Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n worship_v worshipper_n worthy_a 28 3 7.3173 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
A26981 A paraphrase on the New Testament with notes, doctrinal and practical, by plainess and brevity fitted to the use of religious families, in their daily reading of the Scriptures : and of the younger and poorer sort of scholars and ministers, who want fuller helps : with an advertisement of difficulties in the Revelations / by Richard Baxter. Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1685 (1685) Wing B1338; ESTC R231645 1,057,080 615

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

in Religion instead of great and needful things 21. Jesus saith unto her Woman believe me the hour cometh vvhen ye shall neither in this Mountain nor yet at Jerusalem Worship the Father 21. Alass poor woman hast thou not greater matter than Ceremony even the Place of Worship to mind Believe me that time is hard at hand when Jerusalem shall be destroyed and you scattered and a better way of Worship setled so that you shall no more keep up your Ceremonious Worship either at Shiloh or Jerusalem 22. Ye vvorship ye knovv not vvhat vve knovv vvhat vve Worship For Salvation is of the Jevvs 22. You worship ignorantly and corruptly you know not what ever since the Captivity of the Ten Tribes and you strive about the Place and Ceremonies when you have more need to learn who he is that you must worship It is of the Tribe of Judah that the Saviour cometh who must teach you how to worship God and this the Jews do rightly believe and own none in Worship but the true God 23. But the hour cometh and novv is vvhen the true Worshippers shall vvorship the Father in Spirit and in Truth For the Father seeketh such to worship him 23. The time is now at hand yea come when true Worshippers shall not take up with shadows nor worship God by Mosaical Ceremonies or Samaritane Traditions but with that spiritual Worship which Types and Ceremonies did signifie even from the Spirit of God within them as their Principle and according to the spiritual Law or Word as their Rule and not with bodily Exercise that profiteth nothing 24. God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in Truth 24. Acceptable Worship must be suited to the God you worship and therefore they that worship him must worship him spiritually and not by Jewish Ceremony because he is a Spirit N. Though Spirit signifie a Nature more excellent than Body yet that and all human Words are too low to speak the Essence of God any otherwise than Analogically or Metaphorically for God is above all our formal Conceptions or Expressions but created Spirits being the highest created Beings known to us and our souls of that nature they are the clearest Glass in which we can know God and though the word Spirit first signifie created Spirit it doth transcendently eminently signifie the Infinite Father of Spirits and we can say nothing higher of Gods Essence than that he is this Infinite perfect transcendent Spirit what our best Conceptions of a Spirit are I have opened in Methodo Theologiae c. 25. The Woman saith unto him I know that Messias cometh who is called Christ when he is come he will tell us all things 25. N. Even the Samaritans expected the Messiah But with misconceivings of him 26. Jesus saith unto her I that speak to thee am he 26. N. Why did Christ tell that to this woman which he forbad others to tell abroad Ans He knew where and when it was seasonable and would do more good than harm 27. And upon this came his Disciples and marvelled that he talked with the Woman yet no man said what seekest thou or why talkest thou with her 27. Tho they presumed not to ask him why yet they thought it strange that he should talk so long with one woman 28. The Woman then left her Water-pot and went away into the City and saith to the Men 29. Come see a man which told me all things that ever I did Is not this the Christ 28. Telling her her secrets perswaded her to believe him saying I am he 30. Then they went out of the City and came unto him 31. In the mean time his Disciples prayed him saying Master eat 32. But he saith to them I have meat to eat that ye know not of 33. Therefore said the Disciples one to another hath any man brought him ought to eat 34. Jesus saith to them my meat is to do the will of him that sent me and to finish his work 30. c. N. The converting of one Soul was more pleasing to Christ than his natural food and so must it be to us He that loveth God and Christ and the Holy Ghost and the Church must rejoyce when there is one more converted to please and worship God to honour Christ and his Spirit to encrease the Church He that loveth his Country must rejoyce that one more is made a blessing to it when the wicked are it's enemies He that loveth Souls will rejoyce in that Grace which is better to them than all riches He that loveth Gods Word will rejoyce in it's success He that loveth Heaven will be glad that there is one more to possess it He that loveth himself aright will be glad that there is one more made like him to love him and pray for him And he that hateth Sin and Satan will be glad that there is one less to serve him 35. Say not ye There are four months and then cometh harvest Behold I say unto you lift up your eyes and look on the fields for they are white already to harvest 35. You rejoyce that within four months it will be harvest And shall not I rejoyce to see the harvest of my husbandry even at hand in the conversion of many Souls to God 36. And he that reapeth receiveth wages and gathereth fruit unto life eternal that both he that soweth and he that reapeth may rejoyce together 36. And as I sow the seed so you that I shall sen● out as Apostles shall see and reap more plenteous fruit hereafter and shall for your labour under me be well rewarded that I that have sowed and you that reap may rejoyce together in the success 37. And herein is that saying true One soweth and another reapeth 38. I have sent you to reap that whereon ye bestowed no labour Other men laboured and ye are entred on their labours 38. The Prophets and John and I after all have sowed the seed and been at the costliest labour and yet it is you that must see the success in gathering the universal Church when I that labour'd and suffer'd am gone 39. And many of the Samaritans of that City believed on him for the saying of the woman which testifyed He told me all that ever I did 39. N. That to believe in Christ by the means of mens credible testimony of his Words and Miracles is not as many falsly say to resolve our faith into the credit of man and to make it a meer humane Faith They that believe Apostles who said they saw Christs Miracles Resurrection and Ascention believe by a divine Faith on the same evidence that the Apostles were convinced by but not conveyed by the same means what they received by their eyes and ears immediately we receive mediately by their report living at a distance So that their testimony is not believed instead of Christs nor instead of evidence of his truth but as the conveyance of this
