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A13535 A commentarie vpon the Epistle of S. Paul written to Titus. Preached in Cambridge by Thomas Taylor, and now published for the further vse of the Church of God. With three short tables in the end for the easier finding of 1. doctrines, 2. obseruations, 3. questions contained in the same Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1612 (1612) STC 23825; ESTC S118201 835,950 784

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the God of heauen For either Satan by his suggestion or his instruments or which is more to be feared we shall heare the whisperings and mutterings of our owne flesh saying Where is the God in whom ye trusted let not thy God deceiue thee any longer and with Iehoram Is not this euill from the Lord and shall I waite on him any longer to all which let vs be bold to answer with the Apostle I know whom I haue beleeued euen him whose bare word is aboue all bonds who neuer promised more then he was able to performe and neuer performed lesse then he promised faithfull is he that hath promised and no vnfaithfulnes of man can make him vnfaithfull The like truth and steadfastnesse carie all his denunciations and threats for neither when his messengers threaten wrath against the impenitent shall that be found a lying word but the sentence of the Iudge which cannot faile of execution True it is that the Lyon hath often roared but the beasts of the feild haue not trembled The Lord hath vttered his terrible voice against the vnrighteousnesse of men but his threatnings haue met with mockers who say euery vision is deferred and where is the promise of his comming with swarmes of Atheists who say there is no God but denie heauen hell and immortalitie of the soule in the meane time making leagues and couenants with hell and death with beastly Epicures who liue vnmooueably from their carnall delights and sensuall pleasures with heauie and dead hearted professours with whome they haue beene but as a blast all which sorts of men promise to themselues life although the Lord hath said of them they shall die and is not this to charge God expressely with a lie and as much as to say that he is not God But these shall know that the words the Lord hath spoken shall be done Ezek. 12.28 And as the Lord letteth his children see for the present that it is not in vaine to worship him so he letteth his enemies often feele euen before their death that all his words fall not to the ground when he meeteth them at euery corner with sundrie plagues and iudgements in their soules bodies estate name or freinds all which are the accomplishment of his word which shall not passe away when heauen and earth shall be dissolued Vse 2. Seeing God cannot lie let euery one of vs labour to expresse this vertue of God first and especially the minister in his place seeing he speaketh from God nay God speaketh by him he must therefore deliuer true sayings worthie of all men to be receiued that he may be able to say in his owne heart that which Paul spake of himselfe I speake the truth in Christ I lie not and iustifie that of his doctrine which Paul did of his writings the things which now I write vnto you behold I witnes before God that I lie not Now then is a minister a liar when he either speaketh false things as euery where the false Prophets are charged an example whereof we may see in Hananiah the sonne of Azur and Abab the sonne of Roliah and Zedekiah the sonne of Maaseiah who are said to prophesie lies in the name of the Lord in that when the Lords Prophets were commanded to carrie yokes about their neckes these would breake them and so caused the people to trust in a lie or else true things falsely misapplying that truth which they could not but vtter for this was euer the note of a false Prophet to make their hearts sad who should haue beene cheared and to speak peace to them against whom the Lord had proclaimed open warre so falsifying the word of the great God which iniurie no earthly King would suffer vnreuenged If a king should signe and send out his letters of death and execution against some archtraytor and the officer betrusted with them should serue them vpon some faithfull counseller who is neare and deare to his Prince so as the innocent and well-deseruing shal be put to death and the traytor suffered to liue in honour should not the life of this man so betrusted goe for the life of the other In like sort doth be who in Gods place whetteth his tongue against the righteous of the land and disgraceth the most forward in the wayes of God let him discourse against them in Scripture phrase and speak things in themselues neuer so true yet is he a lowde liar in the false applying of them and wresting them against them vpon whom the eyes of the Lord are for good and with liars shall be kept without the gates of the ●oly citie and that most iustly in that he hath not lied of men but of God himselfe whom so farre as his malice could extend he hath endeauoured to drawe into his sinne in making him a liar also like vnto himselfe 2. Euery priuate man must take vp that exhortation to cast off lying and speake euery man truth vnto his neighbour and that because it is a peece and sparkle of Gods image and a part of the newe man which is to be put on Which reason the Apostle vrgeth sundrie times in the epistles And indeede no man can more liuely resemble the image of his heauenly father then by the practise of truth in which one word is included that whole image of God which standeth in righteousnesse and holines as Ioh. 8.44 the angels stood not in the truth As on the contrarie no man can more liuely resemble the deuil then by lying for he is a lyar from the beginning and the father of lies True it is there be many defences made for sundrie sorts of lies which we shall haue better occasion to scan in the processe of this Epistle but let all such as would haue themselues marked with the stampe of Gods children knowe that they onely can haue assurance of the pardon of sinnes in whose spirit is no guile and those onely shall rest in the holy mountaine that speake the truth from their hearts and they alone shall stand with the lambe on mount Sion and sing the newe song before the throne who haue no guile found in their monthes Doctr. 3. The last generall obseruation out of the former words teacheth what an infinite and free loue the Lord embraceth his elect withall in that be decreeth from euerlasting whatsoeuer he doth for them in the due season of it Hence it is that not onely in this place but thorough the Scriptures we may read that all the stayres whereby we climbe to heauen were laid by God before the world began If we looke at Gods predestination and election the names are written in the book of life from euerlasting Iacob was loued not onely before he had done good but before he was to doe it If to the ende which is the kingdome that is prepared from the foundations of the world If to the meanes which is Christ he is the
vs against the scandal which is common in the world wherein most men beleeue not most men repent not nay scorne them that doe at which we may not stumble seeing that some yea the most are refused there must be in euery corner such as are blinded vnto destruction It is the Fathers good pleasure to reueale the things of the kingdome to ● few babes but to hide them from the most of the wise and prudent of the world A few are giuen vnto the Sonne and brought in due season vnto the faith many more are deliuered vp vnto Satan to haue the eies of their minds further blinded that so they might iustly perish in their infidelitie 3. Hence we must blesse God who hath chosen vs that he might put a difference betweene vs and others whereas he found no such difference in vs who were the children of wrath as well as others he chose vs not when we were but that we might be holy and vnblameable Ephes. 1.4 that from the first to last in our saluation all the glorie might be his yea that our ioy might be more full and our glorying in God more firme and cheerefull he hath made it knowne vnto vs that beeing elected we are sure of our happinesse for nothing shall be able to plucke vs out of his hands The second conclusion is that the elect haue a faith by themselues being here called the faith of Gods elect where by faith is not meant the doctrine of faith as Iude 3. Contend for the faith once giuen and 1. Tim. 1.19 but rather the gift of faith whereby we vnderstand and imbrace that doctrine neither is euery gift of faith here meant For there is 1. an historicall faith standing in an assent and acknowledgement of the truth of things written and taught 2. There is also an hypocriticall faith which passeth the former in two degrees First in that with knowledge and assent is ioyned such a profession of the truth as shall carrie a great shew and forme of godlinesse Secondly a kinde of gladnesse and glorying in that knowledge for it is ascribed to some who in temptation shall fall away to receiue the word with ioy To both which may be ioyned sometimes a gift of prophecie sometimes of working miracles as some in the last day shall say Lord haue we not prophecied and cast out deuills in thy name and yet they shall be vnknowne of Christ. Neither of these is the faith of the elect here mentioned but a third kind called sauing faith the inheritance of which is the proprietie of the elect for the iust man only liueth by this faith which in excellencie passeth both the former in three worthy properties 1. In that here with the act of vnderstanding and assent vnto the truth there goeth such a disposition and affection of the heart as apprehendeth and applieth vnto it the promise of grace vnto saluation causing a man to reioyce in God framing him vnto the feare of God and to the wayting through hope for the accomplishment of the promise of life 2. In that whereas both the former are dead and not raysing vnto a new life in Christ what shewes soeuer be made for the time the sunne of persecution riseth and all such moysture is dried vp This is a liuely and quickning grace reaching into the heart Christ and his merits who is the life of the soule and the moouer of it to all godly actions not suffering the beleeuer to be either idle or vnfruitfull in the worke of the Lord. 3. Whereas both the former are but temporarie this is perpetuall and lasting the other rising vpon temporarie causes and reasons can last only for a time as when men for the pleasure of knowledge or the name of it by industrie attaine a great measure of vnderstanding in diuine things or when for note and glorie or commoditie true or apparent men professe the Gospell let but these grounds faile a little or persecution approch they lay the key vnder the doore giue vp house and bid farewell to all profession Thus many of Christs Disciples who thought they had truly beleeued in him and that many moneths ●hen they heard him speake of the eating of his flesh and drinking his blood went backe and walked with him no more But the matter is here farre otherwise seeing this faith of the elect hath the promise made good to it that the gates of hell shall neuer preuaile against it Vse This conclusion teacheth vs 1. That true faith is an infallible marke of election assuring the beleeuer as certenly of his saluation as if he were alreadie gathered vp to his fathers or as if he had a speciall reuelation For besides that here it is a grace impropriate to the elect the Sonne of God teacheth it Ioh. 6.37 All that the Father giueth mee shall come vnto mee that is all those whom the Father chuseth to saluation he giueth to the Sonne to saue for election is founded in Christ and those who are thus giuen vnto the Sonne by the Father come vnto the Sonne that is beleeue in him for so the 35. verse confoundeth them He that commeth vnto mee shall not hunger and hee that beleeueth in mee shal neuer thirst So as those that beleeue are giuen to the Sonne to saluation The same teacheth the Euangelist Act. 13.48 As many as were ordained to life beleeued and 2. Thess. 2.13 the Apostle maketh sanctification of the spirit and the faith of truth two infallible notes of election All that can be here of moment obiected is that a man cannot know certainly that he hath faith But that is false for Paul 2. Cor. 13.5 willing the Corinthians to examine and prooue themselues whether they were in the faith or no and whether Christ be in them or no taketh it for granted that a man may know that he hath faith and that Christ is in him for else were his exhortation idle Quest. But how may a man knowe that he hath this faith that so the beleeuer may rise vp to the assurance of his election Ans. There be diuerse notes and companions of it more easily discerned then it selfe is as first It purifieth the heart Act. 15.19 and will not suffer it to be taken vp with vncleane thoughts or vnlawfull lusts it ordereth the affections and cu●beth them as with bit and bridle and bendeth them with reuerence to loue desire reioyce in God and his image yea in nothing more or so much yea and by thus ordering the heart it doth also guide the words with wisedome for the good man out of the good treasure of his heart cannot but send out good speaches Secondly from the works of loue a man may conclude he hath faith Gal. 5.6 faith worketh by loue first to God then to man for Gods sake for it hath respect both to him that begate and him that is begotten Thirdly it is plentifull in prayers and
