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A73267 The dignitie of Gods children. Or An exposition of 1. Iohn 3. 1.2.3 Plentifully shewing the comfortable, happie, and most blessed state of all Gods children, and also on the contrarie, the base, fearefull, and most wofull condition of all other that are not the children of God. Stoughton, Thomas. 1610 (1610) STC 23315.5; ESTC S117855 406,069 519

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must such ministers as doe so preach that word of truth that thereby men are begotten againe vnto God be acknowledged to be the ministers of God and sent by God For doth not the Apostle ioine all these together calling vpon God beleeuing hearing preaching and sending them that did preach Rom. 10. 14. 15. And doth he not thereby plainly teach that they do go all together and that none can truely call vpon God which doth not beleeue none can beleeue which doth not heare none can heare which haue no preachers none can preach except they be sent and that consequently whosoeuer do so preach that men therby are brought truely to call vpon God and truely to beleeue in God they are sent of God so to preach Is not the same point further manifest by that argument whereby the same Apostle instifieth his Apostleship and ministery to the Corinthians euen by the successe and efficacie of his preaching amongst them against such as denied his Apostleship as many in these daies doe altogether deny all the ministerie of the Church of England Am I not saith he an Apostle c. Are not ye my worke in the Lord If I be not an Apostle vnto other doubtles I am vnto you for ye are the seale of my Apostleship in the Lord. 1. Cor. 9. 1. 2. And againe Neede we as some other epistles of recommendations vnto you or of recommendation from you yee are our epistle written in our hearts which is vnderstood and read of all men in that ye are manifest to be the epistle of Christ ministred by vs and written not with inke but with the spirit of the liuing God not in tables of stone but in fleshly tables of the heart 2. Cor. 3. 1. 2. 3. What meane all these words Euen this that such had beene the successe of the ministerie of the Apostle amongst the Corinthians that both himselfe had good assurance in his owne heart of his calling vnto them and that other also might thereby euidently perceiue and vnderstand as much Doth not our Sauiour proue his sending as a Messias and to be a Messias by the workes which he did The workes that I do beare witnes of me that the father hath sent me Iohn 5. 39. As his workes beseeming a Messias and in the power of none but of the Messias proued him to bee the Messias so do not also the workes of ministers of the gospell and proper onely to such as are sent from God proue men to be such ministers Doubtlesse saith hee that being borne blinde had his sight giuen him by Christ this is a maruellous thing that ye know not whence he is and yet hee hath opened mine eies Iohn 9. 30. And againe If this man were not of God hee could haue done nothing verse 33. May it not in like maner and much more be said of the ministers of the Church of England to all them that make question of their calling Doubtles this is a maruellous thing that ye know not whence they be or deny them from whence they are and yet they open the eies of the mindes of many Yea euen of them that doe make such question of their calling and doe peremptorily deny them to be of God as those wicked Iewes to whom that poore man so spake denied Christ to be of God If such ministers were not of God they could haue done nothing in the lightning mens eies of their vnderstanding to know what the hope is of his calling and what bee the riches of his glorious inheritance in the Saints c. Ephes 1. 18. No man can make opposition to these things but hee must also oppose himselfe to the former scriptures And if the former scriptures be for the iustifying of the ministery of the Church of England as thereby the word of truth is preached to the effectuall begetting againe of men vnto God no other Scriptures can be against it for the nullifying therof because the scriptures do all most sweetely agree together without any contradiction of any one to any other As therefore when our Sauiour seeing many of his disciples to go back and to walke no more with him that is vtterly to leaue him said vnto the twelue will ye also go away Peter answered him Master to whom shall we go thou hast the words of eternall life Iohn 6. 66. 67. 68. so my good brethren though ye doe see many to withdraw themselues from them that haue preached the words of eternall life and still do preach the same and though ye also be earnestly sollicited to doe the like yet determine in your hearts and answer accordingly To whom shall wee go these haue the words of eternall life The comparison obiected by some of children begotten to men as well by adulterie and fornication as by lawfull marriage thereby to insinuate that as such children do not iustify either adulterie or fornication so in like maner such Children as before we haue said to be begotten againe vnto God by the ministery of the Church of England do not iustify the said ministery this comparison I say is so odious so beastly so detestable and abominable that a man would wonder it should come from such men as they would seeme to be that obiect the same For in an adulterous generation as there is a common worke of God so who seeth not also a plaine worke of nature Yea such a worke of nature as is in the very beasts themselues in the procreation of other of their owne kinde But the regeneration of Children vnto God is a worke aboue all nature onely and wholly of God yea of the free grace and abundant mercy of God as afterward shall further appeare Furthermore touching this comparison it might as well haue beene obiected against the former argument of the Apostle from the successe of his preaching amongst the Corinthians as it is now obiected against vs reasoning in like maner from the efficacie and fruit of our ministery Againe all children either in adulterie or infornication begotten and borne in time of the Law were forbidden to enter into the congregation of the Lord that is to bee admitted to any publike office to the tenth generation Deut. 2 3. 2. Dare any man say the like of such as are begotten againe vnto God by the present ministerie of the Church of England Yea dare any man deny any so begotten to haue right and interest into all the promises and blessings of God for this life and for the life to come as well as any other begotten vnto God by the ministery of any other Herein beloued deceiue not your selues Halt not with God neither shew your selues vnthankfull vnto him by denying his rich mercie towards you in your regeneration If ye haue good testimony thereof to your owne soules If by the ministerie of the Church of England ye haue euer felt any true vertue of Christs death to the mortifying of sinne in you and of his resurrection to the life of righteousnes If
state O singular priuiledge O honorable condition The wicked indeed make great mirth They laugh and shout in the midst of their wickednesse that all the place where they are rings of them But alas miserable men this is but painted ioy It is but like the cracking of thornes c. But of this more afterward And againe as touching ioy in any good thing they are so far from it that to heare any thing that way is a death vnto them yea when they are vrged by christian authority to do any thing that good is they do it so against the haire so murmuringly so grudgingly with such griefe moiling and fretting that their said worke is altogether abominable in the sight of God For if God loueth a cheerefull giuer or doer of any thing 2. Cor. 9. 7. then he must needs hate and abhor him that giueth or doeth any thing vnwillingly and grudgingly Thus much for this matter CHAP. XIX Of the dignity of Gods children by the word as it is a rule of faith and life and a speciall part of our christian armor IN the next place let vs consider the benefit of the children of God by the word and Sacraments The word indeed seemeth to be common to the wicked and to Gods children Notwithstanding it is effectuall to saluation only in the children of God If our Gospell be hid saith the Apostle it is hid to them that perish 2. Cor. 4. 3. As whatsoeuer euill we haue we haue it by Adam so whatsoeuer good we haue we haue it by Christ Therefore by Christ we enioy the benefit of the word which is likewise the more euident because by Adam and in Adam we were without the word Ephes 2. 12. They therefore that haue not Christ cannot claime any benefit by the word or any interest into the word Now although the word be the meanes of dying more and more vnto sinne as also of growing more and more in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord Iesus Christ 2. Pet. 3. 18. yet because I haue spoken of the word before as of that mighty instrument whereby God beginneth our regeneration at the first and because that before spoken in that behalfe may be vnderstood of the word as a meanes of the things handled in the last former Chapter therefore I will not so speake of it here but in other considerations viz. first as it is a perfect rule of faith and manners containing all things necessary to saluation either to be known and beleeued or to be done and practised Secondly as it is a principall part of that christian armor whereby the children of God are to defend themselues against the enemies of their saluation Thirdly as it is their speciallest consolation and comfort in any affliction Concerning the word as it is a rule of faith and of life or manners two things are to be noted first the perfection of it secondly the perpetuity of it The perfection thereof is expresly commended and prooued by diuers effects viz. the conuersion of the soule the giuing wisedome to the simple c. The law of the Lord is perfect conuerting or restoring the soule c. Psal 19. 7. c. We are also forbidden either to adde any thing thereunto or to detract any thing therefrom Deut. 4. 2 ●● 12. 32. Pro. 30. 6. Reuel 22. 18 19. It is said to be the power of God to saluation Rom. 1. 16. to be able to saue the soule Iames 1. 21. And lest these things should be mistaken as spoken partly of the word written and partly of a word vnwritten deliuered by tradition from hand to hand as the Papists vrge and that the word only written were not so perfect or powerfull therefore the very Scriptures that is the word only written are said to be able to make a man wise to saluation and to make the man of God perfect vnto euery good worke 2. Tim. 3. 15. 16. 17. If the man of God that is the minister of the word so often times called for excellencies sake then euery child of God els For no child of God is bound to know to beleeue or practise more towards saluation then the minister of God is bound to teach Yea whatsoeuer is vrged more for saluation is abomination It is further said that those things that are before written are written that we might beleeue that Iesus is the Christ the sonne of God and that beleeuing they might haue life through his name Ioh. 20. 31. God giueth vs this faith and life by the scriptures and let the Papists take any thing els by their vnwritten verities and traditions Paul repeateth this twice If wee or an Angell from heauen should preach vnto you otherwise then that which we haue preached vnto you let him be accursed Galat. 1. 8. 9. But Paul preached or said no other things then those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come Acts. 26. 22. and he preached no other Gospell then that which God had promised before by his Prophets in the holy Scriptures Rom. 1. 1. 2. So perfect is the word of God that when the learnedst man in the world by long study of any one sentence hath spoken all that he can yet another may come after and adde somewhat which the former neuer spake nor vnderstood concerning that place It is like a bottomlesse well that will neuer be drawn drie yea like the sea it selfe that will neuer be emptied As the Prophet speaketh of the righteousnesse and iudgements of God Thy righteousnesse is like the mighty mountaines and thy iudgements like a great deep Psal 36. 6. so may it be said of the scriptures for the height and depth of them The Apostle by exclamation speaketh thus of the wisdome knowledge iudgement and the way of God O the deepnesse of the riches both of the wisedome and knowledge of God! How vnsearchable are his iudgements and his waies past finding out Rom. 11. 33. May not this be spoken of the word of God Where is that wisedome and knowledge of God Where are those his iudgements and waies declared but in the word All the writings of all men in the world are but shallow in respect of the word of God All the books in the world not handling the word of God and doctrine thereof do not containe so much and deep matter as is in one of the least canonicall Epistles An heathen man meeting with the Gospell written by Iohn and reading but the first verse thereof could say that that rude fellow so rudely he termed the Apostle had comprehended more matter in that one sentence then was in all the bookes of all Philosophers How much matter then is contained in that whole Gospell Especially in all the Scriptures All other books whatsoeuer are so much more excellent the more they agree with and the neerer they come to the word of God contained in holy scriptures How excellent then is the said word of God it selfe When all the chiefe wise men