lawful for thee to have her 5. And when he would have put him to death he feared the multitude because they counted him as a prophet 3 4 5. N. 1. Faithful Prophets did tell Kings of their sin 2. But such as Herod cannot bear reproof 3. The persecution of faithful Teachers is usually for telling great men of their sins 4. The multitude then did so much reverence prophets that they were a terrour and restraint to persecuting Rulers 6. But when Herods birth day was kept the daughter of Herodias danc'd before them and pleased Herod 7. Whereupon he promised with an oath to give her whatever she would ask 8. And she being before instructed of her mother said Give me here John Baptists head in a charger 6 7 8. N. Great mens feasts and frolicks are a usual season of great sin and carnal pleasures are their snares 2. Rash Oaths are the fruit of vice and the seed of more 3. Voluptuous wantons are oft the most cruel and bloudy persecutors 4. The Devil seldom wanteth suggestors of cruelty 9. And the king was sorry nevertheless for the oaths sake and them which sate with him he commanded it to be given her 9. N. Wicked men oft sin with troubled conscience but yet will do it for their base ends 2. Hypocrites that dare murder the just yet may make the Conscience of a wicked Oath their pretence How conscionably then should bad Oaths be avoided and good ones kept 3. The reputation of m●n in bad company is a usual snare of iniquity 10 11 12. And he sent and beheaded John in prison And his head was brought in a charger and given to the damsel and she brought it to her mother And his disciples came and took up the body and buryed it and went and told Jesus 10 11 12. Note The Bloud of Saints is vile and cheap to Tyrants that can sell them to a Whore or wanton But they shall pay dear for it at the last 2. So great a Prophet as John must be a Martyr that he may be like to Christ 3. It s as true Martyrdom to suffer for Duty as for Faith 4. The bloud of Saints is part of the sport and pleasure of lascivious wicked women 13. When Jesus heard of it he departed thence by ship into a desert place apart and when the people had heard thereof they followed him on foot out of the cities 13. Note 1. The Lord of Life that came in flesh to save the world was fain to fly for his life into a wilderness from the face of men yea of the eminent members of the Jewish Church 2. It is not cowardize or unlawfull to fly from persecutors till we have some special call to suffer 14. And Jesus went forth and saw a great multitude and was moved with compassion towards them and he healed their sick 14. Note Those that follow Christ and seek to him are liker to find his compassion than those that drive him away 15. And when it was evening his disciples came to him saying This is a desert place and the time is now past send the multitude away that they may go into the villages and buy themselves victuals 16. But Jesus said to them They need not depart give ye them to eat 17. And they say to him We have here but five loaves and two fishes 18. He said Bring them hither to me 19. And he commanded the multitude to sit down on the grass and took the five loaves and two fishes and looking up to heaven he blessed and brake and gave the loaves to his disciples and the disciples to the multitude 15 c. Note 1. Christ fed the Body to win the Soul and so must we 2. Nothing is too little which God will bless 3. Tho God be every where yet Christ directeth us in Prayer to him to look up to Heaven for there is the Glory in which he will appear to glorifie his people 4. If the Son of God must look up to heaven and bless his food surely we must not take it like brutes without craving Gods blessing on it 20. And they did all eat and were filled and they took up of the fragments that remained twelve baskets full 21. And they that had eaten were about five thousand men besides women and children 20 21. Note 1. This Miracle was done before five thousand Witnesses and more that there might be no suspicion of deceit or misreport 2. He that was Lord of all and could feed by Miracle yet would not have the fragments lost 22. And straightway Jesus constrained his disciples to get into a ship and to go before him unto the other side while he sent the multitudes away 23. And when he had sent the multitude away he went up into a mountain apart to pray 22 23. Note Christ used to pray alone because his case so differed from all mens in the world having no sin c. that the same prayers would not suit the case of others which were fit for him 24. And when the evening was come he was there alone But the ship was now in the midst of the sea tossed with waves for the wind was contrary 25. And in the fourth watch of the night Jesus went out unto them walking on the sea 24 25. Note 1. Christ permits dangers to us that he may the more notably deliver us 2. The waters can bear him when he will walk on them All elements are at his service 26. And when the disciples saw him walking on the sea they were troubled saying it is a spirit and they cried out for fear 26. Note Nature maketh man afraid of apparitions of Spirits because unknown and unusual 27. But straightway Jesus spake to them saying Be of good cheer it is I be not afraid 27. Note Christs true Disciples should be so far from being afraid of him as hurtfull to them that they should make him their comfort and courage against the fears of men and devils 28. And Peter answered him and said Lord if it be thou bid me come unto thee upon the water 28. N. This shewed much faith in Peter yet none must tempt God nor go unbidden into danger 29. And he said Come And when Peter was come down out of the ship he walked on the water to go to Jesus 30. And when he saw the wind boisterous he was afraid and beginning to sink he cried saying Lord save me 31. And immediately Jesus stretched forth his hand and caught him and said to him O thou of little faith wherefore didst thou doubt 29 c. Note 1. Even strong faith hath its weakness and is liable to fears 2. Our weak faith causing great fear would expose us to sinking did not Christ lay hold on us 32. And when they were come into the ship the wind ceased 33. Then they that were in the ship came and worshipped him saying Of a truth thou art the Son of God 32 33. N. Renewed great conviction● renew and increase
the exercise of faith and praise to Christ 34. And when they were gone over they came into the land of Genesaret 35. And when the men of that place had knowledge of him they sent out into all the countrey round a-about and brought to him all that were diseased 36. And besought him that they might only touch the hem of his garment and as many as touched were made perfectly whole 34 c. N. What great cause have we to trust a Saviour so able and willing to save Body and Soul and to believe his word CHAP. XV. 1. THen came to Jesus Scribes and Pharisees which were of Jerusalem saying 2. Why do thy disciples transgress the traditions of the elders for they wash not their hands when they eat bread 1 2. N. Poor Souls that know not God do take up with ceremonies of their own and their forefathers making and put the name of Religion on these to cheat themselves when such things are not so much as an image of true Religion O what base thoughts have these men of God who think he is pleased or displeased with men as they keep or neglect such trifles 3. But he answered and said to them Why do ye also transgress the commandment of God by your traditions 3. N. The Rebels that break Gods Laws by their Laws yet charge Gods servants with sin for not keeping their Laws and Traditions against Gods Laws They think Gods Laws too many and too strict and yet make more of their own and are precise for keeping them 4. For God commanded saying Honour thy father and