it selfe and cannot lie it beeing a part of his word who can neither deceiue nor be deceiued 2. because the penmen of it were inspired by the holy Ghost and spake and writ as they were mooued by him who is called the spirit of truth Ioh. 14.17 3. because it is a doctrine of Christ and aymeth at him who is the the truth principally as well as the way of our saluation Whence it is that the Apostles often stile it by the word of truth as Eph. 1.13 After ye heard the word of truth euen the Gospel of your saluation and Coloss. 1.5 For the hopes sake whereof ye haue heard before by the word of truth which is the Gospel True it is that the Lawe is a true word without all error but yet neuer thus called For the morall law will not now affoard such a truth as by which a sinner can be iustified in the sight of God and the ceremoniall law although it doe acknowledge such a truth yet was it a farre off and in types and not in the truth but the Gospel onely is such a truth as whereby we are raised to saluation Vse 1. Ministers must rightly devide this word of truth as such who would be approoued of Christ both the author and subiect of it for the more notable the subiect is the more care must there be in handling it Which the Apostle Peter teacheth If any man speake let him speake as the word of God The word of truth would be truely dealt with purely preached wisely applyed and so faithfully dispensed as that both God and good men and a mans owne conscience may approoue his worke 2. This word so purely handled shall euery soule finde to be truth it selfe so as beleeuers shall not faile of the saluation published in it and vnbeleeuers shall as surely meete with condemnation seeing hereby they are condemned alreadie 3. Not to haue this truth seated in our hearts is a fearefull case for it argueth a man to be giuen vp to error and delusion 2. To doubt of any part of it is to giue a lie to all the rest 3. To seeke for saluation out of it or besides it as the blinded Papist doth is to cleaue to folly and falsehood 4. To despise this truth is to contemne great saluation for if to despise Moses law bringeth death without mercie how much more sorer punishment is he worthy of which treadeth vnder foot the Sonne of God 5. But to fight against this truth is most wofull for it is strongest and will preuaile neuer man lifted against the truth but he found it too heauie for him neuer man spurned against it but to the bruising of himselfe Secondly the knowledge of this truth is the ground of faith for so our Apostle would haue vs conceiue that the faith of the elect is raised vpon knowledge of the truth as the matter of it and in this sence we read that faith is called the faith of truth euen for this reason because it is begotten in the acknowledgement of the truth and Paul in asking that question How shall they beleeue except they heare plainly concludeth that no hearing of the truth no faith in it and how may he that runneth read in the Scriptures that to whomsoeuer faith is giuen they be such as are taught of God such as to whom the holy spirit is become a schoolemaster who openeth their vnderstandings that with much assurance they can see and acknowledge the truth for seeing faith is much more then an vncertaine opinion or wauering fancie it followeth that that knowledge which is the ground of it must be no shaking reede with euery winde but a certaine acknowledgement of the truth approouing of it and assenting vnto it Neither may we thinke that the spirit of truth traineth men in blinde and vngrounded conceits nor leaueth their hearts in vncertainties but that wheresoeuer he worketh such an eminent grace as faith is he maketh men able in some good measure to giue a reason of the hope that is in them And as little reason haue we to conceiue that the worke of the Ministerie is to build castles in the ayre or the castle of faith without a foundation but that Ministers are sent to make the misteries of saluation cleare in the euidence and demonstration of the spirit and so lay men on that foundation to become a spirituall house consisting of liuing stones fit for the honour of the Lord. And to ende the proofe notably doth the Apostle Paul prooue the effectuall faith of the Thessalonians from this ground of it for our Gospel was not vnto you in word only but in power and in the holy Ghost and in much assurance which place must be vnderstood so to be both in the teachers and the hearers as the context declareth Vse 1. If knowledge be the ground of faith then sleight is the faith of the most whatsoeuer men professe Numbers of most silly creatures swarme euery wheare who pretend and presume vpon as strong a faith to God ward as the best preacher of them all and yet liue no better then Atheists euen without God in the world without the knowledge of his waies without his feare in their hearts to loue God aboue all and their neighbours as themselues is but a breath with them to beleeue in Iesus Christ is so naturall as they neuer doubted of it all their liues to bring forth fruits of faith whose propertie is to worke by loue in the obedience of the Commandements of the first and second table this they do they hope as well as God wil giue them leaue or as others of their neighbours do whereas alas euen their speach bewraieth them to be destitute of vnderstanding and consequently vtterly voide of the faith of truth 2. If the ground of faith must be a certaine knowledge of heauenly truth then hereby 1. is ouerturned that fond distinction of the Papists which masketh there more then Egyptian blindnes ioyned with wilfulnes and obstinacie vnder their modest vaile of vnexpressed faith or the faith of lay-men whereby if they can professe themselues Catholikes liue and die in the beleefe of their falsely so termed Catholike Church although they know not what it beleeueth it is sufficient for their saluation And indeed be that professeth that religion which like the apples of Egypt will abide no touch had need leane vpon an implicit faith And so some of them pretending more learning thē is common among them beeing pressed by argument haue thought they haue learnedly enough answeared in saying that their Doctors can answer for them But who seeth not these Pharisies taking away the key of knowledge and incurring that we denounced against such as will neither enter themselues nor suffer others to enter into the kingdome of heauen for surely if little or no knoledge little or no faith of a mans owne were enough how vnwise was Paul so to trouble
of their owne displeasure and sometimes out of their sonnes misdemeanours doe disinherit their heires but the Lord cannot growe into such displeasure with his children as ●ue● to cast them out whome in his Christ he hath once admitted into his house If his sonnes sinne against him he will visit their sinnes and scourge them with the rodds of men but his mercie and truth will he neuer take from them Now of the tenure by which we hold life eternall namely of hope I haue spoken twise before in this Epistle at large chap. 1.2 2.13 to which the reader may looke backe onely in a word note that it is a mark of a man set into this new condition to hope and wait for the blessed inheritance in heauen 2. Cor. 5.2 We sigh desiring to be clothed with our house from heauen 2. Tim. 4.8 the description of the godly to be those that loue the appearing of Christ. And if all creatures groane with vs for the time of their deliuerance how ought we much more for whom such things are prepared Hence it followeth 1. that it will not stand with a conuerted heart to linger after the things of this life or to make his heauen vpon earth or to haue equall affection to earth as heauen 2. nor to neglect the meanes whereby this hope is confirmed whether outward offring as the Gospel ministerie word Sacraments or inward receiuing as faith vnfained working in obedience Ver. 8. This is a faithfull saying and these things I will thou shouldst affirme that they which haue beleeued in God might be carefull to shew forth good workes The first words of this verse beeing as it were a finger pointing to some excellent matter some take to be a preface making way and winning attention to the sequel of the verse others thinke it to be an epiphonema or graue shutting vp of that matter which immediately goeth before as giuing consent and acclamation vnto the most weightie and necessarie doctrine of free iustification by the grace of God in Christ which doctrine because the Apostle by the spirit of prophesie did foresee would be most strongly opposed he purposely by a vehement asseueration strengtheneth as also the doctrine of Christian hope which although it be not of things seene yet is it of things so faithfull and firme in respect of the promise as the Christian soule may without wauering and doubting relie and leane it selfe vpon the faithfull accomplishment of it But I take it the words may not vnfitly be referred to the whole doctrine propounded both before and after there beeing the same scope of both for what new thing is the Apostle to teach which he had not taught and vrged before and what particular is expressed in the verse which formerly hath not beene deliuered to young and old men and women servants and other all which estates after their conuersion vnto the faith are in speciall called to readines in euerie good worke vers 1. and to what other ende are those large descriptions of our twofold estate but to strike on the same string that howsoeuer we could not in the former attaine to any fruitfull conuersation yet now in the latter it were a shame not to adorne our profession and calling and what other end learned we of the appearing of grace but that vngodlines and wordly lusts beeing denied we should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world So as I say the Apostle setteth a seale vnto his whole doctrine that it is true and faithfull most vndoubted and certaine in it selfe and most worthie of all our credit and faith seeing nothing can be truelyer spoken nothing more profitably beleeued nothing more comfortably practised then the truth here deliuered vnto vs. Quest. But are not other doctrines true and faithfull yea as true as this and is not all Scripture of diuine inspiration Answ. Yes neither doth our Apostle oppose the truths of Scripture as though one were more or lesse true then another but in more necessarie or more questionable truths he setteth here and there a marke or pointng hand both to vrge the authoritie and necessitie of the one and also to force men more easily to yeeld vnto the truth of the other Example hereof we haue 1. Tim. 1.15 in such a fundamentall point as is saluation onely by Christ to be opposed by so many hundreth heretikes it is no maruell if we see some starre set by it or a light held ouer it that none may passe by it vntill they haue diligently waighed and fully resolued vpon the truth of it In like manner beeing to entreat of the difficult labour care and work of the ministerie from which women as not beeing capable of it are interdicted and of the excellencie of the function which no man might either rashly take vpon him or negligently execute beeing lawfully called and beeing further to set downe a certaine rule vnto which all the lawefull callings in the Church are to be conformed In such a waightie matter as is the preseruation of the Church and pietie he prefixeth