they can defend themselues by the 7. commandement by many precepts of Salomon against such sins Pro. 5. 3. to the 15. Pro 6. 25 c. 7. 22. 22. 14. 23. 26 c. 29. 3. and of Agur Pro. 30. 18. 20. and by many rebukes thereof in the Prophets Iere. 5. 8. Hose 4 10. Amos 2. 7. Mica 3. 5. and in the new testament Eph. 5. 3. Colos 3. 5. Heb. 13. 4. So likewise by the example of a chast mind in Ioseph Gen. 39. 9. and in Iob Chap. 31. 1. 9. and lastly by the iudgements of God not only vpon the Gibeonites for their horrible abusing the Leuites wife but also first vpon the Israelites for being so forward to punish Note the Gibeonites and yet not thinking vpon the Leuit both for hauing a concubine and also for hauing an harlot to his concubine and seeking her vp againe as though she had been an honest and graue matrone when she had most whorishly and wickedly run away from him Iudg. 20. and by exclusion of such out of the kingdom of heauen 1. Cor. 6. 9. Ephe. 5. 5. Reuel 21. 8. and 22. 15. The worldly allurements to theft couetousnesse and to other vniust hard dealing with men concerning their goods and prouocations to withhold their owne when necessity requireth the bestowing of them vpon other they can resist and ouercome by the eight commandement and by many other precepts to the same purpose and by Zech. 5. 2. 3. as also by the great oath of the Lord by his owne excellency against them that swallowed vp the poore and that thought so long for the end of euery new month day and of the Sabbath for setting forth wheat and making the Epha small Amos 8 4 c. and by the iudgements of God vpon Achan Nabal Gehezi Ahab Iudas Is●ariot other If any motions be to beare false witnesse to ly c. they haue at hand the ninth commandement with Exod. 23. 1. Leuit. 19. 11. Psal 5. 〈◊〉 and 15 2. 52. 6. Pro. 6. 19. 12. 18. and 22. and 19. 5. 21. 18. and ●4 28. and 25. 18. and that our Sauiour saith The diuell is a lyar and the father thereof Ioh. 8. 44. and the iudgements of God vpon Gehazi as well for his lying as for his greedy couetousnesse and that lyars are reckoned vp among the fearefull and the vnbeleeuing c. which shall haue their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone Reuel 21. 8. and that whosoeuer loueth or maketh lies shall be without with dogs c. Reuel 22. 15. Against all concupiscence and first motions against our neighbor they haue the tenth commandement and that such concupiscence is the fountaine of actuall sinnes which bring death Iames 1. 14. 15. and the complaint of the Apostle against the same with earnest desire to be released disburdened thereof Rom. 7. 24. That that hath been said of the priuiledge of the children of God by the sword of the Spirit the word of God for their defence against the former tentations may be said touching other tentations also vnto other sinnes The like may be said concerning errors and heresies Let vs take a short view of some of the popish heresies whereunto so many Iesuits and other Romish croaking frogs in euery citie towne village and almost family doe now so busily perswade all states and degrees of men women children and whereof great multitudes of euery state sex age are as apprehensiue because they haue not beleeued the truth of the Gospell thus long preached vnto them but haue had pleasure in vnrighteousnesse 2. Thes 2. 12 as the Iewes were mad vpon sacrificing to the host of heauen Ierem. 7. 18. and as any children are to see plaies goodly shewes and other such vanities Do such frogs therefore and Romish serpents perswade that none can know the scriptures to be of God but by the authority of the Church Against this the children of God may defend themselues by these arguments out of the word First that the Church hath no authority aboue the scriptures and that the scriptures take no authority from the Church First because the Church being a company of men therefore as Christ himselfe receiueth not the record of man though as good as Iohn Baptist Iohn 5. 34. so neither doth the Scripture Secondly because the word being without error and teaching that all men are subiect to error it cannot therefore receiue authority from them much lesse be subiect vnto them Thirdly because the Scripture is the testimonie of God and the testimony of God is greater then the testimonie of man 1. Iohn 5. 9. Fourthly because the Church hauing all her authority from the word for how shall the Church proue that she hath any authority but by the word the word cannot haue any from the Church Fiftlie because the Church is none of the witnesses reckoned 1. Ioh. 5. 7. 8. Sixtly because they that will not beleeue the scriptures will neither beleeue one raised from the dead Luk 16. 31. nor Christ himselfe if hee were here to speake personallie vnto them Iohn 5. 47. How then will they beleeue the Church that will not belieue the scriptures Secondly the children of God haue this to plead against the former heresie viz. that many other things doe witnesse the scriptures to be of God though the Church should not only be silent in that behalfe but also vtterly deny the same Namely first of all the spirit of God whereby they are sealed and crie Abba father which searcheth all things euen the deepe things of God so that as no man knoweth the things of a man but the spirit of a man which is in him so no man knoweth the things of God but the spirit of God 1. Cor. 2. 10. 11. If no man know the things of God but the spirit of God how can any man know the scriptures themselues but by the spirit of God For where are the things of God but in the Scripture How also can any man not know the Scriptures to be of God that hath the spirit of God Secondly the children of God know the scriptures to be of God by the pure and holy matter of the scriptures agreeable to the nature of God himselfe Thirdly by the disagreement of the scriptures to the nature of man condemning whatsoeuer commeth from the same the children of God vnderstand the scriptures not to be of man and therefore consequently of God Fourthly by the excellent harmony of all the scripture and by the perpetuall euen threed of truth spunne thorowout them without any knot of vntruth from the beginning to the ending Fiftly they know the same by the diuine stile and phrase of the scripture sauoring altogether of God himselfe Sixtly by the iust accomplishment of all things foretold in the scripture and that in the manner and time therein also mentioned Seuenthly by the mighty effects of the word at the preaching
reade them and hauing read them themselues then also to lend them to other that cannot buy them Let all that reade them make vse also of them as their seuerall occasions shall require What more my beloued brethren shall I say vnto you Euen this that because ye haue beene long hearers of the word the preaching whereof is the meanes both to beginne your regeneration and also to increase your sanctification therefore remember how yee haue receiued and heard and that also ye do hold fast Reuel 3. 3. Yea that with all your might ye keepe that which ye haue that no man take away your crowne verse 11. Are not these the latter times wherein the spirit long since did speake euidently that some should depart from the faith and giue heede to the spirits of errours and to doctrines of diuels 1. Tim. 4. 1. Are they not the last daies perillous times wherin men should be louers of themselues couetous boasters proud cursed speakers c. fierce also no louers at all of them which are good traitors or treacherous heady high minded louers of pleasures more then louers of God hauing a shew of godlines but in truth denying the power thereof 2. Tim. 3. 1. c. Haue ye not therefore the more neede diligently to take heede to the things which ye haue heard lest at any time ye run out Heb. 2. 1. and leake as riuen vessels vse to doe and lest also at any time there be in any of you an euil and an vnbeleeuing heart to depart away from the liuing God and further to exhort one another daily whiles it is called to day and whiles ye enioy the light of the gospell that none of you be hardned through the deceitfulnesse of sinne Heb. 3. 12. c. Yea that also ye watch one ouer another euen as euery Pastor ought to do ouer his flocke that no man fall away from the grace of God c. Heb. 12. 15. Verily beloued ye ought thus to doe and the times do require it at your hands Take heede therefore that in these daies wherein the loue of many waxeth cold and all iniquity is increased no man deceiue you Mat. 24. 4. 12. Looke to your selues that wee lose not the things which we haue done but that we may all receiue a full reward 2. Iohn 8. Be stedfast and vnremoueable not decaying but abounding alwaies in the worke of the Lord knowing that your labour shall not be in vaine in the Lord 1. Cor. 15. 58. And because yee haue not onely beene hearers of the word neither such onely as haue learned somewhat out of the same but haue also made profession of the hope belonging to adoption therefore against all forces and perswasions to the contrary keepe the said profession of your hope without wauering considering one another and whetting one another as yron whetteth yron Pro. 27. 17. to loue and to good workes Heb. 10. 23. 24. both towards God and also towards men that so ye may flourish as palme trees and grow like Cedars in Lebanon and being planted in the house of the Lord ye may flourish in the Courts of our God and still bring forth fruit in your age and be fatte and flourishing Psal 92. 12. Yea that your loue and seruices and faith and patience and workes may be more at the last then at the first Reuel 2. 19. Shall I here conclude my speech vnto you Not so my good brethren but suffer a little further the words of exhortation Heb. 13. 22. Because therefore all the children of God are as it were bound vp in the bundle of life as Abigail speaketh to Dauid 1. Sam. 25. 29. and stickes that are bound continuing so bound cannot be easily broken but the bond whereby they are bound being cut in sunder a child may breake them one by one Because also they be as it were burning coales euen coales of the Lords altar and coales lying together doe keepe their heat but being raked out and scattered vpon the hearth they are soone quenched and doe dye therefore the more excellent by this Treatise ye shall see the state and condition of the children of God to be the more siriue I beseech you to keepe communion with them and forsake not the fellowship that ye haue with them as the maner of some was euen in the golden age and flourishing time of the Apostles Heb. 10. 25. Let no man dare to account that ministery Antichristian which God the father hath vsed and Iesus Christ hath graced with the holy Ghost to the begetting of such Children as cannot be begotten but by the word of truth I ames 1. 18. As therefore ye cannot deny God to haue begotten againe your selues and other and dailie so to doe by the ministrie of the Church of England so ye must acknowledge the meanes to haue beene and daily to bec no other then the word of truth It is no more possible for any to be begotten againe by any word of errour then it is to haue any father of regeneration but God Was it the word of truth and is it not still Or is it to some and ought not all so to account of it Or is it the word of truth to make men new borne babes in Christ 1. Pet. 1. 23. and is it not also that sincere pure milk which such as are so made new borne babes ought still to desire that they may grow thereby 1. Pet. 2. 2. Or can this sincere milke of that word of truth be sucked out of the breasts and pappes of an harlot Or can the same word of truth be publikely preached and maintained with as publike a disclaiming and renouncing of all things contrarie thereunto in a false and an adulterous Church As the Church of God is the piller of truth 1. Tim. 3. 15. so whatsoeuer company is the piller of truth and doth publikely preach and maintaine and vphold the truth that also is to be acknowledged the Church of God If some one man or diuers particular persons do preach some errours in such a Church yea and be suffered so to doe either by the negligence or by want of knowledge of them yet this doth no more nullifie such a Church and make it to be no Church then the suffering of the woman Iezebel which called her selfe a Prophetesse to deceiue Christs seruants to make them commit fornication and to eate meate sacrificed to Idols Reuel 2. 20. did null●fie the Church of Thyatira and make it to be no Church But to returne to that from which I haue a little digressed as it cannot be denied to be the word of truth whereby men haue beene and daily are begotten againe amongst vs neither that can be denied to be the Church of God where the said word is preached and publikely euen by publike authoritie maintained with as publike a renou●cing of all errours and forraine Canons contrarie to the said word of truth as these things cannot be denied so also
