called the hope of glory and this is the hope that doth neuer make ashamed because this hope doeth not frustrate or voyd men of the thing hoped for Tim. How many wayes do men become ashamed Sil. Two wayes first vpon the conmitting some sinne Rom. 6 21. Secondly by missing our desires and hopes Tim. How doeth this help to the vnderstanding of our text Sil. Thus they which haue the hope of blessednesse in them shall not misse and forgoe the thing they hoped for and so shall haue no cause of beeing ashamed againe by considering the nature of humaine and ciuill hope which if it doe not attaine the thing hoped for there is shame which is not here in Christian hope because it alwayes is sure to attaine the glory which is hoped and looked for therefore no shame can follow it Tim. Wherefore doe some translate it thus hope confoundeth not Sil. They had regard to that perturbation of minde which goeth after shame for the missing of our hope bringeth shame and shame bringeth trouble or confusion in the mind It is also saide of faith Rom. 10. 11. that it confoundeth not and this is not to bee maruailed at because faith and hope be of so neere kindred hope looking to the performance and faith to the trueth of Gods promise Tim. What is the doctrine of these words hope maketh not ashamed Sil. That the godly are assured to be saued and glorified in heauen for first the hope of the godly shall not make them ashamed but the godly do hope for euerlasting life therefore they are sure and certaine of it otherwise their hope would bring shame Secondly the godly are saide to reioyce vnder the hope of glory but there is no reioysing with godly wisemen but in thinges assured and most certaine Thirdly the godly do stay their hope vppon Gods mercifull and true promises which are constant and cannot deceiue therefore their hope is certaine Fourthly their hope looketh to the power of God by perswasion whereof their hope is nourished Lastly if their hope were not certaine how could they call God their Father which cannot be done in truth where there is not affiance and confidence in his loue Tim. But though the hope of the godly bee certaine for the present yet their great and many sinnes and the changeablenesse of their will may make their perseuerance to the end to be doubtfull Sil. First if hope were at any time vncertain and
knowne Lastly there is a fault about diuersity of time for Paul speakes of sins done afore calling these cauilers did wrest his sayings to sins afterwards that whereas the more our sins are afore regeneration the more aboundantly doeth grace vtter it selfe in doing them away yet hereof it followeth not that therefore one beeing regenerate should sin more impudently and securely Tim. What other things doe ye obserue about this obiection Sylas How easy a thing it is for them which cauill against the truth and forsake the grounds there of to fal into diuers errours therefore we should doe well when we reade or heare Scriptures to ponder them ere by way of reasoning we gather any thing from them Secondly we may aslure our selues that the doctrine of our Church touching iustification by faith without works is a found doctrine because such thinges are obiected by 〈◊〉 against our teaching of this truth as was against Paules teaching the same as that it opneth the window to sin ouerthrowes all care of good works Thirdly that the teachers and their doctrine bee subiect to wicked cauillations and therefore they haue neede of wisedome and patience and their hearers of charity Tim. Thus far of the obiection now let vs heare what answer the Apostle maketh vnto this obiection Sylas Hee doeth not answere the argument but doeth perfourme two things in his answere First he detesteth that consequent that men should continue in sin God forbid wherein hee sheweth how grieuously hee taketh it to heare the Gospell defamed with wicked suspicions and accusations whose zeale herein for the truth deserues to be followed Secondly hee giues reason why beleeuers ought not continue in sin because they are dead to sinne therefore they ought not they cannot liue in sinne it is an argument from contraries as if ye would reason thus of Moses he is not aliue because he is dead or of a man that he heareth not because he is deafe so the regenerate being dead to sin by mortification which is the first part of sanctification it cannot bee that they should liue in the seruice of it for death doeth exstinguish life as all men doe know Tim. What is it to be dead to sin Sylas To haue the power and rage of sinne abated by the Spirit of God this worke of the Spirit is called mortification Tim. What differences between these two speeches dead in sin and dead to sin Sylas The first noteth a person vnregenerate that is yet vnder the power of sin drowned in the lusts and desires of sin The second speech poynteth out a person deliuered from the dominion of sinne and so hee doeth not follow and serue the wicked sinfull lusts of his corrupt nature but is as a dead man to them Look what difference is between one that is vnder the water ouer whelmed in a whirlepoole where he hath no footing and another which is compassed with waters but hath sure footing and his head aboue water such oddes there is betweene one dead in sins beeing plunged deepe into the lusts of the flesh ouer head and eares and another that is dead to sin beeing so compassed with infirmities of sin as there is a power in the Soule ouer them from the sanctifying grace of Christ. Tim. What is it to liue in sin Sylas It is this in the whole course of ones life and all the actions thereof to be obedient to the motions of sin as a mans life is nothing but a continuall act of sinning From al which we learne that seeing euery iustified person is sanctified and dead to sin therefore such as still obey their wicked lusts and licentiously liue in sin in vaine doe they professe themselues to be beleeuers and to haue their sins forgiuen them for such as be dead to sin are no more to be perswaded to loue and practise sin with delight therin then a man naturally dead is to bee mooued to feare or ioy by hauing terrible or pleasant things presented to him and they which are otherwise following the seruice of sin with pleasure in it therein sufficiently testifie that their sins are not forgiuen and that they are vtterly voyde of faith because they lacke sanctification the necessary fruite of faith DIAL II. Verses 3 4. Know ye not that all wee which haue bene baptised into Iesus Christ haue bene baptised into his death Wee are buried then with him by baptisme into his death that like as Christ was raysed vp from the dead by the glory of his Father so we also should walke in newnes of life Tim. VVHat is the purpose and scope of this text Sylas To proue that beleeuers are dead to sin by their communion with Christ and with his death whereof baptisme is a sure and effectuall pledge the reason stands thus all beleeuers are partakers of Christ himselfe baptisme being a testimony of their communion with him But whosoeuer are partakers of Christ are also partakers of his death for mortification of sin as well as of his resurrection for quickning to a new life therefore all beleeuers are dead to sin by the vertue of Christ his death communicated to them by the Holy Ghost and therefore cannot liue in sinne Tim. What doth this text contayn as subiect and substance of it Sylas The doctrine of sanctification which is declared and set foorth three wayes first by the parts secondly by the cause thirdly by the testimony or pledge of it Tim. What be the parts of sanctification Sylas Three first the death or mortification of sinne Secondly the buriall of sin which is the progresse of mortification The third and last part is newnes of life or viuification which is our quickening to a newe and godly life Tim. What do ye call mortification or the death of sin Sylas It is that action or worke of the Spirit whereby the tyranny and power of sin is weakned and taken down that though sin do still liue in the faithfull and tempt them to euill yet it is truely sayd to be dead because in mortification the strength and vigour of sin is so broken and abated as it can euer recouer his old force againe but wasteth dayly till it be consumed as we vse to say of one that cannot recouer his health that hee is a dead man though yet he breathe and liue Tim. Tell vs now which is the second part of Sanctification Silas The buriall of sinne which is a new worke of the spirit whereby sinne already mortified doth still more and more consume and moulder as a dead body wastes in the Graue the buriall of sinne being the proceeding of the death of sinne till it be abolished and brought to nothing as the buriall of the body is the progresse of naturall death Tim. What is the third part of Sanctification Silas It is newnesse of life whereby the soule is quickned and enabled to leade a new life that is to liue godlily and iustly Tim. What is meant heere by the glory of the Father Silas
and manifcst Tim. Seeing you say that he that is in Christ by faith may know that hee is so declare vnto vs by what meanes hee may know it Silas By two meanes First euery true beleeuer hath with his faith a gift and power from Gods Spirite wherby he vnderstandeth and seeth his owne faith as one that sees or feeles or walkes knowes infallibly that he doth these things Besides it is written that by the Spirit we know the things that are giuen vs of God 1. Cor. 2 12. Where-vnto adde the example of the man Marke 9 24. and of Paul 2. Tim. 1 12. excepting the time of some great fals or strong temptations or the instant of a mans new birth when this knowledge of a mans owne faith is not so cleare Secondly euery true beleeuer may know it by the proper and peculiar fruite of a true faith to wit by an holy and vpright conuersation which is called heere the not walking after the flesh but after the Spirite For as the Sunne is perceiued by his heate and light and the goodnes of a tree is knowne by the fruite and a liuing man by his motion speech and actions so a beleeuing Christian is discerned to be such a one by his godly and religious life Therefore are we exhorted by Peter to make our calling electiō sure by good works 2. Pet. 1. 