mother and he that curseth father or mother let him die the death 5. But ye say Whosoever shall say to his father or mother It is a gift by whatsoever thou mightest be profited by me 6. and honour not his father or his mother he shall be free thus ye have made the commandment of God of none effect by your tradition 4 5 6. Gods command to honour Parents binds you to relieve them if they be in want And duty to Parents is so great that contempt of them deserves death But ye have like hypocrites got a trick to pretend to devote your estates to God that you may defeat your parents and so quite frustrate Gods commandment 7. Ye hypocrites well did Esaias Prophecy of you saying 8. This people draweth nigh to me with their mouth and honoureth me with their lips but their heart is far from me 9. But in vain do they worship me teaching for doctrines the traditions of men 7 8 9. Note 1. It is the part of hypocrites to pretend Religion for lip labour and Traditions and Ceremonies of their own and think God is honoured and pleased with the injunctions and Canons of men while they break Gods Commands an● hate and persecute those that keep them 2. This humane Religion of hypocrites is vain and worse than vain It is lost labour and sinful prophanation 10. And he called the multitude and said to them Hear and understand 11. Not that which goeth into the mouth defileth a man but that which cometh out of the mouth this defileth a man 10 11. It is not the quality or uncleanness of your food that is sin and soul defilement but it is sinful words and deeds the product of sinful hearts that God will charge on you as your uncleanness 12. Then came his disciples and said to him Knowest thou that the Pharisees were offended when they heard this saying 12. Note Erroneous men and hypocrites are offended at the clearest truth which crosseth their old opinions and way 13. But he answered and said Every plant which my heavenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted up 14. Let them alone they be blind leaders of the blind And if the blind lead the blind they shall both fall into the ditch 13 14. Their Opinions and Traditions and their Sect in making a Religion of these are not of God but of their own invention and therefore God will root them up God will not bless Humane Religions Let them alone a while their judgment is near They and their Disciples as blind Leaders and followers will fall into the ditch of temporal and eternal perdition 15. Then answered Peter and said to him Declare to us this parable 16. And Jesus said Are ye also yet without understanding 17. Do not ye yet understand that whatsoever cometh in at the mouth goeth into the belly and is cast out into the draught 18. But those things which proceed out of the mouth come forth from the heart and they defile a man 15 c. Meat that passeth through a man cannot defile his Soul but it is the products of a sinful heart that defile it 19. For out of the heart proceeds evil thoughts murthers adulteries fornications thefts false-witness blasphemies 20. These are the things which defile a man But to eat with unwashen hands defileth not a man 19 20. It is out of a sinfull heart that all sins proceed as evil thoughts and designs c. Note The heart it self is not here excluded from guilt but included as the defiled and defiling cause of all actual sin 21. Then Jesus went thence and departed into the coasts of Tyre and Sydon 22. And behold a woman of Canaan came out of the same coasts and cried to him saying Have mercy on me O Lord thou Son of David my daughter is grievously vexed with a devil 21 22. Then he went to the borders of Israel near the Heathen Countrey and a heathen Canaanitish or Syropheni●ian woman hearing of his fame went to him and begged of him to heal her daughter vexed with a Devil 23. But he answered her not a word And his disciples came and besought him saying Send her away for she crieth after us 24 But he answered and said I am not sent but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel 23 24. Dismiss her that she trouble us not He said My personal Ministery is to be to the straying Jews and not to the Heathens 25. Then came she and worshipped him saying Lord help me 26. But he answered and said It is not meet to take the childrens bread and cast it to the dogs 27. And she said Truth Lord yet the dogs eat the crums which fall from their masters table 25 c. To give that which is designed for Israel to Heathens is but like casting the Childrens bread to Dogs She said It is true Lord and I confess my self to be but as one of the Dogs and claim not the Childrens portion but if I have as dogs the crums that fall they will have never the less 28. Then Jesus answered and said to her O woman great is thy faith Be it unto ●hee even as thou wilt And her daughter was made whole from that very hour 28. Note Great faith maketh men capable of great mercies even of having what they justly desire 29. And Jesus departed thence and came nigh unto the sea of Galilee
long time 10. And at the season he sent a servant to the husbandmen that they should give him of the fruit of the vineyard but the husbandmen beat him and sent him away empty 11. And again he sent another servant and they beat him also and entreated him shamefully and sent him away empty 12. And again he sent the third and they wounded him also and cast him out 13. Then said the lord of the vineyard What shall I do I will send my beloved son it may be they will reverence him when they see him 14. But when the husbandmen saw him they reasoned among themselves saying This is the heir come let us kill him that the inheritance may be ours 15. So they cast him out of the vineyard and killed him What therefore shall the lord of the vineyard do unto them 16. He shall come and destroy these husbandmen and shall give the vineyard to others And when they heard it they said God forbid 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16. The Vineyard is the Land of Israel the Husbandmen are the Israelites the Owner is God the Messengers are the Prophets the Son is Christ c. See Matth. 21. 17. And he beheld them and said What is this then that is written The stone which the builders rejected the same is become the head of the corner 18. Whosoever shall fall upon that stone shall be broken but on whomsoever it shall fall it will grind him to powder 17 18. Whoever sins against Christ by unbelief will perish in his sin But they that strive against him by malignity and opposition will fall under his victorious Judgement which will make them the most miserable 19. And the chief priests and the Scribes the same hour sought to lay hands on him and they feared the people for they perceived that he had spoken this parable against them 19. Note That which is said against their sin enrageth the impenitent be it never so true and needful to their conviction 20. And they watched him and sent forth spies which would fain themselves just men that they might take hold of his words that so they might deliver him unto the power and authority of the governour 20. Blood-thirsty Hypocrites would ensnare him to get some word for which they might accuse him to the Romans Governour as Treason against Caesar Note How like in all Ages are the nature and ways of wicked men Thus was Naboth used by Jezabel c. 21. And they asked him saying Master we know that thou sayest and teachest rightly neither acceptest thou the person of any but teachest