a worthie preface 1. Tim. 3.1 This is a true saying if any man desire the office of a Bishop he desireth a worthie worke But where the Apostle doth all these things as in this place he could with lesse reason depart from his ordinarie manner Doctr. The Ministers of God must teach euerie truth reueale the whole counsell of God and keepe nothing backe but some truths must be dwelt vpon and more auouched then others and namely such as are either more necessarie or more contradicted This is the wisedome of the spirit of God himselfe who by his penmen distinguisheth of truthes and hath neither prefixed Behold in the beginning of euerie sentence nor affixed his Selah in euerie ones ende but onely in truths more observable and remarkeable then the rest Which point may receiue a generall confirmation from this obseruation that the penmen of Scripture beeing to write the historie of things past because they were of facts more vndeniable as things running into the sences of men they stand not so much vpon ratifications and asseuerations yea a number of historicall books there are the authors of which are not known to the church But when they come to write prophesies of things to come and things in reason more improbable then the authors name his kinred his calling with other circumstances of time place and persons seruing to confirme and conuince the truth of prophesies are registred And if these truthes were either more necessarily then ordinarie concerning the Church or more liable to opposition and exception then was much more caution and confirmation vsed To avoide multitude of examples whereby this point might be strengthened I will onely insist in that prophesie which more neerely concerneth vs that liue now in the newe Testament namely of the Reuelation The which booke because it describeth the state of the Church from the time of Iohn the last of the
parts when we come vnto them Paul In this name two questions come to be resolued 1. How the Apostle came by this name seeing he was a Iew and on the eight day beeing circumcised according to the law was named Saul after the Iewish manner and not Paul Ans. Not to stand vpon the opinions of some who thinke he was called by both these names because he was both a Iew by birth and a Gentile by his freedome in Rome neither of such as thinke he was thus called because he conuerted Sergius Paulus the Proconsul vnto the Christian faith for we read that he was thus called before we read of the others conuersion Act. 13.9 neither of that father who thought he was called Paulus quasi parvulus Christi vpon his conuersion for he was called Saul a long time after his conuersion But the simple and receiued truth is this That beeing called to Apostleship and ordained to be the teacher of the Gentiles in faith and veritie he was presently to giue ouer his Apostleship among the Hebrewes and withall he giueth ouer the vse of the Hebrew name whereby he was formerly knowne vnto them and vndertaking his office among the Gentiles he also taketh vp this name more familiar vnto them whereby he would giue them to know that he was now appropriated and after a sort dedicated vnto the seruice of their faith And this truth seemeth to be grounded in Act. 13. for before he and Barnabas were separated vnto this worke of the Lord he was euer called Saul but after this time neuer Here we may obserue two considerations 1. That it is and may be lawfull sometimes for a man to change his name else had it not beene lawfull in Paul nor Peter who was before called Bar-jona nor Salomon who was first called Iedidiah Not here to speake of the Lords owne changing of names as in Abraham Sarai Israel wherein the Lord in some new names would hide some new mysteries according to the new occasions offered yet here these caueats must be diligently obserued 1. it may not be done to the hurt or offence of any man as in nicknames taken vp in scoffe or for reproach of our selues or others but to the good of men 2. it may not be done to the hiding or couering of any sinne as many fellons and Iesuiticall fugitiues vse it 3. some good ende must euer be propounded in it wherein God may be more glorified and men edified Thus haue sundrie godly men changed their names in their writings to preuent preiudiciall thoughts taken vp against their persons that the truth might more prosperously spread it selfe 2. Note hence that such names are to be giuen to children as may put them in minde of some good dutie as Paul could neuer heare or remember his new name but also be put in minde of his new office and dutie which he was to performe among the Gentiles And so much as may be these names must be giuen in the naturall language thus the Hebrews giue fit names in Hebrew the Greekes in Greeke as Timothie There was a disciple named Timotheus his mother was a Iewesse but his father a Grecian which last words seeme to include the reason of his name the Latins in Latin as Tertius who wrote the Epistle to the Romans and Quartus a brother which reprooueth many men who are either too curious or too carelesse in imposing the names of their children The former beeing in the excesse giue names aboue the nature of men some drawing too neere the Deitie it selfe as Emmanuel and the Iesuits some of Angels as Gabriel Michael c. some of vertues as Grace Faith Mercie Patience c. The latter beeing in defect giue the names of heathen men as though they would haue them prooue so sometimes of things farre below the nature of men as of beasts trees c. then whome sometimes by Gods iust iudgement they prooue not more sensible whereas the name should not onely be fitted vnto the nature but also carrie some fit lesson and instruction in it The second question is Why this name is here prefixed Ans. There be three especiall vses of setting mens names vnto divine writings 1. to shew that men were called of God vnto that worke 2. that they were readie to iustifie and stand to that they had written 3. to preuent the mischiefe of forging writings and fathering them vpon men which neuer wrote them Which regards mooued Paul in all his Epistles to obserue two things 1. in the beginning of each to prefixe his name as in all his 13. Epistles 2. in the ende of each Epistle he added the Apostolicall salutation as himselfe witnesseth 2. Thess. 3.17 The salutation of me Paul with my owne hand which is the token in euery Epistle Coloss. 4.18 The salutation by the hand of me Paul And both these partly to shew his calling which was so strange and extraordinarie to be from God Gal. 1.1 Paul an Apostle not of men neither by man but by Iesus Christ as also that he might iustifie the truth he wrote Rom. 1.16 I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ As in the last place to preuent that mischiefe which was euen then inuented 2. Thess. 2.2 Be not suddenly mooued nor troubled by spirit by word or letter as though it were from vs he would not therefore haue any goe vnder his name which had not his name at it Hence learne 1. That in the former respects it is conuenient that a mans name should be set to his writings which he commendeth to the vse of the Church after the example of Paul who did not as many now a daies for his names sake set himselfe on writing but for his writings sake set to his name yet so as there be cases when it shall be neither necessarie nor wise to affixe the name of the author The principall of them be three 1. When the name shall bring neither credit to the truth nor profit to the Church but danger and hurt to the partie himselfe which case holdeth firme so long as he writeth generall truths and not personall for els it may prooue an hurtfull slander 2. When the high estimation and account of the penman in the Church may cause the truth to be receiued not for it selfe but for the writer 3. Whē the contempt of the writer through the corruption of the people shall on the other hand preiudice the truth that it shall haue none or lesse regard in respect of him And this is thought to be the cause why not to insist in other Scriptures as many of the Psalmes bookes of Chronicles c. the authors of which the spirit of God hath not discouered the Epistle to the Hebrewes generally by the learned thought to be Pauls wanteth both the name superscription and subscription which all his other Epistles haue not because he was the Doctor of the Gentils and so was out of his
the gates of hell here is Sanballat and Tobiah Simon Magus and Amaziah here are false Christs false Apostles Heretikes Tyrants all standing against Christ and making warre against his bodie In all which regards if Salomon in the daies of peace without all opposition hauing an hundreth and three and fiftie thousand and sixe hundred workmen cannot vnder seauen yeares finish the materiall Temple how hardly thinke we must this spirituall house standing of liuing stones goe vp how slowly is it reared hauing more enemies and those no weake ones then Salomon had workmen euen as many as there be naturall men in the earth vnmortified lusts in men or deuils in hell all of them with all their power resisting the proceedings of the Church and Gospel Vse 1. This doctrine lets vs see what great things God hath done for such a people as among whom he hath planted h●s ordinances many strong holds and oppositions hath he brought down many enemies hath he subdued many engins of Satan and his instruments hath he broken before he could settle his glorie and cause it to dwell among his people For as it was at the first breaking out of this light to the world by Christs owne preaching neuer was the world on such a fire neuer was any age so fruitfull in tyrannie and heresie so hath it beene proportionally euer since in the seuerall parts of the world where this grace hath appeared Witnesse in these parts of Europe the stirres and tumults in all the countries against the light restored by Luther witnes also the fires and flames consuming the bodies of Gods seruants in our own countrie in and since the daies of King Henrie the 8. of worthy memorie that had it not bin the truth of God it could neuer haue come to this where we see it for which mercie all the land should be mooued to much thankfulnes Vse 2. Let euery man hence be mooued to helpe forward and lend a hand to the beautifying and perfecting of this spouse of Christ that as it were by many hands this difficult worke may become the lighter Among the Iewes euery man brought somewhat to the Tabernacle and so it was reared some more some lesse but euery man something so let the Magistrate bring his authoritie and countenance the Minister pure doctrine and holy life to the building of the Church the rich their riches to the honour of God the poore good affections and all heartie praiers that we may once see Sion in her perfect beautie Thus euen very meane men shall be honoured so highly as they shall become assistants to the Ruler of the whole earth as some so vnderstand the place of Iehoshuah and Zerubbabel Vse 3. A ground of moderation to beare so farre as good conscience and a mans calling wil permit the imperfections of any Church and in the wants of it carrie our selues as peaceably as may make to the honour of the God of peace and the manifestation of our selues the sonnes of peace as well knowing 1. that it is not to be expected of any Church militant vpon earth to be vnblemished which is a prerogatiue of Christs glorious bodie in heauen 2. by peace small things thriue and arise to their greatnes euen smoaking flaxe cherished groweth to a flame 3. that contention and division hindreth and ouerturneth those good things which haue gone forward but slowly when they went fastest Yet so as according to the extent of our callings we ayme and labour for the pure and perfect estate of the Church For it was a wicked speach condemned by the Prophet to say It is not yet time to build vp the house of the Lord therefore content our selues to dwell in seiled houses and sleepe in sound skins although the Lords house lie wast And hereupon that the Church afore time hath a long time beene wanting in many things tending to the perfection of it to ground a perpetuall imperfection is a peece of Satans sophistrie and argueth the want of that most dutifull affection of children toward such a mother pleading rather for her blackenes then beautie and not reioysing to see this spouse bedecked with all her ornaments The second point in this first dutie of Titus is gathered