subiect and continueth the same time but herein it differeth that the obiect of faith is the whole word of God but the obiect of hope is only the promises in the word By faith we beleeue all things written in the word of things past present and to come as hath been said in chap. 8. But by hope we ●●e expect and looke for onely those things that are in the word promised to be performed her easter either generally concerning the Church or particularly concerning our selues So all the good promised hereafter to be performed is beleeued by faith and expected or looked for by hope Euery truth therfore of God reuealed in his word written is the obiect of faith For by faith we beleeue the word touching the creation of the world by the word Heb. 11. 3. but hope hath only relation to the promises of God Therefore the Apostle exhorting the Hebrews to keepe the profession of their hope without wauering confirmeth the same by the faithfulnesse of him that hath promised Heb. 10. 23. So he restraineth hope only to the promises of God As by faith we beleeue as well the promises of this life as of the life to come and therefore the iust man doth liue by his faith as well touching this life as touching the life to come so by hope we doe expect or looke for the performance as well of the promises of this life as of the life to come Notwithstanding as the things of the life to come are the principallest obiect of faith so also be they of hope This hope is as proper to the children of God as faith it selfe because it is an handmaid only of faith looking only for the performance of those things which faith beleeueth shall be performed Therefore it is ioined with faith 1. Cor. 13. 13. T it 1. 1. 2. 1. Pet 1. 21. and Iude 20. and 21. Therefore also these words Faith and hope to beleeue and hope are often confounded and are vsed one for another This faith and hope are immortall they shall neuer perish The seed of saith is immortall Christ Iesus the obiect of faith is the s●me yesterday to day and for cuer By faith we ouercome all things and all things are possible vnto vs. How then can faith decav By faith ●e are also kept vnto saluation 1. Pet. 1. 5. How then can faith itselfe perish It faith perish whereby we are kept vnto saluation where is our safety Peter proueth faith o be better then gold because gold perisheth though it be neuer so well tried and refined in the fire 1. Pet. 1. 7. How is this argument good if faith may perish as well as gold If faith do thus continue then also doth hope for these are twinnes borne together liuing together and lasting one as long as the other The hope therefore of Gods children shall neuer be frustrated it shall not be confounded Those things that proue the perpetuity of faith proue also the perpetuity of hope The same is also euident by the attribute liuing wherby Peter deseribeth the hope of them that be begotten againe 1. Pet. 1. 3. Paul saith it maketh not ashamed Rom. 5. 5. Salomon saith The patient abiding that is the hope of the righteous shall be gladnesse Pro. 10. 28 In this place and in that of Peter let it be obserued that hope is limited only to them that are begotten againe and to the righteous This is the more because we are as often taught that the hope of the wicked shall perish When Salomon had said in that place before alleged The hope of the righteous shall be gladnesse presently he addeth but the hope of the wicked shall perish Bildad saith that As the rush cannot grow without mire or moisture so the hypocrites hope shall perish Iob 8. 13. Zophar saith The eye of the wicked shall faile and their refuge shall perish and their hope shall be sorrow of mind Iob 11. 20. The Psalmist saith The desire of the wicked shall perish Psal 112. 10. If their desire shall perish can their hope continue Who doth not desire that which he hopeth for Salomon saith againe when a wicked man die●h his hope perisheth and the hope of the vniust shall perish Pro 11. 7. Examples hereof are many How vaine was the hope of the mother of Sisera and of her wise la●●es touching the safe returne of Sisera with great so ●ile Iudg 5. 28. How was the great boasting hope of great Goliah decerued 1. Sam. 17. 44. The like may be said of Ah●b touching good successe against Ramo●h Gilead 1. Kings 22. 6. and of the hope of Saneherib touching the like successe against Ierusalem 2. Kings 18 28. So also of the hope generally of all Papists and particularly both of the Spaniards in the yeer 15 88 and also of many of our own Papists here at home here to fore and of late in the powder treason and of many other What an excellent priuilege then is this of the children of God that their hope grounded vpon God word for things either of this life or of the life to come shall not be frustrated but certainly accomplished yea that we may be the better assured that our hope shall not deceiue vs it is called the helmet of saluation 1. ● hes 5. 8. whereby we are taught that as the helmet or an head peace defēdeth the head from all wounds so likewise hope is a principall part of the spirituall armor for the defence of a spirituall man from spirituall dangers and for keeping him from despaire of saluation If hope bee a speciall preseruatiue against despaire of saluation then also must it be against despaire of things promised for the comfort of this life Feare not little flocke saith our Sauiour it is your Fathers pleasure to giue you a kingdome Luk. 12. 32. By the assurance therefore of a kingdome hee strengthneth them against all feare of want of things for this life Can we rightly hope that God will giue the greater and doubt or feare that he will not giue the lesse viz. the things of this life yea therefore hope is compared to a sure and sted fast ancre of the soule fastened to that which is with in the vaile Heb. 6. 19. This is a sweete and most comfortable comparison viz. of hope not to an ancre only but to a sure ancre to a stedfast ancre not fastened in the bottome of the sea in sand or in any earth but in heauen euen in God himselfe or in Christ Iesus more firm then any rocke How soeuer therefore the children of God be here as it were vpon the midst of the seas tossed with mighty stormes and tempests yet as a ship by a strong ancre with a cable sutable well fastened is the more safe in great stormes and tempests so according to the words of the same Apostle in the same place verse 18. the children of God by their hope well fixed and fastened vpon the things especially within the
were as well now if wee had no word written at all but that all were deliuered vnto vs only by tradition yet it is certain both that God himselfe commanded the word from time to time to be written and also that it was so written to very great purpose and for very great vse of the children of God That the word was written by Gods expresse commandement many places doe testifie Ier. 30. 2. and 36. 2. Reuel 2. 1. c. The speciall purposes of so writing the word of God are two First that the Church might the lesse erre touching the word for if all should haue beene by tradition men might haue deuised what they would and pretended a tradition who almost could haue controlled them That therefore the Church might haue a certain rule both of faith also of manners against which no exception might be taken it pleased God to command his word to bee written for the better examining of all other writings and preachings thereby Secondly it was so written that all men might the better haue the benefit thereof as well priuately to read as publikly to heare the same preached The rather because sometimes by persecution sometimes by sicknesse sometimes by extremitie of weather sometimes by imprisonment sometimes by some other meanes they be kept from the publike ministrie thereof Touching the preaching of it the Lord tooke order also in that behalfe for the better instruction of all by sound interpretation and by wise application of it according to persons and times and places For the preaching of the word is the right diuiding thereof as euerie one needeth the same in respect of age of sexe of calling of state and condition any manner of way 2. Tim. 2. 15. What a singular benefit is this that all men poore as well as rich base as well as honourable may haue the word and ought to haue the word as their seuerall necessitie requireth And truely though a man know neuer so much yea though a man be neuer so rich in faith and godlines yet the preaching of the word is necessary partly to increase his knowledge which is alwaies imperfect 1. Cor. 13. 9. and partly to helpe his memory in those things he knoweth yea to strengthen the same and as it were to stop the holes thereof for the time to come that the things which they shall heare may not at any time runne out Heb. 2. 1. and partly to quicken him both to obedience according to his knowledge and also to make vse of the word for his comfort for his humbling for his strengthning that he may not fall for his raising if hee shall fall and many other waies For alasse what is the best and most godly man that is but drousie and dull needing both to be awakened daily and also with the spurre as it were of the word to bee quickned yea what is the greatest measure of faith of loue of zeale of meeknesse of patience and of any piety in any man here vpon the earth but as a little fire a coale or two kindled vnder and in a great deale of greenewood which will easily bee quenched and goe out without continuall puffing and blowing for nourishing maintaining and encreasing thereof Neither is the word of God in this manner onely a great benefit for the children of GOD in respect of the writing and preaching thereof that so they may both heare it and read it but also because they may at all times both conferre thereof with other and also priuately meditate thereof by themselues yea this conference and meditation must goe with hearing and reading Otherwise all hearing and reading will bee to little purpose yea whatsoeuer wee learne by hearing and reading it will quickly vanish and come to nothing As the two disciples that were going to Emmaus did talke and conferre together of those things that had fallen out at Ierusalem concerning Christ Luk 24. 14. and as the men of Berea did not content themselues with hearing but conferred together of the things they had heard and searched the Scriptures daily whether those things viz. which they had heard were so or no Acts 17. 11. so may and must and will all the children of God do touching the things they heare The like is to be said of meditation Therefore as Ioshua is commanded to meditate in the law of God day and night Iosh 1. 