the way of God truly 22. Is it lawful for us to give tribute unto Cesar or no 23. But he perceived their craftiness and said unto them Why tempt ye me 24. Shew me a penny whose image and superscription hath it They answered and said Cesars 25. And he said unto them Render therefore unto Cesar the things which be Cesars and unto God the things which be Gods 26. And they could not take hold of his words before the people and they marvelled at his answer and held their peace 21 22 23 24 25 26. Note There is poison in the seeming kindness of cruel Hypocrites they flatter that they may hurt Note It is lawful to put off bloody ensnarers with doubt●●l Answers 27. Then came to him certain of the Sadduces which deny that there is any resurrection and they asked him 28. Saying Master Moses wrote unto us If any mans brother die having a wife and he die without children that his brother should take his wife and raise up feed to his brother 29. There were therefore seven brethren and the first took a wife and died without children 30. And the second took her to wife and he died childless 31. And the third took her and in like manner the seven also And they left no children and died 32. Last of all the woman died also 33. Therefore in the resurrection whose wife of them is she for seven had her to wife 27 ●8 29 30 31 32 33. Carnal men from their own Errour do foolishly cavil against the Truth which they understand not 34. And Jesus answering said unto them The children of this world marry and are given in marriage 35. But they which shall be accounted worthy to obtain that world and the resurrection from the dead neither marry nor are given in marriage 36. Neither can they die any more for they are equal unto the angels and are the children of God being the children of the Resurrection 34 35 36. Note Worthiness of that World is such a qualification as is required in God's Promise Note The Blessed shall be like the Angels and with them and be immortal Note By the Resurrection here is meant the next Life even to separated Souls and not only the Resurrection of the Body O why do we not long for such a change 37. Now that the dead are raised even Moses shewed at the bush when he calleth the Lord the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob 38. For he is not a God of the dead but of the living for all live unto him 37 38. See Matth. 22. He is the Lord and Owner of the Dead and Living But to be Their God signifieth more even to be their Governour and Protector and their End and Portion and their All. 39. Then certain of the Scribes answering said Master thou hast well said 40. And after that they durst not ask him any question at all 39 40. T●●y were out of hope of entrapping him by their Ques●●●ns 41. And he said unto them How say they that Christ is Davids Son 42. And David himself saith in the book of psalms The LORD said unto my Lord Sit thou on my right hand 43. Till I make thine enemies thy footstool 44. David therefore calleth him Lord how is he then his Son 41 42 43 44. See Matth. 22. 45. Then in the audience of all the people he said to his disciples 46. Beware of the Scribes who desire to walk in long robes and love greetings in the markets and the highest seats in the synagogues and the chief rooms at feasts 47. Who devour widows houses and for a shew make long prayers The same shall receive greater damnation 45 46 47. Note The Character of formal Hypocrites ●● to be worldly cruel unjust proud ●nd to be devout in a ceremonious Religion and ●●p labour to quiet their Conscience and keep their reputation N. Tho' no doubt but some Hypocrites can use long prayers extempore it is most likely that the Scribes and Pharisees was a Form or Liturgy CHAP. XXI 1. ANd he looked up and saw the rich men casting their gifts into the treasury 2. And he saw also a certain poor widow casting in thither two mites 3. And he said of a truth I say unto you that this poor widow hath cast in more then they all 4. For all these have of their abundance
David's indeed but all such are written in Scripture to teach us also Patience and imitation of such examples of Charity and so to confirm our hope 5. Now the God of patience and consolation grant you to be like minded one towards another according to Christ Jesus 5. I know the danger of this selfish uncharitable humour of imposing Mens own Opinions on all others as terms of their Communion with them and therefore as I have used this long and plain exhortation against it I shall also pray for you that the God who is patient with the weak and is their Comforter and yours will grant you so much Grace and Charity as to make you imitators of him and of the Love and Condescension of Christ and to bear with others and do by them as you would be born with and used your selves 6. That ye may with one mind and one mouth glorifie God even the father of our Lord Jesus Christ 6. That you may with Unity and Concord hold your holy Communion for worshipping God without uncharitable Excommunications or Separations vilifying or censuring each other which can never be expected by driving each one to agree in small unnecessary things or without bearing with the mistakes and differences of one another when all are guilty of many mistakes and such differences must still be expected 7. Wherefore receive ye one another as Christ also received us to the glory of God 7. I conclude therefore by beseeching you to receive one another with Love to your Communion and Kindness as you would be Christian imitators of Christ and as you are sensible of his needful Mercy to your selves in receiving us that once were Enemies and still have manifold sins and errours to the glorifying of God's Love and Mercy And pretend not your Knowledge or Authority or Piety against so commanding a Motive and Example ANNOTATIONS on the former Chapter and this THe Subject of the former Chapter is handled on thus far and here that Chapter should have ended He that understandeth the former and present State of the Christian Churches and the Pride and Ignorance to which Man is liable will easily perceive that it was not in vain that the Spirit of God did by the Apostle handle and decide this Case of receiving Dissenters in tollerable Cases into Love and Communion The Jews were so tied up from Legislation in God's Matters by the knowledge of God's Prerogative in their Theocracy that they had less room for the Canons and Engines of Mans making to exercise their Pride and Uncharitableness by than the Romanists have since done And yet the Pharisees plaid their part and by their Traditions made void the Law of God and preferr'd their Ceremonies before the weighty Matters of the Law and would not understand what that meaneth I will have mercy and not sacrifice and thereby did condemn the guiltless And Christ found the Samaritans and Jews at the Debate Whether in this Mountain or at Jerusalem men ought to worship overlooking that Worship which is in Spirit and in Truth And alas what work have Domination unnecessary Canons and Censures made in the Christian Churches these 1300 years And it is an Instance what power Blindness and Prejudice and Worldly Interest have to frustrate the plainest Decisions of God's Word that so full and express a Decision as these two Chapters make with 1 Cor. 12. and Eph. 4. and James 3. hath signified as little with the Dividers and Proud almost as if there had been no such written And yet such Men call for a Judge of