out of the word translated to redresse but properly signifieth a continuall and instant straightning of things which grow crooked in the Church Whence we learne that there is a continuall bending and inclining of good ordinances in the Church euen in their best estate After that sinne got once into Paradise and tooke the hold of our first parents innocent hearts not the best ordinances that euer the Lord instituted could so fence themselues as to keepe it from them how soone after had all flesh corrupted their waies how were his lawes ingrauen in the tables of mens hearts so forgotten as he must be forced to write them in tables of stone after that how was that law written by his owne fingers generally corrupted and violated as appeareth by Christs reformation of them how his own politie was violenced of Priest and people all the Prophets as with one voice and mouth complaine how al the ordinances of the new Testament were soone ouerturned and by degrees cleane shaken out of the Church by the rising and grouth of Antichrist who euen in the Apostles daies began to worke appeareth in the historie of the Church Hereunto adde the readines of the malicious man to sowe tares the vnwillingnes of the flesh to endure the Lords yoke the busines and curiositie of mans wit and fleshly wisedome which will be adding detracting or deprauing his institutions by a restles turkising of them the state of the Church militant now here now there exercised with continuall vicissitudes and changes as of day and night so of prosperitie and aduersitie according as God giues Kings ouer it either in mercie or wrath protectors or persecutors all these plainely prooue that which is not obscurely implyed that the best things in their best estate are on the bending hand and inclining vnto corruption Vse 1. This point letteth vs see our imperfection in this world and that all our perfection standeth in two things 1. in sight of imperfection 2. in strife vnto perfection For that the Church cannot be perfect is manifest in the continuall declinings of vs that are the members Which should make vs ashamed when we see our turnings backe daily reproouing vs. The Lord if his pleasure had beene such might haue as perfectly beautified and stablished his Church in earth as euer it shall be in heauen but he seeth it fitter for vs to be brought to an humble walking before him in sence of our infirmitie as also daily to repaire vnto him who is both the author and finisher of our faith that he would be pleased to laie as the first so the last stone of this his building that the whole praise of it may be his Vse 2. They may
vnder euerie greene tree and were disobedient children and yet cap. 4.19 he so taketh their miserie to heart as that he crieth out oh my belly my belly I am pained at the verie heart my heart is troubled within me I can not be still And when cap. 9.2 he had desired a place apart that he might neuer come among them they beeing become adulterers an assemblie of rebels and proceeded daily from euill to worse yet to shew that his soule abhorred them not neither that he had cast them out of his affection he tells them in cap. 13.17 that if they would not heare his soule should weepe in secret and his eies droppe downe teares for them So for a Minister to charge a people with knowne and open sinnes it is not euer a signe of malice nor a sting of bitternesse but rather a sweet woūding of loue Hardly can we perswade men of our loue in this case nay euen the Apostle himselfe who spake with ineuitable wisedome was glad to vse many protestations prefaces and apologies to perswade men of it as 1. Cor. 4.14 when he had told the Corinths plainly of their ingratitude who suffered him to be hungrie naked reuiled c. is glad to adde a defence for himselfe I write not these things to shame you but as my beloued children I admonish you So when we deale plainly and let men see themselues and their wayes we cannot perswade them we loue them but for our selues our owne consciences must be our brasen wall if we be not entertained and approoued in other mens we must doe our dutie and tell Israel his sinne Ezec. 18. And although it would doe many good to see vs silenced and stopped in the course of our diligence yet would it doe them no good to see vs damned for our negligence towards them Oh saith one this preacher is euer speaking of me he hath some spight at me and therefore I cannot abide to heare him Oh but whosoeuer thou art learne to suffer the word of exhortation and reproofe for it is a signe of an heart in the gall of bitternesse to impute malice and vncharitablenes to such Ministers as crie out against the knowne sinnes of it and to account of preaching as many doe but rayling Such a one was Ahab who cried out of Eliah as his enemie because he findeth out his sinne such are the hearts of such brutish men who will be at defiance with God and the seruants of God christianly admonishing or reproouing them and then they crie out there is no loue in them which is all one to say that vnlesse we flatter them and partake with them in their sinnes there is no loue in vs. Iohn Baptist dealt roughly with those that came to his baptisme Oh generation of vipers and yet who durst say that that holy man hated them and yet with vs it is no good diuinitie if we couer not the sinnes that are as openly committed as Absolons in the sight of all Israel other men may and can speake of sinnes and impieties and yet God must be dumbe they can see them but God must not other men can openly speake of them in their houses shops fields and markets and yet we may not mention them for feare of forfeiting all our loue But we must much more take vp that dutie which euerie priuate man is bound vnto Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart but plainely reprooue him and suffer him not to sinne Wee may not hate you so much as not deale plainely with you Secondly note that howsoeuer the Apostle dealeth plainly yet he dealeth wisely and vseth a preface to cut off all the preiudice of the truth he deliuereth and is a grace to be imitated of all Ministers who ought prudently to temper their zeale with wisedome so suppling and asswaging their reproofes as they may appeare to proceede from loue When the Apostle was to write of the reiection of the Iewes and the calling of the Gentiles least he should seeme to speak of any sinister affection or from hard conceit of the Iewes he cutteth off all such suspition by a large preface in which he attesteth by an oath that he so embraced his countriemen the Iewes in the most inward affection of his loue as he could haue beene contented to haue beene accursed for them and in Rom. 10.1 beeing to deliuer the true cause of their reiection which was the stablishing of an humane righteousnes he beginneth with a protestation that his hearts desire and prayer to God was that Israel might be saued And great reason is that Ministers should thus practise this serpentine wisedome commended vnto them by Christ himselfe 1. Because they are as sheepe among wolues that is satanicall instruments armed with serpentine subtiltie watching all aduantages to depraue their best actions vndertaken with best deliberation and on the best grounds 2. In regard of the Gospel which the aduersarie is readie to blaspheame and smite and wound through their sides 3. In respect of those that are without that they seeing the wisedome of God in the course of their doctrine and liues may thereby be wonne to the loue of the truth Col. 4.3 Now this wisdome is not fleshly pollicie as maketh men idle lookers on for feare of danger but to walke circumspectly still going on in the good way of life and not rushing headlong but discreetly looking to euerie steppe which Salomon calleth the pondering of the pathes Vse 1. Let Ministers seeing they haue so many eies vpon them pray for vnderstanding hearts and seeing they naturally want this wisedome let them aske it of God that it may as Salomon saith make their faces to shine euery where shewing wisedome as well as zeale in reproofes censures in speaking of euents in the Church and Land and the rather seeing euen in Gods causes we may not be too forward Good Hester in her warmest loue to her selfe and people who were Gods people all of them sold to the sword may not yet rashly step to Ahashuerosh before she had considered of the rigour of the law which was sure to be so much the more seuerely executed by how much it was more commodious for the Kings safetie also whether she was in fauour and grace not hauing beene called of 30. daies and especially she and her people had fasted and praied and consulted with the Lord. Nay more Peter must not rashly draw his sword and strike to saue Christs own life two worthy examples for our imitation 2. People must also commend their Ministers to the Lords direction and whosoeuer stand in good causes that the Lord who is rich in wisedome would giue them wisedome in all things Now we come to the parts of the verses and first of the preface vnto the testimonie Wherein 1. it is to be enquired who is meant by this Prophet Ans. By common consent the Apostle meaneth Epimenides an heathen man and a profane Poet who i● one of his
of them 2. That therefore the lyer casteth himselfe into the gulfe of Gods displeasure seeing as he hateth all the workes of the deuill so hath he testified speciall hatred against this A lying tongue is one of the sixe things which the Lord hateth and is abhomination vnto him Prou. 12.22 and therefore doth with them as we do with the things we abhorre either remooueth them out of sight by barring them out of heauen or destroyeth them Psal. 5.6 3. That although that be the greatest plague to haue the face of God set against them here and to be cast from out of his face and blessed presence of ioy hereafter yet there are other inferiour euills not to be contemned which wait at the heeles of this sinne As 1. that it maketh the sinners of this suite iustly hatefull euen vnto men as those who are the maine enemies vnto humane societie which is vpheld by truth and faithfulnes 2. Such deceitfull and fraudulent persons are occasions of the multiplication of oathes and periuries among men for which the land mourneth 3. In themselues it argueth the want of Gods spirit in their hearts who beeing the spirit of truth and light cannot abide to dwell in a heart that is pleased and delighted with nothing more then darkenes and falshood 4. They loose iustly their owne voice and credit and are worthie not to beleeued when they speake truth and men must deale with them as with their father the deuill whose workes they accustome themselues vnto suspect euen the truth from them and not receiue any as from them Now if any receiue not this doctrine he is farre behind the heathen who shall rise in iudgement to condemne him if any acknowledge it as true and yet make no bones of this odious sinne besids that he is condemned of himselfe let him knowe that he shall not escape the sentence of him who will take account of euerie idle much more of euerie lying and deceitfull word Euill beasts This is the second imputation in this testimonie Epimenides calleth the Cretians beasts because of their bruitish conditions and beastly practises and euill beasts because they are not like the creatures who by their creation were ordained and serued for the commodious and comfortable vse of man but such as since the fall rebelliously refuse the Lordship of man and will not be brought vnto tamenes and seruice nay rather are either fierce and cruell against man as Lyons wolues c. or els poisonfull direfull and venemous as the serpent crocodile with such venemous beasts both which sortes are truely called euill beasts not that they are not good in their substance or not verie good in their creation but because they carrie on them the cursed markes of mans rebellion against God beeing thereby subiected vnto vanitie so farre as in stead of that primarie vse and comfort from them man hath iust cause incessantly to feare and often receiueth much euill by meanes of them And what doth the Poet herein other then that which the Scriptures are very frequent in for when men degenerate and by sinne put off the nature of man both God and nature strippe them of the name of men as vnworthie of it because they rather resemble the bruit beasts shrowding many brutish qualities vnder the shape of men The Scripture speaketh