10. For howsoeuer faith go alone in the apprehending Christ and in the matter of our saluation by him yet in our conuersation it is not alone but accompanied with good workes as tokens and signes to make it knowne Therefore seeing a faithfull person cannot bee condemned and perish and euery such an one hath good meanes whereby to know his owne faith Heerevpon it followes necessarily that euery faithfull person may assuredly know he shall be saued Tim. Let vs heare what profit and vse wee are to make of this trueth Silas It doeth conuict the Papists who teach that the faithful in this life can haue no ordinarie certainty of Gods grace and their owne saluation by their faith For thus they write in the 〈◊〉 hemish Testament that it is a most dānable false illusion and presumption to say that a particular man can say that he is assured insallibly that himselfe is iustified and hath certaine knowledge of his owne predestination they allow a certaine knowledge by speciall reuelation and probable perswasion by hope Tim. What harme and inconuenience will follow this incertainty and doubting of saluation Silas The ouerthrow of all Christianity and Religion For except we be sure of grace free loue to vs in Christ for our saluation we cannot loue him nor hope in him nor pray to him nor obey him nor be thankfull to him nor do any other good worke but in hyprocrisie 1. Iohn 4 19. Rom. 5 2 3 10. Secondly this doctrine of incertainty and doubting of saluation shakes the sufficiency and persection of Christs merites destroyes the truth and constancy of Gods promise weakeneth the testimony of the holy Spirite witnessing to the faithfull that they are Gods Children Rom. 8 16. Tim. Yea but they which are now in Christ and doe beleeuē are not sure to perseuere to the end Silas Yes he that is once in Christ shall euer bee in him A member of Sathan may become a member of Christ but a member of Christ can neuer bee the member of Sahtan for none can plucke them from Christ Iohn 10 28. Who also prayeth for our perseuerance Ioh. 17 11. Tim. What other profite is to bee made of this former trueth touching the certainety of Saluation beleeued in Silas In all terrors of Conscience and conflictes with sinne it ministreth no small comfort to the godlye to know and be assured that their saluation standes firme and immooueable Lastly heere are all men admonished howe to iudge and discerne of their owne faith whether they bee true beleeuers and such personnes as shall not bee condemned which may bee done by the second condition heereunto added and annexed to wit if hee walke not after the Flesh but after the Spirite Tim. What is heere meant by walking Silas Liuing or ordering and disposing our life and actions Tim. What is heere meant by Flesh and by Spirit Silas By Flesh is meant that vicious quality of sinne or corruption of Nature with the blinde and wicked motions thereof and by Spirit is meant that qualitie of holinesse created and working in vs by the Spirit of God by a Metanomie of the cause for the effect Tim. Shew vs now who may be sayde to vvalke after the Flesh Silas Not they which haue corruption of nature and sinnefull motions for these be in euerie godly person but they which in their liuing and ordering of their life and conuersation doe follow these sinnefull motions and lustes as their guides and Leaders so thinking speaking and dooing as their owne carnall blinde reason and corrupt affections leadeth directeth and gouerneth them This is to walke after the flesh to set ones course by the counsell and direction of his corrupt reason and wit Tim. May not a man walke after the flesh whose Workes are outwardly good and honest as when hee prayes heares the word giues thankes reproues sin bestowes almes giues counsell c Silas It is very true hee that doth these things and other good things and doth them often and continually yet may be a person that doth walke after the flesh if he do them out of a corrupt carnall minde and vnpure conscience seeking to please himselfe and other men being carried with his owne profite or praise and not seeking Gods glory Finally doing them rather of custom then of conscience and obedience to Gods commandement Tim. Then tell vs how many sortes there bee of them that walke after the flesh Silas Two sorts the first be they which are wicked and open sinners hauing cast off the reuerence of God and shame of man as Drunkards common swearers periured persons adulterers common lyers couetous railers contentious persons and the like The second sort be Hypocrites which cloake their actions and life with appearance and shew of faith obedience of the worde good conscience and the spirit of God yet in trueth they are voide of all these and haue no other leader guide or ground of their life and doings but their own ignorant minds and false hearts being wholly carried with bye and fleshly respects and worldly gaine Tim. Giue vs some plaine markes whereby they that in this sort walke after the flesh may perceiue it in themselues that it is so Sil. First that they vse not to take counsell of Gods word to make it their rule of euery particular action of their life Psal. 119 9. Secondly they neuer looke vpon their patterne and example Christ Iesus how he spake did that they may do the like 1 Iohn 2 5. Iohn 10 27. Thirdly they do not by prayer lift vppe their hearts to God to gouerne them in their counsels speeches and
the sonnes of God which plainely shewes that their deliuerance is another thing then beeing brought to nothing euen a communicating with the sonnes of God in one part of their glory to wit in incorruption and immortality which the creature had by Creation and by naturall instinct still desires to recouer it as verse 22. Fourthly euery creature desireth it owne preseruation naturally and abhorreth destruction therefore it is not a bringing to nothing this deliuerance for the creature woulde neuer desire that that is against nature Fistly Peter in Acts third verse 22. speaketh of restoring not of men onely but of all other things Lastly the same Apostle Peter exhorts vs to liue without blame because there should be new heauens and new earth all this doth argue and strongly prooue that this deliuerance of the creature shall not be by a reduction into nothing but by an alteration into a better estate The restitution of the creature shall be like the resurrection from the dead but what shal be the particular properties workes and vses of all and euery creature after the last iudgement let no man enquire because it is not reuealed in the worde 〈◊〉 heere is place for that which Tertullian calleth a learned ignorance Tim. What profit is to be made of this trueth Silas First it serues to strengthen our faith concerning the certainty of heauenly glory because the naturall appetite of the creature after heauenly glory is not in vain Secondly it warneth the godly not to be troubled with the confusions and disorders of the world because one day God will bring all these thinges into better frame Thirdly it must call our hearts from the imoderate loue of money and other riches because these being no part of the world must be consumed burnt vp by the fire therefore it is a folly to loue them too much Fourthly it should stirre all men to endeuour earnestly newnes of life because if the creature cannot enioy glory vntil it be first cleansed and changed then much lesse we before we be purged and purified from our spots of sinne by continuall repentance Tim. What other Doctrine is to bee raised out of this 21. verse Silas This that the creature is vnder great misery vntil the time of restoring commeth Their misery standeth in two things the first is bondage in that they are driuen to serue wicked men diuels The second is corruption in that many liuing creatures perish for vs dayly and such as are without life shall bee dissolued and changed The reason heereof is first Gods decree appointing it to be so as the euent hath declared for nothing fals out in time which was not decreed before all times The second reason heereof is Mans sin for whose sake and vse as God created the world at first in perfection so when he being Lord of the creature transgressed the world was impaired and subdued to corruption through his disobedience As the primum mobile like a wheele dooth carry about in his motion all the other Spheares so the good euil condition of the creature dependeth vpon men Tim. But was this righteous in God to curse the Creature which sinned not Sil. Yea verily First because the onely will of God is the Soueraigne cause of all righteousnesse Secondly if ciuill Iustice of earthly Princes may without wrong punish traitors themselues and their children also much more rightfully may diuine Iustice for the treason of Adam curse the Creatures which were made for his sake Tim. What vse are we to make of this point Silas First it teacheth patience in afflictions for the godly shoulde not faint in their calamities seeing the creature quietly suffereth misery for their sake Secondly this should moue vs to abhor sin which is such a venomous thing in that it hath infected all creatures aboue vs about vs and beneath vs. Thirdly it must mooue vs to pitty the creature being liable and subiect vnto labour wearinesse yea and death for our sakes Lastly it reproueth the cruelty of such as sport themselues in the mutuall murdering of the creature the death and destruction whereof being a part of the curse for our sins wee may not make it our recreation Gods curse may not be sported with I mean it not of the lawfull sport by hawking hunting c. where the vse of the creature for sustentation of out life is sought after For all creatures giuen to man to vse may for his vse be killed yet with the least cruelty DIAL XXI Verse 22 23. For wee know that euery creature groaneth with vs also and trauaileth together vnto this present time not onely the creature but we also which haue the first fruits of the Spirit euen wee doe sigh in our selues waiting for the Redemption of our body Tim. VVHat doth this Scripture containe Silas It further prooues the certainety of heauenly glory by a double desire the one of Gods creatures verse 22. the other of Gods children verse 23. Tim. In what words is the desire of the Creature set downe Silas In two borrowed speeches the one of groaning together the other of trauailing in paine The former is taken from such as sigh and grone vnder a common burthen which is too heauy for them The other is takē from women which bring forth children with great sorrow and paine Tim. Is it meant that the creatures doe 〈◊〉 together with vs or one together with another Silas Though some take it that their groanes bee on our behalfe and for our cause crauing vengeance vpon the wicked our enemies and desiring liberty for vs yet because this sence doth crosse the beginning of the next verse wher he speaketh of our groning it is rather to be thought that the meaning of the apostle is that the creatures amongst themselues mutually doe with sorrow expect the end of their misery That this is so appeareth first by our owne sence for we doe see that the creatures are vnder vanity and made by the prouidence and commandement of God to serue our necessity Secondly by the word of God which teacheth vs plainely both the originall and end of their misery Tim. What are we to learne now out of this 22. verse Silas Matter of great comfort both for the creature and for so many as are Gods children which consisteth heerein that both their and our vanity and misery shall not onely haue an end but shall end ioyfully for as at the trauaile of a woman in the birth of a child there is ioy when a child is brought into the world so shall the conclusion of our misery be ioyfull and happy both to men and creatures Tim. But haue Gods children no other and surer ground of their deliuery from misery Silas Yes verily for their desire and hope of deliuerance is built vpon two firme grounds laide downe in the 23. verse The first is the sence and feeling of the guifts of the Holy Ghost for they haue the first fruits of