Controversies because of the pretended Obscurity of the Scriptures when nothing can be plainer than this which they despise They mean that such as they must be Judges and God shall make the Words if they may make the Sense How great is the number that go on the two sides of Uncharitableness here reproved especially on that which is largeliest insisted on One side saith All God's Truths are precious and none must be sold for Peace and we must not partake of other Mens Sins As if our great Duty of Love Forbearance and Communion were our Sin or a partaking of the Faults of all that we joyn with The other Side pretend 1. That Paul only requireth Forbearance in things Indifferent undetermined by Governours and not after such a Command or Determination 2. Or that he giveth only a Temporary Rule for the present Concord of Jews and Gentiles till the setled Church should take a contrary Course I will not here answer these at large having done it in my Book called The only Way of the Churches Concord But I say That I despair of reducing that Man to the Truth herein who shall continue of either of these Opinions after he hath seriously perused the Text and hath considered 1. That St. Paul here useth I think above twenty Arguments from Morality and common Christian Duty which he would not do for a mutable Case which Bishops may change when they will 2 That Rome was then a famous Church and therefore had Pastors or one at least and that he writeth to the whole Church and therefore to the Pastors And sure he never meant The Clergy shall receive such Dissenters to Communion and neither by Canon or Practice cast them out till they think meet to do otherwise and till have made such Canons Paul doth not so play with Contradictions in so long and grave a Reprehension 3. That St. Paul oft puts himself in as under the same Obligation with the rest And if an Apostle called from Heaven may not do what 's here forbidden what Bishops can prete●d a Right to do it by greater Authority or Wisdom But they that have not known the Way of Peace may say something against the fullest and plainest Description of it and the sharpest Reproofs of God himself But he will expound these Chapters to their Consciences if ever he make them Healers of his Church As to those that say It is not Church-Communion that Paul here speaks of I refer them to the plain Text and Dr. Hammond's Annotations which they value The God of Love and Peace hath given Laws for Love and Peace so strict and full and clear that all World may see that it is not he that alloweth the Canons or Censures which have so long torn the Churches 8. Now I say that Jesus Christ was a minister of the Circumcision for the truth of God to confirm the promises made unto the fathers 9. And that the Gentiles might glorifie God for his mercy 8 9. And that you may understand my Argument from the Example of Christ I say that it was his Office to reconcile both Jews and Gentiles to God who will receive them both And therefore they should live as reconciled to each other Christ was a Mininister of God circumcised being a Jew and personally exercised his Ministry among them to perform Gods true Promises to the Fathers And yet his Gospel extendeth to the Gentiles also that
use convincing Evidence in Explication and Application they all convince him and shew him his Condition 25. And thus are the secrets of his heart made manifest and so falling down on his face he will worship God and report that God is in you of a truth 25. And this searching convincing Light will make them join with you in the reverent Worship of God and make them report that God is in your Church a a holy Assembly 26. How is it then brethren when ye come together every one of you hath a psalm hath a doctrine hath a tongue hath a revelation hath an interpretation Let all things be done to edifying 26. Therefore let all your G●fts whether of Psalmody or Doctrine or Languages or Revelation or Interpretation be used to Edification which is the true End of Church-Assemblies And the End is your Directory in the use of all undetermined Accidents of the Means 27. If any man speak in an unknown tongue let it be by two or at the most by three and that by course and let one interpret 27. If you will use your Guift of Languages let it be done by no more than two or three one after another and let some interpret it to the Unlearned in the Church 28. But if there be no interpreter let him keep silence in the church and let him speak to himself and to God 28. That which only God and your selves understand let none but God and your selves hear and speak not that in the Church which they cannot understand 29. Let the prophets speak two or three and let the other judge 29. And the Prophets also must do all to Edification and therefore must speak no more than may edisie the Church which is but two or three at an Assembly the rest judging 30. If any thing be revealed to another that sitteth by let the first hold his peace 30. If God immediately inspire another then to speak let the first give way to him by silence 31. For ye may all prophesie one by one that all may learn and all may be comforted 31. For all that are Prophets or are then prophetically inspired may prophesie in order that all in the Church may learn and be exhorted and comforted 32. And the spirits of the prophets are subject to the prophets 32. And whereas Men may pretend to be inspired of God and that to speak just at that time when it is not so as their own Understanding must judge of the edifying Season and Order so the Prophets that are Hearers having the Spirit of God are fit Judges whether it be that Spirit or a Delusion and Passion of their own that Order may be kept in the Assemblies at least as to the time 33. For God is not the author of confusion but of peace as in all churches of the saints 33. For pretended Inspirations and Mandates are not to be believed against Gods common Law to all the Churches which have a surer notification than a single Man can give us B●t Gods common Law is against Confusion and for Peace and Order and therefore it is certain that Confusion is not of Divine Inspiration 34. Let your women keep silence in the churches for it is not permitted unto them to speak but they are commanded to be under obedience as also saith the law 34. And it is one of the Rules of Order That Women be no Publick Teachers or Speakers in the Church God permitteth it not who hath commanded them Subjection by the Law 35. And if they will learn any thing let them ask their Husbands at home for it is a shame for women to speak in the church 35. Not but that they should learn but it must be with modesty asking their Husbands if they have such as are able to teach them as they ought else they have other private Helps It 's a shame to the Church and her for a Woman there to speak except in common singing Psalms or other Common Acts. 36. What came the word of God out from you or came it unto you only 36. I ask them that contradict this Did Gods Word come out from you or from intrusted Apostles Or did it come to you only that you contradict the Churches 37. If any man think himself to be a prophet or spiritual let him acknowledge that the things that I write unto you are the commandments of the Lord. 38. But if any man be ignorant let him be ignorant 37 38. If any be indeed a Prophet or Inspired and not pretendedly only he will confess that these Canons or Decisions are Gods own