expressely that man beeing in honour became like the bruit beasts which perish But wherein standeth this resemblance Ans. By looking into the word of God we shall finde it to stand especially in three things 1. In becomming without vnderstanding and in all the things of God by nature which holy Dauid in one case confessed as ignorant as the verie bruit beast so Ierimie 10.14 affirmeth that now euerie man is a beast in his owne knowledge and Prou. 20.24 How can a man vnderstand his owne way Now hereby who seeth not that hereby men loose the verie thing which maketh them men and distinguish them from the bruites without vnderstanding and that is the minde it selfe whereby onely man was enabled both to see and consider of the things he seeth and seeing the mind without vnderstāding is as an eie without sight therfore may he that is destitute of vnderstanding be as truely said to want his minde as hee which lacketh his sight is truely said to haue lost his eyes 2. By giuing vp themselues to be ledde with sensualitie as the bruit beasts and this propertie the Apostle Peter ascribeth to naturall and vngodly men Neither can it be that this should not rise of the former for when men are depriued of vnderstanding iudgement reason as euerie naturall man is in the things of God they must needes be ledde by other guides of lusts appetite sense and sight euen as the beasts are For when the noble part of the minde which should subiect the inferiour powers of the soule vnto it selfe as also guide the motions and actions of men by deliberation counsel iudgement and election is deposed from his regencie the sensitiue appetite which is common to man and beast like a rebellious commons taketh the whole command and carrieth the soule by a blind force vnto any bruitish lust and to whatsoeuer is delectable to the senses Notably doth the Prophet expresse this propertie in the wicked Iewes saying that like fedde horses euerie of them neighed after his neighbours wife 3. By the practise of many beastly and bruitish properties For what properties haue vnregenerate men which are not more beseeming euill and hurtfull beasts then men 1. If we consider the respect betweene God and ●im his heart knoweth no subiection but as was said once of Israel he is as an vnrulie beiffer he knoweth no yoke acknowledgeth no Master lifteth vp his heele against his feeder and careth not for the owner of his fat pasture 2. If we consider naturall men in themselues no beast is so vncleane and foule as they whose filthie hearts are fit for nothing but to be stinking cages and dens for filthie birds and beasts wholly bespotted as the leopards Ier. 13.23 swinish men wallowing in the dirt and mire of sinnefull pleasures and reuolting from euerie good way as dogges to their vomits for so the Apostle tearmed such Iewes as revolted from Christianitie to circumcision Beware of dogges 3. Consider them in respect of their neighbour no euill beast is so cruell and venemous as they in regard of the former the Scriptures ascribe the propertie of the deuill himselfe vnto them calling them ramping and roaring lyons such as Dauid and Christ himselfe had to doe withall Psal. 22.13 such a one was Nero whom Paul had to doe withall 2. Tim. 4.17 God deliuered me out of the mouth of the Lyon And for their savagenes and greedines they are called dogges and wolues Zeph. 3.3 Her Princes are as roaring lyons and her iudges as wolues in the euening which leaue not the bones till the morrowe And for subtiltie and craft
to bearing of children then surely for women to despise the ministerie which is the meanes of beginning and continuing in faith loue and holinesse is fearefully to despise fellowship with God and life euerlasting Secondly women must walke in as straight waies to heauen as men sinne is as odious in Eue as in Adam vnder the same lawe are they borne by the same lawe are they to be ruled in this life and iudged in the life to come the same pretious promises of life are made vnto them the same pretious faith must lay hold vpon them the same spirit must inhabitat them the same graces which accompanie saluation must beautifie them Women must worship God as well as men Lydia Act. 16.14 must feare God Act. 17.4 the chiefe women not a fewe must be disciples full of good works and almes to the Saints as Dorcas all or any of which graces if elsewhere they can attaine or performe then by the direction and institution of the word we will giue them leaue to contemne it with the whole ministerie of it but if this be the word of faith which we preach the word of the kingdome and if we haue the words of eternall life let them goe elsewhere or by any other direction saue this whether of naturall reason fleshly wisedome lewd custome or what euer may perswade it they shall surely faile of faith of the kingdome and of life eternall in the ende Obiect But how often haue we heard Popish or profane men alleadge to the contrarie What should women minde the Scripture or meddle with religion what haue they not huswiferie at home haue they not children seruants and a calling to tend and how often doth our religion heare it selfe disgraced in that it is embraced by women who they say are simple and easily seduced Answ. To all which I answer that if these wretches had prooued that women had no soules to loose or to saue such gracelesse discourses were more easily to be admitted 2. Might not a man haue come vpon Marie with the like interrogatories why haue you nothing to doe but to sit downe at Christs feete to heare words which concerne you not haue you no huswiferie to set your selfe about doe not you see you haue a great Prophet to giue entertainment vnto doe you see your sister Martha medling with such matters But if any had thus rebuked her would Christ haue recanted that which he had affirmed of her that she had chosen the better part and if Martha had done so too would Christ haue said that she had failed in the due regard of one thing which was more necessarie then all that busines which shee encombred her selfe withall 3. Salomons mother requireth two things in a vertuous woman one the ouerseeing of the wayes of her familie the other to open her mouth with wisedome and haue the lawe of grace sitting vnder her lippes without which latter should a woman excell the life and death of some bruit beasts assuredly if the former were all shee should liue and die a little more ciuilly but neuer a whit more religiously then they 4. It is so farre from being a iust reproach to the Gospel that women professe it that it is rather a note of the truth of it God chooseth the weake and simple of the world to confound and prouoke the wise and mightie Christ himselfe prouoked Simon the Pharisie by an example of loue which a poore woman had shewed vpon him farre beyond him and thought it no disgrace that Marie out of whom he had cast 7. deuills nor the noted harlot the woman at the well should follow him and entertaine his profession neither did his wisedome thinke it preiudiciall or not beseeming the simplicitie of the Gospel to shew himselfe after his resurrection first to simple women and to make them preachers of it euen to the Disciples themselues Obiect But women are to rest in their husbands instruction and need not depend vpon the Ministers mouth 1. Cor. 14.35 Let them aske their husbands at home Ans. The Apostle there forbiddeth open and publike speach in the congregation where if in the exercise of prophesiyng they had any doubts rising concerning the things handled they were not permitted to stand vp as the men were either to teach or aske questions but keepe silence for the time and consult with their husbands at home for the resolution of their doubts but this place taketh it for granted that they must resort to the Church and heare in the congregation ver 34. And pittifully should most women be taught if they should content themselues with their husbands instruction Vse 1. We see hence what to thinke of the Popish doctrine who will neither admit women nor men but their learned Licentiats to meddle with the Scriptures and least they should so doe they shut them vp in an vnknowne tongue an high wickednes against the commandement of Christ to Laiks and common men Ioh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures and the practise of the Church and beleeuers in the old and new Testament Deut. 31.11 Nehem. 8.3.4 Act. 17.11 2. Let no woman please her selfe that her husband goeth to Church and neglect the meanes her selfe for an vnbeleeuing wife may be sanctified by a beleeuing husband but she shall neuer be saued but by her owne faith he sanctifieth her mariage but not her person 3. The husband may not suffer his wife to incurre such danger but if he loue her he must extend his loue to her soule and better part seasonably giuing gentle admonitions and reproofes if with Martha they grow heauy or careles of this dutie 4. Let no woman be discouraged but incouraged rather in the powerfull profession of religion and frequenting the exercises of it of hearing and reading it reuerent speaking and carefull practise of it imitating herein those good women who followed Christ and ministred vnto him of their substance It is the modestie of women neuer to be ashamed to professe Christ and godly women haue many times become more zealous then men and their sanctified affections haue vsually exceeded mens in strength and tendernes And although the darknes of the world endure no manifest light in men much lesse in women yet Christ and his word highly esteemeth the least appearance of grace in men and much more in women how carefull was Christ to instruct comfort and reueale himselfe to the women that followed him honouring their profession of him in some things aboue his dearest Disciples what a great and worthy praise was it that Priscilla as well as Aquilla her husband should take such a man as Apollos home to instruct him in the waies of God and of how many women doth the Apostle in his salutations giue more then common report of their loue and faithfulnes in the truth As goe no further then the Romans Priscilla was ready for his life to laie downe her owne necke Marie bestowed much labour on the Apostles
then that they enioy vpon the earth and can scarsely endure to heare of any exchange 3. These lusts are fitter for the course of nature vnmortified Ephes. 2.3 We had in time past our conuersation among the Gentiles in the lusts of the flesh but now c. which let such professors thinke off who frame themselues too much to the fashion of the world in meat drinke apparell sports and other things perhappes more vnlawfull then these For thus to walke argueth little or no conscience or feeling either of sin or grace and the gentlest name the Apostle giueth it is a sleepie walking Such may indeed carrie the title of Christians but the worke of Christianitie is not present where there is a fight of lusts against the soule but not of the spirit against lusts and much lesse where these furnaces are fed and fewelled and the flames are not daily dying and extinguished Vse 2. This teacheth that only true religion teacheth true mortification and suffereth not a man to walke after his lusts though he walke in the flesh yet he cannot walke after the flesh All false religions carrie indeed pretences of the spirit as Zidkiah smote Michaiah and said when went the spirit from mee to thee but the true religion only hath the promise and presence of the spirit which indeed mortifieth the deeds of the flesh Euery water in Iudea could not heale the lame but only the water of the poole of Bethesdah in which the Angel stirred Arbanah and Pharphar the riuers of Damascus although in shew much more excellent then Iordan cannot cure the leprosie of Naaman No more can euery religion or any but this which alone is from God cure the vncleannes leprosie of our soules The religion of the Pharisies was outwardly exceeding glorious and very strict yet Paul who had liued according to the most strict sect of them all professeth that before he knew Christ he was not crucified to the world At this day Poperie which carieth with it a great shew of humblenes of mind and bea●ing downe the bodie yet is farre from teaching true mortification for what doctrine the Turkish not excepted goeth further in clayming iustification and life as the merit of their owne obseruances yea take the strictest sort of them as their heremites anchorites c. that goe barefoote pine and imprison themselues lie on the ground couer their skinnes with sacke cloath c. are they not such as the former looking for heauen as a reward for the strictnesse of their liues doe they not then as one Philosopher said of an other contemne the pride of the world but with more pride Euerie shewe of humilitie is not true mortification for not onely the Epicures who were sold ouer to pleasure were enemies to Paul but those strait and seuere sects also of the Pythagorians and the Stoicks did mightily oppose him In a word among what sort of men doth the lusts of pride vncleannes Epicurisme and couetousnesse more raigne then in the teachers of that doctrine their Monks Prelacie Cardinalls and their father the Pope himselfe so as the truth is cleare that onely true religion in which the spirit delighteth to manifest himselfe is the teacher of true mortification And that we should liue soberly Now we are come to the second lesson which the doctrine of grace teacheth namely that such as entertaine it should lead their liues in the practise of three vertues contrarie to the former vices of vngodlinesse and worldly lusts the which as they are directed either against God or our brethren or our selues so the first of these prouideth against the disordered carriage of our selues in requiring sobrietie the second cutteth off hatefull and vncharitable lusts against our brethren in requiring iustice or right dealing man with man Christian with Christian especially the third represseth impious and vngodly lusts more directly against God himselfe in requiring godlinesse to shine out in the liues of professors For all these three must be practised in the due circumstance of time euen in this present world Doctr. 