man can do it saue God onely Secondly God knoweth euery mans hearte more perfectly then the man himselfe 1 Cor. 4. 4. many sinnes which are secret to the committer are open to God Psalm 19. 12. Also many good motions are known to God but they are vnknown to him in whome they be Tim. But the Diuell knewe the heart of Cayne Saul and Iudas and egged them to wickednesse where unto hee saw them bent therefore God is not the onely searcher of the heart Silas The Diuell knowes not mens thoughts till they some way bee vttered by signes words writings and actions God knoweth mens thoughts without these meanes Psalm 139. 1. 2. Secondly the Diuell by obseruing of complexions doeth gesse at mens inward dispositions but God needes no such helpes without which hee perfectly knowes what is in man Iohn 2. 25. Thirdly the Diuell knowes but some thoughts at some time but God knows all our thoughts at all times Tim. What is the reason this belongs to God alone to search the heart Sil. Because he alone made the heart Psal. 94. 9. Secondly because hee alone is the iudge of the world therefore he must know all secrets else how can hee righteously reward men according to their workes Eccle. 12. 14. Rom. 2. 6. Thirdly God alone is omniscient or of incomprehensible knowledge 1 Sam. 2. 2. as hee alone is omnipotent able to do what he will Tim. What profit is to be made of this truth that God alone searcheth the heart Silas First it must bridle all men from iudging the inward intentions purposes of men for this is to make our selues to bee God Secondly it must holde vs in charity to thinke the best of men where no euill appeares Thirdly it should prouoke all men to labour to be as vpright in thoughts before God as they are iust in dealings before men Lastly it may comfort such as feare least their praiers come not vp to heauen but through their great weakenesse vanish in the ayre and languish in the middle way nay that cannot bee for seeing GOD searcheth the heart therefore such secrets and requests as are hid from vs yet bee not hid from him for hee knoweth the meaning of his Spirite Tim. What is meant here by the meaning of his Spirit Silas Such prayers and sighes as come from the inspiration of the Spirit Tim. What is meant by Gods knowledge he knowes Silas His loue and good pleasure he delights in them as Rom. 8. 29. 11. 2. Psal. 1. 6. Mat 7. 23. Tim. What is the doctrine from these words Silas Euen this that God taketh pleasure in the weakest prayers of his Saints for he knoweth them as that he heareth them and in fauour granteth them the reason is because they come from the spirite the meaning whereof God knoweth and embraceth as a man doeth whatsoeuer comes from himselfe For as a mother knoweth the cry of her owne Infant though shee seeth it not and though an hundred other children cry and liketh it better than the cloquen t oration and learned speech of some other who is but a stranger to her so God is better pleased with the feeble requests of beleeuers then with the pompous and long petitions of hypocrites DIAL XXV Verse 28. Also wee knowe that all thinges works together for the best vnto them that loue God euen vnto them that are called of his purpose Tim. VV Hat is the drift of this text Silas It teacheth a newe comfort to those whichsuffer afflictions for Iesus Christ it is drawn from the effects which follow afflictions which are not to bee hinderances but rather furtherances of our saluation The argument may be thus framed Christians are bound patiently to beare that which is helpful to their saluation but afflictions are so therfore they must patiently be borne Tim. By what reasons is it proued that afflictions profit vnto saluation such as suffer them Silas First by a reason taken from the generall to the speciall thus All things serue to the saluation of the faithfull therefore afflictions serue also vnto their saluation Secondly this is proued by the testimony of all the godly we know Moreouer in this text be contained the persons to whome these crosses are profitable they are described by two markes first that they are such as loue God secondly they are such as are called of his purpose This pointeth to the high soueraigne cause the which moketh afflictions to bee behoouefull for Gods children namely his eternall counsell the degrees whereof distinctly are laid downe in the verses following Tim. Now come to the words and tell me how we may know that afflictions shall do vs so much good Sil. Three wayes first by scripture Psal. 34. 19. and 50. 15. and 119. Secondly by experience of Abraham Noah and the rest of the godly who all took great good by their afflictions And lastly by reason because the faithfull being Gods childeren therefore afflictions must not destroy them but onely serue for chastisements to reforme them Tim. What is the instruction that wee are to take from hence Silas This that all the godly are assured that the end of all their troubles and crosses shall bee happinesse it is not so with the wicked who cannot know that the end of their aduersity or prosperity shall be good and therefore they haue neither sound ioy in the one nor constant patience in the other whereas the godly bee cheerefull vnder the crosse because they doubt not but that it will be peace at the last This trueth may be set forth by the comparison of a comedy of which the spectators knowe that the end will be ioyful though the beginning be troublesome and such is the estate of true Christians Also by the comparison of a tragedy of which the beholders are sure that though the beginning be pleasant yet the end will bee lamentable and such is the estate of the vngodly Tim. What vse of this poynt Silas First it confutes the Papists who teach that men cannot be sure to bee saued because they cannot bee sure that they shall stand fast in afflictions Secondly it serues to comfort the faithful and make their afflictions the more easie seeing it is certaine vnto them that not onely no harme but much good will come to them in the end And it is great reason that men should beare that quietly which they know will be for their own good at last as Merchants abide great hazzard so doe Souldiours too vpon an vnassured commodity and victory Tim. What is meant by all things Silas It containes whatsoeuer may happen to a man prosperously or otherwise whatsoeuer is within him or without him either good or euill all Angels all Diuels all men wicked and righteous al gifts of body and mind al defects of both shall returne vnto the good of Gods Children yea Augustine stretcheth it so far as to the very sins of the godly
taken without stammering or doubting and that Faith which leaneth vpon it must needes bee verie firme and strong against all assaults of Satan whose fierie darts of doubtes and despaire are quenched by the Faith of Gods word If in marriage for wedlocke duties and comforts we stay vppon our mutuall promises how much more may the spouse of Christ euen euery faithfull soule quietlie and firmely rest vpon the promise of our husband Christ for all good thinges present and future both nowe and in Heauen Tim. What profit is to be 〈◊〉 of this second instruction Sil. First heereby is ouerthrowne the Popish doctrine which alloweth vnto iustifying Faith no more but probable or coniecturall knowledge leauing mens consciences full of feare and doubting of their owne blessednesse wherein vpon the matter they disable the word of Gods promise and make his word false For to teach that men ought still to sticke in doubts of their own saluation though God haue promised it by Christ to such as beleeue in him what is this else but to play the Butchers of mens Consciences which are euen kept vppon the racke by Romish Diuinity and also to charge the word of God with forgerie and falshoode as if hee did not meane in good earnest Secondly heereby wee see how slanderous they are which accuse the affiaunce and confidence of Faith to be a wicked and damnable presuming sithence it is dutie and Christian submission to relye vndoubtedly vpon the worde of God and not godlesse presumption which rather they are to bee 〈◊〉 with who haue all or most of their trust in their owne innocencie and good workes and not alone in the truth and mercy of God Thirdly heere is matter of great comfort vnto all faithfull soules who in all temptations stirring them to doubt of their owne happinesse they may enfree thēselues from all terror by hauing recourse to the word and promise of God as Dauid did I had perished in my trouble sayth hee but for thy promise thy worde hath comforted 〈◊〉 For as the palsie man in the Gospell hauing Christs word be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiuen thee was thereby cheered aud made both quiet and ioyfull So the promise of the Gospell being applyed to a trembling Soule will fortifie and stablish it in tranquility and peace This Sathan knoweth and therefore his practise is to hide the promises of grace from troubled consciences or else to suggest vnto them this as though that such promises were not made to them or did not belong vnto them Tim. What is the third doctrine out of this 8. verse Silas That the preaching of the Apostles was all one with the Gospel which was written for that word of faith first written by Moses and afterwards by Paul to the Romanes is that selfe same word which Paul and other Apostles preached Therefore it is false which the Manichees and Papists auouch that the Apostles taught other things then that they then wrote that hence they may haue power to ioyne thereunto their Apostolicall traditions vnwritten which errour of theirs must bee reiected as Apocriphall and false If they bee not confonant to the Scriptures they came not from the Apostles but are counterfet Tim. Let vs proceede vnto the 9. verse and tell vs what is meant by confession Silas An open and plaine profession that Iesus who is Lord of all is our Lord also for that hee is Lord the Diuils know and acknowledge Therefore Christians must goe further and beleeue it with affiance Tim. In what respects is Iesus our Lord Silas Both by right of Creation and power ouer vs and also by grace of redemption hauing as well ransomed vs to bee his owne peculiar people as created and gouerned vs. Tim. What is it to beleeue in thine heart Silas It is not onely in our mindes to see and assent vnto the trueth of the history of Christ which euen wicked men and hypocrites yea vncleane spirits doe but to embrace in our hearts will and affections with holy confidence the benefites of Christ his death and resurrection euen reconciliation with God remission of sinnes righteousnes and life eternall Tim. Why is confession set before faith which is the cause and roote of confession Psalme 116. 10. I beleeued therefore did I speake Silas First because Moses did in this order propound them as in the 8. verse is cited Secondly we cannot discerne other mens faith or other men our faith but by our outward profession of it before men it is declared by our confession and action Tim. Why 〈◊〉 hee onely name Christes resurrection seeing faith respects his birth life death and all which Christ did and suffered Sil. First because the faith of the resurrection of Christ doth distingush Christians from Pagans and Infidels who do easily accord to beleeue that the man Christ was born liued and dyed but they deny his resurrection as a thing which exceedeth compasse and reach of reason the Philosophers discerned it not but derided it rather saying What new doctrine is this Acts 18. Secondly because all that Christ did and suffered had profited vs little vnlesse hee had risen againe wherein hee obtained a perfect victory ouer sinne death hell and damnation for all the elect Lastly the article of the resurrection presupposeth al the rest and knitteth together as a linke both antecedents and consequents his incarnation life and death which went before and his ascension sitting at his Fathers right hand and his intercession which followes after his rising Vnder which then by a Synecdoche all the other passions and actions of Christ be contayned Tim. What doctrine ariseth out of this 9. verse Silas Onely this one to wit the facility and easinesse of that righteousnesse which is by faith in Christ 〈◊〉 vnto our righteousnesse before God and saluation in heauen there is no more difficult and hard thing exacted of vs but with the heart to beleeue and with the mouth to confesse Christ and by this meanes Christ will be neere to vs both in possibility and efficacy in possibilitie because it is a thing possible which may bee that elect sinners shall haue grace to beleeue especially God hauing ordained them vnto Faith Actes 13 48. but it is vtterly vnpossible that they should keepe the whole Law perfectly Gods decree and mans corruption being against it And secondly hee is neere and easie to vs in efficacie because through the holy Spirit hee is made to dwell in a faithfull heart really and actually and his righteousnesse as a robe or garment is put vppon them to couer their sinnes and vnrighteousnesse Tim. Yea but to beleeue in Christ is no lesse impossible hard then to fulfill the Law for we haue no more power to doe the one then the other Silas It is true but this facility is to be vnderstoode not in regarde of the beginning and efficient cause of Faith which is meerely Gods gifte without