Commandments and not my Device But if Men will be obstinate in their Ignorance let them look to it 39. Wherefore brethren covet to prophesie and forbid not to speak with tongues 39. Prophecy for the Churches Edifying is to be coveted and Languages there not forbidden 40. Let all things be done decently and in order 40. That Sacred things be all done decently and not with uncomely negligence and orderly and not in confusion or as every Mans Fancy leads him this is a General Law of God according to which undetermined Modes and Circumstances must be regulated and done ANNOTATIONS I. IT 's a Doubt oft put How it could be that Gods Spirit should inspire Men with Tongues or Prophecy and yet not tell them when and how to use them But it 's not to be thought that he that was before without the Habit had the actual Use of them then suddenly inspired but that as the Learned so the Inspired had the habitual Knowledge of Tongues before they assembled and so for the actual Use and Time were to exercise their own Discretion II. The Description of the Church here oft named as meeting in one Place with their Officers and Guides tells us that then a Church of this Rank was not a Diocess of many hundred Assemblies which had all but one Bishop their Constitutive Head but that it was a Company associated for Personal Communion that usually met in one Place though Necessity might make them meet in many and tho some General Guides might take care of many such Churches III. The greater number of Prophets and Teachers c. that were here in one Assembly whose Exercises the Apostle was put to restrain doth fully confute Dr. Hammond's oft-repeated Opinion That in Scripture-times there is no Proof that there were any more Presbyters to one Church than one who was a Bishop and had Deacons under him and that for want of capable Persons But his Opinion inferreth That then a Church was no greater than could meet in one Place For one Bishop could not be at once in many And if no Subject-Presbyters were made in Scripture-times it must be proved by what just Power they were after made even a sort of Pastors never made by the Apostles IV. The Arguments of the Apostle against the uninterrupted Use of Tongues not understood in the Church are so many cogent plain and vehement that I will
supream onely God both in the Temple at Jerusalem and throughout all the now-Christian Eastern Empire and a great part further of the World and under the Title of God's greatest Prophet will put down God's own Institutions and Laws and Gospel and set up his own in the stead 6. What it is that stops him is a thing known to you all even the Imperial Power which as it falls he will rise For as he is to make his false Religion by a composition of Arianism Judaism and his own Inventions so the swarm of Heresies now among us Nicolaitans Ebionites Cerinthians Gnosticks c. are secretly a Mystereous Iniquity preparing for him Onely that Empire that now letteth must give place to him by diminution at his first rising and by its total-overthrow in the East at his full possession And so he shall in his time become the open Seducer and Captivater of the Church and World and must stay till Christ diminish and consume Mahometanism by his Word preached and utterly destroy it with the Glory of his more full appearance before the end 9. Even that M●homets Kingdom whose coming is by Satanical Murdering Wars and deceitful pretences of Heavenly Signs and Revelations and with the unrighteous deceit of pretended opposition to Idolatry and to Christians as if they worship two or three Gods and their Laws were not so good as his And those Superficial Hypocrite-Christians that had but the Name and Form and not the hearty belief love and obedience to the Truth shall turn Mahometans and be damned II. The commonest Protestant Paraphrase is thus V. 3. Christs coming shall not be till there be a general Apostacie of the whole visible Church say some or of most or much of it say others unto Idolatrous Worship and subjection to the Papacy and that Man of sin the Pope be revealed the Active and Passive Son of Perdition the Abaddon the Head of this Apostacie given up to all sin himself and to promote it 4. Who claimeth Christs Prerogative under the name of his Universal Vicar and overthrows his Officers and Laws and sets up his own against them and overtoppeth and subjecteth all Princes and Magistrates and this in the Church of God say most or in that Idolatrous Church of his own falsely called The Church of God say others as if he were there chief Lord himself and arrogating names of Blasphemy I told you formerly of all this And now you know what hindereth his speedy arising Even the Empire as such say some including both the Pagan and Christian Or as others the Empire as Pagan only 6. For the beginnings of Antichristianity are secretly and mysteriously already working which will bring him forth in time even the Pride and Ambition of Ministers seeking Superiority and the Peoples excess of Factious Respects to some above others and falling into Sects and Heresies in following them Only the Empire that now hindreth must first be taken out of the way 8. And then shall the Pope that Man of Wickedness arise say some or be openly discovered to be Antichrist say others Whom the Lord shall consume by the Power of his Word preached by the two Witnesses and then destroy by pouring out the Vials of his Wrath upon him at his later coming to restore his Church 9. Even that Pope with his Roman Church of Papists whose coming to the Papacy is after that way of working by force and cheats and feigned Miracles which Satan teacheth and giveth them to seduce the Christian World 10. And with all the deceiving Arts of falshood by which unrighteousness is upheld and promoted to delude those that shall perish for ever Because they received not sound Doctrine when it was delivered nor held the Christian Faith in Love and in its Power but in Custom Hypocrisie and Form that it might sanctifie and save them Therefore God justly gave them up by desertions to Deceivers and Delusions to believe a lie 12. That all these Papists might be damned who believed not the Truth that is contrary to Popery but had pleasure in its unrighteous Principles and Practices and in that sensual life which is contrary to the Christianity which they profess III. The third considerable Opinion runs thus in the Paraphrase Exposition 1. Pauls words have relation both to Daniels words of Antiochus say most but of the Roman Power rather say Calvin and Brightman who largely proveth it 2. It is so far from being true that the Christians rejoiced in Christs sending the Romans to destroy Jerusalem that they greatly lamented it The Cities name was precious to them the first Christians being all Jews and the Gentiles receiving the Gospel from Jerusalem Christ wept over them when he Prophesied their ruine Paul's lamentation was great for them The ruine was dreadful 1110000 killed and 700000 carried Captive And the Apostles were all Jews and there was a common expectation among the Jews of the Messiah's glorious Kingdom at Jerusalem and they called it The Holy City and Land 3. The Abomination of desolation is by Christ himself compared to that spoken of by Daniel the Prophet which was the destroying the Holy Place and Worship and setting up Idolatry in its stead And the Authors themselves of the second Exposition as against the Pope Expound the Desolating Abomination in Matth. 