1. The doctrine of grace teacheth not onely to abstaine from euill but also to doe good and is the mistris of true sanctification in both the parts of it both the mortification of sinne as also quickning in righteousnesse For as it is in the lightning of a darke house first darkenesse must giue place and light must succeede so is it in the shining of this light of grace the night must passe and then the day must come the olde man must be cast off with his lusts and then the newe man put on That the Gospel is the teacher of both these it appeareth in the ende of Pauls conuersion who for this purpose was appointed a minister of the things he had heard and seene and sent to the Gentiles that he might turne them from darkenes to light and from the power of Satan vnto God and also in the whole scope of his doctrine and ministerie from the first to the last as himselfe professeth that when he taught first at Damascus then at Ierusalem after through all the coasts of Iudea and then to all the Gentiles he reduced all his doctrine in all these places to these two heads namely that they should repent and turne to God and then doe workes worthy amendment of life Hence is it that his Epistles are full of such exhortations as these cast off lying and speake truth euerie man to his neighbour walke not after the flesh but after the spirit Be not drunke with wine but be fulfilled with the spirit The same is to be noted also in the other Apostles 1. Pet. 2.12 I beseech you as strangers and pilgrimes abstaine from fleshly lusts and haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles and cap. 4.2 henceforth so much time as remaineth in the flesh wee should liue not after the lusts of men but after the will of God Vse 1. This doctrine confuteth profane Libertines who as Paul speaketh of some in his time because grace hath abounded continue in sinne they will be saued by such a grace as quitteth them from all holy life and conscionable obedience God is mercifull and Christ died for all here is grace but the fruit and effect of it is to cleaue vnto vngodlinesse and lusts and growe euerie day more foule and deformed then other Whereas the wisedome from aboue is pure and as he that calleth is holy so must he that is called be holy also in all manner of conuersation and if we cal him father we must passe the time of our dwelling in feare The dogges shall be without when as onely the vndefiled in their waies shall obtaine blessednesse 2. Such are iustly hence reprooued who take themselues to be tolerable schollers if sometimes they make shewe of obedience vnto God and his word that they may appeare to men to pray to heare to reade to giue almes c. and yet
into the heart of Iudas to betray him he went to his accustomed place of prayer which Iudas well knewe and whether he knewe he would bring his route 3. When the companie came to apprehend him although he let them knowe by casting them all to the ground that he could haue resisted or avoided them yet he let them rise againe he told them he was the man they sought and deliuered himselfe into their hands yea more the text saith he went out to meete them shewing the truth of that prophesie Psal. 40.6 In the roule of the booke it is written of me that I am readie to doe thy will And as he would not resist in his owne person so when Peter made a rash resistance and in his rescue smote off Malcus his eare Christ immediately healed the wound wished him to sheath his sword and asked him if he thought not that he could command a legion of angels if he would but how then should the Scriptures be fulfilled 4. When he was brought before the Iudge he denied no part of that truth which he knewe they would wrest against him shewing in all his answers a presen● minde and courage with all meekenesse in suffering horrible contumelies without perturbation or confusion vttering such holy speeches as became the most innocent lambe of God as his holy Apostle noteth that he witnessed a good confession before Pontius Pilate 5. When he came to the place of execution he needed no helpe to die he refused the cup of vinegar which in likelihood was reached him to shorten the sence of his paine and that his soule willingly left his bodie besides that strong crie at his death and expiration which argued no languishing death all the Euangelists note that Christ sent out his soule or gaue vp his spirit yea in great wisedome he preuented the souldeirs violence in breaking his legges or offering him while he was yet aliue any deadly wound that he might manifest that he did not violently but voluntarily vndergoe that passion and drinke of the bitternesse of that cuppe By all which seuerals we perceiue the truth of that the Apostle speaketh Philip. 2.8 that Christ was made obedient vnto the death and this made it an acceptable sacrfice for had it not beene a free-will offring it had not beene accepted Let vs then for our comfort hold fast this point of our Christian faith that looke how willingly the father offered his Sonne in sacrifice so willingly did the sonne offer himselfe and that those who crucified him were not more willing to doe it then he was to offer himselfe and suffer himselfe to be crucified and this maketh it absolutely meritorious and effectuall for the iustification of all beleeuers whereas otherwise it had beene no ransome The third and last point to be considered in this fact of Christ is the persons for whom he gaue himselfe for vs. The which words by the latter part of the verse must be expounded only of beleeuers of which number the Apostle was and are not to be meant of all mankind as though Christ gaue himselfe for an vniuersall saluation of euery particuliar man or intended to saue all if they would beleeue as they who are tearmed the Lutheran Diuines doe contend But this place plainely restraineth it to his people his Church such as are redeemed from iniquitie such as are purged such as are a choise and peculiar people and such as are zealous of good workes for such Christ gaue himselfe and for no other For 1. if the purpose of God and Christ was not that he should die effectually for all men then he died not for all men But Gods purpose could not be so for then would it follow 1. that Gods purpose should be frustrate seeing many are alreadie in place of torment and many moe shall be 2. or else that he cannot effect his purpose but something shall resist his will and 3. that the execution of this stable purpose of God shall be grounded vpon the incertainetie and instabilitie of an euent depending vpon the mu●able will of man Neither was Christs purpose so for his purpose was to giue his life for his sheepe and purposed not so much as to pray for any other who surely if they haue no part in his prayer much lesse in his sacrifice Secondly If Christ died effectually for all it is not possible that any one man should perish and be condemned for then hath Christ satisfied for the sinnes aswell of Iudas Caine as any other and consequently their sinnes must necessarily be remitted for satisfaction for sinne and remission of sinne are inseparable so the Apostle maketh redemption nothing else but remission of sinne Ephes. 1.17 By whom we haue redemption by his blood euen remission of sinne and where remission of sinne is must need● be blessednesse so as by their doctrine none should be damned Yea further for whom Christ giueth himselfe to those he giueth his spirit to abide with them and to seale vp their saluation to their owne soules for the spirit letteth them know the things that are giuen them of God But they cannot receiue him for the world seeth him not nor knoweth him and much lesse can receiue him see Ioh. 14.16.17 Thirdly ●or whom Christ gaue himselfe those he loued Gal. 2.20 Who loued mee and gaue himselfe for mee the which is true not onely in Paul but in euery beleeuer Ephes. 5.2 and Reu. 1.5 Hee loued vs and gaue himselfe for vs. Now what is meant here by vs all mankind no surely but Gods deare children and Saints as the first place restraineth it selfe ver 1.3 and those that are washed from sinne and that are made Kings and Priests vnto God as the second but most expressely the Apostle expoundeth his owne phrase in the 25. verse of the same Chapter Hee loued his Church and gaue himselfe for it Now the wicked know not Christ and he knoweth not them they hate him and he loueth not them he is a Iesus indeed that is a Sauiour but because he saueth his people from their sinnes Fourthly To whom neither the ends nor fruits of Christs death can belong a vaine thing is it to ascribe any efficacie of his death vnto them but neither the ends nor the fruits belong to the wicked For 1. the maine ends are 1. by his death to abolish him that had the power of death that is the deuill but he still ruleth in the children of disobedience 2. to conquer death it selfe 2. Tim. 1.10 but they are still held vnder the bondage and feare of it 3. to destroie sinne that it may die in men but it liueth and ruleth in the wicked 4. that they which liue might liue to him which is dead 2. Cor. 5.15 but they rise against him and attaine not the first resurrection nor the beginnings of life eternall here nor the perfection hereafter And for the frui●s of this death which are iustification remission of sin