our selues he working in vs both will and deede Ephes. 2 10. Phil. 2 13. but this righteousnesse of Faith is easier in regard of the manner of the worke because the Law requireth the ful obedience thereof to be performed by our selues which cannot be in this infirmity Ro. 8 3. But Faith referreth and sendeth vs to Christ for the perfourming of the Law and in regard of the manner of the worke it is farre easier to beleeue the Law to bee done by another who was able to fulfill it and was sent for that end then to do it our selues Also much easier it is to beleeue and giue assent to a true promise then to keep strictly without failing all Gods commandements If a King should say to a Subiect Conquer mee such a kingdome and I will giue thee my daughter with large dignities and liuings were it not harder then if he should say doe but trust my word and I will do all this for thee In these considerations one saith that saluation hath but a short cut it requireth no external labour but inward beleefe and Caluin saith that by the operation of the Spirit thou maiest easily beleeue with thy heart and confesse with thy mouth And Lyranus saith heere is shewed the facility of the righteousnesse of faith And Faius thinketh this saying of being neere in the heart and mouth to be a Prouerbiall speech commending the readines of that which is in the heart and mouth Tim. What vse heereof Silas It ministreth comfort to Christians to consider that the meanes of passage to heauen be not vnconquerable and vnable to bee attained Secondly it declares how vncomfortable Popish Doctrine is which excludes and shuts out all hope of being saued by tying saluation vnto an impossible condition of fulfilling the Lawe Thirdly it stirreth vs vp to the loue and praise of Gods goodnesse in appointing so easie a condition and giuing vs power to keepe it For Faith is the gift of God DIAL VIII Verse 10 11 12. For with the heart man beleeueth vnto righteousnesse and with the mouth man confesseth vnto saluation For the Scripture saith c. Tim. WHat doth this Text containe Silas First a repetition and confirmation also of that which was saide touching saluation the effect of righteousnesse by faith togither with an explication of the persons to whom righteousnesse and saluation belongeth The thing here repeated is that a Christian that beleeueth in Christ dead and raised to life and confesseth this his faith before men shall certainly and without doubt be saued Wherefore let vs obserue these things that faith and confession are coupled together as the tree and her fruite and as the Mother and the Daughter Also they be set soorth by their proper subiect or seats whereto they cleaue and wherein they sticke and rest Faith in the heart and confession in the mouth Lastly not the parts but the degrees of saluation be pointed at The first degree or beginning of it is righteousnesse to wit absolution from sinne by free pardon through the merit of Christ his death and being accounted iust before God by the worthinesse of his obedience to the Morall Law The second degree is perfection of saluation in heauen all the proceedings thereunto from Iustification till Glorification in Heauen heere called saluation Tim. Whence is the Confirmation of this proposition fetched Sil. From authority of Scripture as of Esay 28 16 v. 11. and Ioel 2 32. verse 13. Tim. What dooth Paul in the explication of the persons which shall be partaker of this saluation Silas First hee noteth them by an vniuersall particle Whosoeuer without difference of Nation or sex or age or condition Secondly he particularly nameth both Iew and Gentile which in respect 1. of saluation 2. and the neede thereof by sinne 3. with the meanes thereof by Faith are equal as he proueth by two Reasons one from the vnity of Gods effence who is the same Creator and Sauiour of all the elect Iew and Gentile Secondly from the immensiuenesse of Gods mercie which is so large as that it can suffice all sortes of people which trust in his Sonne and cal vpon him verse 12 13. Therefore by calling of the Gentiles nought was taken from the Iewes these were no whit endamaged by sauing them God is sufficient for both Tim. Come we now to the Interpretation and tell vs what is meant by Man As also what is meant by beleeuing Sil. By man is meant euery true Christian man or woman And by beleeuing is meant not onely to assent vnto the Doctrine of Christ but with confidence and sure affiance to embrace it Tim. What is meant by the Heart Silas The soule with all the faculties thereof but especially the will and affections which are therefore in phrase of Scripture tearmed the heart because the soule keepeth her chiefest residence in that fleshie part of man called the heart sitting and shewing her selfe there as it were in her chaire of estate Tim. What is it With the heart to beleeue to Righteousnesse Silas It is the same with that phrase Ro. 4 5. to haue Faith imputed for righteousnesse or with that Ro. 9 30 to attain to the righteousnes of faith or Gal. 3 14 24. To receyue righteousnesse or to bee made righteous by Faith Tim. What Lessons are wee to learne from the first part of the tenth verse Silas First that vnto righteousnesse before GOD that is to remission of sinnes and perfect Iustice by Christs death and resurrection there needes on mans part nothing but a true and liuely Faith Indeede good workes are witnesses to testifie the truth of this faith before men and vnto our selues but when the speech is of getting and receiuing righteousnesse euen pardon of our sinnes and eternall life by Christe workes are cleane to be shut out and excluded as hauing no power to enable vs to embrace Christ and this is the controuersie between vs and the Church of Rome that whereas they do part the instrumentall cause of our righteousnesse betweene Faith and workes wee attribute it vnto Faith onely according to the doctrine of the Scripture Rom. 3 27 28 29 30. Gal. 2 16. and of the Fathers agreeable thereunto The beleeuing man shall bee iustified in Faith onely Ambrose on 1 Cor. 1. Whosoeuer trusteth in Faith onely is blessed Hierom Chap. 3. vnto the Gal. By Faith onely shall Christ saue the offenders of the Lawe Chrysostome on the Ephesians To these might bee ioyned Basil Theophylact Hilarie Cyprian many more which teach the same truth as we now do Tim. What vse of this Doctrine Silas First it instructeth vs to know how necessarie Faith is for where this is there righteousnesse is and there is no righteousnesse where Faith is wanting Secondly it conuieteth the Papists of greeuous slaunders in that they charge Luther to be the first inuenter of this Doctrine touching righteousnes by Faith alone Whereas
before him the learned Doctors of the Church yea Apostles Prophets and Christ himselfe had deliuered this truth to the Church euen from the beginning How then can it bee an heresie in Luther to teach thus but it must be an heresie also in the Pen-men of the holy Ghost to write thus Tim. What is the next Doctrine Silas That the seate and subiect of Faith is not the minde alone but the will also which is more speciallie signified by heart Acts 8 37. Ephes. 3 17. For this confidence is at least a necessary companion of faith but confidence hath place in the heart therefore Faith lodgeth there also Tim. What vse are we to make of this Doctrine Sil. It serueth to teach that vnto a liuely Faith there is required a double worke of the Spirit First to enlighten the minde that it may certainly see and assent to the things written in the Gospell Of this first worke it is that Faith is often in Scripture tearmed Vnderstanding and knowledge and seeing The other worke is to bow the affections that they embrace and fully rest in that which the minde hath fully assented vnto From this worke Faith in Scripture is tearmed trust confidence and affiance Secondly this Doctrine serueth to confute the Romanists which place Faith in the supernal part of the soule onely and will haue it to bee nothing else but the assent of the minde to the will of God whereas it is not written heere that with the vnderstanding but with the heart man beleeueth to righteousnesse There may indeede bee worthy knowledge and notable assent in the vnderstanding part but it is the heart which beleeueth to iustification Thirdly here is an exhortation to all Christians as they will bee assured of this iustifying faith not to rest content with a naked knowledge of the Gospell or that in their mindes they haue yeelded agreement and consent to the trueth of it but neerely to looke vnto this whether faith haue taken holde of their will and affections to make them obediēt to their illuminated vnderstanding with some measure of peace and ioy and to resist all contrary thoughts and motions with a loathing of them being ready to make confession of Christ in our mouthes Tim. What is signified here by confession of the mouth Silas Not onely a plaine and cleere acknowledgement of Christ to be the onely Lord and Sauiour of mankinde and of all that doctrine which concerns his office natures persons and benefits but the calling vpon his name with trust in him as in our owne Lord and Sauiour as it is expounded in the 13. verse following wherein vocation is put for consession Tim. Wherefore is this worke of confession added vnto fayth Silas To distinguish and put difference betweene a dead and a liuely faith by a peculiar fruite of it Tim. But why is this work named as the witnes of faith rather than any other worke Sil. First because it is easily gathered out of the words of Moses before alledged in verse 8. where Moses spake of the mouth and ioyned it with the heart Secondly because it is a principall token of a true faith when occasion serueth sincerely to confesse the doctrine of Christ and to call vpon his name faithfully which no hypocrites doe for they draw neere with their lippes onely Math. 15. 8. but this consession which is a sure marke of faith comes from faith as from the root of it Thirdly because great promises are made to this duty of confession Math. 10. 32. and heere saluation is promised to such as confesse Christ out of a liuely faith Tim. But in what sort and sence is saluation annexed to confession Silas Not as the effect to his cause but as the way to the end for confession is but the way onely by which iustified persons doe come to their perfect blessednes in heauen which is here signified by saluation as the highest degree of our happines Seeing righteousnes is attributed to faith and saluation necessarily follows righteousnes therfore faith is the onely instrumentall cause whereby we be iustified and saued and not confession which is but the path onely wherein the godly are to walke to heauen and a 〈◊〉 of a sauing faith 10 as vaine is that Popish note vppon these wordes that faith without workes iustifieth not it iustifieth without workes but it is not in a Christian without workes What doctrines are taught from this latter part Silas That a liuely faith bringeth forth good workes and namely the consession and inuocation of Christ which where they are there is true faith and there is no true faith where they bee not as there is no fire where there is no light nor heat for it is the nature of faith to witnesse it selfe vppon occasion as fire sendeth forth heate Therefore are wee wronged by the Papistes who accuse vs to teach a weake and a dead faith voyde of workes and Christians are to be warned to get such a faith as can shew it selfe by workes and such workes as proceede from faith for wee teach that true faith workes by loue and all works which come not of faith to be sinnes Secondly we learne that confession is a worke necessary to saluation and is to bee done of all those that will be saued necessarily as a duty and a thing commanded vs of God but not as a meritorious cause Tim. But what things belong vnto Christian confession Silas First knowledge to see the trueth concerning Christ. Secondly wisedome to espy the due occasion of confession to wit when God may bee glorified and our neighbour edified Thirdly boldnesse to doe it freely without feare of man Fourthly sincerity without dissimulation and guile Fiftly reuerence as in Gods quarrell and presence Sixtly meekenesse 1. Pet. 3 15. Such as bee drowned in ignorance of the Gospell and vnbeleefe also rash presumptious and vaine-glorious persons timorous and fearefull ones hypocrites and false-hearted men and women proud and mallepart people be not fit and meeke to performe this duty of confessing Christ. DIAL IX Verses 11 12 13. For the Scripture saith whosoeuer beleeueth in him shall not be ashamed For there is no difference betweene the lew and the Grecian for he that is Lord ouer all is rich vnto all that call vpon him For whosoeuer shall call vpon the name of the Lord shall be saued Tim. VVHat is the drift of this Text Silas To proue by authority of Scripture what he had said before in verse 10. where he ascribed righteousnesse vnto faith as to a cause and saluation to confession as to a way which leadeth vnto saluation The argument standeth thus It is not possible that the scripture should be broken and vntrue but the Scripture promiscth righteousnesse and saluation vnto such as truely beleeue and call upon Christ. This is proued by these three verses of our Text touching faith verse 11. touching confession in