8. and as it is commended to be the continuall exercise of the man that is blessed Psal 1. 2. to teach that he is none of the blessed company that doth not so meditate on the law so it was practised by Dauid himselfe who proueth his exceeding loue vnto the word of God euen such as wherof he was in a manner sick and the which he could not wel expresse by this argument saying Oh how loue I thy law it is my meditation continually Psal 119. 97. This is such a worke as wherin the children of God may euen in the night as they ly in their bed when they haue no light whereby they may read in the way as they walke or ride in their sicknesse lamenesse and in imprisonment when all other comforts doe faile them yea in their old age and when their eie-sight is either dim and weake not able to endure reading or none at all and when they shall be deafe not hearing any thing or at the least not able to endure the speech of any finally when all other things will be loathsome vnto them Euen then I say may the children of God exercise themselues to their great comfort and to a sweet passing away of the time in meditation of the word This is the more because the wicked not hauing this priuiledge do either spend their time in eating drinking swilling carding dicing dancing chambering wantonnesse and in all vanity or else they find all things more tedious vnto them then they can beare Aboue all things great is the benefit of the word for the former vses because it may be and must be locked vp in the chest of our hearts Iob. 22. 22. Pro. 2. 2. and 10. 3. 3. 4. so that when we fall into the hands of theeues that rob vs of al other things yet that cannot be taken away from vs yea though men take away our liues yet the benefit of the word shall continue with vs For this is that good part that Mary did chuse which our Sauiour saith should not be taken away from her Luk. 10. 42. This especially is proper to the children of God Many of the wicked heare the word read the word confer of the word no doubt also but do oft meditate of the word though somtimes rather for euil then for good as al Papists heretiks do study the word the more to maintaine their heresies contrary to the word but only the children of God doe lay and lock it vp in their hearts to their euerlasting good To conclude therefore this point If it were one of the greatest
preferments of the Iewes aboue the Gentiles before the comming of Christ that the Lord gaue them his word his statutes and his iudgements Psal 147. 19. and that to them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 3. 2. viz. outwardly and concerning the letter to be kept by them whereas no other nation had the like benefit then how great is this priuiledge of the children of God aboue the wicked that they only haue the keeping of his word in the closets and cofers of their hearts to their euerlasting good Thus much of the dignity of Gods children by the word of God It remaineth now to speake of the Sacraments wherein I may and will be the shorter because they are only seales for confirmation of the word and either to strengthen our faith the more in the promises of God or to quicken our obedience the more vnto the commandements of God For as touching baptisme it is instituted first of all the better to assure vs of the forgiuenesse of our sinnes by the bloud of Christ by that visible element of water which therein is to be vsed This Peter teacheth when he exhorteth them that by his sermon were pricked in their hearts to bee baptized in the name of Iesus Christ for the remission of sinnes Acts 2. 38. because as the water washeth away the filth of the body so the bloud of Christ clenseth vs from all our sinnes Rom. 5. 9. Ephes 1. 7. Coloss 1. 20. 1 Iohn 1. 7. Reuel 1. 5. Secondly baptisme was instituted as a Sacrament also of repentance and regeneration because the bloud of Christ doth not onely wash vs from the guilt of our sinnes but also from the spot and blemish of them as we haue heard before And therefore Peter saith that we were elect or select viz. in our calling vnto sanctification of the spirit through the obedience and sprinkling of the bloud of Christ 1. Pet. 1. 2. and againe that We were redeemed from our vaine conuersation receiued by tradition of our fathers by the pretious bloud of Christ c. verse 18. 19. Another Apostle also saith that the bloud of Christ shall purge our consciences from dead works to serue the liuing God Heb. 9. 14. Therfore to apply these things vnto baptisme the baptisme of Iohn is called the baptisme of repentance Acts 19 4. and Iohn neuer baptized but hee preached repentance Mat. 3. 8. Luk. 3. 8. Therefore also baptisme is said to teach vs to die vnto sinne and to liue vnto righteousnesse Rom. 3. 4. Gal. 3. 27. Col. 2. 12. In the same respect Paul saith that Christ gaue himselfe for the Church that he might sanctifie it and clense it by the washing of water through the word Ephes 5. 26. In which words the Apostle at least alludeth vnto baptisme and againe he seemeth to vnderstand baptisme by the washing of the new birth Tit. 3. 5. The Apostle also to the Hebrews seemeth to allude to baptisme when hee saith that wee are purged in our hearts from an euill conscience and washed in our bodies with pure water Hebr. 10. 22. Finally touching both the former ends of baptisme baptisme is said to bee the baptisme of repentance and forgiunesse of sinnes Mark 1. 4. As baptisme so serueth for confirmation of faith and instruction in godlinesse so doth also the supper of the Lord. The bread that wee eate and the wine that wee drinke in a religious manner according to Christs institution doth teach vs that as the bread and wine are incorporated into our bodies and made one with them so Christs his flesh and blood are spiritually incorporated into vs and wee into Christ through faith whereby it is said as wee heard before that Christ dwelleth in our hearts Ephes 3. 17. In which respect the cup of blessing which the Minister in the celebration of the Supper blesseth that is which hee praieth God to blesse to that speciall and holy vse is said to bee the communion of the blood of Christ and that the bread which he so blesseth is said to be the communion of the body of Christ 1. Cor. 10. 16. And indeed the Supper of the Lord by the visible elements and the visible actions therein commanded by Christ himselfe putting vs better in remembrance of all that Christ hath done for vs and better shewing his death till he come 1. Cor. 11. 24. 25. 26. then bare preaching would doe for so our eies doe see our hands doe handle our tongues doe taste and our stomaks by the vertue of the bread and wine do feele that which in the word preached our eares doe heare it cannot but be a maruellous and most comfortable confirmation of our faith both for euerlasting saluation in the world to come and also for all things necessary for this life in this present world For how can we doubt of saluation which Christ Iesus hath so deerly purchased for vs and the price whereof we see in so liuely manner represented vnto vs by the bread and the wine by the breaking of the one and the pouring out of the other would he giue so much for vs and then leaue vs in the suds or in danger Yea do not the bread and the wine with the eating of the one and drinking of the other teach vs that Christs flesh and bloud are meat indeed and drinke indeed to preserue vs to that eternall life which he by his death hath purchased for vs Ioh. 6. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. Hath Christ paid so deerly for vs and doth he feed vs so daintily and with such costly diet better then Angels food and will he lose vs and suffer vs to perish and to be taken out of his hands yea sith we that eat his flesh and drinke his bloud spiritually not only in the word but also in the Sacrament doe dwell in Christ and haue Christ dwelling in vs as Christ himselfe in the place before alledged doth testifie will he dispossesse himselfe of his habitation or hauing all power in heauen in earth and euery where els in his hands can he violently by any other power be thrust out of his house and home yea sith as we haue heard the supper of the Lord doth plainly teach vs that wee are flesh of his flesh c. can we perish and he not also perish Touching things necessary for this life whiles we liue in this world the supper of the Lord by putting vs in such remembrance of Christ himselfe doth also most comfortably assure vs of them For he that spared not his owne sonne but gaue him for vs all how shall he not with him giue vs all other things also Rom. 8. 32. And he that spared not his owne life and his owne soule but gaue them for vs and daily doth giue them vnto vs by faith how shall he not being made the heire of all things Heb. 1. 2. and hauing all things in his power and at his disposition how shall hee not I say with himselfe giue
abiect persons much more may they be no more esteemed then boies or children The suffering also the losse of all that they haue in the world and of the world and the submitting themselues to the most shamefull death that is for Christs sake that died the cursed death of the crosse for them what doth it declare but that they haue that noble mind for the contemning of the world and all that is therein that was in Christ Iesus himselfe Who for the ioy that was set before him is said to haue endured the Crosse and despised the shame Heb. 12. 2. What is more princely and kingly then this If it be also accounted fortitude for the common souldier to follow his captaine and to aduenture any danger though it be with losse of life wherein he hath seene his Captaine goe before him shall wee not account it fortitude likewise for the children of God to endanger and to lose their liues in such things as wherein Christ Iesus their chiefe Captaine hath gone before them To proceed yet further in the consideration of the Kingly dignity of Gods childrē let this be our fourth meditation in that behalfe that whereas by nature through our foresaid bondage to sinne and Satan and to euery wordly vanity wee were also captiues vnto death it selfe and prisoners of hell and in the state of condemnation now being made the children of God and members of Christ Iesus God hath giuen vs such victory through our said Lord Iesus Christ Rom. 7. ●5 that we may victoriously triumph ouer death hell and condemnation saying Death is swallowed vp in victory O death where is thy sting O graue where is thy victory 1. Cor. 15. 55. and againe Now there is no condemnation to vs that are in Christ Iesus Rom. 8. 1. Fiftly as Kings that haue power and courage doe protect and defend their subiects from forraine powers so also the children of God doe valiantly protect and defend those that are committed to their charge against all the enemies of their saluation except themselues doe cowardly and slauishly run vnto them or will not be released from that bondage wherein by nature they are Sixtly as when God the father set Christ Iesus his King vpon Sion his holy mountaine that is ouer his Church he gaue him vpon his asking the heathen for his inheritance and the ends of the earth for his possession euen to crush them with a scepter of iron and to breake them in peeces like a potters vessell Psal 2. 8. so also the children of God hauing Christ Iesus the heire of all things Heb. 1. 2. all other things likewise are said to be theirs 1. Cor. 3. 21. and they shall inherit all things Reu. 21. 7. Yea Christ hath promised to giue them and will giue them power ouer nations to rule them with a rod of iron and to breake them in peeces like a potters vessell Reu. 2. 26. 27. Heereby therefore it is that onely the children of God hauing by Iesus Christ recouered that right vnto al the creaturs of God which was lost by Adam and hauing likewise liberty now in the time of the gospell to vse al those things which for the time of the law were restrained that such restraint of some things might be to the Church then and to the Church also in these daies a testimony and a witnesse of the former losse of all things Hereby I say it is that only the children of God haue power with sobriety and without offence according to their ability and beseeming their calling and with obseruation of some other rules in the word to vse all the creatures of God freely to Gods glory and to their comfort not only for necessity but also for their honest delight For vnto the pure only are all such things pure but vnto them that are defiled and vnbeleeuing that is vnto all that are not the children of God nothing is pure but euen their minds and consciences are defiled Tit. 2. 