is the danger of this sinne which cannot but attend it vnlesse we conceiue no danger in breaking such expresse commandements as we haue Leu. 19.16 Thou shalt not goe about with tales among thy people and Iam. 4.11 speake not euill one of an other brethren for this saith he is not onely to breake but condemne the lawe that is as not sufficient or worthy to guide him in all the particulars of his life The defence of many a man is I speake nothing but truth and so long I may speake it But if that thou speakest be a tale true or false as it is if without a calling thou playest the pedlar and settest to sale the name of thy brother these commandements cast and condemne thee Others thinke it is a fault indeede but not so great a fault to speake the thing we knowe by an other but looke vpon it not as it may seeme in thine eie but in the penaltie the Scripture hath set vpon it Psal. 15.3 it hindereth the entrance into the holy mountaine of God and 1. Cor. 6.10 raylers and reuilers shall not enter into the kingdome of heauen and therefore it is no such small matter as many take it for Others reply what are words but winde and God is not so strait-laced if a man should goe to hell fo● euerie word who shall come to heauen This indeede is an auncient ●aturall conceit that outward profession and ceremonie will carrie a man to heauen although in the particulars of the life the power of godlinesse be neuer expressed But marke how the Lord answereth such vaine conceits Psal. 50.19 20. Thou giuest thy mouth to euill and speakest against thy mothers sonnes these things thou doest and I held my tongue and thou thoughtest me like thy selfe But I will reprooue thee c. God hath his time then to call vpon old reckonings and then thou shalt not thinke words winde but knowe to thy cost that life and death was in the power of thy tongue Others yet see no such danger or if any be it is farre off But this sinne beside the iust hire of it hereafter carrieth a secret plague with it for the present for look as thou dealest with an other mans name so shal thine be dealt with and with what measure thou meatest to others shall men measure to thee againe But I must speake my minde and then I haue done no thou hast done thy speech but thy speech hath not done with thee thou maist as well say hauing stabbed a man to the heart I gaue him but a blowe and I had done but the blow hath not done with thee thou must before the iudge for all that and then see if that plea wil hold Let professors therefore humble themselues for this sinne which is so dangerous and so common as that it is the english of our tables of our beds of our publike and priuate meetings to rippe vp this or that olde slippe or iniurie done by an other the deuill doth so sit in the lippes of a number of men that no other talke can proceede from them but such as is like arrowes to wound those that are farre off or hammers to knock him in the head to whom such tales are told or swords wounding his owne soule to the death Beware also for time to come of the subtilties of Satan who that he may not appeare an accuser or a deuill as he is or so blacke as he is hath taught his nouices in this art to vse diuerse prefaces as it were to get attention by and then is the sinne most dangerous and hath most Satanicall subtiltie in it Sometime yee shall haue some that will beginne with the praise of the partie he telleth a tale of he is an honest man one that I haue cause to loue well and one of verie good parts c. and yet thus will he wound an honest man he spareth not his friend but as a flie followes his sores Sometimes the talebearer beginneth with the profession of friendship to the partie to whome hee would vent some mischeife and insert some seeming care of the others credit you are my friend and let it be spoken betweene vs and goe no further tell none that I told you But would he haue a word against his neighbour die with an other and cannot let it die with himselfe or would he shut another mans mouth euen in opening it he hath also his friend to communicate it vnto and so it goes from hand to hand fretting secretly like a cank●r Sometimes againe we shal heare slanders breathed out in a certaine commiseration as taking pitie of such a one that as Salomon saith the words of the talebearer are like the words of the wounded that is are lamentably vttered but yet they go downe into the bowels they giue a deadly stroke and hurt him worse then he was before Many will say it is great pitie of the man I speake it with griefe but the series and tenor of the speach sheweth it a merciles pitie These speaches are farre off from saluing vp the matter or licensing thee to speake thy pleasure nay commonly they argue a bad cause and a guiltie conscience accusing for that euill from which yet thou desistest not and whatsoeuer thou maist premit for pretence or defence of thy course thou cariest thy selfe liker those vermines which rise and feede of venome excrement and poyson then a Christian who wert thou possessed with Christian loue thou couldst not reioyce in euill 1. Cor. 13.6 Loue reioyceth not in euill but reioyceth in the truth The third thing to be considered is the meanes to auoid this sinne of euill speaking which may be reduced to fiue rules First looke to thine heart for if it beeing the fountaine be corrupted the issues and streames cannot but be bitter and if thou giuest thy selfe leaue to thinke euill of any man as accounting the thought free thou canst not but one time or other vtter it Purge well thine heart therefore 1. of pride which maketh a man speake disdainfully of those who want the things which themselues seeme to haue and liberally take vp any language if he can make the detraction of another a ladder for himselfe to climbe vpon 2. Of enuie which greeuing at the graces and good things in another seeketh to darken them as Satan enuying Iobs prosperitie said hee serueth not God for nought 3. Of flatterie which for fauour or reward will tune the tongue to any eare Of anger and displeasure mallice we say neuer spake well but there lyeth a secret grudge of reuenge hid in it which quickly setteth the armes on worke in the strong and the tongue in the weake Banish betimes these nurces and midwiues of this mischeefe and contrarily get into thy heart the loue of God and of thy brethren which will not hastily discouer but carefully hide and couer euen a multitude of trespasses and sinnes Excellent to this purpose is that
raysing and returne out of Babylon but as a dreame for whose hearts leap within them at the ioyfull message of the pardon of their sinne who leane vnto the promises walking worthy of them for their life very few assent vnto the truth we teach it hardly sinketh with men that God should become man that by the death of one life should be procured to so many that the way to heauen should lie by hell that by afflictions they should be passed to glorie these things be riddles to many professed Christians So when we call people as God did his to walke in the old way that they may find rest to their soules they answer vs with them we will not walke in that way the sound of the thing if not of the voice speaketh for we call men from swearing lying couetousnes which is idolatrie from Saboath breaking intemperance drinkings and vncleannes but mens hearts speake by their liues we will sweare we will drinke to drunkennesse we will by gaming or idlenesse breake the sabboath the waies of God are too straite and vnequall a man had as good be in prison as in these bonds Lastly whereas by the knowledge and comfort of the Scriptures we should come to haue hope which whosoeuer hath hee purgeth himselfe how doe most professed Christians peruert the Scriptures to their own destruction God is mercifull and therefore I may do what I list at what time soeuer a sinner repenteth God will blot out all his sinnes and therefore I will not repent yet The whole law is comprehended in these two thou shalt loue the Lord thy God with all thy heart or aboue all and thy neighbour as thy selfe and therefore I know as much as any Preacher can tell me what need all these sermons The Sabboath was made for man and not man for the Sabboath and therefore what need men be so strait laced and precise in the duties of it Hee that prouideth not for his wife and children is worse then an Infidell therefore I must and will diligently seek the world and set my heart vpon couetousnes By all which instances we may see our selues as in a glasse tainted with this fearefull sin of rising vp and reasoning against that light which shineth out in the word Vse 1. Let all men learne hence to be humbled vnder that vile estate of our nature by which we are not onely laden with simple ignorance but euen oppressed with affected contumacie against it such as our Sauiour chargeth vpon the Iewes Ioh. 8. and such as breaketh out in many of our people who not seldome in hearing vs teach them the truth of God say as the Iewes of Christ who can heare him Alas how farre better were it with vs to haue beene heathen or infidels and neuer haue heard of Iesus Christ that our ignorance had beene simple and inuincible then such Christians as abound not onely with ignorance but such as the Apostle speaketh of Rom. 1.24 Which is caused of the hardnesse of heart which is in them 2. Hence may we cease to wonder why so fewe obey the Gospel why after so much teaching there is so little fruit so little knowledge so little turning to God because the degree of corruption of mind is beyond bare ignorance as to assent to the word is a further degree of grace then bare knowledge The Minister may hale and pull but vnlesse the Father drawe none come to the Sonne such is the contumacie and stubbornenes of mens hearts naturally that no curse can terrifie nor promise affect it and this was it which made Christs own ministerie vnprofitable to the Iewes as we reade Ioh. 8. Let hearers and students of the Scripture labour and pray for the sanctification of mind and the spirit renewing their inner man without which they may heare and study and reade but as the Eunuch without vnderstanding for want of a guide Without this teacher our report shall not be beleeued nor without this finger of God shall the arme of God be reuealed A sound of words may be heard and the report of truth may be so strong as to winne acknowledgment of it selfe but faith shall not be founded nor loue quickned nor hope confirmed nor that change wrought without which thou shalt continue a cauiller still yea froward and an enemie to God and his truth 3. If we be such as are called out of this estate to whom God hath giuen hearts to beleeue assent and obey the truth let vs not depriue God of his glorie but acknowledging his gift giue him the honour due vnto him for here is an exceeding great power of God put forth if it be giuen thee to beleeue the worke of faith is a worke of great power see 2. Thess. 1.11 Deceiued Out of this third degree of corruption of mind we learne That before men be brought vnto Christ they infinitely erre and their whole life is but a wandring from God and his wayes For 1. Christ is the way the truth and the life and therefore to be out of Christ is to be out of the way that tendeth to life 2. Our selues by our sinne are cast into the darke night and haue not the least glimpse of Sun Moone or starre but walking in darkenesse knowe not whether we tende 3. We haue a wandring and vagrant vaine euen after our calling and therefore much more before how haue the Saints of God complained in their owne and in the name of the Church Isa. 53.6 we haue all wandred like lost sheepe The like Dauid confesseth of himselfe and euen after conuersion the Lord must still be seeking vs vp Psal. 119.176 oh seek thy seruant for els we haue no list to returne to the sheepheard of our soules Iesus Christ. Now the reason of all this error is a filthy flatterie of the heart and a guilfull securitie of spirit which holdeth men from seeking happinesse where it is to be had while they mistaking their condition make faire weather with their soules when in the meane time all is amisse and they for truth embrace nothing but dangerous and damnable error We shall not neede trauell farre to seeke instances of such vagrants out of the wayes of God and yet aske any of them what way they trauell all of them hast to heauen and will be there as soone as the best if we may beleeue them I might here saue some labour but that the world swarmeth with such wanderers and that I take it much materiall to our point and purpose to shew how farre many are out of the right way how little acquaintance many Christians haue with Christ of whom some neuer saw his face neuer saluted him others haue thought it their best securitie to stand a loose and follow him a farre off and others after a little acquaintance with him doe as many disciples did fall off from him and walke with him no more But a little further to prosecute the point in particular