and to become like a tottring wall or broken hedge for lacke of good lawes wise Gouernours the power of the sword c. For proofe heere of see Esay 2 2 3 4 5 6. c. which should preuaile with vs to moue vs to be thankefull to God both in word deed for that little strength that is left vnto vs least if we continue in our vnthankfulnesse and sinfull course we doe worthily thereby prouoke God to bowe our backs and strike through our loynes and strip vs of all our strength to become not only feeble stooping and crooked but fall downe flat till our enemies tread trample vpon vs as on myre and dirt in the streete If God did thus vnto Ierusalem and the Iewes which were great among the Nations euen his beloued people whom he had honoured with fame and renowne aboue all people yet if hee spared not them for their transgressions but made their strength to fall so as they were not able to rise vp Lamen 1 14 15 then iudge ye what cause we haue to feare the like iudgement whose sinnes are so much the more greeuous then theirs by how much the mercies that we haue abused are more and greater then were the mercies bestowed on them Wherefore let vs speedily repent and turne to the Lord with all our hearts earnestly praying him to heale our Land which is sore shaken by the losse of very many worthies in all professions and degrees of men amongst vs let vs beware least we giue God cause to take vp that complaint against vs which sometimes hee tooke vp against the Iewes by his Prophet Esay Chap. 57 verse 1. The righteous perisheth and no man considereth in his heart Tim. We haue heard hit her to of the three 〈◊〉 of punishments wished or prayed for against the Iewes let vs heare what is to be saide touching the equity of these punishments how inst they be Silas That is pointed at and noted in the worde recompence in the end of the ninth verse whereby is signified a retaliation and requitall to the wicked Iewes that as they had taken pleasure to afflict the righteous and to make all things greeuous vnto them and especially had perfecuted Iesus the sonne of God giuing him vinigar to drinke and gall to eate to vexe him with all So it was but rightfull that God mete home the Iewes with their owne measure paying them with their owne coyne and for a recompence to them should strike them with blindnes for sinning against their knowledge and should make their most pleasant and prosperous things to proue bitter and dangerous and finally should turne their greatest strength to weakenesse and feeblenes because they had abused it vnto wickednesse Tim. What instructions are we to gather from hence Silas First that it is a righteous thing with God not onely to punish sinners but to proportionate the paine and make it like vnto the sinne as it were eye for eye tooth for tooth bloud for bloud spoyling for spoyling iudging for iudging c. Touching which thing looke more vpon Rom. 1 25 26. This ought to awake sinners which haue iniuried eyther God or man that by hearty repentance they may preuent and turne away Gods righteous recompence Secondly from this word recompence wee learne another lesson namely that blindnes and ignorance from God hath not the nature of sinne simply and onely but of a recompence when it is inflicted as a due requitall for former sinnes and in this respect sinne is from God as author to wit as sinne hath the condition of a recompence but not as it hath the quality of a trangressiō for so it proceeds from Sathans suggestion and mans corruption In sinnes mans euill worke in offending God by breaking the law must bee seuered in consideration and truth both from the good worke of God and his iudgement by punishing offences righteously which if Papists would confesse for they cannot but see it they would cease to slander vs Protestants by speaking and writing that wee make God the proper cause of sinne as it is sinne whereas wee teach that in sinne beside the anomia which is from man himselfe there is also antimisthia which is the proper worke of God Tim. We haue seene what is to be learned from the parts of this text is there not some thing to bee learned from it beeing wholly considered Silas Yes and namely thus much that sometime and in some causes and from some persons imprecations and curses be lawfull Tim. In whom be imprecations lawfull and towards whom in what causes things in what manner Silas First it is lawful in God himselfe the soueraigne and righteous author of blessings and curses Leuit. 26. Deut. 28. For God being himselfe most holy can neyther blesse nor cursse no otherwise but holily Also in the Prophets and Apostles which had the Spirit of Prophesie a warrant by a speciall calling to curse others it was in thē absolutely lawful so to do Thirdly in publicke persons as Magistrates Ministers and Parents it is lawfull conditionally that the cause of their curse be not priuate but publickly to wit Gods glory 2. that their affections be not partiall nor maliciously distempered with desire of reuenge Now for the persons towards whom imprecation must bee vsed they must bee such as shew themselues to bee desperate and professed enemies to God and godlinesse such as were Ananias Simon Magus Elmas the Sorcerer the Traitor Iudas the cruell persecuting Iewes Thirdly curses must bee vsed onely in such matters as do concern God or his church And fourthly not in those thinges that are eternall for no man without peculiar reuelation may pray for the damnation of any man but in things which are temporall so farre forth onely as they may tend to the saluation of the parties Finally as touching the manner curses are to be wished no otherwise then with this affection of the conuersion of others expressed or vnderstood if they belong vnto God or otherwise that they may be confounded Tim. Whereunto may the knowledge of this doctrine helpe and further Christians Silas First to reproue such as rashly out of spleene or choller do banne or curse either themselues or others their children or neighbours and secondly to warne them to take care of repenting for that which is past hence-forward to take heede how they rush thorough indiscretion or impatiency into such wicked imprecations least besides the taking of the sacred name of GOD in vaine contrary to the third commandement they do puli downe vppon their owne heads these verie curses which they haue pronounced with their owne mouths as it is threatned in that verie precept and as it hapned vnto one Charles Duke of Bourbon who was slaine with a Gun-shot in the assault of a Towne as hee had wished vnto himselfe and vnto one Henry an Earle of Schuartzbourgh who miserably perished being drowned in a Iakes according to his vsuall imprecations and vnto
be feared for good workes but for euill Wilt thou then be without feare of the power Do well so shalt thou haue praise of the same For he is the Minister of God for thy good Tim. VVHat is the purpose of the Apostle in this text Silas To perswade subiection to Magistrates which he doth by a new Argument 〈◊〉 fine from a twofold end of powers which were ordained of GOD First for the punishment of the euill or to restrain wickednesse Secondly for the praise of wel-dooers or to cherish and protect vertuous and obedient subiects Because he had threatned iudgement to such as disobey he therefore first beginneth with the former end and then proceeds vnto the latter which hee amplifieth being of more waight then the other whereunto hee returneth in the end of the fourth verse Tim. Expound the words and tell vs what is meant by Rulers and by good and euill workes Silas Rulers or Princes and chief Leaders Archontes is the same with powers which name is giuen to Magistrates to denote their might and this of Princes to signifie their preheminence and excellency aboue others which are vnder them and as before he meant all high low middle priuate and publicke so heere like wise by good and euill workes are vnderstood not works which bee such Theologically as a Diuine woulde speake of workes who calleth them good which being commanded of God are done in the faith of Christs name vnto Gods glory and them euill which come not of Faith or be forbidden in the Law But ciuilly good or euill that is vertuous or vicious actions as be enioyned or prohited by the good Lawes of that kingdome or City where wee liue Workes done according or against humane Lawes either naturall and common to all or nationall and positiue bee heere named good and euill workes Tim. How become Rulers a terror feare to euill workes Silas In respect of punishment whereof there be diuers kindes first in words rebukes or threatnings Secondly in deeds as stockes imprisonment banishment pecuniary mulcts and corporall paines as whipping losse of members and limme of good and life all which be painefull and dreadfull striking a terror both into good men to hold them in the course of obedience and into euill men to draw them from disobedience Tim. But how can any feare be to workes eyther good or euill Silas True euill workes doe not feare but by reason of euill workes men are caused to feare or terror belongs to men which doe euill workes by a metonymie are heere put for the workers or doers of them Tim. What doctrines doe arise from the wordes thus opened Silas First that such as liue well and obediently to good lawes neede not to bee affraide of Magistrates or of his punishments threatned by lawes The truth is good men must still feare Gouernors and lawes with a reuerent feare such as children haue towards their parents Prouer. 24 21. Rom. 12 7. But a perplexed and seruile terror pertaineth not to them this is the benefit of their obedience to good lawes to enfree their mindes from such a feare as malefactors haue whose feare is a continuall tormentor and to make Rulers not terrible but amiable to them yet feare of punishment is not profitable for them Secondly we learne that if vile persons be punished for their disobedience and disorder they haue cause to blame themselues and their ill doings but may not accuse the Ruler of the harmes which they suffer for all men by light of nature doe know that to euill deeds euill and paine is due and that society of men could not continue where rewards be not giuen after mens deserts Therefore if they runne into known crimes and haue demerited punishment for disobedient resisting Rulers they must thanke themselues and acquite the Ruler who doth but that which is equall and iust to maintaine lawes and publike peace and to bridle the enemies thereof Thirdly hence Magistrates may learne the bounds of their power which is not indifferently to terrifie all good and euill or to winke at offendors and afflict well-doers For this is the abuse of power and they which doe thus shall purchase iudgement to themselues from the hand of supreame power who is terrible euen to earthly powers if they abuse their office by beating the iust or bearing with the vniust For it is equally abhomination vnto God to condemne an innocent or to absolue and iustifie the wicked to whom the Ruler must bee terrible Hence it followes that sithence Rulers must suppresse euill dooers they must be men of courage because euill men with their malice haue both might and friends oftentimes Hence they are called oppressors Psalme 72. 