15. But of this right of the children of God vnto all things more afterward Moreouer thereby also howsoeuer the children of God are here for a time by their enemies and the enemies of Christ Iesus molested and vexed yet the time shall come when all such enemies shall bee fully subdued vnto them euen as a pot broken in peeces by the potter yea they shall bee indeed broken in peeces by Christ Iesus the head of all the children of God and that which is done by him being their head shall bee accounted as done by them yea euen as the head doth vse the hands and other parts of the body for executing what it selfe shall thinke good against all the aduersaries thereof and of the whole body so shall Christ Iesus vse the members of his Church not onely by the Ecclesiasticall and spirituall power and censures thereof to correct them that shall be of heathenish conditions and behauiour amongst them and to binde their Kings with chaines and their Nobles with fetters of yron that is by excommunication and such other like seuere courses to make such as were as Kings and captaines in all euill to stoope and bend as if they were bound with chaines and fetters of yron Psalme 149. 7. 8. not onely I say shall Christ thus vse the members of his Church to bridle and subdue the wicked but also hee shall vse Christian Kings and Princes by little and little euen by the sword to vanquish all the great enemies of the Church till there be scarce a man left that shall professe himselfe an enemie thereof Especially Christ Iesus shall vse such christian Kings and Princes and some other also to ioine with them though perhaps in worldly respects and in desire of the spoile in hatred of the whore of Babylon euen of Antichrist the Pope and of all that shall take his part Princes as well as other euen to make them desolate and naked and as it were to eat their flesh and to burne them with fire Reuel 17. 16. Seuenthly touching other princely vertues as kings are to be amiable and courteous to the good and austere and seuere to the wicked so the children of God are indued with this kingly grace A vile person is contemptible in their eies but they honor them that feare the Lord Psal 15 4. All their delight is in the Saints and in them that are excellent vpon the earth Psal 16. 3. but they haunt not with vaine persons neither keepe company with the dissemblers but hate the assembly of the wicked Psal 26. 4. 5. Yea they may call God himselfe t● witnesse that such as hate him they also doe hate and they doe earnestly contend with them that rise vp against him yea that they hate them with an vnfained hatred as if they were their owne enemies Psal 139. 21. 22. Yea though the children of God bee aduanced to kingly dignities in the earth as well as they are kings spiritually by Christ Iesus together with other yet
made knowen by the Church the manifold wisdome of God Ephes 3. 9. 10. By this place we plainly see that the Angels haue the benefit of more knowledge then before they had Of the fellowship of the foresaid mysterie and that by the Church What is the Church but the companie of Gods children This is the more manifest by that that there is said of that mysterie to haue beene before hidden in God himselfe and not so to haue beene opened to the sonnes of men in other ages as now it is vers 5. and to haue beene kept secret since the world began Rom. 16. 25. For doe not these phrases intimate that the said mysterie had beene hidden so in God himselfe from the beginning of the world that the very Angels themselues did not fully vnderstand it till it was made knowen by the Church The same is to bee thought of many mysteries contained in the Reuelation because it is said of the booke in the right hand of him that sate vpon the throne written within and on the backe side sealed with many seales whereby the Chapters in the Reuelation following seeme especially to be vnderstood because I say it is said of that booke that none in heauen nor in earth nor vnder the earth was able to open the booke or to looke thereon but only the Lion of the tribe of Iuda that is Christ Iesus Reu. 5. 2. This Lion of the tribe of Iuda doth not only vnderstand the same booke himselfe but also by his spirit maketh it knowen to the Church by whom also the Angels attending thereupon in all assemblies thereof seeme likewise to come to know it and not by any immediate reuelation thereof vnto them in heauen neither as some doe weakly imagine by contemplation of God himselfe in whom all things past present and to come are as it were ingrauen For so they should know the secrets of mens hearts and the day of iudgement which none knowes but God himselfe For are not all those things ingrauen in God as well as others I grant the Angels to know much more of their owne nature and of the nature of God himselfe then the Church knoweth yea then perhaps is reuealed in the written word yet this letteth not but that the Angels may bee ignorant of the meaning of some things contained in the word concerning Gods pleasure towards the Church till the same by the spirit of Christ be reuealed to the Church I will not so inlarge this point in this place as Isee it handled in some late printed bookes but I will content my selfe with this thus generally spoken thereof Another benefit of the Angels by the children of God is that they haue great iov of their conuersion and repentance This our Sauiour teacheth plainly by a double parable Luk. 15. 3. c. one of the lost sheepe the other of the lost groat for the finding whereof there was great ioy the application of b●th which parables is thus made by our Sauiour hin selfe I say vnto you that likewise ioy shall bee in heauen ouer one sinner that repenteth c. and againe I say vnto you there is ioy in the presence of the Angels of God for one sinner that conuerteth 7. and 10. And indeed there is a great reason of this their ioy for doe men reicice in earth for the birth of a sinner and shall not the Angels in heauen reioice for the regeneration of a christian Doe men reioice for the birth of one of Gods enemies and shall not the Angels reioice for the birth of one of Gods children Doe the true subjects of an earthly prince reioice and declare their ioy by some testimony at the birth of a child to such an earthly Prince how much more should the Angels in heauen Gods perfectest subjects reioice at the birth of a child to God himselfe the king of heauen and earth euen of one that shall it selfe be and is as soone as it is borne not only a Priest but also a king as before we heard Is there ioy in earth for the birth of one that shall die againe and perhaps a miserable death how then should the Angels not reioice in the birth of one that shall neuer die more but shall liue for euer a life of grace here till the time of translation from hence do come and then a life of glory with themselves yea with Christ Iesus Did the Angels reioice when Christ was borne a man vpon earth and shall they not reioice when men are borne partaker of the diuine nature from heauen and for heauen yea wherefore did the Angels so reioice at the birth of Christ was it not because by his birth in the world many should afterward be borne vnto God As soone as euer Christ had taken the book before spoken of out of the hands of his Father to open the same to the Church how did the Angels reioice and sing for ioy as wel as the 24. Elders Reu. 5. 8. 9. Did they so reioice at the taking of the book to be opened to the Church how much more cause haue they to reioice and sing when by the opening of mysteries in the same book contained men shall be enlightned with true sauing knowledge of God and of his Sonne Iesus Christ and be also new borne children vnto God As the Angels doe thus reioice in the first regeneration of the children of God that is when men first begin to be the children of God so it is not to be doubted but that their ioy is increased as such graces are increased in men whereby they are the more declared both to men and Angels to be so regenerated and new borne vnto God I might amplifie this point much more but hauing been large in other things it shall be sufficient thus briefly to haue spoken of this matter So we see what great benefits both men and other creatures the inferior creatures of this inferior world and the superior creatures euen the blessed Angels in heauen haue by the children of God Is not this therefore a great increase of their dignity Is it not an high commendation of their state and condition That the wicked are hurtfull to all and beneficiall to none doth make their estate the more base and vile abiect and contemptible Therefore that the children of God are hurtfull to none and so beneficiall and helpfull to many it must needs make their condition more honorable and noble CHAP. XXIX Of diuers similitudes and comparisons setting foorth the dignity of Gods children TO omit diuers other arguments whereby the dignity of Gods children might bee furthered enlarged and illustrated let vs now come to certaine comparisons Herein I will a little transgresse the order of Logicians as I haue not hitherto been curious therein and therefore I will begin with some similitudes whereby the holy ghost in respect of some things before handled doth set forth the excellency of the children of God From these similitudes I will
he commendeth both her safety from all enemies and from all corruption and put●efaction of the world and also her preseruation and reseruation for the only vse of himselfe and of all other whom he will haue refreshed with her liuing waters In the 13. and 14. verses he compareth her workes againe or all the race and posteritie of her signified by plants for profit beauty and pleasantnesse to an orchard of pomegranats with sweet fruits as cipres spikenard saffron calamus and cinamon with all the trees of incense myrrh and aloes with all the chiefe spices then hee concludeth in the 15. verse his whole commendation of her in that place with the similitudes or metaphors before vsed saying by way of exclamation Ofountaine of the garden O well of liuing waters and the springs of Lebanon nothing thereby that there is not liuing water to bee had but by communion with the Church to whom alone Christ giueth the water of eternall life whereof ●hosoeuer drinketh shall neuer thirst any more In the fifth Chapter there is little of the Church but only some titles or metaphors repeated that before we heard of The rest of that Chapter is most diuine description of Christ himselfe by diuers metaphors sutable to these whereby before Christ himselfe had described the Church In Chap. 6. ver 3. Christ describeth the Church by 3. attributes euery one illustrated by a similitude saying that by the grace of God and in respect of the spirituall gifts that God had bestowed on her shee was beautifull as Tirzah that had beene a goodly city in the borders of Israel where before Samaria was built Ieroboams chiefe kingly palace seemeth to haue beene 1. King 14. 7. comely as Ierusalem called the perfection of beauty and the ioy of the whole earth Lament 2. 15. and terrible as an army with banners viz. by her excellent discipline and by the maiestie of him that dwelleth in her and protecteth her In the verses following some former similitudes being repeated in the 9 verse besides the last former similitude in the end of the said verse he setteth her foorth by 3. other similitudes viz looking forth as the morning that is most gloriously faire as the moone euen at the full and in a cleere night and pure as the sunne that is without all mixture and not hauing some parts thicker then some other as the moone seemeth to haue but being all and euery part alike and the same as the Apostle vsing a word taken from the sunne would haue the Philippians to be Phil. 1. 