Apostles vntill Christs comming againe and especially the proceedings pride and fall of Babylon the great whore with all the kingdomes of Antichrist the holy Ghost could not but foresee what labours and trauailes Satan and his instruments would take to weaken and impaire the credit and authoritie of this aboue all other books wherein he preuailed so farre as euen some true Churches called the truth and authoritie of it into question and therefore it is worth the marking with what a number of confirmations this booke aboue all other in the Scriptures is backed First the author of it is set in the forefront or face of it The Reuelation of Iesus Christ who professeth himselfe to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first and the last the beginning and ending which is which was and which is to come euen the Almightie so in the seuerall Epistles to the Churches in seuerall stiles he challengeth them to be his Thus saith he 1. that holdeth the seauen starres in his right hand 2. he that is first and last which was dead and is aliue 3. which hath the sharpe two edged sword 4. which hath eyes like a flame of fire and his feete like fine brasse 5. which hath the seauen spirits of God and the seuen starres 6. he who is holy and true who hath the key of Dauid who openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth 7. he who is Amen the faithfull and true witnesse the beginning of the creatures of God Secondly the instrument or penman his seruant Iohn the Euangelist the Apostle the Diuine who for the further and more full authority of it repeateth his name at least fowre times saying I Iohn Thirdly to omit many in the last chapter are fiue testimonies heaped together that if it were possible no man might be found so obstinately wicked as euer to doubt of it but that he that shold stād against the truth of it might euen gainsay the shining of the sunne it selfe 1. of the Angel 2. of God himselfe the Lord of the holy Prophets 3. of Iesus Christ Behold I come shortly c. 4. of Iohn I Iohn heard and saw all these things 5. the protestation of Iesus Christ vers 18. I protest if any man shal adde or diminish from these things of this booke God shall adde all the plagues of it against him and take away his part out of the booke of life Now had this booke neuer to haue bin oppugned there had not needed such strong and frequent confirmations neither would the holy Ghost haue bin so earnest in a needles matter The like we might teach out of particular examples How earnest is the Apostle in the poynt we haue in hand beeing the very foundation of Christianity not here only but elswhere in his writings when he saw that men would ioyne the law and gospel circumcision and baptisme Gal. 5.2 Behold I Paul say vnto you if ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing and vers 3. I testifie againe vnto you and 4. ye are abolished from Christ and fallen from grace he could not satisfie himselfe in his vehemencie against such a doctrine as this was Nay the sonne of God himselfe hath left vs his owne example in this point of wisdome who was wont in his teaching vnto diuerse more necessarie truths to prefix his Amen Amen I say vnto you which is in sence all one with this of our Apostle if we consider the speach though in the speaker and manner of speaking was wonderful difference himselfe beeing the author and Amen it selfe euen the faithfull and true witnesse and all other so farre only true as they testified from him And so he often shutteth vp his speach with he that hath eares to heare let him heare and then let him that heareth or readeth consider such sayings carrie salt with them and for such the Lord planted the eare more especially Vse 1. To teach Ministers in matters of weight to deale so soundly as the conscience of the hearer may be as firmely stablished in the truth taught and perswaded as if an angel from heauen should come and teach an other doctrine he may be held accursed so as the verie hearts of the hearers may say this is a faithfull doctrine and saying for thus as the Gospel is the word of truth so shall it be held in much certenty by the professors of it And it is a fault blame worthie in many Ministers who when they are occasioned by the place in hand to speake of some controuerted or most necessarie truth either for idlenes because they will not so much trouble themselues or for vnfaithfullnesse avoide by declining and shunning such truths the displeasure of the times which godly Ministers must swallowe that the truth opposed may be setled in the hearts of men not to speake of such as are infamously guiltie of some vices vnrepented of and vnreformed which maketh them balke and betray necessarie truths which in that regard they dare not mention 2. It is a great fault of hearers and worthie amendement who cannot well indure to heare of points in controversie especially betweene the Papists and our selues whereas their vnderstandings and iudgements are so farre from beeing stablished in the certaine truth of such things as euery winde or blast of the skulking Iesuite or Papist is able to vnsettle them in great matters and turne them off their grounds Now if it bee the teachers part to insist especially in such needefull points as are most opposed and hardlyest yeelded vnto it must needes be the hearers to provoke themselues to the right discerning of such differences for neither doe the contentions of the teachers so much concerne themselues as their hearers neither ende they in themselues but in the hearer See we not how if neuer so grosse or slender a point of carnall libertie be contended about it will carrie the applause almost of all men with i● Is it meete then that any Saint of God be a looker on and not rather according to the commandement that euerie one should contend for the faith once giuen and can they contend vnlesse they be taught how and here instructed with weapons This admonition is the more needfull in these dayes so full of danger by the seduction of Papists separators libertines which swarme euerie where the daily encrease of all which is not more incredible then lamentable 3. We learne hence how to conceiue of the point and doctrine in hand seeing the wisedome of Gods spirit vseth to speake to the worth of the thing and by such prefaces and markes of speciall worthinesse pointeth to some weightie and needfull point vsing here another stile then if he should speake of mint and cummin and some smaller points of religion We meet not in euery precept with an oyes or warnword but where we do we must conceiue such not the motes but the beames of our religion
praises which vnbeleeuers are as heauie vnto as a beare to the stake because they wāt the spirit which crieth in the hearts of Gods children abba father Fourthly it hath a liuely hope accompanying it it causeth watchfulnesse and waiting for yea and reioycing in the hope of the appearing of the Lord Iesus Rom. 5.2 beeing iustified by faith we reioyce vnder the hope of the glorie of God Secondly we may hence gather a cause why some beleeue some beleeue not it is not because some will and some will not whatsoeuer free-will-men presumptuously auouch the Holy Ghost telleth vs it is not in the willer nor in the runner but therefore men come to the faith because they are elected Act. 13.48 And why did not the Iewes beleeue the heauenly doctrine of Christ himselfe the reason is giuen Ioh. 10.26 Ye beleeue not because ye are not my sheepe most true is it here the elect haue obtained sauing faith the rest are hardened Rom. 11.7 The third conclusion is that this peculiar faith of the elect is ordinarily wrought in them by the ministrie of the word this beeing noted here that the end of the ministrie is to bring the elect vnto the faith Iob. 33.23 If there be a messenger or interpreter one of a thousand to declare to man his righteousnesse now this righteousnesse is no other then the righteousnesse of faith for this ende were the Apostles called furnished and sent out into the world to teach men faith on the Sonne of God as appeareth in their commission Mar. 16.16 Goe into all the world and preach the Gospel to euery creature he that beleeueth and is baptized shall be saued to this purpose is it that Paul affirmeth of the great mysterie of Godlinesse that it must first be preached vnto the Gentiles and then beleeued on in the world Vse 1. If this be the principall ende of the ministerie let ministers herein employ their first and principall paines to bring men vnto the faith wherein they shall imitate our Apostle not onely here but in his other Epistles who first dealeth in the causes and meanes of saluation and then instructeth in Christian manners as one whom the wisdome of God had taught that if the inside be not first made cleane and the heart purified by faith whatsoeuer actions can proceede from men be they neuer so glorious yet indeede they are no better then glistering sinnes he hath the right way of teaching in the schoole of Christ that first layeth for his ground faith in Christ and then buildeth thereon all his precepts of Christian Philosophie 2. The Minister ought to propound before him Gods end in performance of euery ministeriall dutie and that is by enlighting conuerting confirming comforting to bring and stablish men in the faith Which iustly reprehendeth such as forgetting themselues their dutie and people out of the pride of their hearts busie themselues in finding out obscure and darke mysteries tying hard knots to vntie them againe not much vnlike the dogge which refuseth soft meate to gnaw vpon bones and all this to get the praise of nimble heads and sharpe wits whereas the true glorie of a Minister is the number of those that are begotten to the faith who are gathered by the plaine euidence of the word in the words not which mans wisdome but which Gods spirit teacheth 3. The Lord hauing set out the ministrie for this vse let euery hearer acknowledge herein Gods ordinance and yeeld themselues with all submission vnto the ministerie and the word there preached that thereby they may haue faith wrought in their hearts God will haue men taught on earth and not from heauen by man not Angels or dead men let this meanes be despised nothing in heauen or earth can do thee good fast pray afflict thy soule forget not to distribute doe all the good thou canst but yet all this while despise the word offered and thou hast forsaken thine owne mercie nay more come to the ministerie heare the word read preached ioyne in the prayers and Sacraments of the Church if thou commest without the submission of thy heart whereby thou art become as prepared ground to couer the seede vnto increase all is in vaine for what is Paul what is Apollos what is the minister be he neuer so choise and excellent except he be the Minister of thy faith and so what is the ministerie to thee if it be not the ministerie of thy faith 4. Euery man may hence examine himselfe whether in the vse of the ministerie he finde sauing faith begotten wrought in his heart and by examination some may finde their vnderstandings more enlightened their iudgements more setled their practise in some things reformed but a very fewe shall finde Christ apprehended and rested in vnto saluation seeing so fewe there are that liue by faith in the Sonne of God for of all the sinnes that the spirit may and shall rebuke the world of this is the chiefe because they beleeue not in Christ. Howsoeuer many are in some things bettered by the ministerie yet very fewe haue attained this principall ende of it which is to put men in possession of true faith and by it of saluation And the knowledge of the truth which is according to Godlinesse The Apostle beeing called to beget faith in the elect magnifieth and extolleth this his calling from the difficultie of the worke for it is not to bring forth by his trauell any blind perswasion of faith which beeing too naturall to men would rise of it selfe fast enough without any such manuring but such a faith as is peculiar to the elect as before we heard In the which least men should be deceiued as easily and willingly the most be he taketh paines to set downe the whole nature of it in particular And first here we haue the ground of faith which is knowledge and because the truth of faith cannot find footing vpon follies or fansies nay nor vpon euery profitable knowledge he teacheth what kind of knowledge he speaketh of and that is the knowledge of the truth that is of the Gospel beeing a word of truth yea truth it selfe so called by way of excellencie or eminencie as though no other truth deserued that name or because this carrieth the onely vndoubted truth with it And further because many thinke all cocksure and that they cannot faile of faith if they be able to discourse of this truth he teacheth vs that it is not euery knowledge of the truth he meaneth but such a one as is according to godlinesse that is such as frameth the heart of the possessor to true Godlinesse Whence naturally arise these three conclusions First that the doctrine of the Gospell is the truth it selfe Secondly that the knowledge of this truth is the ground of faith Thirdly that where it is aright it frameth the heart to Godlinesse First the doctrine of the Gospel is truth it selfe 1. because the author of it is truth