3. and lob 29 17. Also that in Rulers there is required diligence in searching and iudgement in discerning of mens persons and causes which come before them to be able to know who doe well according to right and law and who doe ill contrary to equity and honesty and what penalties belong to seuerall offences which are brought to their hearing and examination Tim. But if the Rulers be fearefull and breed terror will not this cause them to bee hated and abhorred for men hate whom they feare and what is such an enemy to vertue as feare or such a spurre to wickednesse Silas The Apostle meeteth with this exception and giueth a good remedy to expell terror of Rulers out of al mens minds namely a study and care of doing such works as are agreeable to good lawes established such shall bee so farre off from terror or expecting punishment from Rulers as contrarily they shall receiue praise from them Tim. What is heere to be vnderstood by praises Silas Euen all that good which from Magistrates is due vnto honest subiects for that is called good in the next verse which is heere called praise also praise being opposed to terror and reuenge shewes that vnder it is comprehended freedome from condemnation and punishment absolution from crimes falsely obiected approbation of their obedience with some publike reward and recompence for their encouragement and for exciting others to duty moreouer defence and protection quiet possession of life goods estate and finally praise and commendation all this is contained vnder praise and is the fruite of subiection Tim. But it often happens that obedient good subiects doe misse of all these and meete with the quite contrary Silas That is a fault not in the powers but in the persons which abuse the power againe Paul sets downe not alwaies what is done by Rulers but what should be done Lastly if well doers misse praise from men they are sure to haue it from God and euill Rulers when they doe not praise good men causally by giuing them their due commendations yet they do it occasionly whilst by punishing good men vniustly they minister occasion to them to shew forth their patience to their praise and glory Power to hurt is giuen to diuels and wicked men that the
of speech one selfe-same word vsed in seuerall sences First in il part for condemning others vncharitably then in good part for examining our selues and pondering our owne actions so to order them as no offence come thereby wee may not iudge others but we may ought to iudge our selues these be not contrary 1 Cor. 11 31. Tim. What is our Docrine from these words thus expounded Silas That after our conscience is by good reason conuicted of any sinne we must striue to leaue it and vse it no more so Paul speakes heere Let vs no more though ye haue beene bold to iudge and condemne one another for these indifferent matters yet now that ye haue heard so good and manifest reasons against it from the dignity of your Lord and his office of Iudgeship hencefoorth do it not The reasons heereof are first when wee liue in sinne after knowledge it is the greater sinne Iohn 9 41. Iames 4 17. Secondly it draweth greater wrath and punishment both temporall and eternall Prou. 1 29. Luke 12 47. He that knowes his Maisters will and doth it not shal be beaten with many stripes God bare with the Israelites in their ignorance but when they had sinned stubbornly after sundry warnings by his straunge workes hee sent strange plagues amongst them 1 Cor. 10 5 6 7. The examples of Gods iudgements against the Old world Sodomites 〈◊〉 the sonnes of Ely against Corazin and Bethsaida all of them warned by Noah or 〈◊〉 by Moses by Ely and by Christ doe confirme this truth that it is daungerous to continue in sinne after warning Thirdly sinnes against knowledge are the high-way to the sinne against the holy-Ghost for though euerie sinne after knowledge bee not that vnpardonable sinne which hath knowledge ioyned with malicious hatred of the knowne trueth of saluation by Christ yet it is a step and degree thereunto Tim. What is the vse of this instruction Silas To exhort euery one to beware chiefely of such sinnes whereof he hath beene admonished and clearely conuicted For if our loue to our bodies bee such that wee carefully auoide such things as we know are wont to hurt them how much more ought we to shew foorth this care for our soules For if ciuill Iustices Maisters Parents will more seuerely strike where their warnings be despised let not vs thinke that God will forget such as neglect his admonitions but will wound them deeply first or last that goe on in knowne sinnes as himselfe threatneth Leuit 26 21 24. I will walke stubbornly against them that walke stubbornly against me Oh that this in time might bee considered of such as haue beene often and many wayes aduertised of their faults yet are so farre giuen ouer as they vse no endeauour for the forsaking of them do not enter into any care or course of amendment Tim. What is heere meant by a stumbling blocke and occasion of falling Silas They be speeches borrowed from earthly things and translated to spirituall as from high-wayes wherein stones and blockes do lye to make men stumble and fall or from snares and nettes of Powlers and hunters they signifie euery thing that hindereth in the course of godlines either quite turning vs away from religion which is meant heere by falling or causing vs to goe on lesse chearefully which is called heere stumbling blocke and when the Apostle saith put not the meaning is that we giue no manner of offence neyther small nor great to our Brother either to make him flye whollye from Christ or to trouble him neuer so little For this place speakes not of a passine offence which is taken where none is giuen as the Pharisies and Scribes which were offended with the doctrine and myracles of Christ Mat. 15 12. and as worldlinges now are grieued with Magistrates Ministers and others for doing their duties for their zeale against vices which beeing good things ought not to scandalize any and do offend none but ill mindes But of an actiue scandal which is an offence giuen when some euill is not secretly either spoken or done but openly contrary to Gods Lawe or when our liberty in things indifferent is vnseasonably vsed by the which others are made the worse lesse godly and honest For as a stone or block so an offence must appeare An horrible crime whilst it is vnknowne it is an offence to God hurts the committer but no offence to others to hurt them till it be manifested Tim. What is our Doctrine from this place Silas That all Christians must carefully looke to this that they neuer be a iust occasion of sinning to any man either by words or deedes to hurt the saluation of any or by building them vp vnto sinne by our euill examples in our sayings or dooings For first this is against the commandement of God 1 Cor. 8 9 10. and 10 32. Secondly it puls downe heauy iudgements on our selues Math. 18 8. Better a Milstone were hanged about our necke c. The world is full of examples of such as haue beene grieuously plagued of God for being authors and occasions of sinne to others as Gen. 3. the History of Adam and Eues fall the Serpent punished more then Eue and Eue more then Adam Iezabel more plagued then the Iudges and false witnesses which accused and killed Naboth Ieroboam for making the Israelites to sin more punished then the Israelites themselues Thirdly it is against the example of the blessed Apostle 1. Cor. 8 13. Fourthly by offence giuen wee breake the rule of charity which shunneth the greeuances hurt of euery man and studieth how to foster help and strengthen euen the weakest As in a naturall body the stronger mēber succoureth the feebler or as a Phisition or Chirurgion tenderly handleth a diseased or pained party so loue is maruailous chary not to trouble or doe the least harme to the soule of any Christian brother Rom. 14 15. Fiftly by offence giuing wee sinne against our neighbour while wee beate nay wound his weake conscience which is great cruelty procuring him by our example to allow or doe some thing whereof in his conscience hee was not resolued or which he knew he ought not to do had not we made him to stumble 1. Cor. 8 12. Nay by our offence we destroy our brother so much as lyeth in vs and become very butchers murtherers of our brothers soule eyther wholy driuing him away from the faith or discouraging him and what a matter is this for so slender a thing as meates and drinkes daies or such like indifferent things to bee the death and slaughter not of the body but of the precious soules of men Rom. 14 15. Lastly this reacheth not to our brother alone and to his destruction but euen so high as Christ the head and Lord against whome wee sinne in wounding or hurting any member or seruant of his 1. Cor. 8 12. There is that straight coniunction betweene Christ and the faithfull that the
regard of these things he doth professe that he had occasion of reioycing and matter of glorying yet not in himselfe but in Christ and his grace in which alone there is true glorying with God and not in honour riches and wisedome of the world but in the things pertaining to God to wit in matters concerning the worshippe of God and the saluation of the Church wherein his ministry did consist verse 17. Tim. What especiall doctrines can ye obserue from the verse 17. to the 21. verse whereof the method and meaning you haue now breefely vnfolded Silas Out of verse 17. we haue these instructions First when God prospereth the worke of our vocation namely by blessing the ministry to the working of faith and obedience to Christ therein is iust cause of reioycing The reason is because in such effects God is highly glorified in his mercies and soules conuerted and saued whereat men and Angels ought to bee glad Luke 15 7. Such therfore wrong God and his Church much which neyther themselues labour to winne men to Christ and doe enuy others which doe it Also heere is more cause of incouragement ioy by the happy successe of his ministry to a Preacher then of disheartning by the vnthankfulnesse of the world Lastly it reproueth such as by disobedience and vnprofitablenesse do grieue their Ministers whose heauinesse is the peoples vnhappinesse Heb. 13 17. Secondly wee learne that Ministers in their reioycing must retaine this modesty as not to be puffed vp with their guifts or to despise others whom God doth not so grace and blesse but euer to remember they are but Organes instruments of Christ to effect what he will doe by them 1. Cor. 4 1. All the force working in the conscience is of Christ who both ordained the Ministers and furnished them with guifts and zeale and blesseth their indeuours The third instruction is that the subiect of their ministry be the things of God that is his seruice Heb. 5 1. A Minister is a middle person betweene the people and God to report Gods will to them and to offer and vtter their prayers to God to preach from God glad tydings of peace and good things and on the other side to bring the people to God Wee will attend the worde and Prayer Acts 6 ver 4. Ministers bee the mouth of GOD to open his minde and of the peoples to put vp their request thus their seruice is wholly about the soule The reason is that as Christs kingdome is not of this world so his Ministers are ouer the people in things not belonging to this world but to the Lord 1 Thess. 