10. In the seuenth chapter Christ seeing the Church comming as it were a far off congratulateth her comming with a speech of admiration saying How beautifull are thy going with shooes O Princes daughter so he compareth her to the daughter of a Princes and describeth her parts from the feet vpward by most excellent similitudes telling all posterity that her feet were most soundly and safely shod as it were with the preparation of the Gospell of peace and her hippes or thighs compassed with Iewels the worke of cunning workemen or made most artificially that is girded with the girdle of truth vers 1. or else by the Iewels of the thighs or hippes he meaneth some speciall ornament in those times worne vpon that part thereby signifying the virtue of chastitie and this the rather seemeth to bee the meaning then the other because if from the shooes we shall ascend to the middle and then descend backe againe in the verse following to the nauill there might seem to be some disorder not well agreeing to so elegant a description Then from the hips or thighs he ascendeth higher to the nauill saying thereof that it is as a round cup wanting no liquor and of her belly that it is as a heap of wheat compassed about with lilies verse 2. meaning by that similitude of the nauell that she had not a barren womb but was already so fully concerued that her fruit should be as a great quantity of wheat growing out of a most sweet soile as that is which beareth lilies from the nauell and the belly he commeth to the breasts shewing them to be as two yong kids that are twins 1. full of dainty food for the nourishment of the seed wherewith before he had said she was conceiued From the two breasts he commeth to the neck comparing the same to a Tower of Iuorie thereby signifying the authority of the Church for the strength and whitenesse or beauty thereof to be like vnto Iuory and for the height thereof to be like to a tower after the neck he compareth her eies to artificiall pooles in the frequented gate that is in the kings gate which was the chiefe way to the threefold towne of Ierusalem and wherein likewise was a great market of cattell and the poole of Bethesdas that had fiue porches by this similitude noting the ministers of the word which are the eies of the Church to be most cleere and quicksighted for the better enlightning of the cics of other and therefore greatly frequented and resorted vnto as some common thorow-fare highway or great market verse 3. he describeth also her nose by the likenesse of the tower of Lebanon looking towards Damascus by this similitude reaching the Church to be of exquisite iudgement for the discerning of all doctrines and spirits of men and other things that differ verse 4 Last verse ● he setteth forth her head to be as skarlet and the bush of her head like purple so that the king is tied in her beames thereby signifying the attire of her head to be so gracefull and excellent that no king can behold the same but he will be greatly in loue thereof or that he himselfe Christ Iesus ●s so enamored of her upon the sight of her beautifull attire that he is willingly tied as it were to be present perpetually in her holy congregations By all this elegant and excellent description of the Church in each part thereof Christ Iesus would haue all to know her to be so glorious as that no earthly thing is to be compared thereunto Therefore afterward in the 7. verse as if he thought no words sufficient to set foorth her excellencie he saith further that her stature was like a palm tree and her brests like the clusters so that he meaneth that she is tall and straight flourishing the more the more by persecution shee is pressed downe and also that the old and new Testaments her two brests as before we heard are neuer drie but alwaies full of liquor and most precious and comfortable doctrine like to the blood of grapes In the 8. verse besides some former similitudes he compareth the sauour of the Churches nose to bee like vnto apples by this meaning that her breath that commeth out of her nostrils is most pleasant and delectable In the 9. verse he proceedeth saying that the roofe of her mouth is like good wine which goeth straight vp to her welbe loued causing
the lips of him that is asleepe to speake by this similitude signifying that the word of God in the custodie of the Church and deliuered by her ministery is like to wine that sparkleth vpward and which worketh so powerfully being the word of life that euen the dead hearing the voice of God therein are awakened and haue their mouthes opened to speake to his praise These be the chiefe similitudes whereby Salomon in that most excellent song called therefore The Song of Songs that is the most excellent of all songs whereby I say Salomon in that most diuine song generally setteth foorth the excellencie of the whole Church and the which may bee applied to euery particular member of the same In respect therefore of these similitudes wee may well conclude againe the state of all the children of God to bee the more excellent Besides these let vs also briefly consider of some other similitudes whereby in other respects the dignitie of Gods children is likewise set foorth vnto vs. First therefore let vs call to minde the excellent speech of that wicked man Balaam which notwithstanding hee spake not of himselfe but by the holy Ghost and wherein he prophecieth most diuinely of the state of the Israelites comparing them most elegantly in one sentence to diuers things As the vallies saith hee are they stretched out as the gardens by the riuers as the Aloe trees which the Lord bath planted as the Cedars besides the waters Num. 24. 6. That which he speaketh of the children of Israel may much more be spoken of all the true Israel of God euen of all that by regeneration and adoption are such children of God as now we speake of Secondly let that also bee remembred that is Psal 1. 3. where the children of God by other properties described in the two first verses the Prophet saith further that they shall be like trees planted by the riuers of water which doe bring foorth their fruit in due season whose leafe shall not fade The application of which similitude he maketh in the next words saying Se whatsoeuer he doth shall prosper then hee addeth a contrary similitude of the wicked saying the wicked are not so but as the chaffe which the winde driueth away verse 4. The Prophet Ieremie hath the like in a manner of both I meane both of the children of God and also of the wicked But first of the wicked then of the children of God for hauing set downe this generall sentence of the wicked Cursed is the man that trusteth in man and maketh flesh his arme and withdraweth his heart from the Lord so doe all the wicked then hee proueth the same by a similitude for he shall bee like the heath in the wildernes and shall not see when any good commeth but shall inhabit the parched places in the wildernes in a salt land and not inhabited Chap. 17. 5. 6. In the very next verses hee addeth the contrary of the children of God saying blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord and whose hope the Lord is such are the children of God for hee shall be as a tree that is planted by the waters which spreadeth out her roote by the riuer and shall not feele when the heate commeth but her leafe shal be green and shal not care for the yeare of drought neither shall cease from yeelding fruit In the Psalme 92. 12. the Prophet commendeth the righteous by these similitudes the righteous shall flourish like a palme tree and grow like a cedar in Lebanon such as bee planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the courts of our God they shall bring forth fruit in their age they shall bee far and flourishing But of the wicked it is said the wicked shall perish and the enemies of the Lord shall bee consumed as the fat of Lambes euen with the smoke they shall be consumed Psalm 37. 20. We haue heard likewise before other similitudes in respect of the certaine estate of Gods children viz. that they are said to bee like to mount Sion and like to Ierusalem compassed about with mighty mountaines Psal 125. 1. 2. and like a house built vpon a rocke against which no stormes can preuaile whereas on the contrary the wicked though hearing the word but not doing it are compared to a house built vpon the sand which when stormes and tempests came was ouerthrowne Mat. 7. 24. With these let vs remember the comparison before mentioned of the children of God vnto a thing hallowed to the Lord and vnto his first fruits Ierem. 2. 3. The Prophet Zacharie compareth the people of God to the Apple of Gods eie Zach. 2. 8. By both these similitudes the holy Ghost teacheth that as things in the law consecrated to God as the first fruits and other things were pretious vnto God and as euery man accounteth highly of the apple of his eie and is very tender thereof so all the children of God are very pretious to God and he is very tender of them Doe not all these similitudes much set foorth the excellent state and condition of Gods children There are many other the like similitudes but hauing giuen this tast of these I will leaue the rest to the reader as he shall meet with them in the scripture To come to other comparisons if it were a great honor to the Israelites to be called the people of God yea such an honor as that in that respect they were more excellent then all other nations how great a thing then is it now for them that at that time were no such people of God to be called the sonnes of the liuing God Hos 1. 10. Paul often calleth himselfe the seruant of Iesus Christ the sonne of God as reioicing in that name and thinking the same more honourable then if hee had beene heire of all the monarches of the world And indeed what seruice of anie King or of all Kings is comparable to the seruice of God King of kings are able to giue such rewards for their seruice as there is in keeping of Gods commandements Psalme 19. 11. If it bee such an honour to bee the seruant of the Sonne of God is it not much more to bee the sonne or daughter of God himselfe Let no man here obiect that the difference is not great because they that are seruants of Iesus Christ are also the children of God For though this were so in the particular example of Paul yet it is not so in the generall all are not the children of God that are the seruants of Iesus Christ or of God himselfe Iudas was a seruant of Iesus Christ as well as the rest of the Apostles Nebuchadnezer is called the seruant of God Ierem 27. 6. yet neither of them both were the sonnes of God by adoption such as we doe now speake of It is a great honour to bee called the friend of God as Abraham is called Iames 2. 23. as likewise for Lazarus to be called by