24. to be the Roman Heathen Army coming to lay waste the Holy City and Temple For that Abomination of Desolation was to go before the flight of Men from Jerusalem or to concur And this Text v. 3. c. seemeth plainly to follow Christ and speak of the same that he speaketh of 4. Vespasian and his Son Titus by his Command were the Men that destroyed the Holy City Temple and Nation and the Idolatrous Heathens and their Worship there took present possession and so set up the Desolation and Abomination And his younger Son Domitian destroyed the Christians and Proclaimed himself to be God and to be worshipped with Altars and Sacrifices as God 5. This Vespatian took on him to work Miracles healing a Blind Man and many others So that some foolish Jews called him the Messiah And he and his Son Titus by their flattery and fair lives got great esteem as excellent Men And their Learned Orators c. promoted the honour of Idolatry by theirs 6. This way of Self-deifying and promoting Idolatry and Captivating the Jews and all Christians went on though not equally through all the Emperours almost till Constantine 7. The attempt of Caius Caligula told the Christians what further to expect when he Commanded Petronius to set up his Image in the Temple to be worshipped as Jupiter Nero's Cruelty prognosticated much 8. But Vespasian and Titus were stopt from the Desolation first attempted by the Life of Claudius Galba Otho Vitellius till he was made Emperour himself 9. And Christ consumed their Idolatry by his Gospel and destroyed it by Constantine These things premised their Paraphrase is v. 3. The day of the Lord will not
For it is sanctified by the word of God and prayer 4 5. For all that God hath made for Food is good and clean and not to be refused as in kind unlawful if it be received thankfully as from Gods Gift to fit us for his Service For to such as do thus it is more than lawful even a sanctified Means to sit them to serve God Gods Word allowing and giving it them and Prayer craving his Blessing to that end 6. If thou put the brethren in remembrance of these things thou shalt be a good minister of Jesus Christ nourished up in the words of faith and of good doctrine whereunto thou hast attained 6. These things thou must suggest to the Brethren as their Teacher that thou maist approve thy self a good Minister of Christ bred up in sound Faith and Doctrine c. 7. But refuse profane and old wives fables and exercise thy self rather unto godliness 7. But as for the Jewish and Heretical Fancies of Abstinence from Marriage and Meats and the idle Reasons from Tradition or Pythagorean Dotage which they give for them avoid them and let it be thy Business to preach promote and practise plain Doctrine and Duties of Godliness and guide the Flock therein 8. For bodily exercise profiteth little but godliness is profitable unto all things having the promise of the life the now is and of that which is to come 8. For no Corporal Austerities or Exercises in Religion must be overvalued The best of them are of small Profit in comparison of that Godliness which consisteth in Spiritual Exercises of Faith Hope Love and their Expressions But this true Spiritual substantial Godliness is profitable to all that we can justly desire having from God the Promise of all the Good of this Life which is meet for us and we meet for it and of that which is to come after this Life is ended 9. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation 10. For therefore we both labour and suffer reproach because we trust in the living God who is the Saviour of all men specially of those that believe 9 10. And what I say of the Promise to Godliness for this Life and that to come is a Truth most sure and of greatest moment and worthy of our greatest acceptation For it is on the belief of this that we labour strive and suffer trusting on the Goodness and Promises of God who is Life and the Lord of Life and as their Saviour giveth the Mercies of this Life and that to come as Men are fitted for each to all Men all Good being from him to all the World But eternal Good being by his Promise secured to all true Believers which others reject when it is offered them for temporal Good 11 12. These things command and teach Let no man despise thy youth but be thou an example of the Believers in word in conversation in charity in spirit in faith in purity 11 12. These things teach commandingly as necessary with Authority And so behave thy self that thy Youth expose thee not to Contempt Be thou an Example in whom all the Believers may see how they should live in thy Speech and thy Conversation in Love and Spirituality in sound Faith and spotless Purity 13. Till I come give attendance to reading to exhortation to doctrine 13. Till I come be diligent in Reading the Scripture privately for thy self and publickly to Expound it to the Church to apply it by Exhortation and sound Doctrine 14. Neglect not the gift that is in thee which was given thee by prophecy with the laying on of the hands of the presbytery 14. Neglect not diligently to use and improve those Eminent Gifts which were given thee even with Prophecy of thee as one that would be faithful by the laying on of the Hands of the Presbytery or Elders of of the Church when thou wast called and ordained to the Ministry For neglect quencheth the Spirit 15. Meditate upon these things give thy self wholly to them that thy profiting may appear to all 15. Note That even those that are extraordinarily Inspired and Qualified must study hard and wholly give themselves to that and all their Ministerial Work if they would appear good Proficients Therefore those tha● have no such Inspiration have need of hard study And they that wholly addict themselves to the Ministry have no leisure for Magistracy or Worldly Avocations Nor can do that for many hundred Churches which required the whole of a Timothy for one 16. Take heed unto thy self and unto thy doctrine continue in them for in doing this thou shalt both save thy self and them that hear thee 16. In sum Take greatest heed First that thy own Soul and Life be Sound and Holy and Undefiled and next that thy Doctrine be so and thou diligently labour in it Continue in this twofold Care and Diligence and thou shalt secure thy own Salvation and in all likelyhood thy Hearers for God will will not deny his Blessing to such Labours CHAP. V. 1. REbuke not an elder but intreat him as a father and the younger men as brethren 2. The elder women as mothers the younger as sisters with all purity 1 2. When Elders in Age or Office transgress use not Magisterial roughness of Reproof but Humble Exhortation as to Fathers And speak to the Younger with Love and Gentleness as to Brethren And speak to the Elder Women as to Mothers with due respect and to the Younger as Sisters carefully shunning all that savoureth of Immodesty or Unchastity in thought or speech or looks or behaviour 3 4. Honour widows that are widows indeed But if any widow have children or nephews let them learn first to shew piety at home and to requite their parents for that is good and acceptable before God 3 4. Let those that are Widdows indeed at once deprived of Husbands and Maintenance being Aged and unable to work be maintained by the Church with due respect But if any of them have Children and Nephews that can maintain them Let these their Off-spring be taught that Piety and Gratitude for all their Parents care of them oblige them to maintain their Widdows and not to cast them on the Church and that this is a Duty that God requireth of them and will accept Note That it is doubted whether these Widdows were Deaconesses or meerly kept for poverty I think that it was the Custom of the Ancient Churches to maintain all that are Poor and Aged and unable to get their own livings but not to maintain them in Idleness but to appoint them to employ much of their time in visiting the sick and poor Women and counselling the younger sort and giving notice of their Wants and Cases to the Elders so that the same Women were also as Deaconesses tho some that were wiser and fitter than the rest might be more specially thus employ'd 5. Now she that is a widow indeed and desolate trusteth in God and continueth in supplications and