5 12. Hence is a iust reproofe to such as neglecting to imploy themselues in the things of God which are the things proper to their calling doe spend it in following theyr carnall pleasures or worldly profit doing nothing lesse then that whereunto they be of God ordained and elected of his Church whose end will be fearefull by the parable of the euill seruaunt in the Gospell which in his Maisters absence gaue himselfe to sensuality and forgot his proper seruice Tim. From the 18. verse what Doctrines collect ye Silas First whereas Paul made a religion and Conscience as one that neither would nor could speak of ought I dare not which Christ had not wrought in him and done by him in the function of his Apostleship Hence wee learne as the duty of Pastors to acknowledge the whole fruite of their ministry to come from Christ as author Paul which planteth is nothing but Christ which giueth the encrease so the deity of Christ that he is true and very God whose sole and onely worke it is to make the preaching effectuall to bow mens hearts naturallie stony and obstinate to becom pliable to the doctrine of the Gospell to receiue it by faith which is the chiefest obedience and mother of al obedience inpractise con uersation but Christ did this by the Ministry of Paul as heere he confesseth Therefore he is the true and mighty God which changeth the hearts yea euen of the Gentiles peruerse Idolaters and wholly estranged from God and goodnesse To make these by faith and obedience to embrace the Gospell must needes argue in Christ which did it an omnipotency and diuine vertue For to giue a new heart and a new Spirit is Gods prerogatiue royall Ezek. 36 26. Moreouer inasmuch as Christ wrought in Paul by two meanes words that is publique preachings priuate exhortation disputing Epistles and writings and secondly deeds that is his great labour and trauaile his godlie life his many and manifold myracles 1 Cor. 15 10. it affoords this Doctrine That there be two notable signes and markes of a faithfull Minister of Christ and two especiall meanes whereby hee may benefite the flocke of Christ. First Doctrine that he be able in a good measure to teach truths and to confute the gainsayer Titus 1 9. Secondly examples of life and maners to shine as a light Math. 5. as Christ both saide and did Acts 1 1. Farre hence from this calling bee all such which are giuen to their ease and commodity be either scandalous in life or vnable and vnwilling to teach and labor in doctrine doing good Let such know as haue their toong or hand lame and maimed and bee defectiue in wordes or deeds that they are so much short of that they ought to be Also let such people see that they haue God come so much the nearer to them and haue the more meanes to draw neere to him or to bee left without all excuse whosoeuer enioy teaching and working Pastors which builde with both hands Some alleadge for defence of their ignorance ot wickednesse that their Minister is ignorant and teacheth them not Others that their guides though seeing ones yet offensiue ones say and do not but such haue no exception at al to make whose Pastors speake and worke and giue light by sound doctrine and godly life Tim. Do yee note in the words or matter of the 19 20 21. verses ought to our edification in piety Silas In the words I note that the greatest workes which Paul did worke are called by two names First Signes because they serue to shew and proue his calling and doctrine to be of God and therefore such as ought to be reucrently receiued and submitted vnto Secondly wonders or myracles drawing or rather driuing 〈◊〉 to admiration and wondering by the straungenesse of them because they exceeded both course of nature and capacity of vndorstanding And it is vsuall with men to wonder at things which be aboue reason or nature Also the word might or power in the first place signifies the efficacy which these great workes had in the hearts of the Gentiles before whom they were done and in the latter place it declareth the chiefe cause of that efficacy to wit the might of the holy Spirite working with the Apostle Tim. What are we to learne from hence What matter of
instructions in these words thus opened Silas That in the beginning of the Gospell when the Doctrine thereof was yet newe vnwoonted or vnknowne and the Church yet being as a tender plant or as a childe in the Cradle it pleased God to accompanie the publishing of his trueth with the gift of woorking myracles the better to countenance and confirme both doctrine and the Church Marke 16 20. These Tokens and wonders which at the first did ratifie the Doctrine as seales establish couenants are stil to this day of force to giue credite to the same doctrine taught now in the reformed Churches to be diuine and from heauen So as he which without a myracle will not now beleeue it when all the world beleeueth it he himselfe may be accounted a wonder We doe vse to water plants when they are newly set and but tender afterwardes being growne vp to be trees we cease then to water them so the Church and doctrine of grace when it was new needed confirmation by myracles but now it is growne old and vniuersally receiued there is no such vse of Myracles Let vs rather suspect the Popish religion to bee the new Religion and their Church no Church of Christ because they build the truth and credit thereof vpon wonders which are no perpetuall nor effentiall notes of true Prophets and true Church but common to all Prophets both false and true See Deut. 13 1 2. Mat. 24 24. 2 Thes. 2 9. and Reuel 13 13. False Prophets false Christs yea that Antichrist shall be permitted for the probation of the faithfull and perdition of the vnfaithfull to worke wondrous workes which are called lying wonders 2. Thess. 2 9. both because they be many of them but iugling trickes packed by the cunning of Friars and for that they tend suppose they should be done to deceiue men to establish their lyes superstitions and heresies of Popery also because oftentimes they are done or do proceede from Satan the Father of lies Whereas all true myracles as our Text teacheth for their end doth serue to confirme the truth of the Gospell and for their beginning they alwaies be wrought by the mighty Spirit of God who alone can alter the course of nature and do wondrous things Satan and his imps do some things to be wondred at of such as cannot perceiue the causes of those things which impostures cunningly hide But if that miracles were necessary we are not vtterly destitute The straunge proseruation of Luther and Q. Elizabeth against many deadly enemies is maruailous if not myraculous also the discouering of the Gun-powder Treason in so strange a sort Maister Hawks clapping his hands thrice for ioy in the fiery flame Cranmers hart whole in the fire his body being burnt as it hapned to others are not these wondrous matters Tim. What may wee obserue from the end of the 19. verse with the 20. and 21 Sil. It commends to vs these few instructions Whereas Paul had filled with the Gospell that is had brought to the faith of Christ by plentifull and diligent preaching the Gospell so many people and prouinces as were mightily distant one from the other as I Hyricum which is thought to be that which at this day we call Slauonia is distant from Ierusalem the Metropolis of Iudea which in a right line is iudged to be about 350. Germain miles but was much larger space going by circuites and fetching compasses as it is knowne he did In this example of the Apostle I say carying the word to such Barbarians and superstitious places with such extreame labour and both manifest and manifold dangers whereof we reade in the Acts and in 2 Cor. 11. wee haue the Image of a faithfull Minister filled with loue of Christ his Kingdom and mans saluation to the reproofe of such as with farre lesse paines and no perrill at home may and ought to preach Christ euery Saboth and will not and it giueth due encouragement to all such as do the Lordes worke with fidelity and industry to perseuer in theyr godlie course whereof they haue Paul such a noble president patterne As God will looke for much of them to whom he committeth much so they which doe improoue their Talents and encrease them vntill they come to be tenne Talents such shall be set ouer ten Cities and enter into their Maisters ioy when the sloathfull shall heare Take him and binde him c. Furthermore as Paul in few words ran ouer an heap of Myracles and an infinite company of Cities in ver 19 to set forth his infinite labours to the example of others so in that he studied and did euen in an holy ambition as men striue which be greedy of worldly honour contend to fulfil the prophesies concerning the carying the name and Gospell of Christ where it had neuer beene preached by any before him yea where the sound of Christ neuer came Heerein first he did approue himselfe a true Apostle whose office was to call ignorant heathnish people to Christ and to constitute Churches which they might leaue to others to builde forwarde as Paul did in Ephesus and Creta 1. Timothy 1 34. Titus 1 4 5 6. Faire vnlike to that which Iesuites boast to bee done by them in India for neyther bee they commissionated for the whole world as the Apostles were neyther preached they the truth of the Gospell but their owne errors the traditions of Rome and gathered Churches not to Christ but to Antichrist to increase not Gods but Sathans kingdome making them an hundred times worse then they were before yea by their extreame cruelties making the name of Christ odious to those Pagans Secondly in that Paul sought as well to instruct such as were conuerted as to gaine to Christ such as were strangers from him we see againe his affection to Christs glory and kingdome which should bee a spur in the sides of all Christs true Ministers to quicken them to al care and labor for the enlarging of Christs flocke and getting to themselues testimony of their calling from God by the zeale of their hearts and fruites of their indeuour as Paul had from the accomplishment of propheticall Oracles whereby his extraordinary Apostolicall function was warranted to him selfe and the Churches of Christ. DIAL V. Verses 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29. Therefore also I haue beene let oft to come vnto you but now seeing I haue no more place in these quarters and also haue 〈◊〉 desirous many yeares agoe to come vnto you when I shall take my iourney into Spaine I will come to see you c. Tim. VVHat is contained in all these verses Silas The hope and promise of Pauls cōming to the Romanes which he setteth foorth by the mouing cause to wit the vacancy of his businesse in these parts where he was Secondly by the feruency of his desire which he had a long time to see them in verse 22 23. then by the circumstance of time when hee woulde come to wit when