markes of them For if a little leauen sowreth the whole lumpe 1. Cor. 5. 6. and if euill words corrupt good manners 1. Cor. 15. 33. then it cannot be but that good words and the good behauiour of men must be and are of great efficacy not only to conuert at the first but also afterward to strengthen and further in all goodnesse them that are already conuerted And this is taught both by our Sauiour Mat. 5. 16. and also by the Apostle Peter 1. Pet. 2. 12. Therefore also so amiable should the society of Gods children be to all euen to the wicked that although they should not purpose to make vse of the fellowship of Gods children to their conuersion yet if at any time they should be violently depriued thereof then they should be so distempered as it were and disquicted therwith that nothing else should please satisfie and content them till they doe againe recouer the same When the enemies of Daniel by their exceeding importunity had ouercome Darius for tne casting of Daniel into the lyons denne how was the said Darius though an heathen affected therwith verily so that he went into his palace and remained fasting and forbad the instruments of musique to be brought before him and lastly that his sleepe went from him Dan. 6. 18. If Darius not only a wicked man but also a meere heathen and altogether out of the Church were so affected and so disquieted with the losse of Daniels company for a time till he recouered him againe how should all other wicked men especially liuing within the Church take their losse of the company of the godly till the same be restored againe Againe if the company of some of the godly ought to be so amiable and their absence so dolefull as it were to the wicked themselues how amiable should the communion of an whole Church be vnto them yea to all so long as they may enioy it And therefore wofull and dolefull ought the casting of them out to be from the communion of an whole Church if they shall so continue in their wickednesse as to deserue the same what then is to be said both of those that are so contumatious and obstinate as to continue in their sinnes till the Church proceed iustly and according to the rule of the word to the fearfull sentence of excommunication against them whereby they are giuen ouer vnto satan and also of those that being so proceeded against do not regard the same and lastly of those that in a kind of pride and high conceit of their owne excellency and sufficiency without iust and sufficient cause do make a wilfull separation of themselues from such whole Churches as haue the pure ministery of the word and administration of the sacraments according to the word and wherein they haue been bred and borne not only as men but as the children of God if they haue at all receiued the spirit of adoption and where also after their regeneration and according to their regeneration if they be regenerated they haue been maintained nourished and increased by the sincere milk of the word To inlarge this point of the desire of all men yea of the delight that all men euen the wicked should haue in the communion of the godly let the same be further applied to the matching of themselues in mariage with the children of God yea though themselues ●e neuer so honorable and noble in the world and the children of God for worldly things neuer so meane base and contemptible For as the Lord doth often forbid his children to match with the wicked and as such matches are testified oftentimes by many examples to haue been very dangerous for the peruerting of the children of God especially by the example of Salomon Neh●m 13. 26. so it cannot be denied but that the matching euen of the wicked with the godly is very effectuall and helpfull to draw them that are so matched though before wicked to be the children of God themselues also And why should any honorable and noble personages in the world being vn●egenerated disdaine to match with the children of God being otherwise for education qualities conuersation and behauior fit yea rather why should not the children of God disdaine to match with the wicked though themselues be neuer so meanly borne and the said wicked neuer so honorably descended in the world what is carnall nobility to nobility of the spirit what is it to come of Princes in the world in respect of being of the bloud roiall of God himselfe the king of kings yea why also in that respect should not the greatest nobles in the world not regenerated thinke it a great aduancement to match with a sonne or daughter of God fit for qualities as before I said though borne of neuer so meane and poore parents As it is honorable and no manner of disparagement at all for the wicked though neuer so nobly descended according to the flesh to match in mariage with the children of God though in worldly respects neuer so meanly borne being otherwise as I said for conditions fit to match with so honorable persons so are such matches likewise of no meane efficacy to draw such wicked ones as sometimes they match with to be themselues of the number of Gods children So saith the Apostle as before we heard what knowest thou O wife whether thou shalt saue thine husband or what knowest thou O man whether thou shalt saue thy wife 1. Cor. 7. 16. Hereof Ruth is a most pregnant and liuely example For being her selfe an heathen and hauing matched with one of the sonnes of Elimelech and Naomi she was so effectually conuerted by this match that after the death of her husband she would by no meanes part from Naomi Indeed Orpah that matched with another sonne though she seemed a while to be very earnest to goe with Naomi into the land of Iudah yet she was at the last perswaded to returne backe to her owne people but Ruth had tasted so deeply of the spirit of adoption by her foresaid match and marriage that her mother in law Naomi for the better triall of her soundnesse therein vsing many words to perswade her to returne backe as Orpha had done she answered most gratiously constantly and resolutely to the contrary saying I●●reat me not to leaue thee nor to depart from thee for whither thou goest I will goe where thou dwellest I will dwell thy people shall be my people and thy God my God where thou diest I will die and there will I be buried The Lord do so to me and more also if ought but death depart thee and me Ruth 1. 16. 17. O rare example O noble paterne O admirable president Let not men therefore only match and mate themselues with them that are the children of God but let them also so animate and hearten themselues to hold fellowship and communion with them that albeit they should be most earnestly perswaded by the children of God themselues
all maiestie accompanied with his holy Angels and comming to iudge the quicke and the dead as at his former comming in the forme of a seruant he came to be iudged and not to iudge This is called his appearing because as the Gospell or grace of God which bringeth saluation vnto all men is said now to haue appeared Tit. 2. 11. in respect it had beene kept secret before since the world began and had not beene so opened as it is now reuealed vnto the sonnes of men c. Rom. 16. 25. Ephes 3. 5. so Christ Iesus being ascended into heauen and there sitting at the right hand of his father is not now so manifested at least to the bodily sight as hee shall manifest himselfe at his second comming This time of this his appearing is his mariage day whereas all time before is but as it were the time of his and our betrothing and of the preparing of vs for that mariage day to be the fitter spouse for him All this sentence of our certainty and knowledge of our being Note made like vnto Christ at his appearing is not to bee taken as spoken in the person of the Apostle onely and of them to whom he did write but of all other the children of God whatsoeuer None must looke for this perfection and likenesse vnto Christ before this time of his appearing What then will some man aske doe you say of Enoch and Elias Of the one it is said that he walked with God and was no more seene for God tooke him away Genes 5. 24. And againe that By faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death neither was he found for God had translated him Heb. 11. 5. Of the other of Elias that he went vp by a whirlewinde into Heauen 2. King 2. 11. Concerning therefore the two former examples of whom the question is mooued whatsoeuer men haue thought or doe thinke and whatsoeuer the former words may seeme to insinuate which their insinuated sense shall be opened afterward this I thinke that they are not yet bodily in heauen Enoch and Elias not bodily yet in heauen neither shall be till the resurrection of all flesh when all the rest of Gods elect shall receiue their consummation and perfect blisse My reasons for this opinion are briefly these First Heb. 11. 13. after the mention as well of Enoch as of 1. Reason Noah Abraham and Sara it is expresly said All these died in faith It were absurd to restraine the generall word all onely to the three last and not to extend it also vnto Enoch and Abel Therefore it is manifest that these two died as well as the other three If it be obiected that it is said before that Enoch was translated that he might not see death and that therefore if here this verbe died bee as well vnderstood of him as of the rest then there shall be contrarieties in one and the same place I answer that the reconciliation of this doubt is very easie namely by interpreting the former phrase that hee might not see death of not feeling death after the common painfull manner of men And so the word to see for to feele or to discerne or by experience to perceiue is often taken in the Scripture The waters saw thee O God the waters saw thee c. that is they did as it were feele and by experience perceiued thy power Psal 77. 16. So the Apostle saith I see another Law in my members c. that is I feele Rom. 7. 23. There might bee many other the like places alleged but these are sufficient That also of being translated signifieth nothing els but he was taken away in an extraordinary manner not seen of men but so secretly that no man knew or by any outward thing could iudge otherwise of him but as if God tooke him immediatly into heauen And so would God in that euill and sinfull age take him away so gently and extraordinarily dissoluing the soule and the body that men might thinke him to goe body and soule into heauen for the better honoring that holy life which he then liued the rather because all other liued so wickedly To any but very meanly exercised in the Scripture it is well knowen that many things are spoken according to the opinion of men according to that which they seemed vnto men So Samuel is said to haue been raised after death by the witch and to haue spoken vnto Saul 1. Sam 28. 11. c. Not that it was Samuel For they that die in the Lord rest from their labors Reu. 14. 13. and are not therefore at the call or command of witches but onely because he appeared in the likenesse of Samuel as Satan can change himselfe into the likenesse of an Angell of light 2. Cor. 11. 14 and because Saul and his company tooke him so to be My second reason is out of the same Chapter For of all the former and of diuers other examples afterward mentioned it is written thus All these through faith obtained good report and receiued not the promise God prouiding a better thing for vs that they without vs should not be made perfect verse 39. 40. If Enoch had beene taken vp in body into heauen then had hee beene made perfect without vs. My third reason is out of the same Epistle also Chapt. 9. 8. where the Apostle by the entrance or going once yee●ely of the high Priest alone into Sanctum Sanctorum into the most holy place doth teach that vnder the Law and whiles the first Tabernacle was standing the way into the holiest of all was not yet opened What meaneth the Apostle by the holiest of all but heauen especially for the bodies of men to enter thereinto For howsoeuer God had prepared heauen to be the common receptacle of the soules of the righteous after death yet Christ was the first that entred in body And this seemeth to bee the stronger argument because in the description of heauen in the same epistle afterward Chap. 12. 23. it is called the city of the liuing God the celestial Ierusalem which hath the company of innumerable Angels the assembly of the congregation of the first borne which are written in heauen and God the iudge of all and the spirits of iust and perfect men and Iesus the Mediator of the new Testament Heere therefore is mention of Angels of God of the spirits of iust men and of Iesus the Mediator heere is no mention at all of any bodies or of any men altogether in heauen If any will reply that this is a description of the whole Church in heauen and in earth both gouernours children and seruants I answer that then the words the congregation of the first borne must comprehend the Church militant in earth and so there will bee none found in heauen but God Iesus Christ the spirits of iust and perfect men and the Angels So all bodies beside the body of Christ are yet excluded Fourthly