the Pope the second Beast that flattered them and rebelliously excommunicated those that were against them and his first notable Power was obtained by engaging himself in the cause of the Image-worshippers and extolling and flattering them and withal flattering Pipin and Ch. Martell and others to maintain him in ●his Rebellion by invading the Western Empire and then engaging most succeeding Princes in the same cause And some think that the Pope is the first Beast and the second are his Councils and Cardinals and Clergy and Jesuits and Fryars that cry him up and persuade the World to obey and follow him according to his universal claim And if the difficult Objections against all these last should incline us rather to think that it is the Heathen Empire that is the first Beast I should by reviewing the History of Fact think that the second Beast was not Apollonius fabled of by Philostratus and Hierocles but the whole Gowned and Literate Tribe Learning and the pompous ostentation of it being then almost as much of the Glory Pride and Strength of Rome as the Military Power And I shall shew anon how ordinary it was for the first Beast the Imperial Military Power to arrogate the name of God's and to have Temples Altars and Sacrifices And the second Beast Poets Orators Comedians Philosophers Historians as well as Augurs and Southsayers and Magicians and Priests all flattered and applauded these blasphemous Emperours and the great Learning of these men was set up against Christianity as despised foolishness As they did with Paul at Athens so did the Learned Romans count Christians Bablers and ignorant Barbarians Learning vain and carnal was as great a glory to Rome as Arms and it 's doubtful whether the Imperial Power or the Literate Opposition and Scorn did more hinder the reception of Christianity But Christ and the Cross at last conquered both and used both to promote the Gospel Yet this might be said to arise out of the Earth for when it was used for enmity and strife against Christ it was foolishness with God and as James saith ch 3. was earthly sensual and devilish causing confusions and every evil work 12. And he exerciseth all the power of the first beast before him and causeth the earth and them which dwell therein to worship the first beast whose deadly wound was healed 12. If it be the Heathen Empire that is spoken of 1. Then it seemeth likest that the deadly wound was the shame and shaking of the Empire by the deaths of Tiberius Caligula Claudius Nero Galba Otho and Vitellius every Emperour between Augustus and Vespasian murdered by others or themselves and the Suspension of Vespasian at first or afterward the shake that Heathenism had there by the Wisdom and Honesty of the Antonines and after of Alexander Severus and Philip yet the first soon repaired by Vespasian Titus and Domitian and all the rest at last by Dioclesian after Decius Aurelian c. And the Learned Tribe did live in Power and in their Senate and all their City-Officers exercise such splendid Pomp and Rule as the Emperour did in his place And caused the Roman City and Empire to worship their victorious blasphemous Emperours and with them to continue the common Idolatry 13. And he doth great wonders so that he maketh fire come down from heaven on the earth in the sight of men 13. This Roman Learning is used to overcome truth and Christianity and to make men believe that the Sun and Moon and Stars are Gods and have Oracle where they speak and that it is they that conquer the enemies of Rome so that their power was in the vis●on represented to me as if they brought down fire from Heaven 14. And deceiveth them that dwell on the earth by the means of those miracles which he had power to do in the sight or the beast saying to them that dwell on the earth that they should make an image to the beast which had the wound by a sword and did live 14. Their powerful Oratory and Learning deceiveth the ignorant multitude to erect Images to their victorious Blasphemous Heathen Emperours who recovered from the foresaid wound by the military murders Images and Atlars and Sacrifices are to be made the means of worshipping them 15. And he had Power to give life unto the image of the beast that the image of the beast should both speak and cause that as many as would not worship the image of the beast should be killed 15. They so deceived the people as that the Oracles seemed to them to speak and to tell them as from the Gods that they must kill all those that would not worship the Image of the Emperour and the Gods that he worshipped and would not be of his Religion 16. And he causeth all both small and great rich and poor free and bond to receive a mark in their right hand or in their fore-heads 17. And that no man might buy or sell save he that had the mark or the name of the beast or the number of his name 16.17 It was the custom of the Romans in those times to mark both Servants and many Soldiers as notes of relation and appropriation mostly on their arms or hands by which the person marked as by a Badge Livery or Colours owned his Master or Captain And also to mark their slaves and punished persons with a brand of disgrace in the face or hand The mark of Servants or Soldiers was sometime his Masters Escotcheon or chosen Badge and sometime his name and sometime the Chief Letters of his name which leaving out the rest flood for the name as M. for Marcus L. for Lucius S. P. Q. R. for Senatus Populusque Romanus c. And it sometime fell out that these Letters were numerall M. D. C. L. I. V. are with us Now this Text serveth to some to mean that the flattering Literate Tribe in Rome Orators Senators Poets Priests Aruspices c. who were the Second beast did by their Laws Orations Poems Comedies Oracles and Deceits cause the people commonly to come under obligations thus to enslave themselves to the Idolatrous Emperors to own them as petty Gods and offer at their Altars and Sacrifices and to Worship the Idols also which they worshipped and so to be the owners of and actors in their Idolatry And in order hereto to honour them by receiving their Badges or their names or the Chief Letters of their names And it fell out that the Chief Letters here meant were Numerall and Nominative both and made up 666. And if it be as most Protestants think Rome-Papall that is the Second here meant then as the First Beast is the Papacy as Idolatrous and Potent so the Second is likest to be the flattering Clergy who are to the Popes much like what the Literate Romans aforesaid were to the Heathen Emperours I mean his Prelates Councils Jesuits and Fryars of all sorts These have pretended to abundance of Miracles to