Shame what it is to the godly and vngodly what it works in both ibid. Shame why mentioned rather then any other fruit of sinne ibid. Sinne the nature kindes filthinesse and danger of it ch 6. v. 23. Sinne to liue in it what Ch 6. v. 1. Sinne to abound what ch 5 v. 20. Sin how first husband ch 7 v. 4. Sinne how mortified and dead not in a moment cha 7. v. 4 5 6. Sins our cause of Christs death and what it shoulde admonish vs of ch 4. v. last ch 5 8. Sinnes none veniall in their owne nature ch 6. v 23. Sins how venial ib. Supper of the Lord howe to prepare to it ch 2. v. 25. T. Tribulatiou see affliction Trust in God see faith Truth of God is for our comfort and imitation Ch. 3 v. 3 4 5 6 7. Truth of God not impeached by mens vnbeliefe Ib. Truth of God how renow ned by our liues ibid. V. W. Vanity how creatures subiect to it and why Chap 8 verse 20 Vnbeleefe a Mother and maine sinne reasons against it and why wee ought to beleeue God Ch 11 v. 20. Will of God ch 12 v. 2. Word of God see Scripture Workes good which bee and why to be done What required to a good worke ch 2 v. 6 ch 14. v 5 6. Works neither 〈◊〉 nor merit and why see Law Works to what ends they are to be done seeing they iustifie not ch 2 v 6. Z. Zeale what erroneus and wise ch 10 v 2. Zeale without knowledg ibid. Zeale ioyned with knowledge and of what thinges ibid. Zeale of the Iewes faultie sundry waies Ibid. Zeale of Papists blind and furious Ibid. Zeale rare in Protestants Ibid. Zealous why we ought to be and why we should take heede of blinde zeale Ibid. Also Ch 12 v 11. Errata Muse not courteous Reader that thou doost meete with these faultes for there would haue beene farre more if the great diligence of the Printer had not preuented it the blinde Coppy and wine owne ouer-sight were so bad Correct therefore with thy pen these heere noted ere thou beginne to reade and beare with the rest PAge 3. l. 25. read Reuocation p. 4. l. 12. r. it p. 8. l. 11 r. exordium p. 9 l. 34 r. his afore free and for after grace and in the mar r. the Gospel after of p. 21. l. 3. strike out which of it selfe and place it before could in l. 32. P. 22. l 16. r. gift p. 23. l. 19. r. few l. 22. r. meane ones p. 25. str the 9. and 10. lines wholy p 27. l 35. r. whom p 32. l. 28. r be p 43. l. 17. r. too high p 54. l. 6. r. 1 Iohn p 57. l 19. r with P 61 l 14. r by for on in p. 63. the lines 12 13 14 15. 16. must be ioyned to l. 6. p. 72 str out whole lines 7 8 9 10 p. 73. r. all matters after attribute P. 84 l. 18. r. these foure p. 89. l. 13. r. Antimisthia p 〈◊〉 l. 1. r. as in killing Abcl. p. 107. l 4. r. doth not p ibid. l 16. r. iudgement for Law l. 32. r. coactiue p 112. l. 19. r. of the 1 chap. p. 133. from the two last lines vnto the 14. l of p. 135. all belongs vnto the 6. Dial. p. 186. l. 31. r. righteous p. 189. l. 3. r. Ro. 12 2. p. 272. str lines 26 27. p. 277. l 26. r hencc p 284. l 8. 〈◊〉 hence p. 362. mar r. imputetur p. 366. l. 34. str actions p. 385. in mar r. habent p. 390. l. 17. r. frced p. 397. l. 1. str on t hauing a little paper left p. 409. l. 29. r. sick p. 428. l. 18. r. now p. 442. l. 7. r. and workes it is a good signe p. 〈◊〉 l. 1. r. word and 446. morg r. deplorat 451. l. 14. r. good p. 488. l. last r. truth p. 489. str 5 last lines p. 502. l. 15. r. after vnable by his-own vnthriftinesse p. 527. l. 15 〈◊〉 r. followeth and his merites p. 563. l. 19 20. r. to our spirit and with our spirit p. 596. l. 6. r. explication p. 606. l. 25. r. our error p. 6 〈◊〉 1. l. 34. r. 〈◊〉 p. p. 614. in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 628. l. 14. r. or some thing which hath Analogic and proportion with faith p. 650. for thirdly r. secondly l. 35. angels for diuels p. 652. l. 31. read probable onely p. 673. l. 1. r. Silas p. 679. mar r. vniuersum genus p. 693. l. 19. r. be iust p. 719. l. 30. r. having p. 〈◊〉 l. 3. r. 〈◊〉 p. 759. l. 11. r. ver 3 4. of this chap. p. 802. r. christ for faith p. 833. r. preaching p. 〈◊〉 l. 21. r. hath not done p. 848. r. are things pa. 860. l. 32 r. it is not true p. 862. l. 23. r. sub testo p. 865. r an agreement p. 882. l. 18. reade Antopistos p. 867. mar r. prophetarum p. 897. l. 13. r. anomia p. 976. r. one beleeuer page 979 l. 11. so the promise p. 991. l. 28. r. or for of p. 997. l. 31. for gods iudgement 〈◊〉 these are things p. 902. l. 1. r. as christ p. 925. l. 6. r toward the end p. 1016. l. 32. r. allow them p. 1023. l. 15. r. three p. 1041. l. 10. for but r. nor l. 12. r. canon p. 1042. mar str Orineus p. 1048. in mar r. one for euen and write after doc Fulke p. 1069. l. 5. r. correction pag. 1085. l. 27. r. vnprofitable 1090. l. 10. 〈◊〉 good lawes 1101. l. 13. r. acknowledge p. 1106. 〈◊〉 4. r. retchles p. 1113. l. 21. r. for 〈◊〉 l hy p. 1121. l. 1. r. also defended Peters abiuring after marriage p. 1126. l. 31. r. vices for duties Acts 9 1 2 3. Ro. 3 24 25 26. Paul was separate 1. to eternal life 2. to the knowledge of both to beleeue as a Christian. 3. to preach it as an A ostle Prou. 3. Psal. 119. 10. 11 c. Nouelty a note of error Antiquity of verity By Prophets here be ment such as preached to the people as Nathan thogh they did write no prophesie Scriptures Vse Foelix Holy Ends Vses of the Scripture This putteth a difference betweene the Gospell and Law Son of God Iesus Christ. Lord. Seed of Dauid Gal. 4 4. Iohn 1 14. Christ had his humainity from Dauid not his 〈◊〉 Ioh. 5 26. and 2 19. Eph 4 10 11 Acts 26 8. Rom. 4 17. Son of God Apostleship Ephel 3 8. 1. Cor. 15 8. It is a certain token of a faithfull Minister when he can account the profit of the hearers to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and vantage Paul his presence and preaching was fruitfull to other Gentiles and he wished and hoped it to be toward the Romaines Diuinity heer in excelleth Phylosophye which is not made for al men and the Law of Moyses giuen into one Nation only Acts 2 45 4 34. Habak 2 4. Papists must blame the Prophets and Apostles and
Secondly that they violated the Law of nature in respect of duties to God and Men by vngodlinesse and vnrighteousnesse Thirdly that they were punished of God mightily Wrath from Heauen Tim. Begin with that part ye named last because it is first mentioned in the Text. What is meant by Wrath is there any such passion of anger and wrath in God Tim. In holy Scriptures Wrath Anger bee otherwise attributed vnto men then vnto God For it is in men properly as it is a perturbation of the minde inflaming or stirring vp to Reuenge Wrath in his proper acception is an appetite or desire of reuenge for some contempt or hurt done or supposed to be done to our selues or others whom we affect When men see themselues neglected or wronged straight way they are moued to take vengeance on the party thus it is in Men the truth whereof appeareth in Came Esau Achab c. whereas in God wrath is no affection but a iust act of God punishing wickednesse or the punishments themselues of warre famine pestilence sicknesse c. inslicted for iniquity so it is vsed in this Text. For it is here set against righteousnesse of God spoken of verse 17 which as wee haue saide signifieth both his mercifull goodnesse freely bestowing Iustice and life eternall vpon beleeuers and also Iustice or life giuen and bestowed graciously Therefore by wrath we must vnderstand both his indignation reuenging impiety and the Reuenge or paines themselues according to the Hebrew phrase Now this wrath is saide to be Reuealed that is to be declared by examples and by experience testified For howsoeuer sundry wayes Gods wrath bee Reuealed against sinne as by the light of nature euerie mans Conscience naturally accusing and tormenting him for euill doing Rom. 2. Secondly by the Gospell whose voice is not only Consolatory speaking pardon and life vnto beleeuing offenders but Comminatorie threatning death eternal to impenitent persons and vnbeleeuers as Mat. 3 10. Luke 13 3. Ioh. 3 18 36. Thirdly by the Law whose office is to reueale wrath and the curse against euery transgression Deut. 27. v. last Rom. 4 15. yet our present text would bee taken of that daily experience which witnesseth that God is wrathfullie displeased with the worlde for sinne and euen at that time when the Apostle wrote there were greeuous miseries of sword plague and famine abroad in the world Also it is plain by the verses following that Paul speaks of such iudgements as God had executed vpon all men for contempt of his Maiesty especially of spirituall punishments in hardning mens hearts and giuing them vp to vile lusts and a Reprobate mind Verse 24 28. Tim. What Learne we from hence Sil. Seeing sin prouoketh Diuine wrath it is necessary to take heed of it Secondly that this wrath appeareth most in spiritual Iudgements because they not only are tokens of wrath but deserue more wrath they are punnishments for sins past and encrease of more sinne Tim. What thinke ye that the Children of God haue their parts in Spirituall Iudgements Silas Yea as appeareth in the example of Adam Dauid Salomon and of many in our dayes which haue faln into some fits of dispaire also haue had the sinne punnished by Sinne as Paul affirmeth heere of the Idolatrous Gentiles Tim. In what sence may it be said that this wrath of God was reuealed From Heauen Sil. Howsoeuer men very learned and not a few haue drawne the sense of these words vnto the Heauens themselues which be instruments of wrath against such as contemne their maker as Ambrose some to the euill spirits which are aboue in the ayre to vexe by Gods appointment wicked liuers as Origen some to the second comming of Christ from Heauen to iudge the world as Theophylact others referre this to the vniuersality and large extent of his iudgements which were and shall be vpon all men vnder Heauen that do wickedly and on others to the euident declaration of his iudgement from Heauen as from an high and eminent place that they might bee most apparant vngainsayable as Martyr Beza Faius do think yet the best and fittest sense is by a 〈◊〉 to expound Heauen for God as Luke 20 5 15 18. and to oppose it vnto the fancy and opinion of Atheists Epicures and other prophane men which ascribe the punishmens that happen vnto men vnto chance and misfortune or to the malice of men or vnto the malignity of the starres and Elements or other inferior causes passing by the iustice of God and denying his prouidence in the gouernment of the world against which Paul affirmeth heere that the euils which be are scourges sent from God who though he may vse ordinary and naturall meanes for the plaguing of men yet himselfe is author ruler as it is euery where in Scripture testified of him that no euil cōmeth but frō him as in Amos that he createth darkenesse in Esay that hee sendeth the sword c. in Leuit. that hee rained Fire and Brimstone from Heauen on Sodom in Gene that he drowned Pharaoh in Exod. Finally it is God which deliuereth vp to vncleannesse and a Reprobate mind in this Chapter verse 24 28. The Doctrine hence is this that punnishments come from God as effects of his Iustice against sinne The duties whereunto it should prouoke men be First to beware of murmuring in time of calamity for this is to fight Gyant-like against God Secondly to be patient and contented because it is Gods doing for iust ends this is to submit vnto God Thirdly to sue and seeke first and principally vnto God for remouing calamities as Israelites in Iudges Nininuites in Ionas did Tim. What may we learne from this that wrath is saide to bee reuealed against all vngodlinesse and vnrighteousnesse of men Sil. Two things First by the order of words we learn that the breach of the first Table is more grieuous then the breach of the second Table Secondly seeing it is against all therefore there is no sinne how little soeuer that can escape punishment Thirdly by vsing the abstract rather then the contrete we learne that Gods anger is not against men themselues but against their wicked deeds principally Tim. Whereof did this admonish vs Sil. To make conscience of small sinnes Secondly it reproueth such as thinke themselues safe because they haue no great sinnes whereas vengeance is due to euery disobedience Tim. What is heere meant by Truth Sil. The remainder of light which since the fall of Adam is in euery mans Conscience to shew him what God is most good bounteous iust and mighty how he is to be worshipped by louing and fearing him aboue all and what is right and what is wrong what good and what euill for these things euen naturall light doth teach euery man Tim. What is the nature of this truth Sil. It delighteth and desireth to expresse it selfe that is it would come forth and appeare in our workes it abhorreth to be smothered and imprisoned