in the description of the resurrection 1. Cor. 15. 52. there is no other sort mentioned but the dead to bee raised and the liuing at that time vpon the earth to be changed The trumpet shall blow and the dead shall be raised vp incorruptible and we viz all which at that day shall be liuing shal be changed The like is 1. Thess 4. 15. 16. 17. This say we vnto you by the word of the Lord that we which liue and are remaining in the comming of the Lord shall not preuent them which sleepe for the Lord himselfe shall descend downe from heauen with a shout and with the voice of an Archangell and with the trumpet of God and the dead in Christ shall rise first Then shall wee which liue and remaine be caught vp with them also in the clouds c. In neither of both these places is there any mention of any but of the dead and of the liuing and remaining here vpon the earth Enoch therfore and Elias must be reckned with the dead accounted as dead though they died in an extraordinary maner neither violent or painfull to themselues or discerned by other Fifthly all the elect being compared to a body and it being contrary to the nature of a body that any one member should bee perfected till the body haue all the members belonging thereunto how can it bee that one or two of the members of Christs body should be perfected and wholly glorified in heauen Christ wanting many members and not being compleat in his said body till the very last age of the world and till the last point of the said age For who can deny but that there are many of the elect yet vnborne When also they shall bee all borne who can deny but that they shall be called one after another Till all be borne and all be called Christs body is not perfect Sixthly who can deny the Ministers of the Gospell to bee more excellent especially the Apostles and Euangelists who first planted the Churches among the Gentiles who I say can deny these to bee more honorable then any Ministers vnder the Law Much more then any before the Law This hath beene shewed before therefore I doe not now stand vpon it This only I adde that it is said of the Apostles as an honourable thing and as a dignity and prerogatiue of them aboue all other namely that they should sit vpon twelue seats or thrones and iudge the twelue tribes of Israel Matth. 19. 28. It is likewise to be acknowledged that as the calling was more honourable then the calling of any of the Prophets so also they had more excellent graces not only speciall for discharge of their speciall places but also generally of sanctification Is this so How vnlikely then is it that any especially vnder the Law or before the Law should haue any degree of glory and be perfectly glorified before them Seuenthly there were some as wicked in their time before their time and after their time and daily are as they now in question were godly yea former times and these last times doe affoord many much more wicked then they then were or any other are godly Such was Ieroboam that made Israel to sinne Ahab and many other of the kings of Israel So Iudas that betraied our Sauiour the Pharisees that sinned against the holy Ghost the man of sinne called likewise the sonne of perdition the aduersarie that exalteth himselfe against all that is called God c. and many other contemners of the Gospell Yet none of these doe goe bodily into the place of all the damned till the day of iudgement Why then should wee thinke that they before named Enoch and Elias went bodily into heauen the place of the blessed This that I haue hitherto written of Enoch and Elias is the iudgement of diuers other that must bee acknowledged to haue beene glorious lights and worthy of much praise in the Churches Caluin indeed writeth heerein somewhat obseurely and I confesse somewhat aboue my reach and capacitie for first thus hee writeth vpon Genes 5. 24. euen word for word the Latine turned into English In summe saith hee speaking of Enochs taking away such a rapture or taking away was but a gentle and ioifull passage out of this world Yet he was not receiued into the heauens to glorie but was onely released of the miseries of this present life vntill Christ the first fruits of them that rise again s●ould come And sith bee was one of the members of the Church it was necessarie that hee should wait till all the members together should come foorth to meet Christ that the whole body might bee vnited to the head Notwithstanding in the very next words he doth much obscure that which before hee had written adding If any shall obiect that of the Apostle It is appointed all men to die once the solution is easie namely that death doth not alwaies make a diuorce of the soule and body but they are said to die which put off the corruptible nature in which manner they shall die whom the last day shall finde remaining These last words I confesse I cannot conceiue namely how any may be said to die whose soules and bodies are not separated and how they that shall be liuing at the last day may be said to die whom the Apostle expresly saith shall not die but only be changed Peter Martyr according to his manner writeth very largelie and somewhat I confesse different from something before written by me namely in his Commentarie vpon 2. King 2. 11. Notwithstanding in another place he commeth neerer vnto me and agreeth more with me In the former place first he writeth that it is not probable or Consent●●eum like that these two Enoch and Elias should be taken to the places of blessednesse before Christ himselfe which is the first fruits of all had aduanced himselfe thither The words also of our Lord may seeme to perswade this who in Iohn saith No man hath ascended into heauen but the sonne of man that descended from heauen He therefore denieth any man to haue ascended into heauen before himselfe c. Yet afterward hee saith that they went bodie and soule into Abrahams bosome and he maketh Abrahams bosome a place aboue yet distinct from the glorious place where Christ and all his Saints departed this life are How sound this is I leaue to other of sound iudgement For my part I know no such distinction as he there maketh After this he proceedeth further denying them to haue died opposing himselfe to them that said as I haue written viz. that they died but yet an extraordinary kinde of death neither by any defect or decay of nature nor by any force and violence but after some other sort with ease and delight c. Notwithstanding in the other place before insinuated he differeth from that which himselfe had before written and agreeth with me For writing of the Eucharist against Steuen Gardiner
calamity either generall or speciall whereby the Lord calleth vs to search and try our waies and to turne vnto him Lam. 3. 40. Ioel 2. 12. that is to purge our selues of such things as wherewith we haue before defiled our selues and prouoked the Lords wrath against vs. This obseruation in one word plainly condemneth the superstition of the Papists that are very precise in purging themselues in the time of Lent and in abstaining then from such things as they foolishly thinke will defile themselues yea from the state of mariage which God himselfe hath pronounced honorable without any exceotion of time to the contrary as also at some other times of the yeare which they as vnwisely imagine to be more holy then other whereas at other times they are altogether secure carelesse and licentious in hope at the returne of the foresaid holy time and times to purge and clense themselues once for all Thus much touching the fourth obseruation of the word purgeth in respect both of the signification and also of the present tense thereof Fiftly let vs obserue the next word himselfe This teacheth that he that hath this hope in him is not onely curious in purging other and in teaching and admonishing other how they should be purged but that especially he laboreth vpon himselfe and with himselfe for the purging of himselfe So Paul exhorteth the Colossians to teach and admonish their owne selues Coloss 3. 16. and Iude them to whom hee did write to edisie themselues in their most holy faith and to keepe themselues in the loue of God Iude 21. So Paul saith to Timoth●e Study to shew thy selfe approued vnto God 2. Tim. 2. 15. He would not haue him to studie onely for the good of other but also and in the first place for his owne good that so hee might bee the fitter and more able to doe good vnto other This is a necessary point because many are very curious about other that doe altogether neglect themselues They reprooae other they censure other they teach other c. but touching themselues they are altogether carelesse by which meanes they doe thelesse good vnto other For who will not be ready to say vnto such Physitian heale thy selfe Luk 423. and Thou which teachest another teachest thou not thy selfe c. Rom. 2. 21. Truly there is nothing that in all ages hath more hindred and now doth more hinder the publike ministery of the word and the priuat profession and exhortations c. of others then the practise that hath been and is contrary to such publike teaching and to such priuat profession and exhortations But what doth the Apostle meane by this kind of speech Euery one that hath this hope in him purgeth himselfe doth hee teach freewill and that euery one that hopeth at the appearing of Christ to be like vnto Christ hath power to purge himselfe Nothing lesse The Rhemists indeed and other Papists vpon this place gather and inferre that doctrine But they gather that which is not sowen and they inferre conclusions without premises The holy Ghost teacheth no such thing either here or any where els yea he teacheth the cleane contrary For we haue plentifully heard before that our whole regeneration is the worke of GOD. To purge our selues is an effect of our regeneration therefore to purge our selues is likewise the worke of God To purge our selues and to sanctifie our selues is all one but sanctification is the worke of God onely as before also hath beene shewed and as appeareth by the prayer of Christ generallie for the Church Iohn 17. 17. and of the Apostle particularlie for the Thessalonians 1. Thessalonians 5. 23. Our Sauiour also expresselie ascribeth this word of purging to his Father saying Euerie plant that bringeth foorth fruit hee that is God the Father purgeth that it may bring foorth more fruit Iohn 15. 2. Where it is to be obserued that he speaketh not of purging men at the first which are not engraffed into Christ that they may bring foorth the first fruits of righteousnesse but that he speaketh of them that alreadie are ingraffed into Christ and saith that his Father purgeth them that they may bring foorth more fruit In the same place also hee saith that without himselfe as hee was the mediator God and man euen such so ingraffed into him can doe nothing without mee saith hee yee can doe nothing verse 5. If such as the disciples of Christ were so long ingraffed into him so long instructed by him and so well acquainted with all his doctrine miracles and whole conuersation could doe nothing without Christ how much lesse can any other doe any thing But what then is the meaning of the Apostle Euen this first as I said before that euerie one that hath that hope already spoken of doth most of all busie himselfe in this worke of purging about himselfe and not altogether imploie his time about other It is true in deed that euery one that hath that hope doth regard also other vnder his gouernment especially and according to his place doth labor the purging of other that are so committed to his charge And certainly hee that doth not so regard other hath neuer been purged himselfe For indeed so to doe is in some sort to purge himselfe because euery gouernour being in some sort the head of those to whom he is gouenor they also that are vnder his gouernment cannot but in like sort be his members at least members of that body whereof he is the head Euery gouernor of a family being as he is the gouernor the head also of the family all the rest of the same fam●ly are as it were his members Especially as the husband is called the head of the wife 1. Cor. 11. 3. so the wife is said to be bone of his bones and flesh of his flesh Genes 2. 23. The children likewise are branches and so in like manner members of the parents as being taken out of their loines So in like manner the King or any other hauing kingly and supreme and soueraigne authority is in that respect the head of his people and his people are in the same respect his members Therefore if such doe not labour to purge those that doe so belong vnto them euen as Iob is said to haue sanctified his children Iob 1. 5. and as Abraham is commended by God himselfe that he would command his sonnes and his houshold after him to keepe the waie of the Lord c. Genes 18. 19 if I say such as are in any authority ouer other doe not labour so to purge them that are vnder their gouernment they may in some sort be said not to purge themselues Notwithstanding all such doe first of all and must first of all looke to themselues euen to their owne persons because otherwise their care for other shall either be altogether in vaine or els it shall bee with little successe Secondly